I measure every Grief I meet
With narrow, probing, eyes –
I wonder if It weighs like Mine –
Or has an Easier size.
~Emily Dickinson
Dear Reader,
Some of my favorite words in the English language are reading, grit and resilience. And since I was too busy opening up the practice, I was unable to write a blog for National Reading Month - which was in March. (Why March? Supposedly because it was Dr. Seuss’s birthday month).
I have decided to write about reading this month because one of my two brothers was born on May 6th and he and I loved to exchange book recommendations and discuss them. His name was Mark and he died at the age of 35 of complications of COVID and end stage kidney disease at the end of 2021. I write this post to honor and grieve him.
I was separated from my brothers when I was 10 years old. I lived thousands of miles away but Mark and I were able to foster love of reading even as time and family life increased the distance between us. Even when we exchanged harsh words and fought bitterly - we would come together over a book recommendation.
We did not have many books growing up. We really got into reading during our teen years. I would say it was out of necessity that we read books. No one else understood us - we knew we were very awkward, lonely and misunderstood. But with reading books, we somehow felt understood. And I think that’s why despite the many traumatic events in our childhood and the chronic feelings of isolation and self-doubts, and despite how much it has affected our health (his kidneys, my breast), we were able to sustain resilience and managed to have families and give love to those around us - basically overcome many terrible traumas against all odds.
I disclose this because after all these challenges, I didn’t think I had it in me to be a parent. But now that I have my two boys and have homeschooled them for 6 years, I realized that the part of me that was saved - the girl who somehow found joy reading classical books, starting with the Bible - that girl continues to survive and thrive and even became a mother of two boys! What a miracle that is. I am extremely grateful for this opportunity. And of course this is not to say that I do parenting perfectly - no one does - although a lot of books would tell you there is a perfect way. I am pretty sure that there is no perfect way to do this and even if somehow one achieves it, the outcomes are not guaranteed anyway.
But I do think that fostering the love of reading in children - regardless of whether you are a parent or not, is a necessary part of helping them develop resilience and grit for the struggles and trials of life.
And of course I would argue that the quality of the books matter. I subscribe to the Charlotte Mason way of teaching and she definitely had opinions on good literature and what she called “twaddle” - poorly-written books that do NOT provide quality reading material.
Read real, living books - books that have stood the test of time. Books that are beautifully written. Point to the words and recite them with emotion and passion to your kids. Boy, I could go on and on about how fun it has been to read with my boys.
Here are some articles that support the idea that reading increases resilience in kids - especially boys. And there are a lot of concerns that kids are falling behind in reading nowadays, especially boys. So hopefully these articles will convince some people to read to the kids around them as often as possible - even if the kids are struggling with reading. Read to them instead - beautifully written poetry, novels, newspaper articles, etc. I have plenty of advice/recommendations but the best source is your school's English/Language Arts teacher. IMO, they are the family physician equivalent of teachers. Another good discussion for another blog post.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220308102826.htm
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0145213421003707?via=ihub
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8898035/
My other goal for this blog post was going to highlight the services I do for my patients and as usual, extol the virtues of being a family physician - the jack-of-all-trades physician - the best kind :).
One of the main services I can offer patients is PRIMARY CARE. This means that you can come to me for advise on a myriad of things like rashes, (I love diagnosing rashes) and at the same time talk about how you can incorporate an evidence-based, healthy lifestyle into your daily routine while also reviewing what can be done about your anxiety and depression, back pain and type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure and I could even do some in-office procedures like wart removal, skin biopsies and pap smears, even laceration repair. I do my best to partner with patients so we can avoid medications, expensive tests and gimmicks, i.e. seemingly “healthy” fads that are just really trying to get your money but you may as well sprinkle fairy dust all over yourself. We can do this at one visit or spread it out as you wish or check periodically with each other so that we are on the same page about your health goals.
All of this at a very low price of $85 per month for adults, $50 for kids. And once I have achieved my goal number of “founder patients”, the price per month for primary care for adults will increase to $95 (which is still quite a deal).
I can also provide specialty types of services at a higher monthly price but it also includes primary care. I will give more information about these for those who are interested - the best way is to have a free, 15-minute non-medical appointment with me to discuss.
A bit of a disjointed post - I have been waffling at making all of these posts “perfect” but to round back into the idea that there is a perfect way to parent or a perfect way to be a sister to brothers thousands of miles away - I am going to let that all go and encourage myself and others to just do our best to love and read to our children.
And there is no perfect way to blog. I am trying to be lupine - and that does not mean perfect.
As usual, if you have any comments or feedback or blog post ideas, please email them to hello@lupinemd.com.
Sincerely,
Dr. Hendrick
© 2023 Angela C. Hendrick
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135 S Worthen St.
Suite 200
Wenatchee, WA 98801
509.888.2200
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