Transformational Times

Words of Hope, Character & Resilience from our Virtual Community

Friday, May 13, 2022

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In This Special Graduation Issue:

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Associate Director's Corner


Perspective/Opinion


Take 3


Poetry Corner

  • Michael Esson: Goodbye
  • John Stone: Gaudeamus Igitur

Your Turn



Upcoming Events/Announcements

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Associate Director's Corner


Let us Therefore Rejoice


By Cassie Ferguson, MD

 





Dr. Ferguson draws attention to the ambiguity, stress, and personal sacrifices that accompany medical training and practice. Even so, the systems that surround us must be redesigned to assure that medical students and physicians experience joy rather than moral injury, even as we care for those who suffer …

 

 

I applied to twenty-six medical schools. I was not accepted to any of them but was waitlisted at one. And when I got the call that I had been the last applicant accepted off of the waitlist at the Medical College of Wisconsin, I packed up the few pieces of Ikea furniture I owned, bought actual (paper) maps of the states between California and Wisconsin and, one week later, hopped in my green Plymouth Breeze with my sister and took off for Milwaukee. And in the twenty-two years since that day, my life has changed in ways I could never have expected.

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Perspective/Opinion


The Beginning



By Linda Nwumeh

 

  



Ms. Nwumeh, a member of the MCW-Milwaukee Class of 2025, reflects on what graduation means to her ...




“Graduation.” It is not a long word, or especially difficult to pronounce by the standards of the English language. How can such a simple word represent the culmination of all of the memories, triumphs, failures and learning that one experiences as a result of medical school? 

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Perspective/Opinion


Reflections From a Female Orthopaedic Surgery Intern

 

 

By Ashley Creager, MD



Dr. Ashely Creager, an MCW graduate in the class of 2021, is an intern at the University of Nebraska. In this essay, she reflects on the value of having other women in her residency training program ...


Since its inception in the late 1700s, orthopaedic surgery has been male dominated; now, well into the Twenty-First Century, this reality remains. Statistics from the 2016-2017 academic year found that female orthopaedic surgery residents made up 0.92% of all female medical residents and that within orthopaedic surgery residencies specifically, women accounted for only 14.0% (this was increased from 2005-2006 when it was 11%), the lowest percentage of any residency specialty. 

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Perspective/Opinion


To the Memory of Us

 

 


By Peter Nguyen – MCW-Milwaukee Class of 2022 

 

 

Peter Nguyen, who will graduate with the Class of 2022, recalls moments along the way from his first days at MCW to being ready to graduate, and how a relationship made the process special ... 

 

 

Cheers to the memory of us, for the days were long but the years short. Chapter endings are oftentimes bittersweet – for us, the joy of becoming a newly minted physician is delicately balanced with leaving a family built over the past four years. Sad as it may be to leave each other, I am excited for our future chapters, and I hope that our shared memories will continue to be reminisced for the years to come. 

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Three Questions for Graduating Medical Student Richard Walsh


Sharing Thoughts on Four Years of Medical School

 


 


 

Richard Walsh, a graduating member of the MCW-Milwaukee Class of 2022, shares his thoughts on his medical school journey…

 

 

 

Richard answers the following questions:

  • When you started medical school, what were you most excited about?
  • If you knew then what you know now, what advice would you give to your M1 self today?
  • In the last four years of your medical school journey, what character strength have you most relied on?
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Three Questions for Graduating Medical Student Sarah Bennett


Resilience and Kindness in Medical School 

 


 


 

Sarah Bennett, a graduating medical student in the Class of 2022, reflects on her experiences at MCW ... 

  

 

Sara answers the following questions:

  • When you started medical school, what were you most excited about?
  • If you knew then what you know now, what advice would you give to your M1 self today?
  • In the last four years of your medical school journey, what character strength have you most relied on?
Continue Reading

Three Questions for Graduating Medical Student Chana Bushee


Reflections on Four Years of Medical School

 


 

 

Chana Bushee, a member of the MCW-Milwaukee Class of 2022, reflects on her experiences ... 

  

 

Chana answers the following questions:

  • When you started medical school, what were you most excited about?
  • If you knew then what you know now, what advice would you give to your M1 self today?
  • In the last four years of your medical school journey, what character strength have you most relied on?
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Past Issues

Goodbye 

By Michael Esson

 

 

This is not goodbye,

no tears will be shed,

no parting words will be said,

no whispers of you will be heard,

and no pain will be felt.

 

You arrived yesterday, it seems

In your eyes, an innocent gleam,

And today, here you are packing up your dreams,

Picking up all the pieces, which still looks new.

You are not the same person I once knew,

In a hurry, time flew

Leaving me with fading memories of you.

 

Maybe this is goodbye,

And I’m just bad at it,

You’ve left me all out of sorts,

So, bear with me while I reminisce,

In my eyes, tears cloud my thoughts,

So, excuse me if I ramble a bit.

This is not goodbye,

If it were, it would sound like this.

 

You were so young and naïve,

The smiles we shared, came with such ease,

Although it pains me to see you leave,

I rejoice having known you, so please

Don’t forget me, not in the least.

 

When your journey gets too much to bear,

Rest your weary head,

And have no fear,

   this is not goodbye.

 

Gaudeamus Igitur

by John Stone


For this is the day of joy

      which has been fourteen hundred and sixty days in coming

      and fourteen hundred and fifty-nine nights

For today in the breathing name of Brahms

      and the cat of Christopher Smart

      through the unbroken line of language and all the nouns

      stored in the angular gyrus

      today is a commencing

For this is the day you know too little

      against the day when you will know too much

For you will be invincible

      and vulnerable in the same breath

      which is the breath of your patients

For their breath is our breathing and our reason

For the patient will know the answer

      and you will ask him

      ask her

For the family may know the answer

For there may be no answer

      and you will know too little again

      or there will be an answer and you will know too much

      forever

For you will look smart and feel ignorant

      and the patient will not know which day it is for you

      and you will pretend to be smart out of ignorance

For you must fear ignorance more than cyanosis

For whole days will move in the direction of rain

For you will cry and there will be no one to talk to

      or no one but yourself

For you will be lonely

For you will be alone

For there is a difference

For there is no seriousness like joy

For there is no joy like seriousness

For the days will run together in gallops and the years

      go by as fast as the speed of thought

      which is faster than the speed of light

      or Superman

      or Superwoman

For you will not be Superman

For you will not be Superwoman

For you will not be Solomon

      but you will be asked the question nevertheless **

For after you learn what to do, how and when to do it

      the question will be whether

For there will be addictions: whiskey, tobacco, love

For they will be difficult to cure

For you yourself will pass the kidney stone of pain

      and be joyful

For this is the end of examinations

For this is the beginning of testing

For Death will give the final examination

      and everyone will pass

For the sun is always right on time

      and even that may be reason for a kind of joy

For there are all kinds of

      all degrees of joy

For love is the highest joy

For which reason the best hospital is a house of joy

      even with rooms of pain and loss

      exits of misunderstanding

For there is the mortar of faith

For it helps to believe

For Mozart can heal and no one knows where he is buried

For penicillin can heal

      and the word

      and the knife

For the placebo will work and you will think you know why

For the placebo will have side effects and you will know

      you do not know why

For none of these may heal

For joy is nothing if not mysterious

For your patients will test you for spleen

      and for the four humors

For they will know the answer

For they have the disease

For disease will peer up over the hedge

      of health, with only its eyes showing

For the T waves will be peaked and you will not know why

For there will be computers

For there will be hard data and they will be hard

      to understand

For the trivial will trap you and the important escape you

For the Committee will be unable to resolve the question

For there will be the arts

      and some will call them

      soft data

      whereas in fact they are the hard data

      by which our lives are lived

For everyone comes to the arts too late

For you can be trained to listen only for the oboe

      out of the whole orchestra

For you may need to strain to hear the voice of the patient

      in the thin reed of his crying

For you will learn to see most acutely out of

      the corner of your eye

      to hear best with your inner ear

For there are late signs and early signs

For the patient's story will come to you

      like hunger, like thirst

For you will know the answer

      like second nature, like first

For the patient will live

      and you will try to understand

For you will be amazed

      or the patient will not live

      and you will try to understand

For you will be baffled

For you will try to explain both, either, to the family

For there will be laying on of hands

      and the letting go

For love is what death would always intend if it had the choice

For the fever will drop, the bone remold along

its lines of force

      the speech return

      the mind remember itself

For there will be days of joy

For there will be elevators of elation

      and you will walk triumphantly

      in purest joy

      along the halls of the hospital

      and say Yes to all the dark corners

      where no one is listening

For the heart will lead

For the head will explain

      but the final common pathway is the heart

      whatever kingdom may come

For what matters finally is how the human spirit is spent

For this is the day of joy

For this is the morning to rejoice

For this is the beginning

      Therefore, let us rejoice

      Gaudeamus igitur.


* Therefore, let us rejoice

** 1 Kings 3:16-27




John Stone is a cardiologist and poet at Emory University School of Medicine. His work appears in five books of his own; he is also co-editor of On Doctoring: Stories, Poems, Essays, an anthology of literature and medicine that has been given to all American medical students by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation since 1991. Music from Apartment 8: New and Selected Poems, will be published by LSU Press in 2004.

Submit a Poem for Next Week

Readers respond to last week's reflection prompt:


What is your favorite quote?



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Theodore Roosevelt:

"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming, but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly."


—Lindsey McAlarnen, MD

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Pablo Picasso:

"Action is the foundational key to all success."


—Cassandra L. Wright, Staff

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Sam Glenn:

"A sign you have a positive workplace culture is laughter. Just listen to how much laughter there is where you work. Laughter is a very good sign of positivity. You can work hard and still laugh and enjoy your workday more."


—Cheryl Knapp, Staff

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JRR Tolkien:

"Not all those who wander are lost."


—Tammy Hosch, Staff

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Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.:

"We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools."


—Tammy Hosch, Staff

For this week's reflection prompt, please answer the following question:


If you were a baseball player, what would your walk up

music be?



Share Your Reflection

New Academic Medicine Innovation Report


MedMoth Storytelling program receives grant



Congratulations to the MedMoth Storytelling program for receiving a grant from the Charles E. Kubly Foundation.

New Academic Medicine Innovation Report


REACH: A Required Curriculum to Foster the Well-Being of Medical Students




In this Academic Medicine Innovation Report, Drs. Cassie Ferguson, Tavinder Ark and Adina Kalet of the Kern Institute describe the REACH curriculum (Recognize, Empathize, Allow, Care, Hold each other up), a required, longitudinal well-being curriculum for first- and second-year medical students at the Medical College of Wisconsin designed to prepare them for the emotional life of being a physician. 


Read Article Here

Wisconsin Medical Journal Seeks Applicants for Editor-in-Chief


The Wisconsin Medical Journal (WMJ) is seeking candidates to serve as its next Editor-in-Chief. The WMJ is an indexed, peer-reviewed journal published through a collaboration between the Medical College of Wisconsin and the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. 
The EIC will serve a three-year term, with the potential for renewal. Previous experience as an editor or deputy/associate editor is preferred, as is prior editorial board experience. This is a volunteer position that averages 4 to 6 hours per week and will commence in June 2022.

The deadline for applications is May 13, 2022.
Learn More and Apply

May Kaleidoscope Forum

Multi-Generational Workplace: Exploring Challenges and Opportunities


Traditionalists, Baby Boomers, Gen Xers, Millennials and Gen Zers oh my! We are currently in a unique position where we could have as many as five generations working in one workplace at the same time. How do you effectively communicate across the board to each group?

Please join us as we explore and identify what motivates each group, best approaches to communicate and engage, and discuss how each generation best gives and receives information. 



May 19, 2022

Virtual via Zoom

12:00 - 1:00 pm CT


Register Now
Register Now
The Doctor as a Humanist DASH 6th Symposium: Humanism in Surgery

Fabrice Jotterand, PhD and Clara Bosco will be leading a plenary session entitled The Wise Surgeon in the Age of Artificial Intelligence at The Doctor as a Humanist DASH 6th Symposium: Humanism in Surgery, a hybrid event.



May 20, 2022
Hybrid Event  

Learn More and Register


Academic Medicine Call For Papers


Academic Medicine is seeking original submissions for their Letters to the Editor feature from medical students, residents, fellows, and trainees in other health professions on the topic of a transformative moment in your professional journey.


The editors will be looking for letters that go beyond describing an event to reflect meaningfully on how the experience affected your professional identity formation. In other words, a successful letter will not simply tell us what happened, but will also illuminate the role of that experience in shaping your identity as a health care professional. We expect you to use your personal experience to illustrate the point, but the purpose of the letter should be to communicate a broader issue or idea that has relevance for others throughout academic medicine. Submissions that are strictly narrative will not be considered for publication. Authors wishing to submit a strictly narrative piece should explore the journal’s Teaching and Learning Moments feature as an option.


Submissions will be accepted between 5/23/2022 and 5/27/22 only.


Learn More and Submit
Join us
KICS Journal Club with Dr. Margaret Chisolm


KICS journal club is an opportunity to discuss some of the latest, influential, and/or thought-provoking articles in medical education with the authors who wrote them. It is an opportunity to learn about new ideas, methodologies, assessments, and strategies for publishing in medical education.

Dr. Margaret Chisolm will be doing an experiential Visual Thinking Strategies mini-session and discussing her article How Visual Arts Based Education Can Promote Clinical Excellence.

Dr. Chisolm the vice chair for education and a professor of psychiatry and behavior sciences and medicine at Johns Hopkins University and the author of From Survive to Thrive: Living your best life with mental illness.


June 8, 2022
via Zoom
12:15 pm - 1:00 pm CT  
Join Live Here
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Please Join Us

KINETIC³ Graduation Celebration



Please join the live (via Zoom) KINETIC³ Graduation Celebration as we recognize the contributions and accomplishments of these outstanding educators who successfully completed either the Excellence in Teaching or Medical Education Research Tracks


This celebration will highlight the graduates' character, caring, and curiosity through:

  • Teaching Pearls and Words of Wisdom provided by the Excellence in Teaching Track 
  • Scholarly work and Research Outcomes provided by the Medical Education Researcher Track 



We hope you will join us to recognize these outstanding accomplishments!




June 8, 2022

via Zoom

3:00 pm - 5:00 pm CT  

RSVP Here
Read the April 21 Issue Here
The Transformational Times publishes weekly, delivering stories of hope, character and resilience to our virtual community.
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