Reflection: Dylan James

I guess the best place to start would be 鈥淟inda.鈥 On my second day of work (at Reading鈥檚 Oakbrook Health Clinic), I was sent in to see Linda and take her patient history, something that put me out of my depth at that early juncture (it still does, but not to the same degree). Linda was a regular, diagnosed with everything under the sun and bound to be diagnosed with whatever she wasn鈥檛 already diagnosed with at some point in her life 鈥 if not by a doctor, then by herself.

She spoke a unique sort of fractured English in which she put emphasis on any uses of 鈥渢he鈥 and dragged out the last syllable of every sentence (鈥淚 have THE painnnnnnn. It鈥檚 in THE left armmmmm.鈥) Within five min颅utes she began to mention her crip颅pling depression. Within 10 minutes she spoke of her suicidal ideation, and within 15 was sobbing.

She drew me into a hug, and I drew myself inward and attempted to piece together why I was doing this. I鈥檝e always been a worrywart about rules regarding people鈥檚 personal lives in an official setting 鈥 not so much the 鈥渓egality鈥 of it, but the morality. On what basis was it OK to send in an untrained person to hear the very private life story of another individual for educational purposes? Isn鈥檛 that, on some deep-down level, callous?

Every sit-down with a patient is like that. You鈥檙e trying to ask pertinent questions regarding their health, but before long you end up as the shoulder to cry on, or the witness to inner turmoil, or just the person who needs to be there to facilitate the patient鈥檚 venting.

There鈥檚 a funny sort of cognitive dissonance to the whole thing. You鈥檙e sitting down with them in this very sterile and clean environment, specifically designed to be absent of personality and set up for maximum efficiency, while they pour out the dirtiest and most emotional facets of their lives. Before long the whole notion of separating the 鈥渕edical world鈥 of clinics and hospitals from the 鈥渞eal world鈥 just dissolves, because you can鈥檛 possibly reconcile the two as different; it鈥檚 a comfortable illusion, almost set up more for the patient than the provider.

Coming up with ways to cope with stress was also a fun activity. I had this crazy idea in the early weeks of working at the clinic that I should be doing something to separate that world from my own 鈥 build back up the illusion to prevent myself from thinking about the patients too much, their plights and crises. This idea came from the fact that I was losing sleep at this point, being kept awake by a few specific patient interviews.

After a close friend knocked some sense into me and made me realize that the whole idea of compartmentalizing my life to minimize thinking about patients is something that could only eventually lead to a disaffected hardening of my outlook toward everything (which I thank him for), I gave up that tack and switched to something else, or four. All kinds of dumb little rituals like journaling and cataloguing emotions. But eventually I figured out the trick: it鈥檚 to not resist.

You don鈥檛 look for ways to combat the stress, you simply let it happen. You let every patient break your heart. The doctor I was interning for remarked that my taking of patient histories improved over the course of the semester. I don鈥檛 attribute that to practice because I know the exact moment that the improvement happened. It was when I finally surrendered to the deluge and let it flow over me.

It鈥檚 this odd blissful feeling, a kind of attached detachment, with gaze focused outward rather than in. More of a Tao thing than a Zen thing, I suppose.

We talk about growth a lot in relation to experiences like these, but I鈥檓 never sure what type of growth I鈥檓 supposed to be undergoing, or what to even look for in that regard. Sure, there was a lot of growth vis-脿-vis the objective, medical side of this internship: learning proper patient history procedure; attaining proficiency in hypertension, diabetes, asthma and hyperlipidemia; looking for patient cues that could indicate different diseases.

But I almost feel like the change in mindset and proper understanding trumps that in some ways. People have always walked up to me in public settings and started talking to me about their lives for as long as I remember, but now I know how to respond to them. I can better be the ear that they so obviously desire, and maybe even a mouth to form words that could be useful to them.

Because really, that鈥檚 what this is all about in the end. It鈥檚 not about me, it鈥檚 about Linda and her omnipresent aches and pains. And Julio with his uncomfortable iron rod in his leg. And Yolanda, who鈥檚 already quite an elderly lady but who comes in with her even more elderly mother, and Terrence with his gigantic head gash and paralyzed left side.

It鈥檚 about Charla with her two healthy kids, and Matt, who鈥檚 honestly really quite rude, and Emily, who really needed help finding a counselor on her insurance plan and for whom we finally did find one in a triumphant moment (albeit one not in the county). And Henry, who comes in with a bloody rag that he hands to me before disclosing that it鈥檚 a specimen of his semen because 鈥 by the way, he forgot to mention 鈥 he鈥檚 having blood in his semen.

It鈥檚 this constantly rotating cast of characters who take precedence here. They鈥檙e still rotating even now, their faces taking turns for top billing in my head. I don鈥檛 think I鈥檒l ever forget them, and I don鈥檛 want to.