Financial Aspect #1

            Working towards getting into medical school is an extreme financial expenditure. Let’s start from high school. The first order of business is attaining a bachelor’s degree. If you go in-state, your costs will likely total $25,000 per year. If you go out-of-state, your costs will likely total $50,000 per year. For the total four years, you are looking at either $100,000 or $200,000 total.

            Next, let’s talk MCAT. The AAMC charges $275 to anyone who decides to take the MCAT. If you decide to purchase preparation material, it will cost from a few hundred dollars for books, to a few thousand dollars for the classes.

            Now that the two requirements for acceptance are completed, the next step is, of course, to apply! The AAMC charges $160 for the first school you apply to, and $36 for each additional school. Let’s say you apply for fifteen schools. That comes to a total of $664. Next, each individual school will charge a fee for their individual (secondary) applications. The average fee for me was $95. Total cost for these secondary applications comes out to be $1,425. Total application process: $2090.

            Congratulations, four of the schools you applied to have invited you for an interview. Let’s say one of these schools is in-state, meaning you do not have to pay for a flight, a car, and place to stay over night. A round-trip plane ticket with a night at a cheap motel, plus a car will likely be around $400. Total for three out-of-state interviews, $1,200.        

            You did it. One of the schools has gotten back to you with an acceptance.  Years of work and financial investment have paid off. Financial cost of getting into medical school: ~$5,800, plus $100,000 (in-state) or $200,000 (out-of-state).

Energy Drinks #1

A friend came to visit the summer before college. She is older than me, already a medical student at the time. During her stay, my family noticed her drinking habit, no, not alcohol, coffee. Every morning she brewed herself a pot of coffee and would pour two cups for breakfast, another in the afternoon, another before dinner, and another in the evening. My mom questioned her about it and she remarked that drinking coffee nonstop was a habit she picked up during her undergrad. She insisted that she needed a cup just to keep her awake let alone feeling energetic. Growing up, she was always the studious examiner, studying with the intention of attaining perfect test scores. Picturing her staying up all night with her books and a cup of coffee beside her was easy. Before she returned to school, she parted with a tip for me to restrain myself from getting addicted to coffee.  

Throughout college, I had felt students were a little too easygoing with their consumption of energy drinks. A part of me wonders if energy drinks have become associated as an essential item for serious studying. Some college students may see energy drinks as a suitable substitute for sleep, permitting them to spend their nights partying.

Now graduated, I can proudly say that I kept a proper restraint. It was challenging nonetheless. I used every little trick I could: ice-cold water, pinching, loud music, a friend to talk with, 15-min walks, 15-min naps, etc. There were times when I failed and would wake up in the morning to see my unfinished assignment on the computer screen in front of me (15-min naps were the last resort). Regardless, I am proud of my accomplishment for I do not need to rely on a morning cup o’ joe to get my day started.