Hi Lindsey,
Since our conversation, I've been thinking about your question of how my education in architecture has influenced my medical practice. My answer, though accurate, was abbreviated and less than eloquent since the true answer is lengthy. Let me tell you more.
I certainly did learn about how people live their lives. In the process of design, what is foremost is how people use the space. It is not just the spoken words such as "I want this to be a park where 120 people can watch a band" but it is the unspoken words, such as "there needs to be space for overflow, and there needs to be space for parking, concessions, restrooms." There is another layer, the sense that the person is saying something like, "I don't know what's the real number, but it would be nice to have than number" or even as far as "I hope they don't have to take out the trees." In short, I learned more about how people communicate. That's not to say that I'm an expert by any means, but it makes me more aware.
Architecture education made me aware of the concept of Process. Process is the way in which the designer has come upon a solution. In Process, many different ideas are tried, and the ideas that don't work are just as important as the ideas that do work. In fact, if a workable solution is presented without failed ideas, the solution is said to lack Process. This was reinforced to me by working intensely alongside my classmates. Everyone has their own method of Process. This is a metaphor for life: we all have our mistakes to make, and these mistakes are a necessary part of the Process called Life. This knowledge makes me more accepting of other perspectives, makes me more flexible to different approaches. It makes me more able to accept that patients to make mistakes (e.g. "I didn't take my medicine because I wanted to see what would happen").
This education has also made me a fuller person. In doing so, it allows me to think more fully about my patients experience and their lives. It makes me a more holistic doctor.
In design, one becomes very aware of a project's positive and negative aspects. You can't ignore the negative, and this type of work makes one's own strengths and weaknesses plainly apparent. But neither the project's or the designer's weaknesses are seen as fatal character flaws: you can't just dismiss the project because there is something you don't like. The skill of the designer is to utilize the flaw, and even make the flaw an asset. This too, is a metaphor for life, for it allows one to appreciate each individual's qualities, as well as one's own, and how to deal with and even appreciate the negative.
In short, the process of design is often the utilization of metaphor (e.g. "this space is a dance") and the process itself becomes a metaphor for life.
I hope this is a better, more thorough answer to your question.
Forest
Zinnias & butterfly
16 hours ago



