Sunday, May 07, 2006
Life in Regina
So I've been in Regina for a week now. I'm staying at the hostel at the Wascana Rehab. Centre, which is where my clinical placement is taking place. When I checked in on Monday the room seemed pretty small - then I realized that over the previous week I had spent a fair amount of time convincing myself that my room would be a certain size, with certain furniture. Oh well. I can still fit everything I need in there. Some things are just not perfectly convenient. For instance, Riva and Jason (friends who live in Regina) lent me an answering machine. There is only one phone jack in my room, and the line is very short. It is located in the far left corner of the room behind a small chest of drawers. Beside the chest of drawers is the bathroom door, and on the other side of that is the closest plug in. So in order to use the answering machine I have the power cord hanging down across the doorway to my bathroom. I'm just hoping that the cleaning people notice it and don't snag it when they're in there. Yes, cleaning people. Every weekday they come in, clean the bathroom, replace the towels, make the bed, and vacuum. It feels very strange. I said that they didn't need to come in every day, but they seem to do it anyway. Oh well. I still haven't gotten used to the shower either. It starts out really cold for a variable amount of time, then warms up enough for me to get in. Then it gets burning hot, so I turn it down. Then it gets burning hot again, so I turn it down. Then it gets coolish, then burning hot. At least I've realized that it's a smart idea to not get into the water until it gets hot.
As for my placement itself, it's been pretty busy. We see about 6-7 patients per day. These people are all inpatients (no, not 'impatients'), meaning that they are hospitalized at the Rehab. Centre. They have a variety of neurological problems, due to stroke, spinal cord injury, traumatic brain injury, and even one with a disease I'd never heard of before - transverse myelitis (ie. inflammation across the spinal cord at a certain level). There are some pretty remarkable people here. It's quite amazing to see just a little bit of what they need to do to be able to do things for themselves. And so many of them have good family support. It makes me a little jealous, actually. Some patients' problems remind me a bit of things with my dad, so it's been a little taxing emotionally as well as mentally. I've been exhausted most days of the week.
This weekend was more fun though. On Friday I got together with Jason and Riva and we went out for supper then saw Mission Impossible 3. It was pretty much what I expected. There are things I'd like to say about it, but don't want to be a spoiler! Saturday I slept in and was lazy most of the day. I did a load of laundry in the afternoon, then went to my aunt's for supper. In the evening I finished off a 1000 piece jigsaw puzzle that a few of us at the hostel worked on this week. Today I finished my laundry, did some beadwork, then came to the public library to use the internet. I intend to buy a few groceries when I leave here. Then I'm heading over to Jason and Riva's for a BBQ. The sky's looking a little grey, so I hope it stays nice for a few more hours. Tonight I have to do some studying, and that should be the end of my weekend.
Hope everyone is doing well, wherever they are!
Thursday, April 27, 2006
What is your sleeping position... or something like that
Find your own pose!
Traits and Tendancies
Tandem Cyclists are the stars of the sleeping world. Tan, relaxed, and wind-swept, they’re always smiling bright, no matter what blows life deals. Disease, public speaking, automotive failure — they take it all in stride, thanks to the steadying power of spending night after night with a best-loved mate at their backs.
I'm a star!!! (And I'm done finals... Huzzah!)
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
5 down, 3 to go
This morning I went to a little seminar about the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. It is a sort of personality test that looks at your preferences for how to do things. I came out as an ESFJ (Extrovert Sensing Feeling Judging) type. Last time when I took it (in 1988) I came out as an ENFP. Last year I bought a book about personality and communication in health care. It used MBTI types. Now I'll be able to go back and look at that book, then experiment a bit on my clinical placements this summer. Speaking of which, I made my living arrangements today for my placement in Regina next month. I'm going to stay at the hostel at the Wascana Rehabilitation Centre. It's going to be quite convenient, and will cost me approximately $300 for the five weeks (gotta love cheap prices for students). I'm looking forward to getting away for a while!
Tuesday, April 11, 2006
2 down, 6 to go
(And if this is how I am now, how coherent will I be at the end of the month?)
Friday, March 31, 2006
Keeping Warm
Just a few hours left to plan for April Fool's Day, everyone. I've been looking at a website that describes the Top 100 April Fool's Day Hoaxes of All Time. And Wikipedia has an entry for this year's hoaxes too.
Thursday, March 30, 2006
Rap Videos Created for the Internet
I can't believe how much this makes me want to make my own video...
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
To all budding writers...
Monday, March 27, 2006
Silly Walks
Monday, March 20, 2006
Dancers in their genes
Are Dancers Genetically Different Than the Rest of Us? Yes, Says Hebrew University Researcher
What makes dancers different than the rest of us? Genetic variants, says a researcher at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In a study published in the American journal, Public Library of Science Genetics, Psychology Prof. Richard P. Ebstein and his research associates have shown, through DNA examination, that dancers show consistent differences in two key genes from the general population. Ebstein is the head of the Hebrew University Psychology Department’s Scheinfeld Center for Human Genetics in the Social Sciences.
This finding is not surprising, says Ebstein, in view of other studies of musicians and athletes, which also have shown genetic differences.
Ebstein and his colleagues found in an examination of 85 dancers and advanced dancing students in Israel variants of two genes that provide the code for the serotonin transporter and arginine vasopressin receptor 1a.
Both genes are involved in the transmission of information between nerve cells. The serotonin transporter regulates the level of serotonin, a brain transmitter that contributes to spiritual experience, among many other behavioral traits. The vasopressin receptor has been shown in many animal studies to modulate social communication and affiliative bonding behaviors. Both are elements involved in the age-old human social expression of dancing.
The genetic evidence was corroborated by two questionnaires distributed by the researchers to the dancers. One is the Tellegen Absorption Scale (TAS), that correlates aspects of spirituality and altered states of consciousness, and the other is the Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire (TPQ), a measure of the need for social contact and openness to communication.
The genetic and questionnaire results of the dancers were compared with those of two other groups examined – athletes as well as those who were both non-dancers and non-athletes. (Athletes were chosen for comparison since they require a good deal of physical stamina like dancers.)
When the results were combined and analyzed, it was clearly shown that the dancers exhibited particular genetic and personality characteristics that were not found in the other two groups.
The dancer “type,” says Ebstein, clearly demonstrates qualities that are not necessarily lacking but are not expressed as strongly in other people: a heightened sense of communication, often of a symbolic and ceremonial nature, and a strong spiritual personality trait.
Others involved in the research with Ebstein were his Ph.D. student Rachel Bachner- Melman, as well as additional researchers from Israel and France.
You go girl!
Sunday, March 19, 2006
Happy New Year
I received a lovely e-mail from an Iranian man who was briefly involved with my dance group. Here's what he said:
Dear Friends,
As the Mother Nature is giving birth to the spring,
May the seeds of love grow tall,
May the clouds rain peace,
May the sun radiate compassion,
May the wisdom overcome the ignorance,
May the trees humble down fruitfully,
May the candle of life burn endlessly,
May we all dance to the rhythms of creation, sing to the spirit of all beings,
Hand to Hand,
And shout with joy,
Life is beautiful,
As one.
- from Mehrdad Shokouhi
Monday, March 13, 2006
My tentative summer schedule
- May 1 - June 2: Wascana Rehab Centre in Regina - Neuro-Rehab placement
- June 5 - July 7: City Hospital in Saskatoon - Orthopedic inpatient or outpatient department
I'm pleased. I've heard good things about both of those places. Once I know if it's final (by March 24) I'll have to start finding a place to stay. I still have to figure out what I'll do with the rest of my summer. I haven't seen many job listings that will accomodate this schedule...
Monday, March 06, 2006
Adventures in House Sitting
My life is boring lately, but at least I've been quite productive. I hope that means I can be awesome again by the time finals come around.
Right now I'm at the Health Sciences Library, procrastinating driving home to pick up some things. Things that could be useful, but that I don't care about right now. Maybe I'll just decide I don't need them. Then I could go back to where I'm housesitting, have a shower, and go to bed.
Friday, March 03, 2006
Snakes on a Plane
Here's a transcript from an interview that Samuel L. Jackson did with NPR:
"Snakes on a Plane is, well, pretty much what it sounds like. I want to do films, sometimes, that excited me when I was a kid, and I always like horror and adventure movies. And when I opened the cover on that particular script and it said Snakes on a Plane I was immediately, at the time, viscerally struck. Oh yeah. It turned out to be exactly what I thought. You know---somebody turns loose a big crateload of poisonous snakes on an airplane, and we can fight the snakes until we get to our destination. It was just, kind of, one of those popcorn kind of moments where you're going to a movie and you don't have to think about what's going to happen. You know what's going to happen. You know there are going to be snakes loose on this plane, people are going to get bitten, there are going to be some victims and you hope you're a survivor. You just want to have that experience and to excite people who are sitting there watching. So people who have a fear of flying and people who have a fear of snakes are gonna have a double-whammy going on there. It's kinda gonna be great."
- Find out more about the upcoming movie (has some pictures too)
- Read an article "Snakes on a Plane... and Nice Breasts"
- Read the Fark.com comments
- Listen to the audio trailer parody
- Watch a rough cut made by two guys who could not wait for it to come out in theatres (very funny)
- And hey! Samuel L. Jackson gets attacked by snakes in "The Ultimate Showdown" cartoon!