One day soon, when I am a Senior Resident, I will look at my poor, tired
Intern as she/he sits around on the weekend finishing up notes and say
“poor, little, tired Intern, finish your notes then sign out to me and
go home”. As an Intern, I now say something to that effect to the
Medical Student and I’ll keep saying it as the overnight Senior.
I write this as I sit in the dark, cool call room after my notes are
finished and my patients are tucked away wondering why the heck I am
still here. I miss my family intensely on days like these. Days when all
of my consults have been placed, all of my medication adjustments have
been made with my friends in the Pharmacy, after all of my parents have
been updated. After I have received several cute, cuddly pictures from
my husband or our babysitter of the day. After I have called my mother
to say how tired and lonely I am. After getting lunch with my fellow
Interns (those with work to do) and the cool Seniors who are like “Dude, why are you still
here?” My response, a shake of the head and a sigh. Oh by the way, did I
say that my overnight Senior Resident, the one who I will be signing
out to, the one who wouldn’t let me go home "early," is taking a nap in
the call room?
Okay, okay, okay, I know, let’s look on the bright side.
I am inspired to write a poem:
Oh ye little tired Intern Soul
Set your spirit free once you are safely tucked away at home
Drive away, remove your scrubs, and wash C diff remnants away with real soap
Oh ye tired Intern Spirit
Carry on, far from here, because by this time next year you won’t have hour limitations and you’ll be stuck just like me
Until then, go be free knowing that your patients still have me.
Friday, February 22, 2013
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
MiM Mail: Family/relationship sacrifice
Dear Mothers In Medicine community:
I'm
a PGY2 who started off residency last year in an Ob-Gyn program while
about 25 weeks pregnant. While not ideal, I thought I could make this
work -- there had been an resident a few years before me who had a baby
during the fall of her intern year, and many residents in the program
(female dominated) had babies during residency. My program directors
and co-residents were extremely supportive, and I luckily had a very
easy pregnancy, healthy baby, and smooth recovery.
While
being pregnant was easy, though, going back to work was harder than I
had thought. Many days, I was at work for 14 hours a day, plus I'd work
weekends or nightfloat, and this would go on for months at a time.
Despite how much I was working, I hardly violated duty hours and I
really did enjoy what I was doing and hardly thought about missing out
on things at home because I loved my job. Meanwhile, my husband was
left home alone for most evenings and weekends with a baby, feeling
unsupported and exhausted. He's a wonderful father and in general a
helpful, loving husband, but he grew increasingly disgruntled with the
situation, and soon we were constantly bickering over my terrible
schedule. Our families, while on the same coast as us, are hours away.
We live in an apartment, so there was no space for a live-in nanny, and
our daytime nanny fell through, so our son started daycare (which we
all love). I offered to hire more help for the nights and weekends, but
my husband resisted, saying it was unfair to deprive our son of his
mother. Honestly, I think my husband was just feeling overworked,
exhausted, unappreciated, and unhappy in his own job, and I actually
think he felt that even though I was at work from 5:30 am to 7:30 or 8 pm many days and weekends, my time away from home was actually a "break" from having to take care of a new baby.
Tension
at home worsened after I got into a car accident while coming home from
nightfloat during the beginning of PGY2. No one was hurt, but my
husband was extremely upset -- not that I damaged the car -- but that I
was willing to risk my life for the sake of a "job." I tried to explain
that I loved this job. I asked about what his expectations were. I
insisted that other people have kids in residency and make it work. It
was all to no avail. When he basically threatened that our marriage
would eventually end and he would seek custody of our baby if this
situation continued, I tried to negotiate a part-time position with my
residency director, but it wasn't possible. Long story short, I ended
up taking a month off from the program, talking to lots of other people,
and then switching into Psychiatry, which is the other field I was
considered during 4th year of med school.
My quality of
life is much better, but I still feel sad when thinking about this whole
ordeal. I'm adjusting to my new program, and 4 months into it, I feel
like I'm getting the hang of things, but I know deep down it's not what I
100% really wanted to do. And every time I open my inbox and see
emails from ACOG, or open my mailbox and find an Ob-Gyn journal, or run
into a med student who I worked with as an Ob-Gyn resident and have to
explain why they're now seeing me on their Psych rotation (I stayed at
the same institution), or run into my former Ob-Gyn attendings or
co-residents, or see friends posting on Facebook about how much they
loooove their residencies or are doing really cool things, it's like
opening the wound all over again -- the hurt, sadness, anger, and
embarrassment all come flooding back. It's especially upsetting to me
when I see other female residents, especially surgical ones, who are
having their second babies while in training! I know there must be more
going on in their relationships that what meets the eyes, but it makes
me sad that other people's husbands must be so much more supportive than
mine.
So, I guess I'm
writing to ask: has anyone else had to make huge sacrifices (such as
switching residencies) in order to save a relationship or pacify a
partner? And if so, how did you handle this? The resentment towards my
husband is fading as I'm beginning to see how wonderful it is to have a
life outside of work, but I'm wondering if I'll always feel a little
sad about having to make this switch?
Thank you so much for your support and advice,
Anonymous
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Next Year...
Next year I am getting it right.
Last year was my first experience as a parent trying to navigate the world of preschool Valentine's Day. I had instructions to deliver 39 Valentine's Day cards, each labeled with my daughter's name ("Homemade cards welcome!"), to school for general distribution on February 14. With little thought as to package to package variability, I picked up two boxes of small, brightly colored cards at Target and brought them home. On February 13 I opened the boxes, thinking I would have to do nothing more than write her name on the card, to discover the assembly of each card a five-step process that, in the end, took me 90 minutes and produced a meager little offering.
That 90 minutes seemed an eternity, and not just for me, but for my 3 year old who, after 5 minutes, wandered off in search of more scintillating activity. Dinner still needed to be made. The house was a mess. But I remained alone at the kids' table to assemble, sticker, and label each card until all 39 were complete.
I wasn't the only one who misjudged the expectations. In Munch's class are a few children from foreign countries, here for a few years while one or both of their parents complete graduate degree or post bac. When Munch got home from school that she had a number of artful, standard-sized greeting cards, most written in unfamiliar languages. While I had been disappointed to find myself squandering dinner prep time with Valentine's Day card assembly, I wonder if those other parents were put off by the relatively paltry offerings put forth by their children's classmates.
This year I bought far simpler cards in early February.
And on Thursday I realized they were missing. Nothing in this house stays in one place for very long and so, after too long a period spent looking for the cards, I resigned myself to a second trip to Target for replacements. At this late hour, my options were Justin Bieber or origami fortune tellers.
I strongly considered the Bieber cards. No preparation, not a particularly controversial celebrity, and who-cares-its-just-a-card. But an emotion similar to shame forced me to select the latter and hope dimly they were pre-folded.
At home I confirmed I was not so lucky. In ground hog day fashion, I found myself alone in the kitchen, the night before Valentine's day, with dinner needing to be made, up against 39 unfolded origami cards and my own expectations.
I did was I suspected I was going to do when faced with the potential each one of these cards would take me five or so minutes to complete. (Not to mention the time it would take to learn how to fold them in the first place.) Ignoring the multitude of dotted and crossed lines, I folded the cards lengthwise twice over and slid each card into its provided sleeve. I wrote my daughter's name on each sleeve and got on with the dinner preparation.
Next year I might just distribute an envelop full of candy. Lord knows that is the only thing I wanted when I was 4.
Friday, February 15, 2013
MiM Mail: Pregnant and matching, oh my!
Hi MiM,
I also have a Rank List dilemma...
I am a fourth year medical student applying for a categorical spot in Child Neurology. I just found out I am pregnant with #1! We were not really trying but it was a pleasant surprise, despite the fact that I am due in early October which will be four months into my intern year, yikes! So, I will be entering residency visibly pregnant and then after a too brief maternity leave, I will have to finish intern year with a newborn. Ideal? No. But I am not going to take the year off and I am lucky in that my husband is further along in his medical career and will have a more flexible schedule than me. We have NO IDEA where we will end up as there are relatively few spots in Child Neuro thus I applied widely and will be ranking programs from coast to coast. By matching categorical that means I do Peds for two years followed by three years in Neurology but at the same institution. I know that Peds tends to be more family friendly than some other programs but I got a sense that some programs were much more supportive than others. None of the programs I interviewed at are aware of my pregnancy as I just found out myself. I don't think I need to disclose this and fear that it would only hurt my chances of ranking.... But if anyone has been in a similar situation or thinks that I am wrong I would love to hear her advice.
My other question is whether or not I should let the "family feel" of each program influence my rank order. Several of my top programs are very academic and I think the residents tend to be a bit younger (thus less likely to have families already) and so I wonder if it will be an issue for me to be pregnant/out for maternity/breast-feeding/etc. Part of me thinks that intern year going to be difficult no matter where I go and that I'll figure it out and make whatever I need to work. But the other part of me (the emotional, tired, newly pregnant part) wants to be a program that will be supportive and celebrate with me. I feel like I did interview at programs like that but they were mainly General Peds programs. Thus I would have to take an extra year to complete Peds and then reapply for Child Neuro fellowship as an advanced candidate in a year. I'm not crazy about the idea of taking an extra year to train when I already know what I want to do. Nor do I want to have to reapply and interview again. Furthermore, I think it would be disruptive to my husband's career to have to move again in three years as well. But again, if anyone has been through a similar situation or has any advice I would love to hear it.
Many thanks,
Pregnant and matching, oh my!
I also have a Rank List dilemma...
I am a fourth year medical student applying for a categorical spot in Child Neurology. I just found out I am pregnant with #1! We were not really trying but it was a pleasant surprise, despite the fact that I am due in early October which will be four months into my intern year, yikes! So, I will be entering residency visibly pregnant and then after a too brief maternity leave, I will have to finish intern year with a newborn. Ideal? No. But I am not going to take the year off and I am lucky in that my husband is further along in his medical career and will have a more flexible schedule than me. We have NO IDEA where we will end up as there are relatively few spots in Child Neuro thus I applied widely and will be ranking programs from coast to coast. By matching categorical that means I do Peds for two years followed by three years in Neurology but at the same institution. I know that Peds tends to be more family friendly than some other programs but I got a sense that some programs were much more supportive than others. None of the programs I interviewed at are aware of my pregnancy as I just found out myself. I don't think I need to disclose this and fear that it would only hurt my chances of ranking.... But if anyone has been in a similar situation or thinks that I am wrong I would love to hear her advice.
My other question is whether or not I should let the "family feel" of each program influence my rank order. Several of my top programs are very academic and I think the residents tend to be a bit younger (thus less likely to have families already) and so I wonder if it will be an issue for me to be pregnant/out for maternity/breast-feeding/etc. Part of me thinks that intern year going to be difficult no matter where I go and that I'll figure it out and make whatever I need to work. But the other part of me (the emotional, tired, newly pregnant part) wants to be a program that will be supportive and celebrate with me. I feel like I did interview at programs like that but they were mainly General Peds programs. Thus I would have to take an extra year to complete Peds and then reapply for Child Neuro fellowship as an advanced candidate in a year. I'm not crazy about the idea of taking an extra year to train when I already know what I want to do. Nor do I want to have to reapply and interview again. Furthermore, I think it would be disruptive to my husband's career to have to move again in three years as well. But again, if anyone has been through a similar situation or has any advice I would love to hear it.
Many thanks,
Pregnant and matching, oh my!
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Fecal Transplants
Last summer, the kids and I visited my friend Trish-eee with her husband and two kids at her lake house up North. It was restorative for me. I hadn't seen her in a few years, long overdue. We talk and text, sure, but there is nothing like face to face time. She was one of my best friends in residency. Her and Mellificent. One of the funniest stories I remember (and there are many) was once when we were stealing away from a conference in San Diego for a little shopping time in the Bohemian district. We asked a cabbie to take us there. She's a beautiful blonde, a granola marathon runner, much like I might imagine Cheryl Strayed looked when she was taking her trip in Wild. I had just read that book, and Trishie was training for a marathon during my visit. She complained of blackened toenails, and I laughed thinking of Strayed's hiking trip. I have never exercised so hard that my toenails blackened and fell off. I guess there's still time in life. Or maybe not.
Anyway, we took a cab to the district, I think it might have been called Hillcrest, which was funny to me since I lived at the time in the Hillcrest division of Little Rock. In LR, it is a hippie, liberal area with lots of cool restaurants, bars, and fabulous old houses, some of them beautifully restored. Trishie and I (Lizzie here) excitedly chatted about the fabulous Thai food we sought out and the wonderful second hand clothes stores we aimed to shop at. I was winding down after presenting a paper, an on sale but fabulous Banana Republic suit happily hanging back in the hotel closet. We were both exhilarated to be out of town and on a jaunt. The cabbie had a question, which he asked with a heavy accent.
"So, we are going to Hillcrest. You must be lesbians, no?"
We glanced at each other, shocked at the blatancy of his question. And the fallacy. Mutually decided that little explanation was better, but in retrospect I wish we would have replied yes, silently egging him on. There were rainbow flags flying everywhere, and in another life, why not pretend? So what if we were?
At the lake house this summer, Trishie took me on a long drive to see the area. She told me she was on the fecal transplant committee at her hospital. I did a double take. Fecal WHAT?
"Lizzie, it's so crazy, but it works. All the big research hospitals up North are doing it. Some patients want fecal donors from their own families, but that's too rough on a small town hospital like ours. We get a big normal stool sample, do all the testing in house to clear it of pathogens, and freeze it in aliquots. You know those intractable patients with C.Diff.? The ones who take tons and tons of meds and eat up hospital time? You just do a tiny suppository of normal feces and voila! They are cured."
I am the Director of Microbiology of my own hospital and I, subsequently confirming that all my co-workers (lab head, techs, etc.) as well, was not at all aware of this in Arkansas. I had tons of questions for her, medical and otherwise. She said, "Lizzie, it's so funny to sit on the committee. There are all these poop jokes. 'I need to make a movement to approve this.' 'We need to make this our #2 priority.'" I listened in awe and laughed until my face hurt.
A month or so ago there was an article on Fecal Transplants in the New York Times. I also ran across it last week on Kevin M.D. So despite my partner's reservations ('Are you sure she is not a practical joker, this friend of yours from residency? I think she is surely pulling your leg' - you know who you are ha ha), I believe her. It makes sense. Replenish the gut with normal flora to fight disease, rather than blasting it with antibiotics - the bomb to kill the fly. I wonder when it will come to Arkansas. I am sure it will come to my attention as soon as it does.
Trishie called me a few weeks ago to set up another visit this summer, and I carved out a time. I can't wait. She and her husband are such wonderful parents to their kindergartner and toddler. We played lots of games. We watched the Olympics. We taught Cecelia how to water ski, and she was so proud. I got up on water skis for the first time in many years, and I was so proud. I ran every day. I swam laps around the lake, and my eyes burned from the muddy water, in a good way. I learned about fecal transplants. I wonder what I will learn about this year. Surely it cannot compare.
I can't end this blog without mentioning that my friend Trishie is the daughter of a self-made multi-millionaire. She would not reveal this to you - you might only learn about it if you knew her very well. Many of you would recognize the name of what her dad has created, which I am withholding here out of respect for privacy. She didn't have to work. But she got her drive from her wonderful dad, who I met this past summer. Her determination to carve out her own niche in this world and do something amazing trumped an easy, luxurious path in life which he certainly would have provided for her. I am so proud of him for instilling that drive in her and her for fulfilling her own dreams. She is an excellent physician.
Happy Fecal Valentine's Day Trishie, love you!
Anyway, we took a cab to the district, I think it might have been called Hillcrest, which was funny to me since I lived at the time in the Hillcrest division of Little Rock. In LR, it is a hippie, liberal area with lots of cool restaurants, bars, and fabulous old houses, some of them beautifully restored. Trishie and I (Lizzie here) excitedly chatted about the fabulous Thai food we sought out and the wonderful second hand clothes stores we aimed to shop at. I was winding down after presenting a paper, an on sale but fabulous Banana Republic suit happily hanging back in the hotel closet. We were both exhilarated to be out of town and on a jaunt. The cabbie had a question, which he asked with a heavy accent.
"So, we are going to Hillcrest. You must be lesbians, no?"
We glanced at each other, shocked at the blatancy of his question. And the fallacy. Mutually decided that little explanation was better, but in retrospect I wish we would have replied yes, silently egging him on. There were rainbow flags flying everywhere, and in another life, why not pretend? So what if we were?
At the lake house this summer, Trishie took me on a long drive to see the area. She told me she was on the fecal transplant committee at her hospital. I did a double take. Fecal WHAT?
"Lizzie, it's so crazy, but it works. All the big research hospitals up North are doing it. Some patients want fecal donors from their own families, but that's too rough on a small town hospital like ours. We get a big normal stool sample, do all the testing in house to clear it of pathogens, and freeze it in aliquots. You know those intractable patients with C.Diff.? The ones who take tons and tons of meds and eat up hospital time? You just do a tiny suppository of normal feces and voila! They are cured."
I am the Director of Microbiology of my own hospital and I, subsequently confirming that all my co-workers (lab head, techs, etc.) as well, was not at all aware of this in Arkansas. I had tons of questions for her, medical and otherwise. She said, "Lizzie, it's so funny to sit on the committee. There are all these poop jokes. 'I need to make a movement to approve this.' 'We need to make this our #2 priority.'" I listened in awe and laughed until my face hurt.
A month or so ago there was an article on Fecal Transplants in the New York Times. I also ran across it last week on Kevin M.D. So despite my partner's reservations ('Are you sure she is not a practical joker, this friend of yours from residency? I think she is surely pulling your leg' - you know who you are ha ha), I believe her. It makes sense. Replenish the gut with normal flora to fight disease, rather than blasting it with antibiotics - the bomb to kill the fly. I wonder when it will come to Arkansas. I am sure it will come to my attention as soon as it does.
Trishie called me a few weeks ago to set up another visit this summer, and I carved out a time. I can't wait. She and her husband are such wonderful parents to their kindergartner and toddler. We played lots of games. We watched the Olympics. We taught Cecelia how to water ski, and she was so proud. I got up on water skis for the first time in many years, and I was so proud. I ran every day. I swam laps around the lake, and my eyes burned from the muddy water, in a good way. I learned about fecal transplants. I wonder what I will learn about this year. Surely it cannot compare.
I can't end this blog without mentioning that my friend Trishie is the daughter of a self-made multi-millionaire. She would not reveal this to you - you might only learn about it if you knew her very well. Many of you would recognize the name of what her dad has created, which I am withholding here out of respect for privacy. She didn't have to work. But she got her drive from her wonderful dad, who I met this past summer. Her determination to carve out her own niche in this world and do something amazing trumped an easy, luxurious path in life which he certainly would have provided for her. I am so proud of him for instilling that drive in her and her for fulfilling her own dreams. She is an excellent physician.
Happy Fecal Valentine's Day Trishie, love you!
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Oh my god....
Yesterday, I collected a receipt from our daycare for tax purposes. In the past, I've always gotten the receipts on a month by month basis, but this time they had a receipt for the entirety of 2012. My husband and I couldn't stop staring at the number on the receipt:
$39,000
Spent on daycare. Before we pay our rent, before we buy even a single frozen chicken nugget. Just for daycare.
Wow.
$39,000
Spent on daycare. Before we pay our rent, before we buy even a single frozen chicken nugget. Just for daycare.
Wow.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Guest post: End of residency rant
One short, miniscule, month. And I can’t
get my shit together.
I started medical school almost eight years
ago. I had the world at my feet. I was married five weeks before med school
started. My husband was in graduate school about an hour away. I had a
wonderful social life, and the resume-padding was unbelievable.
Then, unexpectedly, just before the end of
my first year, I was pregnant.
Now, I am blessed with three beautiful
children, the same wonderful husband, a dog, and a cat. I am about to start an
exciting, rewarding career. I have a loving family and, once we dig out from
under the mortgage-sized debt of my medical training, the prospect of a secure
financial future. My licensing exam is completed – and passed. My application
for independent practice is submitted.
Tick, tick, tick goes the checklist.
So why am I so blue?
Because I am sitting in my “office”, in the
basement, for the gazillionth time, while my husband puts the children to bed.
I am supposed to be finishing my resident research project, but all I can think
about is the sacrifice that went into this whole deal. And I feel like I just
can’t do it one more time. I can’t sit down here, while my kids do their thing,
while my husband cooks and wipes little faces and hands, and dresses and
changes, and talks and explains and answers little questions, while he washes
hair and towels dry and finds pajamas, while he surfs the net in lieu of my
company and attention. I spent months studying for my exam down here. I still spend
endless hours down here administering to administration, to licensing bodies
and colleges and universities and evaluations and preceptors and the endless
litany of mindless work that only I can do. And I just can’t do it anymore. I
am utterly spent.
Where are the other medical mothers who
feel this way? Is acknowledging this darkness akin to yielding to it? Because I
have noticed that no physician who does creative writing in popular medical journals
seems to get published unless there is a vein of hope, silver lining, outwardly
optimistic, or putridly glowing endorsement of the profession tucked into the
moral of the story. We only want to hear tales of physician woe if the tales
end with the message that we are the fortunate, rarefied few who get to
struggle in this way. We hold our noble heads high.
Give me a break. Give me the sweaty mothers
who can’t afford a nanny or a housekeeper or even a babysitter for a night out.
Give me the stressed out mothers with messy homes and offices and cluttered
minds and hearts. Give me the medical mothers who nurse their infants while
reading their journals, then feel guilty about splitting their attention. I
want to befriend the other mothers who adore their children so much that their
hearts break on a daily basis – yet can’t stand the same children disturbing their
few hours of consecutive sleep. Give me the doctors who love medicine, who want
to see patients all day and night, who listen to medical podcasts and fantasize
about intubating crashing patients while doing their completely irregular
workouts (it does get the heart rate up), who obsess over the evidence basis for
PSA testing and feel crushed when they miss a diagnosis. I want to be friends
with dedicated mothers and dedicated doctors, and I want to acknowledge the
horror of combining those two wonderful people into one. Because it isn’t as
pretty as it sounds.
So, as I sit down here, I just can’t get my
shit together. I can’t decide if it’s all been worth it or not. On the very
cusp of being “done” with training, with one foot raised and about to touch the
start line of the rest of my life, I can’t decide. Or maybe, I’m a little bit
sickened. Because maybe, I want to admit, that the sacrifice has been too
great, and if I could do it all over again, maybe I just wouldn’t. Silver
lining be damned. I’ve always wanted to be a mother, more than I ever, ever
wanted to be a doctor. And while being a mother has undoubtedly made me a much
better doctor, I cannot say that the reverse is true. In fact, being a doctor
has stolen gaping wounds of time and attention from my mothering soul.
But I can’t bring myself to say it just
yet. Somehow, despite the sickness in my heart, I just can’t say it. Perhaps
the future knows something I don’t. Perhaps I just can’t bear to close a piece
of writing on a negative note. Maybe I
am copping out, playing to the audience, telling you what I think you want to
hear. I don’t know. So I sit in my basement office a little longer, the
children are asleep, and soon I should be, too. Because tomorrow the children
will want me, it will be my 27th-last day of residency, and there is still,
always, work to be done.
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Being introduced
My mother, not in medicine, and this mother in medicine,
went to have a biopsy. Her biopsy. By a surgeon. I am not a surgeon. Nor am I a doctor for adults. My day to day is infants, toddlers, school-aged
children, tweens, and adolescents. And
medical students.
How does your mom
introduce you to her doctors? My mother
introduced me to the surgeon whom she herself was just meeting at that moment, as
her daughter. Sounds reasonable. Started off well. Though this was immediately followed by, “she’s
a pediatrician.” I paused briefly at the
stark declaration, and softly came up with, “…who knows nothing about what you do.”
Why did I demur? Why so modest? The surgeon and I might indeed speak the same
language (though she much more tersely).
But I need not hover, make her nervous, nor imply that the reason I’m there is because I’m a doctor
too. The reason I was there was to support
my mother. As a daughter.
But alas, I guess I was also there because I do speak, or at least
understand, that language.
[Results not in yet. Somehow
felt okay to post here on MIM in the interim.]
Friday, February 8, 2013
Mom's Group
Back when I was on my last maternity leave, forever ago, I joined a local Mom's playgroup.
At the time, it was sort of fun. We met up on the long boring weekdays and chatted. (We never ate, for some reason. We'd have these playgroups going from 10AM to 2PM and god forbid anyone would ever suggest having lunch. Mothers don't consume food, right?)
Eventually, I went back to work. And that was it for the playgroup and my playgroup friends.
I still get emails about the playgroups. They're always on weekdays, and even if I happen to have the day off, I'm usually playing catch-up on errands. And whenever I suggest doing something on a weekend, everyone tells me that's family time.
I think this is why working moms and stay-at-home moms can't really be friends, not because we have nothing in common. SAHMs want to fill their weekdays with activities, whereas on weekdays, working moms are either working or too exhausted to contemplate going out.
Still, it makes me sad every time I see those playgroup emails.
At the time, it was sort of fun. We met up on the long boring weekdays and chatted. (We never ate, for some reason. We'd have these playgroups going from 10AM to 2PM and god forbid anyone would ever suggest having lunch. Mothers don't consume food, right?)
Eventually, I went back to work. And that was it for the playgroup and my playgroup friends.
I still get emails about the playgroups. They're always on weekdays, and even if I happen to have the day off, I'm usually playing catch-up on errands. And whenever I suggest doing something on a weekend, everyone tells me that's family time.
I think this is why working moms and stay-at-home moms can't really be friends, not because we have nothing in common. SAHMs want to fill their weekdays with activities, whereas on weekdays, working moms are either working or too exhausted to contemplate going out.
Still, it makes me sad every time I see those playgroup emails.
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
MiM Mail: Rank List Dilemma
Dear MiM,
I am a fourth year medical student anxiously awaiting March 15 (match day). I enjoyed almost all my rotations and nothing jumped out to me as "the one." I ended up applying in Emergency Medicine and Internal Medicine (2 different specialties, I did not apply to any combined programs). I also have a toddler who IS my joy and passion. My ultimate career/mom goal is working as a part-time ER doc or as a hospitalist with a week-on-week-off schedule, which, as far as I could see, would allow me the most time to spend with my child while still practicing medicine.
Here’s the catch: my husband, also a fourth year medical student, is applying in General Surgery. I have no illusions about how much I would see him as a surgical intern/resident anyway, but to add to that, he's applying to programs that (while less than an hour away from where I hope to be) will necessitate him living away from my daughter and I for several months out of the year (the program he's looking hardest at rotates where I'll be a good bit). I want to stay where we live now because we have an awesome/ideal amount of family support and a nanny that we love.
Most of my anxiety stems not from actual worry about intern year, but rather about never seeing my daughter. To that end, I'm basing my rank list on whichever program will allow me to spend more time with her (because, again, I love EM & IM both, and can't find another way to choose...also, she's my priority).
I've been able to negotiate with my favorite IM program a 3 months on, 1 month off format, which will extend my residency from 3 to 4 years (however, they're reluctant to do this with intern year, which I understand, but still isn't ideal). I am not sure if it would be better for my child if I was gone all the time for a shorter period of time or home one month out of four (but extending residency by a year). Stability vs. Seeing Mommy (at least sometimes). Of course this also has decreased salary and benefits. On the other hand, EM would mean not seeing her much at all on days when I work (usually 10-12 hour shifts) but then having whole days with her when I'm off (and still getting out in 3 years). There's also the night work, which means some more day time, but having to arrange night time care (fortunately, I am in a situation where I can do this).
I know no one can make this decision for me. Nevertheless, I appreciate the chance to get some feedback on my situation from people who might understand it better than most. Any thoughts on which one is more do-able (in the short and long run?). Rank lists are due Feb. 20 and I'm going back and forth on this.
Sincerely,
At a Crossroads
I am a fourth year medical student anxiously awaiting March 15 (match day). I enjoyed almost all my rotations and nothing jumped out to me as "the one." I ended up applying in Emergency Medicine and Internal Medicine (2 different specialties, I did not apply to any combined programs). I also have a toddler who IS my joy and passion. My ultimate career/mom goal is working as a part-time ER doc or as a hospitalist with a week-on-week-off schedule, which, as far as I could see, would allow me the most time to spend with my child while still practicing medicine.
Here’s the catch: my husband, also a fourth year medical student, is applying in General Surgery. I have no illusions about how much I would see him as a surgical intern/resident anyway, but to add to that, he's applying to programs that (while less than an hour away from where I hope to be) will necessitate him living away from my daughter and I for several months out of the year (the program he's looking hardest at rotates where I'll be a good bit). I want to stay where we live now because we have an awesome/ideal amount of family support and a nanny that we love.
Most of my anxiety stems not from actual worry about intern year, but rather about never seeing my daughter. To that end, I'm basing my rank list on whichever program will allow me to spend more time with her (because, again, I love EM & IM both, and can't find another way to choose...also, she's my priority).
I've been able to negotiate with my favorite IM program a 3 months on, 1 month off format, which will extend my residency from 3 to 4 years (however, they're reluctant to do this with intern year, which I understand, but still isn't ideal). I am not sure if it would be better for my child if I was gone all the time for a shorter period of time or home one month out of four (but extending residency by a year). Stability vs. Seeing Mommy (at least sometimes). Of course this also has decreased salary and benefits. On the other hand, EM would mean not seeing her much at all on days when I work (usually 10-12 hour shifts) but then having whole days with her when I'm off (and still getting out in 3 years). There's also the night work, which means some more day time, but having to arrange night time care (fortunately, I am in a situation where I can do this).
I know no one can make this decision for me. Nevertheless, I appreciate the chance to get some feedback on my situation from people who might understand it better than most. Any thoughts on which one is more do-able (in the short and long run?). Rank lists are due Feb. 20 and I'm going back and forth on this.
Sincerely,
At a Crossroads
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Should I go to medical school?
I have gotten several emails though my blog, some from people who found me through Mothers in Medicine, asking me for advice. I am so touched that people reach out to me. I used to answer these emails individually. I have not answered the last handful, for many reasons.
Most of all, these reasons are personal. Intern year is much different than fourth year as a medical student. I have had a lot more demands on my sleep schedule, my time, my emotions, and my responsibility. I haven't been blogging much in general.
I also did not match last year, and have spent most of this year questioning my dreams. I don't want to rain on anyone's parade with some sort of bitter reply. Which, I wouldn't necessary give, but I have to be honest in my answer. Being a single mother in medical school and residency isn't a piece of cake. But, being a single parent in this world isn't a piece of cake, either, and being a medical student and / or resident isn't a piece of cake. Foregoing medical school isn't necessarily the answer to any of that.
Here is some general advice I will share with parents, single or otherwise, who are facing decisions about medical school and residency. These answers cover a mishmash of frequently asked questions that come up in comments and emails. I looked it over, and I use the qualifier "very" a lot. I usually avoid that word, thanks to my father's influence. He told me to edit by replacing every "very" with "damn", and then to edit out the profanity. I have left them in, because this topic is very damn very challenging.
For single parents or parents whose partner will not be available for child care:
You will need to have a very, very flexible, very solid support system. For clinical years and residency, you will be expected to change what time you come and go on a moment's notice. The rotation you are on most likely will change every four to six weeks, and the demands, time wise, may change day to day on certain rotations. These hours can be as early as 5 am or even earlier, and you can be expected to stay way past midnight, even all night. Some of these times you can plan for, and some you can't. Living near family is very, very important for those of us who can arrange for that. It definitely can be done without family, but please keep in mind the expense and issues with screening and turnover of caregivers.
For people who are facing custody issues, possibly moving for residency, lack of familial support in their particular area:
I feel for you. Coparenting arrangements are very, very difficult. Depending on a lot of factors, you may need to be willing to move for residency, especially for certain specialties or even for some of your rotations. This may involve moving to a place your ex doesn't want you to move to, or moving to a place away from familial and / or social support. The judge may not look to kindly upon you leaving town with a child or children to a place where you know no one and will be working 80 hours a week, including nights, no matter how much you love your kids and parent well. And, there is a reason for that. Is it doable? Yes. Is it a good idea? Depends. Keep this in mind before embarking on medical school. This is one reason I wish I had done ARNP midwifery instead of medical school, occasionally. I wouldn't have to do the match for obstetrics residency. I had reasons not to go the nursing route then, and those are still valid.
For people trying to decide between nurse practitioner, midwifery, physician, and other avenues of the medical profession:
I really stumbled into medicine without a full understanding of how involved the process was, when it came to board exams, residency match, etc. I am still not fully informed on what it takes to be most of the other options available. Please research the nitty gritty, and you will still be surprised by the reality of how the sausage is made. I found studentdoctor.net. With all of its problems (and there are MANY), it is a decent place to find out practical details of many steps of medical school, from pre-med through fellowship and beyond, if you can fish through the trolling, bragging and nonsense.
As for whether or not you can handle it...sigh. I think we can all handle a lot. I think there are times at work, even at 4 am, in which I am exhilarated, and so happy that I chose my path. There are times when I am with my kids that are quality times, and everything seems to work out. There are times in which I feel completely overwhelmed, where I cry at work, and then cry at home because these kids who I wanted to desperately to spend time with when I was stuck at the hospital are bickering with me and with each other, and all I want to do is send everyone to their rooms. No matter what happens this March when I find out if I match in obstetrics or family practice, I will be happy as a physician. I will also have regrets. I think this will apply to anyone, no matter where their choices lead them.
For people who are older:
I was not the oldest person in my medical school. I am not the oldest person in my residency program. I think it is more of an issue with your peers than with your professors and attending physicians, who may be your age. They don't think they are less skilled, and may identify with you more readily than they do younger students. Some people may say it's a waste of investment of a medical school spot or residency spot that a younger person who would give more back deserves more. People say this about women in medicine, too, and that we want to go pop out babies and work part time when we are done with training. All these people can, um, stuff it.
For people who have a history in the "natural" birth community, i.e. doula, midwife, or are just crunchy types looking into medical school:
There is definitely room for us in all aspects of the medical community. I was pleasantly surprised by the diversity in my medical school and in the medical community. One of the first events I participated in for medical school was a social event at a bar, and one of my classmates, a massage therapist, was a few sheets to the wind and offering to balance my classmates' chakras in a wobbly kind of way. I sat next to a grandmother who caught her own grandchild at a home birth all of my second year.
However, medical school is long. Residency is long. It is a grueling, intensive slog. Make sure you are doing it to become a physician. If you want to be a doula, be a doula. I will not be a doula or a lay midwife if I am an obstetrician, or even if I am a family practitioner. It is not worth the effort to go through all the extra training, and the infrastructure is very inflexible and unforgiving. You potentially will be choosing battles constantly, and need to know your place as a matter of respect and experience and survival. Does that mean always stuffing it? No. But, it means often stuffing it.
If there's anything I missed, please add it in the comments.
Most of all, these reasons are personal. Intern year is much different than fourth year as a medical student. I have had a lot more demands on my sleep schedule, my time, my emotions, and my responsibility. I haven't been blogging much in general.
I also did not match last year, and have spent most of this year questioning my dreams. I don't want to rain on anyone's parade with some sort of bitter reply. Which, I wouldn't necessary give, but I have to be honest in my answer. Being a single mother in medical school and residency isn't a piece of cake. But, being a single parent in this world isn't a piece of cake, either, and being a medical student and / or resident isn't a piece of cake. Foregoing medical school isn't necessarily the answer to any of that.
Here is some general advice I will share with parents, single or otherwise, who are facing decisions about medical school and residency. These answers cover a mishmash of frequently asked questions that come up in comments and emails. I looked it over, and I use the qualifier "very" a lot. I usually avoid that word, thanks to my father's influence. He told me to edit by replacing every "very" with "damn", and then to edit out the profanity. I have left them in, because this topic is
For single parents or parents whose partner will not be available for child care:
You will need to have a very, very flexible, very solid support system. For clinical years and residency, you will be expected to change what time you come and go on a moment's notice. The rotation you are on most likely will change every four to six weeks, and the demands, time wise, may change day to day on certain rotations. These hours can be as early as 5 am or even earlier, and you can be expected to stay way past midnight, even all night. Some of these times you can plan for, and some you can't. Living near family is very, very important for those of us who can arrange for that. It definitely can be done without family, but please keep in mind the expense and issues with screening and turnover of caregivers.
For people who are facing custody issues, possibly moving for residency, lack of familial support in their particular area:
I feel for you. Coparenting arrangements are very, very difficult. Depending on a lot of factors, you may need to be willing to move for residency, especially for certain specialties or even for some of your rotations. This may involve moving to a place your ex doesn't want you to move to, or moving to a place away from familial and / or social support. The judge may not look to kindly upon you leaving town with a child or children to a place where you know no one and will be working 80 hours a week, including nights, no matter how much you love your kids and parent well. And, there is a reason for that. Is it doable? Yes. Is it a good idea? Depends. Keep this in mind before embarking on medical school. This is one reason I wish I had done ARNP midwifery instead of medical school, occasionally. I wouldn't have to do the match for obstetrics residency. I had reasons not to go the nursing route then, and those are still valid.
For people trying to decide between nurse practitioner, midwifery, physician, and other avenues of the medical profession:
I really stumbled into medicine without a full understanding of how involved the process was, when it came to board exams, residency match, etc. I am still not fully informed on what it takes to be most of the other options available. Please research the nitty gritty, and you will still be surprised by the reality of how the sausage is made. I found studentdoctor.net. With all of its problems (and there are MANY), it is a decent place to find out practical details of many steps of medical school, from pre-med through fellowship and beyond, if you can fish through the trolling, bragging and nonsense.
As for whether or not you can handle it...sigh. I think we can all handle a lot. I think there are times at work, even at 4 am, in which I am exhilarated, and so happy that I chose my path. There are times when I am with my kids that are quality times, and everything seems to work out. There are times in which I feel completely overwhelmed, where I cry at work, and then cry at home because these kids who I wanted to desperately to spend time with when I was stuck at the hospital are bickering with me and with each other, and all I want to do is send everyone to their rooms. No matter what happens this March when I find out if I match in obstetrics or family practice, I will be happy as a physician. I will also have regrets. I think this will apply to anyone, no matter where their choices lead them.
For people who are older:
I was not the oldest person in my medical school. I am not the oldest person in my residency program. I think it is more of an issue with your peers than with your professors and attending physicians, who may be your age. They don't think they are less skilled, and may identify with you more readily than they do younger students. Some people may say it's a waste of investment of a medical school spot or residency spot that a younger person who would give more back deserves more. People say this about women in medicine, too, and that we want to go pop out babies and work part time when we are done with training. All these people can, um, stuff it.
For people who have a history in the "natural" birth community, i.e. doula, midwife, or are just crunchy types looking into medical school:
There is definitely room for us in all aspects of the medical community. I was pleasantly surprised by the diversity in my medical school and in the medical community. One of the first events I participated in for medical school was a social event at a bar, and one of my classmates, a massage therapist, was a few sheets to the wind and offering to balance my classmates' chakras in a wobbly kind of way. I sat next to a grandmother who caught her own grandchild at a home birth all of my second year.
However, medical school is long. Residency is long. It is a grueling, intensive slog. Make sure you are doing it to become a physician. If you want to be a doula, be a doula. I will not be a doula or a lay midwife if I am an obstetrician, or even if I am a family practitioner. It is not worth the effort to go through all the extra training, and the infrastructure is very inflexible and unforgiving. You potentially will be choosing battles constantly, and need to know your place as a matter of respect and experience and survival. Does that mean always stuffing it? No. But, it means often stuffing it.
If there's anything I missed, please add it in the comments.
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Liquid Gold
Breastmilk, girls. That's what I call it.
I believe I got that name from a book I read while I was learning to breastfeed my daughter, Ce-silly. "So That's What They're For: Breastfeeding Basics." Pause while I look up the author. Janet Tamaro. It was full of hilarious anecdotes. I prefer learning with humor than by rote education.
With Ce-silly, I was obsessed and terrified of nursing and pumping. I had a wonderful breastfeeding mentor, a resident two years ahead of me, named Mellificent. No, she is not an evil stepsister, as the nickname implies. She is magnificent. I wrote about breastfeeding once before, you can read it HERE. I recently re-read it myself so I wouldn't repeat too much here. Eek. I highly do not recommend re-reading old things you might have blogged - way too embarrassing. I laughed as I read it though - implying that Cecelia was easier than my son Jack. The beginning with her was oh so rough. The cracked nipples, the bleeding, the feeling that every time your infant needed to nurse your sensitive nipples were being attacked by razors instead of baby gums. I found breast shields, and used them until I healed. I felt like I had been visited upon by a miraculous wonder masquerading as a piece of soft plastic.
I was in Conway last Friday - there is something magical about going to a different location once every month or so. Pluses and minuses. I am a fish out of water for sure (new electronic medical records, not my office with my reference books in my order) but I can relax in a way that I cannot at my home base in Little Rock. Without the demands of my space - bills, kid things to attend to during my spare time - I open up a little more with the lab techs and administrators. I was having a long hour lunch - a luxury for me. I usually heat up a veggie burger and make lunch 5-10 minutes.
I was having a conversation about nursing with a lab tech and a lab administrator. One of them told me her story. When she was having her first child, she was living in the Mississippi Delta. Very isolated from family and friends. It was back in the day when women came into the hospital in labor, were snowed with drugs, and woke up with a baby usually many hours old. When the female nurse propped her new son on her lap, after she had woken from an unnatural slumber, she expressed a desire to nurse her baby. This was what she got in response. "What? Nurse? I have already fed your baby two bottles, and he took them better than most. Are you going to ruin my efforts by trying to nurse him?" Ouch.
The other woman at our common table in the break room expressed different, but similar reasons for not being supported in nursing. It was in the eighties. The eighties were tough for nursing moms. My mom nursed both my sister and I in the seventies, but my brothers were born in the 80's. My dad's best friend at the time, a great guy, was a formula rep. My mom was busy with growing her brood from two to four and her career pursuits. Both my parents have individually expressed regrets to me about not nursing, especially my middle brother, who is seven years younger than me (I'm 39. No really. 40 this year, ugh. I mean yippee. But I did get carded tonight, and she told me she had to card everyone she thought was under 30, so yay for that, it made my decade). He has a terrible case of Crohn's. I diagnosed that today on a biopsy, and thought of him. He is a successful graduate of the Culinary Institute of America and holds a Ph.D. in food science from Cornell. He has a great job in industry and lectures all over the country in his field. Who is to say that nursing would have saved him from all his health issues? Who am I to judge my parents here? Our wounds make us who we are today. They make us strong and successful. We are our own worst critics, we don't need anyone else tearing us down. Especially our sisters.
And do I sit in judgment of my lab tech friend and administrator friend for their issues around nursing? Hell no. I worked hard to nurse and pump. I wanted to go for a year for both, but I did 11 months for Cecelia and 8 for Jack. Do I look back at myself and see my failure there? At the time, yes. Now, no. I am proud as hell for what I did there. With all the support I had. When I was at a very unhealthy juncture in my marriage, I let a freezer full of milk in an outside carport languish for months. I was a veritable cow - could pump 36-40 oz. a day. One of my friend's husbands at the time told me I should sell my milk online. At the time I freaked out at the thought, but I hear there are donation stations for premies and I wish I would have investigated back then. I finally asked my ex to throw the milk out in a fit of OCD cleaning while I cried in the house. I could no longer face my own failure there. I needed it to be removed from the premises, because the presence weighed on me like an anvil. I was not organized enough to get my Hispanic sitter to use it or to even go out and get it myself. I forgive myself.
My neonatologist dad is a great counselor for anxious new parents who are dealing with more than they bargained for. He tells them this. There are babies and toddlers in other countries and our own that survive on much less. Rice filled with bugs and stones. Peanut butter sandwiches for years. But they survive. There isn't much you can do to hurt this little one as long as you are loving it. I agree. Those babies grow up, some of them, to be so strong. Wearing their wounds like a badge and using them to educate others and change the world. Isn't that the coolest thing on the planet?
I wrote this blog last night, and was trying to insert a video from YouTube. Was having trouble, and accidentally deleted my blog around midnight (a first in many years of blogging). I was so upset, but resolved to finish it. The video is Mining For Gold, by the Cowboy Junkies. I'm not going to try to embed again, ha ha. It is a cover of an old work mining song, original author unknown, as far as Wiki goes. Ce-silly reminded me this morning when I was telling her of my bad night that of course she knew that song, it was burned in her brain, I sang it to her over and over when she was a baby and a toddler. Go check it out on YouTube if you are interested. It is a lovely song, and reminds me of why songs are so ubiquitous and full of empathy. I can be nursing my babies, and feel the pain and glory of gold miners from many years ago. We are all mining for different types of gold. As Mothers In Medicine, our gold may take a different shape, but it's not breast milk really. It's love for our children, and dedication to our jobs. We are miners.
I went to a popular restaurant tonight in LR with a girl friend. I saw my sis-in-law and her husband, toddler, and baby. She was nursing her son at the table. It was one of the most beautiful sights in the world; my head did a little dizzy happy spin watching her and reliving my own memories. She is a path resident, following in my footsteps, and I am so proud of her individuality and unique spin on the path I took before her, in mothering and in medicine.
Thanks R, a dedicated fan, for e-mailing me last week and inspiring this post. You are awesome - get to the gold mines, girl.
I believe I got that name from a book I read while I was learning to breastfeed my daughter, Ce-silly. "So That's What They're For: Breastfeeding Basics." Pause while I look up the author. Janet Tamaro. It was full of hilarious anecdotes. I prefer learning with humor than by rote education.
With Ce-silly, I was obsessed and terrified of nursing and pumping. I had a wonderful breastfeeding mentor, a resident two years ahead of me, named Mellificent. No, she is not an evil stepsister, as the nickname implies. She is magnificent. I wrote about breastfeeding once before, you can read it HERE. I recently re-read it myself so I wouldn't repeat too much here. Eek. I highly do not recommend re-reading old things you might have blogged - way too embarrassing. I laughed as I read it though - implying that Cecelia was easier than my son Jack. The beginning with her was oh so rough. The cracked nipples, the bleeding, the feeling that every time your infant needed to nurse your sensitive nipples were being attacked by razors instead of baby gums. I found breast shields, and used them until I healed. I felt like I had been visited upon by a miraculous wonder masquerading as a piece of soft plastic.
I was in Conway last Friday - there is something magical about going to a different location once every month or so. Pluses and minuses. I am a fish out of water for sure (new electronic medical records, not my office with my reference books in my order) but I can relax in a way that I cannot at my home base in Little Rock. Without the demands of my space - bills, kid things to attend to during my spare time - I open up a little more with the lab techs and administrators. I was having a long hour lunch - a luxury for me. I usually heat up a veggie burger and make lunch 5-10 minutes.
I was having a conversation about nursing with a lab tech and a lab administrator. One of them told me her story. When she was having her first child, she was living in the Mississippi Delta. Very isolated from family and friends. It was back in the day when women came into the hospital in labor, were snowed with drugs, and woke up with a baby usually many hours old. When the female nurse propped her new son on her lap, after she had woken from an unnatural slumber, she expressed a desire to nurse her baby. This was what she got in response. "What? Nurse? I have already fed your baby two bottles, and he took them better than most. Are you going to ruin my efforts by trying to nurse him?" Ouch.
The other woman at our common table in the break room expressed different, but similar reasons for not being supported in nursing. It was in the eighties. The eighties were tough for nursing moms. My mom nursed both my sister and I in the seventies, but my brothers were born in the 80's. My dad's best friend at the time, a great guy, was a formula rep. My mom was busy with growing her brood from two to four and her career pursuits. Both my parents have individually expressed regrets to me about not nursing, especially my middle brother, who is seven years younger than me (I'm 39. No really. 40 this year, ugh. I mean yippee. But I did get carded tonight, and she told me she had to card everyone she thought was under 30, so yay for that, it made my decade). He has a terrible case of Crohn's. I diagnosed that today on a biopsy, and thought of him. He is a successful graduate of the Culinary Institute of America and holds a Ph.D. in food science from Cornell. He has a great job in industry and lectures all over the country in his field. Who is to say that nursing would have saved him from all his health issues? Who am I to judge my parents here? Our wounds make us who we are today. They make us strong and successful. We are our own worst critics, we don't need anyone else tearing us down. Especially our sisters.
And do I sit in judgment of my lab tech friend and administrator friend for their issues around nursing? Hell no. I worked hard to nurse and pump. I wanted to go for a year for both, but I did 11 months for Cecelia and 8 for Jack. Do I look back at myself and see my failure there? At the time, yes. Now, no. I am proud as hell for what I did there. With all the support I had. When I was at a very unhealthy juncture in my marriage, I let a freezer full of milk in an outside carport languish for months. I was a veritable cow - could pump 36-40 oz. a day. One of my friend's husbands at the time told me I should sell my milk online. At the time I freaked out at the thought, but I hear there are donation stations for premies and I wish I would have investigated back then. I finally asked my ex to throw the milk out in a fit of OCD cleaning while I cried in the house. I could no longer face my own failure there. I needed it to be removed from the premises, because the presence weighed on me like an anvil. I was not organized enough to get my Hispanic sitter to use it or to even go out and get it myself. I forgive myself.
My neonatologist dad is a great counselor for anxious new parents who are dealing with more than they bargained for. He tells them this. There are babies and toddlers in other countries and our own that survive on much less. Rice filled with bugs and stones. Peanut butter sandwiches for years. But they survive. There isn't much you can do to hurt this little one as long as you are loving it. I agree. Those babies grow up, some of them, to be so strong. Wearing their wounds like a badge and using them to educate others and change the world. Isn't that the coolest thing on the planet?
I wrote this blog last night, and was trying to insert a video from YouTube. Was having trouble, and accidentally deleted my blog around midnight (a first in many years of blogging). I was so upset, but resolved to finish it. The video is Mining For Gold, by the Cowboy Junkies. I'm not going to try to embed again, ha ha. It is a cover of an old work mining song, original author unknown, as far as Wiki goes. Ce-silly reminded me this morning when I was telling her of my bad night that of course she knew that song, it was burned in her brain, I sang it to her over and over when she was a baby and a toddler. Go check it out on YouTube if you are interested. It is a lovely song, and reminds me of why songs are so ubiquitous and full of empathy. I can be nursing my babies, and feel the pain and glory of gold miners from many years ago. We are all mining for different types of gold. As Mothers In Medicine, our gold may take a different shape, but it's not breast milk really. It's love for our children, and dedication to our jobs. We are miners.
I went to a popular restaurant tonight in LR with a girl friend. I saw my sis-in-law and her husband, toddler, and baby. She was nursing her son at the table. It was one of the most beautiful sights in the world; my head did a little dizzy happy spin watching her and reliving my own memories. She is a path resident, following in my footsteps, and I am so proud of her individuality and unique spin on the path I took before her, in mothering and in medicine.
Thanks R, a dedicated fan, for e-mailing me last week and inspiring this post. You are awesome - get to the gold mines, girl.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
When Baby Is Not Sleeping....
When Baby is not sleeping, Mommy is not sleeping.
We need a sleep consultation!
Everyone with kids can relate to this issue, and I'm sure there's good advice out there. I'm open to hearing almost all of it.
The data:
Our Babygirl is 13 months old, perfectly healthy, and very happy. She's a chatty, impish little creature, with great dark eyes, so dark brown they're like Little Orphan Annie eyes- you can't see the pupils. She's adorable; we marvel at her cuteness multiple times a day. She laughs, giggles, babbles and imitates, playing to her fans like a pro. She's starting to toddle, and is so excited about walking, that's pretty much all she wants to do. That, and whatever it is big brother Babyboy (2.5 years old) is doing. She's a great napper, consistently and easily napping 2 hours around midday.
She'll go to bed around 6:30 if we have our act together. If I'm late home from work, or Hubby is late home from traveling, then the whole bedtime routine is delayed and/or fragmented, and sometimes, she's up until 9 p.m. Regardless of when she falls asleep, she's up many times a night, and then up for the day around 6:30 a.m., cheerful, chirpy, and ready to roam.
Lately, she seems to be waking up more then she ever has: one, two, three, sometimes four times a night. She cries until she has a bottle of warm milk. Then, she falls back to sleep, pretty easily.
If we don't go get her, she cries and cries until she throws up, not only requiring a crib change, but also waking up Babyboy, who then needs to be comforted and rocked back to sleep, and sometimes also wants a sippy cup of juice... in short, total late-night messy disaster.
That is just not Okay.
Though it means sleep disruption, we would extremely prefer the usual (getting up to her crying, taking her downstairs where she will not wake Babyboy, warming up a bottle, sitting downstairs with her while she drinks it, and then putting her back to bed), to the cry-it-out, which results in unacceptable disaster and even more sleep deprivation.
We are, however, becoming very, very tired. I'm wondering if my patients and colleagues can tell how exhausted I am... A few seem to sense it and ask how I'm doing, and Is the baby sleeping yet? I get lots of free advice there too! Meantime, for the first time in my life, I'm drinking coffee in the mornings and the afternoons.
I am grateful to my hubby that he shares the overnight duties... when he is home. He travels a fair amount, and when he is away, I'm on baby-bottle call... This is hard, of course, when I have to be up at 5:30 a.m. three days a week to commute to the Big City to see my clinic patients. When he is home, and I have to be up early, he is on baby-bottle call... though I wake up anyways, as we moms all do when baby cries.
I am also grateful to my mom, who will keep Babygirl overnight sometimes, when Hubby is away, so I can get caught up on sleep.
Despite all that help, I can count on one hand the number of nights I've slept a continuous six hours over the past 13 months.
I don't know how we got here, as Babyboy was magically sleeping through the night at 3 months of age. Somehow, we have a 13 month old girl who just wakes up alot.
I keep hearing from friends that cry-it-out is the ONLY way to get a baby to sleep through the night. Even if we have to line the bed with newspapers to catch the puke, and even if I have to sleep somewhere else, and even if we will all need therapy, that's the only thing that is going to work...
BUT, the people I know who have done cry-it-out with their own kids recall "those awful nights" with a shiver and some horror, like they're reliving physical pain. My aunt describes doing cry-it-out with her then-toddler son: they padded the walls with mattresses so as not to let his screams wake the neighbors, and then she cried, herself... she says she's still traumatized, and that was 30 years ago....
I just don't buy cry-it-out. We're not going to let Babygirl cry, puke, wake up the whole house, and then end up in therapy ourselves, or at minimum, reliving the horror every time someone else is going through the same thing....
There has got to be a better way.
So, making it clear that cry-it-out is not a viable option for us, I still put our baby sleep issue out there, to see what experiences, and even what advice, others have.
We need a sleep consultation!
Everyone with kids can relate to this issue, and I'm sure there's good advice out there. I'm open to hearing almost all of it.
The data:
Our Babygirl is 13 months old, perfectly healthy, and very happy. She's a chatty, impish little creature, with great dark eyes, so dark brown they're like Little Orphan Annie eyes- you can't see the pupils. She's adorable; we marvel at her cuteness multiple times a day. She laughs, giggles, babbles and imitates, playing to her fans like a pro. She's starting to toddle, and is so excited about walking, that's pretty much all she wants to do. That, and whatever it is big brother Babyboy (2.5 years old) is doing. She's a great napper, consistently and easily napping 2 hours around midday.
She'll go to bed around 6:30 if we have our act together. If I'm late home from work, or Hubby is late home from traveling, then the whole bedtime routine is delayed and/or fragmented, and sometimes, she's up until 9 p.m. Regardless of when she falls asleep, she's up many times a night, and then up for the day around 6:30 a.m., cheerful, chirpy, and ready to roam.
Lately, she seems to be waking up more then she ever has: one, two, three, sometimes four times a night. She cries until she has a bottle of warm milk. Then, she falls back to sleep, pretty easily.
If we don't go get her, she cries and cries until she throws up, not only requiring a crib change, but also waking up Babyboy, who then needs to be comforted and rocked back to sleep, and sometimes also wants a sippy cup of juice... in short, total late-night messy disaster.
That is just not Okay.
Though it means sleep disruption, we would extremely prefer the usual (getting up to her crying, taking her downstairs where she will not wake Babyboy, warming up a bottle, sitting downstairs with her while she drinks it, and then putting her back to bed), to the cry-it-out, which results in unacceptable disaster and even more sleep deprivation.
We are, however, becoming very, very tired. I'm wondering if my patients and colleagues can tell how exhausted I am... A few seem to sense it and ask how I'm doing, and Is the baby sleeping yet? I get lots of free advice there too! Meantime, for the first time in my life, I'm drinking coffee in the mornings and the afternoons.
I am grateful to my hubby that he shares the overnight duties... when he is home. He travels a fair amount, and when he is away, I'm on baby-bottle call... This is hard, of course, when I have to be up at 5:30 a.m. three days a week to commute to the Big City to see my clinic patients. When he is home, and I have to be up early, he is on baby-bottle call... though I wake up anyways, as we moms all do when baby cries.
I am also grateful to my mom, who will keep Babygirl overnight sometimes, when Hubby is away, so I can get caught up on sleep.
Despite all that help, I can count on one hand the number of nights I've slept a continuous six hours over the past 13 months.
I don't know how we got here, as Babyboy was magically sleeping through the night at 3 months of age. Somehow, we have a 13 month old girl who just wakes up alot.
I keep hearing from friends that cry-it-out is the ONLY way to get a baby to sleep through the night. Even if we have to line the bed with newspapers to catch the puke, and even if I have to sleep somewhere else, and even if we will all need therapy, that's the only thing that is going to work...
BUT, the people I know who have done cry-it-out with their own kids recall "those awful nights" with a shiver and some horror, like they're reliving physical pain. My aunt describes doing cry-it-out with her then-toddler son: they padded the walls with mattresses so as not to let his screams wake the neighbors, and then she cried, herself... she says she's still traumatized, and that was 30 years ago....
I just don't buy cry-it-out. We're not going to let Babygirl cry, puke, wake up the whole house, and then end up in therapy ourselves, or at minimum, reliving the horror every time someone else is going through the same thing....
There has got to be a better way.
So, making it clear that cry-it-out is not a viable option for us, I still put our baby sleep issue out there, to see what experiences, and even what advice, others have.
Monday, January 28, 2013
MiM Mail: Career impasse in academic medicine
I was so pleased to come across this blog while trying to research career options. I am currently at an impasse in my career and looking for some insight.
I am currently two years into my first position as a full-time medical oncologist at a major academic center. As a bit of background... I have been at the same institution for medical school, residency, fellowship and now as an attending. I am specialized within oncology, but did complete my board certification in IM, hematology and oncology so as to keep my options open in the future. I chose my specialty with no consideration of future family planning, but because I love these patients and find the work very rewarding.
I met my (now) husband in medical school and we have since married and have a 6 month old baby at home. He (my husband, not the baby) is also currently embarking on an academic career.
I am only now realizing the extent of sacrifice that will be required of both of us to have successful careers in academic medicine. I find that my priorities may be shifting now that we have a child and plans for future children and I am struggling to decide how to juggle my career and family. I am no longer sure I am willing to sacrifice so much time with my child for work obligations.
I am trying to see what opportunities may be out there for both clinical and industry work if I were to take some time off or switch to a part-time position for a few years or permanently. I am just not sure if I can take time off at this point in my career and expect to be able to find a position down the road.
What I do know is that my child will only be little for a short time and I want to be with him as much as possible.There are also certain financial issues to consider given that we are both in academics and have a pretty sizable amount of debt from med school.I would love any feedback from those of you who have been in a similar position. Particularly to those of you who have found part-time work.... is this a common situation? I know that at my current institution, it is unlikely that I would be able to stay on faculty part-time, so I would need to find something elsewhere.
Thank you so much for providing this blog as it reassures me that I am not the only one struggling with these decisions.
I am currently two years into my first position as a full-time medical oncologist at a major academic center. As a bit of background... I have been at the same institution for medical school, residency, fellowship and now as an attending. I am specialized within oncology, but did complete my board certification in IM, hematology and oncology so as to keep my options open in the future. I chose my specialty with no consideration of future family planning, but because I love these patients and find the work very rewarding.
I met my (now) husband in medical school and we have since married and have a 6 month old baby at home. He (my husband, not the baby) is also currently embarking on an academic career.
I am only now realizing the extent of sacrifice that will be required of both of us to have successful careers in academic medicine. I find that my priorities may be shifting now that we have a child and plans for future children and I am struggling to decide how to juggle my career and family. I am no longer sure I am willing to sacrifice so much time with my child for work obligations.
I am trying to see what opportunities may be out there for both clinical and industry work if I were to take some time off or switch to a part-time position for a few years or permanently. I am just not sure if I can take time off at this point in my career and expect to be able to find a position down the road.
What I do know is that my child will only be little for a short time and I want to be with him as much as possible.There are also certain financial issues to consider given that we are both in academics and have a pretty sizable amount of debt from med school.I would love any feedback from those of you who have been in a similar position. Particularly to those of you who have found part-time work.... is this a common situation? I know that at my current institution, it is unlikely that I would be able to stay on faculty part-time, so I would need to find something elsewhere.
Thank you so much for providing this blog as it reassures me that I am not the only one struggling with these decisions.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Guest post: When the Pediatrician Calls the Pediatrician
I was changing my daughter’s diaper the other night when I
noticed some spots. There was a cluster of six or so around her belly button
and a line of them tracing her bottom rib on the right. They were
reddish-brownish-purple pinpoints and when I pressed on them, they did not
blanch. She did not seem bothered by them at all. I, on the other hand, began
to quietly freak out.
I am currently rotating on the pediatric hematology service
where reddish-brownish-purplish spots that do not blanch are the opening line
in a number of slow-motion tragedies involving such things as leukemia and
bleeding disorders. Then again, they also play a part in a number of totally
benign and boring stories like heat rash and bruises. Infant skin is like one
of those word searches that looks totally random from a distance: a lot of what
goes on there means nothing, but every once in a while you need to pay closer
attention.
So I saw the spots and I wanted to call the doctor right
away. It was 7:15pm, a totally reasonable time to call the on-call
pediatrician. But I felt sheepish. When you are a doctor, calling the doctor
can be awkward. You know all the questions they will ask. You have completed
the physical exam that they would have completed if your child were in the
office. You have your own differential diagnosis in your head, and you have a
rational sense of when or if your child needs to be seen and what if any
further evaluation they might need. Why, you wonder, are you calling someone
else when you know the answer already? But then there is also a loud voice in
your head that is screaming, “WHAT IF SHE HAS CANCER? WHAT IF SHE HAS BACTERIAL
MENINGITIS? I KNOW EVERYTHING IS OK BUT WHAT IF IT ISN’T?! ACCCCKKKKKKKK!!!”
I called my partner, C, up to see the spots and she said, “Hmmmmm.
Looks like she might have fallen against a toy.” I had to agree. I could almost
make out the shape of said toy, a rectangle with one corner at the belly button
and the other corner up near her rib. Still, I was not reassured. My partner
doesn’t even know what petechiae are. “She’s fine,” C said and went back
downstairs. Once again, the rational part of me had to agree. She was not sick.
She was totally 100% well-appearing. This was a problem that could wait until
the morning. This was likely a problem that was not even a problem. I resolved
to let that be the end of it. I put my daughter to sleep and then got ready for
bed myself. (Yes, I have the same bedtime as my one-year-old. This is what it
means to be an intern).
As I lay there in the dark, it became clear that I would not
be able to sleep. I worried about the spots. I thought about my patients and
the day ahead. Then I worried about the spots again. That very day on rounds,
our attending had told us about a case from his residency, a boy who presented
to the ED with petechiae, eating his McDonald’s lunch, and was dead twelve
hours later from overwhelming sepsis. Sure, he had sickle cell disease, and a
fever, but I couldn’t put it out of my mind. I checked on my daughter and tried
to palpate her liver without waking her up. I went back to bed. I stared into
the dark. Nine o’clock became ten o’clock became eleven o’clock. I snuck
downstairs and called the pediatrician’s after hours line, hoping my partner
would not hear. I needed to sleep in order to function the next day, so I
rationalized that it was for the benefit of my patients.
A nurse called me back thirty minutes later. We talked
through the situation. “I’m worried she has petechiae, but she’s totally
well-appearing.” The nurse paused. “If you’re telling me she has petechiae, she
has to go to the Emergency Room.” “I don’t know if they are petechiae! They
don’t blanch.” She paused again. “Well, lots of things don’t blanch. Are they
more red or more purple, because if you’re telling me she has purple spots, she
has to go to the Emergency Room, but red spots are fine.” I could tell she had
sized up the situation and was trying to reassure me, but she was sitting in
front of a protocol book and protocol books do not care about over-anxious intern
mothers in the middle of the night. We went around and around a couple more
times. “Why don’t I call the doctor on call,” she said.
As I waited for the return call, I sat in the dark in my
office chair. I thought about my little girl. I indulged in some worst case
scenario rumination. I imagined her having to go through the heinous trial of
chemotherapy, the endless sticks and vomits. How would we even get her to sleep
in a bubble-top hospital crib? I couldn’t imagine a hospital room containing
her, so active and curious and on the move.
My thoughts turned to "R", a toddler who had died of leukemia
while in my care. There are patients who travel with you forever, and R is one
of those patients for me. Time does not make my memories of him less vivid. I
was a sub-intern in the PICU at the time, a medical student in my last year of
medical school. R had been transferred to the PICU in the middle of the night,
gravely ill. I was out of my depth caring for him -- his oncologists were still
talking about treatment while the PICU doctors intimated that he would likely
pass away soon. I did not know who to believe and I didn’t have my own
experiences to guide me. His room scared me, but I was also drawn there. I
could sense that the work of love was being carried out there, despite or
perhaps because of the terrible inevitability of his death. R was pale, almost
colorless, and swollen from the chemotherapy and the cancer. He had lost all
his hair and he was sleepy most of the time, but still comforted by the
presence of his parents. He was so beautiful and I felt a tenderness toward him
that I could not explain to myself. Every morning as I went through the
familiar steps of the physical exam, I touched him as I would my own child. I
wanted my touch to if not heal him, at least bring peace and rest to his
suffering body. R’s heart stopped an hour before the end of my last shift and he
was coded for close to an hour before his parents asked the team to stop. I
hovered beside them the entire time, not knowing what to say or do. His mother
sat in a rocking chair crying and his father stood behind her with his hands on
her shoulders and there was so much in that gesture about their love for each
other and their helplessness and their strength. After R died, they went into
his room to hold him and everything became quiet. I had a flight to catch, so I
had to leave, and I never had a chance to talk to them again. I think about him
and them often, though I have never spoken about him to anyone.
The phone rang. It was the nurse. “I talked with the doctor
on call and she thinks it’s probably nothing. Wait until the morning and if
they are still there or you are still worried, call the office and make an
appointment to be seen.”
“Thank you so much,” I gushed. “Thank you so much.” I wanted
to convey to this person how grateful I was to her and to the doctor, whoever
she was. “You have no idea what a gift that is.” I was crying, embarrassed and
euphoric. The safe over-the-phone answer would have been to send me to the ER,
but one of them or both of them had understood that if my daughter had truly
needed to go the ER, I would have already been there. They understood that what
I needed wasn’t medical advice, it was reassurance, and they had the courage to
reassure me.
By the morning when I woke up, I couldn’t believe how scared
I had been. In the light of the day, the spots were clearly a bruise. Two days
later, they were gone, with only me to remember them.
I wonder how the situation would have played out had I not
been a doctor. Either I would have made nothing of the spots, or called about
the spots and ended up with a long and fruitless ER visit. Either way, I think
the quality of the terror would have been less acute. The average person does
not have a repository of worst-case-scenario images to match every sign and
symptom. As a pediatrician, I didn’t need reassurance less, I needed it more.
I did not realize before the spots episode how much effort I
expend maintaining a separation between the reality of illness that I inhabit
during the day and the reality of wellness that I inhabit at home. Sometimes
the one intrudes on the other in ways my rational self cannot prevent. I hope
this will not negatively impact my daughter (or my partner, who relies on my
medical judgment and was understandably shaken by this false alarm). On the
other hand, I never take my daughter’s health for granted. The possibility of
illness sits on my shoulder and reminds me to be humble and present, both for
myself and my family and for all the parents like R’s parents who are suffering
the unimaginable. It makes for a state of parenthood that is more anxious but
also more alert and sacred. I am grateful in advance to all the pediatricians
who will care for me and my family over the course of my daughter’s life, who
will allow me to be afraid, who will give me the gift of reassurance, who will
hold my anxiety in confidence and allow me to be a parent instead of a
physician.
Miriam Stewart is a
pediatrics intern and lives in the Philadelphia area with her partner and
thirteen-month-old daughter. She blogs about the joys and challenges of
juggling motherhood and medical training at whatbeginswithm.wordpress.com. Details about "R" have been altered to protect patient and family privacy.
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