RawSugar wrote:
. . . I've been practicing sutures on bananas since I was fifteen (when I found out that I could order suture kits online from supply companies. And my sutures, they are perfect), instead of looking at magazines I look at brain scans, and instead of watching chick flicks I watch surgical videos . . .
Oh, Wow, RawSugar, I wish you all the best! Finally, at age forty-seven, I feel I've acquired the skills that if I was timewarped back to age 16 or 17, I might become a doctor. I'm probably going to do some other things at this point: writing, art, political activism, entrepreneurship (and in just very straightforward fashion, create some alright jobs). Although studying to be an EMT is not completely out of the question. Makes a good counterpoint to more solitary, cerebral pursuits, don't you think? And it's something I really believe in.
Okay, I read years ago in a book on getting into medical school, and they said, hey, if you want to study, for example, anthropology in your undergrad years, by all means, you're not going to get a chance in medical school. You might as well pick it up when you can, as long as you have the recommended courses and the good MCAT.
In the recent EVERY PATIENT TELLS A STORY by Lisa Sanders, she talks about the decline of the hands-on physical exam because what's rewarded during clinical rounds is being able to summarize the latest research.
I've always thought that a person with Asperger's could do really well in surgery, because it lends itself to someone who's perfectionist in their work, who kind of sweats the details, and who has a systematic approach. That you hold pretty firmly in your mind what's happening, and not everyone does that.
I've always heard that the weed-out class is organic chemistry and that organic II is much harder than organic I. The solution: experiment with different methods of prestudying. It's obvious. And it works so well it's almost cheating! It's also showing off, which is a reason you can't really do it in high school. But in college, the stakes are high enough that it's worth it. And you can just be low-key and matter-of-fact about it.
PS Sometime with your permission, I'd like to pitch you on influenza research. That's a big interest of mine.