(00:00) — Welcome and framing: What this conversation is for and who Dami is
(00:40) — Growing up in Lagos: How health inequity planted the seed for medicine
(02:16) — Medicine vs. public health: Why exposure shapes the choice
(04:49) — Athletics first: Arriving in the U.S. and finding track and field before premed
(06:13) — Picking a college for D1 throwing, not for premed academics
(07:07) — Student athlete as a premed: biology major, math minor, Division I track
(09:29) — Premed attrition: Watching classmates — and fellow Black students — drop off
(13:48) — Organic chemistry and the weed-out debate: What hard courses are actually for
(19:35) — Staying the course: The internal drive that outlasts discouragement
(21:05) — The master's decision: Human nutrition at Columbia and what drove it
(24:54) — A family health crisis and the choice to pause the application timeline
(25:47) — Youth counselor in a juvenile detention center: Two years of meaningful work
(27:19) — Clinical hours and COVID: Knowing when enough experience is enough
(30:38) — MCAT attempt one, attempt two, and the lesson between them
(32:01) — Applying to medical school: school count, MD only, and the DO question
(33:09) — Building application support through podcasts, YouTube, and near-peer mentors
(34:43) — The hardest part of the process: waiting after interviews
(35:17) — Four interviews, two acceptances, and choosing Albany Medical College
(37:38) — The first call after getting in
(38:35) — Final words for premed students who feel behind or off track
Dami grew up in Lagos, Nigeria and immigrated to the United States at 13 to start high school. He became a Division I shot putter and discus thrower, earned a master's in human nutrition, paused his medical school timeline to care for a sick parent, and spent two years as a youth counselor in a juvenile detention center before receiving two medical school acceptances. In this conversation with Dr. Ryan Gray, Dami walks through every major decision point on that path with honesty and specificity. They talk about what premed attrition actually looks like from inside a cohort, why organic chemistry gets blamed for something bigger than one course, what it means to take the MCAT twice and apply when you are genuinely ready, and how to build an application that reflects a life that did not follow a straight line. Dami also shares how he found support — through podcasts, YouTube, near-peer mentors at Columbia's medical campus, and a friend applying at the same time from across the country. This episode is for any premed student who has looked at their timeline and wondered whether the detours are going to count against them.
What You'll Learn:
- Why watching premed classmates drop off is one of the hardest parts of the process — and how to stay focused when it happens
- What organic chemistry and other demanding courses are actually training you to do, and why making them easier is not the same as making the process better
- How to decide between applying now and taking more time, including what a master's program or meaningful gap-year work can add to an application
- How to build a support system for the application process when you do not have a dedicated premed advisor at every step
- Why the internal drive to become a physician has to come from within — and how that conviction carries you through a nonlinear path