Hitting the Wall

“The spirit, the will to win, and the will to excel are the things that endure. These qualities are so much more important than the events that occur.”  ~ Vince Lombardi

 

I have discovered a new talent! I am fantastic at letting long-term goals gently slip into unaccomplished oblivion.

Give me a one-and-done, maybe month-long project (reporting anyone? 😉 and I will deliver results. Easy peasy lemon squeezey. However, it is hard to do those daily things that are never done. Eating right, yoga, scripture study, blog posting … you get the idea.

So brace yourself for the following announcement.

Are you braced?

Today marks the 38th consecutive day that I have started my morning with a yoga practice and scripture study!

Now before you start applauding this measly little accomplishment, I have a bigger point than a disgusting display of self-admiration.

One late night, I ran into a med student friend at the bus stop. He/she was at the ragged end of a long day of studying.

I was at the almost-end of a 3-hour, late-night grocery run/ missed-bus extravaganza from hell. With frozen chicken slime and berry juice dripping from my five bags of melting groceries, I was one short fuze away from a meltdown myself.

What I wanted to scream was, “Why the flip are we doing this?!”

What came out was a sugary, “Hello! How are you?”

After a few mellow complaints about how the course load is just crazy this term and a couple questions about how my night was going, my bus came.

Then, he/she asked if they could help carry my groceries to the bus. I was so thankful to have someone else there.

I really hope he/she doesn’t give up doing that little thing called relentless studying every day – even though sometimes they might wonder why the flip they are doing this craziness. The world needs good people to help carry groceries, lift the burden that comes with chronic disease and help others heal. Where exactly would Debbie Diabetic or Lynette Lymphoma be without a good, caring doctor?

It isn’t easy becoming a doctor. Often it seems like an exercise in insanity. But those daily things that we just don’t want to do anymore add up to one life-changing ability.

“Nothing great will ever be achieved without great mean, and men are great only if they are determined to be so.” Charles De Gaulle

Don’t give up him/she.

Categories: School | 1 Comment

Success

David’s post-graduate alma mater just got a nice feather in its cap Wednesday.

SGU announced that its US and Canadian medical students surpassed North American medical school students with a 94% first time pass rate on the United States Medical Licensing Examination Step 1.

The average US and Canadian student pass rate is 92%.

Way to go Dave! I would say his chances of passing are pretty darn good.

 

 

Categories: School, St. Georges | 2 Comments

Don’t Give the Crazy Man a Machete

As I peered out the window of the bus yesterday on my way home, I saw a stream of uniformed school children winding their way home as well. Some had umbrellas, others were just bracing themselves for the downpour that they knew was going to happen.

Suddenly, I saw a grizzled old man with a machete walk up to a group of young boys. I didn’t recognize any of the children, but the boy’s wide eyes when he saw that machete waved in his face were unforgettable. A group gathered and I wanted to leap from the bus and rip that man a new one!

But in the next instant, the bus had driven past and the scene was gone.

David has made me solemnly promise that I won’t jump in front of any machete wielding mad men while I am here.

But don’t think that I don’t have my eye on you Mr. Grizzly!

Categories: Adventure | 2 Comments

All the Children of the World

These are the sweet little ones that I get to hang out with each Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

 

Our Heavenly Father really does love and watch over all His children.

Categories: Grenada's Kids | 1 Comment

The Wild Ones

I woke up this morning with a  bunch of bruises, a scraped up elbow and a big smile on my face. The day before, I had trekked up to the Mt. Caramel waterfalls.

The Significant Others group had arranged for a taxi to take us up the winding road to Greenville, about a 45 minute drive. By the time we arrived, my head was spinning just a little from carsickness. But I think this was due more to my arched neck looking backwards chatting with friends the whole trip up.

When we finally arrived, we descended down a jungle path (found just to the right of the Mt. Caramel sign).

One 30 minute romp later, we found a tall waterfall and jumped in!

After one fabulously graceful fall on the slippery rocks by yours truly, and a few dunks in the waterfall, we set off again – this time in search of a rocky water slide.

A few rocky (and sometimes slimy) grips up the left side of the slide provided a path to the top. For the first time in years, I got to put my rock climbing knowledge to good use. Thanks Dad, it actually paid off!

The middle slide was slick, smooth and fun. But I had my sights set on the rapids off to the right.

Wheeeee!

Of course, I hit my foot on a rock at the bottom, giving my heel a nice purple splotch that looks like it’s gonna stick around for a while. Oh well, it was worth it.

After an afternoon of sliding and jumping and laughing, we hiked back – sore, wet and happy, belting out Disney songs the whole way back.

Thanks for a great day out!

Categories: Discovering Grenada, Mt Caramel | 1 Comment

Silly Goat

I asked a local boy what was up with all the goats around here.

“They are for pets,” he said with a straight face. “… Or for dinner”

His answer cracked me up!

This is Grenada.

Categories: Grenada | 1 Comment

We Aren’t in Kansas Anymore …

This was posted in the bathroom at the school gym:

 

This was posted outside the local gas station:

 

And … drumroll please … My personal favorite, found outside the bus terminal in town:

Don’t cuss! It might get you fined $25!

This is Grenada. Oy.

Categories: Grenada | 1 Comment

Invasion: 28 Years Later

I haven’t asked anyone about when it happened. The fresh-looking graffiti spattered across cinderblock walls tells me American invasion is still a touchy subject.
Our friends and family had essentially the same response when they heard we would be living in Grenada: “Oh, isn’t that the place where Reagan sent in the troops and evacuated the medical students?”
Yes, Grenada’s political situation was turbulent in 1983. Yes, a lot of people were killed. And yes, we are living here.
With the undertones of invasion clouding the international image of Grenada, it was a legitimate question to ask, “Will you be safe?”
As we drove away from the airport after landing in our new home, we saw an arched monument to those killed in the 1983 invasion.

American spy planes saw Grenadians and Cubans building that long landing strip as a launching point and military stronghold for this thing called Communism.
For me, it is difficult to understand the political climate of October 1983. The words “Communism” and “Castro” don’t inspire the same pulses of fear in me that they did in my parents. But this airstrip was saturated with those words, and that fear.
As if things weren’t tense enough, Maurice Bishop, the Prime Minister, was arrested in a coup. Today, Maurice Bishop is simply the name of the highway that leads to the medical school to me. In 1983, he was a big deal. Big enough that thousands took to the streets and broke him out of the house where he was being held, tied to a bed, starving and in his underwear. That was Bloody Wednesday.
They headed to Fort Fredrick, a military stronghold filled with medical supplies and ammunition. After gaining the fort, military coup supporters arrived and opened fire. Bodies flew from the fort’s cliff in an attempt to dodge the bullets. About 40 people died. Hundreds more were wounded. Then, a burst of the executioner’s machine gun fire against a cinderblock wall killed Bishop and seven of his closest allies. Seven days later, on October 25th, the American GIs landed and almost 1,000 medical students were tracked down and airlifted out.
Today, Grenada is a different place. SGU’s numbers have swelled to 5,000. I watch American students play with underprivileged kids, I laugh with my cleaning lady about our crazy lives and hear about fifth term students who help in the hospital. Locals on the bus tell me stories of Hurricane Ivan and their day-to-day work as SGU staff. Their friendliness makes me feel safe here. I can’t help but hope that they still want Americans in Grenada.
I don’t know what the locals think of the American Medical Student invasion of the 21st Century. But I do know that almost 28 years later, I see this on the walls.

Yes, mom and dad. We are safe here.

Categories: Adventure, Grenada | 8 Comments

A Beautiful Birthday

A bonfire, good friends and the sun setting over the beach made the perfect party decorations for our good friend Sara.

While the youngest among us hit her milestone 20th birthday on the 2oth of September, we still wanted an excuse to throw her the party of her dreams. I remember her saying during her first week here that her birthday party had to be a beach-side bonfire. She had great taste – Magazine Beach was stunning.

We grabbed some hot dogs, roasting sticks and some bug spray and headed to the water.  Stephanie, Laura and Sayeh made beautiful cakes that we set on improvised beach tables (our old Newcastle shipping crates).

While a little tricky at first, we got the fire going and roasted our weenies – and a few unsuspecting bark-dwelling ants at the same time. The bugs exacted their revenge though and ate us for their main course once the sun went down.

After sky turned dark, we packed up and headed out. Just above our heads, fireflies danced in the trees. It was the first time I had ever seen them and they were beautiful!

Happy birthday Sara! We are so lucky to call you our friend.

P.S. I started that fire. Five matches. Green and rain soaked wood. No Lighter Fluid. Bam.

Categories: Beach, Birthday, Magazine Beach | Comments Off on A Beautiful Birthday

Published

Many of you drifting along with me in the SGU wives boat might have seen this before. But for those who haven’t, I will direct you to The Graduate Wife where my piece on our crazy ride through medical school was posted today.

Keep your chins up. Wedded bliss can be found somewhere in between the sacrifices. I promise.

 

The Courage of Exploration

So there I was, sitting at a cheap, plywood table in Newcastle England, starting blankly into a MacBook, more than 3,000 miles away from where I wanted to be.

How did I get so far off course, you might ask? Well, pull up a chair and lend an ear. My story is one a graduate wife can appreciate.

Some of you might remember what it is like to have a great career. I can still hear the hum of the printing press and feel the thick tension in the air as I tried to get a newspaper out on deadline. As a reporter and editor for our local newspaper the days were 100 mile-per-hour marathons, both exhilarating and exhausting. Since I was a little girl I had dreamed of this career. Every extra-curricular activity, internship and my university education had been strategically designed to make me a super reporter.

In my early 20s, I had almost made it. I was an editor at the local paper. The job title, awards and offers proved that I had become a small town Lois Lane. But I was aiming higher.

Then I met my husband.

He was intelligent, ambitious, a Matt Damon look-alike, and I was in love. He was also applying for medical school.

After a year of dating and applying for schools, we were married. On our one month anniversary he was accepted to a medical program – out of the country. We would be moving once a year for the first four years of our marriage, or more if fellowships and residencies dictated.

Like a monkey wrench thrown into the cogs of a printing press, my dreams came to a grinding halt. For this next season of our lives it would either have to be his career or mine on the chopping block – we couldn’t do both. With a few tears, I carefully packed up our unopened wedding gifts, cleaned off my desk and moved to England. I doggedly looked for a job. Anything. Sadly, there were no jobs there in newsroom administration, especially for a transient who would stick around for less than a year. This foreigner couldn’t make headway in the reporting business either – I didn’t know a bobby from a bodge.

Do you ever feel resentment for the sacrifices you have been asked to make?

My bitter tears and empty days alone in a foreign country were poison to my budding marriage. I knew I needed to find an antidote.

A wise comedian, who also found himself 3,000 miles from where he wanted to be, once said, “There are few things more liberating in this life than having your worst fear realized.” Conan O’Brien might have been speaking to graduating academics at Dartmouth, but his words resonated with me. He continues:

“I went to college with many people who prided themselves on knowing exactly who they were and exactly where they were going. At Harvard, five different guys in my class told me that they would one day be President of the United States. Four of them were later killed in motel shoot-outs. The other one briefly hosted Blues Clues, before dying senselessly in yet another motel shoot-out. Your path at 22 will not necessarily be your path at 32 or 42. One’s dream is constantly evolving, rising and falling, changing course.”

As a newly-minted graduate wife, change was my only constant and adaptation my only antidote.

Somewhere in that foreign London fog of change and hopelessness, I started trying new things. I explored. I blogged. I taught myself how to design a website. I adapted.

Fredrick Nietzsche famously said “Whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.” But what he failed to stress is that it almost kills you. The loneliness, the disrupted career path and the stress in my marriage almost killed me. But for those who are stuck in the middle of that mire, I promise that on the other end of your effort there is peace.

My blank stare into that MacBook on that plywood table in that cold, dreary place turned into a journey of exploration. But only because I made it so. Conan was right – there is nothing more exhilarating than having your life flipped on its head and, through your own sheer force of will, flipping it right side up again. When you finally straighten things out, your dreams might look a little different. But because you were the one to do the changing, somehow those new dreams are alright.

Sacrifice became what I made it. It was still painful, but only as painful as I would allow it to be between the bouts of blogging and exploring.

We have survived our second move now and are tripping blissfully and blindly into year three of marriage and year two of his late night, blood-shot eye studying. We have learned that those who adapt, survive. I am a survivor.

What strategies have you found successful in your transition to a graduate wife?

Categories: Adapting | 1 Comment