![]() ![]() ![]() We look for medicine to be an orderly field of knowledge and procedure. Gawande’s proclivity for introspection, coupled with his eloquent prose, culminates in compelling narratives that leave the reader deep in thought. Throughout the rest of the book, we are taken on thrilling journeys into other patients’ and doctors’ lives. ![]() Unnerving though this prospect may seem, we find solace in Gawande’s concession, “the most important talent may be the talent for practice itself”. In the very first piece, The Education of a Knife, we see how surgery is fluid and complex where the surgeon wields the scalpel, pure knowledge falters. Not only are we right next to Gawande as he slices open a patient for the first time-feeling his halting uncertainty as if it were our own-we come to develop an uncanny familiarity with the nature of Medicine itself. Atul Gawande, interview with The Denver Post They were often things patients ask about and I don’t have answers for, and I wanted to get answers. ![]() A lot of the topics I ended up writing about came from experiences that I didn’t understand or that bothered me. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |