How To Motivate Yourself
How To Motivate Yourself
How To Motivate Yourself
Life is full of things that need to be done, and medical student life is fuller than most. There are essays to write, lectures to attend, patients to see, skills to sign off, and exams to revise for. And there are also parties to go to, friends to be with, drinks to be enjoyed, sports to be played, music to be listened to, and fun to be had. How do you fit it all in?
is actually at least three months worth of revision to do? What if their gut instinct isnt all that good at making these crucial estimates? Lets call this type the Last Minuters. To maximise motivation, Planners need to have more fun, because fun lightens the spirit and renews energy. The Last Minuters need to estimate carefully how long their projects will take. Both types need to plan.
Lets see how this could work for you in preparing for exams.
First write down every area that you need to prepare or revise. Everything from clinical scenarios and system examinations for objective structured clinical exams and vivas, to learning the differential diagnosis of ankle oedema or the microscopic features of a cirrhotic liver.
For each area, write down what resources you will need (books, lecture notes, papers, and so on) and estimate how long you will need to spend on it, bearing in mind that you will want to revise subjects more than once. Add up the hours you need to spend revising, including the time it will take to assemble all your resources. Experience suggests that you should add at least 50% to your total hours to allow for underestimates.
Look at the time available between now and your exams and calculate the number of hours you need to work each day, allowing for rest periods/days. Draw up a timetable.
Tell your friends or family, or both, about your plan. You may like to stick it up on the wall where you work or put it on your Facebook page.
Each day, plan yourself a reward for each step. You might plan a cup of coffee and a brief chat with a friend for mid-morning, a nice lunch at midday, and some exercise or a television programme in the evening.
Write down the benefits of keeping to your plan, and each day remind yourself why it is you want to work effectively, and how much you want to do well (see below for turning shoulds into wants).
All of us imbibe these admonishments until such time our parents and teachers become redundant because we carry their voices inside our heads. If you listen to yourself carefully you will hear these voices, and if you check your body you will find that the feeling that you have when you tear yourself away from doing what you want to do, to do what you should do, is exactly the same today as it was back then. An appreciable change in this one pattern will make more difference to your motivation than any other single course of action. The way to do it is to substitute I should with I want: I want to tidy my desk so that I have a clear space to work. I want to get my notes in order so I dont have to waste valuable revision time looking for the right ones. I want go to the library today and get what I need to start my essay. I want to drink less and eat more healthily this week so that my head is clearer and I feel better.
Make it fun
How could you make it fun? Put some music on, think about how great youll feel when its all tidy, develop a new and brilliant filing system, have a competition with a friend to see who can do the best job in the least time. If youre stuck for how to make it fun, ask one of your Last Minuter friends for some tips. A medical students prayer: May I turn my shoulds into wants, my tasks into plans, my obstacles into action, and my drudgery into fun.
Further reading
Houghton A. Chapter 12 Getting motivated. Chapter 14 Action! Know yourself: the individuals guide to career development in health care. Radcliffe, 2005