Month: November 2006

  • The German Pirat

    A while back, one of my former sailing clubmates met a physician who was building a pirat.  That was how I first heard of this kind of sailboat.  (Incidentally, he visited the doctor because he got knocked in the eye with a boom.) I never really investigated the pirat, because I was simply trying to pass my internal medicine shelf exam.

    Well, after 3 straight months of ward rotations (blech!), I might actually have a little bit of free time in between applying for state licensure ($1000), studying for the board exam ($2000), taking the state jurisprudence exam ($600), and starving myself (to pay for all this crap) to possibly think about boat-building again.

    The pirat is a plywood and epoxy sailboat, 5 meters in length, originally designed in Germany.

    Below are some excerpts and pictures from the website (http://www.dauda.at/) of a guy who made a really, really beautiful pirat.  I can’t help but notice that he first found time to make his pirat when his boss let him have 3 months off work.  Wow.  Like I’ll ever get that much time off.  (Maybe when I’m 65. . . .)  It’s really a beautiful sailboat.  Amazing work.  I also particularly enjoyed seeing his breakdown of where his time and money went in the making of it.


    from http://www.dauda.at/EN/menu.html

    “. . . The real time budget however was given to me not until July, 2002. I
    had worked hard for a large computer network project in the airline
    industry, and had a lot of hours to compensate. Having implanted the
    idea of a sabbatical into my managers from February on I was given the
    opportunity to take a 3 month off-time between July and September.
    Without this, I would most likely never have dared to start works on
    FLAME. . . .”


    Simply gorgeous boat. . . .  I drool!

  • Lake Meredith, TX

    Lake Meredith is about as big as the nuclear power plant reservoir I used to sail on.  It’s a decent-sized lake, but I have to say, though, that the maps to the boat ramps suck.  We spent a good deal of time on a twisty, dirt road, driving for 6 miles.  It wasn’t until we saw a “Hunters:  Shotgun and Archery Only” sign that I figured out that we were supposed to take the second turn.

    If you’re ever in the area, there is the cutest canyon, just opposite of the Albites ranch.  It has a little grove of trees, and is sheltered between two very tall canyon cliffs.  It looks like a hideout for a band of robbers in a Zane Grey novel.  Of course, northern Texas is full of these little hideouts, but this one was particularly cute.
     


    The Sanford Dam

    Lake Meredith

  • Sanford, TX

    Matt and I both agree that once upon a time, Sanford was probably a booming little town.  But, once the Sanford Dam was finished, people packed up and moved away to another place to build another dam.  And Sanford is left on the map.  Population?  Probably less than 300, it’s about the size of the town in West Virginia where I grew up.


    The center of town

    When I was little I used to watch those pledge drives to “Save the Children” in other countries, and I used to ask my parents if we could send money to them.  My mom would alway say, “We’re helping poor people already, because we send money to your relatives in Thailand and Philippines.”  Which is true.  We’ve had to bail my dad’s brothers out of debt multiple times.

    So, sometimes I wonder, when I see how many white people send money overseas, or build houses for people in Mexico, why they don’t help their own kind.  There are plenty of poor people in West Virginia.  And plenty of poor people in Arkansas (whom Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham did nothing to help while I was living there).  It’s almost as if American white people scorn their own kind.  But I know that’s not true, because certainly, in the churches I’ve attended, I’ve seen people give tons of money towards helping the poor.

    What a strange phenomenon of self-hatred, to fly to Mexico to build a house, but to make fun of the rural poor in one’s own country.  It’s actually disgraceful.  But to tell someone so, would be to bring the ire of the “liberal” populace upon you.

    (Frankly, I’d rather live and work with “ignorant redneck” people in Texas than with the “educated tolerant” people I always encountered in Berkeley, California, who did more to discriminate against me than any Texan I’ve ever met.)

  • Fritch, TX

    Matt was particularly protective on this trip.  He always is, when we venture into rural areas, where there aren’t many non-white folks.  Fritch is actually where my old ex-boyfriend is from.  He never told me that he lived less than 5 miles from a lake (and yet he never learned to sail).

    On the way to Fritch

    School in Fritch

    Fritch in the sunset
  • On Holiday

    This weekend, I had a rare spot where I’m not on call!  WOW!
    (In other words, this does not count for my “vacation” which means I can save my “vacation” days for job interviews.)

    So, Matt and I headed for parts unknown, in search of a giant
    cheeseburger big enough to fit in a pizza box, and shaped like the
    state of Texas.

    This cheeseburger can only be found at Arnold Burger.




    Arnold Burger

    And Arnold Burger is only open Mondays through Fridays “most of the time.”

    So much for pizza-sized cheeseburgers.

     

     
  • Financial Planners “Mingle Jingle” for Doctors’ Spouses

    I get really sick of mail coming to me
    to attend things like the “Physicians’ Spouses Mingle Jingle” at the Women’s Club.  I don’t have
    time to go prancing around with doctors’ wives.  And I’m sure Matt doesn’t care to “mingle jingle” at the Women’s Club either, unless he has some latent tendencies he’s not telling me about. 

    I wish they would check the gender of the physician they’re
    sending their junk mail to
    .  Perhaps it’s because I’m sleep-deprived,
    but I’m extremely insulted they assumed that the physician in the
    house is male.  It must have been some pretty dense idiots making up the
    invitations with such assumptions.  And would I really want such idiots helping me with
    financial planning anyway?  Hell no.

    And now I’m going to go to sleep, after having been awake more than 24 hours.

    Another piece of junk mail into the trash.  “Mingle jingle” this, ladies.

  • Diving in Southern Thailand

    Diving in Ko Lipe. . . . .



    http://www.asiadivesite.com/thailand-dive-sites/others/koh-lipe.php

    From a great website for diving information in Asia. . . .


    http://asiadivesite.com/index.php

  • ‘Doesn’t Matter If You’re Black or White

    Bangkok media is so stupid.  They thought overthrowing Thaksin would help things in the South.  Nope.  Surprise, surprise.  Muslim insurgents are still bombing civilians.

    It doesn’t matter if you’re black or white.  If you’re the wrong religion, you are the infidel.
    It doesn’t matter who is “negotiating” with the Muslim separatists.  Until you hand over the southern part of the country, they will not stop.

    Every Bangkok newspaper (and they’re all from Bangkok, anyway) thinks it won’t go to the cities, if you just “negotiate” with them peacefully.  Negotiations don’t always work, people.  You have to have someone to negotiate with.  They don’t want negotiation.  They want surrender.  Is that too hard for ivy-league educated snots to understand?

    If Bangkok yuppies refuse to protect people in Yala and Songkhla, there will be no buffer left to protect them.  And those poor European teenagers who go to Ko Samui and Phuket for holiday will have to find another place to get high and go snorkling.


    Bombing on October 23, 2006 — even *after* the coup, imagine that. . . .

  • For the Children

    Last week, I was just coming onto my shift, and I finished check-out in the ICU.  There was a woman who was working on a chart, and it was past 5 o’ clock.  She was working on a patient transfer.  I went about checking on my new patients, and when I glanced at the clock, it was nearly 6 o’ clock, and the woman was still there.  Still working on a transfer.

    Knowing how the system works, I figured, she was asked to do the transfer at 4:30 PM.  That always sucks.  I know people wish that docs would transfer patients sooner, but in the ICU, things don’t always go as planned.  Nevertheless, I felt for her.  It’s past 5 o’ clock.  She should be at home.

    She finally came up to me, and said, “He’s ready to go.”  It was way past 5 o’ clock.

    I asked her, “Do you get paid overtime?”

    “No, I’m salaried,” she said.

    I had flashbacks of some of the times I stayed beyond my required hours before too.  Just making sure that a child gets the care that they need.  (I haven’t gone over my duty-hours though, thank goodness.  Our chief residents are awesome that way.)

    But every now and then, most especially when I’m sleep-deprived, or when I miss lunch for the umpteenth time because someone is having some problems with a ventilator or seizing or whatever, or when the ER pages us for a consult at 4:59 PM or even at 6:59 AM, there are still days when I see a patient go home, walking and talking and doing just fine, and I know that this job is worth every sleepless night, and every meal that I miss.

    Our nurses *do* get paid overtime though.  And they are worth every penny.

    I absolutely love our pediatric nurses.  They are the smartest, kindest women (and men) I’ve ever met.  Every single one of them has the biggest heart.  I don’t think people appreciate how often nurses starve themselves too, making sure IV meds/blood/fluids get into patients on time (truly a nightmare in logistics), making sure cerebrospinal fluid isn’t sitting in the tray when it should get picked up and cultured (ASAP), making sure the kids get down to radiology on time, making sure orders are correct, soothing irrationally angry parents, soothing irrationally angry doctors.  There have been times when I’m surprised they don’t just tell people to “go to hell,” but they don’t.  (At least not out loud.)  Bless their heart.

    Our Child Life workers are simply the best.  Everyone is so experienced with working with the kids, whether they have diabetes or leukemia.  They know what they’re going through, and they know each child personally.  Their favorite toys, their favorite foods.  All the attention to detail makes going through chemotherapy, or recoving from the shock of a new diagnosis, a little bit easier on the child, as well as the parents.

    Our pediatric subspecialists are awesome, and since we don’t have fellows in our program, I’ve been able to personally work with every one of them.  Pediatric subspecialists don’t get paid nearly as well as adult subspecialists, but even in our small program, our subspecialists are the best!  I once asked our neonatologist why he chose to subspecialize, and he said, “I thought I’d make a lot of money.”  And he laughed, but I know that he’d never have been happy doing anything else.

    So, is it any wonder that this year, I’ve heard we’ve got a bumper crop of applicants to pediatrics?  Nah.  I couldn’t imagine doing anything else.

    Except maybe sailing.  Maybe today.

    Addendum:  Yes, went sailing today.  Someone must have said a prayer for me, because it was sunny and cloudless, and the wind was just perfect — a good 10-15 mph the whole time we were out there.  Plus, this is probably one of the last weekends I’ll get to go sailing this year.  So, I can at least say I sailed *once* this year.  ‘Definitely made my day. 

    Plus, I got my neighbor hooked on sailing!  Yay!  A new addict!


    Image from http://www2.ac.edu/faculty/pmulligan/images/sailing%20020.jpg