Thinner

Not!

Is it really so much to ask? I only want to lose ten pounds. Even five would be a big improvement. I’m not that overweight, but on me, five or ten pounds makes a huge difference. And working my ass off at the gym — well, it’s not working my ass off.

It’s always something. I can’t eat beef. I can’t eat milk products without taking a Lactaid first. And now it seems I can’t indulge in salty snacks without retaining water. How else can I explain a two-pound weight gain in as many days?

Yes, I know some folks out there have it much worse than me. But the seeming easiness of my goal makes its unattainability all the more frustrating. Does that make sense? It’s like declaring your New Years Resolution to be, “I’m going to avoid speeding on the highway at least one day this upcoming year,” only to find yourself punching the accelerator time after time.

Speaking of which.

My doctor offered me phentermine. Did I mention that? I asked him what it was, exactly, and he said (with masterful nonchalance), “Speed.” I told him no thanks. Not that I couldn’t use the energy or the weight loss, but I’m insomnia-plagued as it is.

Time to take more Hoodia.

D.

It’s funny because it’s true.

thematrixorigami

Mesmerizing.

D.

Re: innovation

From Scott Berkun, The Myths of Innovation, by way of an old post on The Daily Galaxy . . .

Despite the myths, innovations rarely involve someone working alone, and never in history has an invention been made without reusing ideas from the past. For all of our chronocentric glee, our newest ideas have historic roots: the term network is 500 years old, webs were around before the human race, and the algorithmic DNA is more elegant and powerful than any programming language. Wise innovators–driven by passion more than ego–initiate partnerships, collaborations, and humble studies of the past, raising their odds against the timeless challenges of innovation.

What has been is what will be, and what has been done is what will be done, and there is nothing new under the sun.

D.

Cancer therapy, circa 1896

From Tyson’s The Practice of Medicine: the treatment of Hodgkin’s lymphoma,

Treatment . . . may avert the fatal termination for a long time. Extraordinary results in this respect have followed the administration of arsenic, and even recoveries have been reported. Large doses, arrived at by gradual increment, should be attained and kept up until some physiological effects are observed.

Five-year survival for Hodgkin’s lymphoma was 40% in the early 1960s, just under 92% in the early part of this decade. What do you suppose it was in 1896? I’d guess less than 5%, with or without treatment. Oh! Just googled it and I was damned close. Five-year survival of untreated Hodgkin’s disease is 6%, ten-year survival zero. We’ve come a long way.

Sort of. Depending upon your choice of cancer. With regard to pancreatic cancer,

The prognosis is unfavorable, and the treatment only symptomatic.

Nowadays, five-year survival is less than five percent. So there’s the spectrum, folks, from one of our greatest success stories to one of our persistent dismal failures.

But at least there are some success stories.

D.

Read anything good lately?

Cuz not much point having a Nook if there’s nothing worth reading on the thing.

Just finished Christopher Moore’s Fool . . . probably my favorite of his thus far (and I think I’ve read all but one or two of his books).

I’ve gotta get some sleep. Slept like crap last night thanks to, oh, who knows. Caffeine? Chocolate? Forgetting to take my Benadryl?

All of the above?

So what are you reading? Or have read. I’m in the mood for something escapist.

D.

On the theory that you can find anything on the Internet . . .

I googled “Random Recipe Generator”.

No, you won’t find inspiration for dinner at this site, but you will find recipes for Anchovies Creme Brulee, Pizza Style Mangoes, and this beauty — Horseradish Sauce Bake:


Horseradish Sauce Bake

Serves 2
You will need: 80ml horseradish sauce 4 spring onions 2 bananas
Instructions:
eat the spring onions
eat the bananas
whisk the horseradish sauce
go down to the pub

My random recipe was something called “Raisins Salad.” I must admit, I never would have thought to combine raisins, asparagus, self-rising flour, and Greek yogurt.

I’m just a little confused on the direction, “Barbecue the flour.”

D.

Extreme cuisine

Today, a patient recommended Lengthwise Brewing Company here in Bako. I asked him, “Where’s your favorite place to eat in town?” and that’s what he came up with.

Interesting place. From the dessert menu,

Crude Beer Float
A pint of Kern County Crude Porter sharing space with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. (Sorry kids, adults only!) $5.95

Deep Fried Twinkies with Ice Cream
We had to do it! Three Twinkies lightly fried and topped with our maple and cinnamon syrup, served with a cold scoop of vanilla. $7.95

I’m not sure which is more extreme. Perhaps the deep fried Twinkies? Right up there with Deep Fried Snickers Bars. Of course, we could all visit Thailand and eat bugs.

The most extreme thing I thought I had eaten: jook, which turns out to be rice porridge and not fish stomach, which is what my old gf’s mom told me it was when she served it to me. Witch. Ignoring jook, I guess it would be a tie among jellyfish, blood sausage, and snails, all of which I still eat when the occasion arises.

What’s the most extreme thing you’ve ever eaten?

D.

Remembered

ERs have a smell, as do ER waiting rooms. Blood, mostly, but there’s always a background of fear-sweat and other body odors. It’s not like most folks have the leisure time to shower before visiting their local emergency room.

It’s all so much more noticeable in the middle of the night. I’m not sure why that is. Meanwhile, from a doctor’s pov, life takes on a clearer hue; You’re there for one purpose and one purpose only. Depending on the magnitude of the emergency, all other body functions take a back seat to getting the job done. You ignore your thirst, your hunger. Most of all you ignore the desire to sleep. Sleep is the reward at the other end of getting the job done.

I miss residency for one thing only: colleagues. Rare is the case that doesn’t benefit from discussion. And so this morning, I felt the need to talk to someone from the U. Any U. But this morning, it was my U, USC.

Shirley, one of my nurses from back in the 90s, took the call. “Is this our Dr. Hoffman?” she asked.

“I don’t know,” I said. “Is this my Shirley?”

I remembered her, of course. I always remember the pretty ones, and the nice ones, and the ones who mothered me. I suppose she was a bit of all three. Don’t know why she remembered me, other than the fact I tend to be notorious wherever I go. She handed the phone to another nurse who remembered me. She’s the cousin of Jake’s nanny, and she said that whenever they got together they always talked about me (and Jake, of course).

Times like this, I’m happy to be a doctor, even though I’m tired and foggy right now (could only manage five hours sleep after getting home) and worried, too. In TV medical dramas, bad outcomes occur only when there is much angst to be squeezed from the death — wet hanky melodrama. And even then, the tragedy is often temporary. The sting is there for the pulling. In real life, we know that bad things can and will happen to good people, and our only recourse is to do the best job possible. At least then, afterward, we can still live with ourselves.

It would sap the will if good things didn’t happen with the bad. Being remembered helps, too. It isn’t always obvious the impact we have on people’s lives, not just patients, but coworkers, too.

Note that I don’t ask why they remember me. Some things are best left to the imagination.

D.

Olympic hurling. I mean curling.

Although Olympic hurling would be provocative. Can he nail the bowl without splattering the rim? Yes! It’s good!

According to one of the commentators in the piece below, Canada spent $22 million researching the science of curling. I wonder if they were able to learn anything that the curlers didn’t already know intuitively? We may never know, although supposedly they’ll release their findings eventually — after the Olympics.

We usually watch men’s and women’s figure skating, but this year we’ve been watching curling. Must say it’s a hell of a fun sport to watch. It’s amazing how rapidly a situation can get turned on its head.

D.

Generation gap

Jake had to hang out in my office after work yesterday, so he spent his time (as usual) surfing the net. Nope, no games on my computer. One of the float nurses chatted him up. She wanted to know what he was doing.

He was reading mspaintadventures and had the unpleasant task of trying to explain this to someone who probably knows how to google and that’s about it.

“How did that go?” I asked him later.

“Not well.” (The kid is a stickler for proper usage of “good” versus “well.” I have trained him good 😉 ). “How do you explain something that’s a serial cartoon satirizing text adventures?”

“To someone who doesn’t know what a text adventure is?”

“Right.”

“Whereupon you told her, ‘You know, like Zork,’ and she met that with a blank stare.”

He narrowed his eyes at me. “Were you listening in?”

I wasn’t. Really!

D.