Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from October, 2025

The Year the Fear Went Viral

Prologue: It's a STORY  about vaccine hesitancy/fear causing  PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS!  We defeated smallpox. Doubled life expectancy. Put satellites in orbit. Cracked the genetic code. Yes, Science wasn’t perfect. But it saved more lives than any ideology, religion, or war ever took.  The Year the Fear Went Viral It began the way most things do in the digital age—not with a discovery, but with a rumor. In the small, sunlit town of Mangalore , parents used to line up with their children at the community clinic, chatting over coffee while nurses administered vaccines. It was a ritual of reassurance, a quiet act of trust built on decades of science. After all, the world had conquered smallpox, doubled its life expectancy, launched satellites into orbit, and decoded the very language of life itself. Science had become a pillar—imperfect, yes, but steadfast. Then came the posts. A mother named Chaya devi  shared a video: a tearful parent claiming her son “changed overn...

The Light We Forgot

 Title: The Light We Forgot When the scanners first became commonplace, people began to see themselves differently. Not in mirrors, but in glows. The new “bio-spectrum cameras” could capture the faint biophoton emissions from every living thing—a soft shimmer, different in hue and rhythm for each person. Newsfeeds filled with luminescent portraits. Teenagers compared their “soul tones,” corporations sold glow-enhancing diets, and somewhere amid the algorithms and the filters, a quiet wonder began to stir. Dr. Hesvitha had helped design the first prototype. She wasn’t the kind of scientist who chased fame—she wanted to see what had always been invisible. For decades, researchers like Fritz Popp had hinted that light wasn’t just a byproduct of life, but its language. A faint conversation of photons streaming between cells, a soft orchestra of order. Elara had once told her students, “Every heartbeat is an act of light.” But now, years later, she found herself uneasy. The world had tu...

Top 100 High-Yield Cardiology Points (2025)

 Top 100 High-Yield Cardiology Points (2025)                              (🟥 Facts / 🟩 Treatments) 1) Acute Coronary Syndromes (ACS) — 10 1. 🟥 High-sensitivity troponin (hs-cTn) is preferred for rapid rule-in/rule-out of MI. 2. 🟩 Give aspirin immediately (162–325 mg chew), then 75–100 mg daily. 3. 🟥 For STEMI, door-to-balloon ≤90 min (≤120 min if transfer) saves myocardium. 4. 🟩 Primary PCI is first-line reperfusion; fibrinolysis only if PCI delay is excessive. 5. 🟥 NSTEMI patients with high risk (e.g., GRACE) benefit from early invasive strategy. 6. 🟩 Use a P2Y12 inhibitor (ticagrelor/prasugrel preferred in most) + aspirin (DAPT). 7. 🟥 Radial access lowers bleeding and vascular complications vs femoral. 8. 🟩 Start high-intensity statin in all ACS unless contraindicated. 9. 🟥 Shorter DAPT (3–6 mo) can be reasonable after PCI in high-bleeding-risk patients. 10. 🟩 At discharge: checklist—DAPT, stat...

Unworthy sacrifice-A small story'

 AThe air in the high, cold Andes was thin and sharp as a blade. In a small, mud-brick schoolhouse that smelled of damp earth and unwashed wool, Comandante Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara sat on a low stool, his asthma a tight fist in his chest. Before him, a young Quechua shepherd boy listened, wide-eyed, as Che traced maps in the dirt floor with a stick, speaking of a world where the campesino would not be a beast of burden for the landowner, where the fruits of the soil would belong to those who tilled it. “The enemy is not the man,” Che said, his voice a low, gravelly rasp. “The enemy is the system that tells that man he owns you. Your rights, your dignity, they are not gifts to be given. They are yours to claim.” The boy, named Ccoa, nodded, his gaze fixed on the intense, starry-eyed man who spoke of fire and freedom. But his mind was on his flock huddled outside, on the strange, sharp sound of distant helicopters that made the llamas nervous. Days later, the trap was sprung. Betrayed b...

The Song Beneath Everything

 Prologue:  The deeper we dive into physics, the more it echoes the Vedas. Quantum Field Theory says all matter rises from one unified field—eternal, all-pervading, humming with energy. The rishis called it Brahman vibrating as “Om,” the unstruck sound—Anahata Nada.   Science calls it the quantum vacuum; sages called it creation’s song ==========================================================         Arjun sat alone in the observatory, the faint hum of the equipment merging with the deeper hum of his own thoughts. On the screen before him flickered quantum field equations—curved symbols, complex tensors, and integrals that described reality at its most fundamental pulse. Yet the more he stared, the less they looked like mathematics and more like poetry—ancient, sacred poetry written in numbers.   He leaned back and closed his eyes. Somewhere in the spaces between his thoughts, he could hear it: the soft, endless vibration that the equations h...

The Silent Kitchen

  The Silent Kitchen — A Cultural Warning from America to India (A soul-searching story set in modern India)   1. The Fading Aroma   The Mehtas lived in a gleaming apartment in Gurugram — glass walls, modular furniture, and a kitchen that looked like it belonged in a design magazine. Yet, the kitchen was always silent. The gas stove hadn’t been turned on in weeks.   Dinner came riding on two-wheelers — sometimes from a cloud kitchen two kilometers away, sometimes from a five-star hotel across town. Riya, the mother, worked in a multinational firm. Her husband, Arjun, managed a tech startup. Their teenage son, Ved, ate his meals in front of his computer.   The dining table had slowly become a storage space for couriers and bills; conversations had shifted to text messages, even between rooms.   No one noticed the silence. Until one day, Riya’s mother, Ammaji, arrived from Lucknow.   2. The Smell of Memory   The first thing Ammaji did was open the c...