You’ve tried Anki. You’ve tried reading First Aid until your eyes bleed. But the information slides off your brain like water off a Teflon pan.
You memorize it. You pass the quiz. Two weeks later, you see "Vancomycin" on a practice test, and you only remember it starts with "V." sketchy micro pharm
Every video is a static scene filled with visual "puns." When you look at the picture, you see a story. Each element of the drawing represents a fact about the bug. You’ve tried Anki
That feeling is deceptive. You are engaging in deep encoding. You memorize it
When you walk into the Prometric center, you won't think "Inhibits 30S ribosomal subunit." You will think: "That castle wall is breaking because the battering ram (Aminoglycoside) is smashing the drawbridge... oh, right. That means it causes misreading of mRNA."
Here is the deep dive into why turning Pseudomonas aeruginosa into a water-loving pirate with a pink feather works better than any textbook ever could. Most students start with brute force memorization. You read: "Vancomycin inhibits cell wall synthesis by binding to D-Ala-D-Ala. Side effects: Red Man Syndrome, nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity."
Unlike Micro (which uses one continuous universe), Pharm uses different story themes (Autonomic drugs are in a carnival; Cardiac drugs are in a city skyline; Antimicrobials are in a medieval castle).