Thursday, July 11, 2013

highs and lows

Highs:

1) Seeing a lung transplant. It was awesome. I wish there were more creative words to describe seeing a person be given a new life, but it is just awe-inspiring. And I got to intubate him! There is an endotracheal tube (a "breathing tube") that has a double-lumen which you place so that you can inflate just one lung at a time. This man also felt like my first true patient. I got to see him the next day and he remembered who I was. Sometimes medicine, especially something like anesthesia where the patient is asleep most of the time, can seem so clinical and mechanical. It was exciting to feel connected to a patient as a person. 
2) Improving at something! Two weeks ago, I tried three different times in one day to intubate and I just couldn't do it. My positioning wasn't right, I couldn't get a good view, but I couldn't figure out what was going on. When I tried practicing on my own on a mannequin I accidentally intubated his esophagus (the tube to the stomach) and I couldn't even figure out what was wrong. But after practicing it a few times, I realized I'd been going too deep instead of curving forward. In the last two weeks I've now lost track of how many intubations I did because I got to do so many! I even intubated a 5 year-old this week. I've also gotten better at doing IVs (blood doesn't spill everywhere now... yay!) and helping draw up and administer medications. It's gratifying to see direct improvement, although it's also easy to concentrate solely on the many things I still struggle to do. There is so much to learn.

Low:
 
My boards score. I scored significantly lower than I wanted. Basically this means that I will have to work much harder if I want to go into a competitive specialty like dermatology, plastic surgery, radiology, ENT, etc and it may be more difficult for me to go to the locations I might want for residency. Working a lot harder is difficult to imagine when I already feel that I work pretty hard. I see other people who work much harder than I do, but I don't want their lives. I don't want to study constantly. I don't want to be so rigid and structured that I turn down invitations to hang out with people or forget to do something nice for someone else every once in a while. I want to have close friends and explore the city I live in and be involved in culture. 

I guess the lesson is, if we really push ourselves to do something difficult with our lives, most of us reach a point when we struggle to excel. I am now "average" in the pool of people I have placed myself in. It's difficult to accept. It's difficult not to question my life choices. It's difficult to work hard for two years and feel like you barely succeeded. It's easy to worry about the future when it seems that hard work and whatever intelligence you feel you have is not good enough anymore. I think I'm ready to be the big fish in a small pond again. Screw the big pond! I don't want to be a little fish anymore! I want to be a shark or something. I don't know where this analogy is taking me. I had a beer before I wrote this. I'm not liable. 

But to be serious for one more moment, a more important thing for me to concentrate on is the importance of placing my trust in God and not myself in this time. It is so easy for me to desire success when many things do come easily to me, things I constantly take for granted. And when my plans come crashing down, I become depressed because instead of putting my self worth in Jesus I have been placing my self worth in myself and my accomplishments. I believe God has a bigger plan than my small life, but that he also loves me so much that he also wants me to be happy within that plan. He wants my heart to be for him and I so hope that he uses this setback in my life to point me toward him. Please pray for me to continue to trust in him in this time and to believe that his plan is better, even though it's certainly not easier. 

Hopefully I will add more soon summarizing my experience with anesthesiology, probably more for me than for you, so that when I make that big decision at the end of the year about what I want to specialize in I will have something to look back on. And now I am just one 10 minute presentation away from Endocrine/Oncology Surgery!

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