Sunday, August 15, 2010

Mortality


I layed in bed last night with my mind racing. Planning how I would react if I got in a car accident on my way back to Youngstown this evening. Walking through what I would do and how it would feel to be in a trauma bay with my classmates in the room as I lay on the bed with my clothes cut off and tubing being shoved down my throat. As I was lying there, I remembered my drive home from the hospital on Thursday. How I played through the same scenerio. How I pictured the humiliation of being wheeled into the trauma bay at St. E’s with all the residents and attendings that have been my colleagues and teachers for the last few weeks.

These are new thoughts for me. Working in the ICU with teenage patients, healthy 40-something year olds and college students who have been taken out by a car accident, ATV crash, or any other freak accident you can imagine seems to have brought me to terms with my mortality. Seeing previously healthy people being knocked down by accident and illness with no prior hints has been humbling to me. Who am I to think that I’m above a freak accident? Who am I to think that “this” could never happen to me?

I had my first patient who was actively dying on Friday. It didn’t phase me much at the time. I was engaged and interested, but not really bothered by the idea that this man most likely could be ‘expired’ by morning. But then this morning at church we were singing “Sin has lost its power, death has lost its sting” and it all of a sudden hit me. I wondered if I could really rest in God's assurance that he's bigger than death. While I feel death carries no fear for me, can I say the same thing for my patients? For the human lives that I work with that aren’t walking with Christ? This has the makings for an interesting year.

Sunday, August 8, 2010


In the back of my mind, I always wondered if I'd love medicine and being at the hospital as much as I thought I would. You sit in classrooms and pouring through books for years anticipating that one day you'll be with patients and it will all be worth it. The funny thing is that it's a mere hope; that at the end of the day the years of work and the $100 thousand that you've invested in your education will be worth it. Well, last week proved that I do love medicine every bit as much as I thought I did. I think it's a good sign when you spend 30+ hours straight at the hospital and aren't counting down the hours till you can go home. I love the patients (as crazy as they can be), I love the residents, I love the smell and feel of the halls of the hospital. I love suturing, and procedures, and even being confused. I can't believe I'm lucky enough to go into a field that I'm this passionate about.