 Here is my favorite rotation in medical school. Now, when I was a fourth year medical student, you're required to do something called a sub-eye. This is basically something that's going to represent your first year as a physician, where you have more responsibility than you would your third year in medical school, where you're just learning the lingo of being in the hospital. And so for my sub-eye, because I was going into internal medicine, I could choose to spend four weeks on a general medicine service, or choose to be working in the cardiology ICU. I picked the latter, because I had no idea anything about cardiology and I absolutely loved it. In fact, it's the reason I'm going back to cardiology fellowship in just a few months. And during that four weeks, I received so much autonomy and education on how to take care of patients with cardiovascular disease, whether it's somebody with a heart failure, exacerbation, and arrhythmia. You can see how to diagnose it and how to manage it. And it's lessons that have stuck with me throughout the duration of my career. It's also the reason I'm going to go back to fellowship in the first place. Now, if you enjoy that behind the scenes of my life in medicine, and my life as a full-time physician, as well as are interested in seeing my life as a future cardiologist and fellow, go ahead, hit that like, subscribe and follow for more content just like this one.