So you’re excited about the fall. You’ve gotten that acceptance letter and, almost as quickly as it came, you sent in your formal acceptance of matriculation. You dream you’ll be assisting in medical procedures and major surgeries. I'm talking, when that head doctor requests, “Hemostat!” you just know you’re going to be the best “hander of equipment” ever! You can’t wait to freely and openly give your opinion on what your team should do to treat that ICU patient. I mean, you did just stay up all night reading up on his care and the pathophysiology of his disease, so that will be a no-brainer. You’re so confident in your ability to answer those questions on the first day of class. After all, you got all A’s in undergrad, so this will be a piece of cake, right?
Listen, I’m by all means not a dream killer. But your expectations of medical school may or may not be far off if what you believe is the above (unless you are already a medical student, in which case, you have already had the red carpet of doom laid out for you). The reality is, you will be studying probably for mmmmmm, I’d say a ball-park figure of about 22 hours, 36 minutes, and 18 seconds every day. (This is not a point of discouragement, trust me, there have been those before you who have done it, including me, and there will be those after you! If we can do it, you can too!) On top of this small time “blimp” of, once again, ball park figure of 22 hours, 36 minutes, and 18 seconds in your day, you are going to have to balance being broke. Your tuition, your books, your constant slew of fees for exam after exam after exam, your medial equipment, and you living expenses…yeah, need I go on? I’m sure the point has been made that the bill will add up. And listen (or read, rather), I really do hate to keep bringing this up, but with that 22 hours, 36 minutes, and 18 second time gap in your day everyday, most do not have time for a real job. So with no real way to counter the pure robbery of medical school, your financial cup shall runneth over.
With that being said, although I don’t have ANYONE in my family in the medical field, I’m a frugal Freddy, and caught a tight hold to this wind of pure robbery before I even set foot in my medical school. So my first tip, is to actually use this time to ask for REAL gifts! A lot of you guys are graduating college, graduate programs, research programs…whatever the case may be. For graduation, do not… I repeat, DO NOT ask for foolish gifts! Sure, you deserve gifts for your accomplishments thus far. But that Apple TV, game console, that trip to a tropical island.... all can wait! Now I’m not saying to call up everyone you know and ask for a graduation gift. I mean I ain’t tacky. But for those people that actually ask, don’t feel obligated to say, “Oh nothing.” You deserve help! Below are some gifts that are perfect for incoming med students!
1. Gift Cards... Galore!