Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 3 | Page 28

DOCTORS’ LOUNGE A DISCERNMENT Martin Huecker, MD W e each spent five minutes eating one raisin. Didactics Conference in Emergency Medicine typically involves a few PowerPoint presentations and gruesome clinical photos. At any time, 75 percent of my residents might be focused on the presenter. Others are thinking about active patients in the ED, sick ones from the night before, checking phones for FOAMed posts aligning with the lecture, or of course power-napping. But this time, for 5 minutes, 100 percent of the room shared a focal point of attention, a raisin. Once the raisin was mindfully consumed, Dr. Jon B Klein led us through another five minutes of mindfulness meditation focused on breathing. Isolated in the conference room behind the Emergency Department, we separated ourselves from the chaos of the ED, research projects, procedure logging and interpersonal concerns. Recently in GLMS, Dr. Couch introduced the topic of mindfulness in the framework of medical students and their focus on patients. I have always loved the analogy of looking to the bottom of still versus choppy water. When we are attempting to be present with patients, we can only discern what is relevant in that encounter if we minimize distractions. In the same way, we must discern what is important in life in order to be present and find meaning in what we do every day. The Buddh