I heard about Doctors Without Borders for the first time from my friend Ralf whom I met in a dance club outside
My exhausted body enjoyed the intoxicating energy of the crowd and the smoky smell of a normal life outside the sterile design-studio felt like something sacred, an undeserved moment of liberation to consciously appreciate. My mind however continued to haunt me about how much time I was wasting by being here instead of making my own deadlines. Graduation lay only four months away and I looked forward to escaping from my hometown.
While my mates were dancing off the side-effects of caffeine and lesser known sleep-depressants to Insomnia I decided to take it easy. Sitting alone amidst a tangle of bodiless arms putting down empty beer cans and indecisive hands holding used cigarettes in desperate need of an ashtray, I enjoyed the simple delight of watching ice cubes roll around in a single tot of J&B whiskey.
A stressed out female voice to the left of me caught my attention confirming that this table had reached its capacity. A dark haired man profusely apologized in a strange accent and looked up at me with his bright eyes begging for assistance in this cultural misunderstanding.
I interrupted the situation and distracted the Stetson-wearing lady into directing her toward the restrooms. That was how my friendship with Ralf began. At first I played along with his introduction of how he studied medicine in
This surprise connection with daily stories of emergency room procedures, unhelpful nurses demanding their tea-break and getting lost in the supplies store looking for IV’s resuscitated my passion for relieving the suffering of people under desperate circumstances.
I had applied for Med-school seven years earlier without success but sneaked into the Pathology Museum whenever I found access to the medical campus just to disappear into the mysterious world of physiology and human composition for a few hours.
On Sunday afternoons I joined a group of medical students from our church in visiting the
My most treasured memory about this unobtainable fantasy related to participating in an anatomy class one time. I was the first of the class to identify the one-way heart valves because they resembled a typical cable-design-principle which she had studied under the Structural Engineering department. At that moment she resolved to accept that destiny did not agree with my aspirations of becoming a physician and conceded to a life of dusty building sites and rude contractors.
Eight years later in a downtown apartment in