What Is Your Passion?

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By  |  May 29, 2014 | 

Every spring, I wonder, “What I was thinking?”  Spring is the run-up to our Global Health Course at the University of Minnesota, which starts in early May. It has taken myself and others hundreds of hours of planning, meetings, paperwork, phone calls, and e-mails to pull this off.  We are a small program considering the scope of what we do, and we rely heavily on compassionate and interested experts from around the world.  Anything that takes this long to plan begs the question if all of the time input is worthwhile. But shortly after it begins in early May, it becomes clear.

Our course is made up of about 2/3 resident physicians across internal medicine, pediatrics, med-peds, family medicine, and emergency medicine, as well as interested attending physicians or providers from the local and national community. Their passion for service and inquiry, in addition to their life experiences are an inspiration. There are so many amazing people out there!  To watch the course participants interact and share their experiences and knowledge with each other, in addition to witnessing them learn and experience new things through their collective, hands-on learning experience truly gives me a major boost and keeps me going through the doldrums of the administrative work required to organize such a course. I do have an academic appointment at the University of Minnesota, but like most people working in academic medicine, I spend a lot more than just the “allotted” time working on it.  Global health work, both service and teaching, has been my avocation, and I am fortunate that it has become part of my vocation as well.

Don’t get me wrong – I love my job in hospital medicine. I enjoy taking care of patients at all stages of illness, and I like the mix of teaching and non-teaching work that I do while I am on service.  I am drawn to inpatient clinical service, and for me it is far more than a “day job” (often both literally and figuratively). At the same time, I think it is very important for all of us to have passions outside of work that keep us motivated, help us decompress from drudgery or rough days, and provide us opportunity to impact the world around us.

Avocations and passions need not be clinically oriented or tied to volunteerism.  Maybe your passion is exercise, travel, reading, or writing.  Perhaps what keeps you going is working with your hands, like remodeling your house.  Or maybe you work with your community, school, or faith community.

In medical school and residency, it is easy to get stuck in a rut of keeping your head down and focusing on the endgame. You can emerge from residency ready to be a physician, but there is a risk of losing yourself in the process.  Avocations and passions remind us of the type of person we would like to be.  I sometimes think back to the beginning of medical school 15 years ago and ask myself what 25 year-old me would think of 40 year-old me.  Certainly “Younger Brett” would have had a hard time predicting my current mix of work and life, or the impact that family and illness could have.  But for me, the things that I have done outside of clinical work have helped me focus even more on humanity, humility, and social justice.  These are some of the things that I believe help me connect better with my patients and be a better doctor.

So, tell me. What is your passion?  I hope you are following it.

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2 Comments

  1. Brigitte May 30, 2014 at 12:11 pm - Reply

    As cliched as it sounds, my passion is my kids. And then next would be travel. There is also travel with my kids which ends up being a mix of the best and worst combination of the two.

    Like your description of the global health course, there is a lot of “scut work” to parenting, which needs to be done, but then there is the fun and engaging part – going on field trips, nerf dart battles and “deep thought” questions to ponder with them – that makes the grunt work all worth it. So too, the stress and details of travel planning and the discomforts of being away from home are all part of getting to experience the breathtaking panorama, the thought provoking historical monument.

    It is funny that it is so obvious that one needs to stop and relish these moments and yet it is so hard to let yourself off from the daily grind to do so. “But, I still have to…….”

    Love this post, Brett. I wish I had taken the course when I had the chance. One of those “should have made the time” moments, I guess.

  2. Brett HP May 31, 2014 at 8:50 pm - Reply

    Thanks Brigs. You know – the course is now mostly online at this point, easier for busy folks to take. Think about it and join us at the U of MN, or in 2016 in Thailand for only two weeks of hands on. The rest is online!

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About the Author: Brett Hendel-Paterson

Dr. Brett Hendel-Paterson wears several varied professional hats. He is board-certified in internal medicine, pediatrics, and palliative care. He is a med/peds and palliative care hospitalist at HealthPartners Regions Hospital in St. Paul, MN. He also has tropical medicine training with a CTropMed® from the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (www.astmh.org), where he is a counselor with the clinical group. He is an assistant professor of internal medicine and global health at the University of Minnesota (www.globalhealth.umn.edu), and he is a codirector of the University of Minnesota Global Health Course. His professional passions and interests span medical education, palliative care, health disparities, internal medicine, tropical/travel medicine, and immigrant/refugee health. When he is not attending he is active working with the global health track in the University of Minnesota internal medicine residency. He received his undergraduate degree from Grinnell College, attending the University of Minnesota-Duluth for medical school, and the University of Minnesota for his med/peds residency. Outside work, he spends his time chasing down his two sons in elementary school, enjoying the outdoors, exercising, cooking, and music. His recent diagnosis of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia in the summer of 2013 has required some significant work/life rebalancing and has underscored the importance of caring for patients in an empathic and kind manner in times when many are feeling particularly vulnerable.

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