Tuesday 31 May 2011

Hilarious Heart Attack...Khushdeep (A must for Doctors)





Dr. Kishore Shah is a renowned Gynecologist practicing in Pune. He is a prolific writer. Humor is his forte.The following article is in his own words about MI he had suffered few days back.

 

I suffered a heart attack about 5 days ago. Here is my account of what happened:

As I was rushed to the Cardiac ICU, I just had this sinking feeling in my heart. Just like the one before you enter the Viva Voce hall and see the most khadoos examiner in place, only worse.

The resident there was quite courteous, "Sir, How are you feeling?"

I looked at him groggily and whispered, "Just like Rakhi Sawant!"

He looked at me perplexed. I continued and said, "I feel an unnatural weight on my chest."

The resident didn't know whether to send me off to the Psychiatry ward or not. I said, "Aare Baba, ECG nikal, nahi toh main nikal jaoonga!"

The funniest part of my heart attack, or "cardiac event" as the doctor there insisted on calling it, was that there was no pain. That would comeafterwards when they presented me the bill. But for now I was painless.

"Do you smoke?" persisted the resident.

"I have never tried burning myself, but probably would." My wife nudged me and intervened, "He does not smoke or drink. Just keeps cracking these pointless PJs."

The resident promptly scribbled something on the pad. He probably wrote that the patient was delirious. After peering with screwed eyes at my ECG he said, "Q wave changes."

I said, "I give up. You tell me."

"What?"

"I don't know Kyon wave changes. You tell me."

The resident stopped telling me anything else. He turned to my wife and said, "It seems to be a minor infarct."

I don't know what it is with doctors. How can you call any heart infarct minor? If there is an infarct, it is a major thing, at least for the patient. There was also some depressing talk about ST depressions. Here I felt as if an ST bus was driving over my chest, who bothered whether that ST

was depressed or happy?

I was immediately admitted to the ICCU and posted for an Angiography the next day. One piece of advice to all Cardiac care units: If you do not want your heart patients to have any further attacks, do not appoint such lovely

young nurses. Most of the nurses in the entire world are from Kerala. If all the nurses return home, all the hospitals in the world will come to a stop..

And there will be no standing space in Kerala.

There were big notices posted outside the door of the ICCU. "No Visitors" and no "No Mobiles". Okay, so there would be no breaking news dispatches from me. Soon a pretty, young Malyali nurse came and told me "Gaana Gaaneka nai."

This came as a shock to me. Not that I wanted to break out into a song and dance routine. I could understand that visitors might disturb the patient,or even the mobiles. But songs? How could anyone be so unmusical? I said

Okay but was a bit miffed.

After many pricks and monitors on my body, half an hour later another pretty young thing came and told me "Gaana Gaaneka nai!"

I was a bit angry. I said, "Yeah! Yeah! Someone told me before also." But this really intrigued me. Why were they so strict about songs? If they had said that I could not dance due to my heart condition, I could have accepted

that. But never in my long medical education had I been warned that singing was bad for cardiac health. I wondered if this was a new advance.

The mystery was cleared when the next Malyali sister, who appeared to be their head nurse, came and explained to me, "Doctor Shah, Aap ka blood samble subay saat ko hai. Toh abi Gaana Gaaneka nai. Phir Kaali pet samble

lene ke baad Gaana Gaaneka."

I immediately added an interpreter to my mental suggestion box. It must be really tough to interpret Gaana as Khaana. But the Mallus can't help their accent.

After a relatively painless night, mainly because relatives were notallowed, and also due to the various drips and things, I woke up to the prick of a blood 'Samble'. Then I was allowed to 'Gaana Gaaneko'.

All the tests gave worse and worse news. There was an inferior wall infarct which the Cardiologist insisted on calling minor. (I hoped he would remember this while billing me.) My Trop T was raised. In short, this is a help call

from the heart. I was posted for angiography and an SOS plasty the nest day after stabilization.

On the morning of the procedure, I got the shock of my life, when a grim looking man entered my room and sent my wife out. He then locked the room and took out a large and sharp glistening razor. Omigosh! This was not how

they performed operations, at least not during the last century. Or was this a scene from an assassin movie? The man then turned to me and smiled and said that he had come to shave me for the procedure.

I sighed with relief. One always wants to look nice and presentable for  important occasions even if they be the gallows. I smiled back at him and jutted out my chin at him for easy access. But he ignored my chin and pulled

down my pajamas. I shrieked, "Hey, Its my heart that is amiss."

"Yes Sir. We need to shave your groin!" Groan Groan!

Five minutes later, I was all spick and span and presentable for my planned  procedure. Calling it a procedure, reduces the fear factor from it. If you

call it an operation, which it is, you might suffer a further attack. If you call it a butchery, which it sometimes can be, then you need not go to the procedure. I proceeded with a sinking heart, if it could sink any more, to the operation room, which they call a cath lab. It's all about euphemism.

When I entered the 'Cath lab', I found it extremely cold. Was the AC at  full blast or was I frightened or was my heart not pumping enough blood? Probably all three. There was soft music playing hindi songs in the background. The nurse told me to remove all my clothes and lie down on a

narrow table. I have already mentioned the weather conditions, so it did not help that here I was completely nude like a fresh plucked chicken, lying on a table, with half my respective buttocks spilling out of the respective

sides of the table. The AC vent was directed towards the exact centre of my body. Now I regretted not taking all those ads on the internet about increasing the length of various body parts seriously. If I had, today I would have been a proud man. But sadly, as of now, I think the OT staff

there will remember me whenever they eat dried dates.

The Hindi song playing was "Haste Gaate yahan se gujar, Duniya ki tu parwa na kar." That was very kind of my namesake Kishoreda to remind me how to face this ordeal. But I was very frightened. His next verse also told me,

"Maut ani hai ayegi ek din, Jaan jaani hai jaayegi ek din, Aisi baton se kya ghabarana, Yaha kal kya ho kisne jaana?" I almost burst out yodeling along with him . OOdle di OOd le di Ooo oo.

The anesthetist approached me and saw me smiling. He was confused. Was this guy so frightened that he was smiling? How could I tell him that I was marveling at Kishoreda's accurate advice to me, a smaller Kishore Kumar.

Then came the good part. Many layers of warm clothes were laid on me. I was  shivering, but no longer like the Antarctica. It was more like Shimla now.

The Cardiologist told me that I would now feel a little pain in my groin.

Most appropriately, the song playing now was "Dil hai kaha aur Dard kaha". Ismiled and said, "Yes Boss. Go ahead."

I won't go into the gruesome details, but what was visible to me and the  entire team there was that my Right Coronary artery was nearly completely

blocked. The doctor said, "Yes, a stent will be required. Dr. Shah, should we insert an Endeavor drug eluting stent?"

I felt ashamed to admit to him that I didn't know a thing about stents.Being a Gynaecologist, I only knew about stunts. So I asked him, "What isthe difference between this one and the other one?" I didn't know the name

of the other one, so I cloaked it in the anonymity of 'the other one'. He said, "There are many differences, but the main one is in the price."

"Then I think you should ask my wife, because she is the one with the purse as well as the purse strings."

After a brief consultation, my wife decided that her husband was after all worth a bit more than this costly stent. But the effect was magical. In front of my eyes, I could see a withered autumn tree of heart vasculature suddenly burst out in full spring glory of new tributaries.

Thus I came out of the 'lab' a new and reborn man. It seemed as if I had thrown off my school shirt and worn a new comfy and roomy one. It was as if I had exchanged Adnan Sami's new shirt for his older ones. No more tightness around the chest. The song playing in the lab when I came out was appropriately "Aaj Main jawaan ho gayi hoon. Gul se gulistan ho gayi hoon."

When I returned home from the hospital after paying the bill, I realized that the old proverb was probably coined by a cardiologist. Which proverb?

It's the one that says:

Jaan bachi, Lakho paye.

Thus my heart tried to spring me a surprise. So I surprised it with a spring

into my heart. Now I walk with a spring in my step and one in my heart too!



Kishore Shah  

Thursday 26 May 2011

A must read...Khushdeep







Never look down on anybody, unless you're helping them up.



To realize

the value of a sister/brother

ask someone

who doesn't have one.



To realize

the value of four years:

ask a graduate.



To realize

the value of one year:

ask a student who

has failed a final exam.



To realize

the value of nine months:

ask a mother who gave birth to a stillborn.



To realize

the value of one month:

ask a mother

who has given birth to a premature baby..



To realize

the value of one minute:

ask a person

who has missed the train, bus or plane.



To realize

the value of one-second:

ask a person

who has survived an accident.



Time waits for no one.

treasure every moment you have.



(based on the E-mail of Mohinder Kaur)

Monday 23 May 2011

IT'S A WOMEN'S WORLD...Khushdeep

 
 
India now ruled by Amma (Jailalitha) in South...
 
Didi in East (Mamata Banerjee)...
 
Behanji in North ( Mayawati)...
 
Aunty in Capital (Shiela Dixit)...
 
Madam in Centre (Sonia Gandhi)...
 
Prathibha Patil at the top...
 
and "wife at home"...
 
Now tell me who says...IT'S A MEN'S WORLD...

Thursday 19 May 2011

Taj Hotel Grand Dinner @ Rs.100...Khushdeep

Taj Hotel Grand Dinner @ Rs.100...







It is not necessary to learn financial managemet ,you must have gone to IIM or other reputed institutions...Mr Dhirubhai Ambani was perfect example to testify that...Even a beggar can beat highly skilled Management Gurus in this aspect...You are not ready to believe...Ok read following lines and only then tell me your opinion...



A beggar to another beggar: I had a grand dinner at Taj yesterday.



How? The other beggar asked.



First beggar: Some one gave me Rs 100/- note yesterday.



I went to Taj and ordered dinner worth Rs 1,000/-,



And I enjoyed the dinner. When the bill came, I said, I had no money.



The Taj manager called the policeman, and handed me over to him.



I gave the Rs 100/- note to the police fellow, and he set me free.





A wonderful example of financial management…is it or not...



Tuesday 17 May 2011

Learn the art of minting money...Khushdeep

The art of minting money differs from country to country...How ?



Read this and you will be agree...







TRADITIONAL ECONOMICS



You have two cows. You sell one and buy a bull.

Your herd multiplies and the economy grows.

You retire on the income.

 ----------------------------------------

 INDIAN ECONOMICS



You have two cows.

You sell one to overcome debts.

You worship the other

----------------------------------------

 PAKISTAN ECONOMICS



You don't have any cows.

You claim that the Indian cows belong to you.

----------------------------------------

 AMERICAN ECONOMICS



You have two cows.

You sell one and force the other to produce the milk of four cows.

You profess surprise when the cow drops dead.

----------------------------------------

 BRITISH ECONOMICS



You have two cows.

They are both mad cows.

----------------------------------------

 AUSTRALIAN ECONOMICS



You have two cows.

One cow can give milk only when US & UK permits. And the other cow is lazy and just don't care to give milk!!!!

So People in the country rely highly on Liquor and prepare strategies  for cows to live long !!!

----------------------------------------

 ITALIAN ECONOMICS



You have two cows.

You don't know where they are.

You break for lunch.

----------------------------------------

 CHINESE ECONOMICS



You have two cows.

You have 300 people milking them.

You claim full employment, high bovine productivity and arrest anyone reporting the actual numbers.

----------------------------------------



MIDDLE & FAR EAST ECONOMICS



You have two cows.

You give permission to US & British to make military bases & protect the cows.

They kill & eat the cows & return only the bones, saying it was a

mistake & promise to give two F16 fighter jets in return!

----------------------------------------



SRI LANKAN ECONOMICS



.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

You have two cows.

You exchange them for two buffaloes.

You make one the President and the other the Leader of the Opposition!

and they eat the country instead of eating grass.. !!

----------------------------------------

(based on the e-mail of Nikhil Pal)

Sunday 15 May 2011

Lady on the phone and Makkhan...Khushdeep

From today i'm clubbing my blog Mr Laughter with en.deshnama.com, so you'll get laughter dose time to time right on this blog. Keep smiling because laughter is the best medicine...







Lady on telephone...



Hallo is this Mr Makkhan ? I wanna meet you and talk to you...



Makkhan...Why ?



Lady...Because you are the father of one of my kid...



Makkhan...Are you Mrs Preeto ?



Lady...No...



Makkhan...Are you Mrs Bhajani ?



Lady...No...listen...



Makkhan....Surely You are Mrs Jugni...



Lady (in total confusion)...No...Man...No...



Makkhan...Then who the hell you are...



Lady...Actually Sir, I'm class teacher of your son Gulli, calling....



Saturday 14 May 2011

Want to become a smart politician, read this...Khushdeep





A day before yesterday, in sorting PTI dispatches, I came across with a very interesting study by Todd Rogers and Michael Norton of Harvard University, which throws searchlight on mindset of a good politician while taking questions from journalists or common public.



It's known that good politicians are smooth talkers. Now, a new research has found that they easily evade answering tough questions by addressing similar questions during debates -- thanks to the limited attention capacity of listeners.



The study found that people typically listen to a speaker with the goal of forming an opinion of the person, but many a times they fall for accepting the person's response to a question even if the question goes unanswered.



"When you pay attention to it, communicators are often evading questions that are asked," said Todd Rogers, who is also a political psychologist at the Analyst Institute -- a group focused on understanding voter communication in the US. "Unless you are asked to pay attention to it, they can get away with it," Rogers told LiveScience.



To determine how they get away with it, the researchers conducted four separate experiments with four groups of people totalling 1,139 men and women averaging 44 years old. In three of the studies, participants watched a video of a mock political debate and then responded to an online survey. In the fourth study, participants listened to excerpts of a recording of a mock political debate and then responded to questions.



The results indicated that people are frequently unable to remember an initial question if a speaker answers a similar question. It was found that only 40 per cent of the listeners could remember the original "war on drugs" question, compared to 88 per cent of those who heard the "health care" question.



If the listeners couldn't remember the question correctly, the speaker was determined to have successfully dodged that question, satisfying viewers with an alternate, though similar, answer, the researchers said.

When the question and answer were very different, for example, the health care statement in response to a question about the war on terror, listeners were able to recognise the dodge and came away with a negative view of the speaker.



Debate viewers didn't notice the speaker dodging these similar questions unless they are specifically reminded of the question by placing it on the screen. Even when facing a dodge, participants could remember the original question 88 per cent of the time if it had been on the screen, compared to 39 per cent when it wasn't. Researchers believe this could be because our brainpower is usually focused on interpreting the speaker's social actions -- whether they think the person is honest or trustworthy -- that distracts them from recognising the dodge.



"As soon as we encounter a new person we analyse them socially," Roger said. "Because this activity stops us from fully engaging in the answer, it facilitates question dodging." This study was published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: applied.



And now what are you thinking, awake a good politician hidden in yourself right from this moment.

Friday 13 May 2011

Charlie again bit my finger...Khushdeep









Yesterday Blogger was also eating posts and comments like Charlie used to do with his elder brother, So again have pleasure in watching this superb video...





And now have fun in this audio tune mix...



Wednesday 11 May 2011

Hallo English blogging...Khushdeep





Welcome to my blog. My name is Khushdeep Sehgal. Before proceeding in English Blogging, I would like to give my brief introduction. I belong to 'Meerut' a renowned city of Uttar Pradesh, which is best known as ‘Revolutionary city’ from where the First Indian War of Independence started in the year 1857.  So, I am blessed with the sanskars of revolution since my birth. The same may be reflected in my writing too.



As far as my professional background  is concerned, I have been a Journalist since last 17 years. It  has been my good luck that I had found opportunity to gain experience in Print Media, Web Media and Electronic Media.  I am working  as a Senior Producer with 'Zee News' channel, in charge of producing programmes related to current news and affairs .Presently, I am associated with producing  prestigious programme named 'Badi Khabar' on Zee News telecasted daily at 10:00 PM  to 10:30 PM.



I started blogging on a regular basis from 16th August,2009 in 'Hindi' under the domain name of Deshnama.com. By the grace of God, I found very good response to my blogging .I have been blessed with lot of love and affection from my readers and followers which I can't express in words. I can't forget my valuable experience with Hindi blogging.



Though I am new to the world of English blogging, but I promise you and would try my best to share my knowledge and experiences with all of you to develop mutual faith, love and  a constructive positivity. I hope that you would also encourage and guide me from time to time to deliver my best to English blogging and would not mind my mistakes, if any, due to English language. I am not an expert writer in English. But, I hope that by regular writing I would learn and polish my skills.Because,it is said that ‘ Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow.’



So, help me God, wishing your best support and encouragement.

 “Hope is the dream of a soul awake.”



Khushdeep Sehgal.