Friday, December 24, 2010

And that'll do it!

Well, here it is. I've anticipating writing this post not for the simple fact of writing it, but because it means that I'm done with my first semester of dental school! We had 12 tests our last 2 weeks of school, and I literally studied almost non-stop for 2 weeks except for a few hours I took off on a Saturday night. It was a crazy ride and I'm just so glad it's over. One strange thing I noticed was when I think back on the semester, it's hard to remember specific events. We did virtually the same thing every week for 15 or 16 weeks and it all just seemed to blend together. It's one of those things you look back on and think "wow, that was so long ago" but at the same time it feels like it was "just yesterday". Long story short, taking 25.5 credit hours will mess with your head.

I don't think I want to specialize. So naturally, grades are fairly irrelevant. For some reason, I couldn't make my self just "give up" during finals week. My thought was this: finals week is going to end at the exact same time whether I work like crazy or just settle for average grades. Needless to say, I went for it and worked like crazy and I'm glad I did. It was a wonderful feeling being done with school AND knowing I did the best I could. I think more than anything, it's that attitude that will define who I am as a dentist and a person, not the grades. If I had pushed myself that hard and not gotten the grades I wanted, that wouldn't have been the point anyway. It really wasn't about the numbers for me, but more so about proving to myself that I could do it and pushing my limits as far as they would go to see what I was made of. Must be something left over from all those football practices in high school or something, but that competitor in me just won't die. If there is one piece of advice I could give in terms of working hard, it would be this: just do your best as often as you can stand it. It's not about being better than anyone else, or getting higher grades, or being better in clinic. It's about taking YOU as far as you can go because at the end of the day, the only person you control is yourself, so don't settle for less than your full effort. The more you make hard work part of who you are, the more it will become a habit.


Well that's enough for my lecture, haha. Here is a quick rundown of my semester with a few tips that may help you guys:

Work hard. I talked about this a LOT already, but working hard will get you where you need to go and will let you prove to yourself who you really are.

Don't be afraid to make friends. You're going to be better off working together than splitting out on your own and trying to be the best. Some people may try this, but it's much easier and fun when you've got people going through it with you.

For those on the Air Force scholarship, make sure you get your reimbursements in ASAP. Don't wait around and make sure you are getting paid back for what is required! Don't settle for paying for small things that the AF would pay you back for, get paid for ALL of it. You earned the scholarship, so take advantage of it! (Example: I almost didn't send in a reimbursement for an $80 syllabus but I decided to anyway. I thought it was "just $80" and no big deal but I'm glad I just sent it in. It's silly not to, just get reimbursed for everything that you can!)

Don't argue with teachers. Just because you think you're right (and maybe you are) you are in professional school and so treat your teachers with respect. We had a few instances of people making comments in class that just blew my mind. Be respectful of those in charge, even if you don't agree.

Remember where you came from. Don't get too down when things aren't going your way, because there are lots of people (especially these days) that would kill for the chance to trade you places. You worked hard to get into dental school and remember how badly you wanted it. Don't get selfish and pouty when things aren't perfect. You're fortunate to be where you are, and if you do your work, you'll get out and be a dentist like all your classmates. Dental school may suck at times, but life could be much much worse.

You are being looked up to whether you know it or not, so act professionally. I think this is self-explanatory.

Respect the upper-classmen because no matter how awesome you think you are, they've been where you've been. Learn from them and listen to them and respect them. Regardless of your opinion of someone in the class above you, they've done more than you have to respect that.

Understand that your classmates have come from all sorts of places. I was one of the youngest in my class and many students were 2nd and 3rd time applications. Several had kids, about half were married or engaged, and several were in their late 20's and even early 30's. You're not in undergrad anymore where everyone is within 3 years of you, you're going to be dealing with all sorts of people, so be ready and understanding of others' situations. Just keep in mind that not everyone took your path to get here and not everyone will take your path to get out.

This is going to sound a little childish, but get involved! Just do something other than school because it will make you feel more a part of your new campus and your new dental school life. If the extent of your dental school experience is studying, you're not going to be very happy. Branch out and go do things!

Work hard all semester. Don't say "oh I can let this test slide" because in a month, that might not be true. You have to take advantage of every test and quiz so that if something does go wrong later down the line, you're not in a hole. Lots of students didn't work hard during the semester and that killed them during finals. If for no other reason, work hard in the semester to give yourself a good cushion going into finals week.



Well that's about all for now. For those interested, I ended the semester with roughly a 3.55, giving me a 3.475 overall (counting anatomy). I'm very happy with that and it was due in large part to my work during finals week. I sent in my reimbursement package for my loupes last week and should be getting the money for that in a couple weeks. The new schedule is official, so that means no COT next year. I think I may end up doing it after I graduate.

Hope you all have a Merry Christmas and as always, feel free to e-mail me with any questions about dental school or the Air Force scholarship!

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Almost there!

Can a month in dental school be totally un-memorable? Well I think I've found it and it's the month of November. This was by far the most average month I've had so far. I had no Air Force reimbursements, no truly difficult weeks, and really nothing super awesome (except my birthday!). I hate to break it to you all, but there's just not much to report from an Air Force perspective. I had some tests, did well enough, and am looking at (hopefully) a 50/50 split with A's and B's. I was seriously considering just doing enough to get B's in all my classes but my inner competitor came out last weekend and I got really motivated to study like crazy these next two weeks. I think it's a good thing because it can't ever hurt to have better grades. Besides, everyone else will be studying so it isn't like it's really going to benefit me to sit on the couch a little more. Might as well push it to the max! I've already gotten more B's than I did in 4 years of undergrad, so that was a bit discouraging, but I keep reminding myself that this is a whole different deal and it's my effort, not always my grades, that's going to make me successful.

We found out a few weeks ago that our schedules will be undergoing a massive overhaul beginning EITHER next summer or fall. For the incoming class, they will begin under the new system. As you all know (or at least now you will) my plan was to go to COT in the summer of 2011. If the new schedule takes effect this next summer, that will not be happening. We'll only have 3 weeks off, which is not enough time regardless of when COT beings and ends. So in all likelihood I may just move COT to 2014 after I graduate and stop fussing with it. I'm still disappointed I didn't just do it last year before dental school, but doing it after school has it's benefits too. I'll be a higher rank, it'll be fresher on my mind, and I won't run the risk of growing out of my clothes before active duty. Either way, it will all work out. As for the new schedule itself, the goal is to create a test block environment where we only take a few classes at a time, take their finals, and then move onto new classes; rather than taking 26 credit hours spread out over 4 months, this would mean taking about 6 hours at once for a month, and then 6 more, etc. It will hopefully lighten the burden and allow us to really sink our teeth into the material. They're also thinking about changing our clinics to make them less "requirement" oriented so there is less competition for patients and such, but I have yet to see a patient so I won't comment on this because, quite frankly, I don't know enough about it now to know how drastically it will change.

I did order my loupes yesterday, and I'm waiting on my school to write me a "proof of requirement" letter so the Air Force will reimburse for them. Our school tells us to have them, but it's not officially written anywhere so I have to have the school type up a letter so the Air Force won't think I'm asking them to buy stuff I don't need. for those interested, the Air Force (as of December 2010) covers $1,100 for loupes and $300 for a light attachment. That's a total of $1400, ad most companies have a student deal just under the (for example, my package with loupes and light run $1370). They don't really have individual prices in the package so they just write up the receipt for $1100 loupes and $270 light so I can get it all covered. For those wondering, I got the Designs for Vision black nike pounce frames with 3.5x magnification. (http://www.designsforvision.com/DentHtml/D-Frame.htm)

Finals are around the corner and I have 12 tests and 1 quiz in 9 straight school days starting this Tuesday. 5 this coming week with a quiz, and 7 next week. I'll be back after I get my grades and report on how my first semester went and let you all know how smoothly the loupes reimbursement goes. If my prior reimbursements with the Air Force are any indication, it should be no problem.

Oh, and I hear our spring semester is pretty light compared to the fall semester I'm in right now, so I've agreed to work at my old job tutoring just chemistry for 5 hours a week next semester. Should be no problem but we'll see how it goes!


Friday, October 8, 2010

Is that a light I see?

Well, the semester is almost half way over, and I can start to see the light at the end of the tunnel. I've had exams in all but 2 classes now (2 dental classes that have very few tests) and I'm sitting in a very good spot in all of them. I'm in the high B or low A range in all my basic sciences, and in the A range in all my dental classes. Odds are that is how it will end up in December when this craziness is over. One of the best decisions I made was to study study study like crazy the first month of school. It was a grind every day but I put myself in such a good position that I am feeling very little stress in any of my classes. I have significant cushion so that if anything crazy happens, I'll be just fine. I truly feel like the hardest part of the semester is over, because now I have a feel for all my classes and luckily I did well at the beginning and should be able to improve or stay the same if necessary.

As for the Air Force, nothing has changed since my last post. I haven't sent in any reimbursements or anything so nothing new there.

Here are a few tips I have for the first part of dental school that might be helpful for anyone applying right now and wondering what it's like:

- You will be taking an insane amount of classes. Keep in mind that none of the material is any harder than it was in undergrad, it's just much more. You must prioritize. Waiting until the day before to study for a test worked in undergrad, but here, you'll need to study well in advance. Not because it's hard, but because you have 1000 other things to study for.

- Study HARD right out of the gate. Even if you don't think you want to specialize, making good grades early will only make your life easier. It's much better getting an A on a test and having room to fall later on than getting a C and knowing you've got to keep fighting just to stay where you are.

- Have a plan for every day. When I go to bed every night, I've already looked at my schedule for the next day and I know exactly what I will be doing. Now I don't micromanage every second, but I know that "I'm going to skip physiology and study for this quiz, then go to biochemistry... etc., and once I get home at 5:30 I'm going to watch TV for a while until 6:30 and study until 11". If I give myself structure, then I'm not flying by the seat of my pants every day trying to remember what needs to get done. It makes days less stressful because I know I'm not forgetting something.

- BE A TEAM PLAYER. This is the biggest thing by far. It is critical that you get with a good group of people that you can study with and you need to be willing to share what you know in exchange for what other people know. We have systems where people will make notes for a certain class, someone will set up online flashcards for it, another person will type up questions for this or that. It's a huge burden lifted when you feel like part of a team rather than just 1 out of 56 students trying to survive.

- Have fun! You need to do fun things that bring you joy and not get so focused on school. Keep everything in perspective and remember that everything will turn out just fine. Take time to play basketball, go to concerts, go our to eat, and normal stuff. Yes, you will be much busier with school, but staying sane is just as valuable as anything.

That's all for now... probably headed off to bed and then a big day of studying tomorrow!

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Getting up to speed

Well, if you've been keeping track of my other posts, you'd know that I'm a few weeks into fall semester now. Anatomy ended back in early August, and I began fall semester exactly 1 month ago. So far, everything has really been great! I've made a lot of friends in my class and we all seem to be working together and helping each other out a lot. This is making it much easier, not just from a grade standpoint, but also just from a sanity standpoint. It's much easier to get through the day when you feel like you're part of a team rather than doing this alone.

Switching gears a bit, you may recall that I scored decently on my first anatomy exam. A C on the practical and a B on the written test. I ended up getting A's on both for the final and received a high B in the class. Well, as it turns out, that first C I made still holds the record for lowest grade in dental school so far! I made a B on a quiz, an 88 on two tests, and everything else has been an A! It seems like I just needed to really get back in the swing of things and remember how this whole school thing worked... I think I've got it figured out.

One of the hardest parts about studying in dental school is feeling overwhelmed. That's no surprise really when you're in 25.5 credit hours in one semester. With so many classes comes so many tests and quizzes. You really have to sit down and make a list of what needs to get done, decide what's most important, and do that first. It can be difficult at times, but you've got to make yourself do it. Another thing about studying is that it just doesn't work to study everything when a test gets closer. You almost literally have to study each night that which you learned in class earlier in the day. It's crucial to make sure you at least understand it all early enough that you can ask questions before a test rolls around.

As for the Air Force, not much has changed here. I've only sent in 1 more reimbursement since my books and it was paid for with no problems. They're still, by my measurement, the fastest e-mailers on the planet. It's a really pleasure to not only have a financial burden lifted, but for the people doing it to be so helpful and professional.

Well, I'm just plugging along. I'll try to update within the next month again, even though this right here is probably going to be the story until December.

Maybe something crazy will happen that I can share.

As always, don't hesitate to look around on here or e-mail me questions!

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Stage 1: Complete

Well, I did it! Today I took my anatomy final and I am officially done with my first class of dental school. It was a bit weird because I've pretty much been doing nothing but anatomy for a bit over a month so it seemed to come to a very abrupt end. I don't have my scores from my test yet, but I'm almost 100% certain that I'll end with a B in the class. I needed a 98-100% to get an A, so I can bet that didn't happen. We start up again August 18th will our fall classes, so I have a small little break and I hope to let of some steam and just hang out (and maybe study ahead?) until then.

A quick word about grades for everyone...

I was the kind of guy that HATED getting B's in college and I managed to stay in the A range all but twice. In dental school your mindset has to change a little because it's just not the same game anymore. Not only are your classmates far more intelligent/hardworking than your peers in undergrad, there is more material in less time and it's often more difficult. You've made it to dental school, and now all you have to do is pass to become a dentist. If you get bent on getting A's, you'll kill yourself trying to get them. Now, with that, you need to do your VERY BEST to get good grades if your intent is to specialize. As another side note, getting a C is alright, but odds are you know much less than people making A's and B's and thus, theoretically, they'll be a better dentist. In reality though, just relax and do your best. Remember, your best is ALWAYS good enough!

My 3rd reimbursement came in the other day (for health insurance) as well as my 2nd stipend. All of my tuition/fees for the fall have been deferred and everything is still running unbelievably smoothly. I had my doubts coming into this thing, but I'm truly blown away with how great the Air Force has been. I just e-mailed out a reimbursement for my fall semester books so I'll keep you all updated on how that goes. So far, it looks like it's taking roughly 20 days to get money from a reimbursement from the time I send it to AFIT and the time the money appears in my bank account.

(AFIT stands for Air Force Institute of Technology. They are my point of contact while I'm on scholarship. In other words, they handle everything other than my stipend stuff)

Off to do a whole lot of nothing for a while!

Saturday, July 17, 2010

And so it begins

Well, I've got my first 3 weeks of dental school under my belt and it has certainly been an interesting experience. One of the things that surprised me most was how young I was compared to my classmates. I came to dental school straight out of college but most (and when I say most, I mean about 45 of the 60) have taken at least 1 or 2 years off, probably half are re-applicants, and many are in their late 20's or early 30's. This really surprised me because I had always assumed it was normal to go from college to dental school. I feel very fortunate to have made it this far so early in my life.

Another thing that I've been doing is my anatomy class. We take anatomy in the summer (from about July 1 to August 5) so it's pretty crazy. We got quick lectures on arms, legs, and back, but will only be tested on material covering the thorax, abdomen, pelvis, head, and neck. Our first test was a few days ago (thorax, abdomen, pelvis) and so far I only have my results from the lab practical. It was a standard dissection lab where we rotate through and identify structures on a human body. I've never been good at this, I much prefer the more "problem solving" type learning rather than memorizing type stuff and I ended up with a C on this part. I was a bit shocked at first because it had been about 2 years since I made a C on a test. One thing I remember coming into dental school was all the students really emphasized the fact that grades are not the most important thing in school (unless you intend to specialize) and I'm still coming to terms with this. Not that it's ok to do poorly all the time, but that you just have to accept what you get and move on because when it comes to it, you'll be a dentist regardless. I hear this our most difficult class the first year so I'm sure everything will be fine. I'm glad I got that first test out of the way because now I know what worked and what didn't when trying to cram a huge amount of information in my brain for a test in just 8-10 days. Besides, I feel better about the biochemistry/neuroanatomy, etc. type classes coming up because I've never been much of a 'lab' guy. I'm ready to start doing some dentist stuff! I'm sure it will all work out, and I feel much better about the written portion of the test that we took that same day. Still waiting on the results for that part, I'll tweet that in a day or two when we get the scores. Hoping for an A!

As for the Air Force HPSP, all of that is going well. I got a reimbursement rejected last week for not giving adequate proof of who my insurance was purchased from, but I plan to e-mail a credit card statement in a few days which should clear that up with no problem.

I finally got a regular stipend payment on the 15th of July, and it was exactly what I expected. It was $1030 (half of the monthly $2060) minus some taxes. Came out to about $930. One thing I have loved about this experience is how little I've had to do. I literally had to do nothing to get the school and the Air Force on the same page, the Air Force handled all of that for me. I have already verified that my bursar tuition/fees were covered by the Air Force and I have had absolutely no hiccups with the finances at all. More importantly, the Air Force treats me with as much respect as I treat them, and I take this relationship very seriously. It's great to have such an organized and professional group of people on your side. I couldn't be happier with my decision up to this point.

As you might have seen, I haven't done COT yet but will be going next summer. Just a reminder for anyone looking into what that's like. I'll let you know in a year!

More on that really quick. If you are selected on a 4-year scholarship, you're expected to go to COT before your 1st year unless you have a scheduling conflict with school. Well I did have a minor (it was an informal welcome dinner type thing, not nearly as critical as I had expected) conflict and got COT moved, but in hindsight, I wish I would have gone to COT this summer before school. I think I would have felt more like a part of the Air Force team and it would have been a good kickstart to dental school. I also loved having the time off, but right now, part of me wonders if waiting on COT was the best move. I'm sure it's not a big deal either way, however, it would have been nice to get paid a few thousand $ for that and feel more like a part of the Air Force.

That's all for now... I'll probably update again when anatomy is over around August 5th! School starts up again on August 18th (weird timing... I know) so I'll have a little break before my ~25 credit hours come crashing down on me.

Don't hesitate to e-mail me if anyone out there has questions about the program or dental school!

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Reimbursements and the days ahead...

A lot has happened since my last blog post a few months ago, and a lot is about to come my way. I'll go one by one, starting with the Air Force stuff, and then narrow down to some odds and ends I've been doing. Then I'll close with what's to come... enjoy!


First off, the Air Force.

2 things I need to cover here. For those awarded a 4-year scholarship, Commissioned Officer Training (COT) is supposed to happen the summer before their first year. For 3-year scholarships, COT happens after the last year. For me being on a 4-year, mine was supposed to be this summer. However, the dental school I'm attending starts so early (I'll talk about that soon) that COT would have ended too close to the start of school so it was deferred to next summer, between my 1st and 2nd year. So you'll have to wait another year to hear all about that!

Now about reimbursements and dealing with AFIT (Air Force Institute of Technology, where the people you'll be in contact during your scholarship work, located at Wright-Patterson AFB in Ohio). Let me say that dealing with AFIT has been one of the easiest, quickest, and overall amazing experiences I've ever had. The people working there are extremely fast at responding to e-mails, accommodating my needs, and making things absolutely clear. It truly has been a joy to have my questions answered so quickly and to deal with such professional people. One of the best parts is about reimbursements. When I was awarded the scholarship, I was under the impression that I would need to mail my reimbursement packages to the Air Force base, which would be a big pain, and if anything was wrong, I'd have to mail it in again. Well all those worries went away when I was informed that reimbursement packages can be submitted by e-mail! It was such a relief, because they respond so quickly to my e-mails, I could get almost immediate confirmation that my package was accepted or what needed to be altered. Huge weight lifted off my shoulders. For those that are wondering what a 'reimbursement package' is, it's fairly simply. If I buy something the Air Force will pay for, lets use my textbooks as an example, then I go buy the books and then assemble what's known as a reimbursement package. A reimbursement package is simply 4 things, proof of requirement (I have to prove that my dental school makes me have what I'm asking to be paid for), proof of purchase (basically a receipt or a credit card statement), an AFIT form 31 (this is where you list everything you are buying and total it up for the AF), and an EFT form (a form where you verify who you are with SSN and signature and give the AF the bank account # where you want them to direct deposit your money). All in all, reimbursements are much easier and smoother than I could ever imagine, one of many reasons I am very happy with my choice so far! My first reimbursement was submitted by email around May 22, and my account had the reimbursement money in it on June 15. Only about 3 weeks! I was very impressed.


Secondly, about what I've been up to since my last post.

I went and paid for my scrubs! Cost me about $250 and the Air Force actually doesn't cover the whole cost of that, but it's enough! They cover basically everything else in full.

I got health insurance through the dental school which the Air Force will pay for too, awesome!

I finally got my military ID and have gone over to Tinker a few times. It's pretty weird still to think I'm in the military because I haven't really done any 'military' type stuff yet.

I think I've got all the teeth I need. I almost had 100 at least check and I've got a bit more than that so I'm sure I hit my mark. I hear we don't need them until spring anyway so I'm considering the possibility of continuing to collect them this fall.

Class starts for me on June 29, so I've got all my anatomy books ready to go. We take anatomy by itself from June 29 to about mid-August, so it's going to be pretty intense. Once it hits mid-August, anatomy ends and we start in on our normal 24-25 credit hour schedule... ahh!!!



For now, that's all I can remember. School starts for me next Tuesday... wish me luck!

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

waiting...

Well, not much has been going on this last month. I should be getting my military ID soon, so I'll be able to head over to the base and get some tax free shopping whenever I decide I need something big enough to justify getting it tax free! Which will probably be everything.

Anyway... I'm required to collect 100 intact human teeth for dental school and I believe I'm almost there. About 2 weeks ago I went out to all the offices (4 total) that I dropped jars off at and had the following count at each one: 4, 4, 20, 45. So I took the jar with 45 home with me (the solution was pretty murky), emptied it out, put them in my own little jar at my house, and ran it back over to them the next day. I left the other 3 at the offices because the solution was still clear and there was no reason to waste a trip home and back just to unload some teeth. I also have a jar at a local free clinic with about 12. So the tooth quest continues...

Other than that, I'm just waiting a few more days for that 60 day mark to hit so I can get some stuff taken care of so the Air Force will reimburse me. Oh, and I may need about $800 of work done on my car... luckily I have a pretty good job right now and I'm blessed to have a car as it is. So despite the big bill that is staring me down, I'm just smiling and plugging along.

Should be hearing from me again in a couple of weeks at the latest...

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Finding all my ducks... and getting them in a row.

Well I haven't posted in about a month... but seeing as no one is probably reading this right now, I think we'll all survive...

I took my oath of office on March 5th so I am officially a 2nd Lieutenant in the United States Air Force! I don't feel very official yet, probably because I don't yet have a military ID (hopefully in a month!) and haven't really done any "military" things yet. Speaking of military things, on the 4-year scholarship, they "require" you to attend COT during the summer before dental school. I had mine deferred to the summer between 1st and 2nd year because I have an orientation thing for dental school that was the same day that COT was set to end this summer. So for those of you wondering if you can change your COT date around, the answer is yes. To an extent. If I didn't have this legitimate reason to move it, I would have, in all likelihood, been in Alabama at COT this coming summer and missing the last week of my job... not good. Luckily I will be able to work the final week and hit up COT between my first and second year, giving me one last summer of salvation before school. For those on a 3-year scholarship, COT will be tacked on after your 4th year. So you'll graduate, go to COT, and be off to the Air Force!

Here are some other things I have been up to lately...

I got my scrubs ordered! Our class, the great class of 2014, will have hunter green scrubs. There are far worse colors than hunter green to be stuck with for 4 years. In fact, I think hunter green is probably the best color we could have gotten in my opinion... I really like that color.

I have to get a CPR certification for dental school (CPR with Basic Life Support for Healthcare Providers, aka BLS) and I plan on doing that sometime in June just before school starts. The certification through the American Heart Association expires every 2 years (as opposed to every year like some others, for example, the Red Cross) so I checked the 2009 school schedules to make sure my certification will extend beyond my 2nd year so I will have a gap with no school when it expires.

I also recently got my vaccination history from my pediatric doctor and was lacking 2 minor things which I got taken care of a couple days ago.

I had my final transcripts mailed off to dental school this morning... since I graduated in 3 1/2 years, I don't have to wait around for grades to be posted in May (since I graduated this last December) because I'm not in school right now. So bonus for me and my sanity.

One other thing that is slightly irritating is that to be reimbursed through the Air Force, my required items must be purchased within 60 days of the start of my scholarship. For a 4-year guy like me, this means the start of school in late June. That's not a HUGE deal, but it did require some delaying of payments with the scrubs company (who were very nice about it and helped me out a ton) as well as some potential little things that may not get covered (vaccinations, etc.). Not terrible, but a bit annoying. Obviously I have yet to send in a reimbursement form but hopefully when I do my first one that will go smoothly.

Other than that, I'm just waiting for an updated book list from the school so I can go ahead and purchase thousands of dollars in books! How exciting... I know...

As a final note for anyone who is interested... I have yet to determine where I will be living for my first year of school. Possibly with my dad which is preferable in terms of $. Stay tuned...



I'll try to be more diligent about keeping up with this so that people referring to it years down the road will have a better idea of the steps I have been taking with the start of dental school just over the horizon.

Monday, February 22, 2010

The Oath

So today I went out to the State Capitol of Oklahoma to check out some places that I might be able to take my oath for the Air Force HPSP. My recruiter told me I just have to have a place with an American flag and an Air Force Officer (which he's going to work out for me) so I wanted some place neat and memorable and I think the State Capitol building would be really neat.

I've been looking into the Commissioned Officer Training material a bit and I'm hopeful that my schedule will work out to allow me to go to COT this summer (May-June). I'd like to get that under my belt before dental school so I don't have it looming at the end of my 4 years, although I've heard it's just fine either way.

Once COT gets closer, I'll be creating and updating the COT page. I've found lots of great information on the internet but it seems to be scattered in several locations. Hopefully when it's all said and done I'll have lots of great first hand experience information to pass along to those looking at the HPSP scholarship or COT in general.

Since I haven't mentioned it yet, I'll talk about what I'm doing this 'semester' since I'm not in school.

I currently work as a high school math and chemistry tutor for a few kids in the area. My dad is friends with a lady who started her own tutoring company a few years ago and had told my dad she was looking for a new tutor. Lucky me! I was looking at the possibility of waiting tables (again...) and I'm much happier with this job. It's a shame that my favorite job to this point in my life is a job that will only last a few more months but all good things must come to an end.


I'm off... hopefully I'll get some time to work on these pages quite a bit this week!

Monday, February 15, 2010

The good old college days

College was (as it is for most) a time of immense change. As I left off in my earlier post, I left high school thinking I wanted to be an architect and came into college thinking maybe an architect, engineer, or doctor. All of them sounded like quite lofty goals, and I had no idea what was coming my way...

Freshman year, my first class (ever) was engineering calculus. About 30 minutes of sitting in that class scared the heck out of me and I decided to drop it and just forget engineering. Seriously... I dropped my first college class ever. Once again, math was my barrier and I wasn't willing to jump over it. So I switched into thinking about medicine, my other idea when I came into college.

That first semester, I also took a class called "Intro to Health Professions", which is what really turned me from medicine to dentistry. I heard a dentist come in and talk about how he liked the fusion of medicine and detail work (the kind of detail work that my architecture/engineering style mind loved to do). So I started going to some Pre-Dental Club meetings and next thing you know... I was hooked.

I met an orthodontist at Pre-Dental Club named Dr. Revels and he was a life-saver for me. I shadowed him quite a bit and he ended up writing one of my letters of recommendation when I eventually applied to dental school. He also was a big reason I pursued the Air Force HPSP (check the top of the page for more details on what that is) scholarship for dental school.

I made sure to keep up my grades, and suffered only 1 B (intro to psychology... WHAT?!) so I was on the right track.


Sophomore year, I hit the dentistry thing at full speed. I was elected as the Vice President of Communications of my fraternity and Secretary of the Pre-Dental Club. I also managed all A's through fairly rigorous science courses. My main focus this year was expanding myself. I tried to not just focus on grades but also on volunteering, leadership, etc. I kept up with my shadowing (for those that don't know what this means, check out the 'Pre-Dental Process' tab up top) and made sure I was taking the right classes. I started to understand the amount of work it was going to take to get into dental school and I soon found out that studying was going to be an every day thing. As I'll explain later, it certainly paid off.

Another thing I started doing during this year was taking summer, december, and may intersession classes. I didn't always NEED them (in one case, with Organic Chemistry 1, I actually did need it ASAP and took it summer between Soph and Junior yr.) but I took them just because I had to have them eventually and it gave me something to do. This eventually let me graduate early, which I'll discuss later.

Overall, this was sort of my 'plug away' year. I expanded my horizons and got involved with lots of different things and hit them all at full steam. I had managed to come away with all but 1 A freshman year and nailed a 4.0 both semesters of my sophomore year. As I would find out shortly, however, grades and leadership weren't enough to get into dental school... during my Junior year, I met the giant DAT monster.


Junior year, my classes were even harder... but I was more prepared to handle them. Despite this, I wound up with another B (Biochemistry) and ran for office again in my fraternity (this time, a relative downgrade to 'parking chair'... which was no fun at all) and in Pre-Dental Club (an upgrade here, to president!). So with my leadership rocking along and my grades holding steady, I faced a foe that tested me to the core.

In October of my Junior year (before I was elected to my new offices in December) I took a practice DAT for free with Kaplan. There are lots of these available, check out 'Pre-Dental' for links in your area. I scored a meager 15 but it was enough to convince me that I had the base knowledge required to shoot for an early try... my goal was to study over Christmas break and take it just before I went back to school in late January. A lofty goal indeed. For a breakdown of the DAT and how to prepare for it, go up top to the 'DAT' section.

Long story short, I did well enough to be pretty happy with my score (that is, after I freaked out 3 days before I was supposed to take the test, moved it back a week, got sick, had my car die the morning of the test... you know... the usual).

So there I was. Grades where I wanted them, lots of leadership and shadowing, and a solid DAT score. Now for the hard part... actually getting in to dental school.

Side note: I actually discovered that I could graduate early from all of the summer/intersession classes I took. Fantastic! This would end up cutting my Senior year into a Senior semester.


Summer between Junior and Senior year... this was when all the applying went down. I applied to USC, OU, Marquette, Nova Southeastern, and Creighton. I had very good reasons for each (in a way...) and I was happy with my choices. I pretty much spent the summer working and getting all my application stuff together as well as getting my letters of recommendation together...

Oh, and this was the time I started seriously looking into the Air Force HPSP.


Senior Year... Um actually, this turned out to be more like a half year, like I said earlier. This was the tail end of me being president of the Pre-Dental Club which was a great experience. I took my capstone class, as well as some other classes, and finished up with my college journey! But what about dental school?...

In October, I got an interview request from both Nova and USC... I pushed my Nova interview from mid-October to Dec 18 (in hopes that OU would take me on December 1) and I had no choice but to go out to USC when they offered so I got a nice little mid-semester trip to LA! OU got in touch with me in November and I went to that interview in early November.

On December 1, I got an e-mail from the OU College of Dentistry telling me I was accepted to dental school! My brain let out this massive sigh of relief that it had been holding back for the last 3 years and I promptly withdrew my application from all other schools once my deposit at OU was paid a few weeks later.

Around the end of my semester, I got a job as a high school math and chemistry tutor with a lady that is friends with my dad. I must say, it was the luckiest thing that happened to me because I was looking at possibly waiting tables again for a whole 6 months from January to July... and I just wasn't too excited about it.

(I also got accepted to the 4 year Air Force HPSP in early February 2010... I know that's not really Senior year, but we'll count it.)

So I'm accepted to dental school, accepted to the Air Force HPSP, and tutoring about 20 hours a week...



And that is where I am now... so read on and see what's going on with me right now!



Thursday, February 11, 2010

From birth to college

Here is a quick rundown of my journey to college...

From my birth in 1987 to the end of high school:

From when I was born to about 4 or 5 years old, we lived in a house in Summit Place in OKC, OK. We then moved to a new house... in the same neighborhood... and were there for many many years...

In elementary school, I was the smart kid who played soccer every single day at recess. I was always very small and fast, and that worked to my advantage quite nicely on the playground. I remember wanting to be an astronaut when I grew up but that didn't happen. I heard astronauts had to be good at math and I wanted no part of that.
My most vivid memory from elementary school was when my kindergarten teacher sat me down and had a talk with me after I got caught stealing 'tickets', the currency of choice in a kindergarten class.
I was also in a Farm Fresh commercial when I was in kindergarten... oh the good old days...

As for middle school, this is my super awkward stage. I was pretty shy and just sort of weird, but I guess it all worked out. I had a massive growth spurt in 7th grade but sadly that was about all the growing I've ever done. I grew quickly and it gave me some knee issues, but I managed. I quit soccer before 8th grade to pursue football. My new dream: play in the NFL.
My most vivid memory from middle school was during PE class in the morning of September 11, 2001. They called off PE for the day and let everyone watch the news for a couple hours. It was the most unbelievable thing I had ever seen and I'll never forget what it felt like to watch those towers fall.

In high school, things pretty well went according to the generic 'high school kid' template. I played football, had a few girlfriends, and spent far too much time watching TV and eating. High school football probably had the biggest impact on me because it showed me what working hard over a long period of time can bring you. It made me appreciate doing something for the long-term rather than just doing it for instant success.
My most vivid memory from high school was when I tore my ACL days before our first scrimmage sophomore year. I had to sit out the entire year and had to play with a knee brace for all of my Junior year. This pretty much cut out all hopes of the NFL thing, so I refocused again. This time, I decided I wanted to be an architect... but as I'll explain later in the college post, that didn't really pan out either...




The reason behind all of this...

Well this is my first post, hopefully the first of many, and I'm doing this for a few reasons.

First of all, I do a bad job of keeping stuff recorded in some way and it will be really interesting to have this to look back on in the future.

Second, I have searched high and low on the internet over the past year for things that took me far too long to find. So I figured if someone does a google search for something I've blogged about, they'll have a first hand account instead of something more generic. Example: I would rather hear about someone's journey through P90X rather than snippets on the P90X website (and I've managed, over time, to find some!).

Third, I hope that this will inspire people to do exactly what they want to do. Throughout my life (and I'm sure this applies to the other 6 billion people out there), I have been guided from one point to another. Where I grow and learn the most, however, is when I decide to do something on my own, even if at first it seems like a complete failure. I plan to post fairly often (once a week too optimistic?) about what I'm up to and I will do my best to uncover the true nature of why I do (and did) what I do so maybe someone out there will be able to understand themselves from what I go through.

So this blog will talk about specific things I've done and advice I have about it, as well as just general "this is what's going on" sort of posts...

This first week, I'll chronicle what I've done to get to this point in my life, and see where it goes from there...