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Too long, don't read.

I know I criticize the West often, but objectively speaking, it is far easier and safer to advocate for human rights under the protection of a Western country. Certain privileges and opportunities ,access to advanced healthcare, freedom of expression, and legal protections, have been extended to me solely because of Canada. My life would undoubtedly have been more challenging without these advantages.

There is also something remarkable about the West’s general openness to innovation and reform, its capacity for introspection, and its willingness to learn, socially speaking. Not everyone, of course. I am speaking in broad terms.

And yet, there is a price to this privilige/progress

Ahhh
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My work is relentless and often too brutal. Without specialized nurses trained in triage and acute care, the risk of désorganisation clinique and failure to stabilize critical patients increases dramatically. If I were to offer advice to a novice, I would urge them to develop mechanisms for managing high mortality rates, including advocating for structured grief breaks or implementing pauses psychologiques during prolonged shifts.

Still if one cannot process the unrelenting cascade of trauma cases, they must step away and someone better should step in.

I have seen experienced clinicians and emergency responders crumble under what might be considered ‘moderate’ clinical scenarios, while others with less technical expertise endure. Even the most gifted are not immune to the psychological toll. I remember an accomplished trauma surgeon who momentarily lost her ability to function during a procedure. It was psychological because she had to deal with too much that day.

I also remember a young neurosurgeon holding an injured child whose cranium had been shattered. Cerebral matter had spilled onto the floor, and he froze, unable to continue and determine what to do next, before collapsing entirely. Some things you have to handle defy the very nature of our species, we naturally recoil at the suffering of children. The normals of us at least. But it is the reality we confront daily. And we must confront it without overwhelming grief or fear. In fact , it is best confronted without any feelings at all. You can feel later. All your energy must be put in problem solving.
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I need to address this pain. It gnaws at me, insidious. It is occupying too much of my potential. Unsure if I should medicate it or let it pass.
BlueVeins · 22-25
Yeah this is why I can't work in healthcare. Y'all put up with a lot.
SUPERVlXEN · F
Having skills and having studied hard contributes to one's ability to handle complex situations, whereas the last part of being able to use it all during the most stressful situations is not something you can study, nor is it something that everyone is able to function under. Even those who may be able to do this work need some kind of support system so as not to develop permanent emotional and psychological damage to themselves. There is a very thin line that is easily crossed under prolonged stressful exposure.

As for criticizing vs. complaining as I noticed was commented by someone. Criticizing something is based on an ethical, philosophical or political belief in something with a desire to change something. Whereas complaining need not be anything more than a need to get rid of one's own frustrations about something without a desire to change anything.
popmol · 26-30, M
everyone likes to complain about the western world but the only reason you can is because they allow it.
every other place is either extreme, vile, dystopian or all of the above.
Miram · 31-35, F
@popmol Permanently, not welcomed in any of my threads again. I mean it.
Straylight · 31-35, F
@popmol As a lifelong American citizen, it’s pretty dystopian here too.
popmol · 26-30, M
@Straylight the weird odd dystopian american system. well its at least simple.
its a popularity contest!
Gibbon · 70-79, M
Sounds like a MASH unit but obviously no room for humor. People working those situations need seriously controlled emotions. I can imagine it eventually taking its toll on the strongest. Triage itself must be overwhelming at times.
ViciDraco · 36-40, M
Sorry, ended up reading it all.

I do not begrudge the criticism you offer The West. I really believe that loving your homeland involves accepting that it isn't perfect yet still trying to make it better. The criticisms help highlight areas we need to most improve. People who try to deny the flaws of their homeland remind me of the terrible parents who deny their children can do any wrong and just let the children get away with all kinds of horrid behavior. In the long run, everyone suffers from that practice.

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To your note on the most gifted not being immune, I believe in many cases that they are often the most impacted when their skills fail them. Blame transferrance is a powerful coping tool. The people with less technical expertise have the luxury of blaming the condition "there was nothing more we could have done" whereas the more knowledgeable start playing through everything they could have done differently and pull the blame onto themselves because they can envision other scenarios or they believe they were too good at it to just make the mistake that happened just now.

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Don't feel bad if you need to step away to process and recover in that field. It's very easy to blame yourself for all the people you can't help while taking a break, but you won't be able to help anyone at all if you yourself break.

I know I could never handle that kind of work. I internalize too much. I empathize constantly. I would break down almost immediately.
3Dogmatic · 46-50, M
Miram · 31-35, F
@3Dogmatic Good
Straylight · 31-35, F
I couldn’t be in the medical field. I doubt I could handle the emotional strain.

 
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