Posts

Showing posts with the label Non-Science Majors

She Cried in the Library Bathroom Before Her Orgo Exam. Her Grade Still Didn't Change.

Image
 It was 7:43 AM on a Thursday. Maya had been in the library since midnight. Her highlighters had run dry somewhere around 3 AM, her energy drink was room temperature, and the reaction mechanism she'd redrawn seventeen times still didn't make sense. She splashed water on her face in the bathroom, looked in the mirror, and thought — I am a Pre-Med student. I have wanted this since I was nine years old. Why does this feel like it's ending me? She walked into that Organic Chemistry exam forty minutes later and blanked on the first question. Maya's story isn't unusual. Across every campus, in every semester, thousands of students sit inside that same quiet crisis — convinced they're the only one falling apart, certain that everyone else somehow gets it. Chemistry Was Never Just "Hard." It Was a Different Language Entirely. General Chemistry starts with a premise that sounds reasonable: learn the periodic table, understand atomic structure, balance equa...

When Memorizing the Krebs Cycle Makes You Question Every Life Choice You've Made

Image
  Three days before your Biology exam. You've rewritten the steps of cellular respiration so many times your handwriting has stopped looking like words. Mitochondria, acetyl-CoA, NADH, ATP synthase — the terms blur together into one long, meaningless string of syllables. You mouth them like a mantra and retain absolutely nothing. You picked Nursing. Or Psychology. Or Business Administration. Nobody told you that a single Biology requirement would become the academic equivalent of quicksand — the harder you push, the deeper you sink. The Biology Requirement That Quietly Wrecks Semesters General Biology sounds manageable on paper. It's science, sure, but it's introductory science. How bad could it be? Bad. It can be very bad. Here's what actually lives inside that course: Cell structure and function — not just naming organelles, but understanding what each one does, how they interact, and what breaks when something goes wrong Cellular respiration and photosynthe...