u/Sweet-Ad-9377

Sterngrove X Major Lazer

Just a heads-up for anyone planning to attend tomorrow's Stern Grove show.

From what I've been hearing, it sounds like more tickets may have been released than the venue can ultimately accommodate. If attendance reaches capacity, the venue may switch to a 1-in, 1-out policy, meaning guests will only be admitted as others leave.

If that happens, there's a possibility you may not get in—even if you have a ticket.

If you want to avoid that risk, I'd strongly recommend arriving before 2:00 PM. It's much better to get in early than spend the afternoon waiting outside, hoping enough people leave for you to be admitted.

Hopefully it doesn't come to that, but arriving early is your best bet if you want to make sure you get inside to go dance.

reddit.com
u/Sweet-Ad-9377 — 20 hours ago

PSA for anyone coming to Stern Grove tomorrow for Major Lazer: Arrive EARLY.

Just a heads-up for anyone planning to attend tomorrow's Stern Grove show.

From what I've been hearing, it sounds like more tickets may have been released than the venue can ultimately accommodate. If attendance reaches capacity, the venue may switch to a 1-in, 1-out policy, meaning guests will only be admitted as others leave.

If that happens, there's a possibility you may not get in—even if you have a ticket.

If you want to avoid that risk, I'd strongly recommend arriving before 2:00 PM. Getting there early is probably your best chance of making sure you get inside.

Hopefully it doesn't come to that, but I figured it was worth giving everyone a heads-up so you can plan accordingly.

reddit.com
u/Sweet-Ad-9377 — 20 hours ago

Advice on how to handle a new internship

Starting at a new internship site should feel exciting, but honestly I’ve been feeling really overwhelmed and anxious lately. Hearing that two students from a prior cohort were dismissed during their first year has been sitting heavily with me. One situation involved sharing information they weren’t supposed to, and another was told they weren’t functioning at the expected clinical level.

I know every situation is different, but as someone entering training, it’s hard not to internalize that and start questioning yourself constantly. This field already comes with so much pressure — balancing clinical work, professionalism, documentation, supervision, and trying to grow while knowing mistakes can carry serious consequences.

I care deeply about my work and my patients, but hearing stories like that makes the environment feel intimidating in a way I wasn’t fully prepared for. I think a lot of trainees quietly carry this fear of “what if I’m not enough?” or “what if I mess up?” even when I'm trying my absolute best.

Just trying to stay grounded, keep learning, and remind myself that anxiety and self-doubt are probably more common in training than people admit.

reddit.com
u/Sweet-Ad-9377 — 2 months ago