Honorable Mention, Experiences
Stephanie Halley, Michigan State University
It started with an “alternate” letter to Michigan State University College of Veterinary Medicine. I was so close, yet so far from vet school I could taste it. To beef up my application, I wanted more clinical experience and spent a year working at Clare Animal Hospital. Before work on a snowy in December of 2010 my dog, a 13 year old golden retriever named Hunter, became weak, tired, and had tacky gums. I took him to work where my boss, Dr. Paul McNeilly, palpated his abdomen and said it didn’t look too promising. We shaved him for an ultrasound to get a better look at what was going on. The diagnosis: splenic hemangiosarcoma. The prognosis was grave and Dr. McNeilly didn’t anticipate him lasting too much longer. The reason he was so pale and weak was because he was bleeding internally.
I had fully accepted his fate, vowed to make Hunter comfortable in my home, and was overwhelmed with haunting thoughts that if I had gotten into vet school I may have been able to help him sooner. Days later I received a letter from Michigan State. On my second application I was accepted but the feeling was bittersweet with my dog still sick. Five months later, in May of 2011, Hunter was still alive and in good spirits. The doctors at the practice couldn’t believe it and thought he might be strong enough for surgery if the mass hadn’t metastasized. After taking radiographs, checking his blood, and getting a second look with the ultrasound Dr. McNeilly made me an offer that I couldn’t refuse and set the stage for my veterinary career.
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