Saturday 12 March 2016

On Letters

Because I am thoroughly enamoured with the inimitable Stephen Fry, I find it not unreasonable to mirror his actions and write this letter to my younger self too.

Dear D,

           Your boxes are packed – Dad has begrudgingly pasted your name and new address on it - and your plane tickets are sitting in a folder with your acceptance letter to university. You have never left home before, you’ve barely finished high school, your new life is about to begin and you are not sure if there is time to turn back; if this is something you will regret someday.

            Your home will change. The public housing flat you grew up in will be no more - it was sold so that you could afford your tuition fees. In fact, the definition of Home will differ – from tiny hostel rooms to city apartments to suburban houses to country hospital units – Home you will soon realise is not just a geographical space, but a reflection of the happiness that it harbours. And you will be thankful for your beloved families because when you lie homesick in your bed one night, you will find comfort in the knowledge that there are hearts beating in Adelaide, Perth and Singapore for you too.

            You will change. Your accent a curiosity; people will wonder about your heritage. You will learn independence and you will discover the qualities that make you different from others. Insecurities will lessen as acceptance deepens; beneath all that pubescent awkwardness there lies worth to be proud of. You will grow to enjoy giving because for most of your life you have received. And you will find in your travels that despite differences in colour, religion and culture, we are all cohesive in our search for emotional connection, to define a purpose in our lives.
           
            You will find Love that poets speak of – atop a hill, overlooking sunny patches of bare land – you will trace an imprint of his beautiful face onto your heart as your hand holds his. Gray-skied walks by early summer blooms, philosophical debates over lunchtime picnics, those evenings when a polite insistent stare from the waiter hints at closing time (and we must leave my dear) – you will live in the moment, you can taste its aching sweetness still. And then the bitterness of life’s cruelty will come, when Love was taken away so suddenly from you. But you will emerge through it, through all those tears and painful longing - you must believe me. Believe that growing up means that the love you want now is different too.

            Your career will test you. It will break you, push you to your limits and release you in defeat. You will spend your initial years walking through many cold corridors, a harrowed gaze fixed on the floor, wondering if you had done the right thing. You will see suffering, but you will soon provide dignified painless deaths. Learn to accept that mistakes must happen – without them, you will not grow as a clinician. But never forget that your patients are people, who mean something to someone else. And in the powerless world lived in a hospital bed, your patient’s voice must sometimes come from you.

             Trust me, it will work out. Your fears will soon be infected with excitement, happiness, sadness and despair – Life is not straight forward, it was never meant to be. But have faith in the knowledge that it will all be alright and that when you look back someday, you would never have wanted it any other way.

Yours truly
D.



Saturday 25 January 2014

On Leaving Home (Again)

I am, and have been, a product of circumstance. I would like to believe that I had some choice, but I go where the wind blows and with this, there are no predictions. With that in mind, I ought to remind myself that I cannot have the privilege of resentment, as I move on - once more - down a different path in my life.

It has been a decade since I left the country that I grew up in. And it has been two years since I have left a part of Australia that will always mean so much to me. I am lucky to have many homes, each punctuated by the existence of families that I love dearly. 

In a week, I will leave again. This time to start a career that I choose to believe has chosen me. I am immersed in fear, excitement and regret; often it leaves me confused. Perth, my home, has given me incredible memories filled with wonderful people. I can only hope that I have touched their lives as much as they have enriched mine.

I do not know when the dust will settle, when my life will comfortably stay put but never stagnant. Till then, I must wilfully move on, as if it will not matter, as if it has never mattered, that my future will always be dictated by what the present brings.

Saturday 12 October 2013

Beauty and the Beast

As seen in the Australian Doctor on 3rd October 2013

There is beauty in ordinary things. In my first week of medical school, we had walked, with burdened thoughts, into a cold laboratory peppered with cadavers. We had tutorials, even attended a memorial service, to psychologically prepare us for this: that death is confronting but it bestows the gift of learning and we ought to respect it.

Read more

Saturday 29 June 2013

No Fail-safes Here

As seen in the Australian Doctor on 30th January 2013.


In our final week of medical school, when we soon-to-be graduates were still euphorically high after passing our exams, a professor pitched his prophecy to a room of wide-eyed future young doctors: "You are all destined to fail. Somewhere, somehow, someday. Surely."


Read more..

Dying Moments

As seen in the Australian Doctor on the 23rd of July 2012.


A week ago, I attended a cardiac arrest: chest compressions in the background, monitor blinking in rhythmic bouts, my gloved hands furiously finding a vein. I always try to find calm in such chaos.