(00:00) — Ear cleaning origin: A childhood earwax ritual lights the first spark for medicine. (01:25) — Writer first, then premed: Entering college for writing before finding patient care through EMT work. (02:10) — EMT on campus: Deescalation, student calls, and heavy mental health moments. (03:27) — Suicide hotline: Human-to-human conversations that clarified her desire to be a physician. (04:10) — Medicine vs therapy: Drawn to anatomy and physiology while honoring psych’s importance. (05:45) — Apocalypse-proof skills: Why medicine felt enduring through pandemics, borders, and war. (07:32) — Query-letter essay: How a creative application and workshop hustle shaped her identity. (08:55) — Premed pressure: Cutting hobbies, feeling locked out of creativity, and the regret that followed. (11:31) — The rat race and AMCAS: Hours, comparison culture, and resisting the 15-activity myth. (15:04) — Rest as training: Reframing hobbies as recovery to prevent burnout and learn better. (15:59) — What stood out: Interviews focused on her writing more than her activity count. (18:19) — Reapplying after COVID: Canceled MCAT, delayed app, and an external nudge to pause. (20:01) — Perspective shift: Time off, returning to writing, and no longer feeling behind. (23:11) — Ready the second time: Growth, humility, and being prepared to start medicine. (24:42) — First acceptance: Relief, joy, and finally buying the book she’d saved for that day. (26:02) — Personal statement redo: From listing achievements to writing about who she is. (27:06) — Med school + novels: Supportive team, deadlines, and writing as catharsis. (28:43) — Step 2 vs deadlines: Balancing dedicated study with book edits on a tight schedule. (30:10) — Dark fiction and stakes: Embracing perimortem themes and high-impact care. (32:24) — Pathology curiosity: Autopsies, TV inspirations, and creative crossover. (33:09) — Can students work?: Policy gray areas and being featured regardless. (33:47) — Zero-sum myth: Why gym, games, and hobbies can make you a better learner. (36:24) — Guilt and games: Mario Kart, streaming, and naming the pressure to always study. (37:13) — Permission to be human: Keep your passions—people, not checklists, become doctors. Vanessa’s path to medicine started with a childhood ear-cleaning ritual and grew through college EMT shifts and suicide hotline work that centered real human connection. In this conversation, she and Dr. Gray unpack the premed rat race—the pressure to pack 15 activities, the guilt of cutting hobbies, and the lie that every minute not studying sets you back. Vanessa candidly shares applying twice, including a COVID-canceled MCAT that delayed her first cycle, the external nudge to pause, and the growth and humility that made her ultimately ready to be accepted. She explains how interviews gravitated to her writing, why her second personal statement focused on who she is rather than everything she did, and how she now balances med school with novel deadlines—treating writing as both catharsis and a job, while preparing for Step 2. Along the way: apocalypse-proof humor, a reframe of rest as part of training, and a clear message to premeds and medical students alike—keep the passions that make you human. Because people, not checklists, become doctors. What You'll Learn: - How campus EMT and suicide hotline roles shaped a patient-first “why medicine” - What changed between a late, COVID-impacted first cycle and a successful reapplication - Why focusing your personal statement on who you are can resonate more than listing activities - Practical ways to protect hobbies in premed and med school without burning out - How interviews may lean into your authentic passions—even more than your hours