Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 5 | Page 41

MEMBERS Dr. Bullock on medical mission trip to Uganda with patient after cardiac surgery Josh, Smitha and Gus on vacation Dr. Bullock and Gus Dr. Bullock on medical mission to Honduras for pre-op screening about medicine in a physical sense, and cardiology is very much physics and mechanics. Even when I was working long hours in residency and fellowship, I was still interested in learning more about the field.” She stayed the course through most physicians’ toughest years, medical school and into a residency at Cohen Children’s Medical Center in New York. It wasn’t until she began interviewing for a fellowship that Dr. Bullock forced an internal reckoning with her very frazzled self. “People didn’t talk about burnout then. And you’re young, so you think you’re invincible. But, I had the classic symptoms. I was burnt out,” she said. “I applied for fellowship, attended interviews, went through all of them. I was close to the point where I had to put in my match, and something didn’t feel right. I was having this real moment of internal struggle.” With the support of family and friends, Dr. Bullock stepped away. Though she still loved medicine and the practice of cardiology interested her to no end, something didn’t feel right. “I realized this was what I wanted to do, but it wasn’t the right time. I finally had the confidence to say, ‘I’m going to take a break’ and deferred my fellowship matching for a year. The decision was scary, because you don’t know how programs will respond. But, if I Gus with Dr. Bullock’s parents Josh, Smitha and Gus at adoption hearing. didn’t make that choice, I would have been the worse for it,” she said. With some time to regroup, Dr. Bullock took a path she’d been eyeing for several years: medical missions. After careful consider- ation, she joined her church for a two-week trip to Rwanda. Rather than return home with the group, she stayed in the country for six months. “I’m glad I went to Rwanda. It allowed me to say for certain ‘No, this isn’t right for me now,’” she said. “That’s kind of a theme in my life. I test myself when I’m uncertain. I find out the answer and then move forward.” The year she spent away from her studies was cathartic for Dr. Bullock. In 2009, she was accepted for a fellowship at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington DC. While she had been able to pause her career to focus on centering herself, Dr. Bullock’s life outside of work would not give her the same professional courtesy. She met her husband, Josh, during the first September of her fellowship, and the couple was soon married in DC. They wanted a change of scenery as Dr. Bullock’s fellowship concluded, and he threw out Louisville as a possibility. Options were pursued, an offer was made for Dr. Bullock to join the Uni- (continued on page 40) OCTOBER 2018 39