The history of surgery
I am grateful for modern medicine. In my family we’ve needed surgery on occasion – for some of us life or death, and for others a bit less serious. I belong to the less serious – even though the 15cm + scar on my right knee looks fairly bad ass (in my moments of self-pity I feel like my right leg is disfigured; in moments of grrrrr I’m proud it looks kind of mean).
The other night despite my best judgement I decided I needed to feel more grateful. So I turned to ‘The History of Surgery’ on BBC Knowledge. Now knee surgery is messy and quite gross. But it was my own grossness so I dealt*.
‘The History of Surgery’ showed me things only a surgeon normally sees. Along with narration on how tricky it is to sew some human bits together.
I’m grateful – I really am. But I don’t need to see inside another person’s body to feel even more so. All I achieved was the old ‘my dinner might be coming back up’ trick as well as a narrowly averted punch in the face when I threw my hands in front of my eyes to hide behind them and I miscalculated a bit.
Even the most talented of surgeons could not help me with my clumsy. But I’m still grateful.
*My sister and mother also deserve mass acknowledgement for how they dealt with the grossness. Big time.
(Image from here – Sophie, ma chérie, don’t click!)
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promis, je ne cliquerai pas! Merci pour cet article intéressant. Et je ne trouve pas que ta jambe soit défigurée!
bisous
Je ne veux pas que tu m’en veuilles parce que l’image à l’autre bout du clic, je pense qu’elle te plairait carrément pas!
Ça me fait une belle jambe (ahhh!!) de savoir que tu ne trouves pas que la mienne c’est Frankenstein. Merci mon petit coeur!
xxx
t’aime très fort!
xxx
Moi plus!!
xxx