Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 4 | Page 10

FOR BETTER, FOR WORSE Valerie Briones-Pryor, MD I ’m a polygamist. Though I have been with my husband, Matthew, for 12 years, I have been with my other spouse for much longer. It’s a relationship that spans most of my lifetime and whose depth is sometimes beyond understanding. Yet, like my marriage to Matthew, my relationship with my other spouse continues to grow, deepen and change with time. Please meet my spouse: Medicine. I was introduced to Medicine by my parents at a very early age, even before high school. Looking back, it may even have been an arranged marriage. But I was young, I wanted to explore the world, and not be committed to anyone or anything. So, through high school and college, I played the field. I had some casual relationships with Music, Education – nothing too serious. Medicine always hung around though, never too obvious, but always enough to catch my notice. By junior year, I was seeing Medicine more and more. I started volunteering in a local ER and spent the summer in a primary care clinic. By senior year, I was ready to show Medicine that I was committed; I took the MCAT and applied to medical school. I asked 8 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE my professors to vouch that I was truly devoted to Medicine. I even wrote a personal statement on why Medicine should choose me back. Then it finally happened…I got engaged! That acceptance letter to medical school was so beautiful. I remember showing it off and talking about it constantly to family and friends. Our engagement was quick, but the ceremony was beautiful. That white coat fit me like a glove! It was such a memorable and exciting day, standing there in front of my family, saying the Hippocratic Oath, making my commitment to Medicine official. When I put that stethoscope around my neck, I knew that Medicine and I were together, for better, for worse, till death do us part. Unfortunately, our honeymoon was short. That first year, I spent a lot of time in the classroom and in the anatomy lab and Medicine just wasn’t around as much as I wished. We would see one another in passing, as when learning physical exams on patients. I could hear Medicine talking in the halls when the residents and students would walk past, but overall, it was as though we were living separate lives. We saw a bit more of each other during second year when I shadowed a few physicians, but those first two years were tough. I wasn’t quite sure what Medicine still felt about me. Third year was much better (kind of). Medicine and I spent nearly