Playing My Part

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Hello again, friends! Feels good to be back…  3 weeks since my last post of the Blogging A to Z Challenge, holy cow!  At the end I thought, ‘Hey, I can do this!  One post a week, no sweat!’  …And then crickets…  How Fascinating!

Though I have not posted in three weeks, I have written like mad, mostly journaling. Today I suddenly realized how much I have missed corresponding with my friends on paper.  How long it’s been since I wrote by hand to someone other than myself!  As I sat this afternoon and wrote, on stationery, with colored gel pens and stickers, to some of my best friends, a tremendous sense of connection and gratitude filled me.  Much of this post was born of those spontaneous letters to my fellow conscious, cosmic journeyers.

Given the awesome support network with which I am blessed, I feel an impulse to do something more with my writing—to amplify and project all this love and connection back out onto the world for some positive purpose.  But how can my words possibly make a difference?

The A to Z Challenge showed me that I have the capacity to write often and much—and to produce better-than-crap results! It also taught me that I can take more risks with my writing, in both format and content.  Now I want to take my writing a little more seriously, lend more credence to my own abilities.  In the framework of Simon Sinek’s Golden Circle, I know my Why: to cultivate positive and constructive relationships in every realm of life.  This blog is another What to my Why.  But since the Challenge ended, I struggle with the How.

I think night and day about so many things:

  • My own individual relationships—spousal, parental, sibling, other familial; colleague, patient, student, friend, stranger.
  • Relationships I observe between others, and their impact on those of us around them.
  • Healthcare and medicine in general, and specifically at my own institution—miracles, bureaucracies, opportunities and pitfalls.
  • Leadership and organizational culture—examples of effective and ineffective models, and what makes them so.
  • Social justice and discourse—with an urge for movement toward acceptance, inclusion, mutual understanding, and cooperation.
  • Education, parenting and role modeling—integrity, walking my talk, inside and out.
  • Physician self-care and care of one another—individual and system issues, and their interface.

What am I called to affect? I live a conscious life in all these realms, or at least I try.  I have opinions and positions on various issues, some which I hold with deep conviction.  And I struggle with whether and how to express them—for what purpose?

Finally, I have an idea. Though I have opinions and positions that I hold strongly, I plan NOT to use this blog to promote those views.  There are plenty of people doing that already, a multitude of voices trying to win one another over, or, more precisely, trying to drive one another into silence with ever louder, brasher, and more vociferous language.  My voice can be one of moderation—of collaboration, connection—maybe a bridge for a few who seek one…  Or maybe just one stilt among many others, helping to hold up one such bridge.  I will strive not to criticize or proselytize, not to berate, blame, shame, incite, or inflame; and also not to concede or abstain.  I can, at the same time, hold my positions with conviction and passion, and also listen for the convictions and passions of others.  I can practice curiosity and openness.  I can question, explore, Hold the Space, and stand strong and tall, without feeling threatened.  I seek others who strive to do the same.

Voices of moderation are muted these days. The great orchestra of discourse has lost balance and harmony.  The most strident strings, horns, and drums play for their own promotion, rather than as a contribution to a symphonic collective.  The resulting dissonance makes us want to cover our ears and run away.  In order for a symphony to engage and inspire, each player must not only know her own part and play it well, but also listen carefully for other players and their movement.  Maybe we can all do this a little better: maintain our own distinct voices, while integrating with those around us.  The best orchestra functions as one entity, breathing and moving in a quintessentially integrated fashion.

My instrument is language. The past seven weeks have shown me my part in the online verbal orchestra.  This blog is where I will practice, record, and offer my contribution, not to overpower any others’ words, but to meet, align, and resonate.  The harmony of consonant contrast plays on, somewhere.  Maybe I can help find and amplify it, so more of us may enjoy the music of life among one another.

#AtoZChallenge: LOVE

Teeheehee, a Little Late…

One year ago yesterday I launched this blog, Happy Blogoversary to me! 😀

It started as a platform to explore ways to reconnect patients and physicians in the increasingly divisive healthcare system.  And while that idea still stands central to the theme of the blog, I soon realized a much larger and more important principle:  The best practices apply across all relationships, not just doctor-patient relations.  The more I write, read, and explore, the bolder I have grown in my writing.

The very best outcome (so far) of starting this blog has been the LOVE I have received from others around it.  From the beginning, fellow bloggers have engaged, welcomed, encouraged, challenged, and nurtured me.  My friends and family have also held me up—following me via email, commenting on Facebook and the blog itself.  A vast community of support has stood up around me as I took this risk to share my mind publicly.  If they looked down on blogging, they kept it to themselves and encouraged me anyway.  If they thought I wouldn’t stick with it, I imagine they secretly wished me persistence, and then grace if I failed.  Because of all of these people, I have confidence to continue striving to bring forth the best in me, to share with everybody, in the hopes of creating something meaningful.

What if everybody had this chance?  What if every time someone wanted to do something bold and new, we met them with this much LOVE, cheer, praise, and affirmation?  Doing so does not mean blindly endorsing frivolous endeavors and wasted energy.  We can always offer LOVE along with tactful words of truth and pragmatism.  Even when, or especially when, projects fail terrifically, everybody can learn and grow.  LOVE from others at the outset makes us more resilient to failure.  LOVE from others at the moment of failure, as opposed to ridicule, shame, and sarcasm, makes us humble, grateful, and more brave, as opposed to defensive, angry, and humiliated.

Adequate words do not exist to express my deepest and most sincere gratitude to all who have LOVED me throughout my life, including those who have LOVED me through my blogging adventure so far.  May I pay it forward, and find ways to LOVE others whenever I have the chance.  If I can do that, then I will truly contribute to making the world a better place.

 

 

 

#AtoZChallenge: Humbling and Honoring

Though I was born in the United States, I grew up very Chinese.  Honor and respect for elders was one of the highest values in my family, as it is in the culture at large.  It would never occur to me to be on a first name basis with anyone in my parents’ or grandparents’ generation; they were all uncles, aunts, and surrogate grandparents.  Teachers, as well, always had a title.  In the presence of these zhang bei (senior generation), I would sit or stand up straight, pay attention, and never interrupt.  So it feels Humbling to find myself friends—equals!?—with so many of my elders—

Joe, my 7th grade math teacher,

Dawn, my 7th grade English teacher,

Kathy, Joe’s wife and the music director for the 8th grade play,

Barbara, my 9th grade geometry teacher and freshman volleyball coach,

Lisa and Jerry, my varsity volleyball coach and her husband, one of the football coaches,

Mary and Dan, my confirmation sponsors in college, pastoral associate and pediatrician, respectively, and

Keith, my clinic preceptor intern year.

I always wondered, what did they see in me, so young, naïve, and ignorant, that would make them want to know me as a friend?  Then about ten years ago I found myself befriending students and other ‘young people.’  I gradually realized the rewards of the exchange—new perspective, fresh ideas—connection across generations, cultures, experiences.  I felt a sense of mutual admiration and understanding, despite the age gap—an appreciation that bridged the separateness.

Somehow this reminds me of a morning I spent volunteering in a free clinic a few years ago.  As per usual, patients filled the waiting room and clinic workflow bore no resemblance to anything efficient or modern.  But the atmosphere pulsed with purpose and kindness.  First and second year medical students helped run this clinic, relishing the chance to hone their history taking and physical exam skills.  They saw the patients first, synthesized all relevant data, and presented a summary to one of a few attending physicians staffing the clinic that day.  After some discussion on pathophysiology and care plan, the attending led the team of students back to the exam room to finish the encounter.  If you have ever been a patient at a teaching hospital, it’s much like that, only much slower and often with profound technical barriers and almost no support.

That morning I walked in with my team to greet an elderly Pakistani man for follow up of his blood pressure and diabetes.  I knew he had been waiting a long time.  It was almost noon and he had not eaten all day, in preparation for fasting labs he knew he needed to have drawn.  Upon greeting him, I automatically apologized for the wait, put my hands together, and bowed slightly, while I thanked him for his patience.  I felt bad about the whole situation, and I wanted his pardon.  His face lit up and he immediately turned to the students and said something like, “See?  That is how you treat an old man!”  He was not angry or crotchety in any way.  He seemed honestly and happily surprised to be treated with Honor and respect—as if he suddenly felt seen and appreciated for who he was—a member of an older, wiser generation than all of us.

In Pakistan this gentleman had been a middle- to upper-class professional.  Here in the US his resources were drastically curtailed, such that he had no health insurance and depended on the free clinic to get treatment for his conditions.  I wonder if he was used to feeling like just another immigrant patient in a busy, understaffed clinic where there were few occasions for others to ask about and listen to his story.  Since I was a periodic volunteer, I had that chance.  I get to choose when I am willing to donate my time and energy to the free clinic—everything I do there is on my own terms.  The patients there have no such choices.  If they want care, they have to show up—early—on the day the clinic is open, regardless of what else is going on in their lives.  There are no appointments, and almost no continuity with providers.  It’s a completely different world from where I make my living, on the Gold Coast of Chicago.

I am Humbled by the opportunity to meet people from all walks of life.  Students arrive at medical school from diverse backgrounds.  Patients may hail from all corners of the world, many having come through experiences I can scarcely imagine.  It is my Honor to care for all of them, and I wish to maintain this perspective of respectful service.  I have those who support, teach, and guide me in life—older and younger.  So it is my privilege to give back—to offer my own knowledge, expertise, and maybe sometimes wisdom—and help make a positive difference in people’s lives.  I can’t remember exactly, but I think I said something to this effect to the medical students that day.

Physicians have power by default and design in the medical setting.  We can wield that power with more grace and efficacy when we remember Humility, and Honor our patients as whole, rather than broken or defective.  Be they students, friends, political opponents (yeah, stuck that in there), teachers, or patients, there is always something to learn from someone else’s perspective.  Cultivating the Humble and Honoring perspective, when I can muster it, makes all of my relationships infinitely richer.