Thursday, 16 October 2025

The Light in the Ward: When Dr. Shaw Became C.V. Raman

 That night, exhaustion pressed on Sheen’s eyes like a lead apron. The ICU monitors hummed their steady constellations, and the fluorescent lights washed the corridor in a tired white. She rested her head on the case file she’d rewritten twice—once after Dr. Shaw’s glare, and once after Dr. Shaw’s single, rare “not bad.”

Somewhere between the last arterial blood gas and the next blood sugar check, sleep found her.

And in the dream, Dr. Shaw walked in—same crisp stride, same sharp gaze—but the white coat carried a different gravity. Fine chalk dust clung to the sleeves. A spectroscope gleamed where her pen used to be. The room shifted, and Sheen suddenly knew without anyone saying it:

Dr. Shaw was none other than Dr. C.V. Raman.

“Still writing like a scribe, Dr. Sheen?” Raman-Shaw asked, eyes bright with mischief. “Or will you think today?”

Sheen flinched, then caught herself. “Sir—ma’am—I… I am trying.”

“Everyone tries,” he said, voice warm but unyielding. “Scientists and clinicians question. That is a different verb altogether.”

He tapped the case file. “What is your hypothesis?”


The Ward as a Laboratory

The ICU transformed under Raman-Shaw’s gaze. The monitors were no longer boxes spitting numbers; they were instruments throwing light through a prism—data scattering into frequencies, clues hidden in every shift of waveform. The pulse oximeter curve wasn’t just a wave; it was a spectrum of possibilities. The chest X-ray wasn’t a picture; it was a question.

“People think discoveries happen inside grand machines,” Raman-Shaw said, strolling past the ventilator as if it were an old friend. “But my work began with a beam of light, a prism, and curiosity. The day you stop being curious about the ordinary is the day you stop being a doctor worth trusting.”

He pointed at the patient board. “Hyponatremia. Pneumonia. Shock. These are labels, not explanations. What is the mechanism? What interferes with what? What scatters the signal?”

Sheen found her voice. “The ‘scattering,’” she echoed, “could be where the symptoms split—like light. Fever could be infection, yes, but also drug reaction, transfusion, malignancy. We need a way to separate spectra.”

Raman-Shaw’s eyebrow lifted. “Go on.”

“We form a differential, then we use targeted tests as filters. We refine. Each result removes one color until only the true cause remains.”

He smiled—briefly, like light catching a lens. “Now you are thinking like a spectroscopist.”


The Raman Effect, at Bedside

They paused by a bed where an elderly woman lay sleeping, her breathing shallow but even. The chart read: “Post-op delirium—likely anesthesia related.”

“Likely,” Raman-Shaw repeated, rolling the word on his tongue as if tasting it. “What does ‘likely’ rest on? Habit? Heuristics? Or on a structured test of alternatives?”

He leaned closer. “Tell me, what else causes delirium?”

Sheen listed: “Infection, hypoxia, electrolyte imbalances, pain, urinary retention, polypharmacy, unfamiliar environment, sleep deprivation…”

“Good. And your testable hypotheses?”

Sheen mapped the plan out loud: “ABG to check oxygenation and CO₂ retention; electrolytes; urinalysis; pain assessment; review of medications with anticholinergic burden; bladder scan; non-pharmacological sleep protocol.”

“Observe how your mind moved,” Raman-Shaw said. “From a label to a lattice of possibilities, then to experiments that distinguish them. That’s the clinician’s Raman effect—turning white light into discrete lines you can read.”

He picked up her pen, drew a small prism at the corner of the notes, and underneath wrote: HYPOTHESIS → TEST → ITERATE.


Tea, Sky, and ICU Alarms

They sat—somehow—on a bench in the corridor that overlooked a blue morning sky. The dream folded space the way only dreams can. A nurse hurried by; somewhere, a monitor alarmed and was answered. But for a moment, it was just the two of them and a cup of tea.

“Do you know why the sky is blue?” Raman-Shaw asked.

“Rayleigh scattering,” Sheen replied, surprising herself. “Shorter wavelengths scatter more.”

“And yet,” he said, tilting the cup so the surface caught a window’s glare, “how often do we pass blue without thinking? Critical thinking begins in everyday life—asking why when a thing seems obvious. The ICU is not an exception to life; it is life under magnification.”

He nodded toward the tea. “Temperature, color, aroma—your senses collect data. Your mind forms hypotheses. You test with a sip. Even deciding whether the tea has too little sugar is an experiment. In small acts of attention, you practice the same muscle you’ll use when a patient is crashing.”

“Then why does it feel so hard?” Sheen asked, quieter than she intended. “Sometimes I’m just… afraid. Afraid to be wrong. Afraid to move too slowly. Afraid of Dr. Shaw’s silence.”

Raman-Shaw’s expression softened. “Brains built by fear do not see clearly. Replace fear with method. The method will hold when confidence doesn’t.”

He glanced down the corridor. “And as for Dr. Shaw—steel sharpens steel. She is not asking for heroics. She is asking for hypotheses.”


The Checklist and the Question

Back in the ICU, Dr. Laila appeared in the dream like a scene remembered exactly right. She was finishing her rounds with a checklist, all boxes neatly ticked. Raman-Shaw watched, then asked gently, “What did your checklist not ask you?”

Laila blinked. “Not ask me?”

“Yes,” he said. “What is missing is often where insight hides.”

Laila considered the patient in front of her: “The list asked vitals, drains, analgesia, antibiotics… but it didn’t ask why his pain worsens when he coughs. It didn’t ask whether the drain output changed color after physiotherapy. It didn’t ask why his heart rate spikes every morning at 5 a.m.”

Raman-Shaw beamed. “There. The unasked questions. Between the lines lies the spectrum.”

He turned to both residents. “Checklists prevent stupidity; questions prevent blindness. Use both.”


Ordinary Brilliance

They moved from bed to bed, not hurried, not slow, with the unpressured urgency of a well-run orchestra. Each case became a small problem set: state the phenomenon, propose causes, design discriminating tests, act, then reassess. When a lab value returned odd, they didn’t shrug; they asked what in the system could produce such a signal. When a treatment worked, they didn’t chalk it up to luck; they traced the causal chain and captured the learning.

“This is how breakthroughs happen,” Raman-Shaw said, “not only in journals but in wards. A thousand modest, correct thoughts rescue more lives than one dramatic miracle.”

He paused, thoughtful. “In my time, people assumed the great questions belonged to the West, the great apparatus to the rich, and that we should be grateful for crumbs. We proved that attention is wealth. So is discipline. So is the refusal to accept ‘that’s how it is’ when your eyes say otherwise.”

He handed Sheen the spectroscope. “You already own the apparatus that matters most.”

Sheen looked down and saw her stethoscope in its place.


Waking to Light

A hand touched Sheen’s shoulder. “Rounds in five,” the real nurse said.

Sheen woke with the dream still bright as a morning bell. The spectroscope was gone; the pen drawing of a prism remained at the corner of her notes. She smiled.

On rounds, Dr. Shaw was her usual storm—a crisp question here, a harder one there, the insistence that “likely” is not a plan. But something had changed in Sheen’s posture. Each time she presented, she led with a hypothesis, not a label; when Shaw challenged her, she had tests ready, and contingency plans nested inside them.

At one bed, Laila paused without prompting. “The checklist doesn’t ask why his pain spikes on coughing,” she said. “I’d like to explore intercostal irritation versus drain positioning.” Dr. Shaw’s eyebrow twitched upward—the same quiet gleam Sheen had seen in the dream.

They moved on.

Before the shift ended, Sheen slipped a note into her coat pocket—three words under a tiny prism:

Think. Then act.

Out of the corner of her eye, she caught Dr. Shaw watching. For a heartbeat, Sheen thought she saw a different light in her mentor’s face—something like pride, or perhaps just recognition.

Because sometimes, the fire is not there to frighten you. Sometimes it is there to illuminate the spectrum you’d been walking through all along. And sometimes the forge speaks with the voice of a Nobel laureate to remind you that the most powerful instrument in medicine is not a machine, but a mind that insists on asking why—in the ward, over tea, under a blue sky, and in every ordinary moment that, with attention, becomes extraordinary.

Monday, 13 October 2025

Artemis DrNB — Age of Internal Assessment: Episode 2

 (A very serious, peer-reviewed comedy of errors.)

Date: November 14, 2025
Mood: 2 espressos, 1 palpitation, 0 regrets


Previously, on “We Mutated Because the Microwave and the Diathermy Made Eye Contact”…

A cosmic surge turned the Artemis DrNB residents into the X-Men (plus side quests). The Internal Assessment looms. Mnemonics detonated. Coffee was weaponized. Someone levitated a BIS monitor “just to check if it’s spirit-level.”

Now the cameras follow our heroes into the Viva-Verse… where every corridor is a plot twist and every OSCE station is a boss level with poor lighting.


Scene 1: The Tactical Briefing (a.k.a. The 6:59 a.m. Huddle)

Professor X (Noah, still mind-controlled)in everyone’s heads at once

“Team, the examiners are deploying six OSCE stations, one long case, one short case, and a mandatory ‘Define ICP like it’s a bedtime story.’ Also, whoever brought samosas—you are the real hero.”

Kara/Phoenix lights a motivational flame under the whiteboard (metaphorically… mostly), and Nancy/Dazzler turns the bullet points into a sparkling choreo-graphic: OSCE, OSSE, OSSUM (typo accepted).

Caleb/Gambit flicks flashcards like charged ninja stars:

  • “C.O.I.L.” — Complications Of Intracranial Lines (explodes into confetti)

  • “M.A.N.N.I.T.O.L.” — Most Amazing Neuro-Neighbor In Times Of Laxity (HR asks we change this later)

Emily/Shadowcat phases through the locked equipment room and returns with a nerve stimulator, a spare cap, and the confidence we pretended we had.

Max/Wolverine heals from a stapler attack (don’t ask), Janet/Colossus carries three atlases and a rolling stool like a kettlebell, and Laila/Storm drops the theater temp to an “awake but focused” 22°C.

Logan/Mystique cycles identities: anesthetist → invigilator → plant in the corner. We nod respectfully to the fern, just in case.


Scene 2: Enter the Sentinels (Examiners)

They roll in like supersized Sentinels, scanning for gaps in knowledge and loose hair under caps.

  • Sentinel 1: “Discuss ICP waveforms.”
    Kara/Phoenix: “A, B, C—like a soap opera: A for All Rise, B for Beware, C for Calm Down.”
    Ethan/Cyclops (laser-pointer glint): “And physiologically…” (proceeds to align the entire whiteboard to a 10–20 system grid while speaking in bullet points)

  • Sentinel 2: “Cranial nerve monitoring pitfalls?”
    Nancy/Dazzler dims the lights, showtime voice: “Pitfalls include: poor electrode placement, anesthetic depth confounders—” cue synth bassline “—and that one resident who thought EMG stands for Extremely Moody Graph.”
    Examiner smiles. We call that a micro-pass.

  • Sentinel 3: “Air embolism intra-op—recognition and management.”
    Olivia/Thunderbird already has mannitol calculated for a different future, which spooks everyone in a comforting way. “Also, left lateral + flood field, please. I saw it in a premonition and in Miller.”


Scene 3: Boss Level – The OSCE Gauntlet

Station 1: EEG Montage Mayhem
Sheen/Rogue brushes past the mannequin, absorbs the collective knowledge of the neurotech tribe, and starts narrating the alpha waves’ backstory like a true-crime podcast.
Examiner, blinking: “Carry on.”

Station 2: BIS and the Existential Crisis
Jake/Beast quotes literature while calibrating: “As Miller once said—actually twice—context matters.” BIS obliges by settling at a photogenic 45. We take a selfie (mentally).

Station 3: MEP/SEP—Whose Line Is It Anyway?
Ethan/Cyclops opens the visor; all electrodes snap to attention at precisely correct impedances. Laila/Storm soft-summons a humidity sweet spot; frizz reduces; latency improves; mood stabilizes.

Station 4: Cranial Nerve Karaoke
“CN V—touchy-feely. CN VII—smile for the camera. CN IX—chokes on stress.”
Nancy/Dazzler performs a 30-second educational TikTok in her head (no one else sees it; everyone feels it).

Station 5: ABG Speedrun
Mason/Iceman cools the sample (and the examiner’s rising BP) while Max/Wolverine self-heals from a pipette poke and says, “Lactate’s fine. We are not.”
Emily/Shadowcat phases the sample past the queue and returns before anyone notices time; Noah/Professor X whispers the results to everyone’s cortex.

Station 6: The Consent of Destiny
Janet/Colossus holds the consent pad like a shield. “Risks, benefits, alternatives, and the existential truth that ‘quick case’ is a paradox.” Examiner nods. The pen survives. Barely.


Scene 4: The Long Case—Plot Twist Edition

The case reads: “Supratentorial mass. Midline shift. Raised ICP. Family WhatsApp group highly active.”

Kara/Phoenix levitates into calm leadership mode, dividing tasks with Jedi hand waves.
Olivia/Thunderbird forecasts a tricky venous sinus and hands over a plan that saves 12 minutes later.
Caleb/Gambit detonates a mnemonic that organizes the entire steroid/diuretic/hyperventilation algorithm into a comic-strip flow.

Logan/Mystique reappears as “Senior from Another Unit,” asking the dangerous question: “Can we do it awake?”
Mason/Iceman slides by: “We could, but should we?”
Jake/Beast: “Indications say maybe; logistics scream ‘not today.’”
Janet/Colossus stands between us and scope creep like a friendly iron door.

When the brain relaxes on schedule, there is a collective, silent standing ovation. (Silent because the examiner is writing something. We hope it’s “Excellent,” not “Interesting.”)


Scene 5: Viva Lightning Round (a.k.a. The Pop Quiz of Fate)

  • “Define Cushing’s triad.”
    Everyone, in harmony: “Hypertension, bradycardia, irregular respiration.”
    Nancy/Dazzler adds jazz hands mentally.

  • “Rapid sequence vs. Modi-RSI in neuro?”
    Sheen/Rogue, currently fluent in 4 guidelines: crisp, clean, and terrifyingly complete.

  • “Differentials for delayed awakening.”
    Ethan/Cyclops projects a risk matrix onto thin air. It’s beautiful. Someone claps. Might be us.

  • “Complications of mannitol misuse.”
    Olivia/Thunderbird lists three we haven’t even misused yet.

  • “Why is the BIS 98 in a sleeping examiner?”
    Jake/Beast: “Because consciousness is a spectrum and grading papers is stimulating.”


Montage: Training Sequences We Swear Happened

  • Laila/Storm cloud-seeding perfect humidity over electrode sites.

  • Mason/Iceman skating past ICU beds leaving a trail of optimally cooled saline.

  • Max/Wolverine regenerating a broken laryngoscope blade with raw determination.

  • Emily/Shadowcat walking through a bureaucracy wall marked “Signature Required.”

  • Caleb/Gambit turning sticky notes into guided missiles of memory.

  • Janet/Colossus using her forearm as a makeshift bookstand for You Know Which Big Textbook.

  • Logan/Mystique impersonating a printer to unjam it (heroic, unsettling).

  • Noah/Professor X mind-beaming “hydrate” every 30 minutes like a wellness app with telepathy.


Intermission Snack (Because We’re Still Human)

Two samosas. One shared chutney. A debate on whether “interesting” in examiner language means “good” or “prepare the defibrillator.”
Kara/Phoenix: “Good. It means good. Believe.”
EveryoneBelieves harder than usual.


The Final Boss: “Teach the Examiner”

Twist card: “Reverse viva: explain a tricky concept to the panel in three minutes.”

We pick Venous Air Embolism (because drama).
Nancy/Dazzler dims imaginary house lights.
Ethan/Cyclops outlines the pathophys like laser calligraphy.
Mason/Iceman demonstrates the Durant maneuver with an ice-cube and a grape (don’t try that at home).
Olivia/Thunderbird delivers pre-emptive checklists for a complication that hasn’t occurred yet but already feels managed.
Sheen/Rogue signs off with pearls culled from absorbed consultant memories (all HIPAA-compliant, promise).

Examiners exchange the Look™—the one that says “we might pass them and also ask them to run next year’s workshop.”


Credits Roll (But We’re Not Done)

Results pending, but the vibe is optimistically caffeinated. We learned five things:

  1. Panic is a poor study buddy. Team superpowers > solo spirals.

  2. Humor protects hippocampi. If you can laugh, you can recall.

  3. Logistics is a superpower. Shadowcat-ing through admin saves brain cells.

  4. Checklists beat bravado. Gambit cards > guesswork.

  5. Samosas are medicinal. Don’t @ me, it’s translational science.


Post-Credit Scene (because of course)

Noah/Professor X finally breaks free of the mind control.
“Team, I can read the examiners now… They’re hungry.”
Janet/Colossus lifts the snack table.
Max/Wolverine slices the cake with claws that are definitely OSHA-noncompliant.
Kara/Phoenix lights the single candle with a micro-Phoenix flicker.
Everyone: “To passing, to patients, to pals.”

Cue theme music. Fade out on BIS = 60MAP stable, and a corridor full of residents who remembered why they signed up for this wild, wonderful, slightly ridiculous life.


Appendix: Micro-Hacks That Saved Our Mutant Skins

  • The “Two-Explain Rule”: explain every concept once to your peer and once to your future self (voice notes count).

  • The “Four Corners” OSCE prep: Pathophys → Monitoring → Management → Complications. Hit all four = instant structure.

  • The “Mood Map”: If the examiner smiles, you’re doing fine. If they write for more than 7 seconds, you’re doing great.

  • The “Samosa Protocol”: Carbs before and after viva. Science pending; morale proven.


Final rallying cry:
When the viva gets tough, Artemis gets mutant. And on days like today, we’re reminded: with great power comes great… post-call naps. See you on the other side of the results, heroes.

Artemis DrNB—Age of Internal Assessment (Nov 14, 2025)

 Presenting: Artemis DrNB—Age of Internal Assessment (Nov 14, 2025)

—where sleep is a myth, coffee is an IV infusion, and the residents have mutated into… the X-Men.

Cold open:
A tremor runs through the corridors. The call bell rings in B flat. A viva examiner adjusts spectacles at a 45° angle—the universally recognized sign of impending doom. In this moment, a cosmic burst (probably from the diathermy + microwave combo in the pantry) mutates the Artemis DrNB residents into their final forms…

  • Sheen — Rogue:
    Absorbs everyone’s skills by brushing past them in the OT corridor. Accidentally high-fives the DM Neuro prof and wakes up speaking in perfect EEG. “Alpha up, beta down—also, who touched my coffee and why do I suddenly know interventional neuroradiology?”

  • Logan — Mystique:
    Changes identity every posting. “I was in NICU yesterday.” Blink. “Now I’m the CT tech.” Blink. “Now I’m your internal assessor.” Moral: never roast Logan; it might be your examiner in disguise.

  • Laila — Storm:
    Controls the weather inside the OR. Drops the OR temp to 18°C for neuroprotection and turns it to 28°C when the ventilator gives a frostbite warning. Also summons thunder every time someone says “just a quick case.”

  • Kara — Jean Grey (Phoenix):
    Ashes after night call; reborn by 9 a.m. grand rounds with a fresh bun and scarier powers. Can levitate the BIS to 40 by sheer will and burn through three guidelines before the projector syncs.

  • Janet — Colossus:
    Steel-coated spine. Carries two patients, a stack of consent forms, and the entire on-call list—with one hand. Emotionally indestructible when someone says, “We’ll extubate on table.” Will we, though?

  • Nancy — Dazzler:
    Turns stress into sparkle. Converts the beeping orchestra into a disco beat, tap-dances through cranial nerve monitoring, and blind-sides examiners with neon-bright flowcharts. Viva dazzled. Examiner: “Pass sunglasses, please.”

  • Ethan — Cyclops:
    Laser-focused gaze that aligns every electrode at 10–20 with nanometer precision. Opens visor → instant perfect MEPs. Closes visor → coffee break. Safety protocol: never make direct eye contact during ABG interpretation.

  • Max — Wolverine:
    Heals in real time from call-duty injuries like “death by PowerPoint.” Scrub tear? Regenerates. Paper cut from consent? Gone. Also growls when someone says, “Can we add one more case?”

  • Noah — Professor X (mind-controlled):
    Supreme telepath… tragically hijacked by the collective consciousness of the exam. Reads minds, but all he hears is “Discuss Cushing’s triad,” on loop. Sends telepathic SOS: Bring samosas.

  • Caleb — Gambit:
    Charges index cards with kinetic energy—flicks them across the room, exploding into mnemonics. “C.O.I.L.—Complications Of Intracranial Lines!” Boom. Smoke. Standing ovation. Slight fire alarm. Worth it.

  • Emily — Shadowcat:
    Phases through walls and bureaucracy. Walks through locked equipment room to retrieve elusive nerve stimulator. Also phases through awkward silence after “Any questions?” with “Yes, three.”

  • Mason — Iceman:
    Slaps cryo on brain temps like it’s gelato. Slides through the ICU on an ice trail made of frozen lactated Ringer’s. Coolest extubation you’ll ever see—literally.

  • Jake — Beast:
    Gentleman-genius. Quotes literature mid-intubation: “As Miller once said…” while double-knotting a mask like a sailor. Hair slightly blue from methylene (don’t ask).

  • Liam — Nightcrawler:
    Teleports between OR 3, MRI, and cafeteria. Leaves a faint smell of chlorhexidine and chocolate. If found, please return to PACU handover.

  • Olivia — Thunderbird:
    Sees complications before they land. “Storm coming—prepare mannitol, raise head 30°, call neurosurgery.” Team: “How did you—?” Olivia, already charting the future: “Because I’m Thunderbird, babes.”

The Plot:
United by caffeine, panic, and peer-reviewed PDFs, our heroes must face their greatest nemesis: The Internal Assessment (Rated PG: “Pretty Gruelling”). On November 14, 2025, the Viva-Verse opens. OSCE stations multiply. Cranial nerves parade. Someone whispers “discuss ICP waveforms,” and three residents faint in alphabetical order.

Tagline:
“When the viva gets tough, the mutants get multiple choice.”

Disclaimer (for examiners):
Any resemblance to actual superpowers is purely due to residency. Side effects include spontaneous guideline recitation, abnormal love for BIS values, and the ability to detect air embolism by vibes.

Final Rallying Cry:
Artemis DrNB—assemble your scrubs, sharpen your pencils, and power up your synapses. On 14/11/2025, we don’t fear questions; we curve-smash them. And if all else fails, remember: with great power comes great… differential diagnosis.

Cue theme music. Roll cart. Start the show. ðŸŽ¬ðŸ§ ⚡️

Friday, 26 September 2025

Sincerity, Prototypes, and the Accidental Boat Mechanic

Some people walk into medicine for the stability of a career. Others walk in for the sheer thrill of saving lives. And then there are people like Sheen, a neuroanesthesia and neurocritical care trainee, who somehow manages to stand with one foot in medicine and the other in imagination.

By day, she’s immersed in ICUs — a world of ventilators, EEGs, and monitors that never stop humming. But when the rounds are over, her mind drifts elsewhere. While most of her peers think about rest, Sheen thinks about reinvention. Could that monitor be more intuitive? Could patient recovery be tracked in real time? Could anesthesia care, critical as it is, become smarter and safer with the right medtech tools?

The questions pile up. And slowly, they turn into scribbles in the margins of her notebook:

  • A smarter infusion pump.

  • A way to track sedation depth without invasive methods.

  • ICU alarms that alert only when needed (instead of orchestrating a daily techno concert).

In other words, Sheen isn’t just a clinician-in-training. She’s a dreamer — one who wants to leave medicine better than she found it.


The Sibling Who Said “Why Not?”

But dreams, as Sheen knows, have a weight problem. They remain light on paper unless someone builds them. And in medicine, the bridge between “idea” and “device” is often harder to cross than the busiest ICU shift.

That’s when her brother stepped in.

Most siblings, when handed yet another napkin sketch of a device, might sigh, or joke: “Sheen, maybe focus on passing your exams first?” But not her brother. He saw the seriousness in her eyes and the persistence behind her words.

Instead of dismissing her, he said:
“You should talk to my friend. He’s an engineer. He doesn’t just talk about prototypes — he builds them.”

And with that one introduction, the path widened.


The Engineer Who Felt Like Family

Sheen met the engineer. And something unusual happened.

In their very first conversation, she got a vibe that was oddly comforting — like family. Not the surface-level politeness of professional networking, but a genuine, protective, brotherly vibe. Here was someone who wasn’t trying to impress her with jargon or overpromise results. He was simply listening. Listening sincerely.

And when he spoke, it was clear he shared her excitement — not because medtech sounded flashy, but because problem-solving was second nature to him. His skills weren’t limited to a lab or a workshop. They had been tested in unlikely places, like backwaters in Kerala.


The Kerala Boat Story

Yes, the Kerala boat story.

On a vacation with his family, the engineer found himself in a quintessential postcard moment: palm trees, calm waters, a houseboat drifting gently under the sun. Until it wasn’t. Halfway into the ride, the boat coughed, wheezed, and refused to move.

The boatman panicked. Tourists on board began exchanging worried looks. But instead of frustration or complaint, the engineer rolled up his sleeves. He bent down, examined the engine, fiddled with wires and gears, and within minutes — as if fixing boats was on his résumé — brought it back to life.

The boatman’s relief was so genuine it bordered on joy. His boat wasn’t just moving again — his dignity as a professional boatman was restored. The engineer didn’t just fix machinery; he restored someone’s day, someone’s trust, and someone’s livelihood.

That moment revealed something deeper: sincerity. It wasn’t about showing off technical skills. It was about truly caring that something broken was made whole again.


Sincerity as the Secret Ingredient

For Sheen, this story became the metaphor she didn’t know she needed.

Medicine and medtech, at their core, aren’t about shiny devices or complex systems. They are about people — the patient lying unconscious, the anxious family in the waiting room, the clinician desperate for better tools. And sincerity — the genuine drive to solve problems, no matter how small or inconvenient — is what makes those tools meaningful.

The engineer could have shrugged on that boat in Kerala, leaving the problem to the boatman. Instead, he leaned in with sincerity. And that’s the exact energy Sheen wants in medtech: not engineers looking to “disrupt healthcare” for headlines, but collaborators who care enough to build carefully, patiently, sincerely.


From Notebooks to Prototypes

Now, Sheen and her sworn brother (the title he unknowingly earned) are forging something bigger. She brings the raw, unfiltered needs of the ICU — the gaps that only someone at the bedside can see. He brings the rare ability to transform sketches into circuits, code, and working models.

Together, they are bound by sincerity.

It’s not about ambition alone. It’s about persistence when prototypes fail. About showing up when things don’t go as planned. About remembering the patient behind every sensor and screen. About holding on to the “Kerala boat” lesson: no matter the context, sincerity is the bridge between broken and working, between idea and reality, between hope and healing.


The Moral of Their Story

The story of Sheen and her sworn brother is not one of sudden success. It’s one of patience, of laughter over failed circuits, of late-night brainstorming where coffee runs out but conviction doesn’t.

And the moral is clear: sincerity matters. Whether it’s fixing an engine on a stranded boat, making the boatman smile again, or building the next ICU prototype, the world changes not through shortcuts or showmanship, but through the quiet consistency of people who care enough to try.

So here they are: Sheen, the trainee who refuses to just practice medicine but wants to reshape it, and her sworn brother, the engineer who proved sincerity works just as well in backwaters as it does in boardrooms. Together, they remind us that the future of medtech won’t be built on hype alone. It will be built — boat by boat, prototype by prototype — on sincerity.

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.