Hello Vision for Life Patient,
My interest in medicine and caring for people was formed at an early age. I lost my mother to cancer when I was 12, and so I, unfortunately, spent a considerable amount of time during my childhood in hospitals and dealing with illness.
A couple of years after losing my mother, I took up playing the drums. It provided me with an outlet to express myself creatively, and this is still true today. It taught me that practice, hard work, commitment to excellence, and continually trying to improve my abilities were needed to excel. I think I apply those same ideals to medicine and surgery in constantly trying to improve the care I provide my patients. It is important to me to teach and to continually research new ideas.
As a beginning fourth-year med student, I suffered a serious facial injury with broken bones, after colliding with a teammate during a competitive softball championship. The severity of the injury guided me from my Orthopedic rotation toward Ophthalmology. I needed to continue my clinical training and chose to work with an ophthalmologist in his private practice. After four weeks of watching him care for patients in his office, while also performing amazing surgeries, it was clear this is what I needed to do. My interests in medicine, physiology, physics, optics, and mathematics, while also performing microsurgery, fit the specialty perfectly. The coordination, ambidexterity, and hand control I learned from drumming helped me as an eye surgeon
Today, I can’t see myself doing anything else. The progressive nature of the field, with rapid improvements underway in vision correction through my efforts and those of my colleagues, makes my practice extremely gratifying, challenging, and humbling.