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| subject: | Music/Medicine... 1. |
-=> Ardith Hinton wrote to James Bradley <=- JB> "Great" orchestral works in the day, were intended JB> to be as disposable as last weeks news. AH> Yes... and the same also applies to various other AH> types of music. I heard that a patron of J.S. Bach, for AH> example, insisted on a new chorale every week. It seems AH> the desire for novelty has been a factor for a long time. AH> ;-) I lumped everything with an orchestra into "orchestral". I guess opera needs stage direction also, but to my limited exposure it's the same boat. Now that you mention it, works of a choir would also apply to the "pop" category of yore. B-] JB> If the latest work wasn't "greater" than last weeks, JB> the composer was considered a has-been. AH> To this day, folks in the entertainment business say "you're AH> only as good as your last [gig]". But once in awhile a song AH> which has dropped off the Top Ten list will eventually AH> resurface as a Golden Oldie or whatever. I had a Beatles AH> poster in my band classroom after the initial excitement AH> had subsided, and was often asked "Who are the Beatles?" They did it their way! AH> Now our daughter's favourite radio station includes Beatles AH> songs in their regular Classic Rock program. I still AH> chuckle over the incident several years ago at a family campout when a AH> teenage girl was listening to Beatles music on a portable AH> CD player & the parents were able to identify every one of AH> the songs after hearing the initial chords. The usual AH> drill is that teenagers love the music their parents love AH> to hate & vice versa. The Beatles were young when they AH> created this stuff... and in order to benefit personally AH> from the Classic rating, one has to live long enough. As I AH> understand the situation most people didn't three or four AH> centuries ago. :-)) For such a bunch of hard workers, it's a bit anticlimactic that Hey Jude was one of their last hits. Maybe a sign that their paths were diverging. But today, why is it that Smoke On The Watter is still in rotation? When my sister expounded about the joy she receives from classic rock, all I could think was the work that I associate with performing the same songs I couldn't be bothered *hearing* any more. I *guess* I growed up. She - and MANY others - harkens back to her youth. I remember how silly I must have been picturing myself a rock-star while covering others material. AH> I laughed at myself when I forgot to bring the fever AH> thermometer on a camping trip & soon realized we didn't AH> need it. JB> with what information is "at hand". AH> I hear you. Oncology parents are a special breed, though! Something that was tweaking my supposition ever since I last wrote. I also realized I was hypotensive (Low BP, right?) as a result of my last wasp sting. AH> And as it happened there were other families with us on that AH> particular occasion who were in similar circumstances. AH> BTW... since you expressed some puzzlement regarding triage AH> elsewhere... we've found ways of getting attention promptly: In that environment, I have *no* problem being a low priority and skipping the line wasn't my intent. Two of my visits were to a ward where they have three entrances into treatment. One is a fast lane to plumbing, another is what appears to be a revolving door, and the middle door is where I was stuck. (Something I *should* be used to by now. ;-) Sure, for a CT scan I can understand the wait but, the second time was to check for anemia. There just seemed like that could have been expedited. A low priority to be sure, but there seemed little reason for the wait unless they wanted to see if I'd faint in the interim. AH> 1) You can't breathe. This condition may kill you within AH> minutes if somebody doesn't do something about it right away. Survival school 101: Air, H2O, sustenance. I expect if you complained that you haven't urinated in three days, you'd get door number two? AH> 2) You arrive with a towel wrapped around some part of AH> your anatomy, and with blood spurting from an artery. This may take awhile AH> longer to kill you... but if you get blood on the floor, somebody will have AH> to clean it up. The AH> cleaning staff have been cut back & other folks are AH> terrified that you may AH> have AIDS or some other dreadful disease. Besides the hepatitis scare, that stuff can be slippery! AH> 3) You arrive with a little kid who has no measurable AH> white blood cells & who has had a high fever for three hours. ... AH> we'd like to send Nora to the oncology ward we said AH> "Yes, please".... ;-) My main reason to not being greedy. I know I'm useful to entertain a kid in a waiting room and I'm all too willing to volunteer for that. AH> When you had internal bleeding after surgery, the cause & AH> severity of the symptoms were less obvious. That's the sort of AH> situation where the patient may feel frustrated over long AH> delays etc. We had much the same experience with Nora's AH> stroke, as my parents evidently did with theirs... (sigh). Again, a time sensitive treatment *must* be fast-tracked, and I have limited understanding about what constitutes their priorities. (I know that there is a time limit on blood thinners for stroke patients, but I'm even foggy on that if it *is* blood thinners that are prescribed and why it can do more damage after that amount of time... ... ...) When a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing, I'll gladly stand at the front of that line, but my logistics muscle was telling me that a blood test doesn't have to burn a quarter of a day. ... James ___ MultiMail/Linux v0.49 --- Maximus 3.01* Origin: -=-= Calgary Organization CDN (403) 242-3221 (1:342/77) SEEN-BY: 10/1 11/200 331 14/400 34/999 120/228 123/500 128/2 187 140/1 222/2 SEEN-BY: 226/0 230/150 249/303 250/306 261/20 38 100 1381 1404 1406 1418 SEEN-BY: 280/1027 393/68 396/45 633/104 260 267 712/848 801/161 189 2222/700 SEEN-BY: 2320/105 200 5030/1256 @PATH: 342/77 140/1 261/38 633/260 267 |
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