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Blog: Monday Artday (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Time Machine, Three Trips: Where Would You Go? (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: hospital, curtains, privacy, service, nurse, Offbeat, complaint, supervisor, Add a tag
You go to the hospital, lets say the emergency room they have you laying on a narrow bed, your barely dressed and afraid to move; and people are coming in and out like it is the local supermarket. You have the right for privacy and you should demand it.
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The worst is when they are not too sure why your have hives and a fever, they seem to bring in several medical students and now they are discussing your situation. WHY!
After they leave the curtained area, you ask the person with you, or the nurse why is it necessary that so many people have to come parading around you. If told that this is a teaching hospital, inform them that you don’t recall signing anything that said you could be put on display. You want to be diagnosed, cured and sent home!
How about the pregnant woman, who goes into labor and constantly being checked on, by a different person every hour; or they look in through the little square glass window. Where is your right to privacy? The longer your labor the more faces you will see.
So the next time you find yourself staying in a hospital, let them know how you feel; it is your right to have privacy. It does not matter if you’re in the Emergency Room, Recovery Room, or you have been admitted and people just wonder in and out. If after speaking the staff, ask for a supervisor; and voice how you feel.
Some people are afraid to complain, but you should not; others will wait until they are home to complain, as not to be treated rudely during your stay. If it is your intention to file a complaint after you are discharged, make sure you take down names, along with the date and shift that they worked.
Service is very important, and if your feel that your personal privacy was invaded; you have the right to let the Board of Directors and supervisor know!
Add a CommentBlog: Time Machine, Three Trips: Where Would You Go? (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: language, words, english, trendy, Trend, rudeness, swearing, Offbeat, swear, complaint, crudity, overuse, “f-bomb”, “five words”, “foul language”, “freedom of speech”, Add a tag
I don’t correct folk on their grammar – I make enough mistakes of my own, and I am not exactly quoting any individual – but one of a number I have heard or talked with, rather than a specific person; but – and you had to see this but hanging out a mile away – the point was, we were talking about one word in particular. I tend not to use it and won’t use it here. However I think I can let you know just what word it is by replacing it in the following paragraph with the the words “fire truck”:
Fire truck! The fire trucking fire truck at the fire trucking movies said the fire trucking show was fire trucking sold out, so we fire trucking have to fire trucking find something to fire trucking do for a fire trucking couple of fire trucking hours. Fire truck! Let’s fire trucking go to the fire trucking Mcfire truckingD’s for a fire trucking burger while we fire trucking eat. I’m fire trucking starved. Fire truck!
That paragraph wasn’t said in anger. Just conversation, one friend to their peers. If you haven’t figured it out, “fire truck” actually contains the word in question and I am not talking about “fire” or “truck” but it does end in “ck” and start with “f”
The paragraph translates into more standard English as:
The woman at the movies said the show was sold out, so we have to find something to do for a couple of hours. Let’s go to the McD’s for a burger while we eat. I’m starved.
I guess I can agree that they are only words, but I wonder that they don’t mean anything? What I am meaning is, what is the point of saying them if they don’t mean anything? If the point was to shock – say an offensive word too often and it stops having shock value. If the point was to mark yourself as an individual – too many people use that word, you are one of the crowd.
So, perhaps it is to mark yourself as one of the crowd and someone who just wants to fit in. It is extra work to type as you can tell by the extra length to the paragraph and you could equate it to the illumination the monks added to the hand calligraphed books of bygone ages – except that it is the same design mouth punched into the sentences. It is more like dotting all the “i”s with hearts or sticking stars on the paper – they all look the same.
Getting back to it though… if, as was said, it doesn’t mean anything. If the swearing is so unimportant, then why can’t they “not swear” at certain times? I am meaning in respect to people for whom it might have meaning to?
If it is so unimportant that I should not complain about it – why is is so very important that it has to be done?
What you do say does mean something. It might not mean what you think. “Fire truck” no longer shocks, it no longer makes you look cool or trendy, it no longer really adds any emphasis. nearly any word used now doesn’t because nearly any word used becomes so quickly overused and abused.
In some places you “need” the Internet to keep up with what the current word is. You might as well fire trucking make up your own and even that won’t work long because it is fire trucking how you end up using it that marks it fire trucking out. Why not just use words and English to say what you want? Shakespeare did use foul language in his works, but he also created it and was creative about it. Tell someone they are a ray of dung shine and be dung with it!
Add a CommentBlog: Time Machine, Three Trips: Where Would You Go? (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: language, words, english, trendy, Trend, rudeness, swearing, Offbeat, swear, complaint, crudity, overuse, “f-bomb”, “five words”, “foul language”, “freedom of speech”, Add a tag
I don’t correct folk on their grammar – I make enough mistakes of my own, and I am not exactly quoting any individual – but one of a number I have heard or talked with, rather than a specific person; but – and you had to see this but hanging out a mile away – the point was, we were talking about one word in particular. I tend not to use it and won’t use it here. However I think I can let you know just what word it is by replacing it in the following paragraph with the the words “fire truck”:
Fire truck! The fire trucking fire truck at the fire trucking movies said the fire trucking show was fire trucking sold out, so we fire trucking have to fire trucking find something to fire trucking do for a fire trucking couple of fire trucking hours. Fire truck! Let’s fire trucking go to the fire trucking Mcfire truckingD’s for a fire trucking burger while we fire trucking eat. I’m fire trucking starved. Fire truck!
That paragraph wasn’t said in anger. Just conversation, one friend to their peers. If you haven’t figured it out, “fire truck” actually contains the word in question and I am not talking about “fire” or “truck” but it does end in “ck” and start with “f”
The paragraph translates into more standard English as:
The woman at the movies said the show was sold out, so we have to find something to do for a couple of hours. Let’s go to the McD’s for a burger while we eat. I’m starved.
I guess I can agree that they are only words, but I wonder that they don’t mean anything? What I am meaning is, what is the point of saying them if they don’t mean anything? If the point was to shock – say an offensive word too often and it stops having shock value. If the point was to mark yourself as an individual – too many people use that word, you are one of the crowd.
So, perhaps it is to mark yourself as one of the crowd and someone who just wants to fit in. It is extra work to type as you can tell by the extra length to the paragraph and you could equate it to the illumination the monks added to the hand calligraphed books of bygone ages – except that it is the same design mouth punched into the sentences. It is more like dotting all the “i”s with hearts or sticking stars on the paper – they all look the same.
Getting back to it though… if, as was said, it doesn’t mean anything. If the swearing is so unimportant, then why can’t they “not swear” at certain times? I am meaning in respect to people for whom it might have meaning to?
If it is so unimportant that I should not complain about it – why is is so very important that it has to be done?
What you do say does mean something. It might not mean what you think. “Fire truck” no longer shocks, it no longer makes you look cool or trendy, it no longer really adds any emphasis. nearly any word used now doesn’t because nearly any word used becomes so quickly overused and abused.
In some places you “need” the Internet to keep up with what the current word is. You might as well fire trucking make up your own and even that won’t work long because it is fire trucking how you end up using it that marks it fire trucking out. Why not just use words and English to say what you want? Shakespeare did use foul language in his works, but he also created it and was creative about it. Tell someone they are a ray of dung shine and be dung with it!
Add a Comment
loved this post Josh.
友誼能增進快樂,減少痛苦............................................................