Thursday, May 23, 2019

EJP

I'm not so good at good-byes.  The oldest one is off to college in less than 3 months so it seems like a fine time to question any parenting decision we've ever made and wonder if we should have done everything completely differently.  I don't know who decided that our kids need to leave the nest to go to college or the military or wherever they decide to go.  There should not be an 18 year expiration date.  He's ready.  I'm not ready.  The time went by too quickly.  I knew it would, but I didn't expect that I'd be here, at this place, so soon.  It's like when you go to an amusement park and you wait all that time in line for the roller coaster and you finally hop on and then it's over.  

I have different ways of coping with good-byes and I wouldn't recommend any of them.  A lot of times I've walled off my heart to keep from getting hurt.  It's an immature defense mechanism, but it does prevent a lot of the sting.  I've made myself immensely busy at work this year.  On the surface, the choices seemed rational and well timed but I wonder if it wasn't some lame effort to keep from dealing with the reality of his impending departure.  When you're about to bring your babies home for the first time, you nest; get the house ready for their arrival by painting and buying furniture and preparing your home.  When you prepare for them to launch, you distract yourself with seemingly endless and meaningless tasks (all the while you are doing your best to convince yourself of the importance of said tasks).  

The irony is I'm quite good at living in the moment.  That's breast cancer's gift to me.  I have a fairly healthy relationship with what matters and what doesn't.  But there is absolutely no preparing your heart for this next phase of life.  I've watched friends go through it and I've seen them expose the fleshy bits of their heart but I couldn't quite place myself in their shoes.  I knew my time would come soon enough.  

My sister-in-law says that there is no time for sadness because the alternative, not launching them, is far worse.  I am grateful.  So grateful.  Twelve years ago, I didn't know if I'd be alive to see this day.  He's worked so hard.  He's earned every achievement to his name and I know that he's not gone forever but there will be no more first day of school photos on the front lawn with his brother and sister.  No more knowing he's tucked into his bed in his bedroom under our roof every night.  No more of him coming through the front door at the end of the day after practice or work.  No more scratching for food in the pantry, standing like a sentry in the doorway.  No more sitting at the kitchen counter doing his homework every night.  No more barreling through the door and asking what's for dinner.  

I've enjoyed every last minute of his brief time at home with us.  For him, it's a short part of his life, but for us, it's been everything.  If I could rewind and relive every single moment, I would; every sick day on the couch, every water polo game, every afternoon pick-up, every agonizing day of middle school.  There is nothing I'd leave out.  I love you Evan James Poythress with all of my heart and I wish you all the love and happiness that you have brought to your father and me.  You will do great things and you are well on your way to becoming a man.  You've brought us so much joy and I'm so grateful for the time we've had together under one roof.  I love you more than words can describe.  

Saturday, March 16, 2019

Middle Kid

I just spent the past week with my middle kid on our "college tour" trip.  We didn't actually look at any colleges but that is a minor detail.  I did the same trip with my oldest kid before his junior year.  Middle kid is towards the end of his junior year.  I have one kid remaining and I'll likely do the same thing with her.  It's a good time to do it, their junior year.  Even though we didn't actually visit any colleges, the sentiment was there.  I suppose he imagined himself living in either New York or Boston and I don't think he could actually envision himself living in either city.  But, I could be wrong.  

Comparing the two kids, the older and the middle, is like comparing camels and emus.  They are completely different beasts.  I don't know when and if I'll ever get the opportunity for it just to be the 2 of us again.  This curly headed little beast has wormed his way into my heart and I'll miss the luxury of having time just with him.  He's an affectionate one, they all are, but he seems to be pure affection.  Sitting on the hotel sofa and watching movies on pay per view is enough for him, but only because he gets to be with his mama.  There wasn't a lot I had to do to make him content.  

That's the thing, when you spend individual time with a kid, you get their full personality.  It's not encumbered by siblings or expectations you might have of them at home.  They are free to be who they are and to be witness to that is something indescribable.  This man cub of mine who used to be my tiny baby is full of thoughts and humor and love and ideas and respect and consideration.  My heart swells like a tick so stuffed with his blood meal that it's about to pop.  

Everyone talks about the middle kid...like they are overlooked or forgotten or passed over.  There is so much beauty in the middle; a simplicity and honesty that likely exists because of their birth order.  I don't know how I could be so lucky to end up with a kid like him.  I didn't earn it and I don't deserve it, but I'll take him, every single minute I have left with him at home.  

Grateful beyond words.  


Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Enjoy the Scenery

Getting older is a euphemism for disappointment.  Realizing you have little control of your circumstances or the people around you sucks at first.  And it's a bit like getting tangled in web because the more you fight it, the suckier it gets.  I live in a house with a husband, an 18 year old boy, an almost 17 year old boy and a 15 year old girl and everyone has their own agenda and their own plans.  Gone are the days that I could dictate the schedule and force people to do things they didn't want to do.  

It's New Year's Day and trying to get everyone to spend time together is like trying to catch a slippery fish.  Food is usually a good way to bribe people.  We bought everyone food, 2 different kinds of food to satisfy everyone's desires, and we all sat at the table for about 20 minutes.  Normally those times at the dinner table I sit in silence.  Sometimes someone will ask me why I'm quiet but I'm not sad or upset.  I'm just soaking it all in, sitting quietly and listening to the conversation around me wishing the moment could last just shy of forever.  

They don't understand why I love them so much. How could they?  They are my creations but they are their own people.  I remember getting so frustrated at my own mother not comprehending why she was so invested in my time.  Why couldn't she just find her own thing to do and stop bugging me?  You pour everything you have into these tiny little creatures and then they become big creatures and you still pour everything you have into them.  You can't do it for yourself.  You have to do it for them.  But it still hurts.  They have to separate but every little movement away from you feels like another sting in your heart.  

In my Christmas card I alluded to not having enough time.  At the beginning you think you have all the time in the world and then your kid is 9 months away from going to college and you can count the number of days you actually have left at the dinner table.  It's sobering.  Of course the younger 2 don't get it.  And honestly, neither does the one about to leave because his life is just beginning.  I know he'll come back for vacations and summers but the meat of it is gone.  

My daughter told me that I always make everything about me and I don't deny that.  But doesn't everyone do that?  Every decision we make or action we take is for our own benefit. I'm just trying to squeeze out as much time as I can.  She just wants to hang out with her friends.  She can't see that my heart is breaking a tiny little bit every time she or one of her brothers doesn't want to spend "family time".  She can't understand that someday with her own family she'll feel the same way.  

So I'm trying to digest this middle place in which I find myself; not yet obsolete and not yet always needed.  In the middle of my kids launching their own lives and my parents' lives winding down.  My kids need me less (but they still need my money) and my parents need me more.  And I'm in the middle trying to figure it all out and still be true to myself.  Twenty years ago I was 30 and in twenty years I'll be 70.  These next 20 years will go by even faster than the last 20 and I have to make the choice to be content in all circumstances, even the ones that don't go my way because that is going to be the truth more times than not.  It's a bumpy road and I've gotten a lot of moving violations and will continue to do so.  I just hope I enjoy the scenery along the way. 

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Up All Night

When my kids were younger I used to write a lot more.  The material was better because they were cute and all the stories were cute and charming.  Now that they're all teenagers the stories are no longer cute and charming.  Probably, 9 times out of 10, I don't publish what I write because I'm just spitting vitriol.  It would mostly be angry rants at the object of my ire, depending on the day and the hour.  

For example, it's 1:51 am and I'm put off by my husband because I took my daughter to the ER and it was going to be a 3+ hour wait.  I have to sit in the godforsaken ER because he is worried.  I could throttle his neck.  In our ER, we always expedite people who work there or who have family who work there.  I asked if we could get seen a little sooner b/c we both work for the institution and Lee has a bigger role and the nurse smugly said, "Now that wouldn't be fair, would it?  There are people who've been waiting here for 3 hours.  We can't just move you to the front of the line, can we?"  Princess, that is exactly why I'm asking!  She and I both know that if there are 20 people in front of us, not all 20 have the same level of acuity.  And based on my daughter's symptoms and vital signs, she would have been a higher acuity and should have been taken back sooner.  But she's a teenager and there is automatic bias towards teenagers in a children's hospital.  They probably looked at her and decided she was an eating disorder patient or had a sexually transmitted disease and so they'd make her wait a little bit longer.  I could have punched someone in the face.  At least the registration lady was helpful and nice.  She took us out of the system so we wouldn't be charged.  When I had asked the nurse she acted like it wasn't possible to take us out of the system.  I knew it could be done.  Why do people have to play games like that?  Do I want to be at a children's hospital in the middle of the night.  Absolutely 100% not!  When I call Lee to tell him we're coming home he says he's sorry I had that experience and, yeah, why don't we come back home.  Dammit!  Why did you tell me to go to the ER in the first place? Now she's asleep and he's asleep and I'm up processing my rage.  

I have the week off of work and it figures that one of my kids would get sick.  Whatever plans I might have made are just delusions.  That's the most frustrating part of all this.  Not that I don't want to sit with my daughter on the sofa and watch bad TV with her and make her chicken noodle soup out of a can and do mountains upon mountains of laundry while I try to keep the house remotely clean.  But it was just one little week all to myself and now that is gone.  And I still have all the expectations and obligations to fulfill.  Yesterday I went and did some volunteer work with a friend.  I mentioned that every time the kids know I'm not working I get sucked into doing something for them or, like today, taking ibuprofen and feminine protection products up to school for my daughter.  I remember those days and how embarrassing it was to start your period at school and to be unprepared.  But, shitty me is thinking, "ughhh! how inconvenient! Now I can't do what I want to do!" I'm thinking this to myself as I explain my tiny tale of woe to her, about having to take something to school for my daughter.  And she has the audacity to say this: "I know, but aren't you so glad that you have the flexibility to do that? To be able to to take them their stuff in the middle of the day?"  I'm thinking, "Hell, no! I don't want to be running all over town for them."  But I just nod and tell her, "you bet!" or something along those lines so I don't seem like a complete asshole.  

Well, I'd better try to get some sleep.  Morning is just a few hours away and no one is going to care that I was up half the night and there will be more stuff to do.  

PS, for the record, pediatric related health care providers can be so damn passive aggressive.  It's pathologic. 

Monday, December 10, 2018

I Suck

I'm sucking it as a mom right now.  My middle kid, a son who is almost 17, wants to get his ears pierced.  I say no.  It devolved into his feelings being hurt and I feel like I've been gut punched repeatedly all day.  It started at 10:30 this morning when he texted and said he didn't feel good and he wanted to get out of school.  

Monday, December 3, 2018

Birthdays

I turned 50 yesterday.  It was a nice day and mostly a normal day.  Lee was out of town.  Part of me is upset and part of me doesn't care.  My oldest son turned 18 the day before my birthday.  He missed his birthday too.  In my mind, you don't miss birthdays.  You just don't.  Even if you don't have big plans for the birthday, you're present.  I'm trying to be supportive because it's an important conference for work and he's in a new role and he wants to do well and his boss wanted him at this conference.  For the record, historically, we don't make a big deal out of birthdays or Christmas or our anniversary or Valentine's Day.  So I'm sure, in his mind, he didn't think it was that big of deal leaving town for my 50th and Evan's 18th.  I know he's conflicted and he feels bad and he'd rather be with us.  But part of my crazy mind can't help but wander to this place; is he having an affair?  Is he up there with some woman?  On my birthday.  I texted him at 5:30 this morning and asked him if he was sure he was up there alone.  He's in NYC so it was 6:30 am up there.  He was asleep and he texted me a picture of him in his bed with his computer and bible next to him.  She could be hiding behind the curtains, I thought.  Or just out of the range of the photo.  It would have been better if he had face-timed me and given me a tour of the room and all the places a female could be hiding.  But my daughter was asleep in bed next to me and I didn't want to inconvenience her.  

The kids and I spent the afternoon at my mom's house w/ my brother and his family eating BBQ which is exactly the way I'd want to spend my day regardless of whether Lee was here or not.  We sat around my mom's big dining room table and the teenagers told stories about how they learn nothing in high-school and how all of their teachers don't speak English and how they watch ASMR videos of a woman eating pickles.  

Sunday, October 15, 2017

Priceless

His words penetrated like shards of glass; my face flushed and my eyes welled up. We were sitting in his dingy office in the entrails of the hospital, dirty coffee cups littering his desk, stacks of papers in disarray, photos of a family who must love him thumbtacked to the wall and all I wanted to do was to scream.  “I am not going to let him see me cry,” I willed myself.  I swallowed the lump in my throat and, realizing it was pointless, I navigated the conversation to the end.  I walked out of his office, down the corridor, to the chapel and then I cried.  It was a cry of sadness and anger.  I had gone into his office to ask for the same hourly salary earned by my colleagues; equal pay for equal work.  But he didn’t feel like dealing with me on a Saturday afternoon.  He wanted to work his shift and not be bothered by administrative duties.  “Personally, if it were up to me, I wouldn’t have any internal medicine doctors working in my department.”  His words reverberated in my mind.
 
Dr. Weiner, whose name matched his personality, was the acting chairman for his department; the understudy, temporary and replaceable. With callous detachment, he told me: a) not only did I not deserve equal pay, but b) I was inferior to his skill level and those of the other doctors in his specialty. He didn’t just hit.  He hit below the belt. When I asked him for a pay raise, you’d have thought I was asking him to wire transfer the money directly from his own account.  Hospitals and departments have budgets but he chose to respond to my legitimate request by ambushing me.
 
I’m valuable to his department, working there long before their program existed. As a student, I sewed up a dead guy’s chest in the trauma room before his family said their final goodbye. A year later, I met my husband, an intern, as he attempted a spinal tap on a large, obtunded woman.  I’ve grown up in that hospital over the past quarter of a century; first as a student, then as a resident and now as faculty. I’ve argued with anesthesiologists and orthopedic surgeons, told undocumented immigrants they don’t meet criteria for emergent hemodialysis and Spanish-speaking women that their pregnancy has failed, examined more body parts and heard more stories than there are words to a page. Since the new program began 7 years ago I have covered shifts so faculty can attend Wednesday lectures, retreats and I pitch in whenever they are short-staffed.  I’m a skilled clinician, respected by nurses, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, residents and other physicians.  I can quickly clear a busy waiting room and I see patients independently.  I don’t have to have a resident there to do the dirty work.  I do it myself.
 
To provide some background, my training is in internal medicine.  Internists are the thinkers, the problem solvers, the puzzle fixers.  I’ve practiced medicine for 19 years if you count since the end of my residency training, 22 years if you start the clock at the end of medical school. Though an internist, I still like to work in the acute care setting of our city’s large, public hospital.  This department is a relatively new field and as the new kid on the block, they are still trying to stake their claim.  Like a dog marking his territory, Dr. Weiner was pissing around the perimeter of his domain that afternoon.  I got too close to the boundary and damn near got bit.  
 
Theoretically, medicine is the noblest of professions, based on compassion to others.  However, to one another, physicians can be terribly cannibalistic.  Especially within teaching institutions, egos run amok and thinly veil insecurities., Asking a consultant for recommendations, because it’s in the patient’s best interest, often results in a dressing down.  Collaboration is perceived as a sign of weakness. If you can’t figure it out on your own, then you might as well pack up your bags and go home.  It’s a subtle form of shaming.  Internists do it to surgeons.  Surgeons do it to internists.  All specialties do it to emergency medicine doctors because they are the ones trying to admit patients to your hospital service. Finally, men will shame women and then women will shame other women or those inferior to them in rank.
 
This caste system, or hierarchy is not new and though it’s improved over the past 2 decades, it’s still pervasive.  I’ll complain to my husband, a white, male doctor, about this and, because he doesn’t fit the mold, sometimes he gets defensive or his feelings hurt.  He tries to understand the undertones of sexism and racism experienced by his wife or his colleagues and he becomes indignant on our behalf.  He offers, “If I had been in that room, I would have said or done this or that.”  But he’s always had the good fortune of walking into the patient’s room, the meeting or the consultant’s office in his white coat as a white man with everyone automatically assuming he knows what he’s talking about, deserving of awe and respect.  As the white man, even when you mess up, you are still venerated.  My kids have coined the phrase, “Dad Facts”.  Dad Facts are proclamations of truth based on nothing other than a father’s insistence that it is so. Once, my 17-year old son was asking me a serious of questions to which I had no answer.  My response was, “I don’t know” to all of his queries to which he sighed, “I wish you just had some Dad Facts.  Even if the answers don’t make any sense, they are still comforting because they are stated with such conviction.”  Dr. Weinerwould have never spoken to my husband the way in which he spoke to me.  If he had, my husband would have come after him with some Dad Facts and set the world back on its axis.
 
Let me offer a few vignettes as illustrations.  Recently, I accompanied my husband while he went to get his allergy shot.  Our middle son wants a cat and my husband is deathly allergic, as in throat-closing, epi-pen needing anaphylaxis.  But, because he loves our kids so much, he is willing, quite literally, to put his life on the line for our son.  When we pulled into the clinic’s 1970-style parking garage, the car across from us was being broken into by a young black male.
 
A young black male was breaking into the car parked across from us.  
 
I made a mental note to myself in case I needed to give a description to the cops:    He was about 30 years old, bearded, skinny, 5’11’ and he wore a yellow construction vest, jeans, a navy t-shirt and jandals with socks. We watched as he unsuccessfully jammed, in through the driver’s side window, a white, metal coat hanger twisted into a 2-foot long probe.  “Hey man,” he called to us, “you have a long piece of metal I can use?  I locked my keys in the car.”  We shook our heads and kept walking.  One of us mentioned to the other, “Do you think he really locked the keys in the car or do you think he’s trying to steal it?”  
 
Thirty minutes later when we walked back to our car he was still fishing through the window.  However, this time he had his wife, their 4-year old son and infant daughter, waiting patiently alongside him. The family unit changed our biases.  Suddenly he was no longer a thug trying to steal a car, but an unfortunate young man trying to get his family home. For the next 45 minutes he and my husband worked together on a common project, trying to open the car door while, I talked to the mom and entertained their little boy. Finally, a locksmith came along and opened it with a slim-jim.  We paid for the locksmith because they didn’t have enough money. We left with a sense of satisfaction that we had done something good but neither one of us addressed the underlying prejudice we had both brought to the table.  
 
So, a little bit of backstory: my mother had me when she was 19 years old without a shot-gun wedding to legitimize the situation.  It was quite the scandal.  Just before I turned 2 years old, she married the man who adopted me and who I consider my father. They had my little brother but separated and divorced by the time I was 13 years old.  Though she later went on to get a nursing degree after my brother and I left the house, she raised us on less than $20,000 a year.  Determined never to be in her financial situation, I decided I’d work hard and become a doctor, like her brothers, my uncles, whose monetary support helped us survive.  I also discovered, early on, that my brain was my biggest asset. The better I did in school, the more people paid attention to me.  I got noticed enough to get a partial scholarship to a private, 4-year liberal arts college.  
 
Most of what you learn in college is done outside the classroom. I had just moved into the dorm, classes had not yet begun, and one afternoon several handsome fraternity boys came through the dorms dropping off embossed invitations to the incoming freshman girls. The tea parties to which we were invited were supposed to be social gatherings intended to welcome new female students; at least this was the justification on paper.  In reality, they were sanctioned date-rape parties.  The night of the parties, a dozen of us from my floor, strangers just 2 days prior, put on make-up, party dresses, heels and walked over to fraternity row where these seemingly polite, young men poured us fancy drinks. I spent most of the night talking to a good-looking upper classman from New England.  I was 17 years old, still a minor, and ridiculously naïve.  When he asked to show me something upstairs, I wanted to be cool so I followed him to his room.  No one was present to tell me it was a bad idea and once we were alone, he quickly tried to round the bases.  When I told him he couldn’t put his hand down my pants, he became angry.  I lied and told him I was on my period.  This was not the night he had envisioned and he was pissed.  It was late and with the only shred of decency he possessed, he drove me back to my dorm.  As I got out of his car, full of shame, he told me that I shouldn’t have come to the party if I wasn’t prepared to sleep with guys and certainly not if I was on my period.  “That’s the only reason we have these parties.  To sleep with freshman.” It was 1986.  Welcome to college.
 
Six years later, I started my clinical rotations in medical school.  Up until that point, medical school had consisted of lectures in a large auditorium with all 200 of my classmates.  Clinical rotations took place inside a hospital and you were part of a team consisting of residents several years out of medical school, other medical students and a member of the faculty who’d come by for 1-2 hours a day.  Most of your time was spent with the residents who did the bulk of the patient care and teaching to the medical students.  The third-year resident on my team would keep me and my female student partner in the hospital till 3 or 4 am and make us listen to his narcissistic tales of driving in fancy sports cars with Wayne Gretzky and of the number of women he had bedded (despite being married).  Fred’s misogyny knew no end and he deftly wielded his power over us.  He was going to be a cardiologist, was chosen to be a chief resident and he gave us our grade and evaluation.  Anything to piss him off and we’d have a failing grade.  So Carie and I endured his inappropriate comments and endless rants.  “Are you wearing a bra?”, he once asked me.  On a separate day, he asked me why I dressed like such a lesbian.  Who was I going to tell?  All the faculty were old white men and there was no such thing as sexual harassment in the early 90s.  
 
Fred wasn’t the only guy to say horrible things during medical school.  One day I overslept my alarm and came in 20 minutes late on my surgery rotation.  The 5th year surgery resident, a loud and overly confident guy, told me in front of the entire team, I wouldn’t be late to rounds if I didn’t sleep with my boyfriend in the morning.  I was the only female on the rotation except for another female physician assistant student.  All the guys laughed and we were sent to change dressings on post-operative patients.  
 
Shaming doesn’t come from men alone. Women can be equally injurious.  Rather than support one another’s decisions, fear can get the better of us and we tear each other down, particularly when it comes to differences in work-life balance.  My decision to work part-time was a no-brainer.  I had breast cancer when I was 37 years old and my kids were 6, 5 and 3 years old.  I didn’t want my impending mortality to cheat me of time I had to spend with my family.  So, for the past 10 years I’ve put career aspirations on the back burner and driven a lot of car-pools, packed a lot of lunches, volunteered in many classrooms and done some doctoring.  Recently, in a professionalism workshop at my institution, a very senior female faculty member stated women who work part-time have been flailing in their careers. When I envision a person flailing, I think of someone drowning with their arms and legs akimbo, struggling to stay afloat.  I hadn’t been flailing at all.  I was navigating my career, my family and my disease with finesse.  Obviously, this woman has never met me or she’d be asking me for advice.  
 
In hindsight, Dr. Weiner and all the other phalluses have done me a favor.  Not getting that pay raise sucks but I gained something far more valuable; insight. You can be the smartest person in the room and yet lack wisdom.  I’ve encountered a fair share of fools in my lifetime and I’m sure there are more to come.  The ludicrousness of peoples’ comments can be comical.  Every one of these characters is emblazoned in my memory.  Marionettes in a dark comedy of puppets; the theater of the absurd.  You can’t put a price tag on someone’s value.  My worth can’t be cheapened, no matter what others may have said or done.  The fact of the matter is this; I’m priceless.  


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