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Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 7:25 pm
Came across this long-lost page after listening to a podcast reminiscing the good old times and decided to pay a brief visit. I'm turning thirty this year. Honestly, I am glad that I managed some form of meaningful existence over the last thirty years (or so I hope). At the same time, I don't yet feel the weight of becoming thirty. Perhaps the people around me daily are generally older than I am. Looking back at my previous rants, the question about what is left of me without my career still haunts me. It feels almost damning that this is dawning on me just as I'm beginning to derive bona fide enjoyment and purpose from what I do. Why have I given up some of the things I used to love? How different would things have been if I had pursued writing/journalism instead of medicine? Would the people I know treat me differently? I hate to admit it, but I think so. How accountable do I have to be to others around me when I make decisions about myself? Why do I have to be accountable to others more so than myself? The inherent people-pleaser in me would chide myself for being hot-blooded or fickle when extreme thoughts come to mind. Then again, why should others' opinions matter so much? I'm pitching myself against the people around me, and sometimes I feel like I want and should do more. But to what end? What if these don't give me gratification? Do I, and should I, conform to social constructs? Why should I be obligated to do certain things? Am I just being a wilful child saying this? When did I start losing my self-discipline and self-respect? What do I want to achieve in life? Perhaps there's something off about my hierarchy of needs. Sometimes I envy those who are bold and willing to gamble. You have to lose a little something to gain something bigger, right? I don't think I'd ever have the answers to these questions. Monday, March 01, 2021 @ 12:20 pm
Close to two years into joining the medical fraternity; the journey leaves much to be desired. Wild-eyed and curious at entry, weary-eyed and desensitised
at this juncture. The extrapolation to the point of exit would almost take on a
certain trend, barring any miracles that happen in the midst. There is a multitude of reasons and not a single tiebreaker,
just a slow simmer that brings the stomach to a hasty billowing. The transition
from an idealist to a realist to a pessimist, witnessing ever more grotesque
behaviour than acts of kindness and compassion. Good riddance, how should the
lens of judgement be shrouded by a veil of plain dusky motionless grey? The time horizon is long and still running, but there seems
to be no real point in time to pinpoint. Perhaps it was when I started becoming
more vested in passing examinations than in pursuing what’s left of my own
hobbies. Perhaps it was when I became always too tired or busy to either keep
myself in shape or spend time socialising. Perhaps it was when someone asked me,
“Who and what are you, if you are stripped of your profession as a doctor?” and
to my horror, I couldn’t answer. I am but a small change machine in the grander scheme of
things. Doing changes at a micro, patient-centred level. Will this ever
progress into something bigger? Of disparity and equity Inherent disparities exist in every healthcare system. What
had come into the light of the discussion in recent times is the talk of pay rises for public healthcare workers, which I think has been long overdue especially
for allied health colleagues including and not limited to just the nursing
staff but also our therapists amongst many others. The talks of a pay rise
appear reactionary in light of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, but subtly too brings
up deeper issues of disparity within the healthcare profession locally as well
as a comparison between healthcare systems abroad. Could perceived roles and
responsibilities, emphasis on other economic sectors, education costs explain
the differences in pay grade? How should outcome measures be used in healthcare
to ascertain remuneration? Of appreciation and abuse These days I don’t ask to and dare not wish to be shown
appreciation; such displays might even be superfluous or ostentatious in fact.
All I secretly hope for is that patients and their families leave our care
without returning unwarranted complaints years down the road. Positive reinforcement
is hardly seen at the workplace; the culture focuses on things you do wrong rather
than the things you have done right, simply because we are deemed infallible. Even
a single mistake could be news spread like wildfire throughout the entire
department that leaves a blemish on your records and taints for life. Receiving
feedback has never been so daunting and uncertain. Does the altruistic nature
of the job render us more merciful and tolerant towards such undesirable
behaviours? Does being in a paying class bestow upon you the right to exert
dominance by means of abuse? Does giving you the benefit of doubt of being possibly
cognitively impaired allow violent verbal, physical or even sexual harassment? Of knowing and not knowing – Empowerment A common thread is the mindset of "every man for
himself", which had led to complacency, indolence, a sense of entitlement.
It stifles the very instinct of mankind to become the fittest to survive, condemns the zest to brainstorm creative solutions to novel problems, smothers the courage to become above and beyond a mere mundane conformist of an
economic system. When a problem arises, the solution is not one thing but one
other person. When there is a lack of a solution in a protocol, the knee-jerk response
is to seek answers from another person. We seek answers all the time, yet the
approach to doing so has become as rudimentary as opening your mouth to ask someone
else a question, and not brainstorming for solutions to effect change. By means
of logic, should those who contribute by providing actual thought and solutions
be more deserving of increased remuneration instead of those who merely follow workflows
and ask unrequited questions? That’s for our fellow healthcare comrades. Public health education
leaves much room for improvement as well, but that might seem to be too much to
expect for a population who leaves the decision-making to the physician, only
to return with tirades of insults and blaming if something does not go as planned.
There needs to be an acceptance that things don’t always go as planned, even in
the realm of healthcare and healthcare provision. I am a change machine and will always be. For the better or
worse, who knows. The kindle remains a tame orange-yellow faint glow, awaiting
the spark to be reignited. As it is now, I do still very much enjoy the current
state of slow kindling. Stoked to see how the subsequent years would unfold. Wednesday, September 05, 2018 @ 7:28 pm
This time round I'm almost a year late.It's been about a year since I last wrote about anything here, but I've definitely not forgotten about the existence of this page. Living each day without realising that 24 hours of life has passed sounds incredulous, yet many hardly have time for daily musings. Since fifth year is supposed to be intense and I should be studying, I've listed a few things to pen down and set a time limit for myself so that this doesn't become an excuse for me to evade studying again. There were sooooooo many moments that I thought of this blog and wanted to write things down as I go along, but somehow it hadn't worked out. Undoubtedly a lot has transformed since the last time; having a whale of my time during electives in Australia and back home, transitioning into M5, gaining a lot of weight which can't seem to be shed off, thinking about and establishing a life beyond just Medicine... these are but a few of the things that top the list. M5 so far has been physically and mentally exhausting; the extremely long hours in SGH GS killed me and left me with pimple scars and dark eye circles that I never had and left my pockets drained because of the money spent on the numerous Grab fares incurred due to the unearthly reporting time. As much as I hate to admit it, the transformation has made me a worse person and I think no one can refute that. If I allow myself to be honest, my temperament had never been worse. I used to avoid being direct in my conversations with others, but nowadays I just can't seem to hold it in anymore. The profanities intensified, the number of times I raise my voice has been uncountable, and the frequency of having pent-up feelings has increased. To make things worse, the lack of exposure to proper literature has made me feel more illiterate than before; I find it harder to express myself now through words, be it verbal or written, and this makes me feel so trapped. All of these have amounted to me being a bitter, angsty person who's just getting by aimlessly. Being told that I was "unfriendly" made me think about the way I projected myself upon others, and how much first impression counts and meant to me. It's nothing like being overly self-conscious, but it did make me reflect on how I could do life better. During the electives period, I had long talks with the registrar George almost daily for the first two weeks I was there. I remember the first day I was there ever so vividly. To them, I was so shy and reserved, and that took a few weeks to get better. George was an amazing person. In Singapore, most of the registrars were so busy that none had any time for us. One could attribute it to the slower pace of life in Australia, but George took me under his wing and spent as much time with me as he could before he had his study leave for his exit exams. On my first day, he took me and Corrina out for coffee and introduced me to all the baristas at the coffee place. I felt so welcomed and of course, it was difficult to turn down a cup of rich flat white from Australia. Subsequently, he had a few unofficial afternoons off to study, but still returned to help out at clinics and OT. We had too many small talks on the way to get coffee for the team, and he was the one who'd basically teach me everything -- from navigating around the hospital to medical-related stuff. One afternoon, he told everyone in OT that he was taking me out for lunch. He asked everyone along, but the rest were too busy to join in. The scrub nurse Hilda quizzed, "George, are you being unfaithful to your wife? Bringing a girl out to lunch!" It seems he had a reputation for being Mr. Popular, which explained why he was the face of the hospital -- a standee at the feedback booth smack in the heart of the hospital atrium. I thought it felt nice to have a person who knows everyone and everything to be guiding me in a foreign land. As we weaved through the hospital crowds, he would always stop to say hi to people and I'd awkwardly hang around. Which was what happened during lunchtime. It was weird because there were only the two of us, and I felt bad for ordering food AND a drink. Later, I felt a bit better as I convinced myself that it was normal for people here to be so hospitable. We talked about a lot of things, previous and future plans, his family and how he was coping as a surgeon -- how his family had not moved over to Australia. It all made sense -- why would anyone living the life of a king in Malaysia want to move over and be treated a second-class citizen here? I had many thoughts about doctoring overseas, doing something more with my life and taking greater leaps out of my comfort zone than just being the conventional typical conservative Asian girl who has her life cast in and by a mold. Conversations like these made me realise how important it was to take a leap of faith whenever there was the time and opportunity to do so, because missing the boat in the past would mean that things can change in the future, and also because time and tide waits for no man. I really admire the free-spirited individuals who'd listen and follow their hearts to try out new things and get to somewhere they have never been. As a Malaysian who had gone over to Australia for his studies and now developing his career as a surgeon, he gave me the best and most realistic pieces of advice about life that no one had ever spoken to me about. Amongst many things that we idly chatted about (ranging to Southeast Asian politics to hobbies to food to doctoring in Singapore), there is one thing he said that I will always remember: think about what you want life to be like at 50 years old, then work your career around this vision. A lot of people have regrets about the choices they had made during their younger years, himself included. The journey to becoming a doctor is an arduous one, but what lies ahead after graduation doesn't seem to get easier. I've always thought about juggling family, friends and work and envisioned a decent work-life balance and wondered how people (especially the Duke students I've met and spoken to) manage. The good thing about life is, really, that there is no way that one can truly get stuck. Many at times, it's all in the mind, and how we choose to view things makes a lot of difference. I'm not undermining mental disorders or others of that ilk, but if in times of despair, one is shown the multitude of possibilities, there seems to be nothing that cannot be solved. You can either run away from it, or for the daredevils, face it. Running away doesn't sound like a solution to a problem, but sometimes it may well be the best way at that time. People are ashamed to admit that there is a problem, and that they are unable to cope with it. Things get buried and covered up, until one day a breakdown resurfaces everything -- the good, the bad and the ugly. People are afraid of being viewed as vulnerable. People are victims of judgement. But this should never stop anyone from leaving and living. Which all boils down to the moral of the story and one thing that I value the most in everyday life -- relationships. To me, regardless of a happy event or a sad occasion, it's all about the people. It's the people that matter and people make things happen and memorable. I am lucky to be able to take many things light-heartedly and allow sleep to dissolve away all negativity and start a new day anew. I hope relationships remain my top-most priority as I cruise along in the next few years to come. Today, I was posted to DSC and sat in at the treatment room with Timothy. He is (or rather was) a nurse who was only a year older than I am. I was kinda expecting to learn about protocols, how to give certain treatments and similar stuff but was greeted with a better experience than what I could've asked for. Besides learning from him about the medical content, it had been so long since someone sat down with me to talk about life. I was initially extremely taken aback when he said that he had resigned from being a nurse. I probed further and he related an experience he had with a patient he took care of in the past. His patient was an amicable, very likeable elderly lady whom he had a close relationship with during her hospitalisation. However, this elderly lady had 3 daughters, who were essentially the ones giving him hell. A told him not to give any updates to B, B came after him because he did not speak to her. To make things worse, the ward doctor refused to speak to the family and the poor guy had to give excuses to say that the doctor was busy and unable to meet the family. Needless to say, he was scolded for not being able to deliver the conference with the doctor. He told me how difficult it was to be caught in the middle of family affairs, and how he got 3 complaint letters just for these issues. He also mentioned the flaws of our public health system. It really is all rosy on the outside; the hospitals now view patients as customers/clients. I believe that healthcare is ultimately a form of service, which was exactly the pull factor that drew me to this career. However, it is losing its original intent to heal the sick and do no harm. Patients are the crux of doctoring, but many at times, dealing with the patients' families amongst many other expectations come along, and these shroud the entire concept of placing the patient first in everything we do. People are demanding, exacting, calculative and most importantly, have sky-high expectations. "Wah so young ah, are you sure you can handle?" Thankfully of course, no actual harm is done to the patient, but in handling the intricacies of human interaction, there will definitely be harm inflicted on some other parties. This can boomerang and become an occult source of harm to patients that people hardly ever notice -- tension in the family, making patients feel like a burden/trouble to their loved ones. It is sickening to think that medical students have to pay so much for the education, only to be in continual debt, be overworked, jaded and unhappy at the end of the day having been through tonnes of these issues. In the harsh environment, it becomes difficult to navigate daily doctoring life, let alone to continue cultivating increasing passion for the job. The important people seem to think that providing excellent service to their customers in healthcare trumps everything else. Everything nowadays is done to achieve that and to avoid complaints, to the point whereby healthcare professionals are now trained to do things a certain manner so as to avoid trouble with the law and liabilities that could pose as a threat to receiving a complaint letter. The support for healthcare workers by healthcare institutions in this aspect is lacking, but the important people fail to recognise it. If staff were better protected, it is safe to assume that they would be more empowered to give their best in handling patients and interpersonal relationships, which would potentially raise the threshold for complaints (if saving backside was even paramount in the first place). This was one of the many reasons that led Timothy to resign at age 24. I hope a new pursuit in Physio would bring this carefree, YOLO young man a new lease of life where he'd truly enjoy his job. "If you are a nurse, there is nothing in this world that you cannot do/handle." Amongst many other deep things we talked about, he reassured me that I was a good person and reminded me to change but only for the better, since change was the only constant. I take comfort in this knowledge and really hope to live up to his/my own expectations when I look back at this post in future. In terms of my personal life and goals, I am ashamed to say that it is in shambles. I don't think I am doing a very good job in handling various aspects, but I really have no idea how to go about managing myself. The clarity that I used to have about what I want in life has now become practically non-existent; there are now a lot of self-doubts and considerations, but the goals I set in the past were probably some stupid naive short-term kind of goals that were never achieved anyway. I find myself really thinking about what I want to be like at 40, 50 even 70 years old. I find myself evaluating new guy friends as though they are potential partners. I find myself slightly worried about being left on the shelf since everyone around me have their other halves. I find myself not keeping up with the things I used to think were important (e.g. maintaining my dreams log). I find myself not caring about my health as much as in the past when I was really weight-conscious. I find myself lacking in self-care as compared to my other female counterparts. I find myself needing coffee almost every other day and being extremely unmotivated. I find myself being less FOMO than I should actually be. The worst part of it all? I find myself thinking about and prioritising myself over many other things. Yes, some might say that it is only right to spare some thought for yourself. The same argument works either way -- if you don't think for yourself enough, how can you live for the others around you (versus living for the people around you and thinking of them first)? Either way it makes sense, but I remember regarding others first as a virtue that I used to want to keep with me throughout my life. Now it scares me to see this Americanised mindset taking over me. People might think that I am too conventional or conservative to even say this, but it is a cause of concern to me. I think I am becoming jaded in many aspects of life, not just about my potential career. I find myself becoming angsty and impatient over Granny. I know I can't blame her because she is demented, but somehow I couldn't remove her present condition away from her abusive self in the past. I know she did a lot for us, but I find myself being unable to deliver what I should be delivering for her. I find myself being frustrated at her for making me distracted from studying, for ill-treating the helper, for asking the same questions over and over again (okay this is not that bad). I know she doesn't mean it because she's demented and probably cannot remember what she says or does. But does she really mean it? Is this an exaggeration of her premorbid personality? Is dementia an excuse? Can dementia be an excuse? Is this going to be a vicious cycle? It is pathetic because I have to admit that I cannot relate, and Dad always tells me that I will only understand in the future when this happens to me. It doesn't help that my sense of justice is overpowering; no matter what it is, whether she's old and demented or whether she's elderly and hence deserving of utmost respect, I still stand the ground that it is wrong to condone her aggressive/abusive behaviour at the expense of the helper's rights. There are so many questions in life that I cannot find answers to, and this would be one of them that I'd never imagine getting a satisfactory answer to. To what extent can we forgive a demented person unable to regulate his/her own thoughts for the harm he/she has implicated on others? What constitutes fairness and justice in such a case? How much right does the law have to judge matters like these? I think it's enough musings for the day and perhaps for the year. Of course, I bust my time limit again, this time by an hour and a half. I wonder when the next time I'd have spare time for writing again. Wednesday, October 04, 2017 @ 12:48 am
Currently feeling slightly off and out-of-sorts; don't know if it's because of the coffee I drank earlier this evening or if it's due to the culmination of events that occurred today (Shauna's A&E visit). Or maybe it could very well be just life in general. Before becoming consciously aware of turning 22 really soon, I'd just like to pen this strange array of emotions down while it's still freshly lingering in me.Ever since the start of this academic year, the pursuit of excellence and responsibility of learning well in school has diminished in stark contrast to what I was not too long ago. I can't pinpoint exactly when and where and how and why this happened, but I believe something somewhere along the way must have incited this huge change. At random times of the day I am reminded of how nonchalant I am about schoolwork and these thoughts hover quite a fair bit. It feels like some sort of a mid-uni crisis whereby thoughts about entering university and persisting on in this course come flooding in, unfounded thoughts from unknown sources inundating my already worn-out and flat mind. I tend to brush these thoughts away. At times I feebly attempt to remind myself of the reason why I started out in the first place, to learn well and understand work for the benefit of the people under my care in future. These return with naught and present themselves as fleeting ideas that are quickly shoved aside to accommodate ever more information from lessons that I haven't been able to internalise. I am still worried about the sheer amount of detail that I have yet to learn (that I should have learnt last year), but nothing beats this misdirection or lost feeling. It's like being dropped off smack in the middle of a large glacier lagoon deep in the night without snowshoes, a tour guide or a map. The only beacon of light from the torch is wavering, the battery dying off. You're afraid, but there's nothing to be afraid of because there's no one and nothing. You want to and so try to survive another day, but don't know how the dawn of a new day will turn out, and don't know if the subsequent days are worth the turmoil today. At times you stare up at the night sky, alone and cold, expecting a starry night to mull over the night but see nothing but a blank space above. So vulnerable, yet so formidable because there is no one and nothing to tear down your defenses. After all these thoughts, your body propels you to plough on while your mind takes a break. You mindlessly go on and the cycle of these emotions repeat. It's really tiring. I've never known that emotional capacity can run out. I'm low on reserves. I've been trying to be emotionally available everywhere every time in the past, be it for friends, family or patients. Right now I'm gradually losing the capacity to do so; I don't want new relationships, don't want to rekindle old relationships, don't want to face existing relationships. I can't bring myself to reply text messages, even from people of interest. Family is another huge... source of emptiness. Just a few days back I was bickering with Geraldine, who seems to find fault in everyone who tries to point out her flaws. I'm not the kind who argues for the sake of arguing and would rather err on the peaceful side, but still am brutally honest and straightforward when it comes to family matters. I would at all costs avoid conflict. She talked about how I wasted money not going for piano exams but getting a piano, how I give up on things halfway. I am aware of my lack of determination/fleeting interests that cannot be honed further because of a lack of talent or laziness, yet she makes it sound as though I have never gone into introspection mode at any point of time in my twenty-one years. I am fully aware, even about this egoistic side of me that I have never tried to accept or acknowledge all along. I am self-conscious, unwilling to make a bad impression on people, feel strongly about what I believe in but unable to overtly express my thoughts, am a poor speaker who cannot articulate or substantiate my thoughts and emotions, am a meek lamb who is more comfortable following than leading, afraid to make a point, speak up or make a decision for fear of going against some parties. It is impossible now to live up to my own abstract expectation of being someone that people look up to, being a "perfect" human being with no enemies, leaving no bad impression on people and pleasing everyone, being extremely diplomatic and having no opinion of my own so that I don't take sides and don't offend anyone, which are stupid and impractical and nearly pointless now come to think of it. Back to when the argument with Geraldine happened, I gave up and abruptly stopped all the quarreling. I felt so exhausted trying to make a point for myself, make it clear to her that I am not trying to make life difficult for her or make her feel shitty, and so I just gave up. It ended with Dad telling me to "be more generous/accepting". I got blamed for being calculative by Mum. All my life I've only been recognised by my parents or relatives as "the smart one" who does well academically. I honestly don't care about tarnishing this now; even if I fall from grace in this aspect, nobody is going to give a shit anymore because we've all reached this certain point in education that it is no longer important to compare and compete. I don't give a shit about it either and don't think this is excessively important now. It is strange how the pursuit of academic excellence and gaining respect and recognition from doing well was so important in the past; the Singaporean way of life moulded me to be this robot living to churn tangible results. Over the years, the intangible aspects of life have become closer to my heart, probably because of emotional maturity or the adoption of differing perspectives from various events and encounters in life. I want to be known as a filial child, a reliable and trustworthy friend capable of making a friend feel better in the worst moments in his/her life and someone who people would turn to for advice, a helpful individual who doesn't just perform acts of kindness when scrutinised or seen, a gracious sibling who provides support for her siblings and be a role model to them, a real and relatable person who has her own opinions yet sounds just about right and not overbearing. I used to be somewhat like that, but it seems somewhere along the way I lost this fine touch. I still try, I always do. I know how important these values are to me and would always remind myself to uphold these virtues as a person. All my life I have been a lucky child. I have a complete family, which is most of the time harmonious and at times happy. I am blessed with a capable brain that allows me to utilise it for academic work and problem-solving, and have the capacity to feel emotions well. I am blessed with good health albeit being a fat lazy ass. I have a grandmother who lives with us and although I can't currently put into words how important she has been in my life (she's brought out the ugliest in me), I am happy to have her with me. I am complete as a living piece of flesh. But there is still some discontentment and resentment deep within me that I must confess now. This feeling of inadequacy and insecurity has been there for the longest time, probably subconsciously in the past and surfaced only in the recent years. Somehow I am never good enough; I get praised for schoolwork, but that's about it. No one sees me beyond the "smart overachiever" me. I put in effort to be filial, accompanying Dad to buy and see things, watch TV, be the non-existent son that he'd probably always wanted but am quickly dismissed when things are bad. It seems as though the harder I try, the more hurt I experience. Dad is the harshest to me when he acts up; I get it worst and every nice damn thing is forgotten when I am the cause of his anger. I try to talk to Mum about school, work, problems at home, life when I'm with her (on the way to school or during mealtimes), unlike all my other siblings. When there's no one to go grocery-shopping with her, I do it willingly. Not only am I not awarded with some acknowledgement of my presence, I feel taken for granted many at times. Once I get onto the car when she picks me up from school, she's almost always on the phone with her sisters. Even when I'm really tired and want to sleep so badly, I can't because she talks and laughs at the top of her voice. At times when I refuse to do certain things for her because I'm tired, she throws tantrums and makes me sound as though I'm always unwilling to do things for her. She makes me feel like a labourer for her. Both Dad and Mum expect me to be always around for my siblings, giving them tuition but never considering the fact that I myself would have forgotten how schoolwork was like then, helping them look for tuition/recommendations and expecting me to negotiate with my friends. I feel trapped, used, and that somehow I am living for others and not for myself. I always put in the effort for people whom I care about, still wishing people happy birthday at 12 midnight, but never get the reciprocal. I really don't ask for much in return, only to be seen and heard sometimes. When the time comes that I die suddenly, would people even notice the loss? And I wonder it would be any different without me in others' life. I thought I would have become old enough to manage expectations and take things in my stride. This still bothers me at a ripe age of past-teenage. Though I am a staunch believer of the ideation that there is absolutely nothing wrong with unresolved feelings about expectations at any stage in life, I can't help but feel helpless and pathetic when these feelings strike back. I can't hear myself anymore. These expectations from myself and the people around me are beckoning every ounce of strength and mental will I have left. I'd have to give away the last bit of whatever's remaining. Hope things will take a better turn at 22. Happy birthday to myself. Wednesday, July 12, 2017 @ 7:42 pm
Can't believe I'm back here so quick. This means I've got something to get off my chest again.Today marks the first official clinical day of my fourth year in medical school, and also my first (and likely last) Psychological Medicine in my lifetime. I've always thought that Psychological Medicine was a noble specialty in the medical field, even though it seems that the physicians would never need to appear great and cool in their stethoscopes and walking around in white coats anymore. I find myself a decent listener and dispenser of advice about issues that are within my realm of understanding, and the nature of Psych greatly appealed to me for the longest time. A point of contention that remains is that of the ability and mental capacity to process the multitude of mental tension from those who need an outlet. Burnout seems inevitable now, when in the past I could still think that empathy and compassion runs a lifelong supply that would never cease provision. Perhaps the weather added to it. It was a gloomy, rainy and cold Wednesday morning. I hadn't gotten enough sleep the night before as I was still fighting the demons of holiday withdrawal. A free breakfast is something that I wouldn't have forgone, but today was an exception. I commuted the hour-long journey down to IMH, where I'd never been in the past 22 years of my life. It's going to be a new experience, today and many more days to come, I thought to myself. Too tired to reach into my haversack for the umbrella, I fought my way through and braved the rain, even though I was dressed too well to be covered in rainwater and a veil of gloom. The rest of the morning was uneventful, until morning rounds came. It was the first ever time I couldn't find the rounds. Unlike the many others that I'd been so far, this ward was particularly lacklustre, with no flurry of activity or whatsoever. Ah, I had only just realised that we've only passed the first door. Maybe that was why. Remember to shut the door, I reminded myself. The counter staff were really helpful as she helped us to find our way deeper into the abyss. Oh, the second door. Now there were signs of life. A door further in front opened, and out came a friendly face. A junior doctor said hi to us and seemed to have more to say, but we were so preoccupied with finding the consultant and the rounds that we cut off the conversation prematurely. She trailed off. We hurried ahead. Thinking that we'd find the rounds in the ward itself, we stood outside and some kind nurse tapped her card for us. How bothersome it'd be for the next few days. The doors closed behind us, the sound resonated throughout the hollow room. Although it was probably an illusion on my part, the ward seemed extremely spacious and even endless. A vast area of nothingness. There were no COWs, furniture, alcohol rub, gloves and gowns stations, curtains for each bed, nobody. No medical staff I meant. Only them. Before I could find any resemblance to a typical ward, one of the patients was right in my face. She demanded in Hokkien, "When can I go home? Can you send me back?" Another seemed to be "sneezing" at the top of her voice. Another glided past me on the other side. Another scurried past across the ground. I felt so small. We huddled together in the heart of naught, forging ahead as a unit while the onslaught became more aggressive. Upon reaching the end of the ward, a few others emerged from the washroom. One of them was casually walking back to her bed. The other was freaky. She had just washed herself clean and shampooed her hair. Droplets of water ran down her frizzy curls. It was as though she came from the downpour outside rather than from the toilet. At the corner of my eyes, I could feel her death stare penetrate my soul. The cursory eye contact felt like an eternity. The staff nurse killed my inattention. "What are you guys doing around here? Who are you looking for?" "We're fourth year medical students supposed to be with Dr. K and his team. Do you have any idea where we can find him?" "Certainly not here." I was taken aback. "He's not here yet. Held up this morning by something. The team is having their rounds outside, second door down this way on your right. You could find them there instead." We thanked her and quickly made our way out. By this time, I was already feeling nervous about the place. I thought I would've managed better. The others appeared just as astonished at everything that just happened. I was pretty sure our emotions were in sync. I kept looking back at the door of the ward that had just closed behind us. Two patients were standing right by it, one on each side, peering out of the transparent rectangular glass window. There was nothing, but they stared on. Why did they leave? What about me? I could almost hear their deprived voices scream. Atypical rounds we sat in to. Instead of the team going around the beds and bays, the patients were escorted into the meeting rooms for discussion and resolution of their issues. This patient we saw was crying throughout the entire duration of the consultation, and seemed to have a conflict with another patient. It all seemed trivial and worldly, even childish. When she left, I overheard the team's discussion. She had intention of self-harm and suicide. I saw the multiple scars on her forearm. Who would've guess that from her child-like disposition? I could imagine sorrow welling up in her eyes, but I couldn't see why. We spoke to a patient with schizophrenia. I am particularly bad at proper history taking, and I figured I should hone this skill well these years before suffering from my own lack of experience and competence in future. Psychiatric history taking was a painful process. Each time I asked a question, she looked at me suspiciously, then muttered a series of inaudible comments under her breath, and looked back at me again in fear. "She wants something from me. She's taking something away from me." I haven't done anything to her. I haven't said anything to her. Why is it that she was so offended by me and not the other two? I was disillusioned and deemed that I sucked at this. I've never had problems with interaction, but today I felt isolated and detached. The strength in me died off and never came back for the rest of the day. Fatigue engulfed me. Deep within, the logical part of me knew that this had nothing to do with who I was, and that she wasn't referring to me. But the entirety of my mind didn't buy the story. Somehow she called out to me, and I sensed it. When the interview ended, I left the room to ask a nurse to escort her back to her bed. The same staff nurse that was there in the ward where we were not supposed to be. The nurse returned to pick the patient up from the meeting room. A look of disbelief flickered across her face as she half-shouted, "Did you lock the patient inside all alone?" A fresh sense of panic overwhelmed me, even though I knew in my mind for sure that my friends were still inside with her. It was only then that I found out the meeting room's door was one-way; I had locked it from the outside when I left and closed the door behind me. Leave no door open indeed. And it was also then that we realised we've made a huge blunder on the whole chaperoning thing. I could still help myself to regain the inner strength, by getting some positive vibes again. How about those who can't help themselves? What's left of them? How could they control the voices in their head? When can they finally say 'no' and farewell to their greatest enemies? All the stories on addiction and substance abuse... how does it feel like to be trapped in a real-life vicious cycle, and never getting out of it? How does it feel like to have escaped death so many times, only to find yourself being so close to another death hoax that could potentially become reality? How is it that the human mind could be so powerful, yet vulnerable and destructible at the same time? Everyone just wants to be heard, but who'd be the ones internalising all the negativity and then rebounding back again with positivity? Can anyone be here for so long? Can anyone ever recover fully and bid all of their demons goodbye? I can't help but let these hot tears stream down my shrivelled face as I recall the blank stares and helpless souls awaiting their destiny. This has to be the darkest of any day I've lived as of yet. Friday, June 30, 2017 @ 5:23 pm
I haven't been here in a long time, and so it seems things never remain the same, as much as you'd wish them to. Change is the only constant in life.
I hopped on the bandwagon to apply for a Neurosurgery elective in London. In a feeble attempt to demonstrate to the outside world that medical students can enjoy as vibrant, authentic and normal a university experience as any other undergraduate (this is not accounted for in our annual tuition fees, by the way, nor do sufficient loans exist for us to apply for), the heads in-charge of refining the already-polished programme included a month-long elective programme for all of us. We were reminded time and again that this is a degree requirement -- but one that gives you the liberty to do anything you'd like. The catch is that you've got to be able to justify how the elective grooms you to become an all-rounded, compassionate, intelligent, talented individual. So that's how I spent 14 May to 22 June of this year with my fellow buddies.
Just so happens that I've finally set aside some personal time and put in effort and strength garnered from the rest period after a gruelling M3 year to peruse the book When Breath Becomes Air. It so damningly coincides with the Neurosurgery elective (people actually asked if I was inspired to take on the elective after reading the book; at that point in time I haven't actually gotten into the whole mood of reading). The details of the pursuit of life amidst dying were intricately entwined with the entire hospital situation, and there were just too many occasions on this trip where I was reminded of this threshold of life and death. Here I am back home, going unnoticed in the busy hub of Singapore, buried in the book and finally finishing it after being released from the clutches of Procrastination. Words still resonate within me, beckoning the memories of the past month I spent abroad -- the longest I've been abroad so far. The first week of the elective felt like the most rewarding one. That was, of course, almost expected as it was my first ever time experiencing Medicine in the context of a foreign land. It came to me as a culture shock -- never have I needed to make small talks with so many people -- but at the same time a great sense of achievement came upon me. I never knew how it was like to feel at home in a foreign land. It seems Medicine is a universal thing after all, that all doctors are united by one faith and belief, and there exists some form of commonality between patients. In no time, I befriended the staff at the hospital cafeteria, asked them how their day was, learnt how to count the shilling fast, grew accustomed to maintaining eye contact with a waitress rather than to call for her, left tips for customer service, became willing to spend pounds as though the prices were quoted in Singapore dollars... Just thought that I would pen down some of the most memorable times that I recall from my short stint. GCS Business Mr. L was only a few years older than I am, and came in for a revision of his craniotomy. He spoke Romanian, yet day after day the different registrars who took charge of the morning rounds spoke English to him, hoping to get some reply from him in order to score his GCS. Not that I ever heard him speak Romanian. After my entire month in the ward posting, they still continued to assume that he was deep in sleep. One morning when Dr. R took the rounds, he raised his voice and said, "Good morning Mr. L, how are you feeling today?" It was as though such was a daily occurrence in the neurosurgery ward. Moving with grace and experience, he already expected that there would not be any verbal reply. His hands were one step ahead of his mind (and a few more ahead of the oblivious patient), and he had already proceeded on to the next step -- a sternal rub. He pressed two fingers down firmly onto Mr. L's chest, moving them in a hasty circular motion and continued to verbalise, this time shouting as loud as the hospital could possibly have allowed. Other patients were roused and looked over. It doesn't seem like a daily occurrence after all. The three of us watched intently, hoping that Mr. L would finally respond so that Dr. R can leave him with some peace and quiet for the rest of his sleep (it seemed he was getting a lot of sleep anyway). Mr. L lay unresponsive. By then, I was already feeling irritated. Just let the poor patient rest already! Dr. R continued to stir the patient and this time instead of performing a sternal rub, he aimed for Mr. L's supraorbital ridges and jammed his fingers straight onto them. Probably an attempt to elicit response to pain, I thought to myself. That was something I couldn't phantom -- how can anyone not wake up from this if he were still alive and not comatose? After about a minute of inflicting discomfort and pain not only on Mr. L himself but also on us, the onlooking bystanders, Mr. L showed signs of life. He furrowed his eyebrows. At the same time, Dr. R was making casual jokes on how he should try to score Mr. L with his lack of response, while we were reeling with bewilderment. He hadn't seen Mr. L's subtle display of annoyance and was about to walk away, tempted to score him a zero (the lowest GCS possible for a comatose patient is 3, by the way). The massage continued half-hearted, and this time I could feel Mr. L's anger as he rose from deep sleep. The anger finally manifested as physical movement, as Mr. L garnered just sufficient strength to raise his limp right arm up to his face to slowly but firmly brush off Dr. R's mangy paws. "There, finally. It's a 13?" Dr. R mocked and beamed again. "Have a good morning, Vally." The ward nurses almost appeared annoyed, but none of them spoke a word. As we moved on to other patients for the rest of the ward round, I couldn't help but let an unfounded sorrow envelope me. In neurosurgical terms, a GCS is probably one of the finest tools for helping a clinician to gauge a patient's consciousness level, and to plan for further interventions. After my elective, it struck me that there were so many confounding factors and ways that GCS scoring can go wrong -- language barrier, paralysis, aphasia, mental disorders, etc, and the list goes on. Watching the numerous debates amongst the different registrars about the GCS scores they each gave also brings in the subjectivity of this scoring system. What about patients with ever-fluctuating scores -- what should be done for them? Does a 1-point discrepancy make a significant clinical difference (of course, I'm excluding the existing clinical thresholds of 3 and 8)? Is every patient nothing but a score to the registrars? These questions of mine mostly likely have their answers buried somewhere in the course of a neurosurgery residency, and these observations that I've made have probably been witnessed painstakingly by predecessors. However, fact remains that such a primitive method has already been used for so long. One should hope that at some point in time, a compassionate neurosurgeon would think of ways to better refine this scoring system. At least that would piss less bystanders off in future. Fitting In and Fading Out I forgot to mention that there were so many people in our neurosurgical ward rounds list that stayed at least the entire duration of my elective (1 month). Sucks to be them, I thought. At the same time, if I had been more optimistic about the whole situation, maybe it's not a bad thing for me -- I got to follow through some cases from clinics, to wards, to the theatres, and then back to the wards (but there were none that I saw that made it through to discharge yet). Midway through our neurosurgical posting, Vally went into status epilepticus, or in other words, went into a continuous fit which lasted more than 30 minutes without any break in continuity (I hope this definition is right). This was more or less an emergent situation. We were loitering around the doctor's room waiting for something to see or do after the morning ward rounds and team breakfast, when a crash cart was hastily pushed past us and a few of the unfamiliar ward staff followed swiftly behind. The curtains were drawn, like a reflex response to resuscitation action, immediately closing off the clutter and cacophony from the rest of the unsuspecting world. Being the usual curious and action-seeking medical students that we are, we stealthily sneaked our way to the eventful ward. Thankfully it was empty. The stroke and neurology doctors were already attending to Vally by the bedside, calling for orders for setting a line, blood tests, diazepam, ECG, vitals monitoring, preparation for intubation. Were we that late to the party? There were consultants amidst the herd, and one unfriendly-looking SHO (Senior House Officer) whose face I'd remembered. The hierarchy was functional -- the consultants kept quite silent until they had to voice something out, the registrars/residents were in control, the SHOs were fussing all over the patient, one trying to enter all the orders electronically while another dispatched orders to the ward nurses, the other bystanders just... eyeballing. I forgot to mention the medics; even up till now I still had no clue what their role is, except knowing that they can be quite in control in times like these. Might be the code blue team. The neurosurgery specialist registrar, Dr. R, just stood there spectating. I wondered why he wasn't in the action. Anyway, being THE medical students, all we could do was to observe. I have to admit that I think I'm pretty good at eyeballing and looking very intense. Well, that's because I AM really interested, and it partly also helps to take a load off my mind a little, from knowing that I was just standing around but had no capacity to help. I continued my vigil. Most of the orders went through (thank God) and were duly and timely acted upon. Some that were deemed as less crucial by a team member got stuck in the flurry of activity. This is where the shouting began. The hostile SHO turned to our direction and said, "Can someone get me the ECG monitor? And call the radiographer." Was she actually referring to us when she meant "someone"? Damn, we're just overseas elective students who haven't even found our way around the hospital. Where on the Almighty earth is the ECG monitor? The three of us threw puzzled looks at each other and responded with a blank stare. "Staff nurse? Anyone?" The responsibility has shifted. I took a slow and steady breath, which disproportionately reflected my relief at that moment. It came upon me that if an emergency situation required my assistance, I may not be able to respond well enough to contribute to some form of aid. Hopefully it would be easier back home. I started quizzing myself where the resuscitation trolleys and ECG monitors were placed in the wards that I had been in during my time as a third year wide-eyed and unsuspecting medical student. Would I have been able to rise to the occasion should someone need CPR, since I'm certified to do so (at least for this year). I felt so much like burying my face into the curtains so that none of them could remember the blank and incompetent look on my face. But I remained stoic. Having gone through one gruelling year of clinical postings, I thought it was a formidable feat and that I couldn't be battered any much more. My knowledge burst through the seams of my brain like never before, spilling out and threatening to evaporate after every major examination (even though honestly speaking I hadn't studied as hard as a good student would). The hours I spent being attentive and actually learning something increased as the year went by, when I was getting comfortable with the extraordinary lifestyle a typical university undergraduate would never experience in their schooling lives. Sleep came as a massive privilege. It was almost like I was working full-time and had to study at the same time, just that there are a lot less responsibilities in question. And I thought I was Miss Know-It-All? How could I have deserved to be Miss Know-It-All? It made me realise how important it is to place the patient at the centre of every learning opportunity, rather than being caught up with the zest of knowledge acquisition. As Atul Gawande eloquently expressed in his book Being Mortal, medical students these days seem to fear the lack of knowledge more than anything else. I am guilty of scorning over the artificial patient-doctor experiences that were deliberately set up for us to practice our consultation skills, the times we spent in simulation laboratories (and had the rest of the day free for ourselves) only to look forward to the end of it so that we could declare and afternoon off. If Vally's relatives were there, I wouldn't have known how I would explain the current situation to them -- his uncontrollable fidgeting, why intubation might be needed... While I was preoccupied with handling my thoughts and looking at the resuscitation, a personnel in dark blue overalls like what the SCDF personnel would wear in Singapore, took a glance away from the action to engage us. "Are you guys medical students?" Ain't that obvious. We nodded in agreement. I got the feeling that we were judged substantially, but at the same time I also thought that he would have stopped in his tracks to talk to us about things or even teach us if he hadn't been caught up with such a messy situation. He made eye contact with me cursorily, and then turned back to face the action. The radiographer appeared in a scrub top but his own long pants, with his portable CT scanner or X-ray machine of some sort. Everyone near the entrance, including ourselves, made way for the gargantuan device. He parked it right where he wanted it and stopped, waiting for instructions. Samantha, our ever-friendly and cheerful SHO with a great sense of humour (I mean it the way I say it), abruptly appeared and muttered under her breath, "Shit, he's in status. You guys know what's going on and why?" We nodded again. She must be thinking, why are these Singaporean students so difficult to engage? "So he's post-op craniotomy, and had some intermittent CSF leaks. We checked his wound and it's okay. What year are you guys in? Has anyone gone through with you guys about post-op complications?" Thankfully, the material and cases I've gone through in my General Surgery posting were still somewhat intact in my knowledge bank, unsacrificed. I ploughed through my mental recesses and recalled that page in Andre's Surgery notes. Stroke, PE, AMI, pneumonia... The three of us looked at each other. Why do we always hesitate and pause for such a long time before coming up with answers. I forgot who took the first wave of answers but Sam continued, "There are a few things we typically think of, like respiratory infections... Is wound infection a likely reason here?" "No", I replied almost immediately. Sam jerked backwards, almost surprised that my response came so quick for the first time. "And why is that so?" "It typically occurs later in the post-op period. Like... I don't know, 5 - 7 days?" I always waver when answering questions. It takes a Prof Jimmy So to force me to not give wishy-washy replies. "That's absolutely correct. You guys could stay here and watch a while longer while I go sort out some paperwork." Sam then went to converse with Dr. R, seemingly to provide him with additional information and updates about Vally. "Excuse me lady, come and move over to this side," a Black lady looked at me and said. I looked over my shoulder and hurriedly shifted a few steps to my right. She held my shoulders and walked me along. "I'm so sorry." "Never mind," she replied with a slight chuckle. She wasn't being condescending or anything, and was nearly affectionate. Vally was not in control of himself. I don't know if he had lost continence or anything, but the situation didn't look too good. He had some bloods taken and the SHO had given him drugs through the line (sedation? antiepileptics?) By then, I observed that the laryngoscope was prepared and the endotracheal tube had been released from its sterile packaging. Shit. When did they decide that it's time? A registrar in scrubs of a rather short build for an Englishman was handed the laryngoscope. I'd seen him many times while I was going in and out of theatres, along the stairways, around the neurosurgical ward, but I had no idea which speciality he was from. Not neurosurgery definitely. He made many movements and appeared slightly flustered, yet at the same time cocksure of what he was doing, as though he'd done it at least twenty times before. As he inserted the laryngoscope, Vally didn't gag (given adequate sedation probably). It seemed like a lot of hard work; I could appreciate the contours of his forearm and biceps while his muscles flexed and did a lot of jerking movements to get the laryngoscope through. That must hurt a lot for Vally. At this point, I was also thinking to myself, if I were to be in his position in years to come, no, not if but when I am in his position, would I be able to use the left-hand laryngoscope? Do they have right-hand laryngoscopes for left-handers like me? Then again, I might be better with my right hand in procedures because I handle sutures and venepuncture or lines setting just like a right-hander does. In no time, the ETT was inserted, and they prepared to wheel him to the operating theatre for emergency operation. It seems that one of the consultants (or perhaps the only consultant?) finally noticed the presence of the radiographer. Or did he? Anyway, the radiographer asked, "Do you guys still need this?" He gestured towards the white bulky device. "Not now I guess. He should be getting some scans downstairs in any case. Sorry, and thanks buddy." "No trouble." The radiographer casually wheeled his fancy equipment off without any look of disdain or disgruntlement, as though he's been here and done the same for thousands of times. Had he been unseen and unheard one too many times? The show was over. The crowd dispersed and we dismissed ourselves for lunch and never discussed this incident again. Desperation In Mr. N's clinic, I met with a middle-aged man who wasn't native to London, Mr. B. He came accompanied by a friend who did a lot of the translation work. Mr. B wore a solemn look on his face, and was casually decked in a sports jacket and track pants. That look mustn't have been something new to him, I thought. Judging from his appearance, he couldn't have been older than Dad, but how is it that whatever's left of his youth is smothered? When the consultation started, he complained of hearing loss, instability, and appeared to have low mood due to his declining function. Mr. N continued to perform a physical examination on him -- one of the first most complete physical examinations I'd seen in my entire posting, looking for residual function of CN8, 7, 5, 6 and also testing his cerebellar function. In a bid to involve me in the consultation, he finished off and told me, "Feel for his masseter bulk and let me know what you find." "Hi Mr. N, I'd be placing my palms on your cheeks. Could you clench your teeth tightly together for me, like this?" I demonstrated and he instinctively followed. When I looked him in his eyes, I could sense his bewilderment and even fear. "His masseter is wasted on the left side." I thanked him and returned to my seat. Mr. N went through in great length the scans and treatment options for Mr. B, who'd expressed his interest in an operation as soon as possible. Towards the end of the consultation, Mr. B added with the help of his translator friend, "Doctor, how long do I have to wait for the surgery? Is it possible if I have the operation earlier? I cannot take this anymore, I feel like I'm going into depression because I cannot do anything about it. Please." Mr. N told him that instead of waiting for the typical three months, he would try to schedule him in a month or two, and to await a letter from the hospital. Mr. B and his friend left, grateful yet not fully convinced that his life would get better in the near future. After their departure, Mr. N explained in detail to me this case on acoustic neuroma, and I listened in as he did a voice recording for his consultation. I don't know if he meant to keep his word on the promise to try and arrange and earlier slot for the operation; he was as expressionless as I've seen so far. Deep within me, I prayed that this man gets his life sorted out really soon. On our second last week, a familiar name popped up in the theatre list for Thursday. I counter-checked the surgery to be performed and I confirmed that it was for Mr. B. Thrill came over me but I don't remember how ecstatic I was. I told Brandon and Russell, "Hey guys, this was the patient I was telling you guys about in Mr. N's clinic. I can't believe he got a surgery scheduled to happen months later sorted in just one week!" They responded with approval. I had to observe that operation. Having gone for an acoustic neuroma operation the week before, I totally understood how gruelling it was for the surgeon and the attending. I spent the entire day from 9am to 5.30pm just watching one operation, and I left even before the theatre scrub nurses could finishing washing down the place. Mr. N had demonstrated his patience and humility in the way he performs his operation; he'd probably done these a hundred times, but he still treats every operation very seriously, treading cautiously and never compromising safety for speed. He took so long to just cut open the skull to gain the perfect exposure for the later part. He positioned himself in a prime posture, manoeuvred the microscope in a way that everyone could see what he was doing, handled the cautery with care, closed the dura personally... there were too many instances to name. To place this experience in juxtaposition with my friends' observation of the foramen magnum decompression for a patient with a Chiari malformation is simply jarring. I left the theatre ill, hungry (didn't manage to get lunch), tired, but I didn't complain, for I had just witnessed the product of culmination of years of neurosurgical training, combined with the comfort of knowing that Mr. N is still humble and fantastic at what he does best. This time round, Mr. I was to take on Mr. N's case. Mr. I was a newly-appointed consultant in the department. He certainly had a presence, and even a reputation. Scrub nurses did not like working with him, for he was "demanding" and at times disrespectful in theatre. We were quizzed by him many times during our stint, only to be humiliated or be thrown off by sarcastic remarks. Regardless, we respected him a lot for his knowledge and willingness to teach. Mr. N took us through the case (as did Vas before he scrubbed in) and gave commentary while Mr. I was working on Mr. B. It's strange how one could tell the nature of a surgeon just by observing the way he works. Surely Mr. I knew what equipment he wanted and the steps to take. However, some stuff he did just seemed amiss to me. There was hesitation in his movements, uncertainty in his techniques, negligence and carelessness in his thoughts which translated into a poorly exposed field for the microsurgery as compared to the one I'd seen a week before done by Mr. N. It almost reflected his youthful arrogance, and lack of consideration for the patient as a human being. Who am I to judge? He's already a consultant anyway. We watched on. The entire time I was so focused on the facial nerve monitor. I haven't heard it beeping so many times during the previous op. Each time the cautery probe touched an unknown territory and the machine beeped, I look a frantic glance at it and then turned my attention back to Mr. I, hoping that he would stop mangling Mr. B's facial nerve. Mr. N's words came to my mind, about the worse thing that could happen in facial nerve palsy -- exposure keratitis. The thought of it enraged me. It should be prevented! This continued on for the longest 6 hours of my life, before Mr. I was stumped by another obstacle. We'd seen him help Mr. M in theatre for a transphenoidal removal of pituitary tumour for a patient with clinical Cushing's. At some point, there was blood loss that continued on for a long time, so much so that I did not even realise when the tumour had already been removed. It seems Mr. I has a thing for blood. This time, while he was debulking the tumour, the blood loss was rather significant. His tyrannical ways emerged. "Up the suction please. Why is it not working? Change the sucker. Don't play around with my sucker." He grew more annoyed by the minute, and the atmosphere in theatre also became more tense. It didn't help that the scrub nurses failed to reconnect the suction system after pulling it out. They started berating each other about why nobody knew how to connect it. The scrub nurse handing equipment to Mr. I and Vas had to scrub out and fix the suction by herself. Again, I wished I could help, but I knew nothing. When Mr. N finally came back, it was past lunch time. He warned us that the operation would go on well into the afternoon, and to go grab lunch soon. We told him we would later. He left. We were still there. Mr. I was stuck at some point, and thankfully Mr. N came back to the rescue (of both Mr. I and us). He swiftly but skillfully debulked the tumour and checked for haemostasis, before finally closing up. He turned to us and said, "You guys had a long day, go now and have some food." Mr. N was such a respectable man. Beneath his hardened and rigid expressions and "what-do-you-wants", he was experienced not only in his surgical techniques, but also in his display of compassion towards people around him. Depression A neurosurgical ward, in my honest opinion, is one of the worst wards to be in. Thankfully in Charing Cross Hospital, the ward is brightly let and high-spirited with fun-loving and caring staff. Otherwise, it can really be quite a gloomy place. Ms. Volks was a patient whom we were asked to examine. Brandon took the UL examination while Russell took the LL. I hope she knew that we were examining her and not just disturbing her from her sleep. She appeared to not understand us and had her own speech going on at the same time we were examining her. When we left she even appeared slightly cross. Until now, I still don't know what to make of her response. We also had the opportunity to perform a complete cranial nerves examination for an old lady, whose name I have forgotten. She was ever so pleasant and kind. I did the examination, and never have I felt more pressured to put a smile on my face. It came on naturally after the initial awkwardness when I asked for permission. Since she preferred not to sit up due to a back pain, I conducted the examination with her lying down. This was a bad idea. I felt that I was constantly looming over her, with my shadow obscuring her face. Nevertheless, she was still warm and ever so loving with her comments. It took me awhile to realise that my tone of speech naturally became more varied and comfortable and my pitch went up as the examination went on. She didn't seem to understand my instructions (somehow the Singaporean way of communicating doesn't work quite well here in London). At several junctures, getting her to cooperate with me became slightly difficult that Brandon, being a bystander, couldn't bear to watch me and finally intervened by helping me out. "Oh I see... so that's what you meant! Silly me!" I'm the silly one. Minutes went by but it seemed an eternity to me. Beads of perspiration were beginning to form and trickling down my back and sides of my face. I casually wiped them off with my sleeve, hoping to douse away my anxiety and disguise my clumsiness along with them. At the end of everything, she still was a hundred and one percent cheerful, unbeatable. I said a word of thanks in the rigid manner that the communication skills workshop had taught us back home, "Thank you very much for letting me examine you, Ms. ? Hope you get well really soon!" My words were returned with a phenomenal reply, "Oh not at all! You've been very kind and sweet young lady, and your friends too!" Why am I so awkward when it comes to such situations. I managed a feeble smile and then left with my friends. We went on to discuss the case. I realised that I was so focused on the examination and my emotions throughout that I forgot the signs that I elicited. "Isn't she normal?" I asked with a genuine interest of knowing. Brandon shot me a questioning look, and replied almost immediately, "What do you mean normal? Didn't you see? She had visual field defects. She couldn't see when you went this way, and... this way. That makes it a right inferior quadrantopia. Remember?" It was all slowly coming back to me. Yes. Yes I remember now. She had difficulty seeing. The visual pathway flashed across my mind like how an oil on canvas painting laid across the walls of an art museum. I tried to work out the details and verbalised out loud, "So which part of the visual pathway is affected?" We discussed where the Meyer's loop and Baum's loop were, while Russell gave his usual blank look. I swear I had to get this whole visual pathway shit right once and for all (I'm trying to make sense of images now as I type). A heck of a mixed-feelings kind of experience. Passer-by
As literal as the title can get, we walked past an old lady during rounds. Well, not exactly just walking by; we hovered for a little while but for a much shorter duration as compared to the other patients. She was telling Dr. R how she had made a lot of improvement, independent, wanting to get back to her old self, motivated with physiotherapy... I thought Dr. R appeared slightly impatient, yet he still managed a smile and nodded as she went on with her stories about her family. "Good for you, Mdm, I'm really glad to hear that." She went on and on, getting increasingly emotional and began tearing up.
I always get a strange feeling when I see patients cry, no matter how young or old they are, no matter the reason. This absurd sensation takes over me. I could almost feel a stretch from deep within (no idea where it's coming from), and then tension builds up. The stretching becomes so taut that I start to clench my teeth. My cheek muscles harden, my jawbone locks. At the peripheries, I imagine blood emptying from the vessels in my fingertips, leaving the nail beds thirsty. Yet my heart races and on taking a deep breath, I shudder. It is just me against the atmosphere. The intense, attentive gaze that I wore is torn down, the lines on my forehead disappear. Pupils dilate and there I was looking in the direction of the patient. My arms screamed, my heart churned, and I wanted so much to lunge forward to provide some comfort. But somehow I remained rooted to the ground, just like all the other passers-by, lacking the strength to bring myself to her. I'm no different. After a few attempts of appearing patient, Dr. R got his way. The old lady either sensed that by then, she was holding back the doctors for too long, or that she had run out of stories to tell. "Alright alright here I go again. Sorry for making you hang around for so long listening to me go on and on. I appreciate all you've done for me. I'm gonna just do my best and hope that I can be out of here real soon." I hope you do, Madam. I don't know you now, didn't know you then, but now I know your story. Bombings - Borough Market, London Bridge, Vauxhall One moment it's here, and the next it's gone -- such is the fragility of life. It is an epitome of a living paradox in itself. How can something be so great that it forms the basis of nearly everything on Earth, whether good or bad -- scientific advancements, crimes, feeling happy, playing football, political tension, travelling to another planet, even death -- be lost in just a flash? Without this entity, all of the above would never have been made possible. As intangible as it is and at any point in time, one slip and everything fades away instantaneously. The moment -- nobody knows how it feels like, how it sounds like, unless they've ever been too close to the doors of Death. There are so many moments when people think they've nearly died, and then later take it as a joke to tell others. Climbing all the slippery slopes and hiking, I felt that when my feet gave way, I could have died. Maybe I would have died a thousand times on a single trip. Perhaps my time in the mortal world isn't up yet? There are so many moments when people think others deserve to die, and then later be put down by others to not curse. With that will and motive, it's still not that easy to harm with words, but when it happens, it seems all too easy. My group of friends and I were on a day trip to Brighton on 3 June 2017. We were thankful that the weather's great, food's great, company's great, and we all had a fulfilling trip. In the morning, we had gotten our return tickets and were set to leave Brighton at 8pm to reach Blackfrairs Station. There were adorable Chinese and Korean kids on the train and that kept us laughing throughout the ride. As entertainment, we also had drunkards who'd ask for song dedications and sing all the way down the train. It all felt like a typical great day. Upon arriving at Blackfriars Station platform, we were freezing since it was raining heavily and the winds were mad. They almost gave no mercy, howling and beckoning everyone to take short, powerful and hasty strides to generate enough heat to get us out of the tornado fast. It was the coldest night we've had in London. When we transferred to the Underground, a huge notice board at the front of the ticket concourse told us our nth bad news -- that the train service on the Northern Line was disrupted all the way to West Ham, and that there were alternative forms of transport available, namely by walking and bus. Cass whipped out our handyman Google Maps, which told us that we were just a while away from Southwark Station, from which we would continue our journey home towards Green Park Station via the Jubilee Line. So we braved the storm, obviously insufficiently prepared for the winds and with chattering teeth. The rest of the journey home was unremarkable. When we finally reached at around 2245, we were dead beat. I went to shower and returned to the living room with my laptop and started to blast some music. Brandon looked up and asked, "D'you know that there's an incident that happened at London Bridge?" I was... informed. "Oh I don't... lemme go check that out." To my horror, news of the incident had already been spreading like wildfire that's impossible to contain. There were so many sources before me, and I wished someone could just summarise all that gibberish into a few simple words for me to understand. I typed in the keywords "London incident", "London Bridge", and right beneath the search bar the words "London Bridge incident" were in large font and bold. Accompanying the words are the date and a photograph on the right hand side. It looked vaguely familiar. My eyes wandered to the search results that were yielded, and it was the first ever time I saw timestamps that read "n minutes ago" and "live". Footages, videos, articles, social media posts were all over the place. Shit, it's happening now. And it wasn't just London Bridge; there were nearly simultaneous attacks in three different locations. I felt so cornered, suffocated and helpless. I couldn't even decide which news source to turn to. There were live updates from The Guardian, and I also had The Telegraph, BBC and Twitter tabs all on. By then, I was frantically switching between each tab and reading up on what happened. Cass was totally freaked out. All she could do was gaze at the air, occasionally meeting my eye, and then later returning to her phone to resume reading about the horror incident. The cycle repeated. "Guys, weren't we around there just about half an hour ago?" That struck me deep. Her voice echoed inside my head, bouncing off all the walls of my skull at the same time, creating a destructive cacophony. I suddenly so felt heavy-headed that I could no longer process new information. A sick feeling developed in my gut which left me so cold and nauseous. We were so close. "Let me ask my friends what they know about this." "Should we ask on the class telegram group if everybody's fine?" "I wonder if our parents know of this." "Why didn't MFA inform us about the incident?" I texted my parents on our family whatsapp group about the incident and that I was safe. I sent a link from The Telegraph (which I thought had the best information) to Brandon, since he was already crafting a message to post on the class telegram group, and continued reading the news. There were so many of us in London on electives. Are they all fine? I asked Shauna if she was alright. I asked Russ to ask Prash if he was alright. I asked Colin on Instagram chat, only to find out that he's safe in Glasgow. I thought of the others, but I didn't know them enough. Disturbed and sick, I made space and downloaded the MFA app on my phone, then asked for everyone's details for registration (again). At the corner of my eye, I could see Cass turning off-colour. I told her to keep calm and go get a shower. She wasn't going to be able to sleep. Somehow the boys seemed less affected by this. Guess I've always taken safety for granted; back at home, I could go out till late at night, take a casual stroll back home in the wee hours of the morning and still be alive and waking up in my comfortable bed. I had no idea why Dad was always harping on coming home early; what's there to fear? I was so sick of how unsafe London is. We've planned to not go out unnecessarily for the last week that we're in London. Nigel was scheduled to arrive the next morning and bring Cass away to Wembley, but with a new twist of events, Cass told Nigel to head to our apartment before deciding on anything new. We were going to take the bus instead of the tube whenever possible. It seems outrageous that so much planning had to be done, but in actual fact, no one knows when, where, why, how and what exactly would happen. Now that safety was compromised, I felt so feeble and vulnerable to everything and anything. Now that terrors were so close by, nowhere was home to me. Cass and I stayed up because we were too anxious to fall asleep. The next day was a Sunday. We took a bus down to Marble Arch and walked to our lunch place. The streets were unusually quiet, but people seemed at ease. Everyone was out and about doing their thing; cafes were filled with breakfast doers who sat out in the sun enjoying the summer's heat. The smiles on their faces erased away the remaining anxiety that spilled over from yesternight. After we took a turn at a corner, a bigger street came to view. Police vans were parked by the roadside, seemingly ever-ready to tackle anything that came their way. Later in our trip on the General Election Day itself, the same police vans were parked in the heart of Leicester Square. Shop owners of food stores brought an entire tray of buffalo wings to the policemen to thank them for their service. It was a pretty heartwarming sight. It eased me to see the good in people even when disaster struck, but that doesn't change the fact that I won't return to London for a long time. I made too many observations during my stint, most of which I can't recall by now. All in all, here are the important ones: 1) Many at times, understanding can be a huge problem in neurosurgery -- whether it's the patient understanding your instructions, or you as a clinician understanding the difficulty of not having a presence of mind. 2) Emotional -- the brain controls a being, everything from movement to speech to vision to breathing to emotions. It is so essential in life. When it screws up, life can fall apart easily. Uncle's diagnosis, cousin. As much as the diagnosis is damning, I thought to myself: maybe it isn't that bad after all; he's lived a lot, seen a lot, has a great family. There's always something about a cancer diagnosis that's ever so unnerving. The thing is, nobody deserves to get cancer, regardless of age or whether or not they are inherently evil. Even in this day and age, it is still seen as a death sentence, the worst of all medical conditions with the most unimaginable (or imaginable) consequence. Thoughts running through my head while writing this entire post: 1. Shit, I gotta get into the right mood for writing this 2. Shit, I forgot how intense I felt 3. Shit, I haven't written in such a long time that my writing skills are all over the place now Right now, I can't even think of a proper closure to this. Wow, that took a few days man. Tuesday, April 18, 2017 @ 2:07 pm
Are we all just scared to be lonely?
Monday, October 03, 2016 @ 3:24 pm
Haven't been here for some time. Now that it's recess week, I guess I deserve some time for myself to go into a pensive mood and reflect about the trials and tribulations in life. :)Up till this point in my academic pursuit, I've just completed two of the largest postings in Phase III, Internal Medicine and Paediatrics. The only things that I'd written in the past 4 months since school started were case analyses on patients and other medical literature. It was then that I noticed how crappy my writing became (it could partly be because medical cases were all factual and boring), and how pathetic my sentences were -- unvaried, commas in the same part of each sentence, over-using words like 'hence', 'also', 'unremarkable', 'I say this because', 'elevated', 'raised', 'differentials', 'and', 'as well as', and many others of that ilk. It's been bothering me a lot. Other stupid things include typing extraordinarily long sentences full of commas, attempting to come up with more synonyms that can be medically appropriate as well, starting sentences with some pronoun... ugh kills me when I think of it. I really wanna start reading and writing again without having so many problems with expression and issues with stringent use of vocabulary. Speaking of Paediatrics, I think I wouldn't just stash the thought of doing Paediatrics in the future away just yet. Interacting with children/teenagers and their parents has given me a lot of confidence in my communication skills and at this point in time, I still feel that I'm able to connect with these children (could be because I'm not getting old yet). Also thought that I would do badly at Paediatrics in terms of knowledge and competency at the start of the posting, but turns out that I've been able to answer many of the questions that tutors and lecturers pose, and am no longer apprehensive of the thought of having to present a case, summarise a case, perform physical examination, take a history or answer questions posed. It's heartening to know that I've been making progress, and it's some good tangible progress that's gonna be shaping who I become in the next few years to come. Apart from school and work, I'm starting to think about the research project that Tung enrolled us into, and how it could become increasingly relevant and relatable to me. This really really disturbs me and puts me off a lot. Right from the time when the thought of doing Medicine came into my mind, I've always had a few crucial concerns. The first would be that of performing up to the expectations of the faculty, my family and also of patients (mostly in future but also increasingly applicable now). The second would be that of becoming more and more jaded over time. Nick told me about how I shouldn't be getting lazy and becoming jaded so early on in Med school, and I thought, how does becoming lazy equate to being jaded. Then I wondered, maybe I am really becoming jaded -- sometimes wanting to/choosing to turn a blind eye to certain patients when in a rush or when "unimportant" (which is subjective), feeling that what some patients are going through is common (even though before I knew the medical condition I would've thought that it's serious and anxiety-inducing) and it affects me less now, choosing patients with signs and being eager to clerk them (opportunistic learning, but what about the other lonely patients without signs, maybe just social issues, that want somebody to talk to them). I don't know man. I can say all this now and feel so damn guilty about how learning and stress and priorities (which are all just excuses by the way) affected me to become somebody I have never wanted to be, and I am really so ashamed of myself for tipping over to the dark side. I guess he really set me thinking about how ignorant I was with my own behaviour, because what I displayed reflected to some extent how I viewed certain issues at hand, and also how I would likely to act to overcome or settle these issues. Maybe it's because those were busy postings. I'll try to become better in the subsequent ones. I really resent myself sometimes. Came into Med school thinking that it could grow and develop my character to become a good and better Samaritan, help to treat patients and bring hope. I still believe in all these. Came into Med school thinking that whatever I learn in school, I can apply when I come home to my family everyday. But now it seems to me that I've become more and more critical. Granny's dementia is getting a lot worse and I can't even remember when was the first time she mistook me for my cousin Soo Chin. From then on she's been calling me that, and until I half shout at her, she doesn't realise that she's made a mistake. Maybe I've made a mistake for not being at home often enough, for turning a blind eye to her sometimes and thinking that becoming senile is part and parcel of ageing (thank you Med school), for not being with her even when I'm at home (for instance, selfish me with my alone time now). Mum's been complaining of some chest pains recently, and she thinks it may be something wrong with her lungs. I immediately dissed the idea; summing up everything she's been displaying and complaining of for the past few months + family history of heart disease + personal history of valvular regurgitation, I thought she had a heart problem. School taught me to ask patients if they have any thoughts and ideas about what the cause of their health problems could be, so I took very long to remember that, held back, and asked her why she thought it was her lungs that were bothering her. At least I did hold back. I really don't want to become a machine that just follows algorithms, asks questions for the sake of getting answers that I want, becoming so intent on finishing the job that there's less genuineness in emotions and losing the human touch. I really want to step out of this, but I can't seem to make the first move. I really want someone to take this step forward with me, but there's no one. Putting all of that aside (oh my goodness it's still been school and school crisis-related ugh I hate myself), met up with Haoyu and Keith recently to celebrate my birthday in advance, and Keith updated me on our way home that he's currently working on someone. M2 from Med school, caring and actually shows it (unlike me basically), and for the most part similar to me. Why am I even using myself as a benchmark (it's perfectly fine if he does but not me)? I'm really not great a person. But never mind besides that, I've found myself to be quite comfortable again with hearing such stuff from him, which seems to me that I've managed to put everything that happened between us behind and stepped out of the shithole. I'm glad I did. I felt that it was great that he's looking for someone, and I think I can manage giving him advice now that I've come through. He said he doesn't know who else he can share such stuff with, and I guess he's really trying to mend our friendship and restore it back to how it was before we got together. Sounds fine to me, but I really really hope that we never ever cross the line, ever again. If we have to, it won't be any time soon at all. Since tomorrow's my 21st birthday, happy birthday to myself. I share my wish with the world (too ambitious, maybe just with the Internet and whoever chances upon this post); I hope to become a better person. Better is an understatement. I hope to become someone that my past and future self will look up too alike, and maybe someone that others will take as a role model. That's the life goal (nicer way of saying ideal). Or if I wanna be realistic about it, I hope to become someone that my past and future self can tolerate. :) Saturday, July 23, 2016 @ 1:44 am
It's an understatement when I say I'm lucky all my life. I've been more than blessed all this while -- born into a loving, complete environment with fantastic people, born able-bodied and able-minded, being able to lead a life thus far without having to worry about a lot of matters that would otherwise be constantly on some people's minds. Probably wayyyyyyy better off than so many others, yet it's so difficult to show appreciation daily whilst being tied down by work and other priorities. Today serves as a respite, when I can finally pause, take a step back, reflect and just be thankful for the many deserving things that have happened over the past 6 weeks (before I start slogging away to complete my second reflective journal).6 weeks into my first ever clinical posting with Internal Medicine at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, and it's been more than just an eye-opener to me. I still recall my first time being at TTSH as a greenhorn -- J2, unsure and enthusiastic about witnessing first-hand how a hospital is on the inside. I vaguely remember the gratifying first experience which is pretty similar to what I've been doing at IM so far -- visit to a ward (looks and feels the same as before), visit to the lab, free coffee and milo at Annex, attachments at the podiatry and physiotherapy department, etc.. At that point in time, I was already vying for a healthcare career, thinking of doing Medicine but wondered if my grades could make the cut, and I was hoping to be able to come back to TTSH for various reasons. Guess it was somehow meant to be that I started my first clinical year back at TTSH again, with a familiar and comfortable environment. This time, though, I'm still a greenhorn, with a lot more uncertainty and short-lasting grit that accompanied the unfaltering heart of a yet-to-be-jaded third-year medical student. I remember setting goals for myself right at the beginning of the posting -- to clerk and perform a certain number of long and short cases per day -- but this has come almost to naught with other preoccupations and distractions. I don't dare say that I've seen a lot, and I hate to admit it but I felt that I was losing patience and some empathy somewhere along the way (esp. for difficult patients). There's one week when I had zero motivation to clerk patients and kept giving myself excuses to not do so. Thankfully, a week's worth of Rehab Medicine got me rejuvenated thinking of why I wanted to do what I'm currently doing. Dr Loh's funny reminders to not just be "Mouth Big Brain Small" after graduating with an MBBS, to always remember to treat the patient by finding out what they desire and not just treat their medical conditions, what it means to 'help' patients because intervention isn't necessarily always beneficial. The rehab physicians were full of love and respect for their patients (and probably know more about their conditions and names off-hand). Probably need to try and get that back. Apart from the mentors themselves, I'm also very lucky to have befriended an SIP M5 and overseas elective student. There were a "humble source of unending knowledge and skill", and were extremely willing to teach, share and supervise me. We had lots of fun as well, just talking about related or unrelated issues and making fun of each other, even extending all that talk to beyond just the two weeks we were all together. Each time I think of starting the next two weeks without them, life sounds a lot less interesting and definitely more stressful as I'd be the only one under the direct scrutiny of Prof. Today at Chee's 21st birthday celebration, I was suddenly reminded of how our friendship was so remarkable and that we've witnessed each others' highs and lows, all the milestones and all. I've been blessed with such great friends who've stayed with me all this while and lent me a listening ear whenever I need one. My path crossed with those of so many fantastic people; they've helped me so much along the way to avert potential crises and struggles that I would have to otherwise face alone. Today is the day I give thanks. Super tired though. Probably deserve a good night's sleep. :) Sunday, June 12, 2016 @ 11:13 pm
"Time doesn't always heal; sometimes it only hides the scars."I used to always think that time was the panacea for everything -- anger, betrayal, lies, irresponsibility, forgiveness, forgetting -- even for things like the lack of maturity, time could potentially mend the imperfections and fix the missing pieces of a puzzle. But there's always a cost. Time comes with great cost; along with the priority of making up for or solving something else, there is always a trade-off -- when I allow myself time to be angry and wait for things to settle, the way I handle the things I have on hand become ineffective and draggy because I still am consumed with fury. Time is precious for everybody, but more so for the ill. While we spend time thinking about how time works, those living on borrowed time are not going to have excess of it to be wasted on what may seem very trivial to them, simply because they know they can see the end of it coming in the very near future. When time is no longer on your side, there is no use fighting against it or fighting for it. You go along with it. No matter how many added dimensions time can provide under different circumstances, there's one thing that it cannot do on its own -- solving a problem. Problems remain problems even if they're swept under the carpet. Once the carpet is sent off for dry cleaning, old issues resurface. At times they return with even greater vengeance and do collateral damage, at times they lie low and invoke a bit of a reaction and then die off. There's no end to a problem if it's not solved. I let time slip by while wallowing in my loss. When I thought I got out of if, it was because there was somebody who took me along, not because I came to terms with it by myself. If not for talking to PK, that would never have dawned on me. Right now I still can't look you in the face without feeling uneasy, pained and bitter. I wonder if it's the same for you. I wonder if you've moved on. Nevertheless, thank you for making me the best version of myself, and thank you also for loving me at my best/worst. I just don't have enough courage to do the same without you now. |