In life.

My top 10 from 2017.



Shown above: real life picture of me wanting to be a doctor circa 2004. The interesting thing is that my real life white coat and scrubs look this baggy still...

As we wrap up 2017, I feel compelled to summarize this year as we've had just an enormous amount of change happen in our lives. I told Parker, too, that 2017 is a very significant year for me. No, it wasn't the fact that we moved to another state after having lived my entire life in Kentucky. It wasn't the fact that this was the first year I started earning a real paycheck.

Being the insane, neurotic planner that I am, I had a life plan for myself. Not like a stereotypical life plan of being married by the time I was 25 or something. I had taken the time to calculate all the years of school required to finally reach my pinnacle of personal achievement: becoming a doctor (I could almost swear, too, that I said anesthesiologist at the time but I can't be sure). My earliest memory of this moment was maybe 6th grade. I'm sure I was talking to Kirsten about this as we were excited about starting "junior high" (LOL) and how we couldn't believe we were going to leave Holy Name after 8th grade in 2005. Next would come high school graduation in 2009. College in 2013. Then med school graduation by 2017. Then I would be a doctor. Done. That's all, folks! Legitimately, I planned my life up until a few days from now, and then I will be entering (what I consider) unchartered territory. Yikes.

So, let's revisit some highlights from this last year in my pre-written, premeditated state of life:

  1. Time spent hanging in an Eno with some of your best friends is highly undervalued.
  2. Also undervalued: having two usable legs.
  3. It's surprisingly okay to let your future be determined by a computer algorithm.
  4. That said, there is nothing more exhilarating than opening an envelope that suddenly determines your future.
  5. Moving to a new state is hard. Knowing no one and having to make new friends is even harder.
  6. Speaking of moving, packing up even the tiniest apartment is really hard (especially with only one usable leg). The feeling of throwing away old things is so rewarding, though.
  7. I've not experienced anything more scary or difficult than being (essentially) alone in the hospital responsible for 90+ patients. I've also never experienced anything so rewarding to drive home the next morning knowing no one died or got hurt under my watch.
  8. Birthdays in residency mean kind friends who aren't even working bring you cakes to the hospital because you're on call. They also mean someone brings you a hot cocoa at 3am in the burn unit because you're swamped, and they only stay briefly because you have to finish filling out a death certificate. They also need to leave quickly because they, too, have a death certificate to complete.
  9. Sometimes choosing spending time with people you love can be even more energizing than an extra few hours of sleep - even during an 80 hour work week.
  10. Life is extra sweet when things go according to plan. But there are enough Hallmark Christmas movies out there to teach everyone the obvious lesson that that's not how things tend to pan out.


Cheers to 2017, everyone. Here's to seeing what 2018 will bring!

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In life.

A Tribute to Tony Kraus: Three Key Lessons his Life Teaches us


A former student reached out to me a few weeks ago to ask for advice. He told me that he had dropped his finance major and switched into the college of education to prepare for a career teaching social studies. My heart, of course, swelled, and it had me reminiscing on the events that led me to drop my pre-law focus and become a high school teacher. Having a mother in education was a start, the fact that all of my extra-curriculars were focused on mentoring, tutoring, or leadership development was another factor, and Annie naturally,  who constantly encouraged me to ignore societal pressures and pursue what I really wanted to do. But even with all of these factors, I kept coming back to one event - one conversation…

My career as I know it today, many of the facets that I define myself by: a teacher, educator, mentor - may not have been possible without Tony Kraus.

I'm writing this now because 3 weeks ago Mr. Kraus lost his battle with lung cancer. I watched on social media as his students, current and former, poured out their hearts remembering his impacts at Owensboro Catholic High School. I knew I wouldn't be able to get out how much this man impacted me in just a Facebook post, so I wanted to take the time to sit down and really get my thoughts out. In reflecting on the life and impacts of Tony Kraus, I came up with three key lessons that he taught me. And I believe (you will soon read why) he would've wanted me to share these with the world.

1.) Tell your story.

I am a teacher because of one conversation I had with Mr. Kraus my senior year of high school. With one conversation, he planted a seed that would later bloom into a calling. With only one story he provided the light I needed to illuminate what I was meant to do. But he didn't just tell me and the other students in the room a story, he told us his story.

Mr. Kraus was not a life-long teacher. In fact, he started his 13 year career at OCHS one year before my freshman year - when he was 37. Like most students, I never questioned this, as the life-experiences of my educators was the furthest thing from my mind when I was 15 years old. But Mr. Kraus opened himself up to a group of senior boys in 2008. He told us about how he had worked in the banking industry for 10 years; he talked about his six figure salary, and what it was like to be seen as so successful at such a young age. But he also told us about the hole he felt in his heart - and the fateful conversation he had with a group of friends that prompted him to quit his job, re-enroll in a teaching program in his 30s, and go teach religion at a private school making 1/4 the salary of his previous life. And he told us there was no greater decision (outside of marrying his wife) he'd ever made.

In that simple act - speaking his truth - he unconsciously lit a spark in me that left me thinking what if for years to come. In putting himself out there he gave us all the unspoken permission to do the same. His life was a reminder to be your authentic, vulnerable self - and take any chance you get to share that with others - because you never know who needs to hear it.

2.) Live the life you have imagined - but make sure it's you who's imagining it

Henry David Thoreau wrote those words over 150 years ago - "Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined." Tony Kraus showed me two things about that statement: First, that you can always reinvent yourself. That you are not trapped in whatever life you currently have. There is always a chance for you to go after the life you've dreamed of.

Secondly, and possibly more importantly, is that you can't always trust the you in the life you have imagined.

Mr. Kraus lived the first half of his life searching for what he had believed was the life: the money, the status, the job. He achieved all of it through his own efforts, but he came to realize that the life he imagined was actually a life that others had imagined for him. It's so easy to get caught up in the cultural and societal definitions of success, to define our own success by what others expect of us. We allow the demands of life and society define our standards instead of crafting our own based on what really matters. Which leads me to his third, and most critical lesson.

3.) We were put on this earth to serve others

This is my third takeaway, but ultimately it is the single most identifiable character trait of Tony Kraus - servant. It was, to him, the true meaning of life. In everything he did Mr. Kraus put himself last. Tirelessly dedicated to his students, his family, and his community, Mr. Kraus was someone I could count on to exclaim 'Parker Whitehouse, how the heck are ya?!' , and really mean it. He was genuinely interested in the lives of his students. Teaching for him was a natural extension of his desire to serve and a lesson for all of us in how we define the purpose of our lives.

In his decision to teach, Tony Kraus teaches all of us that our lives are not defined by our victories, successes, or achievements. That our purpose in life is not self-gratification or -fulfillment. We are here to serve others. Mr. Kraus revealed through his life the catch 22 of the happiness pursuit in which American society has us trapped. We spend our lives seeking fulfillment and joy in the world - looking for what the world can do for us - but never asking what we can do for the world. The catch here is that we will never find happiness by seeking it. We will never be satisfied looking for it. It finds us only through our relationships and our service to others.


Though Tony Kraus has moved on to a far greater place than this world, his impact on it will continue to be felt as long as his lessons are still held by his students and colleagues. Every student I've worked with is impacted by him. Every lesson I teach happens in part because of him. I, and many others, will continue to pass on those lessons he lived every day. He taught us to be bold by telling us his story. He showed all of us that in seeking the life we dream of, we can be misled, but through faith and works we can reinvent ourselves to the person we are meant to be. And ultimately he gave us his greatest gift through the example of his life - purpose. We are here for a reason. We are here to serve.   

With that in mind I cannot imagine a more fitting end to his life than those words he most assuredly heard - 'Well done, oh good and faithful servant.'

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