The Pharmacy Chick

Flying the Coop in Retail

White Socks and Black Socks

Filed under: Uncategorized — pharmacychick at 9:04 am on Thursday, July 24, 2008

This morning as I padded sleepy-eyed from the bed to the dresser, I commented to Mr Chick “Today’s going to be a good day!” He asked why and I said “Because its WHITE sock day” We both had a little chuckle because we knew exactly what it meant.

The Chicks do not have a large diversity in the sock drawer. We have a drawer of white socks and a drawer of black socks. When I draw from the black sock drawer, it means I have to go to work. When I draw from the white sock drawer, Its a play day. Today is a WHITE sock day. Poor Mr chick. He put on black socks today :-(

My only exception is this: If I ever make it to Boston, I’ll be RED SOX all over! Boo Yankees.

Peace!

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Would I do it all over again?

Filed under: Uncategorized — pharmacychick at 7:37 pm on Thursday, June 26, 2008

I was ringing up a sale at the register when a long time customer asked me Do you like being a pharmacist? It seems like a fun job. After I checked to see if she had alcohol on her breath I took a moment to respond. I didn’t want to lie and tell her I had the coolest job on the planet, but I also didn’t want to make it sound like my job was akin to mucking out port-a-potties either. Since she had asked a sincere question, I decided that a sincere, honest and to-the-point answer was in order: I said “Depends on the day”.

I told her the truth. The business has been good to me financially. I have made a good living in a field that to date, has been largely immune from the trials and tribulations of economic instability. For 20+ years we have weathered pharmacist shortages that has virtually guaranteed that I will not have to stand in the bread line anytime soon. I could walk off my job tomorrow and by the middle of next week I could have my pick of any number of jobs. Granted, they may not be GREAT jobs, but they would put food on the table. For a lot of people, that is a lofty aspiration and one that I do not take for granted. Neither do I consider myself indispensable (forgive the pun). Everybody is replaceable even if it DOES take a while.

I told her that the job however is rarely “fun”. The cost of this good income is long hours, working in a retail setting that is open 363 days a year, and dealing with the public who comes to me largely because they HAVE to and not because they WANT to. My hours are decided by somebody else, not myself. I cannot choose to close early because I am tired or sick. For the priviledge of being a retail pharmacist, I also forfeit uninterrupted lunches and working in a quiet unhurried environment. I cannot choose my workload. The wearer of the white coat lives under a microscope most of the time, micromanaged by the company she works for, and pressured all day by the demands from whomever is the most persistent.

“Line 1, Guess who?” Like I’d have to guess. For the 6th time today Harold has called to see if his Doctor has ok’d his Vicodin. AND, despite my promises that I will call him the very moment its authorized, Harold calls about every hour….and demands to talk to me.

“Line 2, Guess who also?” Harold just hung up so it has to be Dina, who just picked up her prescription. We play 20 questions every time she comes in. No human on the planet has called our store more often than Dina. While I like her, I wish she would go away. “Can I take Aspirin when I am using Patanol?”, “Can my son take Ibuprofen with his Amoxicillin?” “If I have an allergic reaction to Claritin, can I take Benadryl?” “What happens If I have a reaction to Benadryl?” “Can I take Benadryl and Tylenol at the same time?” “Will I overdose if I take Claritin and Patanol?” There will be, in fact, at least 2 followup phone calls for every single rx she picks up, whether it be new or refills. She has even called us while she is on vacation.

When you are a pharmacist, there is no closed door to retreat behind (but the potty) when you’ve had enough. Go ahead, try… somebody will demand your attention before the aforementioned door closes…and you will again be at somebody elses beckon call. Thats what its like to be a retail pharmacist. I should have a mantle full of Oscars for the performances of a lifetime I have played out in the white coat.

This customer then asked me if they took it all away, would I go to pharmacy school again? Tougher question: Its a good thing that I was an uninformed college student when I chose Pharmacy as my major. I worked thru each quarter, one at a time, always amazed that I survived to pass on to the next one. It was harder than I had imagined…and its even harder now with the Pharm D as the entry degree. Ignorance is bliss I think. There are a lot of things that I have done in my life that were harder than I had thought when I started them. I have completed a lot of things that if I had the opportunity to repeat, I probably wouldn’t simply because I would remember the effort involved. “Glad I did it once, don’t want to do it again” might be a good motto for the things in THAT category.

I guess I didn’t have an answer for her. I dont remember exactly what I said, but in retrospect, if I was 20 years old and had my life before me, yes I’d probably do it again. If I was 45 and starting over with a new career, not so sure.

What made me write about this was the following conversation:

A nurse called me the other day on a refill auth to inform us that at the end of the month, the Dr was closing her practice. I casually asked “Having a baby?”. No, the nurse replied, she is giving up medicine to go to Law School. WHOA. Pharmacy school was one thing, that took 6 years. But Medicine? This physician likely had a dozen years or more in school and residency before she hung her shingle…and she is giving it all up. I wish I knew her well enough to ask her why.

I know the nurses name and when I go back to work next week, I am gonna call her and ask her. I’ll let you know.

For now I put the same question to you–Would YOU do it all over again? or better yet, If you were going to start over, what WOULD you do?

Thats an easier question for Pharmacy Chick–I am passionate about animals, I’d be a vet.

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When old is new again

Filed under: Uncategorized — pharmacychick at 9:26 pm on Thursday, May 22, 2008

Pharmacy Chick was grocery shopping today and found an item that screamed :BLOG!

For those of you old enough to remember, canning food used to be a pretty popular thing. Giant pots of boiling water turning cucumbers into pickles, Apples into pie filling, and peaches into future cobbler.

When I was a kid, my mother used to can food. I guess “jar” would be a more appropriate word for it since it was all in glass. We had a big back yard and grew all sorts of veggies. She’d can tomatoes and peaches, beets, cherries, jam and pickles. She also froze whatever couldn’t be canned. Because canning jars were expensive, they were treated quite well. AND we would also save and reuse mayonaise and Miracle Whip jars.

Oh, that wonderful stuff called Miracle Whip Salad Dressing. I wonder how they got the name. Where is the “miracle?” It seems that most households are either “mayo” or “Miracle Whip”. Ours was both because Dad liked MW and the rest of us liked Mayo. Anyway, these jars were perfect for canning because they had a wide mouth that was the same diameter as the canning jars sold in the store. Every jar was saved and reused for mom’s canning projects. Even our non-canning friends would save jars and bring them over. In mom’s opinion, if you threw away a jar suitable for canning, you were throwing away money.

I never got the hang of canning food, I don’t have a garden, and mom died with all of her secrets. But she left behind all these jars. Hundreds of them. She hoarded them BECAUSE Miracle whip changed their jars from wide mouth to a narrower mouth many years ago. Actually both Mayo and MW went with this narrower mouth at about the same time. To her they were useless for canning. Then they went plastic. I am sure mother would think this was apostasy.

My dad asked me once if I wanted her jars. I graciously declined. As mentioned before, I never learned the art of canning. I could just see me giving my friends Tomatoes Ala Botulina Toxina. Nope, I think I will stick to professionally canned food ,thanks.

So today, when I was shopping, I was amused to see Miracle Whip in its plastic bottle, emblazoned with the words “NEW, IMPROVED WIDE MOUTH JAR”

“New and improved?”….not so much..for those of us old enough to remember.

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Two hours in the bamboo

Filed under: Uncategorized — pharmacychick at 7:28 pm on Sunday, May 11, 2008

Heck of a way to spend a Sunday: 2 hours ripping out bamboo. Pharmacy Chick does NOT grow bamboo, but she has a neighbor who does. My yard is neat and tidy and hers is a urban jungle. Several years ago she planted a bamboo garden. Let me tell you that if you plant bamboo in anything OTHER than a container, you deserve exactly what you are going to get: bamboo everywhere. Today I got to do my semi-anual hack, clip and rip.

Let me tell you what bamboo is. Bamboo is like the troublemaker at school who wants to date your daughter. Bamboo is like your weird Uncle Stan drops in from Philly “for a few days” and is still there 2 weeks later. Bamboo is like your neighbor’s barking dog…at 2 am. Bamboo is like Stan’s wife Alice who smoked in your bathroom and thought you’d never find out cuz she used the fan. Bamboo is God’s own weed. Once you have it, you will never get rid of it.

The neighbor behind us had a bamboo garden once too. When they moved out, the new neighbors ripped and hacked for years before it finally quit popping up. Not even Round Up kills it. It creeps under the fence and starts growing. Hence todays version of the Hack, Clip and Rip.

It looks great now. But, it mocks me from afar. “I’ll be back” HA HA HA

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My tidy whities

Filed under: Uncategorized — pharmacychick at 9:36 pm on Saturday, May 10, 2008

Pharmacy Chick has about 20 white coats. Its embarrassing to admit but I still have some coats from my school days. Its not like there is Haute Couture for lab coats-what changes from year to year? As long as it remains relatively white (”relative” is the operative word here) then it stays in the lineup.

I do actually have a few favorites that make it to the front of the closet. I suppose all of us white-coat-junkies are kinda picky about our coats. I am no exception. Mine have to have 3 pockets. I keep certain things in each pocket and I like to keep it lightweight. One pocket has 3 pens in it. the other pocket has certain papers I use a lot. I also have a receipt from 2 years ago for a bank withdrawal for some money I lent a family member. He still hasn’t paid me back, the deadbeat. And, in my breast pocket I keep my sharpies, the greatest invention since the counting tray.

Years ago I loved my 3/4 sleeve “Consultation Jacket”. Real impressive. It had a fancy lapel and I wore a multitude of pins on it. I kept it crisply ironed, but I eventually wore them out. I still have 3 of them (among the 20) but I dont wear them anymore. They aren’t real white anymore and have stains on them. Since they quit making that style, I went on a mission to find the perfect coat, hence the purchase of the additional 17. I couldn’t find any brick and mortar store to buy them so I had to look online. Unfortunately I was too lazy to return the ones I didn’t like them so they joined an ever growing collection in the closet.

Some of them were made so cheaply they felt like paper–gone, out of the lineup. A couple more were free from the company but had only 2 pockets–gone, goodbye. A few more were long sleeve and they were hard to keep clean on the arms. Ciao. A couple others needed more ironing than a Chinese laundry. Outahere. Then one day an intern passed by and had this zip up jobby that reminded me of a barber. It was plain, but I liked it. I ordered one…then 2 more, and they are now my fav’s. Short sleeve (one point), 3 pockets (one point), no buttons (one point), and no iron (3 points).

I finally decided to clear out some of the coats. There probably isn’t much demand at Goodwill for old lab coats so I retired them to the garage as rags. I still have a dozen that I never wear but they get to occupy the closet–I can’t seem to ditch a perfectly white coat. I just keep using my barber coats over and over. No fancy lapel so no more pins. I’m lucky to remember my name tag. Not much form perhaps, but 100% functional.

Which reminds me, I better get them washed before they qualify as a Superfund site….

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