
Product Placement

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
we're not kids anymore.

Janaina Medeiros
Keni
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AnasAbdin
d e v o n
will byers stan first human second
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

shark vs the universe
art blog(derogatory)

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JVL

titsay
wallacepolsom
styofa doing anything

Love Begins
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@dignityalwaysdignity
How to deal with rotation anxiety? It freaks me out that I'm going to be in an actual hospital working with actual patients. What if I mess up?
Here’s the thing: you WILL mess up. Frequently. In mind-bogglingly large and small ways. Everyday.
The good news is that because you are a student everyone expects you to mess up. Lemme repeat that in all caps for the kids in the back: IT IS OK TO MESS UP BECAUSE YOU ARE STILL LEARNING. No one’s life is in your hands for this reason. This is your time to learn and part of that process is messing up.
As med students we are used to being the brainiacs, right? We are used to getting all the correct answer. We are used to knowing the textbook. But real life, the situations you will encounter in clinic, are often sticky and messy. Sometimes there is no right answer. Real patients are not often textbook cases. Diseases do not learn the ‘proper presentation’. That’s hard to deal with for many med students.
The only way to handle this ambiguity and sudden headfirst freefall into real life is to accept that you will be wrong and you will mess up all the stinkin time and use those moments for learning. We can often get so mad at ourselves and spend so much mental and emotional energy beating ourselves up that we miss the opportunity for growth that comes from such moments. I do it all the time (remember when I cried in front of the program director last week?), so it can be a really hard thing to do for some people.
So, to deal with this type of anxiety here is my advice: first, take a big giant step back from defining yourself by always being right, by your scores, by how long you study, by how 'book smart’ you are. Now here is a huuuge slice of humble pie- it tastes like shit at first, but you get used to it eventually. Accept that you don’t know anything about anything. Finally, and this is the fun part, learn something from your mistake. Own it and grow from it. Rinse and repeat. If you still need help, please talk to a professional.
The seven best doctors
Fresh air Exercise Water Rest Good diet Sunshine Love
Or, as an alternative:
Actual doctors
preventive measures like mammograms, vaccinations, good nutrition, sunshine, water, rest, love, fresh air, and exercise
appropriate medications
mental health counseling
life saving medical procedures and surgeries
assistive devices and durable medical equipment
actual doctors (let’s say it together for emphasis!)
Don’t compare yourself to others. Compare yourself to the person you were yesterday
(via brawn)
This is a pretty slow gif of cardiac electrical conduction – I wish it were a bit faster, but I do like that it shows the EKG line at the bottom to correspond.
Wow never seen this gif
I think it’s great its slow. I’m used to see the faster ones and wishing i could slow them down.
Positivity here
Ghibli med student problems… when you fall victim to the ‘feelings of inadequacy’ gremlins…
It is not fair to treat people as if they are finished beings. Everyone is always becoming and unbecoming.
Kathleen Winter (via yesdarlingido)
The Inevabilities of Success
1. You will feel pain. 2. You will experience discouragement. 3. You will want to give up. 4. People won’t understand you. 5. People will criticize you. 6. People will walk away from, and reject, you. 7. You will feel it’s impossible to persevere. 8. You will want to give up - a million times. 9. You will think that you’re going crazy and are losing your mind. 10. It will all be worth it in the end.
Typewriter Series #1286 by Tyler Knott Gregson
*Pre-Order my New book All The Words Are Yours, through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, IndieBound , Books-A-Million , or iBookstore! *
9 Things People With Mental Illness Won’t Tell You
1. They worry about the stigma attached to mental illness.
People suffering from mental illness often fret over how mental illness is perceived by society. Although major strides have been taken in the acceptance and understanding of mental illness, there is still quite a negative connotation attached to it. There is still a lingering feeling of fear felt by many towards those with mental illness, remnants of a bygone era where they were labeled as “crazy,” and alienated from the rest of society.
2. They are concerned that they won’t be taken seriously.
It is often the case that ignorant, ill-informed people will dismiss the claims of individuals genuinely suffering from mental illness. These self-proclaimed experts will insist that mental illness is “all in your head,” and the people afflicted by it just need to “cheer up.” This is a very real reaction that many people have experienced firsthand, and the fact that this is a cause for concern makes total sense.
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Dear Friend (Or as I have called you so many times, Medical Student), You are an open book. I catch you sometimes frowning on the words written on a hand-out that you complain so many times about, and know that you wish you didn’t dream about this. Your mind runs like it’s in a marathon – and you still tell me, it is never enough… because you’re losing. You oftentimes wish that memorizing and understanding something was as easy as transferring data from a memory card. But reality hits you in the face when it proves to you that it is never that easy. I see reality push you down and drag you to the ground when you fail every quiz… when you can’t answer a question so many of your classmates already know about. And that’s when you start slowing down. You looked at me one time and said, “In our mind, our dreams sparkle with big bold letters and golden arrows pointing at it. But when you try to reach them, the luster disappears and the lights flicker. And you realize that not all the things that shine are alive – aren’t the stars in the night sky dead?” That day, I didn’t reply. I didn’t know what to say. But now, I finally have something to say. When we were younger, you never mentioned anything about becoming a physician. Yet I noticed how you played doctor when someone got wounded. Sometimes, I see you on the internet playing simulation games of doctors’ doing surgery. And I saw you cry when you wish you were older so you could’ve saved your grandfather… when you wished that he was still alive so he could see you now. Your mother talked about how great he was and you were too late to even know. The next few days, your face beamed as if your mind lit up an idea. And every time someone asked you about what you were going to do after high school, you smiled and replied, “I’m going to become a doctor.” No one told you it was going to be hard, but then again, no one told you it was going to be easy. No one told you that before you got there, you needed tons of coffee, some added kilograms on your weight, sleepless nights, failing grades, tears and blood, thousands of prayers and a lot of people – to tell you, you can do it… to tell you that they believe in you… because you’re starting to lose faith in yourself. So I am asking you this… what are you giving your dream up for? Is it as important as the many times you told me that you wanted to let people live a little longer so they could still say ‘I love you’ to their family or go to their daughter’s dance recital or simply live? Is it as important as the many people who stood by you, never gave up on you and tirelessly built the stairs that you now climb to reach your dream? Is throwing away your dream not as hard as regretting? Because love, you fought for this. You went through four years of hell so you could finally go into medical school… so you could finally save lives – even if you hadn’t got the chance to save that one person you so badly wanted in your life. Just right now, you are already a physician. You may not have the license and you may still not have graduated but you already are a doctor. Because I saw how selfless you are. How you messed up your life so others could live. You say you feel stupid, that it feels like you don’t fit in medical school, that people are smart there, that you feel that you don’t have the magic hands that can cure. But that is not what I see and most importantly, you are not alone! Many people feel this way… not only in medical school, but in the game of life. So trust me when I tell you that you can get through this. That all your hard work will someday pay off. You are smart. I see it every time you read a line again and again because you try to understand it. I see it every time you fail because you don’t cheat yourself out of it – you want to learn things the best way, not only for yourself but for your future patients. And that in itself is an essence of a true genius. So please start trusting yourself because someday, people will come knocking on your door because they trust you with their lives. Don’t give up. You didn’t come this far just to get the hell out of it. Nothing is as huge as the times your heart started to cave in because you craved for this dream. And so, to finally answer your question, no… not all the stars in the night sky are dead. They say that stars can live up to million years. So maybe when you look up the sky, you see stars that have seen more than the years you have lived. They have seen many people who don’t walk on this earth anymore. And now they are going to see you live. Let these stars be your dream… that despite the many times the universe might have failed them – they still shine. But then again, I know you. And you will in some way find another loophole. So I’ll stay ahead of you and recall that you did say that not all things that shine are alive. But you’re a doctor remember? Save them. Thumbnail Credit: https://twitter.com/lyona_ivanova
Speechless. Personally, one of the most emotional pieces I have ever read.
Oh. My. Gosh. Thank you for this.
It’s already October?! Whaaat?!
So what are you going to be for Halloween?