A follow-up, or maybe I should call it a prequel, to my reflections about the last 5 1/2 years of my life
We all have 168 hours a week to spend.
For some time now, I have been working well over 60 hours a week and spending 15 hours in the car traveling the more than 200 miles between my two homes and clinics.
As of this July, the month of my 66th birthday, I am staking out a new life for myself. I’ll be spending 30 hours a week in my Van Buren clinic, only 3 hours commuting, 30 on horse related things and 30 on my writing. Add the 63 hours I figure I need just to survive, and I will still have 12 hours to do something else. I admit some of that time, probably 5 hours a week on average, will be remote chart work, which can be done while looking out at the horse pasture. That still leaves an hour a day on average to do something new.
I’m calling this a semiretirement although it is really just slowing down to a more normal pace.
That means I’m giving up the medical directorship and work in my other clinic. But it also means I’ll be a more well balanced human being, I hope, as I consolidate my life in northern Maine, in a Swedish looking little red farmhouse not far from the village of New Sweden.
Aerial view of SOLTORP, which means “Sunny Little Farm” in Swedish
I have written about this before: During my internship in Sweden, I read an article in a Stockholm newspaper about the Swedish colony near Caribou. I was in the process of applying for my Family Practice residency in Maine, so I wrote to one of the people featured in the article. He forwarded my letter to the presidents of both the Caribou and Presque Isle hospitals and they both invited me to come and take a look. The rest is part of my career history and apparent ultimate destiny.
First trip to New Sweden, 1983
As I now reach what the American Social Security Administration calls my full retirement age, I hope to be able to continue the work I love for many more years, but at a pace that allows me to smell the roses along the way. I look forward to having more horse time and more time for my writing.
Another change, sadly, is that I have exchanged my wedding ring for a newly purchased caduceus signet ring. Not that my dedication to medicine and long hours caused this to come about, but this change certainly did make me think hard about how I want to spend whatever time I have left on this planet.
Raking the roof at Soltorp
Look for much more writing in the future, at least after I get settled into my new routine.
Thanks for listening (I mean, reading).
Hans
I worked 40 years as a psychiatrist, retired in 2012, and found helping family and neighbors much more satisfying than doing EHR's and billing. I like to write, appreciate your books and postings, go to a number of medical appointments myself, and am actually SORRY for the robot-like doctors staring at their screens. Have you looked into PNHP (Physicians for a National Health Plan) or the AMA? (They need you desperately.) (Still, I can understand many good reasons for not giving too much time----like your horses, etc.) Anyhow, I thank you for your thoughtful and personal description of practicing medicine----I hope you work (with some reduction of hours) til you're 90! Bill Houghton