Transformational Times

Words of Hope, Character & Resilience from our Virtual Community

Friday, June 30, 2023

In This Issue:


Guest Director's Corner


Trauma hits home for Froedtert ER docs in car crash, and nurse who treated them 

Poetry Corner



Thoughts While Waiting in the Emergency Room

Share a poem with us!

What unforgettable memories were made at your very first Summerfest concert, and how did the experience shape your love for live music?

Share Here

Answers from last week: What is the most memorable and unique dish you've ever encountered at a supper club?


  • My family and I love the Kasseler Rippchen (bone-in smoked pork chops) and the En Brouchete (small steaks on a skewer) at the White Stag Supper Club in Sugar Camp, WI. The meals come with an amazingly crisp lettuce wedge salad, their homemade salad dressings, a baked potato with the fixings, homemade rolls, and a choice of sides. A Brandy Old Fashioned is pretty much required. Cardiology recommends no more than one visit every twelve months. - Bruce Campbell, MD


  • Any steak from my favorite supper club, Tornado Steak House, near Madison WI. -Jeff Fritz, PhD
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Guest Director's Corner



Coping with Trauma: What matters for patients and providers



By Terri deRoon-Cassini, PhD, MS



Dr. deRoon-Cassini shares her candid advice, based on many years of experience and research in trauma care, for how to better understand the psychologic response to trauma in patients and providers, as well as practical wisdom for how to help them…


The instantaneous loss of control – this is one of the defining features of trauma. In an instant, lives can change. The path that one was on is suddenly unexpectedly different. And our brains take a moment to catch up, to realize what has happened.


Gunshot wound patients talk about hearing a noise and not knowing for moments [no one really can say for how long] that they were just shot, until they feel warm blood, because being shot is not painful, not at first. Car crash survivors often talk about the crunching and shattering sounds of a car buckling under pressure from another object that finally orients the brain to what happened. And then things change, lives change, one chapter ends, and another begins.


After realizing that trauma has just happened, a flood of emotions can follow; fear, helplessness, calm, shock, extreme emotional expression, and even thoughts that one’s life is over.

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Perspective/Opinion




“My first thought was terror…” 



By Brady Bollinger, DO


The lives of two resident physicians change in a split second when a car fleeing a police chase barrels toward the car they are in, and makes impact with the driver’s door at 80 mph…  

 

I was excited to go to Costco that weekday afternoon, as even mundane tasks can be enjoyable for resident physicians who aren’t at work. I picked up one of my close friends and co-residents, Sehr. Our plan was to fill our emergency medicine resident lounge with food. The stoplight turned green, and I pulled forward while peeking around the retaining wall holding up I-94 immediately to our left. That’s when I saw a car barreling directly at my driver’s side door. 

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Perspective/Opinion



“Are you okay?”



By Sehr Khan, MD 






I’m not a hugger.  

 

I think I’ve said that for as long as I’ve lived. I don’t mean to be dramatic, but my life changed on October 18th, 2022.  

 

I’ve avoided writing this for a few months (sorry Brady and Dr. Pilarski) because I thought I’d have to deal with emotions that I pushed away since the crash. Brady sent me his draft of his piece for the Transformational Times and my eyes started sweating (as one of my nurses said to me when I was in the ED after the crash). 


Here I am in Colectivo, writing this piece, eyeballs sweating. 


One of my favorite second year residents, Brady, and I had plans to go to Costco to stock our resident lounge after one of my night shifts. I had gotten both my COVID and flu vaccine that morning after shift, thinking that working the rest of my stretch of night shifts would be the hardest part of my day. Brady picked me up and we made it no less than one mile when I heard Brady yell “Sehr!”  

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Perspective/Opinion




Take Three with ER Nurse Kelsey Wishau: They came in on my shift…….




By Wendy Peltier, MD




FMLH ER Nurse Kelsey Wishau was involved in the care of Drs. Bollinger and Kahn the day of their accident. She shines a light on what it feels like to ‘care for our own’ and the important bond ER teams hold as a work family...


Can you tell us a bit about your background and work experience as an ER Nurse?



Can you tell us a bit about your background and work experience as an ER Nurse?


What advice would you share with colleagues who may have a similar experience in the future?

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Thoughts While Waiting in the Emergency Room

Solo Mom writes a poem for her son, Phillip








Inside the hush of this humid night,

I feel your thoughts landing on me:

feathers

feathers moving with the weight

of bones.

That is your way. The constant pulling

then pushing of you,

you whom I birthed

in the middle of a windy storm. I remember

listening

to the pelting of ice

against the blackened hospital windows

the soft water droplets mingling

with the shards of ice

the way the ice splintered

against the solid window as you moved

down my shifting bones

and into this world.

Was it in you then? Planted in

that wet storm with the wild spatter

of stars,

was something born within you

that makes you want to move

outside your own bones?

The way you hide by swallowing tablets,

or inside the smoke of your room

the blue waves you ride.

Once, we rode blue waves together

underwater like that

when you lived inside me:

dove down to feel weightless, to feel the arc

of gravity break for a moment

that first summer I found out I was having you

18 years ago

I rode blue waves with you, spoke to you

said your name.

Now

I sit in the cupped chair

of this hospital

hoping they can wake you,

the way I once woke you to this world.

You who won’t let me in

not into your thoughts and now

banned from the room

the nurse says you are of age,

and it’s my choice to wait for you.

Always my choice, sweet son,

always waiting for the rage

you hold toward me to abate

the way I waited for the storm

to abate the night you were born.

Your words,

tangible as ice, splintering

against my skin

The way you take love

and transform it

into rupture.


Poem from EMPOWERING SOLO MOMS EVERYWHERE

Photo Credit: Shutterstock.com

Submit a Poem for Next Week


CALL TO ARTISTS

 

Humanities in Medicine event

Visual and Performing Artist Submissions:

 

Humanities in Medicine is presented by Froedtert Hospital’s Departments of Spiritual Services and Behavioral Health

 

Friday, September 8, 2023

5:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Froedtert Hospital Clinical Cancer Center

1st Floor - Helfaer Mezzanine

 

We are looking for Froedtert Health and MCW staff, physicians and patients to share their visual and performing art at our next Humanities in Medicine event. Some examples of the creative works we would like to include: drawing & painting, mixed media, fiber art, photography, poetry, spoken word, dancing, music, singing and acting.

More Info
Register Now
Learn More
The Transformational Times publishes weekly, delivering stories of hope, character and resilience to our virtual community.

Jeff Fritz, PhDEditor-in-Chief



Editorial Board: Himanshu Agrawal MD, Bruce Campbell, MDKathlyn Fletcher, MD, Adina Kalet, MD, Wendy Peltier, MD, Karen Herzog, Justine Espisito, Julia Bosco, Linda Nwumeh, Wolf Pulsiano, Sophie Voss, & Emelyn Zaworski


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