We were sitting in the parking lot at the zoo – Christina,
the two boys and I. I had met Christina there after a short morning on service
with a gastroenterologist. It was hot; like Phoenix hot. A massive
miscommunication had relocated our small e-mail opening ceremony here, and
after a brief but intensely frustrating technological argument with Christina’s
new smart phone, I got the e-mail open.
Rapid City, it said. Rapid City – as in South Dakota.
We sat quietly for a moment while I stared at the tiny
screen: rereading, processing. Then we went to McDonald’s.
“The Match” had dealt us something of a surprise. OK, a huge
surprise. It certainly wasn't Plan A. Or Plan B. Plan F? Maybe.
“The Match” is a system of placing potential medical school
graduates into post-graduate training spots, commonly known as “residency.”
This moment had been near my mind for well over a year, with the anxiety of
this day weighing on mind since early in my third year of training.
Preparations for this moment had taken me to Indiana and Pennsylvania; to
Colorado, Wyoming and Idaho. It had taken me away from my home and family for
nearly six months. And just like that, it was over. Match Day had gotten the final word, and there
was no room for argument. Rapid City it would be.
I found it interesting, on a personal level, that despite
all the preparation, all the travel, all the anxiety, I had a difficult time
praying about the Match. I can’t explain it. When I prepared for my personal
prayers, the words wouldn’t seem to participate in the journey from heart to
brain to tongue. Finally, in the last few days prior to the Match, I stammered
out a combination of words that made the trip: “Please bless that I may end up
in the place I am supposed to be; the place where Thou would have me be.”
And with those words stumbling out during prayers, should I
really be surprised?
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Our family visiting Mount Rushmore during November 2012. |
Rewind to November. Christina and the boys had patiently
endured a road trip stretching into its sixth day when we crossed into South
Dakota. We had endured horrendous Wyoming wind, a hotel door that locked us out
without all our belongings, and car sickness; not to mention all the
frustrations of two young boys cooped up and strapped down in car seats. Each
stop on the journey seemed to be further away from where we were hoping to be –
until the sun rose on the second largest city in South Dakota. We found a
beautiful city set in the wonderland of the Black Hills. Though lacking in the
majesty (or magnitude) of the Rocky Mountains, the Black Hills carry a unique
beauty all their own. We found Rapid City to be a family-friendly paradise
filled with pleasant people next to a wildly inviting outdoor playground.
During our one-day visit, we saw deer, big horn sheep and mountain goats. (Side
note: Rapid City only made the list of possibilities because I saw it on an
Outdoor Life ranking of the best cities for outdoorsmen – it was No. 2.) Swirled
into this location is a residency fitting nearly all the criteria I had set
forth when I began to search for the perfect residency.
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Two rams pose for pictures during our first visit to Rapid City. |
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Talmage at the "Art Walk" in Rapid City. |
Time marched forward, and though we remembered Rapid City
fondly and continued to discuss South Dakota as a place to consider for a
future home, we also managed to find reasons to move it down our “Rank List.”
Among other reasons, it is difficult
to travel to Rapid City, and when we learned our family would be growing this
summer, the desire to be close to family grew stronger and stronger. At the
time the rank list was sent into the Match Masters, Rapid City had found its
way down to No. 6.
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One of many beautiful views of the Black Hills. |
Fast forward now, to the present. We have settled in a home
in a quiet Rapid City neighborhood near the hospital, have enjoyed multiple
trips to the Black Hills, been to the Reptile Gardens and the Rapid City
Aquatic Center, toured Custer State Park and evened happened upon a small herd
of elk. Our garden is planted and green, and flowers are blooming in the yard.
We have found friends in the church and the residency, and each day Rapid City
begins to feel more like home.
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Sylvan Lake in Custer State Park. |
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A Canadian goose at Sylvan Lake. |
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A buffalo grazing in Custer State Park. |
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A ram grazing near Keystone in May 2013. |
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The "Profile View" of Mount Rushmore. |
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One of many views of Mount Rushmore as seen from Iron Mountain Road. |
Residency training starts a week from tomorrow. Not every
day is perfect. Sometimes we still feel horrendously isolated. Sometimes I
doubt, and sometimes I wonder. Some days I would like to wake up and have the
plan in front of me; to have that moment when I see clearly that this is, in
fact, the place where we are supposed to be. But I know, from experience, that
while the knowledge will probably come, it probably won’t happen in one day.
Instead, in three years, when we set out yet again on another adventure, I’m
sure I will be able to look back and say: Thank you, Heavenly Father, you knew
better than I did.