Category Archives: Memoirist BS


Thirteen patients

Apropos of yesterday’s discussion, and in the absence of any other bright ideas, I thought I would remember a few patients today. We’ll begin with me and go from there.

1. Me. I loved my pediatrician, Dr. Johnson. I especially loved taking off all my clothes whether he asked me to or not. When I became 9 or 10, my parents decided I was too old for a pediatrician and switched me to their GP, a guy I never liked. There’s something wrong with a dude who thinks it’s necessary to give a kid a rectal exam every time he sees him. But did my mom ever question him on this? Nope. And did he bother to wipe away the lube afterwards? Nope. The bastard.

2. My first history and physical was on a VA patient, a Korean war vet in his 50s who looked like your typical Silicon Valley businessman. We were instructed to ask everything. EVERYthing. And it was embarrassing as hell for this young med student to take a sexual history, and somehow worse still to ask whether he did any illicit drugs.

Imagine my surprise when he told me he did a few lines of coke every weekend with his pals.

3. Not long after, I had another patient, a young man with Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome due to alcoholism. He was in his 30s but he looked 50, and the only word he could say was “Beer.” Ask him how he got here, and he would smile, shrug, and say, “Beer beer beer.” Kinda funny, but really very sad.

4. Another Wernicke-Korsakoff patient: funny thing, both this guy and patient #3 weren’t depressed about their conditions. I wonder if that’s part of the psychosis — if so, it’s a bit of a blessing. (Alzheimer’s patients, for example, are often extremely depressed in the early and mid stages of the condition — understandably.) Anyway, this was back during the first George Bush’s presidency. When we did a mental status eval, we would ask questions such as, “What year is it?” “What city are we in right now?” and “Who is the current president?”

On that last question, my patient responded, “President Bushwhack.”

Obviously of sound mental status, politically speaking. Made me wonder if he was faking the rest of it 😉

5. She wasn’t even my patient. But she was eleven, had a family who loved her, prayed for her at her bedside every day, left prayers for her written in Hebrew, and she died of meningococcal meningitis. Life really isn’t fair.

6. I took care of her lacerated scalp following a traffic accident and she became my private project from then on. She wanted a new nose, I gave her a new nose. She wanted Julia Roberts’ lips, I gave her Julia Roberts’ lips. In exchange, she dressed like a vamp and shared Madonna’s photography book with me, the one with the airbrushed anus.

Nothing ever happened between us, but I suspect we both thought about it.

7. Skip back to med school for a moment. She was a young mom with a loving husband and she had a nasty breast cancer. (Yes, they’re all bad, but some are worse than others.) She wanted my opinion: should she do chemo, or not? My usual protestation (I’m only a med student, I don’t have the knowledge base to answer that question) didn’t wash with her. She wanted to know, if I were her, would I do it?

She couldn’t ask her family or friends. They only wanted her to live, and they would have had her do anything to get those extra few percentage points’ chance of cure. She needed to ask an impartial individual.

I told her I’d do the chemo. I wanted her to live, too.

8. I would be remiss if I didn’t link back to my dos piernas story. Considering the fact I based my romance on a real event (a med student who couldn’t manage to place a urinary catheter), that dos piernas story could probably inspire a trilogy.

9. During internship, every call night the nurses asked me to push Dilantin on Mr. M. He had been unresponsive since the mid-70s; for the past 17 years, all he ever did was grunt in response to pain. Every so often, he would get pneumonia or a bed sore and find his way back to County.

His head looked like a basketball that had seen too many decades on an inner city ball court. Scarred, patched, a war zone unto itself. He was a bull of a man, too. His family kept him well-fed through that feeding tube.

During the last month of my internship, he woke up, just snapped out of it wanting to know where he was, what had happened. I can’t begin to imagine his or his family’s emotions, but for us docs who had taken care of him, it was eery. He seemed like a time traveler . . . and, you know? We didn’t know whether to be happy or sad for him.

10. Flash forward five years. When I was one month out of training, this patient came to see me in the private practice office asking for a third opinion. Two ENTs had told her she needed sinus surgery: the self-perceived ‘top sinus surgeon of LA County’, and one of the top academic sinus surgeons in the area. All I knew was that she’d had an abnormal finding on her sinus CT, discovered when she’d had a head CT for her headaches.

So she had seen some of the best talent in the area and they both agreed she needed surgery. What could I possibly add to this discussion?

I took one look at her CT scan and started laughing. She didn’t need surgery — she just needed an honest ENT. Her only abnormality was a maxillary sinus mucus retention cyst. These are incredibly common and rarely symptomatic.

Moral: don’t hesitate to get those second (and third) opinions, people.

11. You occasionally save lives in medicine — it’s inevitable — but you don’t expect to forget the patients you save. She approached me in a local restaurant, said, “Are you . . . are you Dr. Hoffman?” I’m thinking, What did I do wrong now? Nothing, it turns out. I had ordered an MRI scan on her five years ago and discovered her benign (but life-threatening) tumor. I’d changed her life. And now, I didn’t even recognize her.

12. Sometimes you know in your bones that it’s bad. The sound of a patient’s voice, or a constellation of symptoms that can only mean one thing. Worst of all is when the patient is a child and you hope you’re wrong but you know you’re not.

One came in soon enough that a prompt diagnosis made a difference.

One didn’t.

13. He had a terrible diagnosis, the worst. The one that kills you within a month no matter what you do — surgery, chemo, radiation, this tumor laughs at everything and grows. And grows.

I brought him and his family into the office and told them everything. I asked my patient if he had any unsettled family business, like estranged family members he should square with. He didn’t, but he did have a son in Europe in the military. I wrote a letter. We faxed it to the son’s C.O. If I remember correctly, his son was back home within the week.

He died soon thereafter, as expected. There was nothing I or any other doctor could do about it. And yet I feel more pride in that case than in anything else I’ve ever done in medicine.

Leave a message in the comments, and I’ll give you some cool linky love below.

Kate’s 13 favorite pictures

Darla’s beautiful and neurotic mind

Trish’s 13 in-yo-faces

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D.

Best foot forward, and all that

In the hopes of turning a few of those Crooks and Liars visitors into regular readers, I’m going to re-post one of my old favorites: The Sociobiology of Boobage.

In 1983, Vincent Sarich taught a course at Berkeley called “The Evolution of Human Behavior.” He let us know on the first day that the class was experimental. He had some rough ideas about course content — some things he wanted to talk about, a handful of concepts he wanted to share.

Sounded like good clean fun, and we really did have a blast, too. Professor Sarich (that grizzly teddy bear on the left) was good to his word. He talked, we listened — and argued with him, of course.

For a final exam, he asked us to write three short essays on topics of our own choosing. They had to be somewhat relevant to the course, but beyond that, we were on our own. My three topics:

Genius, a maladaptive trait
Why are hiccups contagious?
The Road Warrior: a sociobiologic perspective

I got an A+.

Funny thing, though. I’ve only retained two things from that class. One is a concept: the Tragedy of the Commons (see the Wikipedia article here, or the original article here), which suggests that folks will always choose their own self interest over the common good, even to their ultimate detriment. If you’re curious about this, I recommend you start with the Wiki article, since it is shorter than the original article and has considerably more perspective.

The other thing I learned in Professor Sarich’s class is why men love cleavage. “I want to talk about breasts today,” he said, except that with his slight speech impediment it came out “breashts.” “Why are they so appealing?”

The traditional sociobiological interpretation is that large breasts are desirable because they translate to well fed babies. Sociobiology was big back then. Still is, for all I know. In case you’re unfamiliar with it, here’s the basic idea. Our behavior is ruled by our genes, and in particular, our genes’ desire to pass on more of themselves to the next generation. “But,” you argue, “genes are not sentient.” Pshaw! Genes don’t have to be sentient to find ways of furthering their own interests.

Back to boobs. Professor Sarich contended that the sociobiologists were wrong. Men don’t love breasts because they want well fed babies. Men crave hooters because of a cross-wiring problem. You see, men get boobs confused with butts:

Recalling that the missionary position is, anthropologically speaking, rare (and dreadfully European), this is the view most men have during sex. Butt cheeks. According to Prof. Sarich, guys crave cleavage because it reminds us of butt cheeks in general, sex in particular. When a woman shows us her décolletage, she’s giving us an invitation to the dance.

Theories like this are only useful if they can shed light on other inexplicable phenomena. For me, Sarich’s idea worked because it explained why, when I was a kid, this old cover for Roald Dahl’s James and the Giant Peach

always gave me wood.

It’s gotta be true.

D.

The Black and White Thirteen

Black and white photos carry a potent wallop of poignancy and nostalgic feeling, don’t you think? Nearly any black and white photo makes me wistful, longing for an earlier, better time.

For example, remember when Dax Montana stopped by?

Oh, Dax. You nearly put my eye out with that, ah, outfit. Who would have thought a breast could carry such momentum.

Yes, those were the days.

Below the cut: thirteen (plus one) slices of the past. I’ve pared down the files as much as I dare, but dial-up users, you’ve been warned.

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The art of self-diagnosis

For the first two or three years of residency, I knew I had a “nervous cough.” Every morning hack hack hack, this dry retching thing that would only subside by 10 or 11. Why a “nervous cough”? Because (A) I obviously wasn’t sick sick, and (B) morning rounds made me irritable as hell. You could cut the stress with a scalpel. A dull one.

By my third year, however, I should have known something was up. The stress level dips in your third and fourth years (only to jump to celestial levels in your chief year) and, for a brief time, life is good. You have medical students, an intern, and a second year resident buffering you from all the Bad Stuff. Sure, in the middle of a call night you’re technically in charge (since your chief really doesn’t want to hear from you), but that kind of anxiety passes after two or three times at bat.

Yes, third year, and I’m still coughing. Should have been a clue.

One evening, we got together with the urology team in our call room for an evening of rented movies (Robocop, IIRC) and atrocious (but cheap) Thai food. It was early enough in the evening that our chief was still hanging around. So there we were, three ENTs, two urology residents, two interns, and one or two med students, watching viddies, ready to chow down.

I took a big mouthful of white rice, dry-swallowed, and the bolus lodged somewhere below the level of my thyroid and wouldn’t moved. I felt like I was being deep-throated by a rogue elephant. No problem — I could wash it down with a swig of Diet Coke, right?

Wrong. The Coke bounced off the rice and splashed onto my vocal cords, which promptly went into spasm. Laryngospasm in this context is an emergency measure designed to prevent aspiration. In other words, my body was none too keen to see my lungs bathed in caramel syrup and carbolic acid, or whatever the hell Coke’s secret ingredient is.

In the long run, laryngospasm is incompatible with life, but in practice, folks either manage to break the spasm or pass out (whereupon the spasm breaks spontaneously — you hope). Meanwhile, however, the air ain’t going in, the air ain’t coming out.

Oh, how I wish I knew how to record and upload a wav file, because I can imitate the noise to this day. Imagine if someone were to strangle a seal. Something like that.

Picture it. I’m standing now, hands at my throat, making funny noises in a room with two other ENTs, two urology residents, two interns, and an irrelevant number of almost-doctors. And what are they doing?

Karen, what was that expression again?

(more…)

A Buddhist reverend, a rabbi, and an atheist walk into a bar

Naw, I don’t know how the joke ends, either.

Neither Karen nor I remember much about our wedding. Here’s what Karen had to say about it a moment ago, when I asked: “It was very stressful.” Weddings aren’t for the bride and groom, that’s for sure. I do know one thing — I had a gorgeous bride.

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Can’t have a good story without complications

Remember that old Fredric March movie, Death Takes a Holiday? I have a new one for you: Fate Takes a Dump.

Yeah, I know: nothing original about Fate taking a dump. But when it happens to you for the first time, it feels pretty damned original. It plays havoc with your world view, too.

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A modest proposal

We celebrate our 22nd wedding anniversary on Friday. I’d like to pick up the story where I left off last year. Hmm. Let’s see. We had just done the narsty, but I hadn’t proposed.

Yeah. That’s a story.

I’ll bet you’re thinking I spent three days fixing some incredible meal for Karen, that I popped for the best bottle of wine I could afford, and that a woodburning fireplace and classical music figured in somehow, too. I kind of like that memory. Too bad it’s imaginary.

Karen was in her last year at Berkeley and I was in my first year of med school (Stanford, sixty miles south). As much as possible, I spent the weekends with Karen, hanging out in her studio apartment atop one of Berkeley’s sleazier massage parlors. Lord, what a dive. When we moved Karen in, foil covered the studio’s one window (accordingly, we called Karen’s predecessor “the Unnamed Vampire Graduate Student”). The window overlooked a ventilation shaft. If you got down on the floor and looked up, you might correctly guess the weather.

We shared a twin bed. (Every couple should do this in the beginning of their relationship so they can truly appreciate the queen-sized or king-sized bed when they get it.) This was not a problem, as we were in the spooning phase of our relationship. Living in terror that her black-belt-in-Judo-father would pop in on us in the middle of the night, that was my problem.

As much as we were in love, we sucked miserably when it came to romance. Candlelight dinner? One or the other of us would pipe up: “We’re having a romantic moment!” thus ruining the romantic moment. Do you see my predicament? I couldn’t have stage-managed a romantic proposal if my life depended on it. Honestly, I didn’t give it much thought. We both knew we were going to get married. The rest was details.

Some weekends, we carpooled back-and-forth from Berkeley to Palo Alto with Karen’s friend Kira. Karen and Kira had been pals since grade school. They roomed together at Berkeley for a couple of years and they both graduated from the College of Chemistry. Anyway, if I remember correctly, Karen was driving, Kira sat in the passenger seat, and I sat in the back. Kira, never the shrinking violet, began pressing me on my plans vis a vis her best friend. Here is a dramatic reenactment dredged from the depths of my memory.

Kira: Well, young man, what I’m asking is, what are your intentions towards our Karen?

Me: Oh, we’ve pretty much decided to get married.

Kira: Really. When?

Me: We haven’t picked a date.

Kira: But you’ve proposed?

(Cue road noise and perhaps the sound of Pink Floyd’s The Wall playing on the car’s tape deck.)

Kira: Surely you’ve proposed.

Karen: Not yet he hasn’t.

Me: So what do you say?

Karen: Sure.

Kira (screams incoherently, since she realizes she has just played witness to the lamest, most unemotional marriage proposal in the history of mankind)

If not exactly true, it’s at least true in spirit.

***

I decided straight away to ask her Dad’s permission. Karen’s mind boggled at the thought. Ask his permission? I think she was not-so-vaguely offended by the idea.

His main concern: he wanted to know how I would support Karen. (Now she’s really pissed. She fully intended to support herself with her grad student stipend.) Before Karen could commit patricide, I said, “With my student loan money, sir!” I convinced him that banks loved med students and would give me as much money as I wanted.

Here’s a pic of Karen and her dad just prior to the wedding:

He died a little over a year ago of pancreatic cancer. What a miserable way to go. Needless to say, we miss him a lot.

Tomorrow: an atheist and a lapsed Jew have a Buddhist wedding.

D.

How’s work? Let me tell you about work.

A typical doctor-patient interaction.

More later, after I pick up the pieces and sew shit up.

***

Okay, I’m back. A little bloody around the clavicles, I can’t find most of my left ear, and it’s a good thing I got that buzz-cut last week because blood in longish hair? Oy. You don’t want to know. Hydrogen peroxide doesn’t even to begin to cut it.

I’m thinking this mood has little to do with patients and everything to do with life in general. Now, if I gave you the nitty gritty details of my life, 49/50 of you would pull out the violin and say (as we did in school), “Ooooooh, poor baaaybeee!” I have a nice house, stable self-employed job, good health, and no major money problems.

But lately I’m feeling like a walking video of Remain in Light. Remember Remain in Light?

So maybe it’s a Houses in Motion kinda feeling . . .

I’m walking a line – I hate to be dreaming in motion
I’m walking a line – just barely enough to be living

Or maybe a Once in a Lifetime kinda feeling . . .

And you may find yourself living in a shotgun shack
And you may find yourself in another part of the world
And you may find yourself behind the wheel of a large automobile
And you may find yourself in a beautiful house, with a beautiful
Wife
And you may ask yourself-well…how did I get here?

I’ve never approved of folks who dodge responsibility for their lives. And yet, I can’t help but feel a little bewildered at my place in the world. One thing followed another with seeming inevitability. You chose A instead of B, C, or D because A was clearly the right thing to do. You would choose A again, given the opportunity. And yet, here you are.

And this goes all the way back to high school.

I think the solution to the puzzle is that I limited my choices from the beginning, putting myself in a position where there really was only one correct choice. We create our choices, those of us who can.

When I was in junior high, I aced some sort of State-mandated aptitude test. My counsellor told my parents, “He can be anything he wants to be.” How lucky I was to have someone there in my life, at that young age, telling me that. How unfortunate that I didn’t believe him.

None of this is new; I’ve been out of sorts for several years now. In 2001, nearing my 40th birthday, I decided to create a new choice and reinvent myself as a writer (and, hopefully someday, author). But as y’all know, it’s a long haul between making that choice and quitting the day job. I suspect many authors never have the ability to quit their day jobs.

I’m hoping it’s not too late to try.

D.

Why do fools fall in love?

What amazes me the most about Groundhog Day is that I love it as much as I do, even though Andie MacDowell and Bill Murray are light-years away from my ideal vision of romantic leads. Goes to show what a kickass script can do for a film. More on Groundhog Day in a moment.

As you folks know from yesterday’s post, my muse has decided she wants to write a romance. Or a romantica. Or an erotica. The muse doesn’t get out a lot, hasn’t read much from any of those genres, doesn’t care about the distinctions between them. But she has a story to tell and damn it she’s going to tell it. From past experience, I know better than to get in her way, but I also know she needs proper nutrition. Hence this evening’s post.

If it’s romance the muse is writing, my protags ought to fall in love, right? But, but, but . . . why?

Why do people fall in love?

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Ninety-two hundred, part two

Remember when you were a kid and you complained to your parents, you would get the When I Was A Kid speech? The other day, I decided to do that to myself by remembering the most difficult bits of surgical internship. Kind of like Monty Python’s Four Yorkshiremen, only it’s me yammering at myself:

Get yer head out o’ yer arse, Doogal, and quit yer whinin’! You call that a tough week? When you were 29, you were putting in 100 hour weeks, you snivellin’ excuse for a doctor!

Without further ado, here’s more pain.

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