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Your Body Loves You More Than Yourself
Literature你的身体,比你更爱你自己
(us) Michelle Harper
Here are 12 stories about our bodies. The human body has a protective mechanism. Your body, every cell in your body, is trying its best to protect your life and health. Michelle Harper is a female emergency department doctor who has worked in the emergency department for more than ten years. She faces high-risk emergencies every day, and has also seen how powerful the human body is in its ability to repair and protect itself: the girl who had an epileptic seizure had another truth hidden behind the bleeding liver; the skull was hit by a bullet. The only sound a man could make was "Save me! Mom"; the female soldier deliberately concealed being sexually assaulted during service, but her body left traces of abortion; the old man had no pulse or heartbeat, but he resumed breathing 19 minutes later... From a corner of the emergency room, we get a glimpse of society and the true meaning of life. Full of empathy, Harper witnessed from story after story: Doctors play a very important role in the treatment of patients, but it is the patient's own body and will that really play the role of bringing life back to life. In the process of helping patients establish an optimistic mood, the trauma that the doctor did not want to mention was slowly healed. Harper put this two-way healing into writing, telling us how to listen to and talk to the body, and truly learn to love ourselves.
Here are 12 stories about our bodies. The human body has a protective mechanism. Your body, every cell in your body, is trying its best to protect your life and health. Michelle Harper is a female emergency department doctor who has worked in the emergency department for more than ten years. She faces high-risk emergencies every day, and has also seen how powerful the human body is in its ability to repair and protect itself: the girl who had an epileptic seizure had another truth hidden behind the bleeding liver; the skull was hit by a bullet. The only sound a man could make was "Save me! Mom"; the female soldier deliberately concealed being sexually assaulted during service, but her body left traces of abortion; the old man had no pulse or heartbeat, but he resumed breathing 19 minutes later... From a corner of the emergency room, we get a glimpse of society and the true meaning of life. Full of empathy, Harper witnessed from story after story: Doctors play a very important role in the treatment of patients, but it is the patient's own body and will that really play the role of bringing life back to life. In the process of helping patients establish an optimistic mood, the trauma that the doctor did not want to mention was slowly healed. Harper put this two-way healing into writing, telling us how to listen to and talk to the body, and truly learn to love ourselves.