Thursday, March 5, 2015

Celebrities

No, you read the title correctly. Celebrities. I thought I would make a post of celebrities I have seen. I never would have thought that I would need a list to keep up with this kind of thing. Never thought I would see a celebrity. But I have. Even talked to one!

Kenny Rogers
My aunt was apparently a huge fan of Kenny Rogers in her teens and my family met in one year in Gatlinburg. I was probably not even 10 years old. According to my mom, I said "Hey, it's Kenny Woaaahdguurs!" He said "How cute. I'm Kenny Wodgers!"

Taylor Swift
In 2008, I saw Taylor Swift in concert on her Fearless tour. That was my first concert and it was awesome. I went with my two best friends and we sat in the balcony pretty close to the stage. We could see her very well actually. Standing on the stage, we were sitting toward the left.

LMFAO and Ke$ha
In June 2011, I was given tickets to a Ke$ha concert for my birthday. The opening act was LMFAO before they got really popular later that year. At that point, I didn't know who they were but they did put on quite a show. So did Ke$ha, for that matter. I was standing on the floor behind the most pit area right next to the stage, so I couldn't see that well.

Kevin Bacon
FOX's new show The Following starring Kevin Bacon filmed scenes for the premiere at Berry in the fall semester of 2012. He waved at me!

Phillip Phillips
In April 2013, Phillip Phillips stopped at Berry on his college tour. Each student was given one free ticket and allowed to buy one guest ticket. His opening act was a girl named Gin Wigmore, who looked and sounded like the girl from The Band Perry. When Phillip came on stage, he said "I'm BERRY happy to be here!" He played several of his songs and covered and Eminem song. He played a couple new songs that he's written. He also made a comment about how much he liked our campus and said "Who has eagles on their campus?!" I actually almost met him, but he went back on stage for an encore. We left and walked near the back of the stage as he was coming off stage.

John Maxwell
I met him (sorta but not really--we were in a really long line) in September 2013 at a leadership business conference. I bought his book (15 laws of leader I think) and he signed it.

Terri Savelle Foy
I met her in September 2013 at the same leadership business conference. I bought her book (about making dreams bigger than your memories I think) and she signed it. We actually talked to her!

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

I'M MARRIED!



And it's weird. Not what I was expecting but then when I try to think what I was expecting..I don't think of anything. Anyways, being married is great..
I get really cold at night and Aaron is like a heater! It's also awesome to have him around all the time and just know that he's always gonna be there (unless he's at work).
I'm still adjusting to my new last name. 

Sunday, November 17, 2013

What I Learned Planning My Wedding


*Wedding planning is stressful. Men don't understand. When we first started, Aaron thought it would be pretty easy. Near the end, I wondered if he would make it, haha.

*Make a website. Let it keep track of who RSVPs for you. I used theknot.com and it worked great. 

*Beware of family. Your mom will try to take over and make all decisions which only leads to more stress on your part.. at least that's what mine did.
 
*Weddings aren't cheap. Be prepared. 
 
*I believe it is entirely possible to plan a wedding entirely online. I really do.
 
*Pinterest is frustrating. There's just way too many cute ideas. You can't do everything. I tried. 
 
*Download apps from both Hobby Lobby and Michaels. Coupons are your best friend. Sign up for 
emails too. Most of my coupons came from the emails. They can scan coupons on your phone, so 
don't worry about printing. Also remember that Hobby Lobby's website ALWAYS has a weekly "40% off one regular priced item" coupon available. Aaron and I would split up and go in separate lines, using the same coupon.
 
*You will change your mind. A lot. I thought I was going crazy I went back and forth so many times but it's stressful and I told myself that it was normal to flip flop on some things.
 
*I think a theme wedding would be easier to plan for. Maybe. We didn't have a theme and so every cute thing we saw we wanted to use. Having a theme gives you limits.  
 
*Having a few specific wedding colors was hard to plan for. Using a gradient was easier. We started with a light purple, bright blue, light pink, and white. We ordered purple cake napkins with blue letters. Yay. But the more we planned, we realized it was hard to incorporate all the colors (especially when I'm skewed toward purple so much) and it was really hard to find the right shade of purple. So we kinda dropped the other colors and eventually we were just using every shade of purple. The only thing that wasn't purple were the cake napkins we ordered at the beginning.  
 
*Don't procrastinate. 
 
*Create a master schedule. 

*Long engagements are bad. Don't have one. Trust me. Keep it at six to nine months.
 
*Match the flowers to the season. We ended up looking for sping and summer flowers right as they were putting out Christmas decorations and autumn colors. You cannot find purple flowers when places only have red, orange, and yellow.. or poinsettias.
 
*Try holding your bouquet with your dress before the day of your wedding because you may decide it doesn't look good with your dress.. like I did. We made my bouquet and it looked great until I held it in front of my dress.
 
*Fake flowers are easier to deal with. They don't wilt, you can make all the bouquets and everything way before the wedding instead of the morning of, and you can keep them! They last forever. They're also cheaper and can be reused. 
 
*Bridal showers are fun!
 
*Address thank you envelopes for the showers before the actual shower takes place. You'll be ahead of the game. If you can't do this, get them done as fast as possible.
 
*Start planning early. 
 
*Be mindful of your guest list limit. If your venue allows 100 people, invite 90. Plan for 10 extra people coming whether you know it or not. It will happen. People misunderstand your invitation and bring their kids even though they weren't invited. People invite themselves. It's ridiculous. Don't forget to account for the newlyweds, the pastor, people serving food, etc.

*Don't break any bows at showers and save them all! Apparently, you save all the bows off presents and make them into a bouquet that you carry at the rehearsal. If you break one, that's one kid in your future.
 
*There will be family drama.. It's not likely that every single person in your family will be invited so you will more than likely make someone mad or someone will invite themselves. 
 
*You will need a lot of stamps. And thank you cards. Be a thank you note machine.
 
*Once you get to about a month until the wedding you're like "screw this lets just go to the courthouse." We almost went at least five times. Seriously. We also considered eloping.
 
*Three weeks out you start to question if you can go without any sleep and food just to make sure everything gets done. I hardly slept the two months before the wedding.
 
*Fiber is your friend!
 
*Sleep becomes even more obsolete the closer you get to the wedding.
 
*This is the one time where you really need to be careful what you eat because of the dress and then you have all these showers with dessert and cake and dangerous dips! It's kind of ironic. And we celebrated two birthdays!
 
*Expect to forget something. We forgot napkins for the reception and remembered two day before the wedding. I also made a last minute mad dash to hobby lobby on Friday candles. 

*Find a wedding director.
 
*Make a spreadsheet for address and keep it updated and with you at all times (or accessible like on a phone or in an email)

And the one thing I wish I had done? HIRE A FREAKING WEDDING PLANNER. 

Whew!

I graduated May 11. 
I found my wedding dress on May 15 at David's Bridal. ON SALE! Yes!

 In June..
 I read two books that catapulted my life into a shift. I read Proof of Heaven by Eben Alexander, MD first. I discussed this book in the post "Reading for Fun."  Then I read Heaven is for Real by Todd Burpo. It's a similar plot but instead of a brilliant adult doctor that visits heaven, it's a small child. I enjoyed this book more, reading about Jesus and heaven from the eyes of a toddler. Great book. Then I read Outwitting the Devil by Napoleon Hill, another great book!

I also took the GRE in June. 
I turned 22, which called for a trip to IHOP, of course,
so I could have pancakes at midnight, 'cause I'm feeling 22. Aaron got a job!!
We took a Dave Ramsey "Financial Peace University" class and it was great!


Wedding planning was in full swing in July and my two classes started. 
In August, I got allergy testing.. I'm allergic to EVERYTHING!!!!


Then the allergy shots started.. my allergies were so bad, I had to "rush" the shots. The first week I got 12 shots in one day. The next two weeks, I got 20 each week, in one day. I would sit at the allergy doctor from 8:30am until 2pm. Fun stuff. Itchy. 

We got an apartment! Aaron moved in before he wedding and I moved in after.

Berry had their first EVER football game on September 7 and I was there!


We started our own Amway business and went to a huge business conference in Kentucky in September. I don't even have words.. We got a book signed by John Maxwell and met Terri Savelle Foy (she signed a book too but we actually met her). It was a great experience and we feel we are
 in the right place. So much, that I dropped my classes.

I don't want to be a PA anymore. 

I went to my first ever Mountain Day as a Berry alumni! Yahoo!

I got married :)



Saturday, September 21, 2013

GRE

In early June, I registered to take the GRE on July 25 because I had to take it before August 1st to meet the November 15th deadline. At that point, I knew it covered vocab and math that I hadn't seen since high school. The only math I took at Berry was basic statistics. The first weekend after I signed up I took a diagnostic practice test that accompanied a Kaplan GRE book (along with four full practice full tests) I got from Amazon for like $30.   

The minimum score I need for PA school is 290. Each section can be scored 130 to 170 for a lowest possible of 260 and a highest possible of 340, with 300 being right in the middle. To make the cut, I needed at least 145 in both sections.  

When I took the diagnostic around June 15, I realized just how rusty I was on algebra, but I loved math in high school so I knew it would only take some easy review. The verbal section made my vocabulary feel very small. But it turned out good and I was very happy with the results. I got a 149 on the math and 146 in verbal for a total of 295. This was soooooooo much better than the feeling I had after that first practice MCAT  I took. MY FIRST GRE EVER AND I WAS ABOVE THE SCORE I NEEDED!!

After the diagnostic, I made a study plan to work through  my Kaplan GRE book. Along with my anatomy class and shadowing, my schedule was crazy.I had a practice test scheduled for every weekend and I barely had any free "me" time during the day. The study plan was the ideal scenario though. It didn't even last two days... 

The next practice test was on June 23. I skipped the writing section. My math score stayed the same but the verbal went up SIX points to a 152, for a total of 301! This was really the only practice test I took. I got busy/made excuses until pretty much the week before. At that point, I started reviewing the small deck of flashcards I made with math formulas and such and answering practice questions in my Kaplan book.

I took the real GRE on July 25 and was a bit nervous. The security was similar to the MCAT but it didn't feel as tense or scary. I started around 1:15pm (early - my scheduled time was 1:30pm) and finished at 5:15pm. The hardest part, by far, was the form I had to fill out before they let me go into the testing room - I had to copy a paragraph in CURSIVE! Once I sat down at my computer, I realized they had entered in my name wrong and they had to correct it. 
Anyways, I felt very confident in my two essays. 

The first verbal section had several words I didn't know but I did my 
best to make good guesses and pick up on context clues. 

The first math section was really hard!! I kept skipping questions to come back to at the end,  but when I got to the end, I only had maybe 10 minutes left and like 12 questions that I had skipped!!! I was panicking. I still didn't have time to work most of them out. They were legitimately hard  questions (harder than any practice questions I had worked on) and questions that would take long calculations. I seriously ended that section by guessing 
on about 7 questions at the last minute... yikes. 

I was three sections in and got to take a break next. Halfway done! I walked to the bathroom, prayed, and came back, only using about 4 of my allowed 10 minutes. I needed the break to clear my head and gain control of my nerves. I also remembered that there will be one section that won't count toward my score and I was so hoping that it was that math section I just finished (and felt awful about)! I cleared my head and wasn't going to let that one section affect the rest of the test. I also remembered that the GRE is an adaptive test, meaning if you do well on a section, the next one will be harder (or easier if you did not do well on the previous section). So I must have done very well on the first verbal section because the following math section was very hard.

The next section was a verbal and I felt about the same for that one as well - several words I did  not know but I made my best guesses. It was during this section that I got distracted and noticed that there was a window beside me, to my right, because several airplanes flew over and I heard several sirens. I really had to work to stay focused. 

A math section followed and again was quite hard. The last section.... I knew that one section would not count towards my score. If the last section was math, then one of the (awful) math sections wouldn't count. If it was a verbal, then the awful math section would count towards my score...I clicked "next" and my heart sank. The last section was verbal and both of my math sections would count. I tried not to let it bother me but I was distracted. I didn't finish that section, either. At the end, I had several blank and had to guess. 

I felt nauseous as I waited for my score to pop up. This was one great thing about the GRE, though, instant scores. I waited a month for my MCAT scores. I needed at least 145 in both sections to meet the minimum required score. But I have never had a testing experience like this before. 


So here's my score.. 


math: 151
(UP FIVE POINTS!!!!!)

verbal: 155
(UP THREE POINTS!!!!!)


total: 306 
(FIVE points higher than the practice test and
ELEVEN points higher than the minimum score I needed!!!!!!!)

I knew immediately that I did not take that test by myself.
I had been praying about it and my prayers had been answered!


A few weeks later, I found out that my writing score was a 4 out of 6
(a bit surprising since I felt so confident about them, but that's still good).
This made my overall total 310.

I was on cloud nine on that car ride home.
Mushy brain, tired, but really happy.
And really proud of myself for keeping my nerves under control.
I very easily could have full on panicked. But I did not.

The Lord replied, "My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest."
Exodus 33: 14


Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Alumni

I'm officially a Berry College alumni now. It feels weird. It still doesn't hasn't sunk in.. 
I thought it would when I ordered my cap and gown or when it was finally delivered.
 But no. 
I thought it would when my classes ended and I was done undergraduate. Nope. 
I thought it would when I picked up my cap and gown and tassel. Nope. 
I thought it would when I took my last final at Berry. Nope. 
I thought it would when I was handed my Alumni Association ID card. Nope. 
I thought it would when I got dressed for the ceremony. Not really. 
I thought it would when I walked across the stage and took my degree. No. 
I thought it would when I moved out of my dorm room. Close. 
I think it finally hit me when I turned in my mailbox amd dorm keys, when I walked out the dorm that I had lived in for three years, and when I drove off campus. 
Sometimes I catch myself saying "Oh yeah! I do have a Bachelor's. I forgot about that." 


 
Class of 2013

Monday, May 6, 2013

Things I Wish I Knew Sooner


Take AP classes in high school.
 I took AP Calculus and AP Biology in high school. I only took the exam for AP Calc at the end of the year and made a 3, which was enough to get me college credit for it. I started college with four little credits, as opposed to zero. I met my friend Mandi the first day of class. It was her first year too but she was technically a sophomore because she took sooooo many AP classes and started college with 15 credits!! I wish I would have known about that. I could have gotten out of English 101 and 102 with a higher grade if I had taken them in high school. I hated calc when I was taking it, but I am so glad I took it. Those four credits have saved my butt almost every semester from various deadlines and requirements, etc. 

College is not scary. 
I love college. I was definitely nervous, especially moving out and living on my own. But, eventually I adjusted and discovered I loved the independent feeling. I was on my own to meet new people and experience the world on my own a little bit. Sure, I was homesick at first and it was convenient that I only lived an hour away, but eventually the homesickness goes away. I started meeting people and loving my classes and it made things easier.  

 Every college class counts. 
 GPA-wise, that is. I am not the type to ..'slack off' in a class, but when I take a class that's not in my major or a core class, I definitely don't try as hard as I could. But it's important to remember that every class counts toward your GPA and any 'slacking off' can hit your GPA hard and haunt you later on.   

Start shadowing early. And do it reguarly.
I should have started shadowing in high school. I should have shadowed every summer during college. I didn't realize how much weight the PA schools (and med school) put on shadowing. For PA school, they look for quantity. For med school, they look for quality over quantity and shadowing on a regular basis. 

Take as many classes as you can handle every single semester.
My first semester I only took 12 hours (the minimum) and then 13 the next. 
I had so much free time but I paid the price later. 

Start studying for the MCAT as soon as you 
decide you want to go to med school.
Avoid cramming the few months before your test date like the black plague. 
You won't do well if you wait and cram. I promise. 

Start drafting your personal statement at least a year 
before you need to submit it. Resumes too.
The first draft will be crappy and will need to be revised. It's that simple. I have had several people read over my personal statement, revising each time and it's still not finished! I'm on the fifth draft of my resume and working on the next one!

Submit your application as early as possible. 
This one is simple: rolling admissions!

Start saving money your freshman year. Even if it's just a little bit.  
This one is a gimme. Any money saved, no matter what your after-graduation plans are, will help.