 So after going through four years of medical school, three years of training and now being a full-time doctor, how much of the medicine that I've learned to actually remember? Now this is a fair question in complete honesty, I would say the answer is 30 to 40%. Now 30 to 40% is actually a high number, probably for most doctors, because medicine just happens to encompass so many different fields. But in reality, being a doctor comes down to three things and having a perfect memory is not one of them. Number one is pattern recognition. After going through those seven years of training, I can see a lab, a patient's complaint, their vitals and be able to tell you these are the likely the two to three things they have going on here, the two to three things we're gonna do and then we'll see if they get better. Number two is to always be on the lookout for outliers. Yes, your pattern recognition may point you to a few diagnoses but maybe your physical exam sign points you to something completely different. And then finally, number three is to always know where to look if you don't know the answers. There are gonna be tons of diagnoses that I don't see enough of, maybe I didn't see enough of since I last saw it. If you guys enjoyed that breakdown and want more insight and behind the scenes of my life as a full-time doctor, hit that like and subscribe for more content just like this one.