<p class="bodytext">Accidents are not intentional. Obviously, nobody invites trouble, knowing full well that it ends up in pain, wretchedness, and grief. Recently, I met with an accident: I slipped in the bathroom and injured my wrist. The very next moment, my hand inflated fourfold, and the pain was unbearable. Adding to my woes was the time: this happened at my niece’s marriage in Salem. The marriage hall was full of my close relatives, friends, and other guests.</p>.<p class="bodytext">As soon as they heard I was injured, they started pouring in to inquire about my well-being. The pain was unfathomable; as a result, I was sweating profusely, creating further panic. Then a flood of suggestions and advice started. Some said this must be multiple fractures. Others were more optimistic, concluding it to be just a sprain. Likewise, several people diagnosed my condition, each with their own experience and knowledge. Suggestions were in umpteen, but solutions none.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Then my brother-in-law, a practicing lawyer in Salem with a wide social network, jumped out from amidst the pool of guests, seeming to me like a hero of a Hindi film with a definite solution, and took me to a practicing orthopaedic doctor from Puttur. I was sceptical, but I abided by his confidence in the doctor and followed. At first appearance, I thought the doctor to be a quack when I saw him in dhoti and net banian. He made me sit comfortably on a chair and pulled my wrist. I screamed on top of my voice, and I thought my wrist was dismembered from my hand to repair it and refit. When he pressed the joint with his thumb again, I realised the hand was still intact. After a course of this procedure, he applied some grinded leaves with turmeric and egg white and wrapped the hand with a cloth bandage.</p>.<p class="bodytext">As the ‘operation’ concluded, I heaved a sigh of relief.</p>.<p class="bodytext">What followed was worse. Facing people with the bandage was an experience by itself. Every person I met had a suggestion and a slew of queries. The most common of the questions was how it happened. Did they expect an ‘action replay?’. I couldn’t tell. But I said I slipped and fell in the bathroom. The next suggestion was, “You have to be careful! See who is suffering now?” Literally, I bit my tooth, swallowed hard, and smiled. Others declared these Puttur doctors to be quacks. “You shouldn’t have taken a risk. The best are allopathic orthopaedics for fast healing.”</p>.<p class="bodytext">The flow of suggestions and advice was unrelenting. By and by, my bandage had become an eyesore that people didn’t miss. It is as if I was showcasing my injury. How could I tell them that the wrist has several delicate, small joints, making it flexible and allowing them to move the hand in different ways? If injured, nature has a defence mechanism to heal, and the duration may depend on the type of injury. I switched to a wrist forearm splint to keep from wrong bending and jerking, as the doctor suggested, until I was confident enough to do away with it.</p>.<p class="bodytext">It was harder to bear the suggestions, questions, and looks than the wound itself. If only we learned to express our concern for others with empathy, love, and genuine care...</p>
<p class="bodytext">Accidents are not intentional. Obviously, nobody invites trouble, knowing full well that it ends up in pain, wretchedness, and grief. Recently, I met with an accident: I slipped in the bathroom and injured my wrist. The very next moment, my hand inflated fourfold, and the pain was unbearable. Adding to my woes was the time: this happened at my niece’s marriage in Salem. The marriage hall was full of my close relatives, friends, and other guests.</p>.<p class="bodytext">As soon as they heard I was injured, they started pouring in to inquire about my well-being. The pain was unfathomable; as a result, I was sweating profusely, creating further panic. Then a flood of suggestions and advice started. Some said this must be multiple fractures. Others were more optimistic, concluding it to be just a sprain. Likewise, several people diagnosed my condition, each with their own experience and knowledge. Suggestions were in umpteen, but solutions none.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Then my brother-in-law, a practicing lawyer in Salem with a wide social network, jumped out from amidst the pool of guests, seeming to me like a hero of a Hindi film with a definite solution, and took me to a practicing orthopaedic doctor from Puttur. I was sceptical, but I abided by his confidence in the doctor and followed. At first appearance, I thought the doctor to be a quack when I saw him in dhoti and net banian. He made me sit comfortably on a chair and pulled my wrist. I screamed on top of my voice, and I thought my wrist was dismembered from my hand to repair it and refit. When he pressed the joint with his thumb again, I realised the hand was still intact. After a course of this procedure, he applied some grinded leaves with turmeric and egg white and wrapped the hand with a cloth bandage.</p>.<p class="bodytext">As the ‘operation’ concluded, I heaved a sigh of relief.</p>.<p class="bodytext">What followed was worse. Facing people with the bandage was an experience by itself. Every person I met had a suggestion and a slew of queries. The most common of the questions was how it happened. Did they expect an ‘action replay?’. I couldn’t tell. But I said I slipped and fell in the bathroom. The next suggestion was, “You have to be careful! See who is suffering now?” Literally, I bit my tooth, swallowed hard, and smiled. Others declared these Puttur doctors to be quacks. “You shouldn’t have taken a risk. The best are allopathic orthopaedics for fast healing.”</p>.<p class="bodytext">The flow of suggestions and advice was unrelenting. By and by, my bandage had become an eyesore that people didn’t miss. It is as if I was showcasing my injury. How could I tell them that the wrist has several delicate, small joints, making it flexible and allowing them to move the hand in different ways? If injured, nature has a defence mechanism to heal, and the duration may depend on the type of injury. I switched to a wrist forearm splint to keep from wrong bending and jerking, as the doctor suggested, until I was confident enough to do away with it.</p>.<p class="bodytext">It was harder to bear the suggestions, questions, and looks than the wound itself. If only we learned to express our concern for others with empathy, love, and genuine care...</p>