Wednesday, July 11, 2012

THE INTERFACE

I once heard about someone who sighted something in the atmosphere and thought he had seen a UFO. Unknown to him it was a long since-abandoned Soviet satellite. One of its booster rockets did not fire and it remained afloat in the air. It’s a reminder to me of a period when two powerful nations challenged each other and boldly reached out to outer space.


As I reflect on this, the question on my mind is what will be the next thing that challenges me or mankind, which will make me (us) go further and work harder? When Small Pox was eradicated, it was considered the most important humanitarian achievement of that century. The world has since been inundated with diverse other accomplishments.

Indeed life is a journey, not a destination. Just when we have achieved a feat, there is another mountain to climb. The point of translation from one to the other demands rigid thinking. We plan, dilly dally, wish otherwise but get on with things anyway. One may call it the valley of decision-making, a moment of truth or a midnight hour. It infers something is about to break loose. We are about to get out of a comfort zone but the non-assurance of the unknown makes our thoughts loiter.

However, we can draw inspiration both from past accomplishments and the better deal from hitting the bull’s eye in the impending aspiration. Sure, man has risen beyond the plague and life has never been more simple or complex! Our moments of truth should drive us to progress, one that we achieve by getting on with what is before us.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

SUGAR-FREE

A few weeks ago, I became officially overweight. This was without any deliberate effort; the kind of thing you just suspect when you struggle with your usual size in the fitting room. You make an excuse that in these days of international trade, sizes differ from one country to another, this lovely shirt must have been sized from another country as your last. Vain! I. Stepped on the scale that day, worked the maths and reality stared finally in the face.

The interplay of what makes people fat is both complex and simple in my opinion : what one eats or drinks, physical exercise, gene pool and all the other things students of science tell us. Of all, lifestyle choices are summarily blamed the most. For someone like me whose height has not added an inch since age 21 or so years, I am now poised to ask if my choices have come haunt me. As much as I want to get on an on exercise regimen, I am often so fatigued at the end of the working day that I just want to lay down and rest. I don't consider myself a glutton with an unmatched appetite for burgers though. I feed on bits here and there. Also, for my stomach sake (an unpleasant low threshold for 'stomach bugs') I am very choosy of what goes into my mouth. As for one's genes, one might not have decided the sequence that has been inherited, but to a great extent what one becomes/does with/about them is a matter of choice.

In another setting, the increment on my weight would be considered as an evidence o f good living - not in today's trendy world! Cosmetics aside, the health implications from excess body weight are far reaching, potentially reducing the quality of one's life. So as it stands,I am obliged to eat less; in quantity and in frequency. I have leaned towards keeping my kitchen shelves and the carbines of my fridge stocked with the likes of coke light or coke zero, low-salt seafoods, low cholesterol cooking oils or butter, low fat biscuits, brown sugar or artificial sweeteners, low fat yoghurt for some years now. Do these really do the job of weight control? They haven't so far. Do I really have to do the calorie math, stick to a certain dietary regimen and deny myself every lust of the eyes? The rewards are certainly desirable.

These few weeks, I have seen the effect of just eating less on my body. An exercise protocol would be added soon. I have opted to lose weight gradually (too suddenly comes with dire consequences, especially with the female folk). It's a deliberate life of starving now. Perhaps a life of self-control too.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

THE POTTERY BARN RULE

Recently I read something pasted on the wall in a store that drew my giggle. It read "if you break it, you pay for it". An old cliche one might say, but I was simply reminded of the answers given by Collin Powell on this week's Time magazine when quizzed on "the pottery barn rule".

 Simply put, the rule states that " you break it, you own it". How true! Human beings from the first have a knack of passing the buck. Too quickly, we brandish a prideful glee when our resourcefulness is on display. But whenever damage is done, like the proverbial Ostrich, we hide our head in the sand of excuses, denial and finger-pointing. Even a child in his naivety puts together the damaged toy of another to look like it has not been broken. Futile, isn't it? Futile because, the older person does not only see things from a broader sense, he in fact knows the trick!

The issue here is not about being optimistic when one has "messed up". That is certainly very positive. But it is about agreeing to what damage has been done, owning it, taking responsibility for our actions or facing up to the consequences of our decisions. By doing this, our lives are free from the suck of regrets. It becomes the stand point from which optimism is built.

The shelves in the store that precipitated my thoughts were not over-loaded with everything fragile. If anything, they had glass coverings. So the chances of anything being broken were much less than usual. Invariably, damage can still be done, hence the warning on the wall. Life is almost like that. It's not that we set out to break every thing that crosses our paths (well, I can't really speak for folks with persistent clumsiness). Sometimes, things just happen that we would prefer otherwise. They happen in the minority. We should "own up" and move on.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

ALL IN DAY'S WORK: A Doctor's Reward

I walked in to do my rounds this morning and was greeted with cheers by my staff. Puzzled, I questioned the ovation. The answers I got, paraphrased were 'look at our baby', 'don't you remember our baby?' Sitted and playing on the lap of someone by the nurses' desk was a chubby, healthy-looking baby. My thought flashed hurriedly into a wild guess. And I was spot-on. It was the baby I had struggled to resuscitate after birth some eight months ago. Born via caesarian section, I had vacated my anaesthetic seat to help help resuscitate him when the APGAR score in the first and fifth minute were less than 5! The protocol is for such babies to be referred to institutions with the the man power and facilities to manage further.

On this day however, my colleague on the other end of the phone said the obvious; the child would have most likely suffered significant brain damage. I was to keep the baby and manage within the capacity of my institution. It was quite a spectacular picture of me ambu bagging the child in an incubator from the theatre to the nursery. Somehow and at some point, the child picked up and was weaned off oxygen. But before this, the unmarried mother died! This was shortly after surgery. Post motem later revealed cause of death to be pulmonary embolism. It was a very distressing time at work. The official paper trail of maternal deaths is not what one could wish for any doctor.

'My baby' improved to the point of being discharged from the hospital to his relatives. On the set date, I had gone round the hospital taking monetary and other contributions from staff to assist the non-working grand mother in with whatever way. I went as far as almost blackmailing my colleagues to up their contributions and it was very rewarding.

Today is my first day of seeing the child since being discharged from hospital. It was an exciting surprise, more so seeing how well he looked. I felt a sense of reward. The professional calling to serve humanity, including in matters of death are carried out within busy schedules, in so much that there is no personal reflection on the impact of one's work. Other times, after routine things are done to save a life, the recipients leave healthy and their path never crosses one's path again! Today was an exception. For me, I draw inspiration from moments like today's.

Safe to say, it is a privilege to be of assistance to any one, especially if it is within scope of one's duty. I am full of gratitude for the opportunities I have had so.

PS. To my non-doctor readers, pardon my jargons. Sometimes there are no colloquial words to describe the gravity of medical stuff.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

ANOTHER ONE

After a hectic week and busy overtime last night no less, I came home today craving for a deserved rest. Like an annoying spell however, sleep has been terribly elusive. All my tricks have failed and my pensive mode has just been activated.


My thoughts have strayed here, there and finally on a live event far way. Someone very dear to me is getting married. Of course, some one is always getting married, but the groom of my interest today is a person that I have struggled again to describe in one word. Friend, brother, junior, colleague or lieutenant? The latter is a fine description as he is the most loyal dude one can hope for. A go-to guy, whom I have only stopped short of asking to find me a wife!

I am nostalgic of the energy within the company I kept those formative years of the past, a world that is far from comparison with the present. The 'pursuit of happiness' has stretched one's value in and view of life, but the fundamental has remained enshrined within the core of my existence. Who I am today is derived from the people I have met in the past.

So, as another leaves the company of good old folks to start a separate unit of the society, I reflect with joy and thank all those who have meant a lot to me, went the extra mile or by simply being theirselves, have filled me with pleasant memories. Demilade, today is your day, I wish you all the best you ever hoped for and which you truly deserve. Believe me, I dreamt of of how I would have smiled and dance at your engagement and wedding reception. Happy married life. Since I am in this mood, I have remembered you Niyi, my 'personal person'; Bukky Akindipe, for all the stability you ensured; Yemisi Oyeyipo, whom I respect and love so much; and David for the broader perspective you always gave. As for you, Joe - you are a chapter, perhaps two, in my autobiography!

My list of friends has grown and the impact on me has been varied. I can not count it all in a moment's thought. I feel privileged today. Thank you everyone.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

ADIEU MATE!


She was someone I shared the same birthday with. Her life was glamorous and her impact was global.  She was known as Whitney Houston. As the world mourns the death of this diva today, I have decided to post the lyrics of a song of hers that I found inspiring as a younger boy growing up.


Well, there's a bridge and there's a river that I still must cross

As I'm going on my journey
Oh, I might be lost
And there's a road I have to follow, a place I have to go
Well, no-one told me just how to get there
But when I get there I'll know
'Cause I'm taking it

[Chorus]
Step by step, bit by bit,
Stone by stone (Yeah), brick by brick (Oh, yeah)
Step by step, day by day, mile by mile (ooh, ooh, ooh)

And this old road is rough and ruined
So many dangers along the way
So many burdens might fall upon me
So many troubles that I have to face
Oh, but I won't let my spirit fail me
Oh, I won't let my spirit go
Until I get to my destination
I'm gonna take it slowly 'cause I'm making it mine

[Chorus]
Step by step (you know I'm taking it), bit by bit (bit by bit, come move),
Stone by stone (yeah), brick by brick (brick by brick by brick by brick mmm...)
Step by step (step by step uh-huh), day by day (day by day-ee),
Mile by mile (ooh), go your own way.

Say it, baby, don't give up
You got to hold on to what you got,
Oh, baby, don't give up,
You got to keep on moving on don't stop (yeah yeah).
I know you're hurting, and I know you're blue,
I know you're hurting but don't let the bad things get to you.

[Chorus]
I'm taking it step by step (ohohoh), bit by bit (bit by bit come move),
Stone by stone (stone by stone yeah), brick by brick (brick by brick by brick by brick),
Step by step (I'm gonna take it now),day by day (day by day-ee),
Mile by mile (ooh), go your own way!

(C'mon baby got to keep moving),
I'm taking it step by step), bit by bit,
Stone by stone (yeah, stone by stone), brick by brick
C'mon baby,

Step by step keep on moving, day by day (day by day-ee),
Mile by mile by mile by mile,go your own way,
C'mon baby got to keep moving, bit by bit (bit by bit, bit by bit)....

  A youtube video can be seen on the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fVyO0I_kJuw&noredirect=1

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

LOUNGING

I started to write this post while waiting on a lounge for a flight, hence the title. Also, I have described my recent activities using the word 'lounging'. That's because every day in the last week has been like a Saturday; the type that comes with a prior late Friday and followed by a Sunday with no duty calls. It's called being on a holiday.

The year seems not only to have landed with a loud tud, but to have skidded on a run way at frenetic pace. So my holiday (which has not ended any way) has come handy - not only to enjoy the clearance sales overflowing from christmass stock but to allow a much needed calm away from regualr life. The latter is helping me to have a perspetive that I will run the year with. My  control freak person at his best!

Who wants to leave anything to chance? Even the sermon in church last Sunday threw an extra garnish on my often-expressed love for the deliberateness of life. So as this year comes with a newness to living, my wish is for all my readers to ensure a deliberate and positive life. That no matter what life throws at us this year, there would be no accidental responses.

This infers chosing to make a joke of an emberrassing moment; making an excuse for others when we prefer they don't act the way they have acted; lighting a candle instead of cursing the darkness; seeing the glass half-full rather than half-empty.It's not control but living according one's terms; living a life of our own. Happy new year everyone!