Tuesday, February 20, 2018

A wide-open space..

True Freedom.

For the first time in my life, I can claim this with absolute certainty.. at least for a little while :P

It finally happened.. I am now officially done with training and its' associated culminating examinations.. All that remains is the oath-taking, but that is of little consequence in this context..

No longer do I find myself in pursuit of a particular schedule to adhere to a rigidly-defined set of goals as prescribed by a rigorous curriculum.

Yes, schedules and tasks are here to stay, but the academic burden has now been lifted from my shoulders.. Only to be replaced by the more awesome responsibility of life as a private physician.. There are no more safety nets, no more easy fallbacks.. Every move must now be more calculated than ever, as a wrong move could send all your hard work spiraling down the drain..

Scary? Yes, but exhilarating all the same. I am now bracing for a very different kind of lifestyle from what I had grown accustomed to in the past years.. Finally gone are the endless duty nights, the relentless need to study for yet another exam irregardless of your state of mind, the ceaseless errands.. But yeah, I will be missing mostly the kind of fatigue that is unique to residency and fellowship training..

Life will still be tough, I will still get tired, and sleepless nights will still be spent, but it is comforting to know that all these hardships will now be done mostly on my terms and not in partial fulfillment as a requirement for something and such..

I was never too much of an academic. I had a slightly different way of processing information, and thus classical techniques of learning and review didn't work well for me. I needed to understand concepts and construct them in my own words, otherwise all my efforts at memorization would come for naught. The caveat of this was that I tended to simplify things to the point that even though the knowledge would be usable, I would purposely omit long-winding (what i deemed) unnecessary details so as to make the information so much easier to digest and process. As a result, my exam grades were never really all that hot. :P 

This was often a cause for concern whenever I took examinations, since I tended to finish early. Just to be clear, this was not due to any sort of brilliance or intelligence on my part. It was actually more of my dislike of retaining the information longer than I had to. I wanted to finish as soon as possible so that I could finally release my mind from all those bits of knowledge I was fighting to retain for examination purposes. Granted, I never really got high marks, and even failed quite a bit, but at least my brain got some catharsis :P. Fortunately, some things do eventually get ingrained into my system with repetition, which is why I think having my residency at a public hospital worked so much better for me as compared to my experiences at private institutions. This is not a knock to the private hospital people. Its just that the program you have may not work for some people, and conversely, other residents are not suited to be in public institutions.

Hmm.. going a little off topic already there.. Hehe.

I'm presently in the middle of completing my requirements and sending my applications out to potential places of work. I never knew being this free could also be this much stressful. :/ Now I finally have my entire future to think about, and I can now think of my goals more concretely than before, since I have finished what there was to finish.. It kinda makes all the sacrifices seem a bit worthwhile.. ;)

Monday, February 12, 2018

Simply grateful..

I'd like to start off this blogging season with a shoutout to the people that matter..

- Firstly, I would like to thank the Lord (for the umpteenth time) as he is always there for me and comes through whenever I need him.. Thank you so much, as nothing would have been possible without you..

- My family, the most wonderfully dysfunctional support system a person can ever have.. :P Thank you for putting up with me and all my crazy idiosyncrasies..

- My Other Half, who was there every step of the way, cheering me on and encouraging me to get stuff done until I finally made it.. Thank you for keeping me together and inspiring me to push through 'til the very end. :)

- My BNO boys, thanks a lot for putting up with my crazy schedules and tailoring some outings just so that I could tag along. ;) 

- My mentors. It was such a great honor to have trained under such great minds and educators! Thank you so much for lending us your time, patience, and experience that allowed us to grow into the specialists we are today. I hope we will be able to make you proud someday..

- My batchmates. Here's to the most dysfunctional bunch of doctors that I have ever met! :P Despite all our un-cohesiveness and many, many interpersonal issues, we still managed to pull of the rare hat-trick of the entire batch passing research on time, taking the boards, and scoring the 100% pass rate! Congrats to us, and thank you as well.. Fellowship wouldn't have been what it was kung wala kayo.. (although it could have been better.. much, much better.. :P)

- My pulmo juniors. You saw a lot of me this past year, mostly being a nuisance at the OPD or just hanging out at the callroom. :P Thank you for being my sounding board of sorts when I was already freaking about as the date drew nearer.. and thank you for the graduation gifts! They are very much appreciated!!

- My co-fellows from the other departments. Alas, here we part ways.. Thanks for being there to answer our referrals (for the most part :P). I'll never forget you guys!

- The hospital support staff. Thank you for being a part of our journey, as we couldn't have done it without you as well! 

- Lastly, to all the patients that I handled, both living and deceased.. Thank you for teaching me to be a better person and physician...

 - To everyone else that I may have missed but has touched my life in one way or another to eventually help me get to this point.. Thank you so much! :)