51品茶COM's "Fishin' Physicians" form bond that withstands the tide
Three friends, a whole lot of fishing gear, and miles and miles of open water.
It鈥檚 the quintessential New England scene, lived by 51品茶 College of Osteopathic Medicine (51品茶COM) Class of 2023 students Charlie Bloom, Hannah Akre, and Kelsey Klingel 鈥 or, as they are known online, the Fishin鈥 Physicians.
The group of friends began fly fishing in the cool waters off southern Maine in late spring, as striped bass began to make their northerly migration. They don鈥檛 eat the fish, they said, but release them to spawn.
The physicians-to-be began documenting their experiences on their Instagram account, . They have since amassed 2,350 followers and have garnered thousands of likes on trade social media accounts like , , , , the , and the , to name just a few.
The crew said their Instagram account is a way to share their hobby with friends and the public, but it is also a way to spread their values as doctors in training.
鈥淲e talk a lot about how we can use this platform as a way to kind of promote global population health, because we know that there's such a correlation between the health of our environment and how that affects human health,鈥 said Klingel, a Minnesota native.
Time on the water is social, said Akre, but it also allows for personal reflection.
鈥淭here is a social component to fishing, between us texting and making these plans, arriving at different locations, and catching up when we get into the water,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut there is also something very individual, mental, and meditative about it. We find our own spots and cast our lines. And, when you hear someone shout, you know they鈥檝e hooked a fish.鈥
It is that meditative space that helps relieve the stress of medical school and helps prepare the students for the rigors of medicine, said Akre, of landlocked St. Louis.
"Finding your outlet, which is unique to every individual in medicine, is so important because medicine can have really intense moments. Whether you're a practicing physician or a medical student, the mental stamina that is demanded of you is significant,鈥 she said. 鈥淏eing able to release, to let go, and recharge is really important to our success right now, as students, but ultimately to our success as clinicians.鈥
Also relieving, the students said, has been the warm response they have received from other members of the local fishing community.
鈥淲e've been so supported and embraced by who would otherwise be strangers but are now dear friends that we've met through Instagram or out on the water,鈥 Akre said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 touching when we get to the river or the ocean and a local fisher shouts, 鈥楬ey, ladies, how did the exam go?鈥 It melts your heart, and, as someone who is not from Maine, it feels really incredible to be welcomed into this community.鈥
Bloom, of New Paltz, New York, said the evolving sport of fly fishing reflects the evolving nature of what it means to be a doctor. The field of medicine is always changing, she said, just like the tides, methods of fishing, and the fish themselves.
鈥淭o be good doctor and angler alike, you have to commit yourself to lifelong learning and continuously feed an insatiable curiosity,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here will always be aspects of medicine that change, and not everything we鈥檙e learning now will be true in the future. As physicians, we have to open to iterating our knowledge base. Remaining curiosity will allow us to incorporate new information in useful ways, whether that is on the water or in the exam room.
鈥淚t鈥檚 fun to be engaged in this environment that is evolving 鈥 the learning never stops,鈥 Bloom continued. 鈥淲e鈥檙e always learning something new and refining what we already have learned, ultimately feeding that curiosity for medicine.鈥
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Photos and video by Camden Spear.