Sunday, May 31, 2009

Exams and Experimentation

You would think that after over a year and 12 major exams blocks with nearly 50 exams, I'd be used to it. But I'm not. Like some vestigial, deep, primitive brain implantation, my "fight of flight" activates on the imageSaturday before exams. It's nerve wracking and no amount of medication, cheesecake or shock therapy seems to avert the inevitable stress of the not knowing. And the first ones of the term are definitely the worst cause we haven't got a clue how the new profs are going to test.

It's sort of a game, with some sport, but I know that it is a means to an end. Deep in side I know that it's just another hurdle and I can almost rationalize the reasons for this ancient torture called testing, but clearly this is not a good way to create physicians. My hindsight as an educator is very valuable, but also very damning. This process is just not right, productive, educational or inspiring. Thank goodness I actually love the science. And I do.

This term too is full of contrast. I'm quite sure I have both the best classroom professor I've had in a long time, and the worst. I'm fortunate on one hand, but it is unfortunate that there is still the misguided notion that great and learned physicians who are likely wonderful bedside teachers are automatically good classroom professors and course directors. To the contrary, it is almost predictable that the opposite is true. Real teaching, and course management is a completely learned, non-innate skill. It is not automatically bestowed upon the MD or DO graduate at any time during training. But as long as there is ego, and the imagepaternalistic belief that it is automatic, we'll end up with very learned men and women, muddling their way thru being teachers. Too bad, this time, I have to be the guinea pig to testing the theory, once again.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Quake, Oil & Storms

Recent natural and natural events have quaked me out of study into writing again. I've been so slack keeping up with the blog. Which only means I've been actually studying and not been dragged hither and yon by attention diverting distractions.

I didn't really know about it until I friend, who lives in the Western U.S., asked me about it. Seems that anyone who doesn't live this way believes that the Caribbean is the size of New Jersey. Yes, we (collectively the Caribbean) got "quaked", but didn't feel it WAY out here in the NE Caribe; At least not that I imageknow. On Thursday, May 28, 2009 at 03:24 AM, and earthquake With magnitude of 7.4 hit in the far western Caribe, off the coast of Honduras. Beyond the great rum they produce, seems that Cuba shielded this side of the Caribe from any major effects.  It was centered right offshore and did some damage including killing a several people. There was lots of talk about it here, but to my knowledge it wasn't felt at all. It did stimulate my image thinking about our vulnerability to various and sundry forces. We never heard about it officially at school, no sirens were heard, not much of anything to indicate a problems at any time. And while we may never know, reports of the water level in Puerto Rico dramatically receding as much as 50 feet raised from the deep recesses of my memory all the training I got while living in Hawaii about tsunamis. We would be clearly vulnerable.

This same week, a potential unnatural disaster also happened. We had an oil spill. On Saturday, May 23, there was a large oil spill originating from a tanker vessel moored at the Single Point mooring just outside the Northern Reserve of the Statia National Marine Park.
The mooring is used by large tankers that are too largeimage to moor up to the Terminal pier to receive or deliver crude oil. It happened at 1:45pm , and it ultimately got pretty big...4 km x 500 meters.

And then, it happened AGAIN, just 3 days later! On Tuesday, May 26, at 5:30am, there was another spill originating at the Single Point mooring. This one much smaller, but it really brought home how much impact this oil facility could have. A major spill could have serious effects for the island's environment and economy. The same spills, with currents running a different direction could destroy the reef here.

And to further my joy, hurricane season is about to start. Reminds me I have to stock up on water again since I almost ran out during a 5 day suspension of port services after our almost direct hit from Omar the hurricane. The storm blew in tons of sediment into the harbor and we couldn't get nothing from no place, no how. We truly are dependent on the lifeline of barges, and shipments.

But I have first major exams of the summer term, another potential unnatural disaster, to keep my mind off of spills and quakes. Is this a great island, or what??

Monday, May 18, 2009

Deliberate Though and Creation

Sometimes life feels like a train wreck.

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But from the ashes often arises great knowledge.  If you don't go willingly, away from the tracks, life experience and education beats you into submission...in a good way. It's actually a pleasant surprise once you recognize that the "change" and growth is both beneficial and welcomed. At the terminal stages of this process, you begin to recognize and develop abilities to handle life factors slightly better than before. I've seen that reflected in the many students and faculty around me over the past year. The most successful appear to be those who can think specifically and deliberately , communicate that thought to themselves and others, and create a different reality for themselves and those around them.  They have become "authors" of their lives.

But to create something in the physical world, it is imperative to create the idea in your mind. Those people who best contribute to the whole in this microcosm of school, have the ability to create the reality in their mind first, they effectively create whatever it is they are thinking in the world around them. This deliberate thinking becomes the tool to create the physical reality, because to create something in the physical world you first must create an idea in the mind...getting the mind "right" or thinking straight about that thing.

But thinking straight isn't a right wrong thing. It's not about thinking in alignment with others, or consistent with any dogma or belief system. It's merely making decision in creating our reality on what is the best thing for everyone involved, conducive to peace, consistent with empathy and identifying the humanness in those around us in which we slog thru life. Thinking straight maybe making decision even when risky given the current state of affairs in the "apparent" world.

I understand that not "thinking straight" and making wrong decisions leads to failure. Those thoughts are usually not "created", not made; We just manage to fall in to them because of our laziness and willingness to fall into the thoughts of others or circumstances around us. If thinking is straight the chances of making wrong decisions are greatly reduced. Deliberate, straight thinking is thought we actually and specifically create.

Deliberate, straight thinking is not about memory and creating thought from our experiences and past. It is not about thought created of our fears of the future. It is about the deliberate creation of though based on our best selves, greatest wants for the greatest number of people, and our yearning to be more directing of our lives. It is about becoming the source of our thoughts and thus our lives.

When you are the "source" you are creating thought. It doesn't have to be original or profound except to you. The only rule, it must be you creating the thought. Once you start this process, you remove yourself from the world working on you and your thoughts and you begin to work on the world with your thoughts...you become the source.

You can originate a thought that is neither a response nor a reaction to anything that has happened or gone before. Deliberate thinking, like any ability, improves with practice. It has been the goal of various meditative practices for years.

If you think you're beaten, you are.
If you think you dare not, you don't.
If you like to win, but think you can't,
It is almost certain you won't.
If you think you'll lose, you're lost.
For out in the world we find
Success begins with a fellow's will.
It's all a state of mind.
If you think you're outclassed, you are.
You've got to think high to rise.
You've got to be sure of yourself before
You can ever win a prize.
Life's battles don't always go
To the stronger or faster man,
But sooner or later the man who wins
Is the man who thinks he can.

So how do we tackle this thinking problem and straighten it out? How do you get your thinking straight?  We are all capable of deliberate thinking, and source awareness. When we step out of our ego (brain based, emotional, indoctrinated by others, physical perceptions, imitation, survival) we can move steadily toward the creation of though deliberately, and being more of the source in our lives...generate creation in the physical world.

Start small. "I feel the best I've ever felt." Work up. I am going to be a competent, confident, versatile physician.

Friday, May 15, 2009

And on we go

Up the river I course like Blue Man...

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It's really strange seeing people who I know getting ready to leave school and move into the world or the next "step". They seem to be everywhere here, hanging out with little to do except study for the big exams coming. That will be me soon, but I don't think I'm ready. But on we go...

It's been a typical start this term. Shaking the cobwebs of the lazy break attitude and getting into the swing of studying again this weekend will be the first hurdle. It's already building to volume that I know are challenging to many, but I still hear things I "know", or at least vaguely remember, from my practice and former education. Amazing how some things stick.

Yet too, I am continually amazed at how much I don't know, never learned or did by menu or guideline instead of understanding the real "why". Such is the more technical education of my past. I don't think I put anyone in danger, but the "oh wow's" seem to come with greater frequency...or am I just paying more attention? I don't know but I'm loving this part of the learning.

I have to admit that learning at this stage is simply moreimage economical, efficient, and profound. I'm more ready to learn and more excited about learning, than ever before. I never got this excited about my education in education. I walk out of class now and feel energized, jolted into what can be, what will be...and that is just a pure, unadulterated rush. One that I'm sure many, many cannot, will not ever feel in their lives. Poor souls.

Monday, May 11, 2009

And so it begins...

I am poised on the great precipice of summer term and yet another battle for academic excellence and survival with the great "it".  Muhahaha! It is "me" against "it"!

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I feel like if I make it sound like the great novel I'm more likely to pursue it with the passion it deserves. Actually I'm hoping it all comes together, there are enough students to pay the bills another term and that there is yet another delay in the implementation of the Netherlands taking over this paradise. It is a race against time, money, politics, power, learning, teaching skills (or the lack) and that which I know not (or know and have forgotten).

Sunday, May 10, 2009

More Studying

The most important educational factor in medical school this term will likely be what organism? Algae! That little green plant stuff too small to make a decent salad.

The headlines tell the story...

Algae Plume Reaches Caribbean

This one "plume" is big and covers a wide expanse of Caribbean water. So big in fact, that it can be seen on satellite images from space.  It started in early April and appears to have begun as nutrient rich runoff fresh water flow from South America...likely from the Orinoco River, which exits Venezuela's northeast coast imageor directly from the Amazon river further south. 

While difficult to notice from the surface to the untrained eye, the water is eerie green around the island. Upon entering the water it feels like you are descending into pea soup...cloudy green water noticeable to those of us used to swimming normally in crystal clear blue water. "They" say it is starting to break up, but you'd never know it.  A short swim yesterday proved "them" to be wrong. The water is still too cold to cause up/down currents in the water to break up the mass. "Them "must not be swimmers or divers.

Wreck Prop, May 2009It is dramatic how the color of the water has changed. I dove a wreck in 90 feet of water about 2 weeks ago and it was really thick green. Pretty interesting to dive in different conditions on a wreck, but I wouldn't want to make a habit of it. You can see the now (Left, green) photo of the prop and one before the plume Prop Pic, January 2009about 3 months ago (Right, blue). The photos are at the same depth, with same camera, with same settings and almost exactly the same lighting conditions. Dramatic effect on visibility and feeling of the dive.

And the fish LOVE it...it's a buffet! So while the diving and swimming visibility is less, the amount of fish on the wreck is especially high. The little ones love the algae and the big ones love the little ones. Hunting and eating for fish is further enhanced at the wrecks and ledges of reefs. So while the clear invitingimage waters are gone for the moment, we are seeing fish we've not seen in some time. NICE! One dive master said, "so thick we had to physically push them out of the way".

So as the plume (or bloom as many call it) continues, and makes swimming a bit more dangerous (sharks, and barracuda love to feed in the murky waters), studying may be the natural alternative to getting eaten by a confused carnivore. I am glad though that I could experience the conditions at least once, but I am looking forward to clear conditions again.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Break

image It's not Saturday Night Fever, or Dengue Hemorrhagic fever...it's Rock Fever. "Rock Fever" is a subtle combination of subjective and objective signs and symptoms that often are not truly experienced until you separate from the source of the fever...the island. Once the possibilities of drive thru burgers, steaks of known origin, and other such comforts take hold, the true nature of the fever becomes apparent. I miss access.

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It's not really the getting that is so important, but the knowledge that access is possible is often enough. I walk thru Costco near home, and I understand that the possibility of buying and devouring one of those wonderful cakes is possible. The mere possibility is better than the eating, digesting and the effects of the high blood sugar to follow (well maybe not completely better).

Access is a quality of life that is universally experienced at some level by all free people. Access is only denied to those incarcerated by the judiciary or by the geographical situation they find themselves. The latter contributes to the disease of Rock Fever.

Burrito So I drive thru where I might not drive thru otherwise, and stuff my self with the Taco Bell knowledge that soon again I won't be able to do so. My fever will then return, and I'll be immersed in the near end of my time on the rock...one of the most wonderful experiences of my life. And I can't wait to get back and get started again.