I'm not an MCAT saint. I'm just someone who figured out a few things that worked, and who genuinely wants to help others do the same.
I currently attend Texas A&M University, where I study biochemistry, and I've applied to medical school for the 2027 application cycle. I took the MCAT and scored a 516, which puts me in roughly the 92nd percentile. That's a strong score, but it's not a 528 and I'm not going to pretend I'm some MCAT genius.
Here's the thing though — most of the information you need to do well on the MCAT is already free or cheap on the internet. Blueprint, Khan Academy, Reddit threads, Anki decks, YouTube videos. The knowledge exists and it's accessible. What most students are missing isn't another resource. It's a real person they can actually talk to.
When I was preparing for the MCAT, I felt the pressure that every pre-med feels. The fear of failure. The weight of family expectations. The exhaustion of grinding for months and not knowing if it was even working. I didn't have a mentor or advisor who had actually done what I was trying to do. I figured it out alone, and looking back, I wish I hadn't had to.
That's why Metacarpal exists. I want to be the person I wish I'd had during my own journey. Someone who will sit with you, understand your specific situation, build you a real plan, and back you up every step of the way.
I'm going to be honest with you. I'm going to listen first and talk second. I'm going to care about you as a person, not just as a client. I'm going to give you a plan that actually fits your life, not a generic template I copy and paste.
And when the inevitable hard moments come — the plateaus, the bad full length scores, the burnout — I'm going to be there to help you think through it instead of leaving you to figure it out alone.
That's the promise. A real human, genuinely in your corner.