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Ramble Strip

There's no stripping. (Sorry.) But there's rambling, usually in the area of science, politics, pop culture, signs that are irritatingly misspelled, and religion, or anything that happens to be on my mind at the time. I post on study breaks, so that I don't go insane. Insaaaaaaaane!

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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

It's okay, Shelby, women are havin' babies every day!

I'm having a ball on this rotation. Like I said, I'm working at a little clinic that is close to home, with a family doc that I've known of for what seems like forever. She is truly a selfless person, and just works tirelessly for that little community, and they all love her. In my trek through the different departments, I've encountered lots of M.D.s (and D.O.s) - there are two distinct ends of the spectrum. Some are "physicians", commanding respect and admiration for all that they've accomplished. And some are "docs", who are following a calling outside of themselves, and who meant it when they said in their admissions interview that they wanted to "help people". The "docs" get the respect and admiration anyway, but they'd never go looking for it. My preceptor this semester is the epitome of a Doc.

Family Medicine doctors are trained in OBGYN as well as some surgery, and you can do some, all, or none of those in your practice. My preceptor does OB (which is my next rotation, by the way, so I'm getting a jump start on some things. The Lord takes such good care of me - He's trying to build my confidence so that I won't totally panic before starting the OB rotation. I'm getting a chance to know the OB residents, attendings, and nurses as well, which is good.) On Wednesdays she's on call at the hospitals, so I spend all day with her, rounding on postpartum moms and pregnant women with other medical problems, and being around whenever one of her patients decides to deliver. (Those deliveries, by the way, are so awesome and I love them. They put me on this great natural high, because I love watching God's handiwork enter the world, and the interaction between the mom & dad and the rest of the family always brings a tear or two.)

Last Wednesday, none of the students on the OB rotation were around, because they hadn't started "Night Float" yet - and that's when the students get to be on Labor & Delivery. This week, two students in my class were there doing night float, and they were each assigned to our two laboring moms. When I heard that, my heart just sank - I didn't think they'd let two students in the room.

I went with my preceptor (I'll call her Dr. L) to check the mom's progress, and she was dilated to 10 and fully effaced, so that's when we all gown up. Plus there were some head compressions on the fetal monitor (not as scary as they sound - it just means that the baby is getting into the birth canal) and that's what sent us in there in the first place. I asked the mom if she minded if a student observed, and she said no, and I asked how many she'd be comfortable with, and she said one. My heart was recovering from the earlier sinkage, and had risen to somewhere around my pyloric sphincter, but that made it sink again, because I knew it would be the OB student and not me. I didn't say anything, though, and I chatted with mom & dad for a few minutes about the baby and names and other kids and such, and then started to leave. Mom said, "The student will be you, right?" I said no, and Dad said, "How many students would have to be in here for you to be in here?" I held up two fingers. Mom said that was fine. I asked her approximately 17 more times, and told her it was all about her and that I didn't want her to regret a thing about the experience, and she said that she wanted me there. Yay! So I got to watch that birth, and I actually made Mom, Dad and other family members in the room laugh in those awkward pauses between pushes.

At one point, Mom said that her hair must be a mess. I told her that she was beautiful, and Dad agreed. By this time we could see the top of the baby's head, and a shock of dark hair. So I said, "The baby's hair, on the other hand, is looking a little rough." Then I added, "I think he just has too much product in it." Hardy har har. That made everybody laugh. Obviously, you have to get a feel for the personality of the parents and the family (and your attending doc and resident) before you say something like that, but I am a big fan of humor. If I didn't laugh, I'd cry.

Which brings me to my next point - I was talking to the other two students that are on OB (incidentally, since a class just graduated, the rest of my class are officially fourth-year students. Yay for them!) One of the students asked if I was going to take the Step 2 review course, and I asked when it was. And the other student said, "She's not a 4th year." Which brought tears behind my eyes, because I feel like I don't belong anywhere anymore since I took some time off. One of the things that helped me through the first two hellacious years of medical school was the fact that my class and I were going through it together - I saw it as a kind of "band of brothers" thing, although everybody else in the class may think I'm crazy and I may be the only one who felt that way. But now, my class is in their last year, and I still have this rotation and three more to do. I feel like they've all moved above me and are looking down on me now, so I don't belong with them. But I don't belong in the class below me either, because I barely know them (with a few exceptions). So the camaraderie is gone, and I feel like I don't have any peers that I can talk to. It makes me really sad, actually. I even feel that I can't really talk to close friends in my class in the same way - it's kind of like they're freshmen in college and I'm still in lowly high school, and I just feel stupid. You know, typing this, I realized that I don't even feel right calling the class of 2009 "my class" anymore. So, I've been kind of keeping to myself as much as possible, but it makes me sad. Oh well. Nothing can be done about it now, and everything works out in the end. The Lord has me in the palm of His hand and carries me through my difficult days. I just can't praise Him enough. So I know I'm never truly alone.

And finally, I had a patient today who tried to quote a Bible verse to me to prove that Jesus smoked weed. I'm totally NOT convinced. I do love patients, though - they are so great. That is all.

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Sunday, April 27, 2008

A quick update

I haven't written for awhile - I had the pain clinic decrease my fentanyl patch from 50 mcg/hr to 37.5 mcg/hr (which is a 25 patch & a 12.5 patch) beginning 4 days ago, and I've been in quite a bit of pain, despite my breakthrough meds. I'm also decreasing my Paxil from 40 mg to zero (I'm down to 10 mg), overlapping it with Prozac so that the short half-life of Paxil doesn't cause SSRI discontinuation syndrome as I cut it down (the whole discontinuation thing TOTALLY sucks - tingly extremities, "electric shocks" through my head, extreme irritability, total insomnia, and crying for no reason.) If you're taking Paxil and want to taper off of it, talk to your doctor about adding 20 mg or so of Prozac during the taper, for a Prozac a day keeps the SSRI discontinuation syndrome away. At least it has for me - I've been decreasing by 10 mg every 2 or 3 weeks, and haven't had problems so far. Except for my anxiety going through the roof.

I start back to school in a week, and I'm so nervous about it. I could really use your prayers, please - because I'm still sick, and I'm so anxious, and sad, and lonely. It gets increasingly harder to put on a face in public, you know? So I haven't written here, because I'm afraid I would end up saying what I actually think. I'm just not one of those people who is all, "I'm fine on my own!" because I'm not. I need Christ. I need Scott. I need my family, and I need friends. I need people to hug me occasionally; to send a quick message to let me know they're thinking of me. I need to be told that things are going to be okay. I don't care if that makes me seem weak, because I AM weak. I'm not sure how else to cry for help - help. Help. Help.

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Sunday, February 24, 2008

Statuses? Statusi?

I'm rather addicted to Facebook, and it has this nifty little status feature that you can use to let your "friends" who also use the application what you're doing and/or feeling RIGHT THAT SECOND. In the event that they care. Which in my case, they probably don't. So I thought that from time to time, I'd bring my status over to people who MIGHT care - you, my blog readers.

Here's what the status looks like on Facebook, in case you don't know what I'm talking about:

Facebook status

The text says "Kim is crying. And stupid. Stupid for bringing things up that bother her rather than just keeping them in to avoid needless conflict, because she hates conflict."

And I DO hate conflict. So why can't I keep my stupid mouth shut? Grrrrr.

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Tuesday, February 05, 2008

On leave AGAIN

So, I spent a month in Family Medicine and I LOVED it - if I can slog my way through the rest of school, I am pretty sure that I will end up trying to match in Family. But for right now, my pancreatitis and my anxiety have other plans. I am, to say the least, so sad and disappointed right now. But I wanted to let you know what was going on, since some of you have contacted me to see how things are going. I would appreciate your prayers.

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

How to have your spirit crushed in 10 minutes or less

My last rotation, before I took "personal leave" for this rotation (which should have been my OBGYN) was Internal Medicine. I expected this to be difficult, because medical students know that the internists, especially general internists, are supposed to be the "thinkers". They have to know a little bit about everything. They have to know indications and contraindications for a whole slew of drugs, compared to the relatively minute number that psychiatrists master (don't get me wrong, psychiatrists know their drugs and they know them well). They have to know classic and not-so-classic presentations for a bunch of different conditions. They have to be able to work algorhithms in their head when the occasional zebra comes through the door. They interpret a ton of lab tests and radiology studies and they have to know when they should order more. In my Internal Medicine review books was a ton of information (the textbook itself, Cecil's Internal Medicine, was a workout to even carry.) And I was looking forward to learning it all, hoping to shine on this rotation since I had previously planned to try for a residency in Internal Medicine at the hospital that I was assigned to for my 4 weeks of inpatient service.

But.

I have pancreatitis. And if you've been reading my blog, you know I had a ton of problems with doctors right as the Internal Medicine rotation began, getting me off to a bad start with everyone - having to call in sick and looking like a slacker. My 4 weeks of outpatient service was first, so calling in wasn't a huge deal to the physician I would be working with for the day (it's not like I was part of a team yet - this was outpatient) but since the rotation was organized so smushedly (is that a word?), we only had a couple of days to spend on each specialty. So miss a day, miss pulmonary medicine. Or whatever. Anyway, it didn't exactly further my learning.

And then when my trusty GI doctor, the one who has cared for my pancreatic maladies (and those of my other family members) for YEARS, decided to be a giant buttface one day and tell me that he'd treat my pancreatitis, but he couldn't treat my pain. I'd have to go to a pain clinic for that. (Okay, there ARE no treatments for chronic hereditary pancreatitis except for pain management. If someone knows of an effective one, PLEASE, do tell.) I begged him to just treat me for the duration of this rotation, about six more weeks - to not make me try to find new doctors and switch my medications all around in the middle of this difficult rotation. Nope. He was committed to his buttfacedness. So I was forced to try to find new doctors and switch my medications all around in the middle of the difficult rotation.

I ended up finding a pretty great pain clinic and a good, compassionate doctor who treats me like a person, a patient in pain, instead of a junkie - but I had to go through a couple of bad doctors to get there. And I was in horrible pain for most of the rotation, operating at about 60% of my capabilities. All that severe pain, with no end in sight, eventually ended up making me seriously depressed, which didn't help matters at all.

And it REALLY, REALLY helps to be paired with a student who will actually work with you*. I wasn't, and I felt like one of the attending physicians that I worked with on inpatient was at times comparing the two of us (which they should not do.) Actually, I'll go ahead and stick a little story right here. I got to the hospital one Thursday morning by at least 6:30AM, in order to see my four patients and write a good SOAP note in their charts before 9:00AM prerounds. (And somewhere in there, I had to travel about 10 minutes to another hospital for a one-hour neurology conference, which was held at 8AM every Thursday morning. And I liked neuro, by the way.) Now, I had seen my first patient and was at least halfway through my progress note for her by the time my fellow student got to the hospital. I saw her head down the hall to the call room, where prerounds were held and where we would stash our stuff while rounding. She saw me, too. I saw two more patients and wrote notes on them, ran into the other 3rd year student a time or two as I rushed between floors, and (a little late, I'll admit) had to leave at about 7:55AM for neuro conference without seeing my 4th patient, who had had surgery and was in surgical ICU. I wasn't sure if we just breeze in and see her anyway - sometimes there are infection precautions and whatnot. So I thought I'd ask first. On my way down the hall to the main entrance, I saw my attending and I swear he seemed to glare at me. Maybe I was imagining things. Anyway.

I walked to my car (a meeeeeeellion miles away, because lowly medical students have to park a few yards past the moon at the hospital, so low on the totem pole are we) drove the 10 minutes to the other hospital, parked by the moon again, walked 18 miles to the building where neuro conference is held, went up the elevator, down the hall, and tried to enter as quietly as possible so I wouldn't disrupt ... my fellow Internal Medicine students, who were sitting there chatting. Huh? Note that the student who was on service with me was not there. All of the other students who was supposed to be there were there. There were no residents or interns, though, and no neurologist. So after a few minutes we decided that there must be no conference, and we dispersed back to our respective assignments.

I flew into the call room when I got back to the hospital, right at the beginning of prerounds. Late - huff, puff, huff, puff - drat! I explained to the team (attending, senior resident, other residents, interns, pharmacy resident, and the other third-year student) that I had been at the nonexistent neuro conference that no one told us didn't exist this week. The other student didn't say anything.

All the attendings have their own styles and quirks and such, and this particular attending would sometimes see patients on our list before prerounds, without the whole team. He happened to see two of my three patients, so I only had one to present, while the other student (who, remember, got to be at the hospital for an extra hour while I was being faked out) had seen four patients, none of which had already been seen and three of which happened to fall in a row on our patient list, so it seemed like she presented in her annoying "baby" voice forever. (She would present to the team - all guys except for me and the pharmacy resident - in this cutesy voice that sounds nothing like the way she really talks.)

I presented my one patient (although I did interject a little with my morning impressions when the attending brought up my other patients - an attempt to be more aggressive) - a patient that I had picked up the night before (when we weren't required to be there, mind you.) I checked the list and saw that he had just been admitted, so I went to his room and spent about 45 minutes getting a good history from his daughter-in-law, because the patient was a poor historian due to some head injuries. When we reached the end of the list, I asked the attending about my other patient - the one in surgical intensive care, and asked if I could still check on her. He seemed indignant and said that yes, we could - he had seen her that morning. I told him (and the team) that I would have checked on her this morning, but I was hurrying to get to the neuro conference that no one told me was canceled. The attending said, "[The other student] knew. [The other student] was here early this morning." Apparently, an intern had filled the other student in on the neuro cancellation and she hadn't bothered to page or call me to let me know (she did have both numbers.) Also, she knew I was there well before she was, but she didn't feel the need to point that out - she just let me look bad in front of the whole team. Wonderful. And one of my friends on the rotation told me later that the other student had told her during lunch that she had felt sorry for me when the attending pointed out in front of everyone that she knew about the conference and that she was there early that morning. Grrrr! I didn't need her pity, I needed her to speak up and say, "Actually, Kim was already here when I got here."

*If you're a third year (or fourth year) medical student and your modus operandi matches that of my fellow student - well, just don't. You make things twice as hard for the other students that you work with, you don't let them learn as much as they would otherwise, and you leave them with a bad impression of you. I think I'd rather work with almost anyone else in my class other than this girl. She was awful to be paired with.

All right, finally we get to my horrendous evaluation, the one that still has me questioning my choice of career even today. I went to the attending's office for a little "sit down" where I expected some constructive criticism (which I can take, by the way - and I realize this is a chip off of the iceberg of the yelling and the criticizing that I will get along the line), my strengths and weaknesses to be noted - that kind of thing. Instead, I was told that my first week with him was "difficult at best" and "a failure". The second week was "a little better" but "still not good". My presentations were just so-so. (For what it's worth, another attending in Medicine that I worked with for my first two years said that my presentations were excellent by the end of my 2nd year. Who to believe? Who knows.) My progress notes weren't good. My knowledge base wasn't there (isn't that what the USMLE Step One and the Internal Medicine miniboard test, both of which I passed by the grace of God? Hmmm.) He said that the assessment and plan portion of the note needed lots of work. (That was actually the only constructive part of the barrage of criticism that I could pick out. But here's the thing - I thought that the daily progress note should focus on the subjective and objective part - issues that had occurred overnight, how the patient was feeling this morning, that kind of thing. New complaints, resolution of old complaints, etc. Unless there was a new problem, I didn't see a need for the third year medical student to formulate a big detailed plan, when the patient had an attending, a chief resident, and an intern looking after him. Nevertheless, I tried to do my A/P better from then on - as redundant as I felt it was.) He wondered how I had made it this far, given the fact that I'm a terrible student and I suck so much. I told him that during the first two "classroom" years, that if I had a particularly painful day or days, missing class wasn't a big deal. And also, I was trying to find a new doctor and messing with my medications during most of this rotation. That didn't impress him much. He proceeded to make sure I didn't feel at all special - telling me about a resident that lost both parents suddenly yet continued to work, and how he lost a parent during his third year and pressed right on. At this point I was crying, out of frustration more than anything, because I was so tired of trying to get people to understand my illness and to understand that it's real. I felt like he was kicking me while I was down. At this point he said, "You cry a lot" which I'm not sure if that was an observation specific to me, or just a prediction for the clinical years and residency - like, "One will cry a lot." I don't know. My skin is getting thicker, though, believe it or not. Mom heard something on the radio the other day - Charles Swindoll, I think - about keeping a tender heart and a thick skin. Good advice for the physician and physician-in-training - have a tender heart for your patients and your loved ones, and a thick skin for superiors such as this attending. He suggested that I take some time off to get better. I said that I won't get better - it's in my genes and I'll always have it. But my talk with him turned out to be the proverbial straw that broke the camel's pancreas, and I decided to go ahead and take some personal leave - to get my medication straightened out and my pain under control (as much as possible, anyway) and to hopefully dig out of this super-deep depressing hole that I'd managed to fall in.

I'm still not out of the hole - and now I'm anxious about starting Family Medicine on January 7th, because I'm afraid it will be a repeat and I'll come up short, again. My talk with the attending is as fresh in my mind as it was that day - I replay it daily to myself and question, "Am I going to be a horrible doctor? How *have* I gotten this far?" I know it's the Lord holding me up because medicine is my calling, but is it? Did God send this attending to tell me to go down another path? I don't know. I'm praying about it. I'm still bumfuzzled, though, as to how my fellow student got rave reviews (I know she got "Honors" from one resident while I got only "Pass", because I happened to see it.) She may have talked more during rounds, but her answers were completely implausible sometimes (The attending asks, "This patient has just returned from a heart cath - why am I going to ask her about back pain?" to which the other student blurts, "Aortic dissection!" I knew that it WASN'T aortic dissection (that's a stupid answer - sorry) but I didn't know that it's to assess for retroperitoneal bleed. I do now, though, and won't forget it!), and I'm not the type to blurt answers just so I can allow everyone the privilege of hearing my fake cutesy voice. I want to think about the question first and try to give at least an educated guess, but she didn't give me time. She may have seemed a tad more enthusiastic than I did, but it wasn't much - I would have ran past her in the enthusiasm department had I felt well, because I love medicine and it continually interests me. She didn't spend more time at the hospital than I did. I often went in in the evening to pick up a couple of new patients, and spent time talking to them and reading about their illness, and to check on the patients I was already following. I am truly interested in the patients - I would wake up each morning wondering what kind of night they'd had. She may have felt up to doing more reading than I did - I'll freely admit that. Sometimes the pain wore me down to the point that I could do nothing but hit the couch and sleep for a couple of hours when my day was finished. But still, I fought it out until the end and I managed a B in the rotation. Thank You, Lord.

And then I heard from a very reliable source that the buzz in the Medicine department was, "Kim's performance is not up to par." That's just fantastic. I'd wanted to leave a good, lasting impression on the Medicine faculty & residents, and instead I did just the opposite. It makes me so sad.

Criticism of medical students from preceptors is a tough thing - preceptors either don't give it when it's necessary because they're afraid of hurting the student's feelings or getting a bad evaluation from that student. Or, they criticize TOO much, to the point where they've beaten the student down. I actually like constructive criticism and a discussion of strengths/weaknesses from preceptors/mentors/attendings/residents that I have worked with for a substantial amount of time - because geez, there is so much to learn and so many procedures and tactics to pick up, and knowing what I really need to focus on would be GREAT. Having someone bluntly go after my character, though? Not so helpful.

Good GRIEF. Sorry this is so long, for those of you who are still awake. It feels good to get it off of my chest, though. Any thoughts?

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Busy, sick, busy, sick, sick, sick.

The title basically sums up my past 7 or 8 weeks - my "personal leave" from this rotation. I had so much I wanted to get accomplished, and have done none of it because I've felt so flippin' awful. If I do feel like writing soon (hopefully I will - and prayers that I'll feel better are always appreciated), here's what you'll see:

  • What the Internal Medicine rotation was like for me
  • The evaluation with an attending physician who completely crushed my spirit and still has me wondering if I should be in medical school in the first place
  • My Christmas photo shoot Gabe (and now Reed)
  • Gabe's little brother Reed's entry into the world
  • Christmas
  • Some health & beauty products that I luuuurrrrve lately
  • Your Fentanyl Patch and You
  • A few good movies
  • The recipe for some yummy fruit salad that I've been making lately (only 2 Weight Watchers points per cup!)
  • My hope that I will soon wake up, discover that the past 2 1/2 years were only a terrible nightmare, and find that I am just preparing to start medical school, without pancreatitis or debilitating anxiety and depression - and that I'll be able to perform the way I could if I weren't shackled with this hateful pain and anxiety. Actually, that wouldn't be a whole post - it's just a thought.

I'll try to feel like writing. :-)

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Tuesday, November 06, 2007

I may be climbing out of my pit

It's been a rough couple of months, y'all. I can barely talk about it without crying, because it was just so full of disappointment and sadness and pain, and it was like I was someone else entirely that I didn't even recognize nor did I like very much at all. (I do have horrible self-esteem and can't find much at all that's good about myself - except for Christ in my heart, of course, but that's Him, not me - but over the past couple of months, I *really* despised myself.) I'm sorry the posts have been so sparse lately, and I'm sorry that when I did post, that it was all about doctors and so on and so forth. Interestingly, my traffic has gone up quite a bit over the past 2 months. Figure that.

Anyway, I hope you, dear readers (I first typed "deer readers" - heh. Scott would be proud - that's what's on his mind at this time of year, too) don't have the idea that I'm some sort of drug-seeking pill-head. Instead, I'm a chronic pain patient struggling to learn to be a doctor, a good one - working 70-80 hour weeks in addition to trying to study in between, and also trying to spend time with my Scott, my family and friends, and some MUCH needed time at the Y. Oh, and sleeping, sometimes. It's hard to do that when it feels like someone is stabbing you in the gut, and pulling the knife around to your back. And then when you go to your doctor or to the ED for help, they instead berate you and you end up sobbing because of their jaded lack of compassion, it's discouraging.

Being in severe pain all the time, all the while being expected to perform in a superhuman manner (and getting bad evaluations when you don't - more on that later) and having more doors slammed in your face - it made me feel more hopeless and sad than I have felt in a long time. I didn't know if I was ever going to get help, or if this pain was going to become a part of my daily life. A Google search found a lot of information on depression resulting from chronic pain. I don't know what the answer is, fellow members of the healthcare system, but we have an underserved population of people here. I don't know how we weed out the true sufferers from the addicts and the dealers. But something needs to be done. And the way I heard other providers refer to patients requiring pain medication was less than encouraging.

I am doing all of the "alternative" stuff that the Interwebz recommends for pancreatitis - an antioxidant blend (the one I take is by Nature Made, with Vitamin A, 100% as Beta-Carotene - 10,000 IU, 200% RDA; Vitamin C: 250 mg, 417% RDA; Vitamin E: 200 IU, 667% RDA; Zinc: 7.5 mg, 50% RDA; Selenium: 15 mcg, 21% RDA; Copper: 1 mg, 50% RDA; Manganese: 1.5 mg, 75% RDA), and I'm also taking an additional selenium supplement, my trusty enzymes (amylase and lipase, aka Creon 10), and a couple of doses of Advil a day for anti-inflammatory properties.

I'm still hurting, though - I do have a new pain doc, and I'll talk about him later - I think I'm going to like him. He and his office staff are already a billion times kinder than the other Pain Clinic Which Shall Not Be Named.

I just didn't want you guys to think that I was an addict who was obsessed with getting my fix. Is that what you think? What DO you think? Let's have it, I can take it. It's why I have comments on my blog - I want to know what people think about what I write, and I appreciate and consider them all. Except the trolls, of course, which I just kick back under the bridge; and the potty-mouths, who I edit and *then* consider. :-)

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Wednesday, October 24, 2007

I'm thinking that I should instead enter a profession in which you're allowed to be human - one where you can not know the answers to a few questions, or oversleep once or twice a year, or accidentally show up at the wrong place occasionally. One in which you can be sick, sad, or tired.

I don't know if I'm cut out for this, y'all - I really don't. I don't think I'm smart enough and I'm not good enough. And it really sucks, because I've been doing the very best that I can. It REALLY sucks. (Rather, *I* suck about 50% of the time, or so I've been told.) If you have a chronic illness, I wouldn't go into medicine.

On a more upbeat note than the crappy evaluation that I just got - I did find a doctor to manage my pancreatitis who seems to actually be sympathetic and kind. Hallelujah and praise the Lord for that! Although being forced to look for him in the middle of my internal medicine rotation really screwed me up.

Ugh. I'm tired of crying all the dang time.

And finally, a PSA - there was a car accident yesterday involving someone with the same name as mine, on the road that I travel to go home (home, home - not the apartment.) So Mom and Dad and I have been fielding a bunch of phone calls, emails, Facebook messages, and the like with people checking on me. That really makes me feel good, because I generally assume that no one cares if I'm alive or not. Especially since I'm the worst medical student that ever lived. But thanks to everyone who has inquired about me today - it made my day a little better!

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Tuesday, July 10, 2007

The lyrics to this song touch me so much.

Christy and Jay and I finally had our Dreamgirls date (we had a pact that none of us would watch it unless we watched it together) and it was just fantastic. This song by Beyonce (a la Deena Jones), Listen, has lyrics that really speak to me and that I would write, partially, if I were a songwriter. Sometimes I feel that the people I love in my life just do not understand what I'm trying to do in school, and that it HAS to be the most important thing in my life right now, or I'm not going to get through it. I feel like I don't have a choice. You can't half-do medical school, you know? And I've bolded some phrases that are particularly relevant.

My first rotation, psychiatry, started Monday - and I've been composing a mental post all week, so that will come later when I'm not so exhausted. For now, let's all sing.

Listen to the song here in my heart
a melody I start but can't complete

Listen to the sound from deep within
It's only beginning to find release

Oh, the time has come for my dreams to be heard
They will not be pushed aside and turned
Into your own, all 'cause you won't listen

[chorus]
Listen
I am alone at a crossroads
I'm not at home in my own home
And I've tried and tried
To say what's on my mind
You should have known
Now I'm done believing you
You don't know what I'm feeling
I'm more than what
You've made of me
I followed the voice you gave to me
But now I've gotta find my own
You should have listened

There was someone here inside
Someone I thought had died
So long ago
Oh I'm screaming out
And my dreams will be heard
They will not be pushed aside or turned

Into your own
All 'cause you won't listen

[chorus]
Listen
I am alone at a crossroads
I'm not at home in my own home
And I've tried and tried
To say what's on my mind
You should have known
Now I'm done believing you
You don't know what I'm feeling
I'm more than what
You've made of me
I followed the voice you gave to me
But now I've gotta find my own
You should have listened

I don't know where I belong
But I'll be moving on
If you don't, if you won't

Listen to the song here in my heart
A melody I start, but I will complete

Now I am done believing you
You don't know what I am feeling
I'm more than what you've made of me
I followed the voice you think you gave to me

But now I got to find my own - my own

I'm not mad at anyone, I'm just tired. If you love me, please try to understand and support me.

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Thursday, July 05, 2007

Eeeeeeeeek.

I'm starting to get really nervous about starting school again, y'all. It's 3:19AM and I can't sleep, despite my benzodiazepines. I am worried about the long hours, and I'm afraid that my pain from my pancreatitis and my anxiety will finally take over. I fear long surgeries where I can't even get a drink, much less take something for my searing, visceral pain; or for my debilitating anxiety that makes me shake and sweat and clouds my brain. And I'm scared that once someone finds out that I have to take medications for both of those conditions (although I don't abuse them) that I will be kicked out.

It's been all right thus far, because if I went to class and was sick, I knew that I could leave and go back to the apartment and try to sleep it off. Knowing that there's a way out is very important for anxious types like me - the idea that I HAVE to stay in one place for God-knows-how-many hours is really freaking me out.

And for some reason, I got more freaked out when I learned that Scott is leaving on Thursday to go to his family's cabin for a couple of days. I'll miss him - on top of everything else.

My pancreas hurts and I'm going to cry.

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Friday, May 18, 2007

I'm afraid I'm a hermit

Super-sekrit note to Christy - this will look familiar because I'm lazy.

I am having such trouble with my stupid panic attacks - they're totally keeping me from going anywhere for the past couple of days, and it's very annoying. Maybe I'll be better after the weekend - I just have trouble adjusting to a new situation (i.e., this class.) I'm printing the powerpoints from my school's USMLE website and hopefully will do okay by reading those and First Aid and doing Kaplan QBank questions. Sometimes I loathe myself.

I just read a mneuomic (which I first typed as pneumonic) in First Aid that amused me. It's for drugs that cause gynecomastia:

Spironolactone, Digitalis, Cimetidine, chronic Alcohol use, estrogens, Ketoconzaole: Some Drugs Create Awesome Knockers.

Hee.

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Monday, May 14, 2007

Ugh, back to class

First of all, re: the comments on my last post - y'all are sweeties. *MWAH* And Oliver, no worries. Despite erroneous belief, I have absolutely no interest in married guys as anything other than friends. Thank you for your kind words, though - they put a little bounce in my step. Yours too, Chris - but you already knew that. :-) Also, Oliver, you have the same name as my cat.

So, I finished my 2nd year of medical school. Or, God and I finished my 2nd year. Now I (and God) have to pass the USMLE Step One exam in June, and my medical school offers a review course for us (meaning my class - not God and me. He doesn't need the class.) This great because I lack any and all motivation and have no study structure whatsoever. I would just sit in the midst of my review books, sobbing, and shouting at no one in particular, "Where do I start?? WHERE????" I don't think that's what you'd call a winning strategery (you know I love President Bush, but I also love that non-word.)

The bad thing about the review course is that it's 8AM-4PM (some days are 5PM), every day, until June 6th or somewhere thereabouts. Uuuuuuuugggghhhh. And tomorrow, to make things EXTRA fun, it's at 7:30AM. In general, I don't like to be conscious at 7:30AM. But oh well. My plan is to go to the review lectures, then read on those lecture topics that evening in my review books (BRS series, First Aid, Kaplan - whatever I feel like picking up) and doing the corresponding Kaplan QBank questions. I think I'll be all right. We took a practice Step One exam today, and other than being rusty in some areas (biochem, neuroscience, some anatomy) I think I did fairly well. It was heavy on microbiology, path, and pharm - micro being my bread & butter, and pharm and path being fairly fresh. The Lord has brought me this far, and I don't think He'll drop me now. Knowing that the Creator of all things is with you at all times and cares about your well-being? That's comforting. Especially when you're studying His design in depth. :-)

I had a week off between my mini-boards and this review course, and despite this weird sad feeling that I can't seem to shake (I think it might be because people I know are always doing things, and I'm never invited. I don't know why that is. I guess it could be because I don't drink - but you know, alcoholism on one side of the family and pancreatitis on the other doesn't exactly make me want to run for the EtOH. But it's more likely due to the fact that I'm boring, annoying, and remarkably forgettable. At least most people think that I'm a boring, annoying, and forgettable NICE person - yeah. MOST people. Some are misinformed and instead, think I'm horrible.) Oops, a little digression there. Anyway, I was mildly sad all week, but other than that, it was great. I stayed up late and slept in. I did my toenails. Went shopping. Spent several hours in the sun, working on my melanoma. I changed my hair. Rearranged my bedroom at the house, and gave it a good cleaning (I mean, "dusting the baseboards" kind of clean.) I did a bunch of laundry and bathed two kittens. I took bubble baths and read a bunch of magazines. I got completely engrossed in The Kite Runner (which is fabulous, by the way.) I watched movies and ridiculous exposes on famous people on E!. I took naps. It was great. I can't wait until I can do it again after June 13th!

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Thursday, May 03, 2007

Postpourri

Dang, y'all. I have been so busy/tired these past couple of weeks. The good news is, I'm finished with Pharmacology (and the miniboard? It was not so bad. If I had studied as hard as I should have, it wouldn't have been bad at all.) I'm finished with Genetics (the 2-hour class that thought it was a 6-hour class.) I'm almost finished with Patient Care (I just have to write a freaking page-and-a-half HPI that I've been putting off and putting off, and do my OSCE - my "observed physical exam" - and that one's done.) So basically, I'm finished with my 2nd year, guys. I can't believe it. I may come back and be all philosophical and wax poetic or something after it's all over - after I take a nap, that is. Oh, and there's still the big, gigantonormous, scary and evil monster that is the USMLE Step One (dum-dum-dummmmmMMMMMM), but shhhhhh. I'm pretending it's not real.

Anyway, I was just going through a batch of Pathology/Pathophysiology questions from Kaplan's QBank, in preparation for my Pathology miniboard on Friday. I also had Facebook open in another window, because, well, you know. I'm easily distracted - and the thing about Facebook is that it must be checked every 7 seconds or so, lest someone's life EXPLODE and you don't know until a minute later. Or maybe someone will post PICTURES. Or leave you a COMMENT. Or CHANGE THEIR STATUS. It's just all very urgent, see. If you're not on the Facebook bandwagon, you should jump on. It's great fun, if you like the "keeping up with the lives of people you know" kind of thing.

I had a page of search results open - I was looking for people who graduated from my undergrad university with a biology degree around the time that I did, because I MUST amass more friends, see. And I ran across this guy in my search results, and I had to screencap him and bring it over here, because - in my endless studying, caffeine-drinking, Vicodin-influenced stupor (hey, I have chronic pancreatitis, which hurts like a mo-fo and flares up in times of stress. What do you want me to do?) the picture looked to me like a bride and groom standing in front of an altar, with their backs to the camera. Instead, it's this:

Take another look

I have [Dr. Cox] coooooo-mmmmm-pleeeeeETE-ly [/Dr. Cox] lost my mind. It's just gone - gone like, well, something else that is long gone. I forgot what else it was that I was going to say was long gone. Probably my vocabulary.

One more thing - I love these Nine West Liatris shoes so very much. When I go to Macy's, I actually go *visit* them. Someone buy them for me? Please?

Nine West Liatris - Buy Me These Shoes, Please!

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Sunday, April 22, 2007

I feel like a giant stupidface and I want to quit medical school.

This post is basically just for me, so feel free to scroll.

When I have crappy days such as this, I just want to chronicle them to remember them later - so that when I'm finished with school (if I actually manage to bumble my way to the end) I can look back on bad days like this. The type of day when I'm at my computer crying, with an explosive head and/or pancreas, feeling lonely and friendless, and beyond stressed. Hopefully I'll be able to say, "Ha ha, I feel so much better now." And hopefully by that time, I will have figured out how to talk to people so I don't completely embarrass myself. As a side note, it sucks when you're having a stressful (and physically pain-filled) day anyway, and it turns out that you've said things to someone that were meant to be jokes that weren't taken that way, and then you have to add feeling like a complete idiot to all of the other negative things that are going on. Bad timing. Ugh. I am glad, though, that - even though there may be a couple of people who think that I am a horrible person - God knows the heart and He knows true intentions. He knows what I intended to say and what I didn't intend to say. And if He loves me, that's all that matters.

In happier news, Christy is finally on Facebook - I'm always trying to convert people to Facebook so that I can have "friends" who are actually my friends, and not just people that I said "hi" to that one time. Christy's been a particularly tough convert.

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Saturday, April 14, 2007

Postpourri

As you've probably noticed lately, it seems as if I'm dead. I'm not, however, and I thought I should let y'all know. I've been doing things like taking tests, getting grades back, taking more tests, taking naps, taking tests, taking naps, getting fatter and fatter and uglier and fatter, and taking more tests. Oh, and jumping through the 16 hoops that you have to jump through in order to register for the first part of my board exams - USMLE Step One - which I'm taking in Cincinnati on June 14th.

YIKES, y'all. When I think about it, it kind of wigs me out. So I try not to think about it. Or if I must think about it, I try to remember that like, 94% of people pass it, and that my school's average score is almost exactly the national average, and that my grades are usually a little above my CLASS average, and that I did better than the national average on the microbiology/immunology mini-board that I took in December. So. I'll probably be okay - if it's the Lord's will, of course - and He's pushed and prodded me along thus far, so I have no reason to think He's going to let me fall flat on my face now. By chance, are there any medical students reading (my class or otherwise) who are taking Step One on that day in Cincinnati? Just curious.

Since I've been so scarce lately (although I have been adding some American Idol season 6 mpegs to the AI Downloads folder, slowly but surely) I have been trying to convince my medical school BFF Christy, who is quite witty and hilarious (more than me, actually, so I kind of hate her a little bit) to join my blog as a 2nd author. That way, there'll be more posts and such. And they'll be better than my blathery crap, too. I wanted to mention this convincing that I'm trying to do, thinking that you guys could leave comments for Christy to help me in my task. And I was going to include a lovely picture of her to go with it. However, she - like me - feels fat and ugly (although she's not) so she would only let my camera get this close:

Christy from space

And that arrow that I've drawn to point her out makes it look like she takes up about 3 1/2 states, which she totally doesn't. Finally, when she was worn down from studying for a set of block exams, I managed to get the camera *this* close:

Christy

So that's Christy. Somebody convince her to blog with me.

And finally, I have something like 9 days left that I actually have to go to my classroom. Do you know how bizarre that is? During the dark days of anatomy lab during my first semester, it seemed that the basic science years would never end - I kept expecting to fail, but thanks be to God, I haven't yet. And I *still* don't feel like I fit in with my class - I don't get invited to anything that the entire class isn't invited to (not that I'm a huge party animal, but it would still be nice to know that someone wanted me around) - but, that being said, at least there's only two people in my class that seem to hate me. That's 2/54 - not a bad ratio, I guess. Most people are just indifferent to me, I suppose, and don't particularly care if I exist or don't exist. I guess I can understand that, because I consider myself boring and annoying. If you can't tell, I'm having a kind of low night. I'm just so tired.

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Sunday, April 01, 2007

The side effects of medical school

As it turns out, the side effects of progestin excess - depression, fatigue, noncyclic weight gain (which is in bold so I should know that one) and oily skin/acne - are the same as the side effects of medical school. Weird. Except that the progestin excess effects also include breast regression - I'll trade that one for "crazy" and it will fit perfectly. Just in case you were curious about that.

Oh, and I have block exams again this week (AGAIN!) on Monday and Tuesday, so I've flipped my lid. Again.

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Friday, March 23, 2007

I know I shouldn't feed the trolls, but ...

... I have something of a self-esteem problem, and I'm afraid what this particular troll is saying is true. I just wanted to make my readers aware of what's going on in the comments with this guy (or girl? Who knows) in case someone wants to disagree.

Here's what happened - I went to The Fake Doctor's blog, where he had a post listing his mail and responding to it. I commented something to the effect of, "I wish I had your traffic and readership - it would be nice to get mail!" So then Beepy the Troll came out from under the bridge, wandered over to my blog, and said:

The reason you get fewer hits than the fake doctor is simple: your blog isn't as good.
Beepy | 03.20.07 - 1:31 am |

I responded:

Well, that was uncalled for.
Kim | Homepage | 03.20.07 - 8:30 am |

Then it (the only pronoun I can use, since I don't know Beepy's gender) returned to my allegedly horrible blog for a second visit (hmmm?) and said:

Uncalled for? Maybe. True? Absolutely! Your blog is trite trash. If you've nothing interesting to contribute to the world, why bother? I suppose if you keep trying, maybe something novel will come out on accident. Keep up the crap work. Don't mistake my comments as hostility. Just pure truth.

In my next post, I wrote:

In other news, if you read the comments on this post, you'll learn from one uncouth commenter named "Beepy" that my blog is far inferior to The Fake Doctor. You know, in case you were wondering.

To that, it says:

Far inferior? I don't think I put it quite in those terms, but I appreciate your doing it for me. I'm not even a very big fan of the fake doctor, it's just that your blog is so cruddy in comparison to, well, virtually anything ever created by a person over the age of eight, that it got me all riled up. p.s. it worries me that you'll be a doc one day. Based on the mediocrity of your blog, I can only assume you subscribe to the C = MD plan. Am I right? Gotta be.

This makes me want to cry. Should I stop writing? I've been wondering this for awhile anyway, because medical school has stolen my creativity and sense of humor (by the way, it scares ME to death that I will be a doctor someday - and it was GREAT to hear someone else say that) and I feel that I don't have much to contribute anymore. If you're a reader who would miss my blog if it wasn't here, I'd appreciate it if you'd let me know. Particularly in the comments.

Sorry - I have exams in a week (AGAIN) and I'm just stressed and sad tonight. Medical school does that to you as well - and it's also a lonely place sometimes. Textbooks aren't very good friends.

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Tuesday, February 27, 2007

30 Unknown Facts/Secrets About Meeeeee

Occasionally I get an interesting quiz posted as a bulletin on MySpace, and I usually bring it over here because I find bulletins on MySpace annoying in general. Especially the ones that are like those stupid chain emails - *shudder*. Check things out at Snopes before you pass them along, people!

  1. What ended your last relationship?
    Hmmm. It was almost 10 years ago and couldn't really be classified as a "relationship", especially compared to what I have with Scott. To make a long story short, I was at my high school's first football game the weekend after I started college, and I was sort of going out with the assistant coach. I say "sort of" because after he did what he did, he used, "We're not dating!" as an excuse. Anyway, I told him that I wanted to talk to him after the game, and he told me that he was going to the locker room for a few minutes and would be right back - he asked me to wait. So I did. And waited. And waited. I would still be waiting - he didn't come back.
  2. When was the last time you shaved your legs?
    Heh. When you're in medical school, and when you run out of hot water in the shower after about eight minutes - probably about a week. Sometimes it gets so bad that when I finally do decide to defuzz, my tub looks like I've just shaved Oliver.
  3. What were you doing this morning at 8AM?
    It's not 8AM yet. But I'll probably be in the shower - I have an MRI this morning on zee eeeeeevil pancreas.
  4. First thought after waking up this morning?
    Why am I awake at 4:43AM?
  5. Are you any good at math?
    Eh. Probably better than most of the general population, given the whole science degree thing - but compared to Scott and his crazy-intelligent mathematical mind, I can't add 2+2.
  6. Your prom night?
    Junior high proms don't really count, and my junior prom? Ah. I had my first real documented panic attack the day of, and ended up not going. Sorry Jared. My senior year I was afraid of Panic Attack: The Sequel (that's how panic attacks work, see - they make you afraid of the next one), and I just went to after-prom. That way, it would be cheaper if I panicked and backed out again.
  7. Do you have any famous ancestors?
    Unfortunately not. Yet! (I'm still waiting for my screenwriting cousin Dale to be famous.) Unless you consider a bunch of people with a weird form of hereditary pancreatitis to be famous. My family *was* in the journal Pediatrics way back when - documenting our screwy trypsinogen gene.
  8. Have you ever taken out any loans to pay for school?
    Not until medical school - and I only take out the $8000 or $8500/year that is subsidized (or maybe unsubsidized - it's the one that doesn't accrue interest until I'm finished. I always mix them up.) God bless my parents and their hard work and sacrifice! One day, I will pay them back.
  9. Do you know the words to the song on your MySpace profile?
    I know the words to an embarrassing lot of songs. I wish pharmacology was set to music.
  10. Last thing received in the mail?
    Some crap from USMLERx - sorry USMLERx, but I'm already signed up for Kaplan's Q-bank for Step One. If it makes you feel any better, though, I'm totally not using it yet.
  11. What would you rather be doing right now?
    Sleeping.
  12. Do you ever leave messages on people's answering machine?
    Always - and they're usually long and rambly.
  13. Who did you lose your CONCERT virginity to?
    What???? I haven't ... oh, CONCERT. Well, that one I can answer - it's somewhat embarrassing, but I was only like, eight. I went with Mom & Dad to see Conway Twitty and Randy Travis - LIVE! A double headliner. I still like a lot of their music - classic country is awesome and It's Only Make Believe is one of my favorite songs.
  14. Do you draw your name in the sand when you go to the beach?
    It's been so long since I've been to the beach that I don't even remember. Now, I'd probably draw something dorky like a DNA molecule or a brainstem.
  15. What's the most painful dental procedure you've had?
    My permanent "eye teeth" were chilling up in my gums, growing sideways. So when I got braces, I had surgery to put a bracket on each of them (the surgeon cut my palate and flipped it back to get to the wayward teeth - ouch) and attached this little plastic thing to each bracket, which my orthodontist would yank on and then tighten every time I had my braces adjusted. Yeeeeouch.
  16. What is out of your back door?
    "Doo, doo, doo ... lookin' out my back door ..." Ahem. At home, there's a patio, a backyard, a "well house", and a garage. At the apartment, there's a hallway and stairs.
  17. Do you have any plans for tonight?
    Probably studying and watching American Idol. Bleh, studying. Yay, American Idol! My life is sad, y'all.
  18. Do you like the ocean?
    *sigh* Yes. I need a vacation.
  19. Have you ever received one of those big tins of 3 different popcorn?
    That's a random question. No - no I haven't. I am a popcorn fan, though I could never eat that much by myself.
  20. Have you ever been to a planetarium?
    Not since about the 5th grade.
  21. What was your first alcoholic beverage?
    One drink of champagne at a cousin's wedding - and it was hideous. No alcohol for me since. Not only am I not interested in it, it would probably cause my pancreas to completely explode.
  22. Something you are excited about?
    Finally being a doctoooooooor.
  23. What is your favorite flavor of Jello?
    Strawberry. In all my days of pancreatitis, I've had lots and lots of Jello.
  24. Favorite TV shows?
    Didn't I already answer this somewhere? All right, I'll do it again, because I love TV. 24; American Idol (shut up); America's Next Top Model (see previous comment re: shutting up); Arrested Development (RIP - Fox.Ruins.Everything.); Best Week Ever; Chappelle's Show; Coupling; Da Ali G Show; ER; Family Guy; Friends; House MD, House MD, and House MD (my TV boyfriend); Law & Order & L&O SVU (not Criminal Intent - I can't stand Vincent D'Onofrino); Monk; My Name Is Earl; The O.C. (again, Fox.Ruins.Everything.); The Office (US); Scrubs; Seinfeld; The Simpsons; South Park; and every stupid countdown on E! and VH1. Note that Grey's Anatomy is not on that list - I just can't get into it. It's just so ridiculously inferior to House and Scrubs.
  25. Describe your keys:
    What? They're - uh - keys. Let me try again - they're usually locked in my car. Or my apartment. Or somewhere else that they shouldn't be.
  26. Where do you keep your change?
    All over the place. Is anyone actually so organized that they have one place for their change? Wow. I'm in awe.
  27. When was the last time you spoke in front of a large group of people?
    I did a presentation for behavioral medicine about a year ago with Todd & Michael - I think that's about it. Unless you count testifying and/or talking in church, which I do often.
  28. What kind of winter coat do you have?
    Too many. A white puffy one from Lands End, an off-white one with a fuzzy collar, a black peacoat, a red trench coat, a blue trench coat - aaaaand I'm too embarrassed to list any more. Coats and shoes are my weaknesses. And beauty products - I have a love/hate relationship with Sephora.
  29. What were you doing ten years ago?
    In my senior year of high school, probably pining over the guy in #1 and freaking out about going to college. I wish I could tell my 18-year-old self that I was going to be just fine.
  30. Do you sleep with the door to your room open or closed?
    Open.

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Friday, February 23, 2007

I think I might want to get OB or Surgery over with

I find out my first rotation and my first rotation group today (the things that we start doing in July, provided we pass USMLE Step One.) I'm nervous, y'all. I wonder if there's anybody who doesn't want me in their group.

EDIT - Well, I start in Psychiatry. Woo! That's the relatively easy rotation, from what I hear. And Todd's in my group, as well as other people that I like and can get along with. So yay. That went well. Now, I just have to pass my classes and my boards - eeek!

Also, we have to pay for our own background checks before we can start our clerkships - I'm terrified that somehow my records are crossed with some murderous pedophile who consistently scams the healthcare system. Let's hope not.

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Saturday, February 10, 2007

Me, Myself, I, and It

It's official - I have gone straight up insane, y'all. It's the pharmacology that's done it to me. The pharmacology!! I think I should just be a fake doctor like Zach Braff.

The other day, Christy and I were going to lunch (meeting Todd and Michael at Fazoli's) and I was mixing up my pronouns something awful. Like this:

Me: It needs to get some gasoline.
Christy: What does?
Me: Oh, I meant "I". What'd I say, "It"? I called myself "it"??

Later, upon arrival at Fazoli's ...

Me (in frustration): There's no place for them to park!
Christy: Who?
Me: Us, I mean us, not them!

Christy, trying to make me feel better, goofed up her pronouns yesterday, as we plodded through our antiarrhythmic notes. She said, "It's so tired!" Hee. I have three exams next week - can you tell? And I'll be lucky to get a 7% on the pharm test. I hate cardiac drugs.

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Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Dave Matthews on House? Squeeeee!

I read in TV Guide this week that Dave Matthews is going to be a guest star (i.e., Patient of the Week) on House M.D. in March. He'll play a pianist. Oh man, my head may explode. I am endlessly entertained by them both.

In other House news, there was a good song at the end of tonight's episode - Grey Room by Damien Rice (iTunes). I Googled the lyrics and then added it to my iTunes cart.

Speaking of lyrics - some particular lyrics of one of my favorite songs in the world, Long Ride Home by Patty Griffin (iTunes - go preview it at least - Patty Griffin is amazing) have been really hitting home with me lately:


Forty years go by with someone lying in your bed
Forty years of things you say you wish you'd never said
How hard would it have been to say some kinder words instead
I wonder as I stare up at the sky turning red

I've had some time to think about you
And watch the sun sink like a stone
I've had some time to think about you
On the long ride home

Headlights staring at the driveway
The house is dark as it can be
I go inside and all is silent
It seems as empty as the inside of me ...

I guess I'm grateful for life's ebbs and flows - it makes you appreciate the good times when you have to go through bad ones. But still - sometimes, I just feel emotionally drained - like I just have nothing left to give.

*sign*

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Friday, December 22, 2006

The one where I'm Debbie Downer. Sorry.

You know, I actually had a post knocking around in my head today, and I thought, "Tonight there will be a new post on the blog! A good one too!" These kinds of things are exciting to me, because my life is sad.

However, I ended up having a rather crappy evening (nothing I want to talk about here or anything - I mention it only because I want to remember what date it was) and then when I got home and looked at all the shopping bags and merriment and such littering my floor, I realized that ... I don't have a job. And I can't afford to give people Christmas presents like I usually do, and like I love to do, because I don't have a job. So I've spent the last couple of hours crying, and putting together bags of stuff to return tomorrow, which isn't nearly as much fun as buying gifts for people. Bleh. I can't wait until 2 1/2 years go by and I'm employed again. I've almost decided to take out more loans than I usually do the next time I have to fill out a renewal FAFSA, because I hate mooching off of my parents. I know my dad doesn't mind, but I still hate it.

Sorry for the downer post. And if you're still shopping, by any chance, you could use my Amazon link to help me pay for my server. It really does help, when people use it. And whoever bought the diamond watch, I love you to bits. That is all.

Oh, and this? Re: Justin Timberlake and the *bleep* in a box? Is hilarious. Not that one of those is on my list or anything. I just want some DiorShow mascara and DVDs. That video almost, almost - made me feel better after an evening of tears and feeling crappy about myself.

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