Err... Yes... That's what I said... she*
I don't know how your class is set up, but my class went like this:
Two semesters
Semester 1: Class 8-5 MWF, 8-12 hr clinicals TTh, worked PT as a basic Saturday and Sunday. Typically an hour or two of studying each day
Semester 2: Class 8-5 TTh, 8-12hr clinicals MWF, worked Saturday and Sunday. Studying time was similar.
I had zero days off through the entirety of medic school with the exception of a few during winter break. However, that was by choice and I liked it that way.
As far as difficulty, it's just like anything else. Some people get it, some don't. For me, sciences come very naturally and I breezed through the course, enjoying every minute of it. Others struggled significantly, even with considerable tutoring. Read chapters before you cover them in class; that should help tremendously.
Understand that there's the school way and the correct way. While you're in school, learn the school way. While a lot of what schools teach is ridiculous, if they tell you everybody needs 100% O2 via NRB, that's what you put on the test.
Also realize that you are learning the absolute basics that you need to function as a paramedic and not kill anybody. Do not stop learning when you get out; you haven't even scratched the surface of the medical field. Paramedics are not omnipotent beings above all other medical providers. We have a very specific skill set, an are typically completely ignorant to the fact that we do not know everything.
People will scare you about how incredibly difficult registry is. Study, understand the material, an you'll do fine. Don't stress too much about it. Registry tests you on the basics. It's considerably easier than most make it out to be.
So some of that may have been more of the start of mini rants, but so be it

My study break is over, so that's all I have to offer right now
