Tuesday, March 25, 2014

grateful


In the second and third years of residency, we're on a schedule where for two months we're working in the hospital with tough hours, then switch to two months of a clinic schedule where we get weekends off and work more 9-5 weekdays. Some of my co-residents get a little restless during these more regular, free months (which are like normal-people-schedules), and miss the hospital in some ways. I appreciate my hospital months, but I don't miss them at all. The months of normalcy never, ever get restless for me. I'll forever be grateful to Yale, and the personal growth and exploration that its flexible system allowed us. Because of it, it's hard for me to ever have enough free time or at least time in which I have the freedom to structure work and life how I want to. So I'm grateful for these clinic months, when not only do I get to the kind of patient care I love most but also indulge other parts of myself.

A list of things I've really enjoyed these past two months of being a normal person:

A new schedule

M and I have started having a regular schedule of sleeping early and waking up around seven, which before daylight savings was when it would start to get light. It's such a luxury to actually be able to have a regular schedule. I love not having to set an alarm, because this well before I need to get up for work, and the light naturally wakes me on most days. I love being up early, but not so early it's depressing like during the days of my tougher schedule. I love being able to go to morning yoga, and I love experiencing all hours of daylight. Lots to love.

Three Junes by Julia Glass

I read this on the plane ride to Kilimanjaro last month, and it was beautiful from page one. Since residency doesn't offer much time for pleasure reading, it can be a risk to start a book without knowing how much I'll enjoy it (this makes me sound practical to the point of being robotic, which can be true). So I was actually excited about the 30 hour plane ride, the long stretch of nothingness with time to experiment, and bought a bunch of books for the plane ride. This was the first one I read, and by far the best. The first section takes place near the water, and the book itself felt like water: fresh, filling and layered despite being incredibly easy to take in.

HIV Clinic

I've been able to spend a half day each week in urgent care of the HIV clinic. A big part of Three Junes is about AIDS in the 80s, and we also recently watched Dallas Buyers Club, and in contrast to those narratives HIV care now is more about longitudinal primary care, less dramatic catastrophes. Though we still see a lot of end stage AIDS and HIV complications in the hospital, the patients I see in clinic are able to live with their illness with all the medications out there. The publicly insured population is a diverse and at times eccentric one, but the HIV population in San Francisco is pretty unique and one that I don't get to see in my primary care clinic since there is a specialized HIV clinic. I appreciate learning things specific to a condition. I think this is something we all value as people, the ability to cater towards something, to feel that familiarity with the unique contours of something helps you to know some of the inside.

Runner's high

After hiking Kilimanjaro I took a break from running because the climb down felt really hard on my joints. But after lots of yoga to recover and with beautiful weather beckoning, I started in again with an hour through Golden Gate Park on a Sunday morning. We don't spend much time there since we live on the other end of the city, but I was craving greenery so drove there. Because it was Sunday morning, there was no traffic and I could take in all the hills and corners that make this city so gorgeous. Golden Gate Park was full of kids playing baseball, people walking dogs and riding bikes and power walking and running. The smells hung heavily in the air, making me forget that it smelled any different anywhere else in the city. The first miles of running were glorious, the middle got choppy and then turned the kind of amazing that makes people wonder why you're smiling so hard to yourself. I'm not fast and my endurance is in the middle depending on the comparison, but I love that that doesn't matter--you can still get the high as long as you go far enough.

Cooking

One of the things that makes me feel less human during my inpatient rotations is the amount of frozen dinners I eat. It's been really nice to cook almost every day, even simple meals. I hate grocery shopping, but with M's help I've grown to like it by getting a bit better at it. Developing certain routines has made me feel very normal and happy and natural. Little things like cleaning out the fridge when we just got new groceries, choosing a new cheese each time we go to the store, placing leftovers in a certain place to remember to eat them. Some recipes we've enjoyed are Alaskan salmon with dill, healthy cinnamon roll pancakes, sesame turkey meatballs (tofu for me) sometimes with an orange glaze, and different kinds of pesto, lentils, quinoa. I like being comfortable enough with certain recipes to vary them every so often.

High school friends

This month I was able to spend more time with Kristina, one of my best friends from high school, and also saw Richard who was visiting from Seattle and who I haven't seen in several years. We got to cook for Kristina and Wayland, and had a long cozy dinner at home. M often talks about how our younger selves can be a pure version of us, indicators of what we want when untethered by expectations and responsibilities. Spending time with people from high school reminds me of what we desired then, of what we naturally gravitated towards, and reminds me to seek those in my life. Kristina's regular blogging during a period of facebook abstinence inspired me to return to this, and her presence made me think of my own, of what I want to make from myself.

So, thank you to all this.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

relations


Clinic days are the days I feel most at home in medicine and also most out of sorts. This morning, it was my turn to present a difficult patient case to the rest of our primary care program. These cases are meant to discuss challenging patient interactions and personal management rather than clinical questions. As I narrated the one year course of a relationship with a patient who has presented multiple complex challenges for me, and listened to others' questions, thoughts, and suggestions, I felt the weight of this one relationship. I don't mean weight as a burden, though it's clearly been hard for me to navigate, but more objectively as an observation. In learning about one person there's a lot there, and also a lot of gaps in perception and understanding. It overwhelmed me to think about it.

Later that afternoon I had actual clinic, where I saw four patients. One of them asked how many I see in an afternoon, and I told him somewhere between four and six, and we commented on how that wasn't that many. But I always feel like it's a lot; each person is a different place and there's always so much to process. What strikes me is how much of medicine is about developing these relationships. You know this is a cliche beforehand, but living it is so different (also a cliche). What strikes me even more is how ill-prepared we are for developing them, especially at a place like the county hospital where the patients are so very different from the doctors taking care of them. I think of how much different life they have experienced, and how much of my time has been spent in books in order to help them deal with these lives that exist in a totally separate realm. M and I talk about this all the time, but now that I'm actually responsible for people, it hits hard the flaws in our book learning and even our patient-centered learning. But even as I flounder with it, I'm incredibly grateful to encounter so many diverse people, and to have a relationship even when unable to relate.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

coming back


I've been going to yoga a lot lately because I've consciously felt the need for physical and mental recovery. At the beginning of our class today the teacher spoke about the distractions that kept her from her daily morning practice that morning. Instead of being at her mat, she would find herself at her desk with her computer or on her bed with her phone. Each time she would come back to the mat. "Don't feel guilty," she suggested. "Just keeping coming back."

I spent the last year and half away from this blog, playing briefly and intermittently with another one centered on monthly updates of my rotations, since my residency schedule has me thinking of my life in terms of what I'm working at for four weeks at a time. It never became a flow or an escape in the way that this place was for me in medical school, for different reasons. Obviously, I've had less time, space, and energy. Less obviously, I've realized that this kind of compartmentalization isn't really me. When I started this blog, I painstakingly re-entered entries from my previous blog onto it, to maintain a continuity (one that no one else but me experienced). I thought that with the move and graduation I should start over and grow. But what I've wanted most is to come back.

In some ways this makes it easier to make space for something that I don't want to lose--my desire to record, process, and share by writing. During some rare but strongly felt times, I think I didn't commit enough to something that's felt most natural to me, and I get sad. I think about writing silly stories on the typewriter as a kid, about the long afternoons with the high school newspaper, the intense focus on essays as an English major, and most personally this blog. And I wonder, was it worth it to have sacrificed such a big part of me, a part I never had to force for any external reason? And I find it hard to admit that I never thought it would've had to be sacrificed to such a large degree. But it turns out that medicine is hard, and that many parts of it don't come to me as naturally as it may for others, so I'm left with less reserve that I anticipated. And with that reserve, I've found it easier to invest in being physically active, prioritizing climbing and running over sitting down to write.

This is partly because medicine has been so emotional for me, that it seemed both easier and healthier to use any free time letting movement seep that from me, than to steep it more deeply into words. And while I don't regret using those moments that way, I look back and feel a lost link. Now that I've looked, I won't feel guilty and I won't look anymore. I'd just like to continue.