Transformational Times

Words of Hope, Character & Resilience from our Virtual Community

Friday, May 26, 2023

In This Issue:

Guest Director's Corner


Perspective/Opinion

Poetry Corner

  • Memorial Day, by Michael Anania

Call For Submissions!


Transformational Times will have another parent issue this year around Fathers Day. We are looking for a variety of submissions ranging from untraditional families, advice, what you wish you knew, or anything else folks might like to share around parenting. If you are interested, please reach out to the email below.

Reach Out

What is your favorite movie and why?

Share Here
LinkedIn Share via LinkedIn
Add me to the T. Times mailing list

Guest Director's Corner


Memorial Day: A time to remember and reflect 



By Michael Erdmann, MD


In this Memorial Day essay, Zablocki VAMC Chief of Staff Michael Erdmann, MD reminds us of the history and importance of this holiday that honors the Soldiers who sacrificed everything for the rest of us... 

 

Memorial Day has its roots dating back to May 1, 1865, when more than 1,000 people gathered to honor their dead, including many African Americans recently freed after the Confederate Army surrendered three weeks earlier. On May 5, 1868, General John A. Logan called for a day of remembrance later that month. The 30th of May 1868 was designated for decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of our country; the day was called “Decoration Day.” Decoration Day was honored on May 30th of each year thereafter, although the name was changed to Memorial Day in 1880s. It became an official government holiday observed on the last Monday of May beginning in 1971. 

Continue Reading

Perspective/Opinion



“He did his job. It took a toll on him and his family.”



By Billie Kubly



Two close friends and MCW/Marquette School of Medicine alumni were drafted to serve their country during the Vietnam War. Orthopaedic surgeon Mike Kubly, MD, was sent to Vietnam. The other, Fuller McBride, MD, an OB/Gyn, was assigned to a stateside military hospital. (See companion piece in this issue of the Transformational Times by Fuller McBride’s son, Michael McBride, MD).

 

Bille Kubly, the widow of Mike Kubly, MD, remembers the experience of watching her husband being sent overseas and how his time working in the war zone changed him ...

 

 

Our family holds Veterans in high regard. My father was in World War I, and my three brothers-in-law served in World War II. My husband, Mike Kubly, was drafted for the Vietnam War in January of 1966.

 

Mike had just started his first year of orthopaedic surgery residency in Milwaukee working with Drs. Walter P. Blount and Albert C. Schmidt; one of the best programs in the country. At the time , we had four children. The youngest was two; the oldest was seven. We had just moved back from Atlanta, where Mike had completed his internship.

Continue Reading

Perspective/Opinion


Psychiatrist Veteran reflects on the real meaning of Memorial Day





By Michael McBride, MD, MS, CDR U.S. Navy Reserves, LTC U.S. Army Reserves 





Dr. McBride cared for Soldiers during two military deployments in Iraq, one in Afghanistan, and two in Germany. He shares thoughts about Memorial Day and remembers the toll that military service took on his father and his father’s friends during the War in Vietnam. He remembers a devastating loss with which his unit grappled and passes along important lessons every medical student should understand as they care for Veterans...

 

 

Memorial Day is upon us and, for most of our community, it represents the start of summer with parades, ball games, picnics, family gatherings, and celebrations to mark the holiday. It was only when I joined the Army that I learned the real meaning of the day. And my work as a psychiatrist at the Milwaukee Veterans Affairs Medical Center has driven this awareness to a deeper level.

 

In the Veteran community, Memorial Day is the saddest day of the year -- an anniversary to remember those service members who have died, especially those who died while still wearing the uniform. I no longer say, “Happy Memorial Day” to a Veteran, as this would be equivalent to telling someone to “…have a happy funeral.” 

Continue Reading

Perspective/Opinion



Four Questions with Arch J. Johnston



Arch J. Johnston was interviewed by Transformational Times editor, Kathlyn Fletcher, MD...



Arch J. Johnston, BSN, is a Marine Corps Veteran, a nurse at the Zablocki VA Medical Center, and a highly-regarded member of the care team. In this reflection, he discusses where he finds meaning while teaching and caring for Veterans.


When you were working as a floor nurse, the medical students and residents loved working with you. What is it about your approach to trainees that makes them so comfortable?


Tell us about a memorable moment with a medical student or resident.


What is one thing that you want all health professions students/residents to know about caring for Veterans? 


How long have you been at VA? What has kept you at VA for so long?

Continue Reading

Perspective/Opinion




Stronger together



By Joe Rouse





The U.S. Army core values are loyalty, duty, respect, selfless service, honor, integrity, and personal courage. However, it is vital to understand these values as more than just something they make you chant while you exercise before the sun comes up every morning. In my experience, the true meaning can become distorted as it passes down the chain of command, like in a game of telephone. Let me tell you the message I received and how I decoded it back to the original significance.

 

I had always wanted to become a doctor but I come from a financially disadvantaged background, so I had to make my own way. After high school, I joined the Army as a medic and I truly found my passion for biology and helping people, which gave me the motivation to end up in my current PhD program studying infectious diseases. I was also a paratrooper in the 82nd Airborne Division and I quickly learned that this position came with a certain level of prestige that was generations in the making. 

Continue Reading
LinkedIn Share via LinkedIn
KI Medical Education Matters Podcast
KI MedEd Blog
Past Issues
Contact Us
Kern Bookstore

Memorial Day

By Michael Anania

 

 

It is easily forgotten, year to

year, exactly where the plot is,

though the place is entirely familiar—

a willow tree by a curving roadway

sweeping black asphalt with tender leaves;

 

damp grass strewn with flower boxes,

canvas chairs, darkskinned old ladies

circling in draped black crepe family stones,

fingers cramped red at the knuckles, discolored

nails, fresh soil for new plants, old rosaries;

 

such fingers kneading the damp earth gently down

on new roots, black humus caught in grey hair

brushed back, and the single waterfaucet,

birdlike upon its grey pipe stem,

a stream opening at its foot.

 

We know the stories that are told,

by starts and stops, by bent men at strange joy

regarding the precise enactments of their own

gesturing. And among the women there will be

a naming of families, a counting off, an ordering.

 

The morning may be brilliant; the season

is one of brilliances—sunlight through

the fountained willow behind us, its splayed

shadow spreading westward, our shadows westward,

irregular across damp grass, the close-set stones.

 

It may be that since our walk there is faltering,

moving in careful steps around snow-on-the-mountain,

bluebells and zebragrass toward that place

between the willow and the waterfaucet, the way

is lost, that we have no practiced step there,

and walking, our own sway and balance, fails us.


Michael Anania, “Memorial Day” from Selected Poems. 1994 Asphodel Press/Acorn Alliance.

Submit a Poem for Next Week

Inaugural William Choi Lectureship

Humility, Creativity, Allyship, and Justice

Rita Charon, MD, PhD


Friday, June 2, 2023

8:00am - 9:00am

Bolger Auditorium- H1400 & Zoom



The Department of Medicine and Kern Institute present the William Choi Lecture Series. This series aims to establish an annual visiting lectureship focusing on the intersection between medicine and the humanities. The inaugural speaker for this series is Dr. Rita Charon.


Rita Charon is a general internist and literary scholar who originated the field of narrative medicine. She is Professor and Founding Chair of the Department of Medical Humanities and Ethics and Professor of Medicine at Columbia University. Her research focuses on the consequences of narrative medicine practice, narrative medicine pedagogy, and health care team effectiveness. She has lectured and served as Visiting Professor at many medical schools and universities in the US and abroad, teaching narrative medicine theory and practice.

KICS Medical Education Journal Club 


Friday, June 14, 2023

12:15pm - 1:00pm

Zoom


Register to join us at our monthly Kern Institute Collaboration for Scholarship Medical Education Journal Club! Each month, we discuss recent medical education scholarship with its author for a lively, intimate conversation about the transformation of medical education. This month Dr. Anthony Artino the Associate Dean for Evaluation and Education Research at George Washington University will be discussing how to develop effective surveys for medical education research.

Register Here
The Transformational Times publishes weekly, delivering stories of hope, character and resilience to our virtual community.

Jeff Fritz, PhDEditor-in-Chief



Editorial Board: 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


Not getting our newsletters? Sign-up today!
Mailing List Sign-up
Facebook  Twitter  Linkedin  Instagram