Showing posts with label learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label learning. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Lifelong Learner.



5 PM. After rounds today. Looking up the answers to the many, many clinical questions I had. 

And still have.

That I don't or didn't know the answer to.






Don't believe what they tell you. No one ever knows everything.  

Ever.

Medical school lasts forever. Believe that.

***

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Top Ten: Things I've learned recently.

A real Real Housewife of Atlanta



I know. It's only Tuesday, but I've got a top ten in me.

Here's ten things I've learned recently--the importance of which are a matter of opinion. Use what you want, throw back the scraps.

#10  -- Check the pockets.



I learned that Crayola crayons like to hide in elementary and preschool pockets.  If you put said pockets into your washing machine and subsequently into you dryer, then it's a hot mess. Literally.

Yeah, so I learned to check the pockets of all those elementary school blue jeans. You should too.


#9  -- New uses for WD 40.



I learned that melted in Crayola crayon marks come out of clothing pretty darn good with a direct shot of WD 40.  The only caveat is that it smells exactly like WD 40 even after you've washed the garment.  But so what. As long as it doesn't have purple and orange blobs it doesn't matter if you smell like a mechanic!

#8  Blasphemy.



LSU won the game between them and Alabama on Saturday. In clinic yesterday, I decided to make some small talk and asked a resident who happens to be from Shreveport or Baton Rouge or somewhere down in cajun country "who won." You know. To show that I remembered that he was from that part of the country and all.

Epic fail! He looked at me like I had a horn growing from between my eyebrows. Kind of like this:

0_0

Then he said with a look of complete disgust, "LSU won, Dr. Manning."  Damn. My bad.

(I am certain that this will be reflected in my faculty evaluation.)



#7  -- del TACO.

Turns out that this is more than just a tex-mex specialty. It's also an acronym for "TRANSFUSION ASSOCIATED CARDIAC (or circulatory) OVERLOAD."

Who knew? (Not me.)

#6 -- Oh, de toilet!

One of my patients told me that (next to the kitchen table) the commode is THE best place to smoke cigarettes. The absolute best. She told me to "just ask any real smoker."

"The commode?"  I asked.

Her answer?

"Hell, you already got the matches in there so you half way there!"

0_o  


Um, yeah.

Matches? Um yeah. Matches preceded what YOU now call GLADE air freshener in your bathroom. Mmm hmmm. (And obviously some folks still don't see the need for any fancy plug-ins or sprays.)


#5  Encyclopedic knowledge.

"life in the South"


I just found out that there's a whole ENCYCLOPEDIA on "life in the South." Yep, sure is. I went with my friend and fellow Grady doctor Dominique C. to the North Carolina mountains for our residency retreat this past weekend. Right there in the foyer of the big log cabin was the ginormous encyclopedia of "life in the South."  I paused for a few moments to skim it and serendipitously landed on the "black life" part which was kind of interesting. Particularly because it seems like it was written during reconstruction (or at least at some point where saying "negroes" repeatedly was cool.)

Um yeah.


#4  Disturbing discovery.

Pre-Thriller Babies

I sent a last minute text on Friday to my first year medical student small group (Small Group Gamma.)  I asked them to join me for lunch and lucky me, they obliged. So over Thai food we are just a-laughing and a-talking about all things non-medical when the subject of Michael Jackson comes up.

"How old were you guys when 'Thriller' was released?"

*crickets*

"Um. . . Dr. M we weren't even born yet. It came out like four years before we were born."

Whaaaaaattt?????

Okay, so it turns out that all of my eight (ADULT) advisees were born either in or after the year that I graduated from high school! (!!!)  So in other words, when I was changing into my cheerleader uniform for the pep rally, they were getting a diaper change. Or when I was sneaking a kiss on the Varsity bus, they were turning somersaults in utero.

Damn.

See? These are the moments when you realize that you are a whooooole lot older than the people you're teaching and not nearly as cool as you think you are.

I think it's because in my head I always see myself as "youngish" until things like this come up. Kind of like the way I always see my parents as somewhere around the age of thirty-six and my grandmother around the age of fifty-five for perpetuity. Am I the only one who gets trapped in this kind of time warp?

Newsflash:  If the people who were born when you finished high school or college are old enough to be in medical school, that makes you old enough to be. . . . . .

. . . their extraordinarily cool and gainfully employed older sister. Yes. Exactly what you were thinking.

Don't let the youthful glow fool you--that lady could be your mom.

Mmmm hmmm.

#3  I now pronounce you.

One of my favorite residents speaks both English and Arabic.  Yesterday he gave me a really cool Arabic lesson at the end of clinic that was quite eye-opening. (I'd say this was definitely a pre-pre-pre-K Arabic lesson at best, but then you have to realize who the student was.)

Anyways. I learned that some of the most simple inflections in the voice can COMPLETELY change the meaning of a word in Arabic. Like big time.  So this resident's name is Mahmoud and he was teaching me how to say it properly in Arabic. It's kind of like saying MAH and then a teeny-tiny, breathy, almost indistinguishable sigh followed by MOOD.

MAH (mini-sigh) MOOD.  

Sometimes when people are trying to show off and demonstrate how Arabic-savvy they (think) they are, they add a gutteral sound to the first syllable. Just imagine that sound one makes when hocking up a large lougie from the throat.  Yeah, like that.

Well. If you add the lougie-sound on accident, then you've just inserted a completed different letter and, when it comes to my resident's name, changing that letter changes the entire meaning of the word. Like entirely. Kind of like meaning to say "halo" but saying "harlot" instead. Mmm hmmm. Just like that.

So. Here's what I learned--don't go throwing around fancy pseudo-Arabic pronunciations of words if you don't know what the hell you're doing. (Or else you might get punched in the nose for talking about somebody's mama without realizing it.)

#2  Target couture.

I was looking in my closet yesterday and it became quite apparent to me that nearly 80% of my entire wardrobe came from Target. All the way down to the tights.

What can I say? I'm all about getting paper towels and a pashmina in the same checkout lane, baby!

#1  Keeping it real.

So I was watching the Real Atlanta Trainwreck Housewives the other day and came to this conclusion:

If they really followed around real housewives in Atlanta, it wouldn't be too exciting. Like at all. On second thought, I take that back--it all depends on what you find exciting. Yesterday before bath time, my boys wanted me to judge a stinky feet contest -- blindfolded. (Yes, I obliged --blindfold and all-- and Zachary won.)

Anyhoo. I've decided that blindfolded stinky feet smell-offs--combined with leftover spaghetti and homework at the kitchen table--wouldn't be nearly as good for ratings as this:

(click this image to see it in action.)

But.

I bet you NONE of these women can get Crayola stains out of Target clothing. Mmm hmmm. Now you tell me who's REAL?

****
Happy Tuesday, people.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Ninjas and Bullies.



Isaiah and I were reading a book the other day. He was reading unusually well this day, and didn't seem to be getting tripped up on the words that normally trip him up. Finally, he reached one word, looked at me and said,

"I had almost forgot that there was a ninja on the end of that word."

I pictured a ninja and wondered what he was talking about which, if you know any five-year-old boys, could be absolutely anything. "Excuse me?"

"Silent 'e' is a ninja, mom. Didn't ya know?"

"No, I didn't."

"Yeah, mom. It sneaks up on the vowels and changes them. Kinda like 'bossy r' does."

"Bossy r?"

"Yeah, mom. R is the bossiest letter in the alphabet. It bullies all the vowels. And she's just a consonant."

'Just a consonant?' .

"That 'r' is so bossy, Mommy! She's a booolly!" Zachary chimed in.

"Uhhh, okay," I chuckled.

Isaiah keeps reading. He then reaches the word "march."  He pauses for a few seconds, and then reads it no problem.

"Good job, bud," I said.

"Have you seen the music man sing about 'ch'?" he replied.

"No. . . not familiar with that one."

All of a sudden, Zachary jumps up, shakes his booty in that perfectly four-year-old way, and starts singing something I have never heard. I later learn that it's The 'ch' Song.

Yeah.

Silent 'e' the ninja. Bossy 'r' the consonant. And The 'ch' Song. Sigh. I can take no credit for any of it. I owe it all to the snow.

All of this crazy goodness is courtesy of the new and improved version of "The Electric Company" on PBS--the show that tortured my children all last week.

While I must admit that I do allow my children to watch some television, to help relieve myself of guilt, I try hard to limit it as much as possible. When I do limit it, it's to things on PBS Kids or movies of my choice.  During the big Atlanta snow week, it was hard to keep them from watching so much TV between snow play (and Zach didn't like the snow, remember?) so they were stuck watching repeats of PBS Kids shows.

Enter "The Electric Company."

I felt terribly guilty about all that TV until that moment. But now? I can honestly say that it has helped my son to pick up some new reading skills. So, I guess what I'm saying is that strategic television isn't so bad. In fact it might be good sometimes. And besides.  If Morgan Freeman and his old school version didn't ruin me, this Y2K upgrade can't be too bad, right?

Long before he drove Miss Daisy, he drove kids like me.

 Yes. I will continue to read to my kids, whip out the sight word flash cards and take them to the library, but on those days when this full time working mama is running out of gas?  I'll welcome a playdate with bossy 'r', music man, and ninja silent 'e' any time. (And if I can find it on YouTube, Morgan Freeman can come, too!)

Check these out for fun. . . .
"Silent 'e' is a ninja. . . ."



"The 'ch' song. . ."


". . . .and bossy 'r'!"


Oh yeah. . . .and, thanks to YouTube, I found Morgan, too. . . . just in case you want a blast from the past!