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.