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one day, two cafes, and a whole lot of studying 🤍
i got my letter of attestation and signed up for an NCLEX date 😵💫😬🫡💩🚽
trying to leave a toxic home + become a nurse
hi everyone, I’m a nursing student in a really tough living situation. My home is mentally and emotionally unsafe, and I’ve been doing everything I can to hold it together but I can’t anymore.
I’m trying to raise enough money to take my licensing exam (NCLEX), and to afford a safe space to live while I figure things out.
if you’ve ever been in a situation where you just needed one break to get out, that’s where I am now.
if you can help or just share, I’d be so grateful. thank you for reading this.
GoFundMe link: https://gofund.me/63f6f852
In celebration of T-7 for the Arirang record release and Friday the 13th (happy to those that celebrate 😭😈) ...My Spotify wrapped! Ha! I really love Taekook solo music. Jungkook's album is slept on. So is V's EP. Wish they didn't have to hustle into the military so soon after their releases. Fingers crossed they get theirs soon - potentially in this BTS tour, preferably solo redemption.
Apparently I listened to 365 genres - when I say I'm a music head, it's not an understatement. Music helps soothe my brain otherwise I'm going out of my ADHD head.
Quelle surprise! RM's album! 🤔 (I was a sucker for 'Around the world in a Day'). Amazed Hobi wasn't there too -- I played 'Sweet Dreams' like my life depended on it. It's an absolute crime it didn't become a song of the summer - it's so easy breezy. Both songs have that wanderlust vibe.
2025 was another "mi vida loca" year for me. Twin peaks: graduating nursing school in May and passing my NCLEX in July. Maybe the best thing that happened was going from a lurker to a commenter on Tumblr.
Borahae (life is a but a dream) 💜💚💛❤️
*authors note: I'm so 2000 and late. Also my charge being at 93% is a feat in and of itself
getting my ATT this week..
fuck i just want to pass the boards and never worry again
I passed my NCLEX
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
I'll be walking the stage as a licensed LVN!
The Study Method That Changed My NCLEX Score
Y'all, I'm sitting here with my RN license in hand, and I had to share this because six months ago I was literally crying in my car after bombing another practice test. Like, ugly crying. The kind where you question every life choice that led you to nursing school.
I had tried everything. Flashcards? Check. Question banks? Double check. Review books that cost more than my textbooks? Triple check. But my scores were stuck in this frustrating 60-65% range, and I was starting to panic because my NCLEX date was creeping up fast.
The Problem With How I Was Studying
Here's the thing I finally realized: I was studying nursing like I studied for every other test in college. Memorizing facts, drilling questions, hoping something would stick. But the NCLEX isn't testing if you memorized that normal sodium levels are 135-145 mEq/L (though yes, you should know that). It's testing if you can think like a nurse.
And thinking like a nurse means seeing the whole picture, not just isolated facts.
The Method That Actually Worked
I started what I call "scenario-based learning," and it completely changed my game. Instead of just answering random questions, I began working through complete clinical scenarios from start to finish. Like, really detailed ones where I had to think through:
What's happening with this patient right now?
What could go wrong?
What's my priority?
What would I do first, second, third?
How would I know if my interventions worked?
It was like the difference between learning vocabulary words versus having actual conversations in a foreign language. Suddenly, all those random facts started connecting into actual clinical reasoning.
I found this tool called Case Crafter Pro that generates realistic clinical scenarios using AI, and honestly? Game changer. Instead of the same recycled cases everyone uses, I could practice with fresh scenarios that felt like real patients I might actually encounter.
How I Actually Did It
Step 1: Start with the big picture I'd read through the entire scenario first without looking at any questions. What's the story here? What kind of patient am I dealing with?
Step 2: Think out loud This felt weird at first, but I literally talked through my thought process. "Okay, this patient has chest pain and shortness of breath, they're 65 with a history of hypertension... I'm thinking cardiac, but I need to rule out..."
Step 3: Work through priorities Before jumping to interventions, I'd force myself to identify what's most important right now. ABCs? Safety? Pain? This helped me nail those priority questions that used to trip me up.
Step 4: Follow the whole case Instead of just answering one question and moving on, I'd follow scenarios from admission to discharge when possible. How does this patient's condition change? What complications arise?
The Results
Within three weeks of switching to this method, my practice scores jumped to the high 70s. More importantly, I felt confident. When I sat for my NCLEX, I wasn't just recalling facts—I was actually thinking through each scenario like I'd done hundreds of times in practice.
The computer shut off at 75 questions (hello, anxiety), but I knew I had passed before I even got the official results. That clinical reasoning muscle I'd built up made all the difference.
Why This Works
The NCLEX isn't really testing your textbook knowledge—it's testing your ability to apply that knowledge in real situations. When you practice with complete clinical scenarios instead of isolated questions, you're training your brain to make those connections automatically.
Plus, it makes studying way more interesting. Instead of mindlessly drilling questions, you're solving puzzles and telling stories. It actually feels like preparing to be a nurse, not just preparing for a test.
If you're stuck in that same cycle I was—knowing the material but not seeing the scores you want—try shifting to scenario-based practice. Case Crafter Pro has been incredible for generating the kind of realistic, detailed cases that actually prepare you for both the NCLEX and real nursing practice.
You've got this, future nurse. Trust your clinical judgment—you probably know more than you think you do. ✨
Helped my friend study for her nclex???? (exam to get her nursing license) just now and I was reading practice questions to her over the phone and, wow, shout out to all the nurses out there because I was having anxiety just thinking about having to deal with these situations, and also my health anxiety was freaking out at the descriptions of problems. This was not a good task for someone with health anxiety, but for bestie, I will do it. She did very good on the 20 questions we did. Everyone who reads this please send your well wishes to my friend for when she does her exam!!