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Returning to Normal?

How do you navigate transitions? This is an open and honest expression of my thoughts at the end of last week.

Transitions are always hard. We talk about finding the “new normal.” I just wish there was a script or a manual to tell us how to do this. Even harder is that I don’t know for sure what I want the new normal to be.

I just finished my first official week back at full time. I stayed at work later than I should have. By Friday noon I could feel the old feelings of fatigue. I was able to keep going but by evening had the heavy breathing fatigued feeling again. A good night’s sleep and I am better again.  I am trying to figure out things now that I am back.

What were the good things in the week? It was good to see a bunch of patients again. I felt like I really had something to contribute. This made me feel good. I participated in some meetings. I was happy to see that I still could feel the drive to speak and want to make things better. People would ask me how I was doing. The answer I came up with varied between 80-90% back depending on when they asked. This morning I am 90%. 

The week started with an upper endoscopy. I have been having some swallowing troubles. This seems to be a residual effect of the mitotane which can take 2 months or longer to be out of my body. The Versed and Fentanyl for the endoscopy were kind of amazing. I don’t remember the endoscopy and only vaguely remember going home. I was surprised that I had to push myself to think the next day. I was also surprised when I felt some remnants of that going into the second day. I felt just a little off balance in terms of thinking. I could think but just didn’t have my usual flow. I stumbled on my words with the patients and the resident who was rotating with me. At times I felt like I was following old algorithms rather than truly thinking in the moment. The next two days after this were more normal and more satisfying for me. The resident was still with me on Thursday and I found myself falling into and enjoying the teaching role again. I wasn’t stumbling on my words like I was on Wednesday.

Today I listened to the song, “Audition (The Fools Who Dream)” from the 2016 movie “La La Land”. Here are some of the words from the song:

My aunt used to live in Paris.
I remember, she used to come and tell us these stories about being abroad.
And I remember she told us that she jumped into the river once, barefoot.

She smiled.

Leapt, without looking, 
And tumbled into the Seine.
The water was freezing, 
She spent a month sneezing, 
But said she would do it again.

Here’s to the ones who dream, 
Foolish as they may seem. 
Here’s to the hearts that ache. 
Here’s to the mess we make. 

I worry that I am not dreaming anymore. 

The future always seemed to sprawl out in front of me. There were always so many things that I could and might do in the future. I dreamed of the dozens of different things that someday I might do. 

Doctors get frequent emails with what look to be amazing job offers. I have never really taken them seriously but often I would forward them on to Sarah. In my mind I would dream of a sudden change and a new challenge. I would want to run through the grass that was greener. Of course, it never really is greener. But I would indulge in imagining the fabulous job the email would try to create. I never seriously considered them. But it was a release to look at the emails. It was all harmless. It was a bit of escapism, but it was also dreaming. Now when I see the emails, I think of my uncertainty and my need to not lose any of the benefits that I have. I haven’t been forwarding the emails on to Sarah anymore. 

When I first saw “La La Land” that song grabbed me and moved me. Today it bothered me. 

It worried me a little bit. Am I not dreaming anymore? Am I settling for less? 

I have always wanted to think of myself as a dreamer. I think many of us want to think that we are. We want to be the aunt from La La Land. For the sake of adventure, she jumped into the Seine. She really lived her life. And in spite of whatever pains or losses she endured, she would do it all again.

A bit of madness is key, 
To give us new colors to see. 
Who knows where it will lead us? 
And that’s why they need us.

There is something very appealing about being a dreamer. I want to be the person who sees the world not for what it is but for what it can be. I want to be the person who brings “new colors to see” to others. I don’t want to just be here. I don’t want to just mark time. I want my time to mean something.

And so, I am back at work. I am trying to figure out what my life is supposed to be like. I am puzzling over what is supposed to be different. It isn’t that my life was bad before. But priorities seem to have shifted a bit. Some things that used to drive me do not as much. And I am wanting to figure out what really is important for me to do at this phase of my life.

Think about it. If you knew you might only have a few years to work, what work would you do? What would you do differently?

I intensely don’t want to just go back to where I was. It has got to be different. I have got to be different. I feel duty bound to ask the questions. I am not criticizing my former self. It wasn’t like I was without purpose before. But I want even more. 

And, I still really want to be a dreamer. Can I do it? Can I continue to look ahead even if I am not certain what ahead can mean? Can I continue to invest energy now that the rug was pulled out from under me once? Can I figure out the new normal?

On the other side of this confusion is this: It is odd but sometimes I worry that I am not wanting to be well. I know that is not true, but it worries me at times nonetheless. I think it is because I worry that I will drift to the mediocre – the bland – the gray. I worry I will return to normal and will not have any intensity anymore. I want to be a dreamer. I want color. I want emotion. I want more than just living and being in my place.

So bring on the rebels, 
The ripples from pebbles, 
The painters, and poets, and plays.

And here's to the fools who dream, 
Crazy as they may seem.
Here's to the hearts that break. 
Here's to the mess we make.

What matters to me? That is, I think, what I am reaching even more deeply within myself to figure out. My worry is that I won’t figure it out and then I will give into the pressures around me and take on the mold and pattern that others might make for me. I don’t want to have wasted the trauma of being diagnosed and assaulted with treatments. I want my life to be more.

Paul said, “To live is Christ and to die is gain.”[1]I get that now. I get that more than I ever have before. I am not afraid to die. That is the easy part. I know that if and when that time comes it won’t be as easy as it sounds now. I desperately don’t want to put my family through grief. But at the moment the challenge that is before me is “To live is Christ.” Paul was committed to the gospel. His calling and purpose were clear. But what is the Lord calling me to now? 

During radiation I was so tired. All I could do was to sit and think. During that time, I dreamed of being able to fully serve the Lord. I even wrote out a plan for part time medical practice and part time seminary followed by part time ministry. This was assuming that the cancer stayed away. It inspired me and gave me strength during that time.

But now that I am returning to work, the reality of figuring out the next phase is in front of me. I am still not fully back (not on call yet) and it gives me some liberty to figure out what is important to me. Honestly it is more than just what is important to me. It is more about what is the best use of my time. If we assume the worst and that my cancer will come back some day, what is the best use of my time between now and then? I think that is what I am reaching for.

My list in my mind so far:

  • People: Çaring about people is good. I have got to remember to slow down. Stop thinking about myself. Look people in the eyes. Really listen to them. Enjoy them. This was really intensely valuable right after my diagnosis and rightly should remain so going forward.
  • Patients: Helping patients is really good. Having skills that I can use for others is really satisfying.  I am a clinician. That is a big part of who I am.
  • Gaps: Reaching into the gaps where there are needs and meeting those needs is really good. I no longer want to do what others can do or are doing. I want to go where others can’t go or don’t want to go. I have little drive to do what 3 other people are vying to do. I feel intense drive to do what no one else can or wants to do. 
  • Color:  I want color. Bright colors. Vibrant and rich. Alive and awake and different. In whatever I do I want there to be color. Emotions. Alive. This too I felt after my diagnosis and I am not very willing to give it up. This blog has helped me to express myself. Like an artist it makes me feel alive. I think that is why I have continued to blog and write so many posts that have nothing to do with my health.
  • Live life not just work: I don’t want to be so stressed that I don’t appreciate life. I don’t want to feel like I have been cheated or have missed out on living because I was so obsessed with work. This is huge. Work is valuable. But there is more to life than just work.
  • Impact: I want to impact and move others. I think that is half of why I blog. I know the first half is what I said above and what is driving me to write this today – It is inside me and it helps me to write it down. The creativity makes me feel alive. But perhaps the second half is to get people thinking more deeply. To help them feel. To make them really live.
  • God:When I was on disability, I started my day with a cup of coffee, my Bible and a quiet time to be with my God. This past week, I felt the pressure of schedules. Time seemed to evaporate. Perhaps there was just a moment too long in the shower or one click of the snooze button that I shouldn’t have taken. My relationship with the Lord is who I am, and I must not let anything get in the way of that.
  • Ministry:My ministry at the moment is in my family, my church, my friends, and in medicine. These are all so wonderful and really are fulfilling. I am not feeling that I have to go beyond those bounds. But I do want to be sure that I am making the most of the time and opportunities that I have. I want to live with the confidence that looking back, I will be convinced that I would do it all again.
I trace it all back to then.
Her, and the snow, and the Seine
Smiling through it, 
She said she'd do it again.

Picture reference: https://www.citymetric.com/fabric/paris-has-watery-dream-swimming-seine-can-planners-take-plunge-2690

[1]NIV Philippians 1:21

By Mike

This is my blog. I started this blog to find a way to express myself and my views of the world. The views expressed here are purely my own.

10 replies on “Returning to Normal?”

Mike,
I so appreciate reading your blog! You are bringing up all the questions and thoughts that all of us should be asking ourselves. You are right that your God given ministry right now is where He has you. Remember there is not a hierarchy of calling. God uses us all with the gifts and profession He has called us to.
Jim

I’ve read all of your blogs…thank you for sharing your thoughts and experiences during such a trying time in your life. Your shared experiences help others in ways you can’t know. God uses us in ways that we don’t always realize at the time. He’s using you now through the trial that you have just survived.
The transition that you are experiencing is difficult and different; as you and others have described as your “new normal”. You will thrive and continue to survive. I know that you have what it takes because you were already a compassionate doctor and person before all of this changed you and your life. I used to work in cardiology on 4E at Blodgett, 4S at Butterworth and then 7H at the Meijer Heart Center before I spent eight years handling all things Certificate of Need for Spectrum Health so I remember when you first came to Spectrum!
I had a difficult transition too with my ex-husband when he came to live with our son after spending eight long months hospitalized due to complications from chemo and radiation. He had double bypass surgery and six months later he was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer. He had a tumor the size of a small orange growing in the back/side of his neck. He collapsed in my garage on April 5 and I called an ambulance and he was admitted to the oncology unit and was eventually discharged from Mary Free Bed on November 8. During those months he got two MRSA infections, he coded while on 7H for nearly two months, went to MFB, got some other infection and went back to 7H and then back to MFB. He contracted the MRSA infection while at a rehab hospital. I’m glad that they now have single rooms there and at MFB. Hopefully it will reduce complications like infections especially for those with a decreased immune system. I had to advocate for him to be sent from the rehab hospital to Spectrum because I knew something drastic had changed and they had to operate and the MRSA infection was in the area of the chest plate inserted during his bypass surgery. At one point he had a chest wound vac, a feeding tube in his stomach, a chemo port and a dialysis port!
So when he came to our house I was a nervous wreck. They set up home care and a electronic safety monitoring system but all day at work all I did was worry and all night I prayed nothing happened like our son getting home first and finding him unresponsive or worse! My mind goes to the worst scenario situation probably from all those years of always preparing for codes, bad weather situations at work…etc. He couldn’t even walk on his own when he first got home. He had lost approximately 100 lbs. He’s 6.5 and still a shadow of his former self. He was still on dialysis and had tons of doctors appointments and tests. Anyway, he eventually got himself to the point of walking and thriving again. He’ll never be the same as his old self but he’s got a new normal now too. He was a fortunate person given his diagnosis and experience but part of that is the power of positive thinking. His attitude pulled him through times that I don’t know if I could have survived. We all had to transition with him. It was hard and I didn’t do so well. I don’t want to go into great detail but I wish that I would have recognized that I was not doing well and sought help sooner. I became depressed but I didn’t recognize that I was sinking fast. I stopped eating and sleeping and it eventually meant that I wasn’t faring well in my professional life either. Unfortunately I left my job after many years of service. My point is that I am glad that you are talking about all your experiences because it can help someone else in a similar situation. The transitions experienced during the initial diagnosis period, the treatment period and hopefully the eventual transition back to work or everyday life is so important to recognize and address. I wish that I would have had a similar resource because I think that I could have definitely benefited from the information. See, you’re already bringing value to your community! I’m still finding value in your blogs now after the fact. I know that God has something good in store for us! He’s changed my life for the better. I got stuck for a long time but even during that time God was preparing me for the next thing. Like you, I have an internal need to experience more enjoyment in my personal life and I feel that fulfillment on that level will drive a more fulfilling experience on the professional level. When I left my job I thought that I lost my identity and value. I felt completely useless to my family and that I had nothing to contribute to them and to society in general but the experience forced me to recognize that I was more than just my job! Thank goodness I know that now!
I apologize for such a lengthy post! I’ve been wanting to say something for a while now so I guess that I saved it all for one long response!
I’m so glad that you are transitioning back to work! It might feel a little overwhelming now but it will keep getting better!
God bless you, your family and your continued journey🙏

Wow. What a hard and amazing journey. Thanks for reaching out and adding it here. I have discovered that there is SO much going on in other’s lives that I never knew. It sounds like you are in a much better place today having come through the storm. It is so good to hear from you!

Thank you and thanks for taking the time to read it! I wish you a full and speedy continued recovery.

Mike
You truly have an amazing gift with writing. I have been through many transitions in my life; with most recent resigning from SH and finding a new opportunity. I prayed a lot for guidance and direction, and with the support of my amazing husband and family left SH after 36 years. Yes I was scared, saddened and didn’t know if it was the right decision for many reasons. But I took the risk and it has been and still is a incredible transition. My change wasn’t due to a physical illness but one could say a psychological cancer and I was not healthy. Change is scary, but you have already changed in so many ways. I believe when you are ready you will make a transition that is right. If it is to continue to work fu time in medicine or minister I. Your church. I think you have a third option and that is writing, after I read your blogs I always think that you should author a book. You are an amazing and caring person. God will guide you. I pray for your healing and continued strength.
I sure do miss you ❤️

Bonnie

Thanks so much for your kind words. I miss you at SH but happy that it has been a good change for you!

Your patients are lucky to have you and that is a ministry. I just completed a bible study on Discerning the Voice of God. How to be still and listen, He is calling us. Very easy to get into our day to day habits. Thanks for your writing!

Colors are wonderful. Thanks for all you have done for Joy. May God protect your marriage and you and your kids through this journey back. I get it. I had that thinking issue day today. Reading on the internet about my accident being the equivalent force of falling from a 12 story building. I get what you meant with the resident early week. I also get what you meant about color. We need hope the kind that feeds focus on heaven and not on judges as we face these days. May grace full your life and the Holy Spirit who comforts be so very near. He thrives on using empty vessels for Him. Delight yourself in the Lord….. You know the rest of the story…
Love in Christ, Gay Lynn

Mike: Thank you for sharing. Having spent the last couple days wrestling with some things myself, your words were a godsend to me. Thank you for sharing your heart! Prayers and blessings, my friend!

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