2-11-09: The never-ending day
February 12th, 2009 Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »Wednesday, February 11 began at 5:15am in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. After a quick shower and packing everything that didn’t get packed the night before, I helped myself to breakfast and checked my email again before getting in the taxi at 7am, headed for the airport. Check-in went rather smoothly, although we discovered that my itinerary required me to get an Australian visa (which they were able to handle at the POM airport), and I found myself with some time to kill before my 9:40 flight (which left at 10). I occupied some of that time by buying a six-pack of South Pacific beer for the brothers as a souvenir at the duty-free. Unfortunately, they’ll never get it—it was confiscated by customs in Sydney. I guess it’s the thought that counts, right?
It was an uneventful (thankfully!) flight from POM to Brisbane, and then I grabbed my bag, went through customs, checked my bag in again for a domestic flight to Sydney, took the train to the domestic terminal, and had just enough time to buy a bottle of water before boarding the plane to Sydney. Then in Sydney it was another transfer from the domestic to international terminals before it was time to go through customs again (this time for departing Australia). This layover was a little longer, which gave me time to peruse the duty-free in Australia (I bought crocodile and kangaroo jerky to replace the confiscated beer) before hopping on a nine hour flight from Sydney to Honolulu, most of which I slept through (thankfully).
I was awake for the last two or three hours, which gave me time to start reading a book I bought at the Sydney airport called A Doctor’s War, by Rowley Richards, a former Australian Regimental Medical Officer who was captured in Malaysia during the Second World War; the book is from his diaries of his time spent in the POW camp. I’m not done with it yet, but so far, it’s an amazing book, right up there with A Surgeon In Combat by an American Army battalion surgeon in Europe during this same period. Many of the things Dr. Richards writes about I have experienced myself as a young, future medical officer in the Army in a time of war. One thing that really rang true to me is his descriptions about his excitement about seeing combat, which in the wisdom of his older years (after having been a POW) he scoffs at as youthful ignorance. I will admit, I have experienced the same anticipation about deployment, which I am sure will happen, it is just a matter of when and where. I know it is youthful ignorance, and I know that my preconceptions about what the life of a doctor is like in a combat zone are probably 90% false, but those feelings are still there, and I am sure that someday, like Dr. Richards, I will look back and wonder why I looked forward (if that is the right term) to being deployed. Still, what I have read so far is very powerful, and I’m very impressed with what Dr. Richards went through and how he managed to continue working as a RMO during his time as a POW. And all of that was in the tropics, so he was dealing with things like malaria and dengue fever and tropical ulcers, most of the time without any medications (the Japanese confiscated their medicines); he wrote about applying good hygiene and preventive measures in a time when such ideas weren’t popular at all. He’s now a preventive and occupational medicine physician (well, he’s now semi-retired, but he was a preventive/occupational medicine physician), so there’s another reason for me to look up to him. I hope if I’m ever in conditions half as bad as he faced that I can show the same initiative and integrity that he writes about.
But anyway, back to the never-ending day. I ended up landing in Honolulu around 9am, still on Wed. Feb. 11—in other words, I landed before I left PNG, which made me laugh. I had to calculate time zones to determine if I should take my anti-malarials or not (I did, including my first dose of my terminal prophylaxis on primaquine), and then wasted time on the internet in the Honolulu airport (I would have rather been at the beach, but we don’t always get what we want) until it was time to board for the last leg of today’s flying, a five-hour flight from Honolulu to Los Angeles, where I will be for a few days for the American College of Preventive Medicine conference. I’m still on that flight as I’m writing this, to be posted later.
Overall, it’s an exhausting 30 hours of travel time (not counting my flights from Kikori to POM “yesterday”)—all of which spans 11 hours on the clock (10am in PNG to 9pm in LA). I’m just hoping that my sleep won’t be so disrupted that I’ll miss out on important parts of the conference.
