Friday, December 26, 2014

Twinkle, Twinkle, Tiny Lights

     The first thing a leader must do is to ask the right question at the right time. In the moment he enters his Small Group Discussion (SGD) room, he surveys the familiar territory, and asks what it lacks, what it needs, what can be done. There is no better time to throw those questions that before beginning a regular afternoon - not during, not after. During the SGD, his role remains. But in order to carry out the task, he is obliged to listen carefully to the inputs, to be quick to analyze, to anticipate, to strategize, and to keep the herd on the right road. At the end of the day, he asks how best to mobilize his group's resources to prepare for the next session.

     I'd say I'd been quite oriented with the responsibilities and routine. We'd learned mechanical phrases, prompts, gestures, and questions through time. But until we would meet some facilitator with impossible standards, leadership in an SGD hardly stirred us.

     It was the first week of the bimonthly. My turn came. Two hours to class, we were simmering under the glare of the Pacific sun; but deep within, my blood had been running cold. Leading a group was a living nightmare.

     Four friends and I decided to eat at Dan Erie across school. The second story offered some kind of refuge from the heat, the hustle and bustle of a regular weekday. We had the floor, the tables, chairs and electric fans all to ourselves' the advantage of privacy lifted our spirits save for mine.

     Reese first broke the unusually solemn lunch. "Kim, she didn't make it in The Voice  last night. It's totally unfair," she said, her eyes glued to her smartphone.

     Kim and Mary chimed in agreement. Then, the three of them had a hearty discussion of their idols, the latest in popular music, and fashion. When they would digress to foreign movies and celebrities, Joana sometimes threw in a gossip or two at a time.

     My mind floated in a faraway desert, rehearsing repeatedly algorithms that should help me find the right questions at the right time. I couldn't afford to screw this week up. It was Hematology - my banner, my brand. But somehow, I was prepared to lose it all for the nth time. What difference did it make if our group did well or not? We'd come to a point where most of us had become robots, devoid of substance. Routines kept us moving. Over time, the little lights that constitute our own unique constellations would go out one by one. Eyes would dim; genuine smiles wear off. Our hearts would grow tired each day, until only flesh and bone would remain when the blankets are finally drawn over our romantic youth.

     I lost track of the time since I left their company. I felt a question burning at the back of my head. And then a tiny voice borrowed the words. They rang in my ears as they clung to me like dismembered sets of fingers burrowing into the skin of my arms. When the question, the voice, and the appendages swirled into an abstract vision, colors bloomed; a face appeared. Mary pulled me out of the dry sea, and then I could feel the fresh air rush in and out of my chest again, stinging my airways like acid.

     The most natural emotion that comes right after a threat to life has been banished is probably relief. I saw the reflection of my smile in theirs, but theirs had been tainted with another motive.

     "So it's a yes?"

     "Did you already say 'yes'?"

     "Oh my gosh!"

     "I could totally cry right now."

     Puzzled and alarmed, I rose. They stopped. "What were you guys saying?"

     Joana gave me an incredulous look, hesitated for a moment before handing me my phone. Instinctively I searched my messages. There was one thread, very recently updated - and read - certainly not by me. It was a text message from Anton. I didn't need to repeat my question to them. I wasn't the type to turn ruddy at the slight agitation of the heart. But I felt my skin effacing, stretching to eternity in a futile attempt to escape acute embarrassment. My eyes welled with tears. The winter stormed my bowels and peppered ice shard on my feet.

     "I could totally cry right now." We'd never heard Reese talk more emphatically than that noon at Dan Erie.

     As Kim grinned, her heart swelling with the innocent love of a child, her small black eyes buried themselves under the fond protection of her cheeks. She purred, "This is wonderful."

     In my mind I screamed louder than a thousand roaring lions. But my volatile anger could not overcome the resistance in my throat as I watched my companions try to pry my mind open. I stifled a cry, sucked back the brewing storm in the bags under my eye, and breathed deeply. Then I sat and said with some finality. "It's not what you think it is, people."

     Joana's right eyebrow shot up dangerously. Laughing thinly, she said, "I would not - for all the world - text you something like that if I'm not head over heels for you. And I know exactly what I'm talking about."

     I knew I'd never win against here. I raised my palms in surrender. "Hey, look, we're not having this conversation right now."

     Joana Ang, the master equestrian, held my gaze like reins. "Oh, yes we are."

     "Yes, we are!"

     "Agree."

     "Please tell us more."

     Before I cam to medical school, relationships and careers had equal footing in the workplace and at home. My colleagues and friends would treat the subjects with as much fervor and importance as either can be psychologically, emotionally, spiritually and economically profitable for a lifetime when properly managed, and disastrous when done otherwise. In those days when we struggled our way into the real world - taxes, violence, injustice, corruption, and betrayal - we prayed and hoped for good luck in career and relationships.

     The longer we spend our days in medical school, the more it seems like a prison. We will virtually be cut off from reality, suspended in a vacuum or immersed in viscous existence, as if in a dream, (After all, out of the thousands of dreamers, aren't we the cut who made it to medical school to live this dream?) We age in body and mind. But in truth, if we have not gone so far off from puberty before serving our sentence here, the chances of reverting back to the stages of early or late adolescence increase.

     As I was telling Reese, Kim, Mary, and Joana the half-truth about Anton's yet-unconfirmed infatuation, I could not dispel the red cloud behind my eyes. It reminded me of that distant time when relationships weren't discussed as an optional extracurricular activity for those who could and would multitask, but an end that must be carefully planned and invested on.

     Every extracurricular activity has its advantages and disadvantages. And every day, my busy smartphone affirms them. Every reminder added there adds to the tangle of strings attached to my body. Every deadline pulls a cord. And every day, deadlines meet like roads, repel like enemies, and put me at the core of a tug-o'-war.

     "Shane, will you please read the final handout for today?" My voice might not reach across the room where he was sitting. I nodded and he understood.

     Our group did it quickly. We filled the last spaces on the whiteboard. We completed the four columns. Although the algorithms in my head had not materialized and our arguments in the support or demurral of our differentials had been wanting of power, we at least came up with a straightforward plan for the management of our case. Despite my preparations, those random minutes spent practicing in front of a mirror or wall, I still sounded like a programmed machine. Few people were willing to risk an exam for a brilliant (absolutely) spontaneous SGD. Yet everyone was able to speak, contributing pertinent bits of information. As a leader, that was enough for me.

     After class, we dispersed like seeds in the wind, adding to the growing swarm just outside the school library. At four o'clock in the afternoon, the second floor of the campus became like the eye of a storm. We have very little, if any, time to chat with friends we met in the way. Almost everyone would scurry or leap to their departments, bags in arms, and stethoscopes on shoulders. At our destinations, we would blend again with a different crowd, before finally meeting another, smaller, duty group.

     If compatibility among members in an SGD group were only fair at best, frustrations and quarrels are inevitable. I'd learned as much. Although we'd been taught that the details are as important as the bigger picture, sometimes the best we can do is to ignore the fuzz on the threads and focus more on the intended pattern or the ultimate design.

     I rested my writing-hand and pen. My wrist ached after the first four pages of my history. One more formulation to go, and I was done for the day. Waiting for the pain to subside, I tried to think of the last time I felt happy doing the same thing.

     Two weeks ago, I became part of a gig. We'd been preparing for it for days. That time, I was so hyped, I didn't mind doing seven pages of history - my longest ever! Collaborations gave me a sense of family. Our goals (and peeves) would bind us with other members until we'd reap the benefits of our labor. Then we'd celebrate together our pain and success.

     How swiftly the days change us. It's be another number of weeks to the next event. I wondered if the same people would still show interest in participating, which was seldom the case. In medical school, one didn't really make long-term contracts for companionship with others unless they return his commitment.

     My eyes wandered to the darkening footpath outside the wards. A familiar figure was heading for my direction.

     "Hello," I said, tentatively smiling.

     "Hello," Anton grinned. Finding me alone in the cottage, he frowned for a moment, then smiled again but more radiantly than the flickering light overhead. "Where's everyone in your group?"

     "Done."

     He looked pained.

     Seeing that he couldn't decide the next question, I offered to explain the unspoken agreement of the group. "We don't hold each other here. We don't even have to write the same things."

     He agreed to my every notion. Then when I'd complained enough, he told me to save the rest till I finish my history.

     As the last trails of the sun had gone under the rising blue-black curtains of the evening, tiny lights fell over the dome above, as if sprinkled by an invisible hand. Some of them simply sprouted and grew. Then a susurrus sheet of translucent gray clouds draped the sky. And they were ever moving, brushing past the twinkling lights and the spot where the moon would surface when the ripe hour came.

     He waited until I got out at almost eight o'clock in the evening. We took our stories to a barbecue place, exchanging our heartaches and frustrations in and out of school. After we've exhausted our minds and mouths, we agreed how sick we might appear to people who'd hear our frivolous troubles.

     "Or how lonely we must be," he added.

     I was trapped. He told the truth. He furnished the dagger that precisely cut through my pride. Lonely people wade together in the flood created by their weeping hearts. Medical school can rob one of the lights of his eyes, heart and soul, leaving a robot polished to succeed in society but not necessarily in personal battles. And that is why we weep in our imprisonment: we weep miserably because we expect emotional reinforcement from our SGD or duty groups yet do not find it. But it's not completely hopeless as it may seem. Pain can blind. Pain can bind. But pain can unmask and reveal the truth. Above all, pain can teach us by demonstration what books can only describe in words.
     
     "We sit here complaining about our exams, our teachers, our classmates, when out there in the real world, real people are dying of hunger, of violence and lack of justice," I said. "Every time I take an exam, I remember my foolishness for not studying hard enough and for shutting out the world when the world needs me the most."

     "You're very idealistic."

     "I know." My smile became sad. "Someday our ideals are going to catch up with us, and torture us to give them up for our comforts of life."

     "I don't quite get you."

     "Anyway, Anton, don't look for the perfect love; you'll end up like me. Learn to love her imperfections that she may learn to love yours."

     "We're going somewhere, aren't we?" He laughed hard. But when his eyes didn't tear off mind, I knew he understood. "So, what was the bad joke you wanted to tell me about?"

     I took my phone out and brandished it in front of him. "I had lunch with friends today. They'd read your messages and thought you were in love with me."

     We laughed. For a moment I thought I saw the sky in the immeasurable depths of his eyes. And I saw tiny lights making the sounds of tiny bells as they dance to our chorus. His eyes became familiar territory, but there was still something lacking, someone needed, and something that can be done.

     "Wait," I said. When we stopped laughing, I knew it was the right time to ask the right question: "When I agreed to help you by role-playing through text, were those messages really for Kim?"
     

Tuesday, December 23, 2014


Response: A CIM cook-off was suggested, with a possible outreach involving a partner community (e.g. Lorega). Inter-batch or inter-organization competitions will be held to foster camaraderie and healthy competition among CIM students in coming up with a nutritious menu. The winning foods will be donated to the partner community for a feeding program. Another idea would be to have CIM students partnering with representatives from the community in coming up with their recipes for the cook-off.

*The CIM-SSC has noted this idea for future outreach activities. Stay tuned for updates, CIM!

Stars

"The Stars will move on, but I'll still be here waiting"
Taken at Palanas Farm & Resort, Boljoon, Cebu
Exposure: 3 hours

Photographer's note: Quite possibly my best work so far. It was soothing to be under a sky of nothing but stars. It gave me so much time to reflect and think. I didn't catch any sleep for this one, well worth it. I hope you enjoy this as much as I enjoyed making it.

Photography by Bede Joseph Ilano of Batch Spectra

Treasures

Wave after wave, I drown
The loneliness in me
Like a drop in the ocean
I got lost in deeper sea

I went on a journey
And found some distant shore
Various gems lie on the sand
That led me to an open door

Every treasured jewel
Has a story to tell
With each  mystery revealed
I see beauty break its shell

Lusters of all colors
Shine through the black of night
The hues mix into one shade
Emitting the brightest light

Written by Disguised Angel

Lights Will Guide You Home

Each year, the blue and white Christmas lights at the Ateneo de Manila University campus light up as the holiday season approaches. And it is a beautiful sight. The fright in nightly jogs is gently lifted off your shoulders, and gently replaced with wonder. The path (however repeated nightly) is remembered better in illumination.

Apart from serving their obvious purpose, to me those lights meant one more thing: I was going to be home soon. As much as university life away from home is a liberating (I dare say necessary) experience, there is an unspeakable joy in coming home for Christmas. There is joy in being in a place where processed food isn't a staple. Yes, there is joy even in once again having a curfew.

As much as we are enthralled with new, bolder experiences, there is warmth in familiarity. It is warmth that is always worth going back to. We appropriate to the above feeling the name "nostalgia." However, nostalgia holds more bearing than we give it credit for. You see, nostalgia was never meant to purely depict sentiment. And it is a disservice to dismiss it as such.

The ancient Greeks described it as a longing for the place from which the very essence of all things - for example, the "blue-ness of blue" - originated. And that's a particularly beautiful insight. If seen in this light, nostalgia does not only refer to the warm, fuzzy feeling we equate with things once familiar. Instead, it is a longing for the place where hearts are light, where love and comfort abound - that is, where we are most ourselves: a place we popularly refer to as home.

But how exactly do we get home? Albeit an oversimplification of some pretty obscure philosophy, we make our way there by following the light.

In "The Allegory of the Cave," Plato depicts men in chains watching, with fixed gaze, shadows representing adulterated reality. Elsewhere in the same cave, there is a man enduring a climb to a place outside the cave, where the light that forms the shadows emanates. Thankfully, he eventually makes it out of the cave. What he once saw as silhouettes, he now sees in true form. It is all too overwhelming at the outset, but he knows with certainty that he cannot return to a world of "lesser" truth. He soon returns to the cave, presumably in service to his fellow man, to tell the others to follow suit.

Allegory of the Cave illustrated (from www.john-uebersax.com)

Now, what do we stand to learn from all this? (I did not wish to bore you with that primer on Plato, however necessary a read I think him be.) If there is something we can derive from all that has been said, it is this: just as the man in the allegory endures the climb, all men must as well endure life - both its excitement and its banality. You see, nostalgia isn't merely a process of blithe reminiscence, but more so a journey home. And it is this tiring journey, sometimes debilitatingly so, that makes life sweeter, that grants upon its conclusion meaning and closure.

However, we are fortunate to have shadows of home today (minus the chains, of course). They consist of all the things we associate with a surface understanding of nostalgia. And sometimes, that's all we really need to get through a semester. Take comfort: home is just around the corner.

Here, I have presented that home can be seen in two lights. Home is first a place of refuge when we are weary, a brief and familiar respite in an otherwise overwhelming metropolis. But secondly, home is also that which meets us at the end of this journey. In either case, home is a consolation for the craziness of life. And home is always welcome.

It has been almost two years since I moved back. The pace is certainly different. The lights in my village do not glow as brightly as the lights in the Ateneo do. They do not glow as brightly as they once did.

Still, it is a beautiful sight. I am here. I am home.

Written by Clarence Aaron Sy of Batch Spectra

Eye Opener

In the cool blast of the Ophthalmology Office's airconditioner, I sat in the corner huddled with my groupmates and witnessed my first endorsement. Not really comprehending what was occurring, we sat there in silence, soaking up as much information as we could, much like the self-procalaimed space occupying lesions that we were. As the resident went through each chart, mentioning the pertinent history and physical exam findings, it hit me. It is a sad reality many take their eyes for granted, myself included. Who wouldn't admit to undermining that all too familiar feeling of itchiness or tearing up after watching episode after episode of the Game of Thrones or reading in a moving vehicle, trying to cram for the exam on the commute to school, or even sleeping with one's contacts on. 

(from www.shutterstock.com)

The importance of our sight cannot be overstated. We see this in the 53 year old woman with reccurent fungal infections and a cataract in need of a corneal transplant in order to preserve her vision so she may continue to work as a street cleaner and put her 5 children through school. We see this in the 26 year old computer programmer who must undergo iridotomy in order to keep his intraocular pressure in check and prevent him from damaging his optic nerve. We see this in the need to address errors of refraction in a 30 year old surgical resident whose impeccable vision is of paramount importance inthe success of an operation. We see this in the medical student experiencing headaches and excessive tearing who must continue to devour page after page of Nelson's Pediatrics. How many of us really stop to think about our eyes? How many have ever tried to imagine life without them? A life in eternal darkness.

Picture this. You are sitting in your room sipping hot coffee from a mug and burning the midnight oil for the last long exam of the year tomorrow. Suddenly, the lights go out and you curse inwardly at the turn of events. Slowly, you attempt to make you way through the room, bumping into furniture and knick knacks strewn across your bedroom floor. Finally, you reach your destination and feel for the flashlight on your bedside table. You flip the switch expecting it to immediately illuminate the room. But it doesn't. It just leaves you there alone and in the dark. You fall asleep and awaken to the crowing of the roosters heralding in the morning but still see nothing but darkness as you open your eyes. What would you do? How would you feel? One can only speculate. May we never have to find out oursleves. How apt it was that under the tutelage of the Ophthalmology department and while studying the eyes and vision, my own eyes were opened. 

Written by Frances Gumapon of Batch Asterion

Monday, December 22, 2014

The Light who Became One of Us (Part 2 of Rumors beyond the Flat Line)

From last month's article, I left off with the promise of telling you about the one who legitimately died and came back from the flat line. One writer described him as "the True Light" and that his birth was likened to light which first came down to earth, illuminating a world in darkness.  By now, some of you might have already guessed who he is.  This person is Jesus Christ-- the reason for our season.

In this post-modern times, most of us have associated Christmas with Santa Claus, exchanging presents, rush Christmas shopping,  unusually long lines at port areas and bus stations, attending parties, reunions and all sorts of revelry.  It was not this way originally.  It may be worthwhile to consider why we celebrate this day in the first place…

The meaning of Christmas has the tendency to be forgotten amidst the rush.
(fro www.kristiann1.com)

The first Christmas happened when God first came to earth in the form of a helpless human baby. He is the King of the universe, but He was not born inside the comforts of a castle, instead, He was delivered in a lowly stable.  Even if He was God, He relinquished His God-attributes to become a man. He who was infinite, powerful, strong and wise became as limited, as powerless, as weak and without knowledge as a babe. God came to earth to become something He was not before. He came to be one of us.

Because of the humanity of Jesus, He knew what it meant to be in your shoes and in mine. He finally experienced what pain meant when, as a kid, he first got bruised when He tripped on the hot, sandy ground of Nazareth.  He first knew what being exhausted meant after he spent a long day’s hard work of hammering wood and making furnitures as a carpenter. He first knew what it meant to be misunderstood when His own family disbelieved Him.  He first knew what real emotional pain was when He got betrayed and disowned by His two close friends. He knew what it meant to feel guilt, shame and unspeakable suffering when all the sins of humanity were laid upon Him on the Cross. And finally, He knew what mortality was when He breathed His last and died. Yet after his suffering and his death, he rose from the dead on the third day and thus proved that He was more powerful than death itself.

For this reason, we can now celebrate Christmas, assured that God is not just up there sitting comfortably in His throne in the heavens. We know that He became like us and knew what being human meant.  That is why the Bible refers to Jesus as “Immanuel”—God with us. Moreover, just as He has shown Himself greater than death (and greater than all other forms of power), it is within reason that we can trust Him even amidst our fears, this world’s wars, disease and problems. Jesus knew what troubles a human soul, and yet He bids us today, “Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid” (John 14:27).

(from www.flickr.com)

Perhaps, that may be just what we need to be reminded and assured of this Christmas.  That is what   He invites us to celebrate. Immanuel. Shalom. Merry Christmas!



Written by Brice Serquina of Batch Spectra