
Am I insane? yes. I am finishing my M.S. in Public Communication & Technology at Colorado State University (writing the thesis) and now cranking it into high gear to get my data collected before May. Why May you ask? Because after 6 years of working in the "real world" I have realized that now is the time to pursue my dreams. Since high school, I have wanted to be a "doctor." My parents wanted me to be a nurse. Now I have decided to go somewhere in-between and become a PA.
Once the ball started rolling towards PA school, it all seemed to happen pretty fast. First, I enrolled in a graduate level Immunology course at CU Denver to boost my science GPA. I also enrolled in the online Human A&P I and II sequence (prereq's at every PA program). Whatdya know?? Five years after my last science class, I can still get an A!!
I also started volunteering in the ER at Exempla St. Joseph's Hospital in May of '08. I shadowed a PA (Mr. Milner) most of the time, so I apologize to the volunteer staff at St. Joe's because I didn't do a lot of "volunteering" unless you call getting coffee for Mr. Milner an act of selflessness.
Next step: quitting the desk job. Except for the huge pay cut, working at The Children's Hospital - instead of shuffling papers around, listening to people complain about their budgets, and trying to decipher my boss's manic, tangental rants - seemed like a vacation. Since July '08, I have had a great time learning about patient care, psychiatry and working with a great group of folks. I haven't found a PA to work with since Children's employs mainly NPs, but that hasn't dissuaded me from becoming a PA.
Finally, I spent many hours online filling out CASPA, ordering GRE scores, and obsessing over online PA forums. Medical College of Georgia was the only non-CASPA program I applied to. Strangely, MCG is the first and only interview and acceptance I got. After getting the call from MCG, I withdrew my other applications.
So, now it's January and my next steps are finding out how I'm going to pay for school. Wish me luck!


Hey Jeri! I am proud of you, I knew you always wanted to be in medicine (remember our wonderful cell bio class)! I think of you every Wednesday when I take my daughter to gymnastics! I often retell stories about us going to that crazy gymnastics class at Georgia, hope the memories bring a smile to your face and a chuckle to heart!
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