|
Learning is career-long journey
I rewrote my original column for this month. Originally it was written as a blueprint to prepare for the credentialing processes of the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners. But two things happened: First DVM Newsmagazine did not receive the copy, and I recently finished reading two books, "Walking Through Adversity" by Rob Bryant and Mahatma Gandhi's Autobiography (for the sixth time). Those two issue kindled in me the urge to rewrite the following article in first person and as a bit of a testimonial. Some readers do not like that format, and to those I apologize. Elusive time Recently a client was in with a bulldog that had a cauda equina crisis, as she recalled, "...it was last March". We looked it up; her previous visit was August of 1999. Not a few months ago, but nearly three years ago. This is a message that today is the tomorrow we have been planning. It is time to look back at a career to see what happened. Personally, my professional goal was to be conscientious, to learn from life's daily clinical lessons, to be better today than I was yesterday and be better tomorrow than I am today. A very simple and basic daily plan. I set out to build a foundation, expand it, experience it, learn those lessons of clinical medicine and human development. Now that nearly 25 years have passed, I realize that a career and long term planning must be developed and broken into baby steps. Baby steps With our complex lifestyles it is getting increasingly difficult to find time to specifically put long term projects on the calendar. The idea of adding another duty to our day to address long term goals and planning can set us back, as living day-to-day is a challenge. The idea is to approach each day with an "empty cup," to consider each day like a prayer on a rosary chain, and each day to take "baby steps" on the way to learning larger issues and moving toward our long term dream. We can learn clinical, professional, and communications skills one day at a time - using today's events as the teacher - if we put that "spin" on our daily schedule. Determining mettle Only those who have accomplished little to nothing with their professional or personal life can claim to have never slipped, stumbled, struggled or just plain goofed. Many a father has shared with children: "The only mistake in life is never to have made any mistakes." It has been said, that "life is not fair", but "it is not what happens to you but what you do with what happens to you that determines one's mettle." If we make our daily life a pattern of taking one day at a time (with an ear trained on our inner voice), if we live each day as a lesson, consider each day a prayer on the rosary, a penny in a change jar, a piece of a larger jig saw puzzle, then as the time quickly slips by we will reach our long-term goals because we broke a 10-year plan into 3,650 daily steps. Or a 20-year plan into 7,300 daily steps. Lifestyle adaptation The essence is then that we live the long term plan one day at a time; simply it becomes a lifestyle. It is the lifestyle adaptation that makes us who and what we are, and what we will become. If we wish to be "physically fit" in 20 years, do something daily for 90 percent of the 7,300 days and one will be fit in 20 years. If we wish to be a "good, conscientious practitioner in 20 years" practice conscientiously each of the 7,300 days in between and you will reach your goal. It becomes a lifestyle. Tackling goals Lots of questions have come my direction by folks seeking to study for and prepare to dive into the process to take the certifying test of the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners (ABVP). My message is this, one can achieve the ABVP certificate by putting together a lifestyle plan for about three years and live, experience and enjoy the process of putting together the data, information and skills needed to surpass the expectations of but one ABVP test. The hidden key to ABVP test success is that one's practice life and skills will grow and develop one day at a time by using the daily challenges of the clients, patients and clinical challenges you face each day. It is so much easier than "breaking out" an extra hour every day to read. Does practice ever get easier? I don't think so. I get stumped just as much on a daily basis as I did 25 years ago. But, I honestly admit the degree of difficulty of clinical and personal issues that are faced on a daily basis are much more challenging than 20 years ago. In fact, things that were difficult 15 years ago may be easy now, but I also know that the difficult challenges of clinical medicine today will be a whole bunch easier in five years. Yet in five years a whole new generation of challenges will be waiting. This means, to go through the ABVP process is to make a lifestyle commitment to study and learn good medicine. Clearly there is no way all of us will have all the data crammed into our heads to get all the answers correct, anymore than we make 100 percent accurate decisions in daily practice. So we make the ABVP certifying process a goal; a goal designed to make us "better generalists" in our species categories. Thus we use our daily generalist caseload as the teacher. The AVMA recognizes disciplined specialists, such as surgeons, internal medicine, and anesthesia that crosses species lines and species specialists - primarily the ABVP. The ABVP process focuses on species, such as avian, feline, canine, porcine, and food animal categories that cross the aforementioned discipline lines. So each day we do a little surgery, a little internal medicine and a little anesthesia in our chosen practice category. What does it mean to make a lifestyle adaptation? For those who have visited Northwest Animal Clinic & Hospital in Albuquerque, many will ask:, "Why do you have this and not that?" Or "Why don't you do this or that?" And the answer is simple: We consider all ideas, we are open to many new ideas, but some issues were in conflict with the day-to-day schedule and practice style needed for me to prepare for the next ABVP test. Cakewalk Once one passes the ABVP test we might think it will be a cakewalk to pass the next test - but recertifying veterinarians are just as likely to fail the species specialty test as new candidates. So, gosh I now have eight years left before I take my canine-feline tests again and so the preparation for the next test has already begun. Yet, with full personal knowledge, small animal medicine is my vocation, horses are my avocation. So many years ago, without really thinking about it, I made lifestyle changes to bolster my equine background, my equine foundation, all with the idea that I loved the daily stimulation of equine topics. Never really thinking that someday I might take the ABVP test for equine (until recently ABVP allowed a veterinarian to only take one species specialty test.) As it turns out, day-by-day, week-by-week, month-by-month the range and depth of my passion for the horse has grown-as one learns more about an interest the passion grows. Follow this lead, then you too, will be able to identify with the book, "Do What You Love and the Money Will Come." Next level Here are some thoughts do go to the "next" level of your passion.
The following additional tactics help.
And for the differential and rule out lists: NITSCOMP DH; neoplasia, infectious, toxic, structural, congenital, other, metabolic, parasitic, diet and husbandry.
We have reviewed the specifics in preparing for the professional lifestyle adjustments that must merge with your financial, recreational and personal life. Please go back and read the first part of the article again 7,300 baby steps is the easy way to get the job accomplished. Enjoy your career and achieve a long term goal like taking the ABVP test of your choice. |