fostering the humanistic practice of medicine publishing personal accounts of illness and healing encouraging health care advocacy

The Madonna

They must have given me something for sleep. My last memory was Madonnas, filled with tears in their eyes. Madonnas?

When I awoke, the lights were out and the door was closed. I could hear voices in the hallway but couldn’t make out what they were saying. I could feel my naked skin as it rubbed against the scratchy sheets. I started to get out of the bed, but I discovered that I was restrained by the side rails.

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It’s Probably Nothing

As a third-year medical student, I’m used to being tired and stressed, and like many of us in training, I tend to neglect my own health. “It’s probably nothing,” I told myself. “I’m overthinking it. Illness anxiety disorder.”

But I’d always been unusually sensitive to cold. Since childhood, my hands and feet would freeze, turning pale, numb, sometimes bluish. I thought it was just a quirky trait. Then I learned about Raynaud’s phenomenon in class, and my classmates and I joked: “You totally have that.”

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Lady in Waiting

I’ve been a “lady in waiting” more than once. A traditional “lady in waiting” attends to royalty—which sounds like a pretty cushy job. But when you’re a lady waiting for the results of a biopsy, the task is a royal pain. Waiting for the phone to ring when you’re younger often means getting asked out on a date. Then years later, you find yourself waiting for a call from your doctor, to set a follow-up appointment to discuss your biopsy results. As anyone can attest, this waiting period can be a true test of resilience.

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An Imagination Run Wild

I have had four breast biopsies. The procedures did not hurt since they occurred when I was in a twilight sleep. What caused me pain, however, was waiting for the results.

My imagination would run wild. Would I need a single or double mastectomy? Would I have implants or just live my life with a flat chest as I did through most of my teenage years? Would the cancer be stage 4 and have spread to lymph nodes? How much time would I have left to create memories with my beloved children?

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Ruminations on a Ruined Face

Right now, it’s dark red. With fifteen days of radiation to go, it seems it will get a whole lot darker.

At least they warned me about the sunburn. They did not warn me about the swelling and the mouth sores. And the red crusted-shut eyes and floaters. “It’s different for everyone,” they say.

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August More Voices: Awaiting a Diagnosis

Dear readers,

It was autumn, and I had just started medical school at the advanced age of thirty. I’d always been in good health, so when my symptoms first appeared, I was sure they couldn’t be anything serious.

The first hint of a problem came in the middle of a seminar, when I had to leave the room to urinate. It struck me as a little odd. The next time the seminar met, I used the bathroom beforehand, just to be on the safe side, but it didn’t help. Halfway through I had to excuse myself again.

Hunh.

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The First Time I Ran Away

The day began like any other in my OB-GYN rotation. A few hours before rounds, I approached a patient who’d just returned from an emergency Cesarean section. I began asking routine questions, until my senior gently nudged me. “Be careful what you ask,” he whispered. “She doesn’t know her baby died in utero.”

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Moving On

Denny was one year ahead of me in grad school and a close friend. We shared so many plans about our future! I knew he was gay, but his bisexual partner was the only other person in on that secret. This was the 1960s, and coming out wasn’t an option back then if you planned to be employed in certain professions.

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Keeping Score

Has it all come down to this, after a lifetime of quantifying success against arbitrary goals? To achieve, whatever the cost? A competitor by nature, I prefer victory to failure.

Retired and sixty-six, I see my oncologist every month. Just when I’d hoped to be free of success by someone else’s calculation, I’m checking for lab results in my electronic medical record.

Yesterday, I learn that my numbers are climbing up.

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Menopausal Moments

The personal question patients used to ask me was “Are you pregnant?” Recently, a patient inquired, after sharing that his wife had started menopausal hormonal therapy, “Do you also take this?”

I have indeed started what I call my Menopause Trifecta: an estrogen patch, a progesterone pill, and a testosterone gel. Estrogen made me miserable during puberty; helped me become a mother of two children; and drove cyclical cravings, cramps, and crying. But my ovaries no longer produce estrogen. My “childbearing potential” is gone. Unused menstrual supplies gather dust in a cabinet.

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Sonder

The chart said that she came into the Emergency Department after an overdose. An older woman, disheveled, who had been found down on the ground. She had a history of schizophrenia and not taking her meds. The Emergency Department stabilized her and then admitted her to psychiatry. On paper, she was like so many other homeless patients: chronic psychosis and layers of trauma buried under ICD codes that adorned her chart.

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Hearse

I was in a good mood. I had just been dismissed early from my shift at the hospital, and I looked forward to an empty house where I could eat lunch, watch reality TV recaps, and take a nap in peace. The sun shone brightly as I drove down the freeway, which was surprisingly free of the infamous Miami traffic. I love my fourth year, I thought to myself. The upperclassmen weren’t kidding when they said that the fourth year of med school is the best. Nothing beat being free from the obligation to study for exams after a long day at the hospital.

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