Cristina Yang (
deaddadsclub) wrote in
fandomhigh2018-10-24 12:03 am
Entry tags:
Humanoid Health and First Aid, Wednesday, Period 1
The classroom today had been rearranged, the desks all removed and replaced with four large, suspciously draped tables. Cristina stood at the one in front, wearing her old scrubs, a face mask pulled down around her neck.
"I got bored," she said. "So we're doing an anatomy lesson."
Hurray?
"The single most important thing in all of modern medicine is being able to practice on actual tissue. You can put bandaids on people all day, but you won't truly appreciate the complex majesty of the human body until you've actually gotten to see all its parts up close and personal. Unfortunately, the school board nixed my idea of sourcing actual cadavers for high school students to work on, but hey. This place is basically the next best thing, right?" She looked much too pleased by this whole scenario. "So today you're going to pair off and do some dissection. We don't have anywhere near enough time to cover the whole human body properly — that takes years, not hours — so each pair is going to get one organ from the thoracic cavity to locate and identify by the end of class. So, uhhhh. You and you get corpse number one, you two are on corpse number two, and you two get corpse number three. There are spare scrubs, gowns, gloves and face masks at each table. Not that you can catch or spread anything from holograms, but you can all play dress up and at least feel like real doctors while you're at it. I'll walk you through cracking the chest, and then you all can go nuts." She pulled her face mask up and held a scalpel in her gloved hand. "Now, gown-up and let's have some fun, shall we?"
"I got bored," she said. "So we're doing an anatomy lesson."
Hurray?
"The single most important thing in all of modern medicine is being able to practice on actual tissue. You can put bandaids on people all day, but you won't truly appreciate the complex majesty of the human body until you've actually gotten to see all its parts up close and personal. Unfortunately, the school board nixed my idea of sourcing actual cadavers for high school students to work on, but hey. This place is basically the next best thing, right?" She looked much too pleased by this whole scenario. "So today you're going to pair off and do some dissection. We don't have anywhere near enough time to cover the whole human body properly — that takes years, not hours — so each pair is going to get one organ from the thoracic cavity to locate and identify by the end of class. So, uhhhh. You and you get corpse number one, you two are on corpse number two, and you two get corpse number three. There are spare scrubs, gowns, gloves and face masks at each table. Not that you can catch or spread anything from holograms, but you can all play dress up and at least feel like real doctors while you're at it. I'll walk you through cracking the chest, and then you all can go nuts." She pulled her face mask up and held a scalpel in her gloved hand. "Now, gown-up and let's have some fun, shall we?"

Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
And, in spite of the fact that he wasn't the sort of person to actually make it into a problem, kind of marvelling at the guts it took to be that blunt with somebody you were asking for sharp objects from.
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Watching Cristina's presentation carefully, Paris followed along exactly, grunting a little at how much effort it really took to crack open a human chest.
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Paris peeked into the chest cavity. "This is cool! Come look."
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
"Oh, hey," he said, leaning in to take a look for himself. "That's the one we're looking for there, right? It's always kind of weird seeing this stuff up close. It's never anything like movies make you think it should be like, you know?"
Actually, Norman, most high school kids would not be in a position to know that.
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Well, that wsn't true. He'd seen plenty of the scenarios. Just... real. Generally with people who were already dead.
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
He was carrying a mighty grudge over that one at the moment, yes.
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
He leaned in, stuck his hand into the chest, and held another organ out of the way to give her a clearer path for the scalpel.
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
Don't say she never did anything nice! You have all of your fingers.
Re: Ready, set, dissect!
"You're welcome," he replied easily. "Need anything eese in there nudged around, just let me know."
That was very useful, Norman, thank you.