Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Angel



Spend all your time waiting
For that second chance,
For a break that would make it okay.
There's always some reason
To feel not good enough,
And it's hard, at the end of the day.
I need some distraction,
Oh, beautiful release.
Memories seep from my veins.
Let me be empty,
Oh, and weightless,
And maybe I'll find some peace tonight.

Chorus
In the arms of the angel,
Fly away from here,
From this dark, cold hotel room,
And the endlessness that you fear.
You are pulled from the wreckage,
Of your silent reverie.
You're in the arms of the angel,
May you find some comfort here.

So tired of the straight line,
And everywhere you turn,
There's vultures and thieves at your back.
The storm keeps on twisting.
Keep on building the lies
That you make up for all that you lack.
It don't make no difference,
Escape one last time.
It's easier to believe in this sweet madness,
Oh, this glorious sadness,
That brings me to my knees.

You're in the arms of the angel,
May you find some comfort here.

My favourite song. 

A friend once texted me the lyrics of the song when i was down and having insomnia. What a comforting thought. Thank you. Wherever you are, i miss our friendship. :)



When art meets surgery


The British sculptor Barbara Hepworth met orthopaedic surgeon Norman Capener in 1944, an encounter that proved to be fruitful in many ways. One of Hepworth's daughters, Sarah, had osteomyelitis (infection of the bone) and Capener had operated on her at the Princess Elizabeth Orthopaedic Hospital in Exeter. The artists struck up a friendship with the surgeon, and Capener later visited the family in St Ives where Hepworth taught him to carve.

In return, Capener suggested that Hepworth observe him operate, initially in Exeter and later at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital and the London Clinic, where she also observed orthopaedic surgeon Reginald Watson-Jones and ENT surgeon Edward Rodney Garnett Passe. The rapid sketches she made in the theatre led to a remarkable series of almost 80 drawings and paintings, 35 of which are now on display at the Hepworth Wakefield's Barbara Hepworth: The Hospital Drawings.

A highlight is the series of six paintings based on her observations of Garnett Passe performing delicate “fenestration” of the ear operations, to reverse otosclerosis. She noted that she was struck by “the long concentration, the minuteness of the work and the weight of the equipment and the power of control behind the work”. Hepworth's drawings convey both the manual dexterity and compassion of surgeon and theatre sisters at work, and she sought to capture the abstract quality of surgically gowned figures moving within confined spaces. 

Hepworth later recalled how: “I became completely absorbed by two things: first, the co-ordination between human beings all dedicated to the saving of a life, and the way that unity of idea and purpose dictated a perfection of concentration, movement, and gesture, and secondly by the way this special grace (grace of mind and body), induce a spontaneous space composition, an articulated and animated kind of abstract sculpture very close to what I had been seeking in my own work.”

Such is the beautiful art of surgery. Whilst I am far from possessing any of these qualities portrayed in Hepworth's paintings, I certainly hope to emulate the amazing and unique works of these surgeons one day - where amidst the rush, the imperfection, and sometimes crude exchange between the theatre staff, something as magical as Hepworth's painting would be made manifest and witnessed again by another human being.      

Dr Capener - delicately putting on his gloves, eyes full of compassion
Barbara Hepworth at work

The scalpel
An ear operation
Orthopaedic operation
The scalpel 2
A theatre sister
Delivery of baby
Gowning up - a process which remains unchanged today



Monday, November 26, 2012

Ward call


In an hour's time, i will be driving to the hospital to begin two weeks of overnight ward call. For those who are not familiar with term, ward call is basically a job where the on-call doctor is called upon to respond to all medical needs that may arise in the hospital when all the day doctors have left for home. The call can range from anything trivial (eg writing medication chart), to life-threatening emergencies (eg heart attack or pulmonary embolism).

Typically when i think of ward call, i have shivers down my spine because of the unpredictable nature of it. I remembered the first call i ever received was to see a mental health patient who was spiking temperature, aggressive in a semi-comatose way, and he had a needle found in his groin (he is a drug-addict). Was it drug intoxication? Was it sepsis (infection in the blood stream)?  Was it drug-induced psychosis? Those were my thoughts as i traipsed to the mental health ward.

Notwithstanding the fact that i had great difficulty getting a cannula into his vein (drug addicts have notoriously difficult veins because of all the times they have stabbed themselves), i also had no idea how to deal with someone extremely un-cooperative who has the potential to do harm to us if he is tipped off the wrong way.

That was indeed my cruel introduction to ward call.

Things did improve along the way. Slowly i learned how to deal with the common problems in the hospital, and to be a detective to investigate why is this person sick or presenting in this way at this point in time. Because this is the first time we are seeing the patients, we have no idea what they came to the hospital with, the past medical history, the progress in the hospital, the medications they are on etc. I would look thru past notes, pull up the lab results, glance thru their medication chart and vital signs etc, with the hope that i might be able to find out the reason for his or her current problem.

Thankfully, most of the jobs that came after this horrendous mental health call were trivial stuff. Later on, i was told that that mental heath call was more of a rare case rather than a norm. Ward call doctors usually go thru most nights without any major difficulty.

Whilst i hope this would be the case for tonight, at the same time i am looking forward to some challenge. I think immersing ourselves in difficult situations is the best way to learn. Yes knowledge plays an important role during this period, and all doctors should always be doing some form of reading up, but to be able to apply the knowledge when one is placed in a highly stressful environment is the quality that distinguishes ordinary doctors from extraordinary doctors.


In South Africa

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Week summary (19-25 Nov)


This week, i have done some trail running, mountain running (ok, more hiking than running), and road running. Each activity allows me to work on a particular area of my running, thereby strengthening it. Trail running allows me to learn to deal with the technical aspect of running, avoiding rocks, negotiating with sharp bends and balancing myself on extremely uneven and rocky surface. Mountain running (hiking) builds the leg strength in general as the entire musculature of the lower limbs are being worked during ascent and descent. In the long run, it actually improves one's running economy, allowing a person to use up less oxygen for the same energy expenditure of the legs. And last but not least, road running allows me to work on speed and high intensity stamina. Running in trail for too long, you will gradually lose your speed and the ability to maintain top speed for a long time. It's good to throw it some road running every now and to train you to be fast. So that's what i have been doing this week! It's really fun to add variety into one's training, something which i did not do much this year.

Ahh. Why did i end up talking about training again? I don't mean to do this. I have been intentionally keeping myself from running or talking about running too much in this period as I have other priorities at the moment. But oh well. Since i am posting my week summary log, might as well just share about what i have done in the week.

I am really excited to going to Blue Mountains, Sydney with Raymun next weekend. A massive project coming up in Dec 2014. Stay tuned! :D

Total distance: 55.8km
Total time: 4hours36mins
Total elevation: 1132m 
Average speed: 4.95 min/km


Monday, November 19, 2012

Week Summary (12-18 Nov)


I am just doing maintenance run at the moment. Run which maintains my fitness, but is not too long and time-consuming as i have other more important things to do. In most days after i get back from work, i would slip on my shoes and hit the mountains and the trails. It feels good to de-stress this way!  :)

Can't wait to go Blue Mountains at the end of this month!

Total distance: 57km
Total time: 4hrs25mins
Total elevation: 1087m
Average speed: 4.65 min/km

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Mental Health


Have you been having low mood for unexplained reason? Have you been waking up early than you should, and find it hard to return to sleep again? Do you find yourself struggling with persistent negative thoughts about yourself or others that you know don't come from you? Is your loved one suffering from chronic anxiety and you don't know how to help him/her?



Welcome to the world of Mental Health.

I have just completed 6 weeks of work in the Mental Health ward, and i have but only a glimpse of the desperation, darkness and depravity of human hearts.

Everyday we see people with schizophrenia, delusional disorder, eating disorder, depression, anxiety, borderline personality disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder etc.

The chronic schizophrenic who is starving himself to death because he believes he has no guts (his weight dropped from 76kg to 37.9kg over 6 months); the lady who sought comfort in self-harm and frequently cuts her chest and breasts and inserts objects into her wounds; the soft-spoken, constantly-avoiding-eye-contact lady who was raped by her father at the age of 14 and carried a child whom she has not met since birth; the stout, bulky man who always points his fingers to the sky and speaks to the 'someone' and told of secrets from the Devil that he is not allowed to disclose; the young attractive woman who is totally disinhibited and is sexually inappropriate toward everyone including other male patients; the mildly obese lady who struggles with pathological compulsive thoughts of suicide (and carries it out most of the times), the guy who suffers from drug abuse, marital breakdown and depression; and the list continues...




There are so many things i want to share about my experience with these mentally ill patients and i don't know where to start.

People don't become mentally ill overnight. The days, weeks, and even years leading to someone's first presentation to Mental Health ward are always worth exploring. We learned so much about a person when the person starts to divulge his past, his childhood, his family, his relationships etc. I find a recurring pattern in a lot of the depressed patients: if someone has been abandoned by one of his parents at an early age, the impact on his/her sub-conscious is massive and it manifests in so many different ways when the person grows up.

My consultant always tells me: it's easy to arrive at a diagnosis. It's easy to just prescribe medications for the mentally-ill. What is difficult is getting to the heart of it: why did this person become unwell? Almost everyone gets criticised every now and then, why only this lady has a mal-adaptive way of responding to criticism by cutting herself? So many young people take illicit drugs, why only this person became psychotic as a result of it? A lot of working couples send their kids to child-care centres during day time, why only this lady becomes so suddenly obsessed with the safety of her son, who despite frequent reassurances, insists that the son's safety is in jeopardy? Every day, people get hurt, relationships break up, workers lose their jobs, why only this special group of people end up in hospital for the common assaults faced by everyone?

Throughout my 6 weeks in the ward, i have grown close to some of the patients. Their stories fascinate me. In contrast to a lot of the older doctors/consultants who roll their eyes and let out a huge sigh whenever a patient says he has died 5 times and has half a million in his bank account, my eyes perk up and i am fascinated. I want to know why this person thinks this way. I want to listen to his stories. I want to see what his inner world is like, if he would let me.

RH and I. No one believed him when he said he had half a million in his bank account, until he proved it. 

Before I started my mental health rotation, I must admit that i was quite skeptical about people with mental illness. Partly because of the chronicity of the illness, partly because my own experience in that my father has been suffering from depression for the 30 years and he is not getting any better, I kinda think that people with mental illness are pretty much hopeless. I mean seriously, you don't expect a person who has been staring into spaces, drooling and talking to the 'invisible' person to one day sit next to you and discuss about the politics or academics or whatever people talk nowadays, do you?

However, i found that i could not be more wrong in this aspect. Mentally ill patients do get better. They do return to an acceptable level of functioning which allows them to be integrated into our society. I have personally witnessed a lady in her fifties who was brought to the ward completely psychotic and mumbling gibberish and throwing magazines into every room, who after 1 week of treatment, became mentally sound again. We sat down later on and had a normal conversation and she was telling us how she just 'lost' it because of too much stress in her life. I saw a similar guy who was floridly delusional and psychotic with extremely poor self care and hygiene, who after some time of treatment, improved remarkably, and though he still has pressured speech and blunted affect (common for schizophrenic), his thinking is very much normal like you and me. I have seen depressed women having the motivation to live again, suicidal young men regaining their will to live and are determined more than ever to save their marriage and work for a better future.

Of course, not all mentally ill patient get well. Many continue in their perpetual cycle of recovery and relapse. They get psychotic, come to the ward, improve, gets discharged, only to return to mental health ward again 3 weeks or 3 months later. Some patient don't ever improve at all. They never gain insight. As a matter of fact, the percentage of patients who eventually become well is much smaller than the group who continue in their illness.

JD. The day of discharge - after he spent 41 days in the ward. 

Medications, obviously, is only one part of the answer. Often times, mental illness begins in the heart and mind of a person. If the trigger persists, the illness starts to spread to other parts of the body, i.e the physical. His sleep starts to be affected, so is his appetite, energy level, concentration, daily functioning. These physical disturbances, in turn cause a person to sink deeper into his emotional abyss. When a mental illness reaches this stage, it's not only the emotional and psychological part that you have to treat, but also the physical part. And this is where medications come in. Medications fix the physical symptoms, and places the person in a position where he or she can start tackling the emotional/psychological part.

If one of your loved ones is suffering from mental illness, i have the following to say to you.

Firstly, you are not alone.

Secondly, your loved one is not the only person suffering too. There are many people out there who are suffering from mental illnesses eg depression, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive behaviour that we don't know about because we never shared them. There is still a lot of stigma and discrimination of the mentally ill in our society today.

Thirdly, don't do this alone! Don't fight the battle alone. Seek help! Find a private psychiatrist, speak to a psychologist, a counsellor, or a close friend. If medication is necessary, don't feel bad about taking it. Lots of people need medication to pull them over the acute phase. And once they feel better, which normally takes about 6 months to 1 year, they can start weaning the medication off.

Fourthly, as much as you can, involve different groups of people whom you trust. Doctors, all the members of the family, close relatives and friends, church, other people who have walked the same path before. Someone who is mentally ill cannot be isolated from the rest of the society. Being isolated may feel like a good coping mechanism initially, but it will do more harm to that person in the long run as he or she loses the connection and interaction with other human beings that are so vital in the recovery.

Unfortunately in Malaysia, Mental health is an extremely under-developed specialty and we really have so much more to improve on. There is very little awareness on the illness amongst the general public and as doctors we tend to shun it as much as we can, preferring to deal with other simpler diseases like hypertension and diabetes because they are measurable and seemingly more treatable.

I hope everything i have written is of some help to some of you.

My prayer is out for anyone who is  suffering from a mental illness. You are not alone. God loves you despite of your illness. He sees the real you, and He wants to heal you, if you would let Him.


A movie about a lady with borderline personality disorder starring Angelina Jolie.
Girl, interrupted (some meaningful dialogue)

Susanna [talking to the psychiatrist]: Explain what? Explain to a doctor that the laws of physics can be suspended? That what goes up may not come down? Explain that time can move backwards and forwards, and now to then, and back again, and... you can't control it? 



Lisa: You know, there's too many buttons in the world. There's too many buttons and they're just- There's way too many just begging to be pressed,they're just begging to be pressed,you know? They're just - they're just begging to be pressed, and it makes me wonder, it really makes me f***ing wonder, why doesn't anyone ever press mine? Why am I so neglected? Why doesn't anyone reach in and rip out the truth and tell me that I'm a f***ing whore, or that my parents wish I were dead?
Susanna:
Because you're dead already, Lisa! No one cares if you die, Lisa because you're dead already. Your heart is cold. That's why you keep coming back here. You're not free. You need this place, you need it to feel alive. It's pathetic.
Lisa:
[falls down to her knees and screams]
Susanna:
I've wasted a year of my life. Maybe everyone out there is a liar. And maybe the whole world is "stupid" and "ignorant" but I'd rather be in it. I'd rather be fucking in it than down here with you. 


Angelina Jolie starring Lisa (left) and Winona Ryder starring Susanna (right)

Monday, November 5, 2012

Exciting plans ahead


I just returned from a run in the forest and the mountain. What was special about today's run was i have no idea where i was heading; i was simply taking a step at a time and let the trail guide me. In my mind, i was meditating on a few things - God's amazing love, His wonderful creation, and some exciting plans ahead. The thing about such an 'aimless' run is that it allows the heart to be free and easy. It also brought a clarity in my thinking that i have never had before. Oh God, Thank You for this beautiful day. :)

I have been busy with wedding preparation the past two weeks. Guest list, accommodation, wedding day events, worship service, gate-crashing ceremony, holy matrimony, videography and photography, are amongst the many things that kept me occupied. Basically I have two principles when it comes to wedding. First, keep it as simple and as down to earth as possible. What is most important is having friends who truly matter to you to be there to witness and bless the marriage. Better to toast with friends and relatives who sincerely wish the best for you, than to face a crowd of faces who don't know you for a bar of soap, and are there only because of obligation. Besides, the quality of a marriage has no correlation whatsoever with the magnitude or the extravagance of the wedding day ceremony anyway.

Second, make it as special for your bride as possible. If a lady is willing to entrust her life into your hands, then she deserves the most memorable wedding ever. The thing about making something special is not always necessarily about spending money (although money does play a big part!). It means paying meticulous attention to small details, adding surprise when she least expects it, and doing everything with our heart. :) In this regard, i am still learning everyday.

Something is bothering me lately..

It hurts me that you are not making effort to be there on my big day. Maybe i have misunderstood you or i am expecting too much. I was thinking: If it's one of my best friends' wedding, i will try my best to be there no matter what. But you don't really seem to care. You just continue your life as if nothing has happened. Maybe we have lost the affection and respect for each other that we once had.. or maybe it's busyness at work that caused us to drift apart.. We just don't seem to share similar passion or dreams anymore.. Whatever it is, i am glad at least we have had some beautiful past memories that i can return to, and i do secretly hope that one day, we can do the things that we love again. :)

Finally, one of my best friends - Raymun, and i will be heading to Blue Mountains, Sydney from 30 Nov - 4 Dec to camp and run in the mountain. I am really excited about being able to spend quality time with someone who is very dear to me, who shares the same passion and interest. During this time, we will be spending time planning a massive project that is coming up in 2014. I am not going to reveal what it is yet, but it's the biggest yet in our lives, wilder and crazier than what we can imagine. I am extremely psyched about this! Will write about this project after we have come up with a draft. Stay tuned!


29 Oct - 4 Nov 2012

Total distance: 47.2km
Total elevation: 891m
Total time: 4 hours 1 min
Average speed: 5.10 min/km



Blue Mountains
Trans-Titiwangsa expedition (2008). Raymun (centre), Rachel (bottom right) - I never knew she would be my future wife :D
6-day hike across the 'spine' of Malaysia. Raymun (front)
Wilderness as far as the eyes could see