Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 3 | Page 18

ON CALL Arun K. Gadre, MD, FACS M ay 31, 2012, started as an uneventful day. I arrived that afternoon at the Detroit Metropolitan Airport on a smaller aircraft from Louisville. Following a long walk over wide polished floors and a couple of escalators, I waited patiently for Delta Flight DL627 to depart. I looked at my boarding pass and passport one more time, and made sure my travel documents were in order. I was headed to the 9th International Conference on Cholesteatoma and Ear Surgery in Nagasaki, Japan, slated for June 3-7. I was excited that two papers had been accepted for podium presentation. The famous Australian otologist, Dr. Bruce Black, had invited me to participate in a panel discussion on ossiculoplasty. I again looked through references, making sure I had memorized the statistics and wondered what questions I would receive from the audience. Working in fits and starts on my beat-up laptop, I made some last minute formatting changes, and hoped fervently that the device would not crash. Would the videos work? Had I made a duplicate presentation on the thumb drive? Where had I kept it? Why was I so stupid not to have stored all of this on the Cloud, so that it could be accessed from anywhere in the world? It was my first trip to Japan. I looked through my PowerPoint presentations one more time. I looked at my wristwatch; two more hours to go before they started the boarding process at 6:35 pm. I walked around looking at open stores - the one with magazines, newspapers, endless packets of 16 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE lifesavers and gummy bears, sodas, gum, and organic bananas were the busiest (apart from the bars). I watched people walking in and out of the McDonald's restaurant across from the gate. The L’Octaine en Provence store competed for customers with the Swarowski store. I wondered who bought these things at any airport. On the other side, a lone airport employee was standing under the wing gassing up the plane, and preparing it for that long transpacific flight. Soon enough people began arriving at the gate. It was the melting-pot that is America; different hues, different shades, different features, different nationalities. In that throng of anticipating humans, a stocky gentleman of eastern extraction with a floppy hat sat hurriedly on the seat across from me. He seemed to be in his 60s, accompanied by a lady companion who appeared to be less than half his age. The couple seemed tired, but otherwise did not seem out of place. But - something about the man’s demeanor worried me. Beads of perspiration were forming on his forehead as he wiped them off with a well-worn handkerchief. His lady companion, who seemed to be tending to him, brought him a bottle of water. He squirmed in his seat as he took a gulp of water and licked his dry lips with his newly moistened tongue. Was the poor fellow ill? Or perhaps he had traveled from a far off place, and he just looked tired and worn. I consciously wiped any thoughts about him from my mind and dug my head into an old humorous book I had read before; George Mikes’ "The Land of the Rising Yen." Zone 1 was announced and I dutifully took my place in exit seat 29B. I popped an aspirin and readied myself for the nearly 16 hour flight that would carry us in a wide arc across the vast expanse