With great power...
Now that I've justified my existence, I'll relate the first thought-provoking nugget. I drove my friends to the airport tonight, neither of whom are medical students (proving it's possible to keep in touch with your old friends while in med school). They asked how anatomy is, and exclaimed that it's really cool, and such a wild thing, etc etc. So, yeah. It really is. Cutting open another human being is something that a very small percentage of the people in the world get to do. Legally, anyway. But, as our professors explained to us so thoroughly, it's not something to be taken lightly. It is our responsibility to treat the cadavers with respect and to appreciate the tremendous gift that they give to us. And we do... most of the time.
But it also gets kind of crazy in there, we make jokes, laugh about stuff... we're not all serious all the time. How could we be? Contrary to what last generation's doctors would like you to believe, nobody's perfect. Apparently, we are a more enlightened (and way more liberal) generation and we are taught to acknowledge (celebrate?) our faults and shortcomings. I was never such a liberal thinker, but I do hear the logic there. We can't just ignore that we're human.
But it also gets kind of crazy in there, we make jokes, laugh about stuff... we're not all serious all the time. How could we be? Contrary to what last generation's doctors would like you to believe, nobody's perfect. Apparently, we are a more enlightened (and way more liberal) generation and we are taught to acknowledge (celebrate?) our faults and shortcomings. I was never such a liberal thinker, but I do hear the logic there. We can't just ignore that we're human.
Basically, medical school is really opening my mind.
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