Student Scene
A Navajo Farewell
Graham
Ramsay
Ellen Rothman
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Eliza’s umbilical cord stump fell off while we were still in California.
I stored it in a Ziploc with the intention of burying it, according to the
Navajo tradition, in the red rock hills behind our home on the reservation
back in Arizona. The umbilical cord is the physical representation of the three
central relationships that orient a Navajo child in this world—to the
mother, to the homeland, to the Holy Spirits. The navel is a lifelong reminder
of the roots established before birth.
This year unexpectedly has turned out
to be an unsettled one, full of turbulence and transition. It has been a time
to define where we have come from and to envision where we are going. My husband
and I have been pediatricians for the Indian Health Service for the past six
years. We came expecting a fling and, instead, discovered the defining experience
of our professional lives.
Ties that Bind
My father-in-law in California has suffered from a long-standing autoimmune
liver disease that was so indolent we wondered whether the doctors had the
correct diagnosis. This fall, he casually mentioned that his feet were swollen
in the evenings. That seemingly trivial complaint heralded a precipitous
progression to full-blown liver failure. He collapsed at home the day before
Thanksgiving and was found to be in end-stage liver and kidney failure. At
that time, Carlos and I were trapped on the reservation, anticipating the
birth of our second daughter any day.
“How can I choose between my father and my child?” Carlos
asked one sleepless night. But finally, the situation became so grave that
we made the 14-hour trip west.
Two days after we arrived, we learned that a liver donor had become available.
Carlos’s father was the alternate recipient. We spent a restless evening,
and I woke in the predawn darkness, vaguely aware that I had been asleep for
many hours. It had been too long—the liver had certainly gone to someone
else. I felt as despondent as I have ever been in my life.
Just then, the phone rang. “Hello,” a woman’s voice said. “I
am ____, calling for Gregorio Lerner. Another liver has become available, and
he is the alternate.
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Carlos and I arrived on the reservation as two free spirits, exhilarated and
itching for adventure. We depart a family of four, with two big dogs.
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“I felt as if God were speaking to me, this disembodied voice in the
middle of the night, with the power to determine life and death. In the end,
the team decided that the liver was better suited for my father-in-law, and
he received a transplant early that morning. We had told him the intended name
of our new baby, and Eliza was his first word after the breathing
tube was removed. She was born in California three days later, into a world
of newfound hope.
Leave-taking
From the moment we first arrived at the reservation, we also knew that we would
one day leave. Our brief stint grew into an extended stay, but we knew that
eventually we wanted to be closer to family and to better schools. We renewed
our job contract year by year, with the understanding that we could leave
at any time. Each year, we signed without a thought, grateful that the time
had not yet come.
But as Carlos’s father became sick and sicker, we started to consider
leaving next fall, then this summer, and perhaps now, or maybe we were too
late already. “We can’t stay forever,” Carlos said. “What’s
the difference if we leave now or one year from now? It’s better to go
when we still want to stay.”
We came to the reservation with little consideration of our ultimate career
goals. In fact, I thought myself a particularly unambitious clinician, all
too happy to accept a small job in a remote area with few opportunities for
advancement. All along, we thought that our reservation years would count little
toward our future career. As I embarked on my job search, it was not clear
what path I should choose. I struggled to envision myself in a more traditional
career—academics, private practice. Nothing seemed to fit.
But opportunities found us. Carlos will join the pediatrics department at
UCLA. His position will draw on the skills he has gained during the past six
years as our chief of staff. I will join a free clinic in downtown L.A. that
serves a community where 97 percent of the children live below the poverty
line and 40 percent have been placed in long-term foster care. The most difficult
aspect of the job search was acknowledging that Carlos and I have different
career goals. Over the past 13 years, we have been medical students together,
residents together, pediatricians together. Now our paths diverge.
We have buried Eliza’s umbilical stump next to our older daughter Macy’s,
under a lone pinon tree along our favorite walk. The yucca is blooming now,
simple white bells stretching high above the spiny underbrush, and the desiccated
rocks are embraced by the fleeting scent of wildflowers. Carlos and I arrived
on the reservation as two free spirits, exhilarated and itching for adventure.
We depart a family of four, with two big dogs. The umbilical stumps will serve
as our physical anchor to this land and to this experience. I am not ready
to go, and yet it is time to say good-bye.
—Ellen Rothman, HMS ‘98, practices in northern Arizona on
the Navajo Reservation.
The opinions expressed in this column are not necessarily those of Harvard
Medical School, its affiliated institutions, or Harvard University.
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Copyright 2007 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College
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