Monday, September 11, 2017

Where I've been

Well, Dortmund is exactly where. It's a hellish 2+ hour drive every day each way.

And a class I thought would be a piece of cake (hey, I was a CNA!) is almost overwhelming due to all the medical terms being in a foreign language. Thankfully most of them are similar to English. Where I screw up, is with the "simple" German words that the teachers don't explain. Sucks to be me, I got 12/20 on my first test, and 2 of them were cuz I didn't understand a simple word, not a medical term.

I get up at 5:30, drive to Dortmund (which seems to be a really nice city, especially in comparison to Cologne!). Half the time I'm late due to traffic, and half the time I'm early cuz I really have no idea. One of the teachers gave me a really bad time for being 15 minutes late, when I arrived and there was nowhere for me to sit. He said, "That's what you get for being late!" I said, "I left my house two hours ago." He didn't care. At the first break he found a table and said, "I got you a table, so you can fit." He placed the table in the middle of the circle of desks, so everyone would be staring at me, all day long. The dunce cap. I said, "You want me to sit in the middle?" He did nothing. I dragged the table to the side, loud and heavy. He wanted to humiliate me! After my struggle with traffic stress! I have a feedback form for every teacher, and I already have some nice feedback for him, his good points, and his cruel ones.

Then I spend the day concentrating as hard as I can, focus more than I ever have in my life, to understand the class sessions.

I'm trying to become a medic. At a very late stage in life, apparently, because all the other students, except for one, were born in the late 90s. I am the age of their mothers. . It's not a nice feeling. The only one close to my age is 11 years my junior, a big guy named Jan who I immediately informed he will be my partner for the hands-on work.

Half the kiddies wear medic uniforms, because they are volunteers and are being sponsored by the institution*. That means, they don't have to pay, and their hotel, lunch, and dinner are paid for. Sucks to be us, the 3 of us who are sponsoring ourselves! It's not a cheap class, and we are not allowed to drink the coffee or soda or o-juice.....those are for the sponsored kids.

And those kids are GOOD. They've been working out of ambulances and they know their stuff.

And they all have German as a native language.

I feel really bad when I ask whoever I'm sitting next to, "What did the teacher just say?" and "WTH does that word mean?" The teachers explain the difficult words, not the "easy" ones.

Today we learned how German law affects this field. OMG. I didn't understand a word, and most of them were 10,000 point scrabble words.

You don't believe me?

Verhaeltnismaessigkeitsgrundsatz.

Ordungswidrigkeitengesetz

Unterlassungsdelikte

* - When I say the institution, I mean the Catholic church. Both Catholic and Protestant churches have an elaborate system of social programs to help the public. Both have ambulances/medics to help people. Both have church-paid Kindergarten, psychological help centers, suicide lines....it goes on and on. Church and state work together in Germany. 

Currently I am "working" for the Catholics, even though I'm Protestant. There would come a point where they would want my conversion, to allow my employment. This is not religious discrimination, this is German life.

All the practice bandages, all the time spent in class, it doesn't come from just our tuition, nor from church donation, well, that, but also....church taxes. Because in Germany you have an annual tax declaration, and in it you describe which church gets your "church tax."

I think I see some Americans freaking out: ) I did too.

Which tax do I pay on my paycheck? (When I actually had a job) - NONE. I refused to join the church-state collusion. Phooey. I will tithe when I want to give money to a church.

OK back to today...

At the afternoon break, 3:30,  I got up and left. I couldn't take any more, and I have a book to try to learn from (the book isn't very helpful either, I will need my husband to help me.)

Good is that my partner Jan is super motivated to learn this stuff. We're older and self-motivated, we're different from the kiddies.

I spent the weekend studying (my husband walked in and laughed cuz I had my name-card out on the kitchen table as if I were in class, so the teacher knows my name). J, "I've never seen you study before."

"I'm having University of Washington flashbacks. Stress. But I can do this, I know I can!"

I studied 8 hours this weekend. I created index cards. So many I ran out and had to start cutting up paper.

Jan spent lunch with me today and I pulled out my cards and I think he was impressed that I have so much stuff on cards, and in my head, so far.

He's a natural teacher and if I got one wrong, he'd talk and talk and talk......*sigh*

Tomorrow we're gonna spend our lunch break testing our blood sugar, blood pressure, bandaging each other and our amputations, and perhaps work on the CPR dummy with Defi.

I think we are going to be partners for our final exam, the hands-on stuff like defibrillator- assisted CPR, bandaging, intubation....and we make a good team. We're the oldies, but we're on fire to learn this stuff. 


Imagine this is me and Jan, playing both roles as the defibrillator commands (during the analysis phase, we are told to wait, and that is our chance to switch positions). It's challenging and fun as a team.

I know from real life, it is not so fun, to do it alone, on a real person. For 15 minutes. But the way I handled that experience has made me curious if I'm cut out for this line of work.

9 comments:

Nuzzling Muzzles said...

How exciting to be working toward a new career, and fascinating about the way the government and churches work together. My daughter learned to speak German when she was in high school, but has never been to Germany. Ironically, she goes to Mexico on a regular basis and can't speak a word of Spanish, which is the most common second language taught in our schools.

Kitty Bo said...

I am so proud of you. What a challenge! This is fantastic!

Camryn said...

I commend you on pursuing such a field. My eldest served two tours in Iraq as a medic. He's now a volunteer firefighter/medic and works for the DOD, he travels a bit setting up combat situations to train others. Shame you're so far away, I'm sure he'd be a good teacher for you. Keep it up, you can do it 👌🏼. His German MIL could translate the German bits for you.

AareneX said...

Your instructor needs to be horsewhipped for that "table" trick. Not only very unprofessional, but also un-adult.

I'm so proud of you for pursuing this! It's not an easy process, even in your home language. Big applause from me.

TeresaA said...

That sounds so tough. Good for you for working so hard.

Sirje said...

Ohhh flashbacks. You can do it! I did a master's here years ago when my German was, erm, not quite up to speed, and I still wince when I remember the copyright and employment law semester. But it is do-able! Sounds like you are doing it the right way, it gets easier. And yes my German was vastly improved by the time I graduated. Sink or swim! By the way there is an awesome study tool that I used for the tricky German stuff, called "Genius". It's basically a very simple flashcard tool, where you test yourself and write out answers which are instantly graded, and things you have trouble with come up more often until you ace it. It was a lifesaver: https://genius.en.softonic.com/mac

One thing we had in addition to the written evaluations was a face-to-face evaluation, the class vs. the prof. But I don't know whether that was just a thing my school did. The American in me was absolutely shocked that the prof would literally sit there and invite critique. And most were quite gracious about it, even when it was on the far side of "constructive".

My BF was a paramedic for his civil service, and they were indeed really well-trained. I think that's also how he learned to stay so incredibly cool and yet totally alert and quick in any situation. Kudos to you for picking such an important and difficult field. I am sure you will be really good at it. You'll get super strong, too! Horses plus paramedic? You'll be able to lift the donkey with one hand.

The Kelly's Adventures in KY said...

Congratulations on pursuing this!!! Looks like you found a good school partner in Jan. I was a total note-card vocabulary person too. Sure helps in learning all the long funky terms only used for taking tests.

Ugh, I remember the scramble words horror! I guess we have that a little in English when we talk really fast, but its not an official written word like in German. "Whatchadoin"

Way to go! You're so going to rock this!

lytha said...

NM, I was always jealous of the people who wanted to learn Spanish, cuz you have such great opportunities to practice it in America!

KB, thank you!

Camryn, I had to laugh when you said, "The German bits" cuz I cannot call them bits: )

Aarene, the plan is that if I can become a medic, I should be able to find work OUTSIDE of downtown Seattle someday. I don't want to be stuck commuting in King County ever again.

Teresa, it's been a long time since University. I remember feeling exactly as overwhelmed (by statistics and calculus, those two!)

Sirje, you're so funny. I'll check out Genius, thanks. OMG just today as the class wrapped up, the teacher-of-the-day wanted a verbal evaluation from each student! No other teacher has done that yet. It was weird most people were sweet to her, but a couple were Germanly-honest and told them they were disappointed. I told her "Best day so far!" and she blushed and said THANK YOU! She was a really sensitive, sweet lady. Wouldn't it be cool if I did get fitter though a job that wasn't sitting at a computer all day? What a dream!

Kelly's - Well, Jan is very bossy and today got frustrated with me because we wanted to practice with the dummy/equip. during the entire lunch hour, but he didn't want to simulate the entire process, he just wanted to do the intubation part. I was like, "I NEED to start from the beginning and do the entire 20 or so steps!" Then I started to get frazzled cuz he was very loud and I started to lose it and he said, "See, we should have just done this one part at a time!" And I very bravely said, in front of all the other students who had gathered around, "Jan. I must tell you that my problems with this are different than your problems. I need you to accept that." And I was happy when some of the more experienced medics (with actual experience) agreed with me.

Jan is loud and pushy and pedantic, not a great combination, but at least he's not HALF my age! Seriously, today during introductions, one of the kiddies said, "I'm 24. I'm the OLD one here." Um.....?

Thanks for cheering for me, I feel pretty optimistic.

Now to hit the books.

Unknown said...

Holy wow! I have known for years I am not cut out to be in the medical field. Clearly, this reassures me that decision is correct. That said, way to tackle the world and go after something you want! This entire post just had me going, "whoa."

I hope your jerk professor lays off. Those can be tough, and there isn't much you can do about it other than just showing up, putting your head down, and mustering through.

Hang in there!