Medical students love alcohol. No less than 85% of activities that they partake in have alcohol as a key component, which is probably not that different from most other groups of people. They will use anything as an excuse to get inebriated, including boredom, the end of a sequence, the release of the new Harry Potter movie. If you are thinking of going to medical school, having a hearty love of the bottle and a disregard for the health of your liver is imperative in order to establish yourself in your medical class's social pecking order.
Most potential medical students have already prepared for this situation during college (or high school, for the overachievers). If you fall into this category, congratulations! You are well placed to surround yourself with drinking buddies who you will claim are friends.
However, there are always a few applicants who, for various reasons, do not drink alcohol. This is a straight path to social suicide, so here are a few recommended solutions.
Probably the easiest solution for most is to make up for lost time, and start drinking as soon as possible. Make friends with the alcoholics and follow them to every event they attend (e.g., "Guitar Hero Bar Night Fridays"). When drinking alcohol, go for quantity over quality, as this will help build up both your social standing and tolerance quickly. You should see results within two weeks with this method.
If you don't drink alcohol because of religious restrictions, converting to agnosticism or atheism is your best option. Neither of these religions have any restrictions against anything, so they offer a pretty permanent first step to solving your problem. This method has a secondary mode of action that makes it particularly potent, which is that without the hope of happiness in an afterlife, alcoholism should come fairly easily for you.
Finally, some of you may have moral objections to drinking alcohol. For those of you in this case, your best bet is to consider a different career choice, such as construction, waste management, or teaching. A less popular alternative is nursing (for obvious reasons).
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