Gender bend Mr. 3
Thought I'd make some digital art of it for cosplay reference
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Gender bend Mr. 3
Thought I'd make some digital art of it for cosplay reference
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Monthly Shoutout #3 (September 2k16)
1. @coffeeallalone13 2. @llamafabbiness 3. @the-ravenclaw-swiftie
You guys are such amazing followers, and always ALWAYS manage to be in my notifications. Thank you :)
s/p one week
Reflections after one week of step 1 prep:
1) Step 1 is all consuming. Even when you're taking breaks, you're thinking about what you're going to study next, where you want to study, etc. It's pretty hard to escape.
2) Studying for Step 1 after a year on the wards is interesting. It makes me feel like wow, I really knew nothing this whole year. How did I survive? But it also sort of, sort of, makes learning this stuff exciting. Every time I come across a disease a saw on the wards, I can picture the patient and it makes it much more clear.
3) Pathoma. Is. Amazing. I honestly feel like I never learned this stuff before. Some of that is true because we didn't have a specific pathology course at my school. It was organ system based with the physiology and then pathophysiology of each organ. Maybe they did teach us the basics of pathology but they never really came together and made sense until now. Also, his voice is oddly soothing.
4) Finding the right study spot is half the battle.
The End of Family Med
My clinic rotation for FM is over, but it was amazing. I loathe living in a non-urban environment (seriously, I need all those fancy stores to live) but I LOOOOOOOOOOVE semi-rural FM and getting to see every age of patient in a day.
I love diabetes and hypertension. I love explaining contraceptives to teens and moms and everyone in between. I love well child physicals and medicare "physicals" and well woman exams. I love that my preceptor handed me a speculum last week and told me to practice my "clickie unclickie" skills, so I could be less nervous about the noise it makes. I love talking with men about BPH. I love the variety of depression and anxiety, and seeing how exercise and the right prescription can help those people get back to their normal and be happy again. I don't love trying to convince parents to get vaccines, or begging a COPD patient to start oxygen or a diabetic to check their feet. I don't love the hoops to jump through for insurance. I don't love hearing the patients who treat themselves badly and don't want to change and say they want to die. But I love family medicine... it's back on the table after medschool professor bitterness and bad experiences with FM docs the past 2 years took it off. So glad that I had such a great preceptor for this rotation, who helped me love it again within the first few days of being her student.