 After going through college, four years of medical school, and even more years for training to become a doctor, here's the most important thing I've realized about studying. And that is that there's no one method that is going to save you. Instead, you need to remember that the reps are really what matter. While you may see your classmates doing flashcards or outlines or whiteboards, in reality the most important thing is which method allows you to have the most repetitions in the shortest amount of time. Because regardless of the subject, usually we don't master anything on the first time around. You need that second, third, fourth, and even fifth or sixth pass to really understand and master a topic. But because most of us, myself included, are so obsessed with finding the best method or the best resource to shrink our time and improve our retention, in reality we could have used all that time and probably even less so to get those extra reps in to finally actually understand the information. So if you're somebody after multiple study sessions, just don't feel like you're building that retention you really want to. Check below in the description how to get a free resource explaining exactly how I studied medical school, as well as all those tips and tricks I wish somebody had told me on my first day.