(00:00) — Early spark for medicine: Jasmine’s childhood curiosity and desire to help takes root at age four or five.
(02:40) — High school split focus: AP sciences vs. seven-hour show choir and a one-week summer health program.
(03:55) — Choosing Howard: Proximity to a hospital/med school and an open-door culture sealed the decision.
(05:15) — Major, minor, and momentum: Biology major, chemistry minor, and 40 COVID credits accelerate progress.
(06:40) — The hardest part: Juggling 21 credits—including biochem and orgo—while working left her exhausted.
(07:30) — Working to afford school: From food service to barista to the gym, she logged 26–40 hours weekly.
(09:10) — Intentional time use: Doing homework during/after class and finishing tasks before they lingered.
(10:40) — When it became too much: Princeton Review course, burnout, and a first MCAT score worse than practice.
(13:20) — Regrouping the plan: Graduating early, studying Jan–Apr, and defining a target MCAT within context.
(15:15) — Mindset after a bad score: Grieving the disrupted timeline and pausing to finish strong in undergrad.
(17:20) — The timeline trap: Why gap years feel scary and Dr. Gray’s note that 75% take one.
(19:50) — Building without connections: Deep website research, spreadsheets, and avoiding Reddit/SDN noise.
(23:10) — Doors opened by advising: Programs that delivered mentorship and free MCAT materials.
(25:00) — School list and interviews: 22 applications (20 MD, 2 DO), a DO fair, and six interviews.
(28:00) — First invites and first A: Riding the wave of early interviews and an acceptance during homecoming.
(31:20) — Med school reality: First year was brutal, second year harder, and memorization no longer enough.
(34:20) — Final encouragement: Keep going, dream big, and be realistic about the path that gets you there.
Jasmine shares a candid, practical look at making premed work when time and money are tight. She discovered medicine early, chose Howard University for its hospital and medical school access, and powered through a biology major and chemistry minor—accelerating with 40 credits during COVID. Meanwhile, she worked 26–40 hours a week in food service, as a barista, and at the gym, all while managing 20–21 credit semesters that included biochem and orgo. When a burnout-fueled first MCAT score came in below any practice test, she grieved the lost timeline, graduated early, and reset: January to April dedicated MCAT prep, a clear “good enough” score target based on her strong GPA, and an application strategy built on deep DIY research and school-by-school spreadsheets (not Reddit or SDN). She applied to 22 schools, earned six interview invites, and celebrated her first acceptance during homecoming. Now in medical school, she reflects on why second year felt even harder than first and how shifting from memorizing to true understanding changed everything. Dr. Gray and Jasmine unpack the pressure of timelines, the reality that many students take gap years, and how to keep moving forward when plans change.
What You'll Learn:
- How to balance heavy course loads with paid work
- Handling a disappointing MCAT and deciding when to retake
- Setting a “good enough” MCAT score in context of GPA
- Building school lists and opportunities without connections
- Why medical school study demands differ from undergrad