Bedside manner and the birth of a blog

Here’s the scene. A renowned oncologist has a stage 4 Melanoma patient as a guest at one of his lectures. She stands before the class. A veritable sea of solemn faces sits behind the life-sucking glow of the laptops before them. The Dr. wants the students to ask his patient the hard questions. In the hopes of improving their future “bedside manner.”
The questions commence. The students are unenthusiastic. They speak in clinical terms. Their faces offer no glimpse of empathy, sympathy, or understanding. They view her with the same enthusiasm as a cadaver. After the third emotionless, flat question the patient turns on them. She challenges their affect. She challenges their humanity. She implores them to see a person, not a patient. In response to her impassioned words, a student flatly asked her how she’s feeling. She then goes off on them as the Dr. watches on in silent agreement.
“How am I feeling?” How are we feeling?” “We’re dying, that’s how we feel!”
“And another thing”, she implored. “When you talk to us try to stop looking so fucking terrified!”
End scene.

The Big C. My kind of show.
Due to my medical history, I cannot help but be very aware of death. I’m not obsessed morbidly. I don’t plan to go anytime soon. Nor, and most important, am I afraid of it. It’s quite simple, actually. I spent so much time sick that it was always there in front of me. So I got to know it.
There are positive takeaways from being mindful of death. It changes how you live, for starters. Facing your own mortality opens the door between “someday I will die” and “when I die”. Suddenly, it becomes a part of your thought process. I think about it from every angle, and I’ve made peace with almost all scenarios. I live with a legacy mindset, always conscious of how I will be remembered. I’m at peace with all of it.
With the exception of a Cancer diagnosis.

That is the appeal of The Big C. It is a brave, unflinching, and honest look at life while facing death. It has it all. Bucket lists, difficult conversations, clinical trials, and experimental medications. Emotions range wildly as we watch Cathy Jamison, played by the always delightful Laura Linney, endure the highs of small victories and the crushing depths of disappointments and setbacks. At the center of it all, she is simply trying to live a normal life, with some mortality-related improvements. I believe it beautifully portrays a loving family dealing with loss. They are slightly dysfunctional and are coping with losing a mother and wife. The true beauty is that the show gives equal treatment to the concerns of both the survivors and the patient.
For the sake of this post, I want to shift focus to the medical aspect. In particular, the challenges of maintaining patient dignity in treatment. That is why I led the story as I did.

I’m very familiar with the patient/Doctor dynamic. In particular, I am very in tune with tone-deaf doctors and Nurses. My experiences have been mostly positive. However, many patients feel like a number or a statistic. They don’t feel like people because Bedside manner isn’t stressed as it once was. How do I know? I was told this by one of my own Doctors.

While hospitalized in 2016 for excessive water retention due to a failed transplant, I was approached by my Nephrologist. He said,
“Bill, you’re going to be here for a few days. If you have the energy, would you do a favor for me?”
“Sure, I’ve got nothing else to do.”
He went on to explain that he had a team of students. By his assessment, they had poor bedside manner. He made quotation fingers as he said “Bedside manner”, so I pressed. He explained that they were very bright and gifted clinically. Still, he was very concerned about their lack of empathy when dealing with patients. I admired that he cared about this, but I was not surprised. After all, he was very good with me.
I asked him what he wanted from me. He explained that he wanted me to tell them my story. Which he knew all about, of course. He said I should not volunteer everything. He wanted me to let them “pull it out of me” due to my natural tendency to overshare. In return, he would give me a certificate for helping out. I was glad to do it.
2 hours later, my hospital bed was surrounded by Medical students. I made it hard on them. I made them pull out of me the things not on their chart. The challenges of being sick for years on end. The financial, marital, parental, and occupational challenges of Chronic illness. I told them as only I could. One of them was in tears at the end, and others were visibly shaken.
My Doctor would later tell me that I was the perfect choice for such a lesson.

Soon after, I was visited by friends. They immediately noticed the new Certificate of Appreciation on my table and asked about it. I shared the story. One of them said, “Brother, you need to start documenting this shit. Write a book, man.” I mentioned that I used to have a blog, maybe it was time to start a new one? The name of it hit me instantly.
Superman can’t find a phone booth. The meaning was simple. I had fight left in me, but I was too weak to find the strength to change into my bullet-proof costume.

This is the same blog, just renamed because eventually I did indeed find my Phone Booth.

People over patients. Bedside manner is everything.


The Quiet Strength of Resilience in Tough Times

Resilience isn’t dramatic.
It’s choosing life repeatedly,
even when joy feels borrowed,
And tomorrow feels unsure.

Anonymous

I saw this the other day while doom scrolling FB reels. There are a lot of gems of wisdom, tailored to your particular crisis on social media. In my case, the FB algorithm stepped it up to Yoda mode. Who am I to fight it?
I watch those reels because no matter the topic at hand. I never fail to glean some wisdom or useful nuggets that inspire me. By inspire me, I mean it gives me some general validation. It affirms the troubled traits bothering me at that moment.
This week’s troubling trait is Resilience. I’ve been thinking about it constantly.

If you have been reading, you know that I have been faced with yet another health challenge. Upon initial diagnosis, I was very concerned. The surgery is extensive and is followed by a long recovery. I wasn’t sure that I was up for it. While it goes against every fiber of my being, I thought my good run may be over. Consistent with the theme of “going against every fiber of my being”, I also did something I rarely do. I shared my dilemma with my close friends. I rarely share my struggles. I grew up figuring out shit all on my own. Upon hearing the news of my upcoming surgery, my friends were amazing, as to be expected. They were supportive in offering help in any way, and many shoulders were offered to lean on. I appreciated such offers.
The true takeaway was how many people commented on my past resilience, encouraging me to take inspiration from that. Then it occurred to me that that is what I am known for. I’m the guy known for never giving up and rewriting the narrative. Where was that guy?

Why wasn’t my initial reaction what it was when I’ve faced a health challenge before? I had to meditate on that for a few days. I had more questions than answers. That is why the above quote grabbed me so.
Here’s what I came up with. The choice to fight isn’t always out of vim and vigor or enthusiastic tenacity. Sometimes it is merely a choice. Not dramatic but instead pragmatic. The choice is, of course, living or ending it. A choice I have contemplated so very often of late.

I am not suicidal. I am merely dancing with the notion of being done. “Done” is a common topic of thought for many people in my situation. What situation is that?
Older. Plagued by physical maladies. Not financially secure. Finding myself not needed as I once was, and unwilling to insert myself into situations in order to change it. Having maximized my usefulness and in need of a purpose. Life has become a chore, and hope for it changing fades with each passing year. The ensuing tragedy of feeling this way is that suicide becomes less about being incapable of dealing with life. And instead, it becomes more about how willing you are to continue dealing.

Resilience isn’t dramatic. No, it’s a character trait. One that fades over time.
It’s choosing life repeatedly. Yes, because the alternative is less desirable. Not to mention the damage it does to those you leave behind.
Even when joy feels borrowed. There are moments when the only happy moments in my life are vicarious.
And tomorrow feels unsure. What makes me choose life is the hope that my future will be brighter, despite all indications to the contrary.

So I will fight this in my usual manner. I will reclaim my tenacity and beat this latest challenge. Not because I have a particular desire to achieve another victory over a medical foe. I want to stick around for a while to see what happens. I’ve been to enough parties to know that if you leave too soon, you will miss the good stuff. That will have to be a good enough reason to fight this battle. Being an enthusiastic participant in my own life is something I need to get back to as it is. I miss that guy.
That guy has been conspicuously absent for too long.

How do I overcome this stretch of existing and get back to my love of living?

Facing Heart Surgery: another challenge of my resilience

Well, I shared my news with some close friends as well as on here. I don’t know what my expectations were regarding reactions, but it’s out of the bag nonetheless. As my goal is always selflessness, I’m glad nobody is making a fuss. My family and friends are there for me and that’s all that matters. They’re processing it just fine. They are all offering their help and I’m doing what I always do: downplaying it. It’s not that I’m outright refusing help. I just don’t know what to do or say because I haven’t processed it yet.

I have vowed to be brutally honest in this space. I have gained a readership because I do not hold back. I put my vulnerabilities out there for consumption. That won’t end or change today. Here it is, at first I was scared. That’s natural, I think. I don’t embrace it, but I can accept it. I worry more about people seeing me scared than anything. It’s the reputation that follows me; I’m known for resilience. For taking every punch life has thrown at me and getting up each time. It’s all I have going for me.
But when I was told that I needed open-heart surgery, I was enduring a Cancer Scare. It occurred to me that I have met an opponent that I couldn’t overcome. All I could think about was the same 2 words, Four years.

4 years of uninterrupted good health. 4 years of getting back to living my life. 4 years of not being the “sick guy”. That’s the one that gets me, the “sick guy”. I was hoping that guy was gone forever. You know the sick guy. He’s the one who, whenever someone sees him, automatically gets the obligatory, “how are you feeling?” Now, don’t get me wrong, there is nothing wrong with people inquiring about my health. It’s kindness, awareness, sometimes sympathy but more often empathetic, all rolled into one. It exemplifies the best in people and I’m a staunch believer that people are good. But after a while, it stops being warm and fuzzy and begins to overshadow recovery. Since I was 42 years old, I have been the sick guy. I had a brief respite in 2011. During this time, I had my first transplant. I bounced back most spectacularly. I was back at work in 33 days. I was exercising, socially active, excelling at work, and truly enjoying my new life of saying YES. I almost got to the point where the “how are you feeling’s” stopped. Then the kidney failed and I was that guy again. 5 years later I got another shot. It was a great kidney. My body adapted to it so well. It was clear to all that it was not necessary to ask me how I felt. Anyone could see that I was doing great.
When the prostate issue arose, I was nervous but kept going. The news of the heart surgery, not so much. It’s a big surgery and a long recovery. It shook me a bit. After all, I can hope for but cannot have guarantees that I will be 100% after the surgery. And I’m sorry, but I’m trying to make up for much lost time. And I don’t want to break the run that I am on.
Despite not giving myself permission, I felt bad for myself for a few days. I feel compelled to go into detail, to fully convey the extent of my angst. It lasted days as I battled an increasingly common enemy, the urge to give up. I am/was/will continue to be very troubled that this enemy has established a foothold in my psyche. I can only attribute his presence to one simple fact, part of me just doesn’t want to do it anymore.
I am asked at every Physician appointment if A)I feel safe, and B)If I have suicidal ideations. I have been answering “YES” to part B. It leads to a conversation, of course. I am forced to explain that I don’t want to actively end my life. I just don’t care if something else does. As I said, it stems from just plain being done. My mind was allowing me to entertain a notion I have fought with every fiber in my body, giving up. The news that I received last week could have easily given more weight to the notion. In fact, it almost did.
Then I remembered who I was.

I’m the guy who has always smiled and given a thumbs-up for the camera when things were grim. I have a collection of photos taken in hospitals after my many surgeries. In every one of them, I am clearly thumbing my nose at what could have been. I am openly defying it. I’m the guy who reacts to recovery times like I do to GPS arrival times. I scoff and say, “I can beat that.” I’m the guy that says, “I’m good”, even when it is very clear that I am not.

Well, one week later, that guy is back. That pussy worried about surviving? Fuck that guy. I spoke to my dear friend Pedro recently. I told him that I am no longer scared. I am going to fight this as I have been, stubborn and confident. He calls me C Brown, named lovingly after my hero Charlie Brown. He knows and remembers when I don’t, that I got this. And I do. There really is only one choice here, to get through it. I’ve survived 100% of my worst days, my money is on me.

Now, where the hell is that football?