I need that for medical school?” I thought to myself. I applied to become a phlebotomist at Mosaic. One problem: I’m afraid of blood, and needles; Not precisely hair standing up on the back of your neck fear, but vasovagal syncope fear. During training, I researched the order of draw for exposure therapy and learned how to draw on my own median cubital vein—Yes, this was the proper training procedure at the time. This is one example of meeting a deficiency head on and persevering to achieve success. Moving to 2021, Dr. Kevin Witte (former Wetzel Scholar) allowed me to observe in clinic and the OR. That was my first time observing a DO, and since then, I’ve been pursuing this path. The remainder of my undergraduate experience demonstrates standard academic success that is unmemorable. My transcripts show I graduated cum laude with a 3.6-3.7 GPA and a slightly above-average MCAT score. But my transcript will not show you my most memorable academic memory of how I assisted with implementing a study system to raise the overall cumulative GPA of a 50-person student organization in which I was involved from 2.7 to 3.1 over the period of one year. Unlike I wished, my path in med school has not been