Giving a due credit
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In November, 1985 100 years from the date of N.N.Anichkova's birth were
executed. The Scientific community of all world has celebrated this date
and on adv...
Monday, August 10, 2009
passive operative madness
Hospitals focused their most concentrated attention on the drama in the operating room. Even the human body cooperated, demonstrating that a man or woman could get along minus a kidney or a gall bladder, with half a stomach, one lung, or part of the sex organs. In Europe one woman was reported to have had twenty-three major abdominal operations. Furor operativus passivus—passive operative madness—was the ironic name the reporting physician gave to the craze for surgery. When I was a student, a story went the rounds of the hospitals about a man, suffering from epilepsy, who had this plea tattooed on his belly: "Don't take out my appendix. Was taken out twice."
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But it was obvious that the sick man was going through a series of strokes. There were two more consultations, but all medication, all suggestions, all efforts failed to halt the downward course of the disease. A ililliculty in swallowing appeared and it became obvious that the entire .interior central gyrus, the area in the brain which harbors all these « uters, was involved. We had before us the classic picture of cerebral hemorrhage.
ReplyDeleteIt is not necessary to discuss here all the varied and sometimes desperate struggles of the inner man with his superego, his conscience. It is important to understand, however, that the pattern of that conscience is laid down in childhood. Its judgments and evaluations of right and wrong are often a child's judgments and evaluations. And the sins for which our conscience castigates us in maturity are often sins only according to the limited, inexperienced, sometimes grievously mistaken interpretations which as children we may have made of the adult world, or sins we have perpetrated in fantasy but never committed in reality.
ReplyDeleteHere is an example: Suppose a child has been naughty, and a father has spoken harshly to the child; the child has rebelled against the rebuke. Shortly afterward the father may fall sick, or even die. For the rest of his life, the child may carry buried within him the conviction that it was he, by his naughtiness and rebellion, who caused the illness or who outright killed his father. Coupled with the unfortunate sequence of events, the child in his deepest self may have wished his father dead; this is not unusual, and at some stages of growth it is normal.
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