When vascular surgeon Vicki Teodorescu, MD, was growing up in a working-class part just outside of Newark, New Jersey, she said the standards for what girls like her might grow up to do were limited. “I don’t think there was much expectation for girls to do anything,” she said.
It was assumed that once young women graduated from high school, they would get married and have families, and “that was pretty much the end of that,” she said. But, from an early age, she felt called toward more. She wasn’t sure what, but she knew she needed to get out and explore.
It’s an inkling that had always been there — a hunch that she was destined to break out from that mold. Teodorescu guesses it came from her mother’s side — with their hardy, Scandinavian roots. Her ancestors immigrated from Sweden in the 1880s. During the long, arduous journey, her headstrong great-grandmother insisted that the family piano make the trip with them — across the water by boat and then across the prairie in wagons, dragging this several-hundred-pound reminder of home because it was an essential part of their family identity.