Because of My Father, Yin and Yang

Because of My Father

Because of My Father

When you lose a parent during childhood, it effects just about everything you become.  Decisions about life naturally stem from enduring this trauma.  Some try to form families early and replace that which they feel has been lost.  Others spurn close connections and create a wall so firm that no on else can encroach.  An attempt to protect against pain.  Because of my father I have become so many things.  Whether healthy or not no longer matters.  I am a collection of disparate feelings.  A reaction.  Splayed along the years of being the yin, the equal and opposite to my father’s yang.

His death and my life.

Intertwined

Becoming a Doctor

Because of my father I became a doctor.  Childhood memories of white lab coats, stethoscopes, and pen lights.  A room full of gadgets.  An answering machine chocked with messages from those needing help.  Doctors, and administrators, and patients.  Tons and tons of patients.

Before my father died I wanted to be just like him.  And after he died, that’s what I became.

There was no obstacle that could hold me back.  The learning disability that hampered my early development disappeared.  The shy, unconfident, wiry child afraid of his own shadow and unsure of everything.

But not this.

My destiny returning from sea on the ripples of a wave.  Pushed violently by happenstance.

Hospice and Palliative Care

Because of my father I professionally surrounded myself with death.  My first experience as a medical student spent volunteering in the local hospice.  I not only chose internal medicine but gravitated to the elderly.  The critically ill.  The dying.

I futilely tried to recreate my childhood and then inject some modicum of control.  As the doctor I could ease the pain and suffering.  I could prepare families, and be there with the orders for pain medication when the  discomfort came.

I could somehow take what had been foisted upon me cruelly and turn it into a situation of my making.  A world in which I wasn’t the victim.

And this brought me happiness.  Because somewhere in there it stopped being about me, and became about helping people.  The art of medicine.  Maybe my beginnings were auspicious, but my intentions now held true.

I no longer had to protect myself.

I had the power to help protect others.

Half Retired

And because of my father I am going to let go of half my practice.  I am going to half retire.  Because his death at the age of forty can’t help but remind me that life is fleeting.  Not every road is endless.  In fact some are much more finite than others.

I cannot continue to immerse myself in activities that no longer give me joy.  What would my poor father say?

Life is too short to be unhappy!

I didn’t die for you to be unhappy! 

Yet leaving my profession is like letting go of the part of myself that is most like him.  Is there any yin without yang?

Because of My Father

Yin and Yang

Yin and Yang (/jɪn/ and /jɑːŋ, jæŋ/; Chinese: yīnyáng, lit. “dark-bright”, “negative-positive”) describes how seemingly opposite or contrary forces may actually be complementary, interconnected, and interdependent in the natural world, and how they may give rise to each other as they interrelate to one another.

My father and I.

Death and doctoring.

Work and retirement.

Yin and Yang.

 

Doc G

A doctor who discovered the FI community but still struggling with RE.

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11 Responses

  1. E says:

    Your father with his 40 years, did great work. Including the gifts he gave you. What great influence he had to propel you on your chosen path of profession. And your own innate senses , which has guided you towards balancing your own inner yin/ yang. Congrats on the arrival to a launching pad and daring to want, More!
    ( PS – very relatable : my dad , and mom who had passed over 35 years ago , on this date 9-15, and I are intertwined as well. It has propelled the trajectory of my life in similar , yet different ways )

  2. E says:

    One more thing, guess we will be hearing all about your adventures in retirement in upcoming posts!
    Looking forward to it!

  3. Gasem says:

    Notice the eye in each symbol, opposite in color. Contained in the black (death) is the seed of white (life). Contained in a life is the seed of death. The two combine and oscillate almost like a sine wave, a renewal, like the phoenix, like a harmony, no discord, always in perpetual resolution.

  4. Xrayvsn says:

    Both of us have had similar stories and paths because of the death of our fathers who were both physicians. As I am fast approaching the age my dad died (50 (I was 14), it really drives home how early he was taken away. If I died in 3 years like he did, most of the things I have put off wanting to do (like extensive travel) will likely not be done and my bucket list will most likely be 3/4 full.

    He was the inspiration for my FIRE journey as well which I chronicled in a post on my blog of the same title:

    https://xrayvsn.com/2018/06/26/my-inspiration-for-fire/

    It is amazing what kind of influence someone can have on your life even through that way too short interaction. You should be proud of what you have become and achieved and know that your father would be proud (I would like to think the same with mine).

    In the end I think both of us are going to retire early from medicine because of the direct effect of our father’s early demise. It highlighted how time is precious, how much we have left is unknown, and that you can’t put off gratification forever because it may never come.

  5. Congrats on the decision doc! That’s a big deal!

  6. Lovely says:

    The reason I retired was I looked into the future and saw if I worked 4 more years, it would make maybe 1.5 mil difference is my life”s total accumulated income. It would make zero difference in my nest egg”s ability to sustain my life post retirement. At the 50% centile on the Monte Carlo bell curve I would have twice the money at age 92 than when I retired I retired. At the 10% centile I would have 3/4 at age 92 of what I retired with. That extra 4 years would have been a complete waste of time. All I would have done was incur 4 more years of liability and then 4 more years for possible suits to be filed after I was into retirement. and 4 more years of deteriorating medical practice as we are marginalized and normalized in our decision making, not to mention the paperwork. A t some point you have to put aside risk aversion, believe in the projection and behave rationally. Running a hospice is good and necessary work. I have a couple friends who run hospice and I have a lot of respect for them. I know a lot of nurses and social work types who are involved and they are quite proud of the work they do, and my wife used to be on the board of one of our hospices so I”m familiar. Being a retired physician is totally legit but you won”t even be a retired physician, you will be a hospice director. You loose no status to your community or family, continue to be a model to your children, and do valuable work, you have plenty of dough. I don”t quite get the angst involved. https://www.vetbizresourcecenter.com/

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