Feb/090
Gotta love brains..
..or not.
We've reached that stage in second year medicine where the budding surgeons can hardly contain their excitement.. but many more of us are shaking in our boots because we've just hit the neuroscience part of our course.
If you thought the brain was just a blobby, jelly like thing - think again.. there are names for all the pokey spaces, wiggly lines and cells that make up a brain.. names that I don't think I'll ever get my head around. Its hard to fathom how one bit of grey brain has a completely different job to the grey bit of brain next to it. Sadly this is exactly what the next six weeks of my life will be spent finding out!
We are two days in. I turned up with some enthusiasm - 'its the brain right? There must be lots of interesting things to learn about that'. I can feel that same enthusiasm slipping away rather quickly.. hopefully Amazon will be my friend and when my two shiny new neuroscience textbooks arrive my excitement will be 'rekindled'...
I can live in hope!
Jenn
Oct/080
It’s been a while!
What can I say? A month with no posts is a bit poor on my part.
Bristol and uni are both good, although we are still waiting to get hooked up to the internet in our flat.. I'm plodding on with mobile internet for the time being. The company are dragging it out, apparently we need 'planning permission' to have the cable put through, that's our fault I suppose for choosing a flat that is somehow also a listed building.
I had an amazing week of clinical medicine last week. I was on placement at a hospital nearby and we were let loose on real patients for the first time. This was a daunting experience for both us and the patients I'm sure, but it all went so much better than I had been expecting! We took histories from some of the patients on the wards and had to present them back to the consultants at the end of the week. I think I had built it up to be such a milestone in my head, but in reality it was really easy to sit down and chat to the patients - and they were all lovely ( considering the number of medical students wandering around!).
This week has been much busier, we're back in Bristol doing systems teaching. We've just started learning about the respiratory system which is going O.K, but the added load of year 2 SSC's on top of it all is taking its toll.. I managed to miss a doctor's appointment and nearly miss a teaching session in all the jumble, so I've made it my mission to get my life in order over the weekend!
Going back to SSC's, we have to study these in year 2 of medicine. They stand for 'Student Selected Components' and are basically study modules that we choose for ourselves. Only that isn't quite what happened when we signed up for our written projects this week... About a third of the year abandoned our lecture theatre to race to the curriculum office to get 'first pick' of the titles on offer ( there are limited places for each project so everyone was a little stressed).. at the end of the lecture mayhem broke out. Following in the style of those that had already run off, the whole lecture theatre jumped to it's feet the second the speaker finished and there were medics running up the hill in an effort to get to the front of the queue! Yet another example of how ruthless we all are. Despite all of the warnings that anyone cheating the system would be sent right to the back, this didn't happen, so by the time we got to the front about half way through our year of 250 there wasn't much chance of us getting anywhere near our first choice!
Sep/081
Is there a doctor in the room?
I am lusting after this game! I was given a DS by my parents for my 20th last week... it's great fun. I can't think of a more appropriate game to help me to survive my medical training! Pay day is on Friday .. we'll see!


