WELLBEING → LIFELINES Issue 618 · July 13, 2016

With Every Stitch

“What do you want to be when you grow up?” I was just three years old when my Bubby’s friend asked me the question. “A doctor,” I promptly replied. “You mean a nurse,” Bubby corrected me.

With    Every    Stitch
Photo: Shutterstock

Photo: Shutterstock

“What do you want to be when you grow up?”

I was just three years old when my Bubby’s friend asked me the question. “A doctor” I promptly replied.

“You mean a nurse” Bubby corrected me.

“No” I said. “I mean a doctor.”

This was in the 1960s when female doctors were a rarity and a frum female doctor was almost unheard of.

Nobody besides me ever imagined I’d be a doctor. I was a girl I came from a chassidic family and I hated school. I had a very hard time reading and was probably dyslexic but in those days kids like me were just considered stupid. I had to work extremely hard just to do okay in elementary school and being a Type-A personality I had a very hard time accepting just okay. It wasn’t until the end of high school that I actually taught myself how to learn.

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