Thursday, January 31, 2008

Howdy all the way from Seattle!

Howdy everyone! Well, let me preface by saying I ALREADY HATE THIS PLACE! It has been a really bumpy ride so far here and I've only been here since Saturday. Yep, it's been not so great. I still don't have a car. Hopefully it will be here soon. I take the PANCE this Saturday, oh joy. I've been walking 8 blocks to the closest Starbucks everyday to study. It's been quite interesting there. The same hippies come in every single day at their usual time. One acts a bit Schiz-ish. He makes multiple trips into Starbucks throughout the day buying each time a tall Chai tea and then proceeds to drink it, smoke a cig, and talk to himself (or someone whom he THINKS he's talking to) outside. It's quite entertaining to watch him talk his own head off outside. He's always making quirky faces at me, too. I'm not impressed. Another dude totally creeps me out. Every single day he staggers in there looking dirty, exhausted, hungover, high, etc and he rolls all of his joints in the store. I want so much to laugh at these weird people, but I'm scared of them. :) That's another thing, the natives here are WEIRD. They are definitely a different breed than what I'm used to seeing. This will certainly be a cultural experience for me. I've been sheltered in the south for far too long I suppose.

Basically, I'm really lonely right now. I don't have a car, which makes it quite difficult to get around. I'm having to rely on my fellow PA colleagues to get me where I need to go. They tell me NOT to take the buses. My cooky neighbor is...well...A FREAK! She's a hippie lesbian with trashy hippie bumper stickers all over her car. I love it when Freddie poops in her yard. :)

Alrighty, well, I've bored y'all enough. I'm so sick of studying. I'll be glad when my test is over Saturday night. I don't even start my test until 2:30pm. Ugh. That was the only time available. The only good thing I have going for me so far is that my employer put me on the payroll starting this past Monday so they're paying me to study this week at my house or where ever. Can't complain.

Take care! Keep in touch. Miss y'all. :(

Amanda

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Did you get an email, part deux?

Alright, I think I set-up a mailing list with Yahoo Groups that will send all of us an email when I post this.

This is a test of the Posting Broadcast System. This is only a test. In the event of an actual posting, there would be something worth reading rather than this meaningless drivel.

Love, Richard

Monday, January 28, 2008

Hey from Colorado

Hey guys

Just thought I'd send along a little update. I made it to Grand Junction on Sunday (Wichita Friday night, Denver Saturday night). The movers and all my stuff are hanging out in Denver or so I hear. There are chain restrictions along I-70 and they dont want to chance things, so they're postponing delivery till this weekend. Guess it'll be my lovely old sleeping bag and pillow on the floor the rest of the week:( On a brighter note, there is a Jim N Nicks in Denver. Just opened up within the week. I saw it and had to check it out. It is just the same as the ones in Birmingham!! Well, except for the fact that they had more biscuits. They had people walking around handing them out. Totally made my night!! Well my time's about out on the library computer (movers have mine). Hope everyone is doing well.

Tammy

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Did you get an email?

Hey everyone,

I think I set-up our blog so that we will each get an email whenever it is updated with a new post. This means you should get an email when I post this.

This should be an easier way to keep up with the blog and what's happening with everyone in the class...

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Poker

Well, I mostly want to post something to move Richard's 4 page long blog down the page. Haha, jk. Anyway, for those still in the Birmingham area (or if you wanna take a road trip), we are playing a little Texas Hold 'Em at my place on Thursday night. I think 6:00 pm will be the start time unless we have to wait on Bruno to get off work. Everybody is welcome, and even if you don't wanna play you can still come and hang out with Whitney.

If you need directions to my place just email me . I look forward to seeing everyone that can come. I guess if you are planning on coming if you will reply to this or call or email me so we can have a basic idea of how many are playing. BYOB and ttyl.

Jody

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

My Graduation Speech

Here is the text of the graduation speech. A few of you asked me to post it, so here are my notes... I may have improvised some from this original, but hope you enjoy it!

Graduation Speech

First of all, on behalf of my fellow graduates, I want to thank our friends and our family for all of their support and encouragement for the last 2 and ½ years. Our friends, our parents, our husbands, our wives, and, for a few of us, our children have all sacrificed a lot of time and money for us and invested a lot in us while we pursued our goal of becoming Physician Assistants, and we are very grateful for all of you. The least we can do tonight is to give you a round of applause for all you’ve done for us (start clapping).
Now, if you can continue that support for another month or so while we study for and take the national certification exam, we will be eternally grateful!

I also want to thank all of our professors, our preceptors, and the staff of the Surgical Physician Assistant Program for all of your instruction, your advice, your guidance, your hard work in our classes, in our clinical rotations, and behind the scenes for us over the last 27 months. If I could have all of the faculty, the preceptors that are here tonight, and the support staff please stand…
We know you do what you do because you love to do it and we are grateful for everything you’ve done for us!

No more pencils, no more books, no more Mr. Harrelson’s dirty looks… about getting our paperwork turned in and our Typhon entries done…
Speaking of Typhon, no more entire weekends spent logging what I like to call “composite” patient encounters into Typhon…
No more pencils, no more books, no more Dr. Huechtker’s “interesting”(?) jokes… The kind where you think, “Should I laugh… or be embarrassed?”
No more pencils, no more books, no more Mr. Drace’s 500 slide power point presentations with 1000 animated emoticons, and, sadly, no more Drace-isms, of which my personal favorite was, “I gave Toradol out like it was candy, y’all!”
No more pencils, no more books, no more of everyone’s favorite assignment: Professor Swatzell’s “pretend you have a disease for a day and write about it your experience in a journal…”
No more pencils, no more books, no more Professor Ridings wonderful demonstrations and his grim prognostications… “Yeah, there’s really nothing we can do for these people… They die.”
No more pencils, no more books, no more Dr. Jennings raving about Duke… No more Jennings in your face, on your case, calling you out in class, rolling on the floor like a baby (literally), and taking every single opportunity to push you further than you ever wanted to go - usually over the edge of sanity…
And finally, no more pencils, no more books, no more Dr. Rapp’s… well, no more Dr. Rapp. Actually, Dr. Rapp was planning to join us tonight via teleconference but we had “technical difficulties.” I heard that someone from UAB is at Dr. Rapp’s house right now, in the closet, working on the problem...


We have had a lot of fun together over the last 27 months. And we made it to the finish line, although after Dr. Rapp’s final exam with 180 questions in two hours and after our Gross Anatomy exams, I know some of us doubted we would. But we did, and we learned a lot along the way.
We learned a lot, of course, about surgery, anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, pathology, and all the other –ologies so necessary to becoming a Physician Assistant, but we learned a lot outside the classroom, too.
I remember before I started PA school, I expected UAB to be a tightly integrated system of education where all the professors were alike and taught the same, tested the same, all following some brilliant master plan that worked like clockwork to spit out fully-formed PAs. Then we started classes and I realized, there is no clockwork… These professors are absolutely nothing alike! Each professor taught differently, tested differently (some from test to test), they acted differently, gave different answers to the same questions… I mean, we have a very diverse faculty from a wide range of backgrounds.
Then, as we got to know one another as students, I realized how different all of us were, too…
People from small towns in Mississippi and Alabama (not too many people have ever heard of Madrid or Centre), people from cites like Baltimore, Boston, St. Louis, Indianapolis, people from Virginia, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, and even South Dakota. People in their very early twenties to people in the thirties (and beyond)…
All of us brought our different values, experiences, beliefs and perspectives together and we were forced to literally share our lives together for 2 and ½ years. We were together for hours a day every day going through this intense, difficult process together, and I think we learned, over time, to appreciate or at least respect the different perspectives each of us brought to the table.
Of course, all of us are pretty headstrong, and we had our share of conflict, our share of differences, especially when the stress was at all-time highs (Who’s bucking this bronco, right Allison?), but we learned over time to work together and learned to listen to one another, even if, at times, we didn’t like one another very much!
Looking back on it now, I think learning from dramatically different professors, doing clinical rotations with a wide range of preceptors, and learning alongside people with radically different perspectives taught us all something, something we may not even realize we have learned.
Recently, I was reading a speech given by Dr. Eugene Stead, the “father” of the PA profession, who started the first PA program at, yes, Dr. Jennings, at Duke in 1965. In that speech, Dr. Stead said that in that first class, what they were looking for in a student was someone who could listen to what others were saying, who could take criticism and still “stand their ground” about things that were important.
I think he said this because he realized that the role of a PA is to connect and interact with patients, and nurses and physicians. The PA has to be able to listen to and respect different perspectives from every angle and still “stand their ground” and do what’s best for the patient, regardless of what pressures may exist from the other perspectives in the interaction.
And I think what we learned, whether we realize it or not, in the 2 and ½ years we spent together, was to do exactly what Dr. Stead said he wanted in those first PAs, listen to and respect the different perspectives, make a decision about what’s best, and then stand our ground to see it through.
I hope that as we graduate and go on to practice medicine, we will remember the time we had together and what we learned from one another and make a real difference in the lives of the people we care for.
Thank you for the opportunity to share what I learned from all of you in the time we had together in PA school.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Boards...

I think that there have been several to attack the PANCE ( Scott, Chitty, Kris, Jody?) I tip my hat to your ambitious early offensive. Best of luck to those taking them in the coming weeks...

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Welcome!

Hello everyone and welcome to the UAB PA Class of 2007 Blog! I don't really know anything about blogging, so my wonderful, internet-savvy wife set all this up for us. Anyway, how we use this blog will pretty much be up to all of us, so you can create postings of text, photos, etc. by becoming an "author" (follow the instructions in the email I sent) or you can just comment on other's postings without becoming an author.

I will eventually post the graduation video that Lauren and Kari put together, as well as Jenning's powerpoint, but in the meantime, enjoy the photos and if you have some photos to share, become an "author" and post them!

Stay in touch, everyone!

Dicky Dub

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Graduation

{ Click here for more graduation photos. }