✧ Check Out Our Website Here ✧

✨   Follow @psych2go For More! ✨
✨   Follow @psych2go For More! ✨
✨   Follow @psych2go For More! ✨
✨   Follow @psych2go For More! ✨

✨   Follow @psych2go for more! ✨

✧ Check out our website here ✧

More Posts from Tonimichelleluttrell and Others

6 years ago

“I have this strange feeling that I’m not myself anymore. It’s hard to put into words, but I guess it’s like I was fast asleep, and someone came, disassembled me, and hurriedly put me back together again. That sort of feeling.”

— Haruki Murakami (via purplebuddhaquotes)


Tags
5 years ago
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,
Mindfulness Has Been Proven To Have Many Personal And Professional Benefits, Including Discipline, Tolerance,

Mindfulness has been proven to have many personal and professional benefits, including discipline, tolerance, calmness, and mental clarity. In a professional sense, mindful thinking and practice has been proven to lead to better productivity and workplace satisfaction. Our Mindfulness program, presented in partnership with the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, provides a secularized approach to the traditional Buddhist practice. Designed in such a way that it can be applied to many different areas of professional and personal life, our courses are taught by instructors who have a wide range and depth of experience in a variety of disciplines.  

The professional Tai Chi Swords on: http://www.icnbuys.com/tai-chi-swords.

6 years ago
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​
For More Posts Like These, Go To @mypsychology​

For more posts like these, go to @mypsychology​

7 years ago

I'm listening to Beautiful Scars (feat. PnB Rock) by Kevin Gates on Pandora


Tags
6 years ago

You’re not JUST a ...

A long time ago before I studied medicine, before even biomedicine, I used to volunteer in hospital. It was scary at first; most teenagers are out there having a life, meanwhile you’re wandering around on wards. At first, I was worried I would get in the way. I mean, important stuff happens in hospital, right? There are lots of busy doctors and nurses rushing around and doing important things. Things that actually matter to patient care. I didn’t want to get in their way. I was even worried I’d trip up an important cable or get in the way of a ward round or something! As volunteers we could do all sorts of little jobs that other people weren’t being paid to do. We would go around with the library trolley or shop trolley. Or help re-stock gloves, hand gel and things like that on the wards. We directed lost visitors around the site. We helped with lunches. If you were unlucky, you’d be asked to do something less exciting like stuff envelopes. But sometimes, after a tiring week of revision, it was actually a nice break. I challenged myself to be as efficient at the repetitive tasks as I could be; they usually ran out of tasks sooner than expected! Pretty often, we got to chat with patients, which I really enjoyed. I got to know a lot of the ward sisters, and all the staff were really welcoming and pleasant. I had little interaction with the doctors, though they were always polite and friendly when I was selling the poor juniors snacks from the shop trolley, which must have been a lifesaver in itself! I didn’t interact with the medical students.  It never occurred to me to ask them questions about medicine; the mere thought of approaching anybody who was somebody was terrifying. I didn’t think what I did was meaningless, but I did feel it wasn’t that special. It was just all I could do at the time. And that was enough for me. When I was a student, I still felt like an outsider in hospital. It takes all your guts to wander into a strange ward or an operating theatre armed with nothing more than your ID badge and a clinical handbook of medicine, and say ‘I’m… I’m the medical student?’ when they ask you who you are. To which they usually reply ‘Eh? I thought they were coming next week…’.  I can’t count the number of times I uttered the words ‘I’m just a medical student’. Because I couldn’t diagnose or treat or prescribe, it was easy to sometimes feel that whilst we were learning, we weren’t really doing anything to help. I remember our doctor tutors frequently telling us ‘you’re not just a medical student.’. It was pretty nice that they cared, but it didn’t stop us apologising constantly. It’s not that easy to change how you feel, after all. At some point, I resolved to stop using those words. And if I remember correctly, I mostly succeeded. But I only really gave them up when I had to: when those things actually became my job. The further along we got, the more we wanted to learn how to do everything, and the more we devoted ourselves to mopping up any jobs we could help with. I loved to devote time to talking to patients; I couldn’t ‘clerk’ as a student without being drawn into long rambling conversations. I didn’t feel as invisible as when I was a volunteer, but you feel so constrained by what you can’t do that it’s still easy to overlook what you can. Especially when you first start on the wards. But now, as a doctor, I can really appreciate that what I did back then wasn’t really insignificant at all. Not by a long shot. Because now, more than ever, I have to rely on every other person to do all the things I can’t do. Back when I was doing these things, I thought they weren’t that important because anyone can do them. Now I realise that although anyone can do them, most people in hospital can’t. Because there are so many other things that need doing. So many.  When there aren’t gloves anywhere, and there is no hand gel in any of the dispensers, it makes doing my job safely that little bit harder. When the proformas aren’t in place or cupboards aren’t stocked or the ward is a mess, life is a little harder. When the OR isn’t cleaned, it takes longer for the next operation to happen. When my patients are lonely, it makes their stay in hospital more painful than it should be. When there’s nobody there who can do bloods or a cannula or even just fill out some blood forms, we can become swamped in lots of little tasks. Add all these little things up, and you’ve got some pretty stressed doctors and nurses! To anybody out there who feels insignificant because they’re ‘just’ helping with the little tasks; thank you. We couldn’t do it without you.

6 years ago

““You don’t need water to feel like you’re drowning, do you?””

—  Jodi Picoult (via naturaekos)

6 years ago

Hell Explained By A Chemistry Student

5 years ago
Did You Know?
Did You Know?
Did You Know?
Did You Know?
Did You Know?
Did You Know?
Did You Know?
Did You Know?
Did You Know?
Did You Know?

Did You Know?

The most professional Feiyue shoes Australia on http://www.icnbuys.com/feiyue-shoes-australia.

7 years ago
No Love Like Self Love.
No Love Like Self Love.

No Love like Self Love.

6 years ago
My medical education has been a long journey to this point -- a journey filled with many obstacles and detours resulting in moments of self-reflection and personal growth. One of the most important detours on my journey led to me being relocated to Riverside University Health System (RUHS) for a longitudinal care assignment.

“Now that I am in my third year of medical school, I have started to see how health care disparities can have significant impacts on the management and prevention of disease. It is my hope that as the culture of medicine changes ever so slowly more physicians will be aware of the disparities and develop cultural humility to better serve their patient populations.”

An article on health disparities in medicine, by Stephanie Dreikorn at University of California, Riverside School of Medicine

  • eternalwriter
    eternalwriter reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • eternalwriter
    eternalwriter liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • thelibrarianxhes
    thelibrarianxhes reblogged this · 6 months ago
  • tony-perfect
    tony-perfect liked this · 9 months ago
  • simseez
    simseez liked this · 9 months ago
  • sterlimg203
    sterlimg203 reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • darkness32
    darkness32 liked this · 9 months ago
  • luvmesumme
    luvmesumme reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • myprincerebel
    myprincerebel liked this · 9 months ago
  • myprincerebel
    myprincerebel reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • realjaysumlin
    realjaysumlin reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • realjaysumlin
    realjaysumlin liked this · 9 months ago
  • artcollectorninja
    artcollectorninja reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • watkins731-blog1
    watkins731-blog1 liked this · 10 months ago
  • l0ve-123
    l0ve-123 liked this · 1 year ago
  • passafrisk
    passafrisk liked this · 1 year ago
  • mulrewanbeefsnick
    mulrewanbeefsnick liked this · 1 year ago
  • rentvelocanca
    rentvelocanca liked this · 1 year ago
  • lareinedefer
    lareinedefer reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • nine85smoky
    nine85smoky reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • nine85smoky
    nine85smoky liked this · 2 years ago
  • ch46avi
    ch46avi liked this · 2 years ago

74 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags