Friday, September 17, 2010

MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 2010

Reflections from Jo'burg

[It has been a long time since I felt compelled to write. This is overdue, and a culmination of the influences of many friends, people, places, and experiences.]


At one point just over a week ago, I just sat down alone to contemplate the mess that I felt I had gotten myself into. "Mess" is a somewhat pessimistic word, but that is what it felt like. I was unsettled. There I was, in Port-au-Prince, doing the exact work that I want to do as my career, surrounded by some of the most unselfish, hardworking, fun people that I have ever met, working in a true humanitarian disaster, and I needed to figure out where I would be the following week.


I had a ticket booked to Johannesburg. I had a medicine board exam to take that I hadn't really been studying for. I had an apartment reserved in Denver. I had a job lined up in Denver. I had finally stopped panicking every time a pregnant woman, in labor, came into the clinic. I had received a phone call a day earlier from my recruiter at the locums agency who informed me that she had plenty of options for short-term contracts in Aspen, Vail, Denver, and elsewhere in the Colorado--I just needed to let her know when I wanted to start, and how long I would work for.


I tried to figure out which principles should guide my decision: professional goals/obligations, financial goals/obligations, my own ethos (the fact that I had basically given my word to a future job that I would be there on Sept 7). There were multiple options. Go back to the US, take boards, cancel my Jo'burg trip and return to Haiti for 2 more weeks. Go to the US, take boards, email my future job telling them I had changed my mind, call my locums recruiter. Not go back period?? I had already made one unexpected decision this summer (that being to return to PaP), and making another unexpected decision would not really raise eyebrows amongst family and friends. I could not come to a decision that day. I needed to sleep on a few things.


Somewhere over the Atlantic, I was two-thirds of the way through Where Men Win Glory¸ Krackauer's book about Pat Tillman. I was absorbed in the book. Furious at the USgovernment/military, but also engrossed in the way Tillman made decisions. He was a man guided by his own set of principles, and when making decisions, it was his own dogma which dictated what he should do. And that is why I was on a plane headed to Johannesburg. The following day, after contemplating what do to, I realized that I had made a commitment to my future job and bailing out this late in the game wouldn't uphold the commitment which I have given. This was combined with the fact that my financial obligations really require some of their own disaster management. I had also planned this trip to Johannesburg long in advance, and since I wasn't sure when I would have time to visits Jo'burg down-the-road, it felt important to come back and spend time with my friends here.


As the plane started to descend, we flew just to the east of the city, in a path that went south past city center and then made a u-turn coming into the airport from the south end. Before making the curve back to OR Tambo Airport, I got one of the best overviews of Johannesburg. I could see the slow morning rush hour traffic on the M1 as commuters headed into the city center. Even better, I could see the new soccer stadium, and the famous water cooling towers of Soweto. And then Bara became visible. I tracked the road down from Bara, and saw Southgate Mall where I did use to go shopping, an even spotted my old gym. We flew just over my old neighborhood, and I was able to look down into the nature reserve where I use to run and hike.


And then it hit me, I was home. This is home. This is where I had the best year of my life (well, aside from the year I was 5, which was a pretty great year too). Some of my best friendships were made here. Some of the most meaningful work experiences happened here. I still picture many of my patients from Bara, and often think about how they are doing or if they are even still alive. Some of the most heart-wrenching deaths happened here, like the death of four year old KR. Some of the most bizarre things I have ever read happened here (cops vs. cops in shootout was a newspaper headline).


I felt an urge to get off the plane, get into my car, and just drive, at once, to all my favorite places. Instead, Andrew and David met me at the airport and then we went to lunch and had a great time catching up. When it took me two hours to get a new SIM card so I could have a SA phone number, I just had to laugh at the annoyance of going to 8 different stores in 2 different malls to find one. I was home.


I think that, somehow, I knew I needed to come back to Jo'burg for other reasons. My friends here would have understood had I bailed on my trip. But I knew that being here would give me some down-time to go back to those issues from above and to figure out my next game plan. I also needed to be here to spend time figuring out what the fuck happened in the year since I had left.


When I left, I knew I would be back. I was so certain of this, that I almost didn't bother to sell my car. I wasn't sure I would be back in South Africa; it could have been Lesotho, Botswana, orSwaziland, which would allow me quick regular escapes to Jo'burg. But I was sure I would be back in this area. If I hadn't needed the cash from selling the Bakkie (SA slang for a small pick-up), I'd be driving it now.


Days before I left South Africa, Randall and I had a really meaningful conversation. I remember it with perfect detail. It was Saturday morning. I had just made coffee, and was reading the NY Times on-line. Randall came onto skype, and we decided to catch up. We talked about his life in China and my impending departure to Massachusetts. He told me about the difficulties he was having in his personal life, but it seemed that things were getting better, and he was making plans for some changes. I whined that I wasn't ready to leave, and that I was envious that he had extended his contract in China. It had been a long year and then some for him, for me, and for us. I don't know how or why it happened that day, but during our conversation we seemed to have really re-connected. We actually decided it was time to fix things. He was no longer mad at me for asking him to not visit me when he had a vacation. I was no longer mad at him for abruptly ending things. And somehow we started to talk about future plans, dancing around the issue of other future possibilities. He wanted more time in China, maybe two years he said. I would spend a year finishing residency, and then I would work for a year in South Africa/Lesotho/Swazi/Bots . And then the following year we would both be back in Colorado. Two days later, as I departed South Africa, I knew I would be back in one year. A week later, Randall died. In the confusing time after his death, my plans to return here, to South Africa, died as well.


The highlights from the past year pale in comparison to the previous year (Bara, Nepal, Kilimanjaro, Ethiopia, Cape Towntrip, backpacking trips and on and on). There was the wedding in Hawaii last July which included a luxurious stay at the Four Seasons in Lanai. There were some great dinners with friends scattered around New England. There was an impromptu road-trip to the cape, as well as to Maine. There was the joy of trick-or-treating with my nieces and nephews on Halloween. There was a great trip to California to see some of my dearest friends. There was the fact that I had finished residency, finally.


By far, the best highlights were my trips to Haiti. In February, working in Milot with earthquake survivors, had been one of the most challenging experiences I had encountered as a physician. When I was re-assigned to an adult tent (and pulled from the pediatric ward) , those 35 female patients were solely under mycare. I was charged with managing their infections, their blood pressures, making sure they were getting their wounds managed appropriately, making sure they were scheduled for their cast changes, skin grafts, and revision amputations. The days were long, but the work was incredible. It re-affirmed that this was the kind of work I wanted to do.


My experiences, thought, in Port-au-Prince trumped Milot. Maybe it is unfair to compare the two. The services in Milot were entirely medical. While in PaP, I was part of a bona fide humanitarian mission. The organization I was working with, was responsible for managing a camp with 52,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs). The NGO had to provide/coordinate shelter, security, water, and medical services (among other things). The team in PaP was loosely split into "medical" and "non-medical." There seemed to be an honest admiration for the work that the other team was doing. Neither was more important; both were essential to providing for the people of the camp. And that was refreshing. To know that there was a larger mission than just medical care enhanced feeling like part of a greater team. I felt lucky, that in my month in PaP, the "non-medical" and "medical" teams enjoyed having dinner together, hanging out on Sundays (the day off) and drinking together.


What was most impressive though, was the almost-sacrifice-type commitment that people had made to be there. People were volunteering there because they wanted to be there. Everybody had paid their own airfare to be there. Some were using vacation time. Some were on summer breaks between college or masters programs. Yet others came to PaP in-between careers, and one made a career change partly influenced by being in PaP. Upon that background, volunteers slept in tents (either on cots or sometimes just sleeping pads), often showered under a garden hose, and spent most of the time confined to the camp where we were working. It was a pleasure to work with that crew, they were perhaps the most down-to-earth hardworking team I've ever worked with.


There was another element which I hadn't experienced, and that is one of the full humanitarian roll-out process, and working amongst the presence of so many different aid organizations, both governmental and NGO. At times I was amazed at the lack of coordination amongst the large groups, all working in their own microcosm in the middle of this city which has been destroyed. The allure of the UN was also enjoyable. Meeting UN soldiers from Bangladesh, India, Brazil, Nepal, Morocco,Philippines, and hearing their stories about being away from home, often away from families was inspiring. One of the best parts was being the invited guests to one of the Indian UN base camps, meeting their commanding officers, and being wine and dined for a night, which included fresh, authentic Indian food. Delicious.


I departed PaP on a Friday, arriving late to my place inMassachusetts that night. On Monday I was sitting in front of a computer screen, trying to answer questions about medicine, in the hopes of becoming board certified. A minutia question of differentiating the cause of anemia popped onto my screen. Are you kidding me? I know I'm suppose to look at this picture of red blood cells under a microscope and know if this anemia is from B12/Folate/Iron deficiency, Thalassemia, or some other cause based on how the cells look, but I don't care. This is not practical. A few days prior, as I pulled down the lower eyelids of malnourished, feverish child, and saw how pale the conjunctiva were, I diagnosed the child with anemia. I didn't know how low the hemoglobin was, I'd guessed less than 10, easily. I didn't need a microscope to know the cause of anemia… Malaria. Malnutrition. Why wasn't this on my test. I kept thinking back to my pals at J/P, knowing that it was Monday, they were short staffed, and they would be getting swamped that day. What the fuck was I doing in Massachusetts, taking this ridiculous test?


Less than 48 hours after the exam, I was on a flight to South Africa.


I'm envious of my friends who are still working in PaP, more envious of those who I know will be returning there before me, and still even more envious of those who are doing humanitarian work, as their career. I am humbled by those who are forging ahead and making it work. I look forward to the day that I can rejoin my J/P pals, on a permanent basis, sleeping in the tent, wondering if the chicken we are eating were the chickens that were alive out back a few hours ago, bracing for the onslaught of another Monday clinic. I look forward to the day when Chris calls me from Darfur (or what ever conflict-du-jour is taking place) asking if I can come set up a mobile clinic for his IDP camp. I look forward to the day that Matt/Jack/Jeff/Andy are only a radio call away as I call them because the hospital electricity as gone off, again, and I need electricity for the nebulizer machine for the child having an acute asthma attack. I look forward to endless hours of Frisbee with Mark and Lee, maybe not on the LZ, but across a rice paddy, or on the savannah. I look forward to the day when a crashing patient shows up in clinic, and Paul/Andrew/Annette/Mellissa/Jodie/May/Lindsay/Beth/Lee are there to help. I look forward to Sonia calling to say she is going to help bail me out, again.


And so, I find myself again contemplating where things are headed. This time, I am not sitting in the tortuous heat of Haiti. I am sitting on the back deck of Siza and Scott's house. It has taken me a few days to finally unwind and relax. The influence of good friends, and great wine have brought me to the point where I can finally sit back, in the warm winter Johannesburg sun, and realize how it is that I am here as a visitor, not as a resident. I am reminded that I am very fortunate. I have great friends (who are scattered around the world at this point- Sapna: where the hell on the globe is Chuuk anyway?), good health (even though my legs burn from running yesterday), a great family (who will be disappointed when I leave Colorado, but will always be supportive), and a profession which has plenty of job options. I still don't know for sure where the next move will be, but I know which direction I will be heading; it will be toward humanitarian relief work. It may be Haiti, South Africa, or it may be where MSF/UN etc places me. All I know is that as soon as I can, I'll be back out in the field.


Keep a tent open for me, I will be back.

Soon.

Monday, January 11, 2010

The End

This blog is now done.

Please start reading at the beginning, back in 2008.

As for the recent posts... I made my decision on January 1, 2010. After months of agonizing, examining the decision from financial perspectives, career development perspectives, my own personal drive and desires, and the need to live somewhere sustaining (for a while), I decided to take a med-peds hospitalist position here in the US.

It's a 180 degree about-face from where I thought I was going to be that day I got on a plane to move back to America. I was certain I would be moving back to somewhere in Africa in the summer of 2010. I-Was-Certain. It'll be good to make some money to appease the student loan people. It will be good to spend some time growing as a physician. It will be good to spend some time with family (especially nieces, nephews, godkids and all the other kids). But it won't be long... Won't be long til I'm driving on the left side of the road, or taking off somewhere where I don't speak the language..

This blog starts here (enjoy).

Feel free to contact me: javamania75@hotmail.com

Cheers,
Brian

Sunday, December 6, 2009

I'm not just picking a job

I'm not just picking a job. I'm defining myself-to some degree. I can't recall the last time I agonized so much about a single decision. Choosing residency was easier than this. The decisions for university and medical school didn't have much competition.
 
May 28th, 2008 I took a hike. It was a Wednesday. I had been on night float the night before. Had gotten off of work. Been to the dentist. I must have taken a nap at some time. And it was a gorgeous day, so I made a break for a trail. Just a chance to get out and get some fresh air, and maybe a fresh perspective. I stopped into a bagel shop, grabbed a bagel sandwich, popped into a liquor store and grabbed a cold beer, and hit the trail. I ended up sitting down on a rock in the middle of a small river, and watch as the water crashed over a waterfall hitting a pool below. And I just sat, enjoying the solitude contemplating.

Contemplating bigger issues.
 
Why did I go into medicine.
What did I want to do.
 
I made a list of the things I wanted to do:
-work with MSF
-work on Everest Base Camp for a season
-work in a rural hospital
-work in an inner city hospital
-complete a tropical medicine course
-volunteer with UNICEF
-have a faculty appointment somewhere
-work in Alaska over the summer
 
And there are a lot of things that aren't on that list, that have crept into my thoughts since then. I'm trying to juggle income, finding the job which will allow me to take care of kids and adults, the patient population I want to take care of, the ability to have time off to get back to Southern Africa/Central America/South America.
 
[Courtesy of White Snake]:
 
Here I Go Again
I don't know where I'm going
But, I sure know where I've been
Hanging on the promises
In songs of yesterday
An' I've made up my mind
I ain't wasting no more time
But, here I go again
Here I go again
Tho' I keep searching for an answer
I never seem to find what I'm looking for
Oh Lord, I pray
You give me strength to carry on
Cos I know what it means
To walk along the lonely street of dreams
An' here I go again on my own
Goin' down the only road I've ever known
Like a drifter I was born to walk alone
An' I've made up my mind
I ain't wasting no more time
I'm just another heart in need of rescue
Waiting on love's sweet charity
An' I'm gonna hold on
For the rest of my days
Cos I know what it means
To walk along the lonely street of dreams
An' here I go again on my own
Going down the only road I've ever known
Like a drifter I was born to walk alone
An' I've made up my mind
I ain't wasting no more time
But here I go again
Here I go again
Here I go again
Here I go again
Cos I know what it means
To walk along the lonely street of dreams
An' here I go again on my own
Going down the only road I've ever known
Like a drifter I was born to walk alone
An' I've made up my mind
I ain't wasting no more time
An' here I go again on my own
Going down the only road I've ever known
Like a drifter I was born to walk alone
Cos I know what it means
To walk along the lonely street of dreams
 
-

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Running, Again? Running, Away?

I don't think it was a whim, but I don't know why I stopped out of the blue to buy new running shoes. I hardy run these days. But I did, and I shelled out the bucks for the new shoes (the current version of the shoes I've been running in since August 2004), as well as some fancy socks and a shirt. And then I came home, chatted with my flatmate, had a glass of wine, and pondered going to bed. Realizing that I should put those new shoes to use (if anything to justify the ridiculous price of 75 US$, I mean that'd do a long way for some friends back in SA), I abruptly stood up from the table, finished a generous gulp of wine, and went and changed to go running.

I put on my ipod to my running mix, the same mix of 164 songs that I've had for years, and set off. I turned the corner and headed down Route 5. I don't know what it was that took me back in an instant to that first night I ran in Dublin. Maybe it was running along a busy road (there, it had been South Circular Road), maybe it was the cool, misty night air. Maybe it was knowing that my legs were going to be sore in the morning, as I was biting off more than I should by hitting the pavement, but I felt like I'd gone back in time. And for a few blocks, maybe a mile (I wish I could say a few miles), I kept having flashbacks to my running progress in Dublin. After that first run, I couldn't run for a week. And then I ran around a park for a while, a meager few blocks, and then I was running more. Running along the River Liffey. Running through Dublin-no longer embarrassed to be out running. As I changed my running route, I discovered new areas to run in Dublin. New Parks I had never explored. New pubs which I made a mental note to check out, though usually forgot about once I got home. When a certain song plays when running, I can recall exactly where I was in Dublin during certain runs...

I turned the block, and ran past an Indian restaurant. And that triggered a flashback to a night when I went running during my intern year. A cold night. I'd run from my flat, down to the hospital, and around a neighborhood. I'd run past Gabby's house- and saw she wasn't home, and I wasn't sure why she and I had not talked in a few days-both busy I'd suspected. The Indian restaurant I was passing is where she took me for my birthday, and the conversation that night is permanently etched in my memory. We were going to make the world a better place. She wouldn't let me sell out, and as I ran, I thought what advice she'd be giving me now. "Fuck those job offers, are you kidding me, there are people out there who really need our help." She didn't hold back. And I miss that. She gave me coffee and a tie for my birthday. I don't wear that tie nearly enough. Maybe I'll wear it tomorrow.

I was lost in thought. Am I running to somewhere? Or am I running from something? For months I've agonized where my paths is going. I've solicited (both bluntly and circuitously) the insight from friends, sometimes hoping that one or two of them would pin me down and spell it out for me. Because I cannot see the path anymore. When my world crashed in July and August, all I could think of was Denver. On more than one occasion in the past 4 months, I contemplated flying out to Denver the following morning, fuck residency. Having the support from my family when I did see them in July, and the joy of hanging out with nieces and nephews, combined with the awesomeness of Denver made it clear, that Denver is where I thought I needed to go, and the ball was set in motion. On a Saturday in September, after Randall's memorial, I was sitting outside drinking margaritas and chowing down Nachos, surrounded by a great group of people; it was again evident that Denver is where I was headed.

I was lost in thought, until I saw a dodgy person on the sidewalk with a German shepherd. I'm in a residential neighborhood, in a safe part of town. This is not Johannesburg. I am safe here. He nods as I run past. More than once, in Jo'burg, I had crossed the street, or taken a turn and changed my path when I was running and saw a group of people on the street at night. It had taken me months to work up the courage to run there. I miss running in the nature reserve; I miss seeing zebras and wildebeests on runs. I miss Jo'burg, period. And then I heard Gabby again, and I wonder if I am running from the thing I really want to do, to oblige the banks who loaned me the vast sums of money so I could get to this point.

As I reach the driveway, the only Jewel song in this mix, Who Will Save Your Soul starts playing. I smile as I stretch. Maybe the answer is neither. I'm not running to nor from somewhere/something.

I'm just running...


BPB

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Running into the Sunset

I debated, hard. Opening my bottle of Meerlust and watching the sunset versus a run. I needed something. I needed to appreciate the dusk. It was a perfect cloudless Jozi evening, and the sunset was going to be superb, and I was not sure which would be the better way to appreciate it, a glass of fine wine, or sweating and pounding the pavement.

I gave my Swiss housemate a ride into town today. He is going to be leaving the house and will be living on part of the Wits campus--the old Johannesburg College of Education Campus. At JCE, I showed the guard my Wits Staff ID card, and we drove into the campus. And I dropped him off outside Gyrton Hall. And unexpectedly, a flood of memories were unleashed. Almost exactly 5 years ago to the date, I was dropped off, outside Gyrton Hall, by a taxi, and a few days later I would be getting ready to start my rotation at Bara, as a medical student.
 
From there, I left and headed over to 44 Stanley, home of my favorite coffee roasters. When I was there a few days ago, the head Barista and I were chatting and he told me I must stop by again before I leave Jozi. So I popped in this morning to enjoy my new favorite coffee drink (a PICCOLO- a strong, sweet latte served in a 90ml glass), do a bit of work, and then chat with the Barista. It was slightly embarrassing a few days ago when we did finally chat. For some reason, when he found out I was leaving, we just ended up having this great spontaneous conversation about being foreigners, and life etc. Turns out, he is a Zim refugee, who was a high school teacher before he was forced to flee Zim. (Does this sound familiar)? Anyway, when I headed to the till to pay, he handed me an SA music CD, as a gift. Needless to say, I was shocked at the kindness of this very humble ex-teacher-now-barista.
 
From there I may my way to Parkhurst, where I had a late breakfast with one of my ID attendings. We chatted and ate for 2 hours, catching up on clinic business, as well as possible future plans for pursuing a Trop Med course (she's pushing for me to consider the program where she went). Suddenly it was approaching 1pm, and I was overdue at the HIV clinic for lunch. We parted and headed to Bara.
 
I joined the HIV team for lunch, AK and I chatted for a bit, and then we walked to the xray department to consult the radiologists on a patient he was seeing, I ended up in clinic and made a round to say farewell to the other consultants, as well as the counselors, and then I headed to Ward 18, my old ward. My favorite pediatric nurse and I chatted for a bit, took some pics, and while I was there, the Registrars I worked with were there for a pedi infectious diseases round, so it was marvelous running into them and having a bit of closure. And then I departed for home.
 
And driving home, thinking about packing up my room, it just suddenly hit me that this was, or is, my last night in Mondeor. I made a cup of coffee, mulled over things, and then it was obvious-I could time it perfectly so that as I ran away from the house, I'd see the blue-purple haze hit the hills, and when I reached my turn back point, I'd capture the best part of the sunset. And that's what happened. Finally, after many attempts, I capture it perfectly. I went to the nature reserve, stopped to watch the stars, and the brushfire off in the distance..
 
Now it is late. Very late. I'm half packed. The bottle of Meerlust has enough wine for one glass (I took it to my landlord's house as we watched SA lost to Brazil and discussed life and their departure for Kili in the morning).
 
That is it. Off into the sunset. A year at Bara is over.
 
Thanks for reading these posts.
 
-

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

One Last Time.

I want to do it one last time... "It" is a long list.
I want to do for one last sundowner at the Westcliffe.
I want to spend a summer evening at Lulu's after work, sitting outside reading and drinking coffee.
I want to be having breakfast at Espresso, hung over (mildly), laughing about the previous night.
I want to go back to Simply Blue on Pride night.
I want to sit outside at Mandela Square, during the week, in the middle of the day, eating sushi.
I want to take the minibus to work.
I want to see the Apartheid museum one more time.
I want to drive on the M1, amazed at the people walking along the highway, on their way home from work.
I want to be back in Nepal, back in Lesotho, back at Vic Falls, back in Cape Town, back in Clarens.
I want to be back in Ward 18 (especially now that I know so much more than a year ago).
I want to run through the nature reserve, stop, look at the zebras wildebeests and blesbock, and still be shocked that they are down the road from my house.
I want to the miracle of people coming to the HIV clinic weeks later, healthier, not dead.
I want to be in the pediatric cath lab with the peds cardiology team, learning and laughing.
I want to be at the airport, seeing the look on S&S face. Not sure if they are more confused because I've returned with only the clothes I'm wearing, or if they are more amused that I can't figure out how the hell to get to where I parked my car.
I want to spend a Saturday at Bean There studying and reading, and then meet up with friends in the afternoon, and end up back at home Sunday night.
 
What do I still want to do.
-nil-
-nada-
-zip-
-zero-
-zilch-
I've done it all. I'm cleaning and starting preliminary packing, and I just saw the list that I made a year ago. I did every single thing on that list. Life is too damn short to make lists of things to do, places to see and to not scratch items off that list regularly.
 
Back to cleaning..
 
-
 

Monday, June 22, 2009

New Pics

Pics from the Sani Pass and from my farewell braai are now up:
 
 
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