Karthik V

1.3K posts

Karthik V

Karthik V

@Docvk2

Thoracic surgery, baby dad, he/him/his

Tata Memorial hospital, Mumbai Katılım Mayıs 2021
249 Takip Edilen187 Takipçiler
Karthik V retweetledi
The Disruptor
The Disruptor@Disrupttor·
There’s a man in my office who hasn’t been promoted in 6 years. He arrives before everyone. Leaves after everyone. Knows the company’s systems better than the people who built them. When something breaks at 2am, they call him. His name is on the bottom of reports that directors present to the board. He doesn’t complain. He says he’s just “not political.” Last week, a 26-year-old joined us. MBA. Firm handshake. Calls the MD by his first name. Within 3 months, he’s already sitting in meetings my colleague has never been invited to. I watched my colleague train him. Smiled the whole time. Answered every question. Shared shortcuts it took him years to figure out. Afterwards I asked him, don’t you feel cheated? He looked at me for a long moment. “I used to. But I realized something. I’ve been loyal to a company. Not a purpose. Those are not the same thing.” He resigned two weeks later. Took everything he knew with him. Started something of his own. The MD sent a company-wide email. Called it “a great loss to the team.” Eleven years of emails. And that was the first one that mentioned his name. The system will celebrate your exit more than it ever celebrated your presence. Stop waiting to be seen. Build something that sees you if you’re not appreciated where you are.
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Alvin Foo
Alvin Foo@alvinfoo·
A violinist played for 45 minutes in the Washington D.C. subway. Of the 1,097 people who passed by, seven stopped to listen to him, and one recognized him. He collected $32.17 in tips from 27 passersby (excluding $20 from the one who recognized him). Only one person knew this, but the violinist was Joshua Bell, one of the best musicians in the world. In that subway, Joshua played one of the most intricate pieces ever written with a violin worth 3.5 million dollars. Two days before he played in the subway, Joshua Bell sold out a Boston theatre, and the seats averaged about $100. The experiment proved that the extraordinary in an ordinary environment does not shine and is so often overlooked and undervalued. There are brilliantly talented people everywhere who aren’t receiving the recognition and reward they deserve. But once they arm themselves with value and confidence and remove themselves from an environment that isn’t serving them, they thrive and grow. Your gut is telling you something. Listen to it if it’s telling you where you are isn’t enough! Go where you are appreciated and valued. Know Your Worth. Credit : @foundconsciousness via IG
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💗
💗@ma1ybe·
my classmate in med school studies for seven hours every evening and exercises daily. I used to ask him how did he manage it & he said, "I'm very disciplined". I met his wife yesterday, she told me how she cooked him three fresh meals daily, mowed their lawn, ran all errands, cleaned the house weekly, and handled all social plans. It made me wonder how many times "discipline" means a woman doing all of the other essential work that keeps a life going
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💗@ma1ybe·
My sister lives alone in an apartment near her university. She takes the long way home every night. Once, a man followed her through the shortcut alley and told her no one would come to save her. She keeps her keys between her fingers when she walks. Unlocks her car from a distance. Locks the doors immediately. She runs without headphones so she can hear footsteps. In parking garages, she checks reflections and the back seat before getting in. She shares ride details every time she takes a taxi. She usually shares a ride cause being alone feels like a risk. She lies about where she lives. Never posts her location in real time. Delivery drivers don’t get her real name. A light stays on when she gets home late. By her door sits a pair of men’s sneakers that don’t belong to anyone. This is the WORLD we are living in where a woman have to go above and beyond to just SURVIVE! Don't try to tell me men have it easier than women.
zek@Azziielle

Hit me with the harshest reality truth.

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Karthik V
Karthik V@Docvk2·
@KamathGurudutt Many a times, hospital food is prepared by the kitchen in the hospital which aims to provide simple clean meals for patients in the process of recovery and hospital restaurant is outsourced. I would always rate the hospital kitchens that I've worked very high.
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Guru
Guru@KamathGurudutt·
Karuna Hospital in Borivali West has a good Beetroot Cutlet. Quality has gone down these days, but it is still quite decent at a decent price. Wish restaurants could serve food like hospitals and hospitals could serve food like restaurants. My friend in USA used to send her hospital food photos. Very exotic dishes. Looked like 5-star hotel food!
Singh Varun@singhvarun

We have been so accustomed to relate hospitals with tasteless food that this comes as a surprise. Also how is a hospital running a restaurant?

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AI Panda
AI Panda@AIPandaX·
I told my therapist: “I’m not suicidal… but I’m tired in a way that scares me.” She didn’t brush it off. She didn’t say “everyone gets tired.” She didn’t tell me to think positive. She said softly:
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Akanksha Badaya 🎨
Akanksha Badaya 🎨@art_lover_09·
My nephew who is 5 got lost at the Singapore Airport for two hours. The only reason he’s safe is because he knew his parents' phone number by heart. He told a stranger, who video called them immediately. Please, teach your kids your number. It’s a lifesaver.
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Sabita Jiwnani
Sabita Jiwnani@drsabita·
The #ESOPEC trial reignited the debate in resectable #esophageal adenocarcinoma. #FLOT vs #CROSS. 66 vs 37 months median OS. Practice-changing? Or a result that needs careful interpretation? Four editorials in @DOTEsophagus explore the implications.
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Karthik V
Karthik V@Docvk2·
Entertaining sunday.
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Karthik V
Karthik V@Docvk2·
Done and dusted! 1 bad decision at a time.
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Pramesh CS
Pramesh CS@cspramesh·
Truly an honour to be recognised alongside people I've admired deeply in cancer control globally. oncodaily.com/community/100-… Also a reminder that we have miles to go towards equity in cancer care. @CancerGridIndia Access to quality healthcare should be a right, not a privilege.
OncoDaily@oncodaily

The 100 Most Influential People in Oncology in 2025 oncodaily.com/100/100-most-i… The 100 Most Influential People in Oncology in 2025 recognizes the changemakers in cancer care who have helped shape current practice in oncology and continue to drive innovation and research towards better outcomes, advocacy, philanthropy, leadership and education. #oncology #100InfluentialPeopleinOncology #OncoDaily #OncoDaily100 #cancer @OncoDailyIO @OncoDailyGI @OncoDailyBio @CancerWorldmag

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Divya
Divya@DivyaOYR·
Alright runners, what’s the goal for 2026? #runchat
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Zeno
Zeno@1729isthebest·
I posted something about plum cakes on WhatsApp and bang, I get an ad on Instagram!!!!! Dei zuck!!
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Chirag Barjatya
Chirag Barjatya@chiragbarjatya·
The Elevator Button Theory The elevator button is a beautifully simple test of patience and common sense. Pressing it once is enough. The light comes on. The elevator knows you exist. Technology has acknowledged you. Congratulations. Yet somehow, many people turn into professional button mashers. They keep pressing it repeatedly like the elevator is powered by annoyance. As if the building will say, “Wow, this guy is serious, better hurry.” Not pressing it again is the objectively correct thing to do. It requires restraint. It requires trust. It requires accepting the tragic reality that the universe does not bend to your frantic tapping. Nobody will punish you for pressing it ten times. Nobody will punish you for pressing down button to call the elevator down. There is no fine. No police case. No CCTV man laughing at you. You gain absolutely nothing by doing it. Except maybe a workout for your index finger. That is why the elevator is a perfect character test. Do you press once and wait like a rational adult? Or do you keep smashing the button like a toddler trying to skip an ad on YouTube?
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Crazy Vibes
Crazy Vibes@CrazyVibes_1·
My son's been living in my basement since his divorce. Thirty-two years old, sleeping on a pullout couch, avoiding eye contact at dinner. For six months I watched him shrink into himself, this man I raised to be confident becoming someone I barely recognized. Then last month he asked if he could redo my office floor. Said he needed a project, needed his hands busy. I said yes even though the floor was fine, even though I knew this wasn't really about flooring. We bought plywood sheets and he cut them into squares in the driveway, measured everything twice. Then he pulled out a propane torch and started burning patterns into the wood. Just stood there with fire in his hands creating these wild grain patterns, each piece different. I asked what he was doing and he said, “making something ugly beautiful.” We both knew he wasn't talking about the floor. It took us two weeks, working every evening. He found a special sealant online from someone who does custom wood finishing and talked to them for an hour about techniques. He started buying other woodworking supplies online too, planning his next project before we even finished this one. The floor's not perfect. Some squares are darker than others, the lines don't all match up. But when the light comes through that window it looks like water, like movement, like proof that burned things can still be beautiful. He moved out last weekend. Got his own apartment—small, but his. Took some of the extra wood squares to practice making furniture. Called me yesterday to say he's starting his own refinishing business. My office floor is his first portfolio piece, the evidence that sometimes you have to burn everything down before you can build it back better. Credit - Emilia Berry
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Celina 52 Truck Stop
Celina 52 Truck Stop@celinatruckstop·
Our long-time customer Pat recently lost Linda, his wife of 55 years, so we've been supporting him in every way we can. Today Pat is healing by lying down in the store while listening to Linkin Park at max volume. The chip and cooler aisles will have limited accessibility until he completes the 7 stages of grief. In the end, it doesn't even matter. #RIPLinda
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Agustin Ibañez
Agustin Ibañez@AgustinMIbanez·
Shame is a powerful emotion rooted in secrecy, often making us feel damaged and unworthy. Its impact spans psychological, neurocognitive, sociocultural and institutional domains. At @TheBJPsych editorial (doi.org/10.1192/bjp.20…), we reframe harmful shame as a health target requiring specific interventions. @ProfLawlor @SandraBez9 @nanosanta
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Karthik V
Karthik V@Docvk2·
More power.
Nidheesh M K@mknid

Dileep walked free today. The legal case will continue. But let’s take a moment to sink this day. These eight years ushered in a cultural reset that cannot be reversed by any court decision. The legal case itself made abstractions like patriarchy and power structures suddenly acquire physical weight, became things you could point to, document, fight in a courtroom. But the case’s true significance lies in how it equipped a Malayali to hold powerful men accountable, how male impunity became slightly less absolute, how silence became slightly less obligatory. When the survivor filed her complaint on that February night in 2017, she couldn’t have known she was tipping the first domino in a sequence that would topple structures standing for decades. The crime itself—abduction and sexual assault in a moving car, recorded by the perpetrator—was horrific enough. But the complaint’s filing set off a chain reaction that would dismantle the Malayalam film industry’s carefully maintained architecture of silence. Something changed in how Malayalis talk about gender and cinema. Before this case, discussions of “casting couch” culture existed in whispered rumors, blind items, and knowing jokes. After 2017, these conversations moved to op-eds in major newspapers, prime-time news debates, social media discourse with real names attached. Young women I’ve interviewed for various stories now reference post-actress assault case as a temporal marker, a before-and-after in their consciousness about gender dynamics in Kerala. They can’t point to what changed exactly, but they know something did. Kerala’s film industry long maintained a self-image as somehow more progressive, more artistic, less crass than Bollywood or South Indian commercial cinema. The WCC’s formation and the testimonies that emerged shattered this exceptionalism. Malayalam cinema was revealed to be just as patriarchal, just as structurally violent toward women, just as invested in protecting powerful men. This loss of innocence punctured collective myth-making. The survivor’s decision to continue her career, to be photographed smiling at events, to do romantic scenes, challenged Kerala’s narrow conception of how assault survivors should behave. She didn’t subscribe to visible suffering, withdrawal from public life or performance of permanent trauma. Her refusal of that script didn’t just help her personally; it expanded imaginative space for other survivors. The idea that you can be assaulted and still be sexual, ambitious, glamorous, professionally successful. This cognitive shift ripples outward in ways impossible to quantify. The Women in Cinema Collective didn’t exist before May 2017. Now it does with office space, regular meetings, official spokespeople, institutional memory. You can attend their press conferences, read their statements, trace their interventions. The Hema Committee Report didn’t exist before 2017. Now there’s a 235-page government document sitting in archives, cited in academic papers, referenced in parliamentary debates. 30+ FIRs were filed. A.M.M.A’s entire leadership went into resignation, leaving a vacuum that forces institutional restructuring. These are concrete institutional realities that exist independently of how anyone feels about today’s verdict. Then there are things you can feel but can’t put a finger on. On film sets, a moment of calculation exists now before certain jokes get told, before certain demands get made, before power gets exercised in certain ways. It’s not that harassment stopped. It’s not that power dynamics disappeared. It’s that there’s a new variable in the risk calculation: Could this get documented in ways that damage me even if I’m never convicted?

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