Sunday, December 9, 2012

Semester 6, Finals Week--Commence Panic!

So... it's hard to believe that this semester is already over!  With the ROSSie and block exams, it's just been one thing after another... I've barely had much time to myself (so I somewhat fear what next semester will be like).

Anyway--on to finals week!  It's only 3 this time:
*  Monday:  Small Animal Medicine II at 10:30am
* Tuesday:  Large Animal Medicine I at 10:30am
* Wednesday:  Small Animal Surgery at 10:30am

http://vetschoolparadise.tumblr.com/post/37496133055/trying-to-study-for-that-last-final 
Anyway, I will be staying here over the winter break and being an Orientation Leader for the last week of break, so I'm sure I will have plenty to update you guys on.

Don't be stingy with the good lucks!  I need it!

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Semester 6, Week 10--ROSSie Freakout Time!

Well, it's that time of the semester for me--the dreaded ROSSie exam... it's a spay model that we have to perform the procedure on to pass the surgery lab in 6th semester.  So, that includes everything from draping and prepping to the removal of the "uterus" and closure of the "patient."

It's almost 2 years in the works--covering all the surgical skills we've gone through since the very first semester we were down here.

Mine's on Tuesday... keeping the fingers crossed.  :(  Although, I've already started a cleaning spree to keep my mind off of it...

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Semester 6, Week 7--The Eye of the (Tropical) StormS

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I love when I can get a good pun in like that.  :P

I had gone down the street to check
on Jesse's dog in the middle of the
storm... got DRENCHED!
Studying by candlelight and the light of the laptop...
or at least attempting to!
Tropical Storm (Hurricane?  I don't know.. there was a lot of confusion with that amongst the student body apparently) Rafael crept over the island on Friday, pretty much at the start of volleyball.  Yeah, we were playing in the midst of some pretty heavy winds... but, I must admit, it adds a certain level of fun to the game when the wind knocks the ball out of the trajectory you had originally planned for it to travel along.  By the end of that evening, the rain began.  Nothing out of the normal for a rain storm out here, however.  Saturday was full of torrential rain and wind.  Then, the SIREN (emergency network through the school) messages started via text messages--"Flash Flood Warning!" "Remain off the roads!" and so on.  I swear some people take that as a challenge sometimes.  :P  My roommates both took that as their indication to flee West Farm--Jackie went to school and Dan trekked his way to Frigate Bay.  Well, there's a ghaut in the road about a block and a half from our house that floods with heavy rain.  Jackie, although worried with the rushing water, has a SUV, so she blew through it with no issue, minus the fear of being washed away.  Dan, who left a few hours later (once we lost power), just walked through it to get to campus and told me later that the water nearly washed him off the edge of the road, partly from the sheer force of the water, and partly from the rocks coming down the ghaut.  I elected to stay home with Lia and Reese (and Jackie's cats) despite the power outage.  It wasn't so bad--my laptop had 5-6 hours of battery power, and my Kindle had enough so I could read 3 books (two of which were for the Practice Management and Jurisprudence class).  I went to bed relatively early, once all my devices lost their battery power.

This is from a road looking towards the ocean... the two vans
are pushed along a bridge while they got caught in a flash flood.

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Woke up Sunday morning with no power yet.  It was nearly 15 hours before it finally came back.  (Although I must say that my house cleaned up fairly quickly, cause I was so bored.)  I took advantage of the power--washed all the towels that I had used to soak up water coming in through the porch door, took a warm shower (which was also quite difficult due to the low water pressure coming through the water main), etc.  Dan and Jackie came home for a bit... or at least until the power went out again.  In that interim, Jackie and I took her computer apart--her heatsink had fried the motherboard... things far beyond my capabilities in basic computer repair/maintenance.  Once the power went out later that evening, everyone went their own separate ways again--Dan went to Frigate Bay again (until the power came back later that evening) and Jackie went to work an ER shift at the school clinic.  As before, I sat at home with the animals and kept myself entertained and busy... and at least attempted to study for a little bit.

This is from the main portion of downtown, just on the
way to Port Zante.

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Monday was interesting--we got even more of those SIREN messages... including a wake-up phone call around 6:30 telling us that classes were still on.  So, we all went to class.  Crossing that ghaut was pretty terrifying--there were rocks the size of grapefruits coming down the 2-foot-deep river.  There were torrential rains all through class... we lost power multiple times (luckily the school has a generator), and, as an old friend from my Pine Banks days said:  "I love the ominous sounds of thunder while the professor is lecturing.  It's like a horror movie."  It's never a dull moment here.  By 12:30, we were sitting in Grand Rounds (7th semester presentations) when everyone's cell phones went off again.  Another SIREN message.  Campus was being closed at 1:00.  *sigh*  So, when the last group finished up, well, Kevin said it best:  "THIS IS NOT A SAFE PLACE (even though it should be one for students).  FLEE, FLEE FOR YOUR LIVES (all at the same time."  It was a mad dash to get off campus... and I'll admit, I was really worried I wouldn't get home with how urgent the messages sounded.  The ghaut was really no different... if anything, it was better since the rains had been letting up over the course of the day.  It was actually so clear on this side of the island that Bonnie, Karim, and I went grocery shopping... despite the half-flooded roads.  :P  Jen, on the other hand, wasn't so lucky--she lives on a dirt road, which had significant chunks of it washed away.  Well, the power was out by the time I got home again, but it came back relatively fast this time... so spent the afternoon studying.  Jackie came home not long after I did after I did my food shopping and took a nap for a bit (can't blame her after being on the overnight in the ER), but when she woke up... we pretty much lost power again.  We Ross students are pretty good at adapting--we invited Jesse, one of Jackie's classmates who lives a few houses down from us--to come by for tea and some Uno by candlelight, which also then included some Epidemiology quizzing since they have a test today.  On a random side-note, it's VERY difficult to tell the blue and green cards apart by candlelight.)

Life is pretty much back to normal now, although the National Hurricane Center is watching the development of another storm brewing out in the Atlantic.  On a good note, despite all the cars that got washed away and accidents and mess, I haven't heard of any deaths from the storm... so that's always a good thing.  We're all looking forward to the weekend--not only does it already feel like it's Thursday, but it's also midsemester break, so we'll have Monday off!  For me, this is a busy weekend if the weather cooperates--dinner for Bonnie's birthday, the Extra-Life 2012 Gaming Marathon, a paintball game, our usual bi-weekly gaming session, my birthday, and we might be squeezing in a birthday dinner for Heather as well.  Phew!  Somewhere in all that, I also need to study and would like to run through the ROSSie procedure again.

We had our second set of block exams last week--and boy were they tough compared to the first set.  Our Large Animal Medicine I and Small Animal Medicine II test averages dropped slightly, but were still around the 80% mark.  Small Animal Surgery, however, dropped by over 10%... and we had an 82% on the first block.  That means the class average was under 72%... just barely passing (as our pass grade is 70%).  I'm at least in a comfortable spot taking these figures into account!  Can't give up though--set #3 is coming up faster than we all would like (can't believe we're at midsemester already!)

Well, hope you enjoyed the update--but I must head back to studying.  I'm planning on using a blog post here on Saturday to update my donators on my Extra-Life marathon, so if you don't want gaming updates, you're welcome to check back in a week.  :P

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Semester 6, Week 3--Where Has the Time Gone?!

What was the last time I updated everyone on the goings-on down here?  Almost a month and a half or two months ago sound about right?  Sheesh.  I need to get better at that!

So, I passed 5th semester with flying colors and managed to pull my GPA up overall yet a little bit more--which now leaves me with 4 choices when it comes to choosing a clinical year:

  • Oklahoma State University
  • Louisiana State University
  • Purdue University
  • University of Illinois
Out of these, OSU is at the lowest of my list at the moment, but my GPA is high enough that I'm not excluded from any of these.  :)  More will come of this as time passes, I'm sure.

I went back to Boston for the break between semesters this time and spent some time traveling out to Ohio to visit some old friends, going to King Richard's Faire, going shopping at a REAL grocery store (Stop and Shop almost felt like a Target or Walmart to me!), and just getting my fill of the 'real life' back in America.

Two weeks passed far too quickly for everything that I had wanted to get done... but semester 6 started with a... rather eventful start.  Labs.  Oh, boy, do they bog you down with labs.  In the three weeks (and a few days), I've already had my ROSSie practice (a fake spay that we do on a sweatshirt model) twice, a lab to practice drain placements for surgical wounds, a bandaging lab, and asepsis practice.  And that's in addition to the 3-4 lectures per day. 

As for classes, the majority of them aren't too bad--Small Animal Medicine II, Large Animal Medicine I, Practice Management & Jurisprudence, and Small Animal Surgery.  With the exception of Large Animal Medicine I, the classes are interesting and I finally feel as though the last 2 1/2 years are making sense and fitting into place.  Horses... well, they break ALL the rules... quite literally.  

This semester, they introduce a new method of testing--the dreaded block exams.  Honestly, I didn't think it was too bad.  You're given an hour and a half to take 3 exams of about 20 questions each.  Yes, I ran close to time, but I didn't think it was any more difficult to study for them or anything like that.  At least it's 3 classes worth of tests... and not 4 anymore.  We only have 3 final exams this term too, so that's a plus!

Well, I think it's time to stop procrastinating for the evening.  See you next time.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Semester 5, Week 14--Where Did the Semester Go?

I... really have no words for how crazy busy this semester has been.  In this last week alone, we had a laboratory final for Anesthesiology, 2 communications exercises, tutor groups, and a Diagnostic Imaging laboratory.  The week before that, we had a practical physical examination for sheep, horses, and dogs.

I've been feeling very isolated from everyone in the US (even though most of it had been self-inflicted) and am counting down the days until this break.  I need some time on American soil and to visit my support network back up that way...

But, before I get to that point, I have the FinalsBeast to deal with:
* Monday:  Anesthesiology - 8:00-10:00am
* Tuesday:  Diagnostic Imaging - 2:00-4:00pm
* Wednesday:  Toxicology - 8:00-10:00am
* Thursday:  Small Animal Medicine I - 8:00-10:00am

And the following Wednesday, I'll be on a plane to JFK!

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Semester 5, Week 7--Midsemester Break!

For once, we had a true midsemester break!  No tests this upcoming week... so a chance to finally get some R&R in.  :)  Well, at least that was my hope--but with the way I keep my schedule, I was busy.

The Evil League of Evil--Bonnie, Jackie, Meri, Jesse, and myself.
Friday night was volleyball night, as usual.  Unlike the last week (which was an AMAZING win--everyone was in synch with one another and we were an unstoppable force), we didn't win.  Trent, Robert, and I had a nice chat with Dr. B, however, regarding professionalism, life in clinics, etc.  After several days in the past few weeks of wondering if I really want to do this as a career, that conversation was very helpful.  I don't know what it is, but during my live animal labs, I sometimes wonder if I really want the responsibility or if I'd rather just be a technician again.  (No need to worry--I have no plans on dropping out of the program... just the usual "growing pains," as Trent has told me.  Everyone goes through them.)  It's interesting, because as a technician, you want nothing more than to have more control, more understanding, and more of an ability to help, but as you begin learning more, it sometimes seems overwhelming.

I look intense!  ... or like a terrorist...
Saturday was BUSY!  The morning was filled with my class' paintball tournament.  Sixteen teams showed up  to play.  Unfortunately, the Evil League of Evil was wiped out in our first round, but the opposing team went on to win the tournament overall, so we felt somewhat better about the loss.  It was a BLAST despite coming out with 6 welts (even though it was a single-hit elimination)!  It's been years since I had played, and that made me want to get back into it.  Next semester, Team Awesomesauce will triumph!  We plan on a once a month practice session up to that point.  With it being a fundraiser for the class, Mike (the class clown), volunteered to dress up in a green man suit (a-la It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia) and have people pay to shoot 20 paintballs at him.  A hundred paintballs later, I think he must've been hit at least 25 times.  I'm surprised he could put up with that, honestly!  Overall, it was a good fundraiser for the first run--we earned about $2000EC for the class with it (a little under $800USD).

My knee.  3 shots in a row.  Ow!
Robert and Mia's birthdays were this week as well, so we went to Rock Lobster for dinner (they wanted the sangria).  Kristi and I made a very quick appearance--long enough for some appetizers--and then went off to Cayon-to-Keys Beach for leatherback patrols.  My team didn't see anything (sadly, yet again), but Kristi and the rest of the 7ths that were joining us got brought over to North Friar's to see a nesting female.  It's been one of the slowest seasons that Dr. Stewart has seen in the last decade... she's even considering ending the season early.  Not to mention, the hatching rates are really low this season.  :(

Sunday was full of sleep... at least for a bit.  Nerds Anonymous took a field trip out to see Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.  Taking it as an entity separate of the book, it was excellent... but it did take a lot of artistic liberties with the storyline.  Regardless, it was definitely a good movie.  I'd see it again.

Monday was a glorious day off.  Nerds Anonymous attempted to have a gaming day... a rather sizable one, but only 6 of us showed up.  Disappointing, but we made the best of a bad situation.  Koby, Jackie, Bonnie, and I played a 6 1/2 hour game of Arkham Horror.  6. HOURS.  We won, but DAMN!  Robert and Billy were playing random Wii games.  I was hoping to get to it at some point, but things happen.  Throughout the course of this, people were in and out of the apartment--I had a plumber fixing my toilet, an electrician looking at our water heater, and had to pick Jen up from the airport (I basically made her go home for midsemester break).  Busy, busy, busy.

... and here we are.  Tuesday.  Back in classes in... 5 minutes.  *sigh...

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Semester 5, Week 5--Doing Medical Stuff!

While this semester isn't initially very busy when you get the first schedule (which showed we were generally out of classes at noon), your personal schedule is quite different.  You get smaller group labs scattered throughout practically the ENTIRE semester.  To this point, I've had:  suturing labs (3 different ones, practicing different patterns and ties), phlebotomy, catheter placement, dog physical examination, sheep physical examination, radiographic positioning, anesthesia case studies, and ultrasound.  I'm sure I forgot something somewhere too!  I do like the hands-on aspect of this semester for the most part... even if my fingers swell from holding the surgical tools for hours on end... and I can't hit model veins very well at all... and even if the sheep are royal jerks.

On that note, I don't like sheep.  At all.  During the lab, we had to practice restraining the sheep on its butt ("rumping," I think it's called).  There are two ways you can do this.  Stand on the sheep's side and reach under its belly/neck and grab the legs closest to you and then swing the sheep onto its butt... or you can turn its head so it's looking behind it, and pull down on the flank as you spin to get it to sit.  Well, my sheep decided he wanted to buck while I was doing this, so I stumbled backwards as the sheep walked backwards on its hind legs in the same direction. If I didn't hit the fence, I would've been on my butt on the ground with a sheep on top of me.  Mister 495 also had horns... and when he decided he didn't want to go back into the pen, he headbutted my knee.  Jerk.

Classes are rather dry, but our instructors really try their best to keep us interested.  It's not the material that's boring, either... it's all clinically relevant.  It's just hard to stay interested sometimes.  :(  On that note, we're starting to see a shift within the class now--the ones that could cram and study book work very well are having a harder time with examinations... and those of us that struggled because we're hands-on or experiential learners are doing much better.  Any guess as to which category I fall into?  :P

Starting the clinical nutrition elective this week as well with Dr. Hammond.  All clinical cases so far.  Loving it... it's a great review of what we did in the first semester.

Next week is my group's canine anesthesia laboratory.  I miss those days at the clinic!  We have to turn in our drug protocol to the pharmacy this weekend.

Photo courtesy of Dr. Stewart's facebook wall.  Yes, that's her  IN the cloud of sand...
Leatherback season is REALLY slow this year.  I've only seen 6 turtles... 4 of them were all on one night last semester.  Seems we may wrap up in early July--which will give me weekends back again.

I think that's about it for the time being.  Gotta give my wrist a break, too... all this writing/typing has been hell for it lately.

Until next time!

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Semester 5, Week 1--Feelin' Like the Doctor

Fifth semester is AMAZING... well, at least for now, it is!  It feels like the instructors finally view us more like equals... or at least like a future veterinarian.  Classes are now case-based and we're looking at what sorts of presentations the different diseases will have in a clinical setting.  Laboratories are more hands-on and clinically oriented.  This is exactly what I've been waiting for!  At the same time, you really feel like you've learned a lot in the prior 4 semesters.

As for classes, we have:

  • Small Animal Medicine I - This is the most case-based one.  We're looking at symptoms, diseases, treatments, and prognoses.  It's tying everything together into what we'll be thinking about in a clinic.  Lectures are at least half case-studies and you start figuring out what's wrong with the patient.  Not to mention, we started with endocrine diseases, and it just so happens that Chester (one of my cats back home) was recently diagnosed with hyperthyroidism as well.
  • Diagnostic Imaging - This is all looking at x-rays and ultrasound.  It's tough because I was somewhat weak on anatomy, BUT it's great to review all that in a fun way--I LOVE solving puzzles, so I like trying to figure out what's wrong with an x-ray.  Again, it's very case-based, so I enjoy it.  In our lab yesterday, we took x-rays of one of the dogs and were looking at our technique.  Felt good being back in a clinical setting.
  • Anesthesiology - I did a lot of the anesthetic monitoring when I worked at the clinic back home, so it seems pretty... easy so far.  I hesitate to say that, but we've just been looking at the anesthesia machine, how it works, how to put it together and troubleshoot, and the monitoring tools associated with it.  
  • Toxicology - I'm most afraid of this class, as it's taught by Dr. Shokry again (the one that taught pharmacology), but it's definitely less abstract at least--it ties in the clinical presentations of various poisonings and toxicoses, so hopefully it won't be as bad.
  • Introduction to Clinics I - This one is all hands-on.  Clinical skills ties into this one, so we'll be working on suturing, phlebotomy (blood drawing), skin scrapings, intubation, etc.  Then we also have labs on how to do a physical exam on a dog, horse, and sheep.  The only thing I'm DREADING is the communications module in week 14, where we'll be recorded in a mock client consultation on video.  *shudders*
Other than that, I figured I won't be too involved in later semesters with clubs and everything, so I joined a few different ones this time:
  • AAFP (American Association of Feline Practitioners) - Same as before.  Only a member this time--much less stress... although Jackie, my roommate, is the new president, so I still help her out a lot.
  • Scuba Club - Just cheaper to go on dives.  ;)
  • VBMA (Veterinary Business Management Association) - I'm about 4 hours away from completing the business certificate program.  Woo!
  • SVECCS - I forget what it stands for, but it's emergency medicine... I figured the case-based discussions couldn't hurt to solidify everything we work on in Small Animal Medicine I.
  • IVAPM (International Veterinary Association for Pain Management) - Holistic club essentially turned into this one--they focus on chiropractic and acupuncture case management of pain.  Again, with surgery coming up in the next few semesters, I figured it's a good way to start thinking about this.
  • And I'm still a part of Ross University: Nerds Anonymous and Ross Community for a Greener Campus and will be now training someone to take over the tortoise volunteers and overseeing their care.  
I think that's good enough for an intro to the semester.  :)  Here's to hoping it's a good one!

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Semester 4, The Wrap-Up

Movin' on up yet again!  It was a nail-biter to the end (stupid pharmacology)... but I made it into 5th.  Still with the Greenies (I guess it has to be my lucky color or something).  Didn't do as well as I would have liked, but then again, who ever does during finals?

  • Epidemiology - B+
  • Clinical Pathology - B
  • Pathology II  - C+
  • Mechanisms of Disease - C+
  • Pharmacology II - C
Looking forward to this new semester... we start getting clinical finally!
  • Anesthesiology
  • Small Animal Medicine I
  • Diagnostic Imaging
  • Intro. to Clinics I
  • Toxicology
  • Clinical Nutrition (elective)

Monday, April 16, 2012

Semester 4, Finals Week

Other than the studying another day after another day after another day, not very much has been going on down here... minus the giant 8" centipede that Jen and I took out one night after studying.

On a more interesting note, the university is under "attack" (in the reputational way) by yet another colleague.  
Reader's Digest posted a list of the "Top 50 Things Your Vet Never Told You..." and #20 was appalling:
"20.  "Your vet may not have gotten into vet school!  Vets who can't get into traditional US veterinary programs due to bad grades and poor test scores often go to for-profit schools in the Caribbean, where, basically, if you can pay the tuition, you get in."  --A vet in California
The AVMA has also posted a response in defense of our school (link here).

I, like many of us down here, was outraged and posted my own reply to the article:

"I have worked alongside many great vets that have come from Caribbean schools, and am currently a student at Ross University myself.  Our education is no less challenging nor is our curriculum inferior to those at American schools.  As a matter of fact, our passing grade is a 70%, not a 60% like some American schools are!  We are held to just as high of a standard and don't take our oath any more lightly than our American colleagues.  We have just as much hands-on experience, if not MORE than some schools. 
What Ross provides for us students is a great opportunity to live and grow both personally and professionally with a wide array of experiences that we never would have had if we had attended schools in the US.  I would never have had the experience to work alongside the St. Kitts Sea Turtle Monitoring Network to help preserve the breeding population of leatherback sea turtles had I gone to an American school, for example! 
If #20 were true, the AVMA would not have accredited the university.  Accreditation implies that our institution meets or even exceeds the same standards that all accredited US veterinary schools are also held to.  There are even some schools in America that have limited accreditation status.  What I'd like to know is how the author of #20 feels about foreign graduates that have passed the PAVE or ECFVG (in addition to the NAVLE and their state boards) to get full licensure in the US if they have relocated to the States. 
I am proud to be a Ross vet student, and I am thankful for the opportunity that the school has provided me. I know many of us down here would agree! We're a dedicated, passionate bunch of students who have a lot to bring to the field of veterinary medicine, and I feel as though our commitment to the veterinary oath shows with the sacrifices we made in our own lives to get to this point."
And on that note, on to the finals freak-out, frantic studying phase:
* Monday:   Pathology II - 5:30-7:30pm
* Tuesday:  Epidemiology - 12:00-2:00pm
* Wedenesday:  Pharmacology II - 8:00-10:00am
* Thursday:  Clinical Pathology  8:00-10:00am

*panicpanicpanicpanic*


In that image, kitty = vet school... and, yeah, stress has been doing that to many of us.  ;)

Monday, March 5, 2012

Semester 4, Week 8--CHAOS ENSUES!

Well, hard to believe a month has flown by since I last had time (or energy) to update this thing... and I apologize.  I've been joking with my friends about what this entry would be like:
"Today I woke up... went to classes... went to the gym... went home and studied... and then slept. Tuesday, I did the same thing... and on Wednesday..."
For the most part, that is the life of a veterinary student.  That, wrapped with a crippling fear that nothing you do to prepare for exams is good enough--you study for hours, pull all-nighters, and still fail the exams.

Midsemester break was last weekend--and we had a wonderful 3 days off.  Saturday night, we went on a night catamaran trip out to Nevis.  By "we," I mean 20 of my closest friends down here.  Luckily we're Rossies and can make the best of bad situations:

  • We were told there would be a bonfire once we got to the beach.  We ended up toasting marshmallows for s'mores on a candle...
  • A friend almost got into a stranger's car... but luckily was around some of the rest of the group that advised her against that decision.
  • The battery on the boat died and we got stuck on the beach for an hour with a rather creepy rastafarian who wanted to flirt with all the women in the group.
Needless to say, I think I'm done with catamaran trips for the duration of my time on the island...

This long weekend also marked our "halfway day" in the curriculum.  WOO!

Our professors were quite kind to us the duration of the week and actually gave us Friday off as well, so we had two 3-day weekends in a row.  Well, they were kind in that respect... but exams have been rather difficult on us this semester so far... so let me just say I have a LOT of work for the finals.  

On Saturday, Lexi, Steven, Robert, Liamuiga, Gus, and I hiked up Mount Liamuiga--the volcano on the island.  It was a grueling 2 1/2 hours up to the crater and I wanted to quit on several occasions on my way up there (especially after slamming my knee into rocks multiple times), but Steven made a promise of a lobster dinner if I made it to the top.  And, that I did.  (Pictures forthcoming.)  According to DailyBurn, a 4 1/2 hour hike burns 2500 calories, so it's no wonder I ate everything in sight that night... and boy was that lobster dinner delicious--even more so because I didn't pay for it.  

Today, I was catching up on my blogs between classes (and procrastinating from studying some Mechanisms of Disease material despite our test being tomorrow), and came across this little gem on one of my favorite ones:  Veterinarians Behaving Badly.  It chronicled the story of a veterinarian who started treating a duo of dogs fresh out of veterinary school... and followed the family as it grew--from puppy to adult dog, with additions of human children into the household, and straight through to the end, 10 years later.  What struck me so poignantly about this post was at the end:
"We have this life, and ONLY this life. Enjoy it. Make the world better for yourself and the others around you. Heaven is not some mystical reward to be given to you in the afterlife. It’s an ideal, a dream, a goal. It’s something we all need to work together to MAKE for OURSELVES. Love well, love deeply, love many. Find humor. Find beauty. Find joy. SHARE it. Share your defeats and tragedies as well, for without sorrow there is no joy, and pain shared is pain halved. Smile, laugh, cry, dance. Live."
This is why we followed our dreams to come down here--to make the world better for ourselves and the animals that enrich everyone's lives.  This is why we're here, pushing our minds (and sometimes our bodies) to the limit.  This is why we're fighting through to the end.

And on that note, I'm going to study for tomorrow's exam.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Semester 4, Week 3--Life Takes a Turn...

The rock sure finds a way to beat you down emotionally and mentally sometimes... even with things other than school and life down here.

JoBeth left the island a few days before her birthday.  It was a very sad time for Jen and myself, as we lost a close friend to the rigors of veterinary school.  I have absolute faith that she'll find something to do with her life that will make an impact, though.  For those of you who know her--keep her in your thoughts--she undergoes surgery for a torn rotator cuff tomorrow morning.

The AAFP brought down Dr. Maza, a Ross University graduate that now works at Cornell, the week that JoBeth left.  It kept us busy, running to dinner with him every night and attending his lectures on spaying/neutering and feral cat management.  I have to admit, I had a few moments of thinking "OH CRAP!  I'M GOING TO BE DOING THAT SOON!?!" during his surgery talks, but it somehow seemed a lot less scary having a stronger understanding of anatomy than I did a year ago.

I also found out a week or so ago that a very close friend of mine in England has cancer and is undergoing radiation therapy for it.  Luckily, it's only stage 1 ovarian cancer, but it's still a scary fight for all of us involved.  I have the utmost faith in her to pull through, however--she's a very strong fighter although she doesn't like to admit it.

The school recently began offering a business certificate program through the VBMA (Veterinary Business Management Association), which is a 15-credit hour program that involves sitting in on lectures that fall within certain categories, like employee management or personal finance.  I figured it's the closest I can get to an MBA while down here, so it couldn't hurt--especially since I hope to open my own practice someday.

Bonnie, Robert, Jen, Mia, and I have all united to work on completing the P90x program this semester as well--we just finished week 3 and are almost into our "rest week."  Man, it's exhausting, regardless of HOW many times you've made it through the whole thing.

The only other really noteworthy bit of news was that Elvis, the owner of one of the main bars on the strip (the area where we play volleyball) was shot and killed this last week.  Volleyball was cancelled, and many of the students went to the bar to have a drink in his memory.  I may not have known him as well as some of the Ross students did, but he was always happy to be there when students were around.  He was one of the guys that made everyone feel welcome on the island and jumped out there to cheer on everyone.  Volleyball won't be the same without him...

I guess that's about it for the time being--so, until next time, keep my friends in your thoughts (or prayers if you're more apt to that).

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Semester 4, Week 0.5--And So It Starts... Again...

Study fun-time with Jobeth and Jen, now with
super-strong coffee and queso!
It was a rough nail-biter waiting for those exam grades to be posted, but I came out with three B's and one C (in pharmacology I) at the end, which means I made it on to semester 4!

Did you know that by the end of last semester, we lost power a total of 27 times with only 15 days as our longest stretch with power?  We made 93 days without a centipede sighting.  I'd be interested to see how this semester ends up, but this time we're also watching how many times the ATM on campus breaks as well.  (I'll have a picture of the new board up soon.)

I went home this break to see the family for the holidays--it was nice.  Busy and a bit too warm after spending 6 months straight down on the island, but nice.  I had a decent amount of things to bring back as gifts and needed to return with two bags despite telling myself I only needed the one.  :(  Honestly, it gets harder and harder to come back here each time. 

Nicholine moved on to her clinical year at Purdue, which left Jackie to move in.  She's a fun roommate so far--very laid-back.  I enjoy having her in the house... and (sorry, Nicholine... I mean no offense here) I've gotta say that having the big room is pretty nice.

Classes so far (although it's only day 2 of this term) are AWESOME.  There's a shift from not knowing much to being treated almost like an equal.  The instructors expect you to know so much already and it's amazing to see how far  you've come.

Sorry for keeping it short--I'm pretty drained tonight, and will have to see how my friends fare with their appeals tomorrow, so I need to get some sleep in, because I'm sure some will need consolation.  :/

See you guys on Sunday!