Disclaimers: this first paragraph is med school work-related whining. See next paragraphs for less venting. Also, this post is a little more disjointed than usual. It happens.
The second week of med school is behind me. I'm exhausted. Excluding finals and MCAT, I've also just studied on a Friday night for the first time. The fact that there were other people with me makes that previous statement less lame (barely). Buut, assuming I get enough done tomorrow, that means this M1 will feel okay going out tomorrow night! Hooray! And then Sunday it's back to more studying for my first biochem exam. Apparently there's three more biochem lectures right after the exam, along with physio. LAAAME. Buut, there's gonna be a post-exam party. It is *so* on then. Rinse and repeat for exams every week. The sheer volume of material is what makes things so hard. I've done okay keeping up with the material after class most days - but sitting down to a full binder of lecture notes after two weeks is kinda intimidating. Next week, more of my time disappears as anatomy and histology take turns eating up my afternoons. Haven't had histo yet, but the first anatomy lecture went over by about an hour. Oh and I found out that anatomy has a year-long cumulative lecture final. Uncool. Hooray more material and less time!
If you actually read that previous paragraph, I would like to give you a cookie. I'm not pissed or anything, but everything's just such a huge change for me. Even tonight, we were talking about this type of stuff and just had to laugh about it. We marked "yes" when schools asked us whether we were taking their acceptance offer and (somewhat) knew what we were getting into. Anyway, for non-whiny stuff, read on.
Back during orientation week, there was a med school organization fair that's analagous to UIUC's Quad Day. Also, since we have all our lectures in the same room, four of the six chalkboards usually have organizations' announcements posted: meetings, events, free lunches, socials, and whatnot. Between these two sources, I signed up for a few extracurriculars: two free clinics, a phlebotomy club, Asian-Pacific American Medical Student Association (APAMSA), a medical Spanish class, and a couple of specialty groups (ER, surgery, family med). The free clinics and phlebotomy classes were insanely popular to the tune of only 30-40% of students actually getting to do them. I'm in at one free clinic, waiting to hear about the other one, and out of the phlebotomy classes. I'm pretty excited to get to do the free clinic. That and any other limited UIC curricular clinicals we get this year: shadowing and a few basic clinical skills. APAMSA seems like a good organization for me...for more than just the obvious reason. It'll get me some of that culturing that I'm wanting, they have community service projects like free health screening in Chinatown, and they've got their own socials. The medical Spanish class is less productive than I was hoping for. I just can't pick up the language I need to at this point. I guess I kinda knew this going in, but still. The classes are run by a Hispanic med student organization at three different levels. I'm at the beginner level, and things are just way over my head. I can understand some of what's going on and have picked up on a few medical terms. I just can't put things together well enough to really understand, much less hold a conversation. In the clinic, conversations won't be as structured or slow paced as they are in class. Either way, I feel sorry for those in the class who are true Spanish beginners.
I mentioned that organizations post announcements like meetings in our lecture hall. Since every M1 and M2 has the same lunch break, meetings are usually held over the lunch hour, with free lunches usually provided. I have so been taking advantage of this. It's cheaper and it beats walking back to my place. Things only get tricky when they check the organization's member list. That's when I have to try and remember which friend is in which organization, so I can be them (if they're not there, of course). But free lunches are my thing now partly because these first few weeks have been expensive. Rent, utilities and their "setup fees," books (I've been trying to limit these, but it's still expensive), microscope fees, transcription services, and anatomy supplies...adds up pretty fast. Boo to that. But I've been blessed with parents who've helped a little bit with med school so far and will continue trying to. Eases the financial load a bit. Between the parents and me, I hopefully won't have to get a budget extension and/or private loans on top of the ~$43k budget, like some classmates are having to. Third and fourth years are even more expensive, but I'll cross that bridge when I get there. I'm hoping to get out of UIC with no more than $200k in debt. We'll see what happens.
Back to the present...this past and upcoming week have and will be the real adjustments to med school. With the first few exams and full schedule coming up, I'll be able to gauge how things are/should be going. Maybe I'll even figure out a routine that lets me keep up with all the material while still having time to go out once or twice a week. Seems like the main linchpin in said plan is truly studying when I'm trying to study. What I did in undergrad didn't work for the first few days. I've had to go to the library to get any real work done. It takes so much longer to get work done at home (if at all). There's just too many distractions at home: email, facebook, aim, 360, tv, food, naps. With a full week of the full schedule coming up, if that means heading to the library right after class, so be it. But at least I'll get my work done and out of the way. I've been packing some snacks, sandwiches, and drinks with me when I go to the library and this has seemed to work out pretty well. And the people I've started studying with are about my same style. We're in the same area, but don't really bother each other except for occasionally bouncing questions off each other and taking breaks. Sometimes I'm on my own when meeting up falls through for whatever reason or by choice. When this happens, the main Chicago library has been a pretty cool place for me. It's only about a 5 minute L ride and it's a really big, nice, and quiet place for me to get shit done. And for breaks, I'm in downtown Chicago. I think I can figure out ways to entertain myself there. So pretty much the plan for the next few weeks goes something like this: work hard, play harder.