Besides, it was already said they ran the tests several times and it was pretty much confirmed, even by Wilson, it was cancer and it had to be taken care of.
You mean that's not next week's episode?I'm sad we'll never likely see the battle they'll have with the ferrets.![]()
Yeah. I was just thrown off a bit because I didn't see House outside after the dog ran out with the chicken.Remember, House was training the dog to fetch a feather.![]()
I can see that affecting her medical career, but I'm not so sure about the rest of the team. House wasn't involved and the others only found out what was going on after the girl went critical.I don't think they'd have had the character make that massive a mistake, though. Not only would it have ruined her medical career, but it would have been bad for House and the entire team. Maybe if they were kicking off a medical malpractice story arc they would have gone that way, but when the character's leaving and not coming back, this was the right way to go.
"Crippled?" Come on. They do wonders with prosthetics these days. It's not like the girl will never sail again; lots of athletes with disabilities have achieved similar or greater feats.
Yeah, Chase still has some "use" in him
Hell, I'm pissed at my opthamologist that he's making me put in eyedrops for glaucoma every night. I've had extended wear contacts for 30 years, which let me feel like a 'normal' person who doesn't need eye correction. Now I have to take the damn things out every night to put the drops in, and I hate feeling 'handicapped.' Can't imagine how suddenly losing a limb would make me feel.
How would dying at sea, alone, feel? How would it make your family feel watching it happen on the webcam set-up?
How old was she? And I wouldn't mind reading more on this short of thing. It seems a bit much to suggest that a teenage girl has "no rights" when it comes to making decisions like this.Patients have the "right" to refuse treatment but this girl was a minor and, thus, did not have that right. Her parents did.
I think she was eleven or twelve. The father mentioned that there'd been another situation similar to this where the parents tried to get her to do something in her own best interest at the expense of a sailing expedition, and she threatened to emancipate herself. He was certain that she'd go through with it if they tried to force her to have the surgery before she left.
How old was she? And I wouldn't mind reading more on this short of thing. It seems a bit much to suggest that a teenage girl has "no rights" when it comes to making decisions like this.
Hell, I'm pissed at my opthamologist that he's making me put in eyedrops for glaucoma every night. I've had extended wear contacts for 30 years, which let me feel like a 'normal' person who doesn't need eye correction. Now I have to take the damn things out every night to put the drops in, and I hate feeling 'handicapped.' Can't imagine how suddenly losing a limb would make me feel.
Hell, I'm pissed at my opthamologist that he's making me put in eyedrops for glaucoma every night. I've had extended wear contacts for 30 years, which let me feel like a 'normal' person who doesn't need eye correction. Now I have to take the damn things out every night to put the drops in, and I hate feeling 'handicapped.' Can't imagine how suddenly losing a limb would make me feel.
Then you should get the fuck over it then. Being a type one insulin dependent Diabetic (which I might add is several hundred degrees less worse than an amputation and a billion degrees worse than some simple eye drops once a day.) who has to inject multiple times a day, I personally feel you are a moron for even considering complaining about that, let alone complaining outright.
Hell, I'm pissed at my opthamologist that he's making me put in eyedrops for glaucoma every night. I've had extended wear contacts for 30 years, which let me feel like a 'normal' person who doesn't need eye correction. Now I have to take the damn things out every night to put the drops in, and I hate feeling 'handicapped.' Can't imagine how suddenly losing a limb would make me feel.
Then you should get the fuck over it then. Being a type one insulin dependent Diabetic (which I might add is several hundred degrees less worse than an amputation and a billion degrees worse than some simple eye drops once a day.) who has to inject multiple times a day, I personally feel you are a moron for even considering complaining about that, let alone complaining outright.
Good fucking Christ, does everybody overreact much?!
I was relating my little bitty annoyance at the sudden advance of my minor "handicap" to how this girl must feel about suddenly having to change her whole life to a truly major life-changing crisis, and suddenly self-righteous twats are all over my ass! Get over yourselves and take my comment for what it was - just a comparative comment.
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