Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 5 | Page 39

could work hard enough to overcome any deficit. “I told her that if I followed her recommendation I couldn’t graduate on time, and I didn’t have the money to go to summer school. We went back and forth because she had to sign off on my classes. Finally she agreed but, before she did, she said, “I just want to let you know that I’ll see you before you get out of school.” I thought, “What did she mean by that?’” Mrs. Exum turned out to be one of the highest-ranked professors in the Biology department, one whom Dr. Giles would have to face over and over. “I thought ‘Oh my gosh,’ I just challenged one of the most important people in my life. I knew I was going to have to work really hard once I found out who she was, but I accepted the challenge. I had her classes four times I think, and I worked hard and got A’s.” In his junior year, Dr. Giles was passing her in the hallway when she called him over. “She said, ‘I want to apologize to you. You’ve taught me that you can’t judge an individual by where they’ve gone to school,’” recalled Dr. Giles. Mrs. Exum then asked if he’d be interested in being the president of the new honor society at TSU. He agreed, in exchange for a letter of recommendation to Meharry Medical College. While studying at TSU, Dr. Giles met his wife and future mother of his children, Bessie Rice. The two were married on July 7, 1979, in Chattanooga, Tenn., and soon had a son, Eugene Giles, Jr. He began at Meharry, and tuition, perhaps unsurprisingly, doubled between his freshman and sophomore years. To pay for school, he accepted a public health scholarship which required him to practice in an underserved area after graduation. He spent three years at Hubbard Hospital in Nashville and the Murfreesboro VA during Internal Medicine residency. Then the couple moved with their young son to Louisville, which had a qualifying public health location at Park Duvalle Community Health Center. The plan wasn’t to stay long. Dr. Giles had dreams of opening a practice back in his home state of Mississippi and even put down a deposit on a building. But just as they were planning to move, Bessie was offered a teaching job by the Louisville Board of Education. “I told her it didn’t make any sense for us to go to Mississippi having no jobs down there. She had a job and I can work with somebody, so let’s stay.” Their second child, Natasha, was born just a few months later. In the late 1980s, Dr. Giles worked for a few practices. But it wasn’t until he had a visit from his adopted father that he made the decision to strike out on his own. “My father came to visit while I was working. He took me outside, I’ll never forget. He asked me where my name was on the building. I said I was working for a friend of mine. He said, ‘There’s no such thing as a friend. Why are you working for someone making them rich when you can do the same thing yourself? You should be your own boss.’ And, he went back to Mississippi. But those words stuck with me. He reminded me that I have to walk through doors when they open.” Dr. Giles had received an offer about opening a practice on Dixie Highway but turned it down at the time, as he was happy where he was. A few years passed, and that thought of independence kept coming back. “One Saturday I was kind of down because I wasn’t advancing. I was channel surfing and this guy on television was talking about how we let other people steal our dreams, and how we have to be hungry. I thought that sounded like my dad. The light bulb went off and I looked up the group I’d turned down a few years prior. They said they were still interested, so I went through with opening my own practice in 1991.” (far left) Dr. Giles' graduation from Simmons College of KY. With his wife Bessie on vacation. (continued on page 38) OCTOBER 2016 37