Friday, December 24, 2021

Happy Christmas and New Year- Blog admins

Greetings and best wishes for Christmas and the New Year.

Let us hope that 2022 will be a better year for all of us. Lucky and I as Blog Admins make this wish thinking of all our Batch mates, their spouses and families.

COVID has been a dampener and remains so but we must never lose hope.

Thank you for all those who contributed and commented and a Big Thank you also for the silent majority - we know you are with us.

The poem is mine and the beautiful painting is by Chira.

(Chirasri Jayaweera Bandara)


  

A Christmas dream

Mahendra Gonsalkorale


I dream as I often do
As a special time is due
Christmas builds hope in me
For a World where we are truly free

Free to join hands in caring for our precious abode
Free to be ourselves, yet part of a community
Free not to be classified according to birth, belief or bias
Free to stop searching for a purpose where there is none

Free to love others and be loved
Free to feel the pain of others less fortunate
Free to state our feelings without being judged
Free for our views to be considered dispassionately

Free to receive and understand the views of others
Free to forgive and bear no grudges
Free to let go the burning ember of regret and revenge
Free to be close and respectful to Nature

An interconnected world permeated with respect and love
A veritable Utopia without the need to commit to a Faith,
Judged on action and behaviour, not on empty words
Will my dream come true as a new era dawns?

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Revo Drahaman- A gem in the world of pebbles.

Dr Revelion (Revo) Drahaman - A Gem in a world of pebbles

By Dr Nihal D Amerasekera


 When I think of Revelion Drahaman I am reminded of a famous line from Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night:  “Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon them.” Revo seems to have had them all. 

I first met Revo in 1965 when we were both students at the Faculty of Medicine in Colombo. It was the Swinging Sixties. Memories of amber nectar, tall tales and late nights whizz around my head as I recall those years of long ago. Friendships were made and firmed in the canteen and common room which was the social hub of the Faculty where laughter was endemic. Revo started his training with the first batch of students at Peradeniya and moved to Colombo on a transfer. As our surnames were nearer the beginning of the alphabet, we did most of the clinical work together. Our walks on the long corridors to every corner of the General Hospital in search of patients and knowledge is a memory that has stayed with me. This brought us closer and the friendship lasted a lifetime. 

Our third year (1965) was a particularly difficult one with a plethora of subjects and much to read, retain and recall. Nalin Nanayakkara, Revo and I studied together. We met at each other’s houses. Revo’s parent’s house was in the affluent part of the city in the plush surroundings of Guilford Crescent, Cinnamon Gardens. This splendid house was called “Merdeka” (Freedom in Malay). On arrival we soon got stuck into our books.  When Revo’s mother saw us immersed in our work, took pity on us and sent us cups of tea and cakes. Sometimes those study sessions ended in a delightful lunch. Revo was intelligent, focused and hardworking. 

But it was not all work. We occasionally snatched an evening break.  As students, drinking and socialising took away the stresses and the strains of the heavy workload. There were those memorable and raucous evening booze-ups at the faculty’s Men’s Common Room. The glitz and the glamour of the Colours Night and Block Night Dances at King George’s Hall at Reid Avenue lit up our amorphous yearnings!! On those evenings we twisted and jived the night away in gorgeous company. Revo was ever-present and enjoyed himself thoroughly. During the years in the faculty, he had a rugged and reliable BSA Bantam motorbike. I was a regular pillion rider on this noisy beast weaving through the Colombo traffic. 

He breezed through the difficult examinations at the faculty. Our undergraduate days ended in June 1967. As the sunset on our student days, there was a new dawn of a career in Medicine. Revo did his internship at the General Hospital Badulla and in 1968 he returned to the OPD at Ragama Hospital. We came together again when I moved back to Colombo in 1970. Then our uncertainties loomed large. It was a time of professional and personal insecurity. On an evening, the Health Department Sports Club at Castle Street was our oasis. He was genial company and we spoke about our lives, families and our academic progress. Revo wanted to specialise in ENT surgery. He was a good listener always calm and measured in his delivery. Whenever my life was in turmoil, Revo flattered me with his genuine care and interest in my well-being. I respected his opinion. He often advised patience. His contributions to any discussion were well-thought-out and conveyed with much consideration. Revo was endowed with high moral standards. Although not overtly religious its important tenets were deeply rooted in his psyche. He stood up for his principles, steadfastly. 

I left for England in 1974 and began work in London. By then Revo had proceeded with his surgical training with Dr Victor Benjamin, Consultant Surgeon and was successful in his preliminary FRCS examination in surgery. He too arrived in the UK in the early 1970s. We met up again when he worked at the prestigious Whittington Hospital in London. This hospital is named after the famous 14th-century traveller, Dick Whittington. As we both had busy jobs and difficult professional examinations to overcome our meetings were less frequent. 

After completing the FRCS examination in surgery and the professional training, Revo returned to Sri Lanka in 1976. He was appointed as an ENT Surgeon, General Hospital Colombo. Before long, he formed an efficient and impressive ENT Unit that was the envy of his colleagues. He was an astute clinician, careful and meticulous. Revo was also a technically gifted surgeon. In practice he was a traditionalist and stood by the wisdom of Hippocrates, "primum non nocere" (first, do no harm). His sensitivity to the feelings of his patients made him an outstanding medical professional. They trusted his judgment.  Revo was keen to share his surgical skills and enthusiasm and enjoyed teaching. He trained many young doctors to achieve great things in the speciality, at home and abroad. Revo Drahaman became a leading name in ENT surgery, much admired and well sought after. He had a busy and successful career at the National Hospital. He also worked in several Private Hospitals. Revo is a wonderful, wise and deeply perceptive man. He is modest about his own considerable achievements and scrupulously honest. With his fine bedside manner, professional competence and high ethical principles he handled patients, colleagues, nursing staff and trainees with skill, kindness and unfailing courtesy. 

Despite his busy work schedule, he looked after the medical needs of my family in Colombo. He treated them with his usual respect, warmth and helpful kindness. Revo refused to accept any payment for this enormous favour. I was then a regular visitor to Sri Lanka. On those journeys, we met up unfailingly and caught up with the news of mutual friends. We spoke about our careers and family and put the world to right. There was always time to reminisce and recall the good times gone. On those visits, I remember with fondness his mischief and playfulness and those witty narratives delivered with waving arms and a broad smile, just as he did when we were students. 

Revo comes from Malay aristocracy in Sri Lanka. His father was Dr M.P Drahaman who was a General Practitioner in Slave Island and an appointed Member of Parliament in the late 1950s. He is remembered for his tireless work to improve the lives of the Malay Community devoting much of his time to their welfare and well-being. Dr M.P Drahaman provided support for the Indonesian struggle for Merdeka (freedom) for which he was recognised and honoured by the Indonesian Government. Three of his sons followed him into the medical profession. He passed away in 1963 in Mecca while performing Haj. 

Revo still lives in Cinnamon Gardens with his wife Lareena who is a dental surgeon. The old house has been completely rebuilt. They remain lavish and generous hosts renowned for their Malay feasts. He is an affectionate and attentive father to his son and daughter and is a doting grandfather.

His son Akram has followed in his father’s footsteps to qualify as an ENT Surgeon. Revo’s daughter, Asnita, is a GP and her husband is a Consultant Physician and they live in the UK.

When Revo visited his daughter and son-in-law in the UK they were honoured guests at my home. Those meetings are now precious memories. I have a collection of old Malay music which were popular in Sri Lanka. He loved listening to them after a few glasses of vino. I offered him a CD of the music for him to take back to Sri Lanka. 

Revelion Drahaman dedicated more than 50 years to the medical profession. Work was his pleasure and after retirement, he continued to serve in the private sector. He is a fine product of that great redbrick institution, Royal College Colombo. By his dignity and decency, he brought honour to his school, the profession and his community. This short biography is a testament to the caring and integrity which was evident in everything he did.  Revo has lived a remarkable life. He was ever so humble about his success and never regarded himself as someone special. Despite his privileged upbringing he never lost the common touch. I consider myself so very fortunate to have met him in my journey through life. 

As we age those days of grandeur and glory become a fading memory but we still cherish the friendships and the good times. I wish Revo and Lareena a long and fulfilling retirement. May their onward journey be peaceful. 

“The mind can go in a thousand directions,

but on this beautiful path, I walk in peace.

With each step, the wind blows.

With each step, a flower blooms.”

― Thich Nhat Hanh (Vietnam)

 

 

Friday, December 17, 2021

Douglas Mulgirigama - First Book

Douglas Mulgirigama’s first book

By Mahendra “Speedy” Gonsalkorale 

We take great delight when a Batch mate does something very special. We can be justifiably proud of our Batch which has produced so many distinguished Doctors who have made significant contributions in various parts of the World and especially so of those who have contributed to Sri Lanka.  Our good friend Douglas has done something he can be very proud of. He has written a book in Sinhala aimed at the layperson wishing to get a greater understanding of mental health. His book titled ‘මානසික පීඩනය සහ කාංසාව” (“Mental Stress and Anxiety”) was published in 2019 and following its success, a second is planned for release in 2022. 

Douglas says “I am very proud to be a Sri Lankan and from my young days took great interest in studying the history of Sri Lanka, Sinhala Language and Buddhism. Probably my close contact with the local temple and the monks were influential in this. I also became interested in studying medicine. It was a Buddhist monk in the temple who germinated the seed describing it as a Noble Profession and the enormous merit one could gain by helping others and healing the sick”

Douglas echoes the thoughts of many when he says, “But any of these dreams would not have come true if not for the free Education I received to which I am very grateful and thankful to Sri Lanka”.

His background and aspirations

After graduating, he worked in Sri Lanka for about 6 years before coming to the UK. In the UK, he worked as a consultant psychiatrist for nearly 36 years before retiring.

“My plan was to get back to Sri Lanka. I even bought a piece of land in Kandy and built a house. It took about five years to buy the land and build. With the passing of time, I realised it is not the most practical or sensible decision though it was my dream”. 

Why did he write the book?  Douglas speaks for all of us when he says, “The main reason for writing the book was as a token of thanks and expression of my gratefulness to Mother Lanka for everything I have received, especially the free education which supported me to become a doctor. From a long time ago, I had this idea of giving something back”. 

“Realising that there is very little written, in Sinhala on mental health, I decided to take the challenge. The book I have published is on Mental Stress and Anxiety, titledමානසික පීඩනය සහ කාංසාව”. The book was published by The Sarasavi Publishers”. At present I am working on a book on Mood Disorders titled ‘මනෝභාවය සහ සම්බන්ධ ආබාධ’which I hope to publish around April 2022 

His plans for the future

Douglas speaks about his plans to utilise proceeds from sales of his book. “I am hoping to use all the money received from the sale of the books to promote the writing and publishing on mental health and to give bursaries to needy students. I have two aims: to make accurate and up-to-date information on Mental Health available to the public and making at least a modest attempt to reduce the stigma attached to Mental illness”.  

The launch of his book

The book launch was held on the 19th of January 2019 at BMICH. The Chairperson was Professor Ven Kotapitiye Rahula By good fortune, it was at the time of the 150th-anniversary celebrations of the Medical College and a few of our Batch mates were able to attend. Those who attended included: Pramilla Senanayake, Bandula Jayasekera, Lucky Abeyagunewardene, Indra Anandasabapathy, Dharmani and Amara Markalanda. Pramilla participated in lighting the ‘Pol Thel Pahana’ on behalf of the batch. Bandula Jayasekera volunteered and spoke a few words to support Douglas’s speech reinforcing the observation that the unfortunate stigma on mental health still exists not only in Sri Lanka but around the world. Prof Nalaka Mendis, Professor of Psychiatry emeritus delivered the Keynote Speech. 

Prof Nalaka Mendis’s comments

This book titled “Mental Stress and Anxiety” by Dr Douglas Mulgirigama is a welcome addition to the slow-growing volume of literature on mental health in Sri Lanka.

 During the last few decades, there has been a better understanding of the nature of mental health, mental distress, and mental illness as a result of scientific developments, evolving concepts of health, attitudes, values. Dissemination of this knowledge coupled with effective interventions and services has resulted in increasing numbers of people benefitting from the new developments, especially in developed countries. However, the benefit to people in less developed countries have been not as much, largely due to inadequate understanding of these developments, the prevailing stigma associated with mental illness, low values attached to mental health and issues of access to services. This publication aims to address general mental health issues useful for people in their daily lives by providing very valuable information on mental health, mental distress and mental illness.


Dr Mulgirigama is a very experienced psychiatrist who worked in the United Kingdom as a consultant over thirty years having had his early training in Sri Lanka. Over the years he has continued to keep in touch with developments in Sri Lanka. Throughout my association with him over four decades Douglas has expressed his desire to contribute towards the development of mental health in Sri Lanka. This book fulfils his long-standing desire and is aimed at raising awareness of mental health issues in the community. 

Three important reasons why Prof Mendis considers this book unique

In my opinion, this book is unique for three important reasons. 

Firstly, it reflects several modern developments in mental health. The modern concepts of mental health, promotion of mental health, prevention of mental distress and treatment approaches have been well described.  The new approaches to the understanding of stress, responses to stress and various anxiety-related syndromes have been described in detail. New treatment approaches such as pharmacological, psychological and others have been referred to. Stigma, though an old concept continues to impact people with mental health issues and has been dealt with effectively. The fact that mental distress or illness could affect anyone including great personalities will come as an important revelation to many. Descriptions of ways of promoting mental health, prevention of mental distress and effective treatments are welcome. Concepts such as Illness behaviour, abnormal illness behaviour and sick role are very useful in understanding health-related behaviour. 

Secondly, this is a very comprehensive publication. The book specifically focuses on mental health, mental distress and mental illness the three important emerging areas. The description on mental health is very useful to all of us and similarly, the concept of stress, normal and abnormal responses to stress are discussed in detail. References to stresses such as trauma, disaster and childhood experiences are also described in detail. The descriptions of illness experiences and manifestations of different forms of mental distress and mental illness have been illustrated with case histories.    

Thirdly Dr Mulgirigama, has been able to translate complicated concepts such as psychoanalysis, behaviourism, and cognitive behaviour therapy that have evolved in the world in various languages to Sinhala language in a clear and simple manner in a way that is easily understood by non-experts and people. I consider this a very important aspect of this publication. More recent developments such as psychopharmacology, biochemical theories and problem-solving approaches also have been described in simple language. 

On reading this publication I was happy that Douglas has been able to compile a book of high quality, which has a firm theoretical basis and practical relevance. This important publication would be of great benefit to mental health professionals, social welfare workers, educationalists, patients, families and the general public. I hope this will be made available in all local libraries”. 

In conclusion

That is the good news I wanted to share with you all and in conclusion, I say, “well done Douglas, we are extremely proud of your contribution and would like to wish you all the best in all your future endeavours”. 
This photo shows Douglas with his family. His wife-Pushpa, Daughter-Aruni, and her Husband-Mark and two grandsons-Jego and Dylan

 

 

 

Thursday, December 16, 2021

The Journey of Life- Speedy Gonsalkorale

 The Journey of life

by Mahendra Speedy Gonsalkorale


Wading through
Wading through
So hard to fight
So hard to fight
Water rushing past me
Water nearly toppling me
Trying to push me back
I am tiring
But not weakening
I am trying
trying hard
Getting dark 
and dismal
Won’t stop now

A floating tree trunk
Whizzes past me
Nearly hit me
Going uphill now
Will I get there?
The current is strong
But I keep wading
The journey of life
Can be tough
Wading through 
regardless of obstacles
Keep going 
Keep going
till you find
That oasis
your true love

Friday, December 10, 2021

Musings in the winter- Nihal D Amarasekera

Musings in the winter – a compilation of thoughts

Nihal D Amerasekera


It is once again the time of the year when the winter storms batter my windows. I snuggle up in my rocking chair allowing my mind to wander. Those thoughts reflect lazily on the twists and turns of my life’s fandango. It is also a time to appreciate the good things in life also to be critical of the things that are wrong. The chair provides a perfect posture to meditate, ruminate and cogitate about the world around me. I am partial to a tot of whisky, in medicinal amount, to help lubricate my thoughts, just taken neat as the makers recommended. 

This is my second stint in London. After spending eight gruelling but fulfilling years studying Radiology in the 1970’s I moved away to a leafy suburb in Hertfordshire. As my professional tenure ended, leaving my rural idyll was a heartbreak. Still, there is fun to be had in the big city with a kaleidoscope of culture, museums, art galleries and music venues. In the words of Wordsworth: “An eye to perceive, a heart to enjoy.” Being retired I now live in an apartment in a block of flats. Living in a flat requires a different mindset. The block is a community, although not a close one. Everyone is busy with their own lives. We hardly know our neighbours. There are house rules - some written and others implied. There are also civic and social responsibilities. We must respect others’ privacy while sharing the space. Looking through the window at night, I see the geometrically arranged lights of the surrounding blocks. This creates its own beauty. Each light represents people with their own lives, joys and sorrows - we are all a part of the rich tapestry of life. 

We, humans, have caused global warming. Glaciers are melting, sea levels are rising, forests and wildlife are dying. There is a sense of foreboding of an impending apocalypse. Cop26  has come and gone. Humanity is undergoing an existential crisis. As we defer, delay and prevaricate, time is running out. Something has to be done sooner rather than later. The days of being next to the warm glow of a real fire is fast fading.  Burning wood and coal harms the environment. Fossil fuel power stations are being run down. The promise of a better tomorrow is enticing. While the renewable sources of energy take on the slack the cost of heating and electricity have skyrocketed. Whenever I complain about the bitter cold people remind me that I have left the heat and sunshine in the tropical paradise where I was born!!!! 

Politics is the bane of society. But we need politicians. Despite political upheavals, coup d’état and insurrections, Sri Lanka has remained a democracy. The quality of life has improved for the majority including healthcare and education. The villagers now have a voice. But as a country, we are not where we should be and yet much still needs to be done.  The origins of the art and science of governance is not clear. But sleaze, corruption and criminality in politics is old as the hills.  Extreme power and control over people corrupt and destroy societies and lives. But we never seem to learn from history. As I look around there is not a single country in the world where politics is clean as intended. In the West, there is unacceptable political corruption, but it lies below the surface and far less conspicuous. In some countries bribery, deceit and deception are accepted as the norm. This causes tremendous hardship to the people. Some Politicians aren’t true to their conscience. They will in the fullness of time lose their power and with it the respect, recognition and reverence which they yearn and crave for so much. 

There is a high level of economic inequality in the world which is shocking and obscene, and it is getting worse. People have long dreamt of an egalitarian society. Despite human existence for thousands of years, all the religions and philosophies of this world have failed to inspire and encourage us to live in peace and share our wealth. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels’ political philosophy and thinking had a tremendous influence on politics and society. But even Marxism, Socialism and Communism have failed to live up to their tenets. We now accept inequality as a part of life. Covid-19 has brought to the forefront the problems of inequality between the developed and the developing countries. This has indeed deepened the existing inequalities hitting the poorest the hardest. 

Despite the huge numbers of new cases of Covid every day in Europe and so many deaths, people get about their business, with no masks, no distancing and some even no vaccination. This nasty lurgy has been with us for over 2 years and people are tired of the lockdowns, restrictions, and the never-ending government dictates. There is a feeling in the air “we want to be free”. But freedom comes at a price. A new variant, Omicron, has emerged from South Africa. There is mounting scientific worry about the characteristics of this variant. A failure to share the vaccines seem ‘cold and callous’. No one is safe until we are all safe. 

Cricket, the game played by gentlemen, is in turmoil in the country where it all began. Yorkshire Cricket Board is accused of racism. It is alleged the governing body, the England and Wales Cricket Board, has not done enough to stamp out this evil. They got bowled over by a wrong’un from Azeem Rafiq. Now the country seems to have woken up and the government has stepped in to sort out this unholy mess. Religious, ethnic and gender inequality and intolerance are unacceptable although they exist in every country. Although much has improved with the passage of years not enough is done to stamp it out completely. The ethnic trouble that broke out into an all-out war in Sri Lanka was a tragedy to many thousands of innocent people. This remains a stain on the history of our country. Fairness, equality and tolerance should be taught young, in schools. The government must be impartial and provide proper leadership and guidance. Religious leaders should encourage the public to be more tolerant and to show fairness and humanity to prevent another catastrophe and suffering. 

Being a septuagenarian, It is so wonderful to look through the mist of a lifetime of joy and grief and the full spectrum of emotions.  What props up often are those happy days of my youth. Then I had nothing of value to call my own. My future was beyond the horizon and out of view.  The nineteen fifties and sixties now seem like a distant fantasyland. There is now a never-ending desire to make that journey to the past and there is no better vehicle than music. The music of my teenage years and early twenties has a greater and more lasting impact than songs in later life due to the psychological phenomenon called the reminiscence bump. Friday nights remain my music nights when I listen to the music of my childhood. To my mind that was the golden age of cinema and radio in Ceylon. In 1955 we were hit by the typhoon of Rock and Roll music. Bill Haley redefined music and created the magic and we all felt its energy. Then came Elvis Presley the King of Rock and Roll. He mesmerised us all with his songs and his cult. Despite the puritanical warnings, we emulated our icon’s distinctive pompadour hairstyle, Cuban collar shirts and pleated trousers. Post-independence the Sinhala songs and cinema came of age

The stories and songs from the Sinhala films had a dark and dramatic edge to it. There were songs about our country, culture and natural beauty. We sang those songs at school and at home. The best-loved singers of that bygone years were Sunil Santha, Chitra and Somapala, Rukmani Devi, Mohideen Beig, C.T Fernando and several more. Probably none of them are alive today. Many of those old Sinhala favourites have been given a new lease of life.  With clever musical arrangements and sound, those songs retain the magic and the romance of the days gone. When there is a generous flow of the amber nectar, music has the amazing ability to transfer emotions through time. They bring back memories of events and people from long ago and that of my beloved country. As I age tears come far more easily now.  I Just hold fast to those memories and what memories they are. 

In the Northern hemisphere, as the days move towards Christmas, the mellow light of the evening sky soon merges with the darkness of the night. Christmas has morphed into a global festival. It is the season of goodwill, a time for giving and for meeting with family. Selecting presents is indeed part of the fun. In the whirlwind of consumerism, the prestigious shops on London’s Oxford Street have beautiful displays enticing passes by. My needs now are few. I get books as presents. My Christmas shopping is to give some happiness to others. This is also the time we think of the dawn of a new year and what that may bring. 

We are all aware of the lively imagery and the immense power of poetry. I have been so taken up with a poem by Piers Plowright which speaks volumes, more than the 15 lines, it shows on paper. He taught English in Khartoum in Sudan in the 1960s and handed this poignant poem to a friend when he was flying back home to England. I leave it to your imagination to interpolate its deeper echoes to different situations we will face in the future. 

ON GOING

At the corner, I turned

And looked back

There was nothing unfamiliar

Only streets and trees

Which I believed would vanish

When I had gone.

The people no longer moved

They belonged to a frieze

Remembered even as I looked at them

For a particular moment

Which was done

But such going

Needs no tears

It is merely a way of showing

That life is being, not going.

Friday, December 3, 2021

MEDICAL SCHOOL MEMORIES - Part III- Kumar Gunewardane

 Never let a stumble on the road be the end of the journey.”

MEDICAL SCHOOL MEMORIES - Part III

By Kumar Gunewardane

 

Although dispirited by having to repeat forensic medicine, I was determined to start afresh. The memory of youth, though longer than that of a goldfish, is still short-lived; it is easy to fall back onto bad habits. 

The BLOEM

It is not difficult in the naïveté of youth to get swayed by ones companions. The Bloem was not an oasis for scholars and thinkers; it was more a refuge for the non-conformists and the forgotten, the chronics aka chroniyas. There were many of these in the hostel and as a group they were good natured and companionable. They were initially inhibited with us juniors , but became good friends in time. Their diffidence was understandable as they had fallen behind their colleagues who looked upon them , with pity and sometimes disdain. One of my favourites was PK alias Kandos. An entertaining conversationalist, he could mimic our teachers to perfection, a flair much in demand at parties and concerts; also at Christmas carols, when a few would venture to the houses of amiable consultants. An obliging man, he sometimes made promises he couldnt keep. Once he undertook to nominate someone for high office in the hostel student association, but failed to turn up at the crucial meeting. His enraged friend threatened to kill him; Kandos had to seek refuge in the rooms of friends to escape the wrath of his erstwhile mate. K remained a friend long after both of us had qualified. While he was interning in Galle, he hosted me when I had to attend the Supreme Court to give evidence in a case of grievous hurt. I was accommodated in a vacant room and provided all meals. It gave me the opportunity and privacy to catch up with old friends and re-live the palmy days of my own internship. This hospitality was a tradition in those still propitious days. There was also the time I was hosted by ex-Bloemites when stranded in Tangalle, which was a sleepy village then. I arrived at the rest house unannounced only to be told that it was full; the friendly rest housekeeper directed me to the DMOs (District Medical Officer) house, where I was welcomed warmly. 

We lost touch when both of us migrated to the UK. He very likely did well there as he had good rapport with patients and all and sundry. A good friend of his, and a fellow chroniya was Marcus F who was also a most affable person; living in the shadow of his elder brother who was a brilliant academic must have affected him. There were others like the mighty Siva who was menacing when drunk, but very benign otherwise. The story goes that once he and M got drunk In the company of an undertaker. Unable to get back, both of them had slept in empty coffins. They woke up unscathed the next morning. In Sri Lankan folklore even the demons are wary of drunks.

Siva, took a liking to Bora and me and nobody would dare to rag us in his presence. Most of them did well after qualifying. A story of Boras worthy of repetition is of the three chroniyas who after some time in a small New Zealand town decided to move to England. The front page headline of the local tabloid was “Brain Drain to UK”. ‘Piggy” Muldoon the then Kiwi prime minister, speaking of New Zealanders migrating to Australia, said this raised the IQ of both countries. 

LEARNING

The pace was manic. Clinical terms (appointments), ward classes, and lectures were endless. The redeeming trait was the excellence, especially of the ward classes. Outstanding were Drs Wijenaike, Ernie Pieris George Ratnavel and Ranji Wickremanayake the last in the outpatient section. Darrel Weinman stood out among the surgeons. We attended their sessions, even if we were not scheduled into them. The show offs and ones who wanted to impress and be remembered at the final exams were in the front rows. I stood at the edge discreetly. 

Dr Wijenaike’s therapeutic lectures were in a class of their own. These were very useful for my post-graduate exams in the UK too. All of them were superb mentors as well as teachers, some of the very best I encountered anywhere. Our aspiration was to emulate them in every way.The only drawback, in hindsight, was the lack of exposure to acute medicine. In our time there were no intensive or coronary care units, or trauma wards or acute medical admission wards.

 Our worst and recurring nightmare was the professorial medical appointment. The Chief was a martinet and even the stoutest quailed at the prospect. We became ascetics for two months abstaining from all fun. The risk of verbal assaults and repeating the term was ever present. By a stroke of luck I had his deputy Dr Oliver Peris as Professor R had gone on sabbatical leave. Bora was not so lucky and had to repeat his appointment. He had been asked what he would do for a patient with meningitis , if he was stationed in a remote hospital. He had quite rightly replied that the patient would be transferred to the nearest big institution. This provoked an outburst and repeat term , quite unjustly. B was told that he was typical of the layabouts who preferred carousing with local public officials, to attending on patients. Another had been chased out as he did not have a wrist watch. The chiefs grouse was that the boy was able to attend a fee levying school , but was unable to afford a watch. Fortunately, the boys uncle came to his rescue with an elegant and expensive timepiece. After hearing this, I hastily borrowed my fathers watch. He was loath to wear anything on his arms, although he had a pure gold amulet and chain round his neck. This, he later, donated to the gilded fence which now encloses the sacred Bodhi tree in Anuradhapura. 

I do not remember much about my professorial appointment, perhaps as it was stress-free and uneventful. OAP was an excellent teacher and clinician. Sadly for our medical school, he migrated to Australia, not long after and became a consultant in a leading Sydney hospital. 

Our other bugbear was surgery. Some of the brightest had floundered with the new professor R.A.Navaratne, affectionately called Nava. His priorities were very different to his predecessor and the emphasis was on basics and not esoterics. Although an accomplished surgeon himself, he was rightly more keen for us to learn pre-operative assessment and post-operative care and clinical awareness of the common conditions. At this stage, Bora who was rooming with me at the Bloem had the brainwave to rope in a colleague, Johnny C for combined studies in surgery. A masterstroke that helped us to negotiate this hurdle. J was intelligent, had associated with other study groups and knew the location of likely examination cases. Also, he had a nursing friend in Navas ward who informed him of likely exam patients. However, he was like the proverbial camel who when allowed to get its nose inside the tent, eventually got its whole body in. J, while not domineering, dominated our lives and studies. 

We would camp him overnight in our room and smuggle in food. His washroom routine, however, irritated some of our mates who complained that he would wash not only himself , but others adjacent to him. His reading aloud of textbooks and notes while sprawled on my bunk remains an indelible memory. My everlasting regret is that I didn’t do combined studies with him in the other two subjects, and that I didn’t spend much time in the medical or the obstetrics/gynaecology wards. Bora and C passed at the first attempt, but I was referred in Medicine my favourite and Obstetrics. I had a personal interview with Professor R after the results; he was surprised that after doing so well in the written papers I had come down in the clinicals. Gently he advised me to spend more time in the wards. 

J moved out of my life and I met him only once, afterwards at our 25th-anniversary reunion in London. He became a very eminent academic and ended up as the Vice-Chancellor of the Ruhuna University. 

Bora was however a constant and our friendship now numbers nearly the proverbial three score and ten years. He did not forget me in his celebrations and came home to pick me up for his party. The pained look on my fathers face as I walked away still haunts me; there were no recriminations, but he must have wondered silently where he and I had gone wrong. A brilliant student, who sacrificed himself for his siblings, he

gave us the best of everything, often giving up luxuries which he relished. I decided right then, that come hell or high water I would succeed at the next attempt. 

I rejoined the Bloem and this time roomed with Cyril Ernest. This was the right choice by a country mile. Despite being an elite sportsman, he was a serious,steady and dedicated student. His influence made me also burn the midnight oil. I had also become very religious and would visit the nearby temple at least twice a week. After offering flowers and paying obeisance to our Lord Buddha I would pray to gods to help me succeed, this second time. 

All these would have helped as I sailed through the inquisitions. One incident I recall is the gynaecology long case. The young student nurse who was assigned to chaperone me must have sensed my anxiety, and at the risk of her career , looked up the patients notes to ascertain the diagnosis. It confirmed mine and I was able to answer all the examiners questions confidently. The picture of her sweet face and incongruously, a couple of grey hairs on her head still remains in my minds eye.

My parents were ecstatic at my success and my father, as was his wont, had an overnight pirith ceremony and an almsgiving the following day as a thanksgiving. 

FUN

It may not have been the best of times, but there certainly were good times. 

A Little Romance 

The short story writer whom I idolise is Guy de Maupassant. I have read almost all of his three hundred odd tales which skilfully depict the vagaries and foibles of human nature in all its myriad forms. One of my favourites is Miss Harriet, the story of the unrequited love of an English spinster for a dashing young French painter. In it the hero says “ love is always love, come whence it may. A heart that beats faster at your approach, an eye that weeps when you go away are things so rare, so sweet so precious that they must never be despised. 

In the last turbulent year of Medical school, I was the unworthy recipient of such a love; a love that blossomed in a tiny milk bar not far from our hostel. The road that skirted our abode opened onto a broad tree lined avenue, dotted with spacious bungalows at the back of expansive gardens. At the front of one of these, facing the road was a mini milk bar. A counter separated the three stools for the customers and the well stocked repository at the back. It was run by three teenage girls, daughters of a medical luminary. Bora and I and sometimes other birds of a feather would pass an idle hour here. It was a pleasant way to relax when worn out by the endless studies and exacting clinical work. The girls were alluring, chatty and easily amused. The eldest M who was in charge, was chubby, and had a sweet face and generous nature. The two sisters A and F were always hovering around. M would sometimes refuse to take money from us . Bora and I would be embarrassed but one of our companions was happy to oblige. I have long forgotten the playful banter but not their carefree laughter and the bonhomie which rejuvenated us. 

M volunteered to teach us ballroom dancing. The carpets in the spacious salon of the main house would be rolled back, and the French windows opened to let in the cooling frangipani scented breezes; the fans in full swing would silently whir overhead. A small gramophone played, lilting music of her choice. Although I was her favourite, she gave up on me, gently rebuking me for not having an ear for music. Bora, she said, was the one with rhythm and feel for music. 

The few times we danced however were enchanting; the slow, slow quick steps or slow quick quick, with hands entwined and bodies close together. We did not progress to the jive or the waltz. The foxtrot was our only physical contact.

 

That year, M made my birthday very special. She gave me a boxful of goodies and also socks, handkerchiefs and a tie. I was overwhelmed and wondered how I could recompense, but cannot recall whether I ever did. If I had possessed the gallantry and the money , I would have sent her a dozen red roses. The pressure of studies and the threat of exams made us drift apart slowly and in our androgen-fueled youth perhaps it was beauty that prevailed over goodness. Beauty does fade however, while the memory of goodness lasts longer.

We never met after I qualified. She and the youngest sister F had later moved to London. Bora had once telephoned her, mimicking me. But she was not taken in. A apparently still lives in the old mansion. 

The Ball

An event which we all breathlessly awaited was the annual hostel ball. It had always been an evening of joie de vivre to which girls had unfettered access. In those unenlightened days the hostel was strictly out of bounds for females, rest of the year.

Bala had a steady girlfriend and her roommate P was to partner me. P was fittingly petite and pretty; there were many who would have given their eye teeth to escort her. Bora was left to take potluck, but he did have the luck of the Irish. Bala also commandeered a limousine, a Humber Hawk no less, from a friend of his. Sanath, my cousin, was the designated chauffeur. We picked the girls up at their home. They looked glamorous in dazzling sarees and low cut blouses. My heart did skip many a beat as the girls, Bala and I were huddled in the back seat. 

Bloem was festooned with coloured lights and gaily coloured streamers. We arrived in style as the disco music was playing “ Hard Days Night”, the forerunner of many Beatles hits. The girls were given soft drinks, while we sipped, surreptitiously smuggled alcohol. 

I was not adept at treading the light fantastic, then and P had to yield to the entreaties of other eager young bucks. However, she would sit by me and chat animatedly between dances and willingly agreed to go up to my room ostensibly to enjoy the view. Maddeningly, when we got up there, Sanath was fast asleep on my bunk. I silently cursed him and his forebears and went back to the ground for P to dance away and for me to watch. 

A while later a cabaret artist, arranged by Bala started her act. A bright or more aptly a malevolent spark switched off the mains triggering bedlam. P rushed to my side and Bala rescued the hapless artist who was still adequately, if barely clothed. After midnight we had to drop off our guests and on the way stopped at the Lighthouse in the breakwater. P and I went down to the rocks only to discover a great many Lotharios had preceded us. 

Once again my Great Expectations had been dashed