After spending a day finalizing the agenda for my last week in
My first stop was the Nepal Medical Council, found all the way across town in Bansibar, Maharajgunj. For some reason, there was a massive traffic jam in central
“I asked to come this way because you told me you’d been in
We then veered back onto the main road through a winding alleyway, and I was amazed by the sudden transformation. Bansibar is where many of the major embassies (French, Australian, Japanese) and organizational centers (Councils of Medicine, Nursing, Water) are, and the neat row of houses, sparkling government buildings, and shops were a stark contrast to the poverty omnipresent less than half a kilometer away.
Anyways, after doing some business at the Nepal Medical Council (okay, okay, I was getting documentation and applications so that we could bring in several expatriate doctors to work at the clinic) I took another cab to Patan Hospital to track down Rachanal Shretha, the director of the birthing center there (which is famous for reasons I’ve enumerated in a previous post). Nobody seemed to know where she was, so I took a stroll down the pediatric wards (for some reason, if you drop by in the afternoon, the security doesn’t seem to care if you just wander around the patient wards). In the words of Sachin, my pediatrician ex-housemate, “there were a lot of sick kids.” Many seemed quite cheerful though, and two with casts were actually playing with a ball in the courtyard.
This made me think that sometimes, I wish I could go back to being a small child. There’s a pure optimism kids have that we don’t anymore. Granted, as a young person, I’m still overly a glass-half-full person, but I can’t always believe that the best will come around. Bless them for it, I suppose.
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