So I was in the grad lounge the other day and this girl in my program, who is very nice, made a very not so nice comment. There were a bunch of us talking about our stress level as this is midterms and we are all a little loopy. I had made the comment that I felt stressed about getting a paper turned in while studying for a HUGE neuroanatomy exam this week. She responded along the lines of "remind me why you have something to be stressed about (since you don't have any clients)?"...
Needless to say I had to fight the urge to drop kick her booty to the other side of the Boston Common. Yes, there are people with clients this semester. Yes, they have a lot of planning to do and they have 5 hours a week in the clinic. BUT she neglected to count the fact that I work 20-25 hours a week (she doesn't) and I also have to complete 25 observation hours in the clinic (she doesn't) and I am taking a 5th class to fill an additional ASHA requirement (she didn't sign up yet).
In my state of "five-year-old tantrum", I decided to do some calculations of how I spend my time these days.
Here is my laundry list of obligations over the past two weeks:
-Four Emerson classes (3 hours of class time plus roughly 3 hours outside of class per week)
-UWRF class online (3-6 hours per week... if I actually tried harder)
-Extra Neuroanatomy study time (3 hours per week)
-Thesis work (2-4 hours per week)
-Clinic time (4-6 hours per week)
-Health Communication class I am sitting in on for my thesis (4 hours per week)
-Riding the T to and from downtown (45 minutes each way-around 8 hours a week)
-Work (20-25 hours per week)
-Walking to work (half hour each way- around 5 hours each week)
Throw in sleep time, eating, showering, biological functions and any random task along the way.... I did the math and I would end up with about 3 hours a day that isn't scheduled for something. Oh how I wish those 3 hours would come all in one block and not in random 5 minute snippets throughout the day.
I feel better now, I have good reason to be stressed during midterms.










