This Won't Hurt a Bit (And Other White Lies)
My Education in Medicine and Motherhood
by Michelle Au, MD
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Pub Date May 11 2011 | Archive Date Sep 01 2012
Description
If Atul Gawande were funny--or Jerome Groopman were a working mother--they might sound something like Michelle Au, M.D., author of this hilarious and poignant memoir of a medical residency.
When Michelle Au started medical school, she was "approximately as ready to become a doctor as a Tamagotchi owner is ready to raise a human baby." This is the story of how she grew up and became a real doctor.
Throughout her years as a resident, she also attempts to maintain some semblance of a life outside the hospital. During her second year of residency, and already used to being up all night, she and her resident husband decide to have a baby. Baby Cal's arrival is joyous, but results in an ongoing struggle for Michelle to balance her medical life with her "real" one.
This book is a story about the imperfect, and occasionally hilarious, process of medical training. It is an insider's view of overnights in the hospital, where the unimaginable becomes possible (Can I use this bedpan as microwave receptacle for my dinner? Is it OK if I take this comatose patient's cup of Jell-O?) and the commonplace becomes bizarre.
Michelle also writes about the specific challenges of being a working mother while completing a medical residency, trying to cultivate an outside life within an institution that expects you not to have one. With honesty and the ability to find humor in almost any situation, Michelle recalls the stories, big and small, that continue to shape her into the kind of doctor, and mother, that she wants to be.
When Michelle Au started medical school, she was "approximately as ready to become a doctor as a Tamagotchi owner is ready to raise a human baby." This is the story of how she grew up and became a real doctor.
Throughout her years as a resident, she also attempts to maintain some semblance of a life outside the hospital. During her second year of residency, and already used to being up all night, she and her resident husband decide to have a baby. Baby Cal's arrival is joyous, but results in an ongoing struggle for Michelle to balance her medical life with her "real" one.
This book is a story about the imperfect, and occasionally hilarious, process of medical training. It is an insider's view of overnights in the hospital, where the unimaginable becomes possible (Can I use this bedpan as microwave receptacle for my dinner? Is it OK if I take this comatose patient's cup of Jell-O?) and the commonplace becomes bizarre.
Michelle also writes about the specific challenges of being a working mother while completing a medical residency, trying to cultivate an outside life within an institution that expects you not to have one. With honesty and the ability to find humor in almost any situation, Michelle recalls the stories, big and small, that continue to shape her into the kind of doctor, and mother, that she wants to be.
Available Editions
EDITION | Hardcover |
ISBN | 9780446538244 |
PRICE | 24.99 |
PAGES | 336 |