Sunday, January 12, 2025
Trail Run
Saturday, January 11, 2025
Universe
Sunday, January 5, 2025
Inheritance
If you're looking for a contemporary vision of medication abuse, go to read the novel My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh.
Central to the idea of "relaxation" is a young New York woman's numbing herself to near-coma with a remarkably huge repository of dangerous drugs. Risperidal, Ambien, Valium, Ativan, chewable melatonin, trazodone, Nembutal, Benadryl, NyQuil, Xanax, Lunesta, and her list goes on and on.
The tragedy of this miserable woman goes all the way back to her baby days when her mother, a bedroom drunk, crushed Valium into her milk bottle to "console" her for colic and crying.
You might wonder how a zombie poisoned by that many psychotropic medications could have survived. Well, she could barely arouse the enthusiasm to stand up straight. She took a shower once a week at most. She didn't do much in her waking hours besides watching movies. That woman didn't have to work as she had all her bills on automatic payment plans. She didn't have to worry about property taxes on her apartment, because rent money from the tenants in her dead parents' old house upstate showed up in her checking account by direct deposit every month.
In short, she survived by inheriting the fortune from her parents. Or, should we say, she inherited the misfortune from her mother who mixed alcohol with sedatives?
Thursday, January 2, 2025
Fix
Nearly 30 years ago, I had no idea about patient safety as a junior medical intern, much less keep my patients safe.
The vivid real-life stories from Amy Edmondson's Right Kind of Wrong reminded me of the internship experience. She mentioned the near-fatal mistake of complex failure in a ten-year-old boy, whose face turned blue after surgery. The boy was given a morphine overdose – several times more than was appropriate.
Alas, that story was exactly what I had encountered in a surgical unit where a domestic maid was found unarousable after an appendicitis operation. Within minutes of being paged by the nurse, I rushed to check on the patient and found a near-empty bag of morphine. I ordered a dose of antidote, which worked like true love's kiss for Aurora. That fixed the problem and my patient woke up. End of the story.
Except that it's not.
Looking back, I was so naive to take a quick fix without reporting the incident. I dared not speak up. And that's it.
As a matter of fact, we tend to take short cut in the working environment, even for simple process failure like running out of clean linens. The so-called "first-order problem-solving", as you can imagine, is simply walking to another unit and taking linens from their supply. Problem solved. Minimal time and effort.
It is time for me to quit the first-order problem-solving habit. We better think about what Amy Edmondson dubbed "second-order problem-solving." That could simply mean reporting the shortage of linens and taking the initiative to work around the linen ordering system.
Wednesday, January 1, 2025
Legend
In his 2018 book Through My Father's Eyes, the son of Billy Graham recounts his personal relationship with his father, an iconic American evangelist.
In 2007, the Billy Graham Library (ahead of his death at the age of 99) was dedicated in the presence of former American president Jimmy Carter (who recently died at the age of 100).
Carter also followed Jesus and taught Sunday school classes before, during, and after his time in the White House.
Both are legendary.
Humor
For those of you who like the witty hashtag on Twitter (or X, or whatever you call that), you should have heard of Jimmy Fallon who likes to tweet movie or song title, add one word to change the meaning and tag it to ask for more suggestions. Those humor habits with social media users could have started with Jaz-Z who hashtagged #mylaugh years ago.
If you're anything like me (bad news: you are), you might be less obsessed with hashtag and more old-fashioned. A nerd like me would have prefered The New Yorker magazine caption contest, which comes up with a blank cartoon for anyone to create funny captions. That would be good exercise to rewire our brain to stress less and laugh more. I learned this kind of writing during my high school days, when a newspaper posted a blank cartoon every week and invited submission of short fiction on that cartoon. To me, back then, the comic story crafting meant a conscious desire to be funny, to make people laugh, and to reward myself with pocket money.
Another prime example of humor habit, as I recently learned from Paul Osincup, is game called Guess the Punchline. The goal isn't to build six-pack abs (which will be used only when you laugh too much), but to exercise your humor muscle. All you need to do is pause a video after a comedian like Jimmy Fallon made a setup, and guess the possible punchlines. Here's an example of the setup: According to most studies, people's No.1 fear is public speaking. Number two is death.
What's the punchline?
"This means, to the average person, if you go to a funeral, you're better off in the casket than doing the eulogy."