Showing posts with label curse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label curse. Show all posts

Friday, April 5, 2013

Surviving the Colorado Curse


Steep atop Denver International’s darkest crag lies perched, peering, seeing, watching: the cursed stallion.

 
With beady red eyes, bulging blue veins, and a nasty bite he haunts the mile high city. All who fly into Colorado’s newest, great airport are cursed. Cursed with a terrible curse.

I myself was afflicted by the apocalyptic hell beast, and it began the day prior to my arrival – a tribute to its cursiness. An innocents night sledding was ended tragically by my left knee bending in half the way nature never intended. Contributing factors may have included sledding from the top of a three hundred plus yard sledding hill, a small craft advisory, and a near complete lack of prior sledding experience; nevertheless, I was without warning catapulted from my sled and onto my left leg which promptly collapsed like papermache. I additionally somehow got a road rash on my right forearm from the experience, the stallion!
A few days later transgressions continued when I learned my four-week clinical “elective” would actually be four weeks of 12 hour days, tedious dictations, and regular floggings. I had hoped to commute to the hospital via bus or carpool with a friend, but the partial ACL tear, mild MCL sprain, mild LCL sprain, patellar-tibial contusion, and gastrocnemius strain all limited the feasibility of the former while working till the darkest dark of night limited the feasibility of the latter. Eventually I was forced to rent a car for the mere sum of a whole hell of a lot more than advertised.

Paying about 3 times more than listed for taxes, fees, and any lick of insurance coverage was actually one of the few fortuitous decisions I made, however, as within 2 days of acquiring the new car – and 5 days from my original sledding accident – a young woman decided to drive into the side of it. Her initial reaction to pulling out into traffic and hitting my front bumper consisted of “why didn’t you stop?!” as if in the US -- or anywhere on any planet for that matter -- it’s perfectly acceptable to make left hand turns in front of rapidly oncoming automobiles whenever you want. Once her boyfriend pointed out this was insanity she then fell back to exclaiming, “it’s not my fault!” endlessly until the police finally came. My reward for this? A new car and a significantly more expensive new rental car contract. Curse you cursed stallion!
I had to lay low for the next few weeks while the jinx passed, and was thankfully sheltered by my friend Adam and Kate in their basement under an alias. They thankfully are exceedingly generous hosts, Kate’s cooking exceedingly delicious, and their children exceedingly prone to hop merrily in place at the slightest provocation. Aside from some additional difficulty finding dry cleaning – I eventually had to go to Denver’s Korea Town – and a general lack of improvement in range in motion of my knee, things began to blow over. Unfortunately a final blow came the final week when an unknown assailant struck down Dara their slouchier, whiter dog. Some say it was a veterinarian putting an old, good dog down to her final resting place. Others say it was that stallion. And still others say it was the stallion posing as a veterinarian. All that’s clear is that through Dar-Dar’s sacrifice the curse was lifted. Or it just went away on its own. Curses are weird like that. The boys were saddened by the loss of their beloved pet, but after determining she had gone down into the pits of the Earth to doggy heaven and that they’d likely be getting another, younger dog in the future they decided they were ok with their other remaining pets. They eventually returned to hopping, and after working far more than I ever cared to on an elective, I flew home away from the demon's stare.
This post is dedicated to Dar-Dar. The best old, white dog I have ever known. We'll miss you girl.
 En memorum.
This photo is an approximation. I do not actually have a photo of Dara, but she looked kind of like this. But older.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Befuddlement

It was the best of times. It was the worst of times.

Or so I am frequently told.

Frankly, I don't find the times very enjoyable. In all honesty, though, I have no idea how to interpret them. These times apparently be confusing.

Relatively speaking us Air Force residents have got it easy. Compared to the internal medicine residencies of yesterday where interns and residents were shackled to their wards, forced to work while sleeping, and generally treated like so much chattel, we live lives of luxury with slashed work hours, broken chains, and alleviated patient burdens. Everyone always says it was harder back in the day -- and I am inclined to believe them -- nevertheless I am also inclined to believe that back in the day there were infrequent CT scans, no MRIs, only a handful of blood tests, and a pharmacy consisting mostly of a few penicillins, ergotamine, and phenobarbital. Twenty patients ain't so bad when all you can do is lay on hands and hope for the best.

Beyond that we've got it easy in other ways too. Compared to many civilian programs we work less, see fewer patients, are paid better, and likely are showed more appreciation by our patients. And compared to the hobos living immediately outside my apartment at least I have more to come home to than cheap booze and some invisible pets.

In absolute terms, however, residency is so much balderdash. We still work harder, longer, and with less perks and less confidence than the vast majority of Americans. Our job is in its very design constructed to make us feel continuously ill prepared so as to constantly compel us to learn. And through a legacy of estrangement many who teach and guide us have no great sympathy for our lot.

So how am I supposed to feel? Frustrated that it's not better? Happy that it's not worse? Thankful that I get to train for the unique career of my choosing or upset that all I do is train for the unique career of my choosing? I am undoubtedly incomparably blessed, but this particular blessing comes with an odd trial before the spoils. I have no means of measure and so am constantly wavering between emotions; I find myself muttering under my breath perhaps more than is healthy, and am thinking of joining the hobos.

Perhaps they'll let me take care of the invisible cat.