Thursday, November 27, 2014

my story



I wanted to start by sharing my story and how I ended up headed towards medical missions.

Let me mention that there was nothing fancy about it. At a young age I knew I wanted to help people out.

God really spoke to me through his word in the part of the gospels where he decides to wash his disciples' feet. Every time I read this passage, I felt like something was about to jump out of my chest. There he is, the Son of God, God in person, and he decides he is going to be the one to stoop down to wash his disciples feet before dinnertime. And the crazy thing about it is that the disciples let him, I mean would you let the president wash your feet? I think not, I would probably be like "Mr President, your highness, how about I wash my own feet, I can do it, you don't have to wash my feet, if you want I can wash yours (because this would feel more appropriate than him washin my stinky feet)."

Peter felt somewhat the same way as I do and protested when Jesus was about to wash his feet. I realize that serving is not only about serving: if you really want to be Jesus' disciple, you have to humble yourself to be served. I think Peter learned this lesson when Jesus corrected him, "if you won't let me wash your feet, then you have no part of me." True humility in serving is NOT a one-way street, you have to be humble enough to serve and to be served. In the end, Jesus insisted and Peter responded, "well if you have to, then wash all of me, not just my feet."

As I mentioned before, this story just really makes me feel uncomfortable and yet so much more passionate about the way Jesus would serve his disciples. One time when the disciples were arguing about who was the best disciple, Jesus said "whoever wants to be first must be servant of all." And that really resonates with me.

So my passion in life is to serve others, and since God also put a passion on my heart to become a doctor, that is how I plan to carry it out. As I said, nothing fancy.

One last thing: Ever since I remember I felt a strong sense that every person I came in contact with was an equal, and it was important to serve at an eye-to-eye level instead of from a perspective of superiority. Get rid of that "savior complex" that does no one any good. Practical ways of doing this include sustainibility (serve in a way that doesn't crash when you aren't there), empowering the local community as much as you can to do what you do (as the saying goes: teach a man to fish), and go there with the perspective that things should only change as much as the local community is willing it to.

How I see this playing out: Given my latin background having grown up in Chile, the plan is after residency is to serve in a latino community that has limited medical resources and plug into that community in the biggest sense of the word, to serve and be served.