Thursday, October 4, 2012

Sox Game

Chuck's parents got four tickets to a couple Boston Red Sox games this season as a Christmas present for Chuck and his sister, Liz, last year.  At the time, Liz was living in Boston where she worked as a teacher so it was pretty easy for them to all get up there for a game, but a few months ago Liz moved to LA so I got to be a stand in for Liz at the last game:
I like to have people take their sunglasses off in pictures so that you can actually see who is in the picture with you (see above for exhibit A).  Chuck disagrees with this request because then you are painfully squinting into the sun in the photo.  This debate will continue for all of time.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Apple Picking

I will admit that I am getting kinda pumped for fall. I obviously love the sun and summer but the leaves are changing, the weather is cool enough that I can leave the windows open all day and when I go on an evening walk I can smell some wood burning fires (this is one of the few things missing in our apartment). So last weekend I went into full fall mode with Angie (who works with Chuck) and her roommate Erin when we went apple picking:
Erin, Paige, Angie
We went to a local orchard that allows you to pick-your-own apples.  After we had picked our fill we headed home and baked some pies:

Go Eagles

Chuck and I have season tickets for BC football this year.  The Eagles have had three home games so far this season and we have been to all of them!  We are such good fans.  A couple of Chuck's college friends (Tom and Nuck) still live in Boston so it is nice to hang out with them.  We go to a tailgate hosted by the Mucci family, they have five family members who have gone to BC so, as you can imagine, they throw a pretty serious tailgate.
Nuck, Chuck, Tom
Paige, Chuck, Tom, Nuck
Paige, Chuck, Jason, Dani

Welcome Dinner

A few weeks back, right after I moved to CT, Chuck's parents (Chuck and Debbie) took Chuck and I out to dinner to welcome me to town!  We went to a restaurant called Apricots which is right on the Farmington River (the same river we tube on).  The food was great, the company was great and the view was amazing:

Sunday, September 30, 2012

CRNA at St. Francis

I am happy to report that I will be beginning my career as a CRNA at St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford, CT.  I interviewed here in early 2012 when I was staying with Chuck during my school rotation at Danbury Hospital .  We don't get the opportunity to rotate to St. Francis as students at Columbia so I interviewed for a position at this hospital without knowing what it will actually be like (everyone is nice during an interview!).  It is a level one medical center, it is a teaching hospital and, most importantly, it is less than a 10 minute drive from our apartment :)  I have signed on to work 40 hours a week and I have the option of taking call shifts if I want them.  I am excited (and nervous) to start - wish me luck!

Saturday, September 22, 2012

P. Redfield, CRNA

27 months ago I was much more tan, I was nervous about getting lost on the subway, I didn't know the dose of succinylcholine (or what it did) and I thought that living with an 80-year-old in an apartment with no air conditioning in NYC wouldn't be that bad - I was so new.  On August 14th 2012 I finished up my last clinical day at NYU, I rode my bike back to my apartment (I am no longer afraid of the subway but I am familiar enough with it to know that it is nearly impossible to get from my upper west side apartment to a mid town east hospital efficiently) and finished packing up all of my belongings.  The next morning dad came and picked me, and all of my stuff, up in his truck and we drove to Put to pick up my car and a few boxes of things that never quite made it down to Manhattan after I moved back from LA.  Then we drove to my new apartment (Chuck had moved in at the beginning of August) in West Hartford!  I then buckled down for four weeks of studying for my boards.  After you graduate from a nurse anesthesia school you have to pass a national certification exam to ensure that you really did learn everything you were supposed to.  Columbia sets up their program so that the first year is didactic (just classes) and then the second year is clinical (working in the hospital).  As we all know, tests of book knowledge don't always line up very well with what you actually do in day-to-day practice so the information on that exam was mainly the stuff I hadn't seen in a year!  Ugh.  I had taken a review course back in June so I was armed with a study plan and for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week that is exactly what I did - it was PAINFUL.  And then on September 19th at 2pm it happened - I took my exam and passed!!!!!!
I am now officially a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA)!  The exams are self scheduled which means that as soon as I actually graduated (August 14th) Columbia sent a letter to the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA) to let them know I had completed my school requirements.  The AANA then sent a letter to the National Board of Certification and Re-certification for Nurse Anesthetists (NBCRNA) to let them know I was eligible to sit for my certification exam.  The NBCRNA then sent me an email to let me know that I was eligible and that I needed to find the nearest Pearson VUE testing center and sign up to take my exam.  Pearson VUE is just a professional test-giving company.  You show up and give them two forms of photo ID, they take your picture, scan your palm, take away all of your stuff (purse, phone, last minute study notes, etc) and then put you in a cubicle with earplugs and a computer that you use to take your test.  The test is "adaptive" which means that the computer gives you a question and if you get it correct then the next question is harder, if you get it wrong then the next question is easier.  The computer keeps giving you questions until you are getting about 50% correct and 50% wrong so it knows your knowledge level.  If this level meets the minimum requirement then you pass and if not then it is back to the drawing board :(  Since I didn't know when I would be able to sign up for my exam (paperwork could have gotten lost or I could have filled something out incorrectly and that would have caused a delay) or if I would pass on the first try, I gave myself a little cushion between my goal test-taking date and starting work.  I have spent the last two weeks sleeping, cleaning, finding my way around West Hartford and trying to enjoy the excitement that came with passing while it lasts!

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

I'm a Nutmegger

Chuck and I moved into our new apartment this weekend!  Technically I have to be in NYC for clinical until August 17th but now that we have some stuff there it feels official.  Chuck convinced three guys from his softball team to come over and help us.  We picked up the U-Haul and were all set and ready to start when it started raining... so we had a beer and waited until it tapered off to a drizzle.  In the end I'm sure the rain made the temperature much more bearable (that is what I will keep telling myself).  Here is a picture of our manly movers - thanks guys!  We couldn't have done it without you!
L to R: Chuck, Chris, Conner, Doug
There are four units in the building, our apartment is on the top left.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Goodbye Columbia

Today was our LAST DAY OF CLASS!!!!!!  So now we have had our graduation ceremony and our last day of class, now all we are waiting for is our last day of clinical and then I get to move to CT!  In honor of our last day of class we brought a couple bottles of champagne in for a toast while we watched a slideshow that Emily put together (the first part doesn't have sound, you aren't crazy).

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Robert Moses State Park

Emily has her car in town for this clinical rotation (she is at Westchester) so this weekend we took advantage of our access to wheels and Emily, Eric and I drove to the beach!  We went to Robert Moses State Park which is on Fire Island:
 
You may recall that Emily and I visited a friend at her summer beach house on Fire Island last year.  The day was a bit overcast but that was good because it meant the beach wasn't quite as crowded.  It was still warm enough for us to get in the water a couple times and sunny enough that we got a little color on our pale skin!

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Macios and Laurin's Wedding

Last weekend Chuck and I took a road trip to Boston because his college friend (Chris Macios) was getting married!  They had the ceremony in a very cool church and then we danced (for six hours) until I couldn't feel my feet.  We woke-up to a beautiful day Saturday so we went for breakfast at Moogy's (Chuck used to eat there in college) and then walked it off with a stroll around BC before driving back.  I only have one photo for you of us at the wedding:
It turns out that being a guest at a wedding (as opposed to a member of the bridal party) is REALLY fun.  And when you aren't stressing about helping to keep things running smoothly you don't remember to stop dancing long enough to take some pics ;)

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Farmington River Tubing

I took the bus up to CT after work on Friday so that we could go tubing on Saturday!
Kaley, Nathan, Angie, Nick, Chuck, Paige
The Farmington River runs through Connecticut very close to West Hartford.  There is a company that rents tubes and runs a shuttle for tubers, Chuck and I did this last summer and had so much fun that we thought we would invest in our own tubes so that we didn't have to pay to rent them every time we wanted to go.  This weekend we took it to the next level and decided to leave a car at the take-out point and then put in further up the river so that we could get a longer float.  We met up with Angie (she works with Chuck and is basically my first CT female friend), her boyfriend Nick, Nick's co-worker Nathan and his fiancee Kaley - did you follow that?  Neither did I.  We got about 4 hours of tubing in, only popped one tube along the way and now we have more CT friends - success!

Coney Island Mermaid Parade

Last weekend Emily, Eric and I headed to Coney Island for their annual Mermaid Parade.  We really had no idea what we were getting ourselves into.  From what I found online, this seemed to be a parade celebrating the official opening of the Coney Island beaches for the summer.  It turns out that it was really just a celebration of the weirdness of Coney Island.  Emily had some friends in town from Ohio for the parade - I didn't realize that they were actually here to be IN the parade!  We show up and they have an "art car" decorated in a tiki hut theme:
We got to ride in the car which gave us a pretty prime view of all the crazy people that had come out for the parade in their hand-made costumes.  I still don't really have a good explanation of what the parade was all about but I can tell you that it was very fun, we got to eat some very tasty corn dogs and, somehow, the tiki car WON for best parade float!

NYU Langone Medical Center

I'm at my LAST CLINICAL SITE!!!!!!!!!!  I started my rotation at NYU on June 19th.  Recap: Memorial Sloan Kettering, Cornell, Maryland Shock Trauma, Methodist, Westchester, Danbury, Long Island Jewish. Ahhhhhh!  I can't believe it!  NYU is in midtown east on the corner of 34th and 1st.  I still haven't figured out the most efficient way to get there (I have biked, I have taken the bus, I have done a combination of bike and bus) but I am just happy to be back in Manhattan for my last rotation.  We still have class every Monday but I have taken my last test and turned in my last assignment so I am truly on the home stretch here.  Chuck and I found an awesome apartment in West Hartford, our lease starts there August 1st and my last day of clinical here is August 17th.  I will be spending the last two weeks of August moving and settling in and then I will get down to business studying for boards in September.  We have to pass a national certification exam to become CRNAs (certified registered nurse anesthetists) instead of just GRNAs (graduated registered nurse anesthetists), so that is the next big hurdle on my horizon.  It feels weird to be getting this close to the end of my days as a student - weird but AWESOME.  Here is an early-morning view of the East River from NYU:

Patti and Danny's Wedding

Patti and Danny
I am about a month behind in posting - oops.  It turns out that senoritis affects all aspects of my life, not just school-related ones.  It is extremely contagious.  About a week after the CU graduation ceremony Chuck and I flew to Orlando for Patty and Danny's Wedding!  Our flight landed around 8pm on Saturday night, Laura and Kacy were bridesmaids so they were at the rehearsal dinner but when they got out we met them for drinks before heading to bed.  
Kate (8 months) and I
Kacy and Laura had more wedding party duties on Sunday so Chuck and I spent the day lounging at the hotel pool with Elaine, Jay Bacon, Brett and baby Kate!
Brett, Jay, Chuck
The ceremony was Sunday night (Monday was Memorial Day so we all had it off) and then we all headed home Monday.  The trip was WAY too short but it was very fun seeing everyone!
Kacy, Elaine, Laura, Paige
Paige and Chuck

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Sacagawea... that's me!



It has been raining non-stop lately... like deploy the life rafts / build an ark kind of raining. Like I've run out of closets to straighten / am suffering from vitamin D deficiency kind of raining... ugh. Today the sun burst through and DRob and I literally dashed out the door looking to play! What to do? What to do? "Hey", he says, "Hows about a little ROAD TRIP!" Yay! A quick gathering of sunscreen and swimsuits and we were headed north to Weeki Wachee Springs State Park to paddle the crystal clear cold waters of the Weeki Wachee River. Turquoise blue river with plenty of shady spots, NO gators and a reported favorite hanging around spot for manatees. Cannot confirm the manatee claim but as to cold? Boy howdy, dats some cold COLD water, my friend. And a beautiful five miles of easy paddling - made infinately easier by the strong and accomplished nature guy in the back of my canoe - hence the "action shoot" of me above, deftly negotiating the river. Well... all that paddling works up a mighty fierce thirst and appetite, yes? A quick costume change and we find ourselves at BeckyJacks Food Shack... a little hole in the wall WELL off the beaten path - where he finds these places will forever mystify (and delight) me. BeckyJacks was about as big as a doublewide trailer with the coldest beer and finest fish sandwich you've ever stumbled across. (Rolled in crushed cornflakes & potato chips then deep fried. My cholesterol levels have no doubt redlined) Am now home avoiding responsible stuff like laundry and noticing the sting of a little too much sun on the tops of my feet. Clearly my sunscreen-application-skill-set needs more practice which can only mean that nature guy is on the hook for another run somewhere soon. Yay!

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Hiking in Harriman State Park


Yesterday Katherine, Sheldon and I went hiking in Harriman State Park.  You may recall that Katherine and Sheldon went hiking in this park once before and had a run in with a pretty large rattle snake.  I am happy to report that there were no snake sightings this time around!  Sheldon cooked us a delicious lunch:
And we also hiked to Claudius Smith's den:

Monday, May 21, 2012

Panther Attack and Bday Fishing

Katherine and I drove up to Put this weekend to spend a day fishing with Dad for his birthday.  We started the day off with a walk around the property so he could catch us up on everything that has changed since our last visit.  Since it is spring we were doing a walk through the garden so he could show us all the stuff that has been planted for this summer.  I was holding one of their cats, a black one named Panther, as we walked.  While I was distracted listening to Dad's description of all the stuff he and Rob planted, Dad and Julie's new puppy, Thunder, decided to find out what cat tastes like and he latched onto Panther's tail/back legs/butt - I don't really know what he grabbed/bit, all I know is that Panther FREAKED OUT and the next thing I know she is shredding my hand as Thunder tried to tear her away.  When we finally free Panther from Thunder's jaws I look down and realize that one of my fingers is pretty badly cut.
Long story short - I ended up in the local ER getting it cleaned out properly and getting a prescription for a course of antibiotics... not the way we pictured our relaxing day of fishing starting!  We did still manage to make it out to a neighbor's lake for some fishing though:
L to R: Julie, Dad, Paige, Lucy, Rob, Julian
Happy Birthday Dad!!!!

Graduation Week

So close!  Our degrees don't actually confer until August 30th (at which point I will still have to study for and take our national certification exam) but Columbia University held their graduation ceremonies for the entire university this past week.  The School of Nursing coordinates their school-specific ceremony with the big University Commencement ceremony so that our friends/family only need to travel here once.  So I made it! (kind of) Woohoo!

  
 

NYSANA visits Niagara Falls

I am currently the student representative to the New York State Association of Nurse Anesthetist's Board of Directors (that is a picture of the 2011-2012 board).  The organization, also known as NYSANA, is the professional organization of CRNAs in New York state (where as the AANA, which I lobbied for in DC, is the professional organization of all CRNAs in the US).  How did I end up in this position?  Last year I volunteered to be the Columbia student representative to NYSANA.  I was told that I would basically just be a point person so that when NYSANA had information pertinent to Columbia SRNAs they would email it to me and I would forward it on to my fellow students.  There are four nurse anesthesia programs in the state of New York (including Columbia), each of these schools has a student representative to NYSANA performing the same duty at their respective program.  Well it turns out that the four of us are also on a rotation to have our student rep act as THE student representative to the NYSANA Board of Directors... and guess which program's turn it was?  It is actually pretty cool to see the inner workings of our professional organization, we have a monthly conference call to discuss what is going on in the world of CRNAs in NY (what are we lobbying for? what are we doing about AAs?).  We also have a fall and spring educational meeting which CRNAs from the state can attend lectures at to receive Continuing Education credits (which they will need a certain number of to maintain their professional licensure).  It is a little intimidating to see how much work goes into this - and we are only one state!  These CRNAs volunteer SO MUCH TIME and energy towards protecting our profession, I am glad that they are willing to do this because it would be far too much to ask of most people (including me!).  A few weekends ago we had our spring educational meeting in Niagara Falls, NY:

Long Island Jewish

Three weeks ago I started my seventh (out of eight!) clinical rotation at Long Island Jewish Medical Center!  Recap: one, two, three, four, five, six.  I am doing a general rotation (I am done with all of my specialty rotations like pediatrics, trauma, OB, etc) which means now I just need to focus on getting enough cases (in total - we need 550 cases to graduate, and in specific categories like extremity surgery - we need to do 50 of these before graduating).  LIJ is a great clinical site because there are no anesthesia residents there (no doctors in training to be anesthesiologists) and there is only one other SRNA so there isn't too much competition for cases.  This means that if there is a cool case or a case I need for my numbers I have a pretty good chance of getting it!  The downside to LIJ is that there is no easy way to get there from my apartment...
LIJ (the "B" label) is really less than 15 miles from my apartment (the "A" label) but, as you can see, there is no direct route.  It takes me about 30 minutes to drive there in the morning and then anywhere from one to two hours to drive home, depending on traffic.  Also when I rented a car for Westchester I was sharing it with another Columbia SRNA and when I needed a car for Danbury I borrowed one from Dad and Julie.  I am the only Columbia SRNA at this site which means I was shelling out about $400 a week to rent a ZipCar Tuesday - Friday.  I did the math and realized that was ridiculous.  Since I was planning to start a car search for after graduation soon anyway I (when I say "I" I mean "Dad" - thanks for all of your help finding the car Dad!) just sped up the process a bit and I am happy to report that I am now the proud owner of a Subaru Outback!
I am loving it! One step closer to graduating an living in the real world!  PS: please disregard my glasses in the ID picture - no, I do not suddenly require glasses.  Many of our clinical sites require us to wear eye protection in the operating room.  I find that the disposable ones they provide are both too big for my face and tend to fog up when I tuck them into my mask (too keep them from falling down) so I decided to go the stylish route and just buy regular glasses and leave the plastic display lenses in! Problem solved!  They pulled me out of the OR to take this picture and it was easier to just leave the gasses on then go through explaining why I was wearing them...

Lobbying in Washington

CRNAs (and SRNAs!) from all over the country descended on DC a couple weekends ago to lobby on behalf of our national professional organization - the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (aka the AANA).  You may remember Chuck and his dad lobbying on behalf of the Connecticut Food Association last year (they went again this year).  It was a crazy experience - I don't think I would ever want to run for an elected office after just one afternoon of lobbying!

Saturday, April 7, 2012