You may have heard that all medical students do is study. It certainly seems that way at times. There are, however, opportunities to fit in some other experiences. Here are a few of the things I have done this year:
I’ve always liked to run, and the endless desert trails in Beer Sheva provide great places to train. In November my roommate and I decided it would be great fun to run the Tel Aviv Half Marathon, scheduled for February. What seemed like such a good idea when we registered in November, however, became a source of stress as the February date approached, because we realized that the race fell on the day before a pharmacology quiz. Fortunately, we were able to come up with a creative solution to our loss of study time. While other runners wrote split times on their arms, our arms sported names of the drugs we needed to memorize. I suspect we were the only runners in the race who quizzed each other about COX inhibitors as we ran. We had a great time running, and we both passed the quiz.
During our break over Passover, some classmates and I hiked from the Mediterranean Sea to the Sea of Galilee, a classic 4-day backpacking route in northern Israel. The North is very different from our home in Beer Sheva. Instead of the desert, the landscape is wooded and wet. We fell into a hiking pace with two people from Hebron who spoke no English, and who were very patient with our Hebrew. The route combined history with nature; it’s not every day you pass Byzantine ruins on a hike.
I also participated in a mobile clinic at a school in the West Bank with Physicians for Human Rights. This was my first foray to the West Bank, and I learned a lot about the health care system there. Listening to the stories of Palestinian patients provided valuable first-person insight on life in the West Bank. After we finished seeing patients, the residents of the town we worked in invited us to eat dinner with them. So there I was, a first-year American medical student, listening to Israeli and Palestinian doctors sit together and discuss barriers to health in the West Bank.
I hope this convinces you that you will study hard at MSIH, but also that your life as a medical student in Israel can be both productive and fun. (And never underestimate the power of your arms as study sheets.)


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