Categories
Being human Reflections on Life, Being Human, and Medicine

How to Enjoy a Dinner Party

It was at a dinner party in Belgium. We were celebrating my aunt and uncle’s wedding anniversary. It was a great gathering of their family and friends. We were so pleased that we got to be a part of it. I was also pleased that most of the guests spoke English!

I was making casual conversation with one of their friends. I asked him, “So, what do you do for a living?” 

He answered me, “You must be American?” 

I asked him why he said that. He told me that Americans seem to be so fixated on work as their identity that it was a very American question for me to ask. He told me that a European would generally not ask that question. 

“So, what do you talk about?”

He told me that they might ask about what book they were reading, where they went on holiday or where they were planning to go on holiday. 

As the evening progressed, I learned that he was an engineer involved in designing how sound is handled in professional buildings. That was fascinating. I had no idea that was an entire line of engineering. But I also learned about where he went on holiday and what things interested him beyond his work.

The lesson has stuck with me.

Several months later I was at a professional dinner. It was at a weekend meeting focused on heart failure management technologies. It had been a long day and I really did not want to have the day’s work activities stretch into the evening over dinner. And so, I told the story about the dinner conversation in Belgium. Carolyn was sitting next to me. I asked her what book she was reading or had recently read. It started a great conversation. We talked back and forth about it for a while. She then asked me what I was reading. I explained that my daughter Dorothy loves Dostoevsky and that I was reading “Crime and Punishment” because of that. 

What followed was a wild journey! 

Carolyn also was a big fan. In fact, after college she had moved and lived in St. Petersburg, Russia. While she was there, she decided to follow the steps of Raskolnikov, the main character in “Crime and Punishment.” 

In the book, Raskolnikov counts his steps from where he was living to the place where he was going to commit murder. As the book progresses, he does commit the murder. In case you haven’t read it, I won’t tell you anymore and spoil it for you. It is a great book with amazing depth.

Anyhow, while Carolyn was living in St. Petersburg, she went to the place where Dostoevsky was said to have lived and to have based his story. She then followed the traditional walk from the book, counting her steps as she went to reach the site of the fictional murder. When she did so she entered the building. 

On the steps in the dark stairway she made a startling discovery. On the steps inside of the building where Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov was said to have killed Alyona Ivanovna to steal her money, Carolyn found a dead body! 

WOW! SCARY!

What a story! I couldn’t imagine it, can you? Just being in Russia would push most of us out of our comfort zone. But then to be following the steps of one of the classic crime stories and then to stumble on a real live – or – that is “dead” body – is just amazing! You couldn’t make that story up! 

The body apparently was an unfortunate homeless person who had settled there for rest and had passed away of natural causes. But nonetheless it must have been a terrifying experience! I still can’t imagine going through what Carolyn experienced.  It was such an incredible experience for her. And it was so much more interesting of a dinner conversation than continuing to talk about the role of thoracic impedance measurements in determining heart failure decompensation! That dinner meeting suddenly had become something that I would remember for a long time.

A few years later Dorothy followed her passion and moved to St. Petersburg to study Russian. 

Sarah and I were pleased to be able to go with her to St. Petersburg at the start of her time when she was getting settled in. While we were there, I told them of this story. And so, we too found the places and we walked the “Crime and Punishment” walk, counting our steps as we went. It was a delightful time! We didn’t end up going into the building. And just in case you are curious, we did not find a dead body on our journey. But we did have a great time doing it!

Starting the Raskolnikov walk.

A casual dinner conversation can lead to so much! As you sit at a dinner party can you too be taken on an adventure? Can you learn things that you might not know from the people you are dining with? 

Through the years then my friends have taught me a lot. 

  • There is real value in listening as much as talking. Oddly, people tend to find you to be more interesting company if you listen to them rather than if you are constantly talking at them.
  • Others are generally a lot more complicated and interesting than you might think. Everyone has a story. Within their minds and their lives are things that you can learn from. You can learn something from everyone, and everyone can learn things from you. Take on the attitude of expecting to be surprised by people. 
  • You might need to draw people out a little bit. It might help to keep in stock some questions that you can use to get them talking.

Who are you? What interests you? What stories or experiences do you have within you that I might not know? We as Americans are often focused on our career and what is happening there. But there is a lot more to life than that. I don’t think it is wrong to talk about our work, but we should not stop there. 

  • What was the last book you have read and what did you think about it?  What surprised you or stretched you in that book? Why did you read it? Were you happy that you read it? Why or why not?
  • Where did you go on vacation? Tell me about that. What was the most interesting or memorable thing that you did on that vacation? Were there things that surprised you? 
  • What was your favorite vacation ever? Why?
  • If you could live anywhere, where would it be? Why?
  • Where would you love to visit? Tell me why?

I won’t confess to be an expert at this but the lesson from Belgium has stuck with me. 

Can you view your next dinner party as a grand opportunity? 

Can you learn from the people that you are seated with? Can you ask and listen and find out what interests them? How might they think differently from you?  Will you let them perhaps stretch you or surprise you? Will you be lucky enough to be taken on journey inside a dark stairway in a deserted building in St. Petersburg, Russia? 

There are treasures within the people around you that you can learn from. Everyone has a few stories that are worth hearing. 

So…  What books have you read recently? Or perhaps, have you read any good blog posts recently? 🙂

Categories
Being human Medicine Reflections on Life, Being Human, and Medicine Reflections on the Christian Life

Anchors Aweigh – Or How a Prank Taught Me About Being Human

The assignment was to write and deliver a motivational speech. 

It was a standard part of the leadership training. It seemed like kind of a hokey and contrived assignment. 

We wondered if we could make it better.

We were a group of medical students, dental students, nurses and law students. We were in our “Officer’s Indoctrination School” (OIS) for the United States Navy. This was a 6-week training course that was designed to take us from being civilians to being officers in the U.S. Navy. We learned how to march and salute. We learned how to wear our uniforms. We learned about the customs and regulations of the Navy. 

We also learned a lot about leadership. I didn’t realize it then, but it molded a lot of who I am today.

During the training I made good friends. Perhaps it was the stress of staying up all night running floor buffers to wax and polish the floors. Or prepping for the inspections using a toothbrush to scrub the cracks on the floor. Or in using Q-tips to clean the windowsills. Or choosing to not sleep in your bed because you might wrinkle the perfectly made bed with its tightly ironed hospital corners. But in any event, we had become good friends.

We were talking about the assignment together. How could we truly deliver a motivational speech? One of us came up with a silly idea. It was risky. We could get in trouble. But the more we talked about it, the more we liked it. We thought it would be worth the risk.

The class time came, and we were all ready. 

One of my friends got up to give his speech. As he got near the climax of his speech, we perfectly executed our plan. It started out with just a very low-level humming. Then it grew. 

Ever so slightly louder. 

And then a little bit louder. 

And then it was clear what was happening. 

A group of us in the class were humming, “Anchor’s Aweigh!” 

The humming got so that we were filling the room with sound and then we let it all go. We jumped to our feet and began singing at the top of our lungs, 

“Anchors Aweigh, my boys, Anchors Aweigh. Farewell to college joys, we sail at break of day-ay-ay-ay. Through our last night on shore, drink to the foam, Until we meet once more. Here’s wishing you a happy voyage home.”

It was risky.

We could have gotten in a lot of trouble.

We looked at our Lieutenant Commander instructor to see if we were going to have to pay a penalty for our little prank. 

She had tears streaming down her face. 

They were not tears of sadness. They were not tears of laughter. 

Then we understood. And the joke was on us. In that moment we all learned a lesson. 

That was the day that I became a part of the United States Navy.

Suddenly I was filled with immense pride and a sense of belonging. I understood the deep traditions of the Navy. I felt linked to the many men and women who had so bravely fought and risked everything to be a part of the Navy. In an instant I understood what it meant to be committed to something bigger than myself.I understood how hearing just a song could trigger deep emotions of pride and respect and belonging. I had tears in the corners of my eyes. And I was now an officer in the United States Navy.

I have been a member of the Navy in my heart ever since that day. I have been so proud of my uniform. Even though this incident happened in May of 1988 and I left active duty in the Navy in June of 1996, I am still Navy. My uniforms are still hung in my closet. I looked at them the other day and I had no intention of moving them. 

It distressed me a couple of years ago when I realized I was likely too old to ever go back on active duty again. In the back of my head had always been this little thought that if ever I got “tired of it all” I might go back in the Navy. But time has marched on and that no longer seems possible. But I am still Navy. 

I heard them singing the “Navy Hymn” for Bush 41’s funeral this fall. It got me a little bit choked up and nostalgic again. That is the song of “my Navy”. I got to serve in the same Navy in which George Bush risked his life in World War II and which molded him into who he was.

What does all of this matter to you?

For those of you who were in the military I suspect it rings true. There is such a strong sense of identity that never seems to leave. There is a link to the generations of men and women who committed themselves to something greater than themselves. The link is to many who have died in the service. There is a link to many who experienced things that I never want to experience. There is a link to tradition and honor and leadership.

For those of you who have never served in the military, the lesson is clear.

There is great value in committing yourself to something bigger than yourself. 

If all you ever do in life is to think about and to live for yourself, you have not achieved very much. You are but one life and your concerns and desires are a small thing. But we were meant to and we were designed to be a part of things bigger than ourselves. 

That is another part of what it means to be human. 

We are not just living a life here of survival on this earth. We are not just going to go through our days surviving and then die. We were meant to build and create and grow. And by working together we can do so much more than we ever could alone.

We were meant to dream big and to build big. What is there that you care about? Is there something that you are willing to invest yourself in? Is there something that is more important than just your own needs and desires? What is there that is worth living for?

Maya Angelou said, “My mission in life is not merely to survive, but to thrive; and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humor, and some style.”

We were meant to create. We were meant to build. We were meant to stand up against injustice and evil. We were meant to band together for what is good and right. And in doing that we find purpose and meaning and honor and joy. 

Thatis something that can make a silly old song trigger tears from a place deep down inside. It can make you cry in a way that is not sad and not laughing but of profound purpose and meaning.

I recently read an article that said that one of the drivers for frequent job changes among millennials is a need for real purpose and meaning. Financial ROI (return on investment) is no longer enough to keep them satisfied and challenged in their work. They feel a strong pull toward finding something big enough to be worth their energy and passion.

What does this mean for your life?

Do not live just for yourself. Live for things bigger than yourself.It is not just the military. It is anything that has deep purpose and meaning for you. What will you treasure at the end of your life? What will you commit yourself to that is so much more than just living for you?

For me it is a bunch of things. 

I am forever proud to have been a part of the Navy. 

I am a father and together with my wife, I am committed to the growth and success of my daughters.

I am proud to have joined the ranks of healthcare professionals as a physician. This is not an isolated thing but is large club that binds us together in shared purpose and experiences. Regardless of what anyone might think, the vast majority of physicians were drawn to healthcare by a desire to use their intelligence and skills for real good.

I have committed myself to making healthcare better in my region. Within heart failure I would like to think that I am not only helping in the care of individual patients with heart failure. While that is excellent in and of itself, there is more. I also want to be a part of having improved the care in my organization. I also dream that I could improve the care beyond this. I want to improve things for an entire region. By example and energy and in whatever way I can, I want to think that patients will get better care by the time I am finished than when I started. That is a huge goal and makes me inspired just to think of it. I just wish there was a song that I could hum as I write this!

On a deeper level, as I have mentioned, I am also a man of faith. 

I believe in an Almighty Creator who has made us in His image and who allows us to be a part of His redemptive plan for His creation. The world is a fractured place. Everything is not as it is supposed to be. That is obvious. But I have a belief in a God who is executing a plan to repair it all. And I believe that He allows us to be a part of it.

That is a very deep level of belonging. 

Suddenly I belong to thousands of years of people who have lived by faith. There are people who have lived and died, many as martyrs, for standing up for what is right. They have opposed tyrants and evil throughout generations. And I am, by an incredible gift of God’s grace, even linked to the sufferings of Christ. This is a deep mystery, but I am linked even to Him. I am, by the purpose and plan of God, linked to a plan to redeem and remake the world into the place that it was meant to be. 

To be committed to such deep purposes is a big part of what it means to be truly human!

What are you living for? What is there that is greater than yourself?

“Anchors aweigh, my boys, anchors aweigh!”

And that is how a little prank flipped back on me and taught me a big lesson about what it means to be a human being.