Sunday, 24 August 2025

A Dream in Calcutta: When Dr. Love Became Mother Teresa

That night, after a week of learning more than she thought possible, Sheen drifted into a dream. But this was no ordinary dream. The ICU monitors, the sterile halls, the hum of ventilators—all melted away into the dust and din of Calcutta. Rickshaws rattled past. Incense curled from temple doorways. The air was thick with both suffering and resilience.

In the center of it all stood Dr. Love—except she was no longer Dr. Love. In Sheen’s dream, her laughter and energy had taken on a new form, her white coat replaced by a simple blue-bordered sari. She was Mother Teresa.

She moved through narrow lanes lined with the forgotten and the broken—lepers, beggars, children with hollow eyes—and touched each with the same warmth she had once carried through the ICU. Where others saw decay, she saw dignity. Where others turned away, she leaned closer.

But Sheen noticed something else: even though Mother Teresa drew the eyes of the world, even though she carried the Nobel Prize in this dream, she was not alone.

Dr. Bailey was there too. Quiet, steadfast, almost invisible to the crowd’s adoration, but never invisible to the ones who mattered. She bent down to clean wounds, changed dressings, and whispered words of comfort. She was the anchor, the friend, the steady flame beside the saint’s fire.

Sheen realized that even as Mother Teresa became the symbol, Dr. Bailey was the strength. Their bond—rooted in friendship, trust, and service—was not diminished by the difference in recognition. It was, in fact, magnified.

The Soil of Bengal

The dreamscape itself mattered. This was Calcutta—not just a city, but a cradle of culture and conscience. It was here that Rabindranath Tagore had once planted the seeds of education, integrity, and sovereignty through Shantiniketan. His words had lifted generations to dream of freedom and humanity.

Now, in Sheen’s vision, two Nobel laureates stood tethered by the same karmic soil. Tagore, the poet who taught the world to think of freedom with dignity. Teresa, the servant who taught the world to serve with humility. They had been born generations apart, yet both had been drawn to Bengal’s call—service before self, humanity above all.

And in this karmic weaving, Dr. Love and Dr. Bailey walked together. One radiating light that drew global attention, the other a quiet companion whose loyalty and compassion carried equal weight in the unseen ledgers of service.

A Friendship to Revere

When Sheen woke, she held onto the dream not as a passing fancy but as a lesson. Recognition may fall unevenly, awards may land in only one pair of hands—but true greatness is never solitary.

In her heart, Sheen knew: the friendship of Dr. Bailey and Dr. Love was one to be revered forever. It was proof that behind every saintly figure, there stands a friend, a healer, a steady presence who makes the impossible possible.

And sometimes, that bond—quiet, unseen, unwavering—is as holy as the work itself.

Tuesday, 19 August 2025

The Tagore Dream: A Neuroanesthesia Resident’s Awakening 📖✨

 Where a dream paints poetry into practice, and a resident discovers that healing isn’t just science—it’s soul.


I. The Sleep Between Shifts ðŸŒ™

The corridors of Artemis Hospital had stilled to a rare hush. Monitors beeped like lullabies, and fluorescent lights bathed the neurosurgical wing in a sterile glow. In a quiet corner of the resident lounge, Sheen, a Neuroanesthesia resident, sat down for just a moment—her mind saturated with perfusion pressures, BIS monitors, and the delicate dance of brain oxygenation.

Her head dipped.

She didn’t mean to sleep. But sometimes the mind slips into rest when the soul needs to speak.

And what a strange, luminous dream it was.

She stood barefoot on red earth, beneath a sprawling banyan tree. Children recited poetry. The air swirled with verse and birdsong. Ahead, robed in ivory, stood a serene figure with a gentle smile and a commanding presence—Rabindranath Tagore.

Or was it… Dr. Davidson?

Yes. It was him—her mentor in neuroanesthesia—but transformed. His usual scrubs replaced by flowing robes, surgical calm exchanged for poetic stillness. His eyes, however, held the same steady flame of wisdom and compassion.

"Welcome," he said softly, "to the true Shanti Niketan. Not built of brick and vine—but breath and belief."

And in that moment, a forgotten ache returned.

Shantiniketan had always been her dream, not just hers—but her father’s. A quiet man of few words but deep ideals, he had often spoken of Tagore’s vision, his hope that Sheen would one day study where learning meant liberation. On her high school graduation, he’d even gifted her a red and white Bengali saree, telling her gently, "For when you go to Shantiniketan, beta. You’ll need this."

She had never made it there.

But maybe... now she had.

Sheen woke up with a jolt.

She was back in the lounge. But the dream clung to her—not like a fog, but like a revelation.


II. The Operating Theatre is a Temple ðŸ§ 

From that moment on, Sheen saw the OT through new eyes.

Every time she walked into the neuro OR, she remembered the banyan tree, the poetry, and that quiet smile. She no longer felt like just a resident caught in a storm of complex cases—she felt like a student in a sacred space, being guided toward something deeper.

Dr. Davidson, the Head of Neuroanesthesia, wasn't merely supervising. He was teaching by being. Calm in crisis. Exact in execution. Gentle with juniors. Fierce when needed.

"Neuroanesthesia," he’d often say, "is not just about keeping the patient asleep. It’s about listening to the brain without hearing a word. It speaks in waves and pressures. Learn the language."

Sheen began to hear it.


III. The Unsung Pulse: Techs & Nurses Who Keep the Soul Beating ðŸ’“

But if Dr. Davidson was the philosopher-king of this surgical Shanti Niketan, then its pulse was the OT techs and nurses—working without fanfare, never seeking applause, but forming the very sinew of the system.

At the helm of the OT tech team were Raghav and Faiz.

🛠️ Raghav was a master of precision—silent, stoic, and always two steps ahead of the surgeon. He calibrated machines like a violinist tuning strings—so the surgery could sing.

🔥 Faiz was fire and intuition. He could anticipate problems before they occurred. Need a Mayfield clamp repositioned mid-craniotomy? He was already moving. She trained juniors like a sculptor—firm hands, soft heart.

And then came the nurses—led by a couple whose names had become synonymous with integrity and instinctAnika and Sufiyan.

👩‍⚕️ Anika brought comfort into chaos. Whether it was a distressed family member or a restless post-op patient, she infused the space with peace.

👨‍⚕️ Sufiyan, quiet and deliberate, commanded respect without needing to speak. His strength was not just in clinical skill but in his ability to hold space during crises—never flinching, never failing.

These were the people who turned the OT into a sanctum. A place where timing, trust, and teamwork didn't just save lives—they wrote quiet epics.


IV. The Shift That Tested Everything ðŸŒ’

One evening, the rhythm of the hospital stuttered. A young woman with a ruptured aneurysm was wheeled in—unconscious, unstable, and spiraling.

The neurosurgeons prepared for an emergency craniotomy. Sheen, just catching her breath from a 14-hour shift, was called back.

Dr. Davidson met her at the OR doors.

"You ready?" he asked, eyes steady.
Sheen nodded. Tired. Nervous. But certain.

Inside, Raghav was already positioning the head clamp. Faiz ran a final check on the perfusion pump. Anika and Sufiyan coordinated IVs, crossmatched blood, and gently reassured the family outside.

The procedure began.

ICP spikes. Bleeding surges. Brain swelling threatens to derail the operation.

Sheen felt her own breath quicken.

"Breathe," Dr. Davidson whispered. "You are the patient’s voice now. Keep it steady."

She adjusted anesthetics. Tweaked ventilation. Administered mannitol. Watched the numbers. Watched the brain.

And slowly, with the orchestra around her moving in perfect synchrony, they brought her back.


V. The Realization: This Is Shanti Niketan ðŸŒ…

Later that night, Sheen sat in the quiet of the ICU hallway, sipping cold tea. Across from her, Faiz and Raghav were already restocking for the next case. Anika was changing a wound dressing, while Sufiyan gently explained extubation to a nervous family.

No one asked for thanks. No one needed applause.

And in that moment, the Tagore dream returned.

Not in sleep. But in the stillness between tasks.

This wasn’t just a department. It was a school of purpose.
A place of poetry without pen.
Where every life saved was a verse.
Where mentors didn’t lecture—they embodied truth.
Where the techs and nurses didn’t just assist—they anchored the mission.

This was her Shanti Niketan.
And Dr. Davidson was her Tagore.
Not in ink, but in intention.
Not with words, but with wisdom shared in silence.


VI. Epilogue: The Dream That Stayed Awake ðŸ’«

Sheen never forgot the dream. But she didn’t need to return to it.
Because now, every time she walked into the OT, adjusted an anesthesia plan, or watched Faiz catch a mistake before it happened, she lived it.

And when people asked what it was like working in Neuroanesthesia at Artemis, she’d smile and say:

“It’s like poetry. Only the ink is blood, and the rhythm is breath, and the pen is all of us—together.”

Saturday, 9 August 2025

NANCC Nights: Friendship, Romance & The Art of Not Failing Your Exam (Probably)

 In the glamorous, adrenaline-filled world of Neuroanesthesia and Neurocritical Care (NANCC) at Artemis Hospital — where the air smells like antiseptic and despair — two residents have cracked the code to survival:

Step 1: Make a best friend.
Step 2: Study together.
Step 3: Lower your expectations for Step 2 immediately.

Sheen and Laila started out as just two tired souls trying to navigate residency. Somewhere between night shifts, endless rounds, and trying to find a pen that actually works, they became inseparable.


The “Study Sessions”

On paper, their study plan was flawless.
Reality check:

Sheen: “Okay, today we’ll cover ICP monitoring.”
Laila: “Great, but first… snacks.”
Sheen: “We just ate.”
Laila: “That was pre-study eating. This is intra-study eating.”

By the end of the night, they had covered:

  • 2 paragraphs of the textbook

  • 3 packets of chips

  • 1 emergency meme break

  • And the entire medical gossip circuit of Artemis Hospital


The Love Life Intermissions

No NANCC story is complete without unnecessary romantic plot twists.

Laila was steady with Javed — charming, loyal, and the kind of guy who’d bring her chai at 2 AM. Unfortunately, her parents treated his marriage proposal like she’d announced she was quitting medicine to become a street magician.

Her mother: “Beta, you can do better.”
Laila: “Better than a man who knows my favorite paratha order?”
Her mother: horrified silence

Sheen, on the other hand, dated James — a charming guy who turned out to be significantly younger.
How much younger? Let’s just say she had more clinical experience than he had years on the planet.

Laila: “What’s the age gap?”
Sheen: “Let’s just say his first phone was an iPhone 14.”


The NANC Crew — Our Chaotic Cheerleaders

Their department crew was like a poorly funded Avengers team — strong in spirit, weak in common sense.

When Laila was sulking after another “parental disapproval” dinner, the crew held an Emergency Happiness Code:

  • Dr. William ordered samosas.

  • Dr. Brad Pitt started singing “Pehla Nasha” off-key in the ICU corridor.

  • A confused patient in bed 6 asked if it was visiting hours.

When Sheen broke up with James, they threw her a mock graduation ceremony. The certificate read:

“Successfully Completed the Course: Dating Someone Who Still Uses Their Parents’ Netflix.”


Hospital Moments That Deserve a TV Show

Of course, life in NANCC came with… incidents:

  1. The Time Laila Spilled Coffee on the Ventilator

    • She claimed it was “part of humidification therapy.”

    • The machine disagreed. Loudly.

  2. The Time Sheen Fought the EMR System

    • She typed the wrong password three times.

    • Got locked out.

    • Sweet-talked the computer.

    • It let her in.

    • Now the IT team thinks she’s a witch.

  3. The Time The Crew Tried Group Yoga in the ICU

    • Lasted 4 minutes before a Code Blue ruined the vibe.

    • Patient was fine. Downward Dog, less so.


The Bigger Picture

For all the snacks, gossip, and tech disasters, Sheen and Laila had one thing locked: ambition.

They quizzed each other at ungodly hours, held each other together during brutal shifts, and celebrated even the smallest victories — like remembering the GCS scale without peeking at the back of their ID cards.

One night, mid-study, Laila looked up and said, “We’ll laugh about all this someday.”
Sheen: “I’m already laughing. At you. Because you’ve been highlighting the same line for 25 minutes.”


Conclusion: The NANCC Friendship Survival Kit

To survive this department, you need:

  • A friend who knows when to hand you coffee

  • A crew who’ll throw you a fake graduation when your relationship tanks

  • And the ability to explain brain herniation at 3 AM while eating a samosa

Sheen and Laila aren’t just surviving residency. They’re building the kind of friendship that might actually get them through exams… assuming they eventually get past Chapter 2.