4.18.2014

Honduras

I've been meaning to write this post for a long stinkin time, since spring break ended to be exacted. For having a relatively easy semester, the last few weeks sure have push some of my buttons! This week alone, I've been averaging 14 hours school days. Between clincals, make up work, class and SI, I've barely had time to sleep (okay, i never give up my sleep, but i've been giving up everything else!)

But on to Honduras…

I had the incredible opportunity to travel to the beautiful country of Honduras for spring break with Global Brigades: Medical. Global Brigades is an organization that works to improve the quality of life for people in rural Honduras among other countries. There are 7 different brigades: medical, dental, public health, water, business, architecture, and one more I cannot remember. Each brigade works together to help make these people live sustainable, just too awesome. The brigade I went on was Medical and it was the neatest experience. The group arrived in the capital, Tegucigalpa, and immediately got in our buses and headed to the compound, Posada Azul. The compound was basically in the middle of nowhere and completely breathtakingly gorgeous. Mountains (like monster mountains you never want to have to climb, or drive up for that matter…) were in every direction. The only downside to this beautiful place was the stairs…all 150 of them. Definitely a workout. Tow other schools were staying at Posada Azul at the same time, UC Irvine and UCSD. I even met some tri delta sisters from USCD! We ate first thing because lunch was definitely missed in our travels.

All day, the first full day, was spent sorting medications. I almost forgot to mention, we brought over all the medications for our brigade in our luggage. I would have loved to see security look at my bag with 10 bottles of vitamins, 10 bottles of beta-iodine, 2,000 bandaids, and 20 rolls of gauze! So I got a little pharmacy experience and I'm not going to lie, it made me pretty glad I didn't pursue my short lived dreams of becoming a pharmacists. I started recognizing the Spanish versions of all the drugs I learned about in pharmacology last semester. The dots were connecting!

Day 2 we woke up before the sun and headed out to Santa Cruz, our brigade community. The drive was about two hours of bumpy, twisty, scary roads but the bus driver Mario made sure to get us there alive all week. The line of people was probably at least 100 people long when we arrived to the school to set up shop. It took a little to get rolling on that first day but once we did, whew! I spent the morning in the gyno rotation, and I think I'll pass on that rotation next time haha The afternoon was a little more intense. I was in triage. It was myself, another girl (who thankfully spoke a little spanish!) and our translator, Adrian. Thank goodness for those translators! Me and Ailon made a great team, she had the Spanish part down for the most part and I could identify what medical type things and drugs they were trying to say. Not too mention all week I majorly brushed up on my manual blood pressures. I thing triage was definitely my favorite part of the week, I even got to come back the next day and do it again! The second time, I had to get a little more confident in my Spanish because I didn't really have a choice! After we got back to camp, it took all I had to stay awake for dinner, I think I passed out by 9!

The second day was just as exhausting. I spent the morning in data informatics. The whole purpose of the data informatics system is too get all the people into some sort of medical record. It helps the powers that be keep track of everyone and also identify trends in medical problems. Day 3 was my busiest day by far. I spent the morning in the pharmacy. Basically how it worked was the pharmacist set up all these suitcases all around the room and a volunteer would bring us the prescription lists and we would be responsible for deciphering the incredibly impossible handwriting of the doctors (especially Dr. Belt…) and get everything necessary before giving it to the pharmacist to check and distribute. I don't think I sat down once! The afternoon was my favorite (I know, every things my favorite). I was in physician's consultation. I sat with one of the Honduran doctors (she even spoke English too!). She would talk with the patient and figure out what was going on, then turn around and explain everything to me. We even saw a lady with Cushing's which was neat. Halfway through the afternoon, we saw a 16 month old little boy who the doctor diagnosed with pneumonia. The little guy looked just miserable, he was coughing so much he couldn't breath. The mom said he couldn't sleep, he had a fever, and he was dripping sweat. It was obviously a sort of serious situation but we just had to do the best we could with what we had. The doctor decided the best thing to do would be to administered an extend breathing treatment to help little man's oxygen. Poor thing was fighting it so hard he fell asleep after 20 minutes of screaming and thrashing around. Before he fell asleep though, he wrapped his little hand around my finger and it made my heart melt. I didn't even think twice when the doctor asked me to stay with the mom and help hold the mask and keep little man calm. It was one of the moments I hadn't realized I needed, that made me realize without a doubt I'm doing what I should with my life. Throughout the 3 days, our brigade saw 880 patients…yep 880.

The last day our brigade had the opportunity to have a "holistic model day" in which we helped with another brigade's project. A two hour drive later, we arrived in El Canton to help with the construction of a community health center. After 3 hours of lugging 200 pound wood beams onto a roof, I thought I was dying. I thought I was going to have it easier after lunch by helping with the trench digging but let me tell ya, that was just as hard! That day was some of the most back breaking work I have ever helped with, props to all y'all construction peeps!
The gals



Sweet little melissa

Triage Day 1: Killin' it with Ailon


Day 2

The best bunk mate

Just being all technological

My view every morning..

Killing it in the Pharmacy

One of the best doctors I've interacted with

All hail mighty translators

Such sweet boys


My little man

Just a little USCD delta lovin'

bus selfless for the win #blessed

Good ole Dr. Belt

The group!

Masters of the wood pile


Overall, it was yet another trip of a lifetime. I know I would go back in a heartbeat if I ever get the chance! Honduras, you were too good to me.










3.18.2014

Crawling to the Finish Line

Okay it may not be the finish line exactly, but I am crawling towards Spring Break. Four more days, and ya know what? I think I'll make it!

Since I'm trying to catch up on this whole blogging thing, this might be a little scatterbrained (but, then again, whats new?)

Three weeks, start to finish, I can officially down with my thesis proposal! The weight that was lifted off my shoulders, I'm talking a freaking elephant, was a pretty euphoric feeling. The moment I pressed submit for my funding grant, I could see the confetti flying inside my brain, there were even those party poppers! I can't say I know a whole lot about congestive heart failure now, but hopefully give me a year and at least I might know something. Speaking of nursing, I learned how to start an IV last week! I'm taking volunteers for people to practice on..just kidding (well sort of). I'm sure the entire universe will hear about the first IV I start on an actual person...

Last Thursday was a great day to be an Arkansas Tri Delta! We had our annual Pancake Pigout philanthropy dinner, with all the proceeds (the pancakes were donated!!) going to the precious little kiddos at St. Jude. One of our cooks had to leave for the night so yours truly even flipped a few flapjacks! My first batch definitely didn't make the cut, but I got the hang out it after a few flips. The highlight of the night came when I finally got my chance to be Dolphy the Dolphin (and no that's not the mascots real name, I just felt like it needed a name). I climbed into the mascot suit and shook my fin like there was no tomorrow! I can't say being a mascot was necessarily on my bucket list but it is now (and crossed off I might add)

This weekend was a much needed break. I got to head on down to Little Rock to hang out with the brothers. Even Matt was off from her surgery rotation! We took the little nuggets to the zoo for the new baby tigers' welcome home party! I think I might have even had more fun then Marshall. The joys of staying in a gluten free household, Jason's Deli and P.F. Changs, um yum. Of course we couldn't not celebrate St. Patty's Day so we added a little food coloring to some champagne and voila, green drinks! I finally got to see Frozen, a perk of staying with parents of small children. I even got a few hours to be a total granola and try out my new hammock in the backyard! Overall, a great weekend, of course it's always great when I get to see my family.

A little blurp, I'm going to Honduras for Spring Break! I'm going with an organization called Global Medical Brigades. Basically, along with about 30 other students, we'll travel with some doctors, dentists, and pharmacists to rural Honduras and provide medical care to those who would not otherwise have it. Now this definitely has been on my bucket list!!!! I can't wait, I will for sure share when I get back.

Also coming up when I get back, BIRTHDAY PALOOZA!!!!! The big 2-1 is right around the corner!







3.17.2014

Mmmm Mmmm Chicken

I bet you'd think this post was going to be about chicken by the title, hate to break it to you, but its not. It's more about the embodiment of a chicken, specifically a chicken with it's head cut off (a little morbid if you ask me). Picture it, me running around like a chicken with its head cut off (don't worry, I still had my head). That has been me for the past few weeks, hence the lack of blogging, or sleeping, or reading, or (insert any action here). Crawling towards spring break is an understatement!


I've been cruising along all semester than all of a sudden WHAM! So long free time! It all began with a snow day. Sounds great, right? Yes it was fantastic and much needed but a definite productivity suck. Not to mention it was the 10th snow day of the semester (tuition money hard at work!). A test I had got moved to the end of the week so everything was peachy (of course, I conveniently forgot I had another test on the same day). Then came the whole process of trying to figure out how to be in two classes at the exact same time (both were mandatory of course). After hours of emailing my teachers and researching how to acquire a time-turner device, one of my teachers decided to cancel skills lab-whew another crisis averted. Class ended up being super awesome, who knew an interdisciplinary healthcare class would be my favorite class this semester? I guess it's not hard to compete with "Nursing Research." Wednesday was when things started to snowball. I had 5 hours of skills lab, two tests to study for (and no time), and I promised a friend I'd go to a basketball game. Of course that is when I should have been a smart and stayed in to study, but the game rocked so I'm over it. Then came the day I never want to relive again…. It started with 4 hours of skills lab (during which I passed out so thats cool), then a random honors college meeting, then a race against the clock to get the Reidster from daycare by 6 (I may or may not have ignored just a few traffic laws) (ps, I got him at 5:59, BOOM), then a trip to halfway to fort smith to drop Reid off turned into a trip basically to Fort Smith, then came the hilariously weird situation of having to have a phone interview for my NSLC job in the parking lot of a gas station (I can hardly drive without getting distracted, much less drive and write). Back to Fayetteville by 8:30, just in time to stay up for hours studying for my two tests. Not  happy campers putting it lightly! Needless to say by Friday, I was exhausted, with no time for a nap (it's a rough life, I know). I had the chance to volunteer with one of my favorite organizations that Friday night, rEcess. It's basically a parents night out program for parents who have children with special needs. One of my favorite nights of the month for sure. It always puts it into perspective that, yes, my week may have been colossally sucky, but I brought a lot of that stress on myself. Some people have way more on their plate than they ever could have wanted, but they make it through, and so can I. And if playing with parachutes and trains and dolls doesn't make you happy, then you're crazy.

Before I go try to harness what minimal productivity I have left for the day, here's a little photo recap

A little baseball game fun

The house does look gorgeous in the snow, but I'm still over it



Fayetteville does have some of the coolest sunsets

basketball game with the gals!

1.19.2014

Taking on the Windy (and I mean very windy) City

I feel like I've conquered the world. I made it through 7 hours of airport starvation, a blizzard in Pittsburgh, and the literal/actual tundra (aka Chicago). What a Christmas Break.

My little adventure began with a trip to make the familia rounds in Virginia. Of course I forgot to eat breakfast before we left at an oh so early 5:30 only to find out our plane was going to be delayed because of fog. How delayed you ask? SEVEN HOURS, yes folks, I spent 7 hours in the fort smith airport. Hangry does not even begin to describe my emotions by the time the plane got to Atlanta. After that minor mishap, the next week or so was spent visiting, catching up, and getting into all kinds of shenanigans with some of the best family and friends. I even got to spend a crazy few days with my second family, the Crocketts, during which I found my newfound love for the show Moonshiners (trust me, just watch it and you'll be hooked). I even watched a UFC fight while I was there, who woulda thought? It was so nice to reconnect with all the people I don't see near enough.

On to da next..

After leaving my parents at the airport in Atlanta, I made my way to Pittsburgh to meet up with one of my NSLC gals. Blaken picked me up at the airport and of course it snowed from the time I arrived to the time I left. We walked around in the freezing blizzard cold to check out some of Pitt before my official first visit to small town Pennsylvania. After a day of so of hanging out at Blakens, we took a train (yes, a train) from tiny town pennsylvania all the way to Chicago. Just my luck, the train kept getting delayed, but we finally made it into Chicago, even at the same time as Alli! NSLC break: Chicago edition had just begun!

The weather in Chicago was cold. I mean ice cold. No colder than ice cold. The windows in the hotel room were iced over the entire time we were there…on the inside. At one point the wind chill was down to a mere -50 degrees. Yes, such a temperature exists, and let me tell ya, I never want to experience it again! A little cold weather couldn't stop us girls from doing a little shopping. Of course we hit up the cliche Bean and the Sears Tower in between stores. We even finished our first day with some delightful gluten free pizza.

The second day turned out to be even more adventurous when two of the guys we worked with, who live in Chicago, came in to see us. It literally felt just like we were in San Fran. The boys followed us around shopping and we always took the longest way to get anywhere. Where else would we end up on a freezing, blizzarding Sunday night but the Shed Aquarium. We even got to see a dolphin show from the side of the tank. I don't even want to mention the face-numbing walk to get a taxi…through the snow…into the wind…in -25 degree weather…yeah.

The last day was spent laying around and watching trashy tv all day, a perfect end to a perfect weekend. Except, oh wait, IT WAS SO COLD ALL FLIGHTS WERE CANCELLED. Thankfully my dad worked some of his airline magic and got me on a flight the afternoon of when i was supposed to leave. Of course then I turned down a seat on an earlier flight because I already checked my bag on the later flight. Only to get home and find out my bag went on the earlier flight…dumb.
sista sista

me and momma being cute

weirdo dolls

love this picture, love us

momma geisel


Sears Tower


being hams

how many cold people can we fit in a taxi?

I think Marshall would have liked this penguin

Everyone, I know the pope

NSLC break: chicago

bundled up like crazy people