 What is the hardest year of medical school? As a brand new medical student during your first year, you're gonna be taking classes that you either haven't had exposure with or haven't had enough exposure with. Anatomy, biochem, cell bio, and all of these topics are going to be squeezed in into a semester or two semesters. But once you feel like you've finally mastered how to study medical school, how to read your textbooks on slides, suddenly they do a 180 and put you into rotations, which is typically what happens during your third year. Now in rotations during your third year, you go from reading and learning material in a lecture hall or textbooks to actually learning it in the hospital, in the clinics for that specialty that you're in for that month. And now once again, you're having to relearn how to learn medicine. Before it was a textbook in a lecture hall, now it's a patient in a clinician that's telling you how to become a better doctor. Once you feel like you mastered a rotation and understand all the concepts, you go on to the next one. And so life as a third year is still very busy. You're having long hours, then you come home to study for exams and board exams and make sure that you know what you're doing for the next day for your patients. Now if you enjoyed that insight and you want more behind the scenes of what it's like to be in medical school, be a doctor like myself, go ahead and hit that like, follow and subscribe for more content just like this one.