October 29, 2011


Coffee for me. Cigarettes for A.
Mexican cuisine. Three Musketeers. Chat about self-generated theories.
Sometimes we need to surround ourselves with people having totally different perspective about life. It nourishes the mind and is also a form of escapade. :)

October 25, 2011

At the Psychiatry interns' callroom, this was glued on the wall like an important note beside the list of decked patients, interns' guidelines, etcetera. Oh well, I must say it is equally important. 



If you have at least 4 of the above symptoms. CONSULT YOUR PHYSICIAN. NOW!

October 22, 2011

Elusive Peace

I’m in the middle of a routinely work when the urge of writing suddenly popped up like an old friend tugging at my back seeking for a little attention. And after months of neglecting my personal journal, here I am trying to jot down bottled-up feelings I attempted to ignore. 


I was reading a fiction called “Below The Crying Mountain” by a Filipino author Criselda Yabes about the entangled story of an American mestiza who eloped with a Muslim educated man towards the land of the “Dirty People”; and of Nahla, an ambitious Muslim woman who fell in love with a Christian soldier declared by her people as an enemy. The story revolved in the poverty-stricken and nest of rebellion Sulu. It broke my heart as the story unfolds piece by piece. My heart got even more broken when I opened the television after putting down the book and saw what happened in Basilan which is on the headlines as of speaking moment. It’s as if what I was seeing on TV is a continuation of the book I just finished reading. 


There were 19 soldiers who died in the encounter, 6 of them were held captives before they were mercilessly murdered, the news said. I heard the weeping family members airing their sentiments at how their loved ones’ lives were grimly taken. Stories of these national heroes were told and the images of them bidding farewell to their mothers, fathers, wives and kids promising to come back soon quickly flashed in my mind. Just like a scene in a movie accompanied by sobby music on the background. Little did they know, they will return as cold corpses. I can’t help but shed a tear for their loss. 

I sympathize with the mothers who lost their sons after decades of nurturing them, protecting them from the harsh rains, feeding and educating them to become better men. 
I sympathize with the fathers who worked hard to raise their sons to become perfect gentlemen and good citizens of the nation. 
I sympathize with the wives who, after days and weeks and months of patiently waiting at the doorstep, no soldier husband would arrive. 
I sympathize with the little sons and daughters who will grow up without a father at their homes. 
I sympathize with the nation for losing great men—men who died while serving their motherland. 

On the other hand, it hurts me even more that the culprit were Moro rebels. Muslim rebels, the news said. Not Christian rebels because the media knows not of any Christian rebels, only NPA who unknowingly kills and burns acres of lands in other parts of the country. But they’re not on the news. Only the Muslim rebels are the highlights. The bad guys. My people. 

There goes the media for their one-sided story, feeding the nation with false information. While we sympathize for the nineteen people who died, did it ever occur to any one of the millions of televiewers the other side of the story? How about those thousands of helpless residents who were displaced in their war-torn areas? They are the real victims in the situation. Do the media even investigate as to why the MILF attacked the AFP camp in the middle of the Peace Talk? For all we know, there must be a reason. 

Nineteen were mercilessly murdered as opposed to the thousands who were ripped off from what was left of their lands, from their dreams, from the good future that could be awaiting them. Thousands of mothers and fathers will endlessly hide and protect their children from the bullet rains fired by the national government ammunition. Thousands of children will be deprived of a happy childhood, a better education, and most importantly, deprived to live a meaningful life. Tell me, how does that differ from being killed? 

Then there’s the pushing for an all-out war against the MILF, against the Moros, against the Muslims. They want us to perish. Those people pushing such evil idea know better---there’s no victory in war, most especially, evil shall not triumph over the good. My rebel brothers in the South know that too, but why do they push for a Bangsamoro Republic when we can’t even handle ARMM? Let’s admit it, we Moros aren’t even united. We’d get at each other’s throat to gain power to fuel our pride. I believe we’re too ambitious for a Bangsamoro republic. Yes, it will happen, but not now. Let us not be governed by our impulsiveness and blinded by our pride. To quote a character from the book “Below the Crying Mountain”: 



“Of course Allah was not on his side. He was not on Allah’s side to begin with…did He ever say, take up arms and follow me? There should have been no turning back for Jolo but it kept on doing so because violence breeds violence. 

“..I’d say that of any revolution is to succeed here and now it would be the weapon of tolerance. Only tolerance will bring peace, but no one here, not the Muslims, not the Christians, not this government we’re stuck with, understands the meaning of that word. 
“…Omar failed because he was thinking only of himself. He was trying to prove something, seeking vindication because he was a Muslim. He may talk for all he wants about building an independent state for Sulu but I doubt if he knew what it meant to serve Allah.” 


In the midst of all these confusing chaos, all we can do as spectators of this reel-like reality is to pray for our leaders to make a decision that is unbiased and beneficial for all. Let us pray for a nation undivided by religion, race and language—a nation so united that people coexist peacefully. 
Amen. 




There, I just said my piece. 




October 21, 2011

NSS


I sat down for a good 3 hours listening to the Neurosurgery Pre-/Post-operative conference. I almost felt my CSF leaking out of my ears by just listening to them. This department consists of brilliant people without exception, almost all of them were board exam topnotchers! My hats off for them for understanding the complexities of the brain and actually opening the skull and working on the organ! Personally, manipulating the brain vessels, gyri and sulci is the toughest thing in the medical field! Astig! On the photo above is Sir Ronnie, first year Neurosurgery resident who's an excellent writer as well. 


Interns do not assist in Neurosurgery because of the very minimal operative field. In this photo above are two BISDAKs (Bisayang Dako), Sir Villamor (a Cebuano and Chief Resident) and Sir James (Iliganon and first year resident), doing a craniotomy and clipping of aneurysm. 


Cerebral angiogram of the patient being operated on the other photo above. Somewhere along the branches of his brain blood vessel ruptured creating a blood clot on his brain which subsequently causes him dysfunction. The clot need not be evacuated (depending on the volume of clot) as the brain has a natural mechanism for reabsorption but the ruptured vessel must be clipped to halt the blood from leaking. 


FUN-TASTIC FOUR! (I'm number four!) 
L-R: Alaric, Dane and Rex. 
Our block was divided into two and (un-) fortunately, I got into this group. They're the people I was with for the past three weeks until our Anesth rotation next week. Being around boys is a lot more easier than being around girls (haha! peace, girlies!). 

P.S.
Alaric, being my fan (!), wishes to be featured here in my blog. Will write about you so long as you cook a perfect meal for me and hand me a copy of your best photographic shots! Yes, I will write about it. Promise. :) BWAHAHAHA!




Parental Visit

Mama and Papa, October 2011.


It has been said that marriage is a match made in heaven. However, from a school of thought I read eons ago, when an individual is a wandering soul in heaven, he was asked who he wants to become his parents when he assumes a physical form on earth. He will have to choose his parents in heaven prior to his arrival on earth, whether a marriage between the would-be parents will occur or whether it will last or not. This  explains why there are illegitimate children and there are broken marriages. Hence, we have no right to tell our parents that we did not choose to be born! We actually did and we chose them to be our parents. 

I guess, I made the perfect choice. 

I pray for a longer life for my Mama and Papa. :)






October 15, 2011

Desiderata


When I feel like I'm on the deepest pit, my go-to book is the (behold!) The Holy Qur'an. Seriously, it is. I cannot put into simpler words the magical feeling I get after reading the Holy Book. Yesterday, while I was sitting at the nosebleed-inducing Neurosurgery case conference, I got a glimpse of Desiderata hanging on the wall. I loved this poem since forever because it is a spirit-lifting read when you have some suicidal ideations boiling inside your head. I haven't read it for quite sometimes and I was reminded when I saw it printed on a frame dangling beside the Chairman's certificate like it was saying "hello, do you remember me?". It made me smile, and so here, I share it with everyone else who have forgotten how to live a life. :)

DESIDERATA
Max Ehrmann
Go placidly amid the noise and the haste,
and remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible, without surrender,
be on good terms with all persons.
Speak your truth quietly and clearly;
and listen to others,
even to the dull and the ignorant;
they too have their story.
Avoid loud and aggressive persons;
they are vexatious to the spirit.
If you compare yourself with others,
you may become vain or bitter,
for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself.
Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans.
Keep interested in your own career, however humble;
it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.
Exercise caution in your business affairs,
for the world is full of trickery.
But let this not blind you to what virtue there is;
many persons strive for high ideals,
and everywhere life is full of heroism.
Be yourself. Especially do not feign affection.
Neither be cynical about love,
for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment,
it is as perennial as the grass.
Take kindly the counsel of the years,
gracefully surrendering the things of youth.
Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings.
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.
Beyond a wholesome discipline,
be gentle with yourself.
You are a child of the universe
no less than the trees and the stars;
you have a right to be here.
And whether or not it is clear to you,
no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.
Therefore be at peace with God,
whatever you conceive Him to be.
And whatever your labors and aspirations,
in the noisy confusion of life,
keep peace in your soul.
With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams,
it is still a beautiful world.
Be cheerful. Strive to be happy.

October 12, 2011


He may be tiny but he says something enormous. We, Muslims, are the most stereotyped people. 
The world's just not fair. 

New Look!

I put a new look into this tiny nook that blogger has newly offered. It's called the Dynamic View wherein readers are given the options to choose which way they'd like to view or sort the articles. You may scan this page using the Classic view, Flipcard, Magazine, Mosaic, Sidebar, Snapshot and Timeline views. The advantages are the photos previously posted can be easily located as well as the old articles plus it gave the site a lesser boring facade! The DISadvantage is that my blogroll is not featured in here as well as my favorite linked sites! :'( But anyway, I shall give this blog a temporary look. Just feel free to drop comments especially on which one is convenient for you---the old one, or this new one! :) 

GOOD MORNING!
Greetings from a Neurosurgery intern who's checking her mail to download files but ended up updating her blog. :)

Have a blessed Wednesday, people!


What's with the CI logbook?

What's the most famous logbook among the PGH interns?
Answer: CI logbook.

This logbook is the interns' attendance logbook at the Cancer Institute and every single intern who gets to spend some few hours of duty there looks forward to flipping the pages of this logbook. It doesn't look any extraordinary at first glance, just plain and cheap logbook bearing the interns' names but the important pages are found at the back. It holds important and controversial secrets that only interns know. This is where we vote for the Sunog-Puri awards. 

Trivia: interns traditionally burn an effigy of the most loathsome resident, nurse or any hospital staff perhaps to get even and label them as Sunog Awardees while the effigy of those heavenly angelic residents or any hospital staff are being raised on a pedestal, they are the Puri Awardees.

In between hourly monitoring of patients or doing ward works such as blood extraction or IV insertion, one would definitely get entertained by just leafing through the back pages filled with vandals expressing their frustrations, hatreds, mundane thoughts, sometimes love and everything they want to express. Conversations between people who probably doesn't know each other would happen sometimes. But people have an unspoken rule of NOT indicating their names. But there's a particular intern whose name is the "talk of the logbook". Of course I wouldn't tell who. 

Now, to give you an idea of what I'm yakking about. Here. 


"This is what CI boredom does... It's called the CI Effect Syndrome:

1. Enhanced chismis skills.
2. Grammar regression
3. Literary warfare
4. Decreased hemoglobin secondary to lamok. Echosera." 
True! You might not get dengue but you'll suffer from anemia (chos!) from excessive mosquito bites!



People even mercilessly taped the mosquito carcasses on the page!! Boredom!!


People would even show their artistic skills by drawing!


...Or greet their friends.. HELLO BLOCK U! That's us! :) Hey! *waves at Block U*


And these are the reasons why nobody would even dare to tear a single page of the logbook:

BAWAL MAGPUNIT NG PAGE. ANG PUMUNIT:
1. IPAPASOK SA TIME CAPSULE PERO NAKALABAS ANG ULO.
(Imagine riding an aircraft with your head out the window!)

2. IKUKULONG SA ELEVATOR NG CI MULA 2-4AM NG UMAGA. 
(There had been rumors about bizarre creepy events at the Cancer Institute especially during the wee hours of the night. Gusto kong maniwala na chismis lang lahat ng yun.)

3. PIKTYURAN PWET AT I-UPLOAD SA FACEBOOK.
(Unless you're some whore, then you wouldn't like people to be feasting on your ass)

4. FOLEY CATHETER! 
(worst punishment ever!)



The CI logbook is a huge source of entertainment, but still, I don't like going on duty at the Cancer Institute because it feels creepy even at daytime and..
it smells of death. 

The Iron Lady

If there's one structure on earth that I so love much I'd probably marry is the Eiffel Tower. I get so engrossed by it even when I was young that it is my lifelong dream to actually land my feet on Paris and see for myself and climb the la dame de fer. I find it mysterious, standing in the middle of the city as if observing in silence while patiently waiting for something. According to the people (ahem, friends?) who have been there, everywhere you go in the city of Paris, the tower will always be within your vision. I believe that's one of the things that the engineer Gustave Eiffel wanted to impart to the public--that his undying work of art will always be visible. There's one more thing I wish for about Eiffel but I guess it is not appropriate for me to divulge such in this public journal. (Haha!) Unknowingly, I began to buy stuff printed with Eiffel. I had lots more back in Marawi, these are just the ones I purchased here in the metro. 


Earrings. Look closely, there's the tower o. 


Necklace. I got this from Iligan. The moment I saw it, I knew I had to buy it.


Notebook from a bazaar at Rockwell. I have so many unused notebooks but without second thoughts, I grabbed this one. :)


Photo courtesy of GOOGLE.

Sunset at the Eiffel. Magnificent! 
See you before I die. 

P.S.
I wish for a miniature Eiffel I can place inside my room. I wonder where I can possibly purchase one that comes at a cheaper price. Yung tipong...gift. Haha!


October 6, 2011



I was tagged by Ate Bee from her blog. So, the rule is that the first three adjectives that you see at the crossword puzzle simply describe you. Game? Game!!


Mine are:
lovely
beautiful
whore

WHAAAAAT?!! Okay na yung first two eh, can I have a take two for the last word? Hahaha!

What's yours? You're free to drop a comment! :)




"Studying" for the Ortho end-of-rotation Exam. 

Conclusion: Ortho is never my forte. I got a very low score during the exam (which was more like a quiz), I can't seem to forgive myself. Oh well. On my last OR assist, a resident even accidentally pressed the cautery while it was pointing at my antecubitus which burned my skin! The area is still erythematous until now. I think this will leave a scar! Malas nga naman oh. 

October 1, 2011


Note to self:


something beyond reality for an anhedonic person called ME.