Rotations are tough because you feel so out of place. Everyone looks at you like you’re in the way. You don’t know where the bathroom is and, even if you did, you still don’t know if it’s okay to leave and use it.
I was watching a bunch of good baseball players look like goofballs this weekend. These good athletes and good ball players simply watched as baseballs fell all around them.
Why?
They had never played outfield before. They had all always been infielders. These excellent infielders had been asked to play a position they don’t know anything about, and it showed.
That doesn’t make them bad kids or even bad baseball players. It just means that they don’t know what to do.
Clinical rotations can be the same way, so I’m going to help you out. I’m going to help you see what you should be doing. I’m going to tell you where the bar is and how you can leap over it. I’m going to set you up for success rather than letting you “sink or swim.”
Join me tomorrow night for live training on how to navigate these bloody waters.
www.physicianassistantexamreview.com/rotationcall
Brian Wallace