Sunday, September 19, 2010

Preparing for our first test-week...

Once upon a time, at midnight on a Saturday night, a girl sent out a study guide when she should have been out with her friends. This is the beginning of the story of a medical student, tonight = me. :P

The past two weeks have been some of the biggest roller coaster days of my life, and that's saying a LOT! I go between being stressed, impressed, intimidated, and confident at the drop of a hat (where does that phrase come from???) and can't quite keep up with it all! Each day has more up time than the last, however, so I'm counting on the pattern continuing!

As the title of this post suggests, we have our first test next week. But, before I get to that, I want to update on a few things from the past two!

The short week after Labor Day ended up being a total life-saver for our sanity. We were gasping for a break and so it happened. Somehow, just like in undergrad, I managed to fill up my time. Monday Tuesday was a full day of class with my first clerkship in the afternoon. I think we must have chosen the wrong time to come, however, because we ended up not seeing any patients... I have spoken with the course director, but more on this later.  After an evening anatomy lecture on shoulder surgery, in which I answered a question (this is a big deal :) ), came a speech by the President-Elect of the AMA, Dr. Peter Carmel. He was a good speaker, but not having been back to my room since 8:15 in the morning meant that I left a bit early -- around 8pm!

Wednesday passed rather unnoticed, which solidified my love for Wednesdays, but Thursday was another long day, with class in the morning and anatomy lab in the afternoon. I learned the name of my favorite muscle -- the brachioradialis -- sometimes called the "beer drinking muscle"! Just kidding! But my professor sure thought he was funny when he told us that. I was delirious from all the phenol stench and laughed hysterically so that he thought I was suffering from overuse of my brachioradialis... :P He then launched into some description of the arm muscles based on Greek mythology, after which my whole group turned to each other and asked if anyone knew what he was talking about... Oh well, at least one thing stuck! My anatomy group is great and many other groups have expressed jealously that we're always laughing and having fun during lab. Hopefully we're learning something, too! Oh! And my  professor ordered some nice step stools for me, and kindly suggested I carry one with me during practical exams... ces't la vie! That night I attended a lecture on opthalmology and vascular surgery, for two different interest groups. I wanted to check them all out. I ended the night with an audition for the Bard Hall Players show Crazy For You. I got the part of "Sheila", who is one of the chorus of "Follies Girls", and part of a trio. I just found out that I will be singing the low part of my trio, when I've only ever been a soprano 1 or 2... This should be interesting! It's already been fun and we've had a read-through. The two male leads are played by people in my class, one who was on Broadway, and another who is a big-time opera star! WOW!

Friday night I branched out from my normal group and made some new friends. It was a lot of fun and I'm looking forward to planning some Halloween festivities with a few of them for our class in Bard Hall! Saturday I studied, found out I had been nominated for Class President and Curriculum Chair, and attended two different parties! One was in the Towers, which is where I will be living next year (hopefully!) and the other ended up at Canal Room. It was fun, but really crowded and a younger, rowdier crowd than I was prepared for. They were playing 80s rock, so that was fun! Sunday was spent recovering, studying, and obsessing about whether to run for student government positions...

This week was VERY busy. It started out with a bang, too! On Monday night, I attended the cocktail party of one of the admission's interviewers, Dr. George Lazarus -- he did not interview me, but he is the father of a guy I graduated with. He and his wife, Shelly Lazarus, provided me with one of the most glamorous experiences ever! The fancy cocktail party on the Upper East Side was attended by a majority of his interviewees that attend Columbia across the years. His house is GORGEOUS and he and his wife were so welcoming and sincere. They assured all of the first-years that they would be a resource for us if we ever needed them! I became closer with one of the girls in my class and even met a third year from Milwaukee, though he plans to stay out east.

Tuesday was highlighted by the visit of one of my best friends, Jennifer Landau! She was my mentor and idol all through undergrad, but now we've switched positions; she is applying to medical school right now. She was in NYC for two interviews, though neither for Columbia. It was SO nice to see her, despite having to duck out for a few meetings. I just found out that she will be visiting again soon because she has received an interview here at P&S! She left early Wednesday morning from Bard to attend another interview, but I feel like she shouldn't bother. She will definitely be here with me next year!!! :P

Thursday was another long, 12-hour day. It was supposed to end with "Beerchus" the beer equivelant of "Bacchus", the wine tasting club I attended the first week, but I ended up feeling like I needed to get some work done instead. There's always next time, and I wasn't the only first year to back out. Before that, however, I attended a meeting for "Student as Patient as Professor", an initiative by a second year student which has been carried over since last year, to have a few first years share their personal stories of being a patient or caregiver. I told them I didn't feel like I had many lessons to teach my classmates, but they though that was interesting in itself, so I will be participating. I also met another girl who had lymphoma, which was cool. She had T-cell with only 4 months of treatment, but found out while she was studying for the MCAT. I thought mono was bad!!!

Friday was a final, long day again. I didn't return to my room from 8am to 8pm, only this time it was unplanned. I stayed out for lunch so we could get an early start on non-dissecting session for anatomy, and then went straight to Clerkship. Again, this was a less-than-ideal experience. I saw my first patient with him after a total of 6 hours watching reports being entered between last time and this time. finally at 5:30 we saw a patient which lasted until 7:45pm! I learned what he expected me to learn from that experience, but it was too little, too late. I am in discussions with my course leader now to try to figure out how to find a more... fulfilling experience. The highlight of yesterday was getting a letter from my friend Sammy from home. I feel terrible because I've been so out of touch, but she's always there when I need her, or True Blood - Season 1.

Today was spent doing laundry, cooking, and studying. I'm getting the rhythm down and, despite having a test on Thursday, am not freaking out... yet! I try to keep in perspective that everything is pass/fail and I only need to get a 70% at most on an exam to pass. I feel a bit like a slacker when others talk about how they are learning this stuff so that they can be great doctors, but I know that a great doctor comes from compassion and the ability to think, not a mass of knowledge with little relevance to the topic at hand. I doubt my dad, as an ophthomologist, thinks much about what nerve innervates the quadriceps muscle (the femoral nerve, by the way). Keeping perspective is the only way I keep sane, so I'll have to deal with feeling like a slacker every once in a while.

My friend Ryan, who encouraged me to relax and not study so much in undergrad -- some of the best advice I got -- somehow managed to do the same today by incessantly texting my score of the Wisconsin game until I gave in and watched the second half upstairs. I was VERY glad I did, because it turned out to be a VERY exciting game! I had to fight (not really) with some BYU kids for the channel rights, but luckily I was the first one there and had control of the clicker -- er... remote.

As far as student government goes, I have decided to run for Class President against my better judgement. Rumor is that 7 people are running, so I probably won't get elected anyway, but I think it would be a really great way to meet new people and become involved here at P&S. Well, in addition to the musical... and tour guide... and interest groups... and Bacchus... and Beerchus... Oh well, if you want something done, ask a busy person!

Next week starts the meal plan -- 3 dinners a week -- so I won't have to spend so much time cooking (aka. won't have any excuse to procrastinate studying). We'll see how it is!

Let me know how everything is going in your lives!

Hayley

EDIT:
Please glaze over the awkward phrasing/grammar in this post. It was LATE when I wrote it and I wanted to be sure to fit it in this weekend. Next weekend will be busy studying for our first anatomy exam, so I won't probably be able to update!
Hayley

Monday, September 06, 2010

Week 1 = Survival

Well, Monday began it all, full speed ahead. Do not pass go and DEFINITELY do not collect $200. Here at Columbia we have 3 courses in our first year:

1) Molecular Mechanisms of Health and Disease: this is our "biology" course. It encompasses, cell bio, molecular bio, biochemistry, pathology, pharmacology, physiology, histology and just about every other "ology" you can think of... It hasn't been TOO bad so far, because much of it is review for a biology major such as myself, but I have to be careful not to get too comfortable and realize that new things are coming, and quickly.

2) Foundations of Clinical Medicine: this is our "soft" course. We talk about our feelings, read popular medical literature (ex. The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down), learn medical ethics, and talk about our feelings some more. We even get a diary... er journal to reflect in. In all seriousness, FCM is a nice way to comprehend what it is we're all slaving away at... The first lecture, we met a patient and heard her story of life-long treatment for sickle cell disease, the good and the bad. The first small group, we wrote for a few minutes on what our first anatomy lesson was like, or other things from the first week that were tough. It is also nice because FCM falls on Wednesday and provides a nice pause from the grind so we can all try to catch up. The clerkships I mentioned in a previous post are also a part of this course. As I said, my clerkship is with a nephrologist named Leonard Stern. He is very nice and has a hugely varied practice. He has 4 different offices and invited Valerie (another girl doing the clerkship) and I to join him on any day at any office. One is even down near to FAO Schwartz! Conveniently, one of his offices is just off the lobby to my dorm building! I think I'm going to try each location out! (The two others are a hospital and inpatient location.)

3) Gross Anatomy: this is, so far, my most challenging course. It is the one I discussed before, where Team Richard (<-- my anatomy table) and I battle through the emotional, physical and mental obstacle course that is anatomy. As Dr. Stern said, it really is learning a new language, "medicalese" he calls it, but it gets easier each day I use it. Repetition really is the only way to get it, but slowly I feel more and more comfortable using anatomical terminology. I spent a day with my friend Sam from Yale and she couldn't believe that I had only had two anatomy classes. She said she already couldn't understand a word I said -- that I was speaking a different language! Yay Medicalese! Gross Anatomy consists of dissections in lab, where professors and clinicians are there to help and also show us clinical procedures. So far we've seen a cricothyrotomy (emergency airway) and a tube thoracostomy (chest tube insertion)!  We also have super overwhelming lectures that are only understood the 3rd time through (luckily all lectures are video recorded), non-dissecting sessions where we look at bones and learn about bony features such as Epicondyles, and clinical correlation lectures where we learn about surgeries and specialties, so far radiology and breast surgery. To add to the load, each dissection group only does half of the dissections for the course and must go in with members from the other group sharing your cadaver  to learn what dissection they did!

Though it is only three courses, we all feel totally behind! The "all" part of that sentence is keeping me sane, as is a pass/fail grading system! Luckily, the people here are great! For example, my dissection group needed a "guide book" or a dissector, so I bought one of a second year. To repay me, I've so far gotten 3 coronas, $8, and the promise of 3 orders of french fries -- grossly to reflect how greasy our dissector is. I KNOW! I'M SORRY! I'M totally grossing you out! :)

Outside of class, last week was another busy week of opening days events. We had a "big sib/little sib" even where we met the second years we've been assigned to annoy all year. Mine's name is Maile (read: Miley) and has already had to tell me to relax at least once! Oh well! After a quick stop at the farmer's market, we had the P&S Club Fair on Tuesday, which was JUST like the Activities Bazaar at Yale, complete with the A Capella group asking everyone if they sang (inside joke for you Yalies). It was fun to see that Penis... er P&S has so many student groups, including beer tasting, wine tasting, theater, poetry, dance, singing, volunteering, rugby, etc. I put my name on a few lists, but am trying not to over-commit. Wednesday I realized how much I love FCM Wednesdays, and received my first batch of groceries from FreshDirect! Yummy produce!

Thursday marked the first meeting of the Society of Bacchus (sorry no link...), which is Columbia's wine tasting society. Our professor, Michael Gershon, led the lecture on 3 types of wine -- a total of 6 glasses, and the party then moved down to The Gin Mill where they had half priced drinks with a Columbia ID. Needless to say, we all needed the chance to let loose a bit. It was great fun, and I plan to make Bacchus one of my activities for the year.

Friday morning's lecture was given by Dr. Gershon as well, and he wasn't the slightest bit surprised to see half the class missing at 8:30am. Though I was there, I sure was glad that it was mostly review! The course director kindly advised Dr. Gershon to save the wine tastings for the weekends. : ) I learned about the Student Government at noon-time and spent the afternoon (after non-dissecting session) meeting with Dr. Stern about the logistics of the clerkship. I then auditioned for the Ultrasounds a capella group. I ended up getting "deferred" to second semester due to an abundance of sopranos both in my class and the second year class, who will be quitting at semester.  I hope to be able to do this second semester. In the mean time, the Bard Hall Players are doing "Crazy For You", a Gershwin musical this fall, so I plan to audition for that this coming week. Friday night ended with us all getting kicked off the roof deck of the 12th floor (who knew you needed a permit to be out there at night?), me "icing" the birthday boy, my friend Travis, and then to Coogan's, the local Irish Pub.

Saturday morning passed by unnoticed by most of Bard Hall, and I awoke in the afternoon to walk to the grocery store and buy some ingredients. I had received a BUSH of basil from FreshDirect and planned to make pesto to put in the freezer. It was slow going until I found that my friend Nick had an amazing Cuisinart tool which worked as an immersion blender, but more importantly a food processor! It was a life-saver and I paid him back in pesto, which was DELICIOUS! I then used my Griddler to make eggs and toast and then headed downtown to see my Yale friend, Sam, who had just returned from Haiti. She was visiting NYC with her boyfriend for a birthday party before her semester at the School of Public Health really begins. We had lemonade in Bryant Park and then walked to Rosa Mexicana for dinner. We mosied down 5th Avenue, shopping at Fossil and lusting after the live Abercrombie & Fitch window models. We even ventured into Banana Republic where I found a $60 shirt for $16!!! YAY! Finally we met up with Sam's friend a posh lounge called Cibar. They had my favorite drink, the French 75. Too bad it was $16 each! After a drink and an ice water, the group headed toward Union Square to find a club. I, unfortunately, had to get all the way back to Washington heights, so I ducked down to the L train across to the A. Unfortunately, at night these trains run infrequently so I waited for each for about half an hour. Luckily, however, 5 guys from P&S hopped onto my subway car at the Port Authority and I had someone to talk to. After leaving around 1:15am, I still didn't get home until close to 2:45 or 3!

I slept in Sunday and spent the day studying. I visited a friend's apartment in the evening, but turned in pretty early. Today was spent studying as well. I can now tell you everything you ever wanted to know about the brachial plexus, which I assume is NOTHING! : )

Tomorrow begins another week, albiet short, and new adventures.

Miss you all!

Hayley

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

My Clerkship Mentor

Hey all!
One of the opportunities we have as a first year is called a Clerkship, which is basically glorified shadowing. We get credit for doing this! YAY!

My clerkship advisor is a Nephrologist:

http://www.columbianephrology.org/Stern.htm

I'll let you know how it goes!

Hayley

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

"it's like the pope of your torso!"

Just a fun link of my professor from yesterday morning on Colbert...


http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/88460/june-11-2007/michael-gershon

enjoy!

Hayley

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Orientation Week COMPLETED!

And so it begins...

It's weird to think that my goals for essentially my entire life are finally being realized. I have completed high school (more unsure for me than some others), completed college (an exciting challenge), and completed the application process for medical school! Contrary to what many expected, I chose to attend  Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. I was attracted by the students I met who were passionate about many things, especially outside their interest in medicine. There is a vibrant extracurricular life here filled with a cappella, theater, comedy, writing, art, music and more! (Who gives a f*ck about an Oxford comma?)

This recent journey started out with a long drive back out to the east coast with ALL the stuff I had just driven to La Crosse after Yale's graduation! Silly, I know... After loading up the van so that it was bursting at the seams, Dad sent Mom and me off for a 3-day driving adventure. I-80 feels like home after having driven along it so many times. We even have our favorite restaurants, hotels and rest stops along the way! (See Ambrosia Lounge)

I spent last Friday, Saturday, and Sunday moving into my 10x13 dorm room of Bard Hall. It is bigger than I expected, but I half wonder if I will be living with communal bathrooms for the rest of my life... There's only one kitchen for an 11-story building, so I got a refrigerator, George Foreman-esque grill, microwave and hot water heater. Plus I have a sink in my room which is super convenient. So far, they have been feeding us, so I haven't had to cook yet!

I stayed at the Yale Club with my mom for a few nights! It is super nice and right across the street from Grand Central Station. I even got to see some of my Yale friends for a birthday party. It's nice to know I already have a group of very close friends in the City. We went to this amazing bar called The Press Lounge at Ink48. I felt totally not cool enough to be there, but it was AMAZING!

Once orientation started, I stayed up in Washington Heights. Everyone here is SUPER nice. Mom even made friends with the security guard and got to park right outside the building one day. I've already got a group of friends to hang out with, one of which I met at revisit weekend. We're all excited to explore the city and survive med school together!

Orientation was 5 days of non-stop action from 9am to 1am every day! We had sessions on student life, classes, and team-building exercised during the day -- my team won field day games (think wheel barrow races and egg tosses) and received a neuro reflex hammer as a prize! We met with our advisory deans (a built-in mentorship program), learned about the Hippocratic Oath (which we took Friday) and were told about all the support services available at P&S (say it fast and it sounds surprisingly like penis... we all quickly figured this out and never stopped giggling about it. Future doctors of America here, aren't you proud!)

The nights were spent going to restaurants we couldn't afford, bars we weren't cool enough for, and shows we won't have time for. All together it was an amazingly fun introduction to the city. The first night I ran into a friend who is going to Columbia Law school at a bar down by the main campus in Morningside Heights (aka Harlem).  The city seemed much smaller after that. I saw In the Heights, a big Tony winner, which is about the area I'm going to be living in for the next four years. It was AMAZING! The bar we went to afterwards was another rooftop, called the Hudson Terrace, where we ran into Joe Jonas, one of the famous Jonas Brothers. That was exciting! The third night we went on a river cruise (read: booze cruise) with the dental school. We all decided Lady Liberty looks a lot stockier close-up. It was fun and the 2nd years that had been leading us around all week got to let loose with us for once! Many went on to Johnny Utah's where they had a mechanical bull. I decided I needed to slow it down and get some sleep and returned to campus with a few friends. We drove right by the Seinfeld diner on the way!

On Thursday we began the real business of medical school with our first anatomy lecture and lab. My group got introduced to Richard, our cadaver for the next semester. We got over our squeemish-ness and the phenol smell to progress in our scalpel skills. I won't give any gory details, but it was a very cool, moving experience. Each cadaver in the lab donated their bodies specifically to P&S first years to learn anatomy. This was humbling and we tried not to get detached from the significance of what we were witnessing. I hope I will becoming more relaxed as the year goes on... my shoulders were quite tense when I got out. The final night was spent at Coffee House, a talent show display of the abilities of our classmates. Though shorter than the one at revisit, we witnessed a concert pianist, a comedy routine, a broadway sing-along, and an amazing cover band. The party moved up to our 11th floor roof lounge to end the night!

Friday began with a talk titled "On Becoming a Doctor" which made us all aware of the honor and responsibility that is gained with donning a white coat. It addressed the questions we are all sure to have over the next phase of our lives and opened us up to talking about our fears and excitements. It was followed by the White Coat Ceremony which was founded at P&S in 1993. Kathy Matthews, my mom's good friend from college, flew out to attend my ceremony (and to give my mom company on the drive home). After the ceremony, Mom, Kathy, and I went to tea at the Plaza Hotel, just like Eloise! We proceeded back to the Yale Club after a short walk (Mom has SO many blisters from her week in Manhattan!). Vidur, my friend from Yale, joined us for a celebratory dinner and drink afterward! Yesterday we explored the neighborhood of Chelsea in downtown, Manhattan, especially the Chelsea Markets, which is housed below the Food Network Studios! Lots of good produce, cooking utensils, food and an Athroplogie store! Mom got gelato while Kathy and I enjoyed crepes! We then had dinner at db Bistro Moderne, home of the $32 dollar hamburger made with foie gras, black truffles, and braised short ribs. The food was amazing and we proceeded down the street to see Memphis, this year's Tony Best Musical! This was my mom's 5th Broadway show in this visit! She had made a friend with a young guy from Finland who joined us for a drink afterward. He wants to do set design and directing and is on his way to Canada for school. 

Mom was glad to get into the car this morning after having walked ALL week! She said she has blisters on TOP of her blisters! She and Kathy drove me up to Washington Heights and helped me put some finishing touches on my room. They started their drive to Maumee, OH, the stop for tonight, while I took a nice long nap! It was necessary, as you can see!!!

Please update me on your life! I hope to keep up with this blog as much as possible, but remind me if I'm slacking!

Love you all!
Hayley



View from my dorm room window:

The Hudson River at sunset from the 8th floor of Bard Hall


Tuesday, May 08, 2007

The End of an Era


This is a post from my Google blog.

So, of course, it is the end of an era. The end of my freshman year has come and I still feel like I'm just getting used to life here at Yale. Perhaps I'll never be used to it. Perhaps my unrest is due to other large changes in my life that happen independent of a school year.

It's strange to think how much less sure I have become of everything since I arrived on campus.

Sure, I became sure that I HATE philosophy. I became sure that I am awful at Ping Pong. I became sure that having friends is the most important thing in the world.

But on the other hand, I became so unsure of what I want to do with my life. I imagined being a doctor with my white picket fence around a loving home in a small town, but I've learned that nothing is sure. I have been given a wake up call and I know now that nothing is as it seems. You never count on things staying the same. When you think they will, everything gets turned on its head and the only thing you can do is continue on. I learned:

Yale is not filled ONLY with uber-intelligent over-committed type-A's.

Getting a B is not the end of the world. There are so much bigger things to worry about.

The person you're with now may not be the one you will be with in the future, no matter what you want.

I cannot control everything.

Some choices can't be made by other people, and sometimes you make wrong choices.

This may all seem obvious to everyone reading, but to me, these are the most important lessons I have learned this year. I only hope that my mantra "everything happens for a reason" rings true in my sophomore year.

On a brighter note, I have accomplished so much this year that I never thought I could do. I rose the ranks in several organizations and will be holding leadership positions next year. I succeeded in some of the hardest classes I've ever experienced. I became comfortable enough with myself and I joined a sorority regardless of my preconceived notions of them (one of my best decision EVER-- I love you, girls). I danced without caring who was laughing at me because I wanted to! I cried and admitted that I needed help to my new found friends. I made new friends. I got to the point where I'm so sad to leave my world here that I'm not sure if I want to be home.

This summer should be a interesting one. One of my friends wrote a note about the strangeness that will be encountered when we all return home to our old lives and old friends. I am sure I will feel out of place, but I know and love my friends from home and I know they will welcome me back. I have great opportunities to explore this summer! I will be writing case study papers for the pediatric oncology unit at Gundersen (probably about some of my friends -- weird). I will be working at the pharmacy one or two days a week. I will be taking statistics at UWL. I will be learning new and interesting things about myself and life.

This year has been an interesting one, for the most part good. I can't say I have no regrets, but I can say that I know what I want to change in the future. Most of all, though, I will miss being able to say, "It's ok, I'm only a freshman," and have everyone understand and excuse my behavior. :)

Thanks so much for all your support this year!

--me

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Yikes! Long time, no blog...


This is a post from my google blog.

Hey everyone,

I s'pose this is a strange time to be blogging considering I was just home, but I realized how behind I am...

Firstly, Parents' Weekend was soooo nice. The fall stretch of school is so long and it's nice to be able to break it up with a visit from the familiar. My parents even let me sleep in the comfortable bed at the hotel! Ah, a good night's sleep... We were super busy and the weekend wasn't long enough. We went to some great restaurants, went to meet the sorority girls, met with the Stiles Master, and went to one of my sister's improv comedy shows. It was a really busy weekend. We also went to go see Flags of Our Fathers which was intense but really good.

The next weekend, Stiles had a busy schedule. Friday night was a crazy Girl Talk concert. Girl Talk is an amazing DJ and if you haven't heard of him, you should check him out. He's a biomedical engineer by day and DJ by night... amazing concert! I was dancing on stage it was so good! Saturday night was Casino Night, rated in the top college parties by Rolling Stone. It was an amazing transformation from Dining Hall, to Concert Venue, to Casino! Everyone got all dressed up and was given chips at the door to gamble with. You could enter raffles with the "money" you made. I was working, so I didn't actually gamble at all, not that i would know how to anyway... It was really fun and I got married in the Little White Chapel (see facebook pictures).

*News Flash* Hayley went to a sporting event! Because Harvard was being dumb about the tailgate alcohol policy, the Princeton game became the focus of the most tailgating fun! I had a great time hanging out with my sorority sisters and all my Stiles friends. We were winning up until the fourth quarter when Yale essentially gave up and Princeton won... arghhhh... we could have held the Ivy Title to ourselves....

Not only did I go to ONE sporting event, I went to TWO! The Harvard game was the weekend that Thanksgiving Break started and I went to Boston on the bus. Although the tailgate was lame, the game was amazing. Yale won 34 to 13 and everyone rushed the field at the end. This would have been fine except that it was probably a 10 foot drop or more to the field so you basically had to jump and hope someone was there to catch you. My hands were bleeding from the concrete and one girl broke her leg, but it was still amazing!

After a freaky night alone in the dorm, I was on my way home for an amazing break! I watched Gilmore Girls with my mom, went and picked up Matt at school, went to Aquinas and saw all my old teachers, spent time with my family on Thanksgiving, and had a great reunion party with all of my friends. It was as if I never left.

Now I'm back on campus with two weeks of tough work ahead of me, one week of "Reading Week" where I'll finish one final paper and study for one final, and then my finals week of only one final. Then, thank goodness, I'll be back home. Wow. One eighth of my college career done. Oh, wait, I'm thinking of going to medical school... I'm not even CLOSE to being done... :P

Love you all and miss you!

Hayley