When I Grow Up

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One of the most common questions I have received in Residency has been, “What do you want to be when you grow up?

I have heard it from every level of the medical machine in which I have existed for the last two-and-a-half years.

Attending physicians have asked me.

Nurses in the ICU.

Respiratory therapists in the ED.

Janitorial staff in the hallway.

Pharmacists in the trauma bay.

Senior residents on a multitude of services.

What do you want to be when you grow up?


 

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It has been the most infuriating question I have received in Residency; I’ve been asked it more times than I can count.

And it is not as if the question has been some derivative thereof; the wording has been exactly that.

It hasn’t been “When you have finished your medical training, is there a specific focus you would like to have?”

Or “what made you decide to choose Family Medicine?”

Grown adults have asked me, “What do you want to be when you grow up?

I have grey hairs in my beard. If that weren’t a dead giveaway that I’m an adult, I don’t know what is…


 

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For all except one of the occurrences, I have politely responded with something about my desire to provide primary care in the Behavioral Health patient population.

In the lone outlier, I made reference to my age, as I was clearly older than the person asking me and unbelievably sleep deprived, which kept me from overriding my primordial desire to psychologically eviscerate them.

I apologized after my verbal carnage ended.

My ego has been kept in check for most of Residency, mostly due to my need to survive without making a multitude of personal and professional enemies, despite my innate desire to respond with an exasperated,

Do you realize how condescending of a question that is?”


 

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It’s not meant to be a condescending question. Perhaps it has simply infiltrated the ice-breaking vernacular of the medical field.

Perhaps it is appropriate, as a fair number of medical school graduates are still coming straight from an undergraduate campus without an iota of life experience with which to share their patients, much less their colleagues.

Maybe I look young? But I know I don’t. I’ve seen pictures of me before I grew up. And I certainly don’t look as young as I did when I was 24.


 

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When I showed up to the first day of Residency, I was 34 years old.

While it’s true that every single senior resident in my Residency had a far superior grasp on medical knowledge and patient care than me, a vast majority were four to six years younger than me.

Embedded in that seemingly trivial age difference, are the fruits of my labor.

If I conservatively look back on the six years from when I moved to Boston at 24 and when I turned 30, I wouldn’t know where to start in order to describe the multitude of amazing things I experienced.

Perhaps I sound like an incredible asshole by saying that. You may not be wrong. But for the most part it is true.


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I came to Residency with an open mind about being taught by men and women with far fewer life experiences from which to draw upon than me.

The converse could not be said to be true.

For each successful completion of one year of Residency, it is as if a Purple Heart has been awarded by the Surgeon General.

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Without a year under your belt, the Medical Degree for which you worked so hard was like a Participation Certificate a child would receive for making an exploding volcano at the Science Fair.

Respect is based solely on your capability to perform the medical task set before you as a resident; everything else about you be damned.

It didn’t matter if every other person outside of the medical field who knows you would explain with awe in regards to what you had created for yourself; no one within medicine could care less.


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Medicine is a hierarchical beast. It has been that way for the past century since the dawn of modern medicine.

I am not perfect.  I have fallen into that trap a few more times than I would care to admit during Residency, but I believe for the most part I have awarded everyone of my colleagues a Purple Heart for just making it to Residency.

Surviving the four years of Medical school without becoming disenfranchised, burned out, or overwhelmed by the cesspool of obstacles inherent in medical training, is an incredible achievement unto itself.

So each time I am asked “What do you want to be when you grow up?”, the part of my amygdala that houses my Pride, is set aflame.

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I can imagine a  PET scan of my brain glow bright red as each neuron would be firing at full tilt.


A sparkling fireworks display of my life flashes before my eyes:

I grew up a long time ago.

I’ve been taking care of myself for the past 20 years.

I worked at the #5 University in the world. I attended the #6 University in the world.

I worked at the #3 Hospital in the US.

I’ve presented my own research at Columbia University.

I traveled all over the world with an amazing woman at my side.

I have lived in Boston, Chicago, Miami, and New York City.

I’ve sat on the Board of Directors of a Non-profit organization.

I spent two years living on an island in the Caribbean.

I have grown up.


 

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I did all of these things before taking one breath as a physician.

Each of them was critical in my development. Each of them have allowed me to make connections with people all over the world.

Each of them brought me closer to my patients and colleagues than I ever could have otherwise.

And my pride, which allowed me to overcome every barrier I found in front of me while transitioning from a 24-year-old Midwesterner to a 36-year-old world traveled physician, can’t help but take offense to the assertion that I have yet to grow up.

What do you want to be when you grow up?


 

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I want to be who I already am. I’m comfortable in knowing that I have been fortunate to live a charmed life; a life that I created, despite getting knocked down a few times.

I don’t want to grow up.

I did that years ago.

As I transition from a Third Year Resident to an Attending physician, the number of times I have been asked the aforementioned question has picked up steam.

Each time, my Id screams, my Ego broods, and my SuperEgo kindly responds: “I plan to provide primary care to the Behavioral Health population.

And now that I have my first job after Residency lined up, contract signed, and start date on the calendar, I can respond with an actual job title.

But I still wonder if people will expect to me grow up. Unknowingly overlooking everything that brought us to the moment where they felt it appropriate to ask:

What do you want to be when you grow up?

Life on the Amazon

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“Welcome to the Jungle

We’ve got fun and ‘n’ games

We got everything you want

Honey, we know the names

We are the people that can find

Whatever you may need

If you got the money, honey

We got your disease”

 

 

Axl Rose’s voice roared over the loudspeaker as I sang along with a bar code scanner doubling as my microphone. “Welcome to the Jungle” seemed quite the appropriate theme song for where I found myself at 3AM on a recent Wednesday morning: an enormous warehouse on the outskirts of Lexington, KY.

But how the hell did I get there?

One day in July 2013, while on a month-long break from medical school, I found myself dreaming about what I would do during the 8-month break I would soon have between finishing medical school and starting Residency.

During that day-dream, I found myself:

a) in the outback of Australia, rough-housing with cuddly koalas and lacing it up with rambunctious kangaroos

b) providing medical care to the indigent people in Chennai, India with an old friend

c) attending evening lectures at Harvard and mingling with Nobel laureates

d) indulging at Carnival in Rio de Janeiro

 

 

Each of these seemed as likely as the next. My mind wandered and the possibilities seemed endless. Approaching the end of my journey to becoming a physician, I was feeling a bit grandiose. My delusions of grandeur had me feeling like the memories I would create by gallivanting around on such ridiculous journeys would serve as a buffer for the long nights and difficult times I would likely face in Residency.

 

 

But none of those things will happen during this 8-month break. No koalas. No Jared Diamond lectures. No flights to Chennai. No beads at Carnival.

Instead, I’ve been spending an enormous amount of time on the Amazon.

No, not the Amazon River. Though I’m surprised it didn’t ever arise as a possibility during my day-dreaming sessions.

The Amazon I’m referring to is the Amazon processing line. The Amazon that services your on-line orders for ginkgo biloba, Lego’s, the King James Bible, cans of corn, defective remote-controlled helicopters, and a new door handle.

 

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Yeah, you ordered all of those things from one website. In five minutes. And it cost you $107.18 and was delivered in two business days. I remember your order. Creepy, I know.

So where did my day dreams go so wrong?

The end of my nearly nine year sojourn to becoming a physician ended with a month of Trauma Surgery, not exactly the typical elective for a a future Family Medicine doc. I felt like an incredible weight had been briefly lifted from my shoulders when I walked out of that hospital for the last time as a student. Now I wanted to regain some semblance of self, or at least reflect on whom I had become… even if it included moving somewhere I hadn’t lived in nearly 15 years.

Upon arriving in Lexington, I was in need of some serious mental and physical recuperation. I promised to give myself the month of November to basically cram whatever meaningless and mind-numbing things I could into my life before starting to be a productive member of society again.

 

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As November was coming to a close, the stark reality that money no longer grows on trees began to reflect in my bank account. So I began researching possible job opportunities at the local universities, considered private tutoring, and investigated becoming a Craigslist gigolo.

 

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I quickly realized that I was either severely over-qualified or unlikely to get anything worth my Bachelor’s degree when potential employers realized I was in Lexington only temporarily. Except for the gigolo position, you can never be too qualified for that. But you can be too out-of-shape.

And then, in a stroke of holiday magic, I flipped open the newspaper on an early December morning to see a booming full-page ad for “Temporary Work! Great Wage! Happy Holidays!” placed by Amazon and the agency that fulfills its temporary staffing needs for the holiday season.

I could hear the Bezos Dollars cha-chinging in my ears.

 

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So I bundled my pride up in a knapsack, which I had obviously ordered from Amazon, drove it to the Kentucky state line, and tossed it into the Ohio River.

Then I drove to the staffing agency that handles temporary hires for Amazon, parked my Benz as far away as possible, and walked in head held high, unsure of what I was getting myself into.

Before I could muster a word, the young blonde at the front desk blurted out, “We are only hiring for night shift. It’s 6:30P to 5A. Are you still interested?”

“That’s perfect!”

 

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She was only momentarily stunned by my enthusiasm and proceeded to quickly detail what lay in store for me… in the next three hours I would have to maneuver my way through a series of computer terminals, video presentations, and drug tests before an impromptu interview where I might still be told I wasn’t quite Amazon material.

Medical school doesn’t allow time for part-time money-making endeavors, so I thought, “Three hours? I’ve held retractors longer than that!”

 

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By the time I reached the second of three computer terminals, I was beginning to wonder how much my professional reputation could be impacted in twenty years if it came out I was a gigolo between medical school and Residency.

At this computer, I was welcomed by a flashing screen. It warned me that if I was unable to score a 90% on the following exam, I would immediately be removed from the applicant pool and would have to return in 30 days for further consideration. My palms began sweating. These people were not screwing around.

Thankfully, I nailed all 20 of the picture matching questions.

 

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Cha-ching!

After fist-bumping the guy at the station next to me, I said a quick prayer thanking the Medical Licensing Examination Gods for preparing me for such a rigorous test of my mental faculties.

A short hour later, after watching a video about how awesome it was going to be working in a warehouse overnight, I was beckoned to a makeshift interview area.

 

 

A pleasant woman pulled up my on-line application and asked, “So you have a college degree, that’s great! Any other education?”

“Uh, yes. I do, but I don’t think it’s relevant.”

She looked at me quizzically. “Will you have a problem standing for 10 hours straight?”

“That shouldn’t be a problem.”

“Then get a copy of your high school transcript. That way you won’t get fired in the first week.” I humbly nodded my head and wondered again what the hell I had gotten myself into.

That was over two months ago. I can’t say processing customer returns in a warehouse overnight has been a “come to Jesus” moment, but if I needed one, it would suffice.

 

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On a recent night, while parked in the snow-covered lot outside the warehouse, waiting to begin my shift, I answered a phone call from one of my aunts. She had heard what I was doing and chatted me up about it for a minute or two.

As the conversation began to wind down, she asked, “So… you are going to be a doctor, right?

“Yes. I am. I swear. But if I ever needed a reason to go to college, which I already did, this would be it.”

She laughed. In my head, I reflexively wondered, “I am going to be a doctor, right?”

As I stood at my desk that same night, the conveyor pumping boxes alongside me, the overhead radio station blared ’80’s rock and I sang along as if I was competing for a place on the The Voice.

Axl Rose screeched, “You know where you are, you’re in the jungle, baby!”

I turned to the woman at the desk behind me and said, “More like, you’re in the Amazon!”

She giggled; I again wondered what the hell I was doing in a warehouse at 3AM, when I could be in the actual Amazon. Shooting blow darts at ravenous crocs. Or learning how to carve a canoe out of a tree with a toothpick.

I suppose that’s why they are called day-dreams.

 

“Welcome to the Jungle

We’ve got fun and ‘n’ games

We got everything you want

Honey, we know the names

We are the people that can find

Whatever you may need

If you got the money, honey

We got your disease”

welcome to the jungle