Monday, August 23, 2010

Shambles or perfection?

The Arctic ice is melting quickly.  Slow moving dark  waves creep ominously through large gaps between ice fragments in waters that used to be strictly contained by  solid ice. Next year’s ice will be even more fragile due to the heat absorbed by the black water.  How successful will humanity prove when starvation and water shortages are exacerbated by the catastrophic flooding and crop upheavals that could result?  What if the gulfstream turns the British Isles to ice?  Am I joining  legions of insane predicting that the end is near?  Or falling victim to a culture that awards undue credit to miserable pessimists?

“Our mission is not to see what lies dimly in the future but to do what lies clearly at hand.”

Annie found her way into my office today. I last saw her 2 years ago when she used her given name, “Fang” and spoke almost no English. She has long black hair, a girlish face and figure, and wears a spirited jacket over distressed jeans, polka dot socks and high heels.   She could easily pass for 20 even though she’s 35.  “I just want a check up. Nothing’s wrong,” she chirps. She has a thick Chinese accent but otherwiese surprisingly good English.  “How’s Samuel?” I ask about her husband after admiring photos of her 18 month old son.  She turns away from her i phone for the first time and faces the wall.  “Not well,” she chokes out. “Terrible. He passed away. “  I gasped.  I had never met her husband but had spoken to him several times.  Years ago, he meticulously arranged care for his Japanese wife by phone.  Then more recently he translated by phone for his younger Chinese wife. A successful Jewish American, he travelled for work and seemed to have an affinity for far eastern women and languages.

“What happened to him?”

“He had depression. He hurt himself.”  Luckily, Annie was seeing a Chinese speaking counselor and was thankfully looking forward to things like her son’s education.  Aside from trying to speak English with her son “since Samuel’s gone,” she seemed to be making good decisions.  I had another patient waiting as I drew her blood and finished her review of systems: “…and do you ever feel unsafe?”

“Oh yes,” she understood very clearly. “That’s why I want to move. A man in my neighborhood helped me feel better after Samuel died but he’s not a good person.  He knows where I live. He knows where my son goes to school. “  She had requested I test her for everything possible  during her exam. 

Later, a young French woman, Francoise,  said she wanted to drive straight through crowded downtown Bellevue streets without moving her steering wheel to end her own life. She stopped herself because her 3 young children were sitting in the back. Her children save her life every day as they’re the only reason she’s gotten out of bed for the past 3 months.  If only Samuel’s baby son  had the same power to  pull Samuel up.  Samuel spent 5 months of his brief time with his son in his pajamas in bed.

The privilege of trying to assist my patients sure saves me. I had to put the NYT editorial page aside quickly to get to work and I didn’t think about melting ice once all day. Because I’m in family practice,  I was able to diagnose Francoise’s bipolar type 2 with major depression during her baby’s vaccine appointment. It was gratifying to see Annie enjoying a cascade of photos of her  beautiful little boy knowing that I”ll follow up with her next week to make sure she has no sexually transmitted diseases and that Eastside Domestic Violence is helping  her escape an unsafe environment.

Samuel made a big mistake. But to avoid falling into his abyss, maybe we should stick to Hollywood gossip shows and Pets 101,  focus on  tasks at hand and try not to dwell on the overwhelming urgencies that  Paul Krugman and Thomas Friedman convincingly present.

Or we could always create a utopian piece of fiction. Found a good movie set in a happy  future: The Fourth Element.  And someone made a book recomendation: Stroke of Insight where a left brain stroke helped a neuroscientist achieve  the same goal:  Less analysis and more imagination.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Letting go

“You’re going to have to let us age,” my 72 year old mother-in-law directed me. Ouch. What a way to start a one week adventure in Guadalajara and Nueva Vallarta. Luckily, she went on to try yoga for the first time, conduct a cooking demonstration and go out late at night after early morning walks on the beach. She also reached new heights in expressing anger when she disagreed with my mother and my scrablle rules.

My own mother kept tugging us into the future. Mexican and Chinese husbands would be an asset…except marriage is such an outdated idea. And she correctly saw beauty in everything-the bus trip from Guadalajara was more beautiful and safer than a trip from Phoenix to San Diego. The coastline in Puerto Vallarta reminded her of the Amalfi coast in Italy. The pools overlooking the Pacific Ocean looked even more inviting than her pool at the beach. She could identify a lot of the palm trees and sea birds. We especially loved the frigrates which sat still on a large sculpture in PV. Also, the grand pedestrian boulevards in Guadalajara were lined with imposing buildings hundreds of years old. Fruit trees had plenty of breathing room in open air courtyards. Iris and I used well worn tricks in furtive scrabble games so as not to bother Carol. I forget which Mexican magic she attributed it to but my mother’s radiation burns healed quicker than expected.

How about letting Carol and Iris be ageless. That’s what I’d prefer for myself.  But letting kids go into adults is a great idea. Lauren will major in English and SHE will get her book published. Emily will major in business and figure where to go from there. I still want to help Summer study for the SATs …we’ll see if she lets me. We gave them our credit card last night and after hours in the mall, Lauren, Emily, Summer and their bag handler, Andy, returned with 6 large bags of new clothes and shoes for me from Bellevue Square. Their style is my casual and party style and Grandma and the Air Force provided my preferred work style. Lucky for me to have this guidance.

Eric and I biked  to HBs today where we met HB s parents Lilah(?) and Shel and enjoyed SeaFair for the first time. HB found the pilot’s frequency on his radio gadget (CB?) and we could hear the lead pilot. He actually hummed to keep 4-6 jets in tight formation, said “pull”  to coordinate their climb and calmly directed “smoke on” and “smoke off” during their 200 mph stunts over Lake Washington.  Focused practice that utilizes your talents makes the nearly impossible look easy. Summer runs like she’s competing for state in daily track and cross country practices.“Look out",” the lead pilot said amiably as 4 jets aimed straight at HB’s deck. “And up,” as they veered upwards at the last minute.  Lynelle could float a stunning painting or photo into existence as a child. But every single day she strives for photos that soar higher. “Hello down there,” the lead pilot greeted hundreds of land and water locked people beneath him. It felt like a  part of each of us  flew with them as all six pilots  rocketed straight up in formation and on hearing “delta break” showered out in their own directions.