Friday, June 26, 2020

My PA School Rejection Letters - How to Turn a Set Back into a Set Up

If I fail more often than you, I win I have written before about the importance of becoming anepic failureand how this is a fundamental part of becoming an epic success. I was cleaning out some of my old file cabinets today and came across my PA school application documents from 2001. I will be sharing three of them below. If you are experiencing setbacks on your path to becoming a Physician Assistant I want you to know that this is a normal part of the process. Do not be discouraged: failure met with perseverance, is the key to long-term, sustainable success. My PA School Rejection Letter #1 (Ouch!) To help you reach your goals, it is important that you see my failures along with my successes. Otherwise, you will be fooled into believing that success is a simple, pain-free process when in reality the path to each of my successes has been lined with the road kill of my many epic failures. Got a Moment for SomeInspiration? Whether it is God or otherwise, how we perceive a setback matters! (Listen25 minutes) This week, I won two free tickets as part of my daughter's kindergarten raffle to see James Durbin, an American Idol "outcast," play here on our shared hometown stage of Santa Cruz, California. Although I am not that familiar with all of James' music, last night as he stood on stage, I realized just how much I respected this 25-year-old rocker. Knowing all the public criticism he had to endure during his time on the Idol stage, the sting of being "voted off" and rejected by his peers, not to mention the many obstacles he had to overcome in a lifelong battle with Tourette's and Asperger's syndrome. Last night, he spoke to the sold out crowd (many of whom were young, screaming teenage girls) and divulged his story of how his pediatrician told his parents to keep their expectations low. Just goes to show what you can do with a dream and a whole lot of grit. Don't even get me started on the Olympics! It may sound clichto say that we learn more from our failures than from our successes, but nevertheless, this is true. Because life is a process of trial and error, and error, and even more error until finally you succeed! The key is to hang in there long enough, don't give up with the struggling masses, there is light at the end of the tunnel no matter how dim and distant it may seem. PA Rejection Letter #2 (Your Killing me) So success is simply the result of a long series of epic failures if you have done things right. Reading the above rejection letter so many years later I am almost embarrassed to admit that I didn't have a 3.0 GPA, but there is a back-story not written on this rejection letter. This proves the point that an isolated number outside of any context is just a point along a curve that when seen alone is pretty much useless. Don't become a point on a curve. The trend is what matters! In what direction are you trending? And just when you thought the pain and suffering couldn't go on . . . My Rejection Letter to the National Health Service Corps (The kick in my proverbial balls) Yes, I was even rejected by the National Health Service Corps the first time I applied. Although not the second . . . And yes, I received even another rejection letter from OHSU, but I must have thrown that one into the fire. My Acceptance Letter to PA School At first, it seemed odd to me that among this stack of failed attempts I could not find my acceptance letter into PA school. I remember it so well, that simple single sheet of white paper with red and black ink letterhead, about four sentences long sporting an official UMDNJ seal. I read it in the rain, on a cold Seattle evening by streetlight, heart beating, exhausted after a long day of work. The feeling of nausea rose to my chest as I held the two corners of that letter, and I said a short prayer before I tore it open. I made a promise to God and myself that if this dream came true, I would use my training always to relieve the suffering of others and to make the world a better place. Spoiler alert I was accepted, and I am still working hard to keep my promise. My Message to You If you have received a rejection letter fear not my fellow epic failures, I too have stood demoralized in your shoes. But do not let that define you, let it guide you, let it be the road kill that you can look back upon with pride years later when you are writing a blog post hanging out your dirty underwear with pride for all the world to see. Here are my rejection letters. I am posting them as a reminder of what should make you stronger. I saved them because they are a source of motivation, and I hope they can provide you with some peace of mind as well. If you can learn to see adversity as a tool to help you reach your goals you can turn what seemed to be a "setback" into a "set up" for something truly wonderful. Thank you for reading, and I wish you the best wherever you may be on your journey to PA-C. - Stephen Pasquini PA-C photo credit: venspired document.createElement('audio'); https://s3.amazonaws.com/palife-downloadables/Joel+edit+-+Strategically+Ordered+Steps.mp3Podcast: Download (23.4MB) | EmbedSubscribe: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | RSS | PANCE and PANRE Podcast Player You may also like -Who Gets Into PA School? Heres What You Need to KnowLeslie Mean is a 26-year-old singlewhitefemale who presents to the PA school admissions committee on her first attempt to get into PA school. She has a 3.58 overall GPA and a 3.47 science GPA. She is holding a bachelor of science []Overcoming Obstacles on Your Path to Becoming a Physician AssistantLife is full of obstacles. They can be as simple as getting out of the bed in the morning, or as arduous as writing the perfect physician assistant application essay. Most of the time the biggest obstacle is ourselves. The excuses []Physician Assistant Application Letter of Recommendation Samples: Applying to PA SchoolPA School Letters of Reference Here are two letters of recommendation Ireceivedwhen applying to PA school. I am not posting them here as a way to fluff my feathers but merely to serve as an example of what I included as part of my []