BIG RAJJ
9.4K posts

BIG RAJJ
@BiggRaj
If it is to be, it is up to me.
Earth Katılım Mayıs 2022
905 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
BIG RAJJ retweetledi
BIG RAJJ retweetledi
BIG RAJJ retweetledi
BIG RAJJ retweetledi

Because we are in the glorious month of Ramadan, I am giving away:
✅ An apple IPad
✅ Branded Merch (3 winners)
All you have to do is download this app here app.madeenahbooks.com/eidgiveaway?re…
The app is called Madeenah books. It teaches Arabic using the world-famous Madinah university curriculum
- interactive quizzes
- 500+ vocabulary flashcards
- Grammar exercises
It’s free to download. No credit card required
How to win the giveaway:
✅ download madeenah books (iOS & android)
✅ create a free account
✅ follow @madeenahbooks on IG + tiktok
✅ RT this thread with your favorite merch color and tag your friends who you want to Twinkie together
Winners will be announced on March 22nd
Download the app here app.madeenahbooks.com/eidgiveaway?re…
English

Assalamu’alaykum
Please vote for my sister to help her get this scholarship to seek more islamic knowledge. Here’s the link and it takes less than 30 seconds.
Jazakumullahu khyran!!
ramadan.amauacademy.com/story/storyofu…
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BIG RAJJ retweetledi
BIG RAJJ retweetledi

@BiggRaj Alright toh Allah ya taimaka.
Ibada alhamdulillah.
Indonesia


@AbRaheemmuhd My boss!
I got caught up with some physical activities but I'll be back soon insha'Allah
Ya Ibadah?
English

@Hafaz_the_1st Lmao. You should be tired already!
I'm winning at least two trophies this season insha'Allah.
English

@BiggRaj Today is a day for you, Tuesday might be a day for me😂
Where you hide bro?
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BIG RAJJ retweetledi

6 years for a 4-year course 😂 but Glory to God 🎓
I’m officially a graduate of ABU 🎓
Second Class in Agricultural Economics (Faculty of Agriculture). 🌾📚
The journey wasn’t easy, but it was worth it, grateful for growth, lessons, and grace. 💚
#ABUConvocation2026 #ABUGraduate

English
BIG RAJJ retweetledi
BIG RAJJ retweetledi

In medical school, we are taught a golden rule: "When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras." It is a reminder to look for the common explanation before the exotic one. But after decades in cardiology, I’ve learned that if a patient is still suffering after the "horses" have been ruled out, a doctor must have the courage—and the curiosity—to go hunting for the zebra.
Sarah was a thirty-four-year-old marathon runner and a devoted mother who came to me after six months of being told she was "fine." She had been bounced from one specialist to another, each one pointing to her normal EKG and standard blood tests as proof that her crushing fatigue and racing heart were simply the result of "new mom stress." By the time she reached my office, she didn't just look tired; she looked invisible, as if the medical system had stopped seeing the woman and only saw the data.
Instead of re-reading the normal test results that had already failed her, I asked Sarah to walk me through her life. We talked about her training and her family, eventually landing on a backpacking trip she took to the Mendoza province of rural Argentina. She described staying in a charming, rustic cottage made of sun-dried mud bricks. She mentioned waking up one morning with a strangely swollen, purple eyelid that she assumed was a simple spider bite.
As she spoke, a memory surfaced from a biography I had read years ago about Charles Darwin. Most people know Darwin for his theories on evolution, but medical historians have long puzzled over the mysterious, debilitating illness that plagued him for decades after he returned from his voyage on the HMS Beagle. Darwin had written in his journals about being bitten by the "great black bug of the Pampas" while sleeping in mud-walled huts in South America. He spent the rest of his life suffering from heart palpitations and exhaustion that the Victorian doctors of his time could never explain.
I realized then that Sarah wasn't suffering from stress; she was likely hosting the same "silent killer" that may have haunted Darwin: Chagas Disease.
The "Kissing Bug" lives in the cracks of those mud-brick walls. It bites its victims—often near the eyes or mouth—while they sleep, passing a parasite called Trypanosoma cruzi into the blood. The danger of Chagas is that the initial symptoms disappear quickly, but the parasite can hide in the body for years, slowly weaving itself into the muscle and electrical "wiring" of the heart.
To confirm this, I moved beyond the standard tests. I ordered a specialized "Strain Rate" ultrasound, which doesn't just look at whether the heart is pumping, but at how the individual muscle fibers are stretching. We saw that while her heart looked strong to the naked eye, the fibers were "stuttering," a sign of early parasite-induced scarring. A specific blood test for the parasite's antibodies confirmed the diagnosis.
Treatment required a difficult, sixty-day course of anti-parasitic medication to stop the infection, paired with a protective heart regimen to keep her electrical system stable while the inflammation settled. Because we caught it before her heart was physically damaged or enlarged, the recovery was a success.
Months later, Sarah returned to my office, her vibrant energy restored. She brought me a leather-bound copy of The Voyage of the Beagle with a note tucked inside. She wrote that while other doctors had looked at her charts, I had looked at her. This case remains a vital reminder for my memoir: in a world of high-tech scans and AI, the most sophisticated diagnostic tool we possess is still the human story. When we truly listen, we don't just find the disease—we find the patient.
Good morning.
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BIG RAJJ retweetledi
BIG RAJJ retweetledi

I came late to the party.
7 years for a 5-year course😅, but Alhamdulillah 🎓
I’m officially a graduate of ABU, finishing with a Second Class Upper in Agricultural Economics (Faculty of Agriculture).
Grateful for the journey.
#ABUConvocation2026



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