Looking Back, Looking Forward: 2010

There are so many good year-in-review and decade-in-review memes out there already so while I won’t be joining in on them, I can’t let 2009 slip by without some commentary on it.

In my little corner of the universe, 2009 definitely had its high points: I signed a deal for my second book during a very tough economic spell, I met Bill Clinton and chatted about health care reform, and I pursued new academic and freelance opportunities. I am incredibly grateful for all of these experiences.

I thought and wrote a lot about hope this year, a word that is as closely related to these high notes in my life as it is to the low ones. In fact, I’d argue that when I felt fragmented and run down or when I was disappointed, when all I could do was focus on just making it work, hope was even more important.

I’m not into making resolutions this year. I’d rather take what I’ve learned from 2009 and apply it to 2010. Despite some really great developments, 2009 was a long, tough year, a year that pitted my strengths against my weaknesses in a major way. I am a planner and a control freak, and the more crazy life (and health) gets, my tendency is to push back even harder. I had a ton of pressure on me this year, and so much of what I needed to do hinged on me being able to control the one thing I can never fully control: my health.

In a much broader way, I think 2009 was a year that challenged so many of us on that front, healthy or otherwise: sometimes we can do our very best but other factors can dictate so much of our success or failure.

It is one thing to say that having hope is important, but it is another to be truly willing to accept things that are out of your control, to have hope things will work out even if in the moment, you can’t see how or when. That is the hard part for me, anyway.

When I think about the past year and the past decade, I have to admit that some of the most important and life-changing developments were ones I never planned for, never even knew to look for: meeting my husband (six years ago tonight, actually); getting my MFA, meeting the friends in college, graduate school, and beyond who mean so much and who feel like family; starting this blog; etc.

There are many more examples like this, but the point is, sometimes you just have to be open to chance and possibility. All the planning in the world does not guarantee we will get what it is we think we want, and sometimes we don’t know what we want or need until we find it. At points this year I think I was so bogged down in surviving that I lost sight of the importance of the unexpected, that sometimes hope means trusting in what we cannot yet envision.

In this post, I reflected on the idea that a person needs three things: someone to love, something to do, and something to hope for. This is what I want to carry with me into 2010, and into the next decade.

Have a wonderful (and safe) New Year’s, and may 2010 bring you as much health and peace as possible.

Thank you for reading.

Happenings from Around the Medical Blogosphere

It’s been a week of just-getting-by here at A Chronic Dose, but there’s much to report from different corners of the Internet.

My colleague and diabetes blogger extraordinaire Amy Tenderich of DiabetesMine recently announced a contest that proves yet again why her site is one of the most respected and influential around:

The 2009 DiabetesMine™ Design Challenge, an online competition to encourage creative new tools for improving life with diabetes.

It’s pretty simple—if you have a great idea for a new web application or innovative new medical device to help manage diabetes, you could win a grand prize of $10,000 to help make your project a reality.

According to Amy’s site, “The contest is open for submissions from March 2, 2009, to May 1st, 2009, at 11:59 pm Pacific time. Winners will be announced on Monday, May 18th, 2009.Submissions are accepted in the form of a 2-minute video to be uploaded to the DiabetesMine YouTube channel, or a 2-3 page written “elevator pitch” plus supporting graphics, also to be uploaded online.”

For more information on rules, other prizes, and judging criteria, be sure to check out the design contect page at DiabetesMine.

As Amy says, let the innovation begin!

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Speaking of innovation, Alexandra Carmichael of Cure Together just announced the release of the first crowdsourced book on endometriosis. Endometriosis Heroes: 137 Women Share Their Experiences and Treatments is available here.

March is Endometriosis Awareness Month, and sites like Cure Together and Jeanne’s Endo Blog (and many others) are working tirelessly to promote understanding and awareness.

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And lastly, innovation of another kind—an unusual perspective in today’s climate of economic woes, layoffs, and general anxiety. One of my all-time favorite voices and people in the medical community is Paul Levy, CEO of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center here in Boston and blogger at Running a Hospital. Check out this Boston Globe column about the way Levy has approached potential layoffs at the hospital, and the amazing response from his BIDMC community. Empathy and sacrifice have replaced self-preservation at the other people’s expense, and it’s something we can all learn from, especially these days.