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as a regular donor to Gaza Soup Kitchen I get their email updates, and they said today that while they've continued to be able to expand, donations are slowing down as Gaza gets less coverage. If you have a few dollars to spare, I encourage you to send them here to continue the amazing work that Hani and his team are doing.
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90-ghost has done so much for the people of Palestine. He is trying to get the rest of his family out of there while the war rages on, so to show your support, please donate to his sister's and brother's respective Paypals!
Help support Samar Saed Kamel Saed by donating or sharing with your friends.
Go to paypal.me/bushrabo and type in the amount. Since itâs PayPal, it's easy and secure. Donât have a PayPal account? No worries.
@gazavetters Vetted List lists Ahmed and his family at #740.
Happy (belated) 32nd birthday, Ahmed. I hope you know how much you've done to help the Palestinian people. I might not have any money, but I shall always do my best to spread your hard work and the words of others.
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alright I've got to do some quick math to explain attitudes towards AI to my boss.
we're looking to create an AI policy, and when we were talking about this, my boss (older millennial) was genuinely shocked to hear that younger people do not (seem) to view AI positively (a la the recent commencement speakers being booed)
please rb for larger sample size!
Question 1/3
What is your age, and do you feel AI is a net positive or net negative in our lives today?
i feel. like on a fundamental level. i do not understand x reader fic. i am not exactly opposed to it because let a thousand blossoms bloom etc. but like. i genuinely donât get it. it seems like the exact opposite of how i engage with fiction. like the whole point is that iâm not in there. i donât wanna be in there. if iâm in there itâs going to be very stressful.
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Park the Shark x overprotective trope... i just wanna see him flash his teeth at a patient for being combative with y/n. 'Nobody can bully her except me' shtick hhhnnnggg
( gif credits to the lovely @parktheeshark for this crisp gifset ! )
†â PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
summ. Ortho is paged to the ED. Park the Shark fortifies his fierce reputation.
pairing. brendon 'shark' park / f!resident!Reader
w.count. Â 2.5k!
a/n. Implied power-imbalance , corrupted mentor/mentee dynamic if you squint , an annoying amount of eldritch maritime motifs . Apologies if Shark is ooc here given he had like 3 minutes of total screentimeâ I hope y'all enjoy nonetheless! & Thank you @lumissandbox for beta-reading this shipwreck of an imagine đ„
          UNCANNILY SHARP MOLARS are a common sight when Dr. Park snarls out and berates hapless surgical interns amid long procedures.Â
Anyone whoâs ever worked with himâ let alone heard of him, is aware of Park the Shark, whoâs come around to be some cautionary, fantastical fable.
A mythological creature of PTMCâs Orthopaedics Departmentâ some beastly, thalassic leviathanâ whoâs all jagged rows of endless teeth and killer instinct; Made out to be a divine, merciless warden of the sea responsible for piecing together centuries old bones buried five fathoms deep into bedrock.
A virtuoso of his field who you owe your knowledge to. Whoâd taught you the fearlessness common of surgeons, but also instilled in you the fear of failure thatâs needed to temper it.
What is it that Garcia and Walsh like to call you residents under his wing (or finâ), again?Â
Shark pups.Â
Left to fend for yourselves most of the time. Sink or swim. A dogfight of devouring each other alive in a desperate attempt to keep your head above water; to make it through this riptide of a Residency and be the best of the best.
Park the Shark stands on a mantlepiece of his own making. A faultless reputation sharp enough to cut, and the stringent attitude to match thatâs a given considering his medical prowess and achievements. The other juniorsâ aw, these your shark pups, Park?â tenderfoot and wet behind the ears, worship the ground he walks on like suck-up remoras.
You admire him, yes. But most of the time you just⊠try to get by. Keep your head down and stay out of his way.Â
(Not that you never advocated for yourself, that is. Being a woman in a particularly male-dominated specialty has only drilled into you an extra layer of thick-skin from criticism and inherent misogyny. You donât fawn to the quote-unquote Ortho-bros, and have enough clever sense to know when to be candid without crossing the line.)
Perhaps thatâs why heâd quickly clamped his jaws around you.
Always seen as the âfavouriteâ; the âProdigal Daughter/Menteeâ, even if it never remotely feels like youâre worth any of Parkâs precious time.Â
Resentful, the other Residents eventually came to the conclusion that competition starts with you:Â
Always the one personally selected to assist in Parkâs odd cases, always the one his shark-like gaze searches for first in a crowd, always the one getting teeth sunken into and then humiliatingly chewed out for the smallest, mindless things because Youâre supposed to be the competent one out of all the others, for fuckâs sake.Â
They spin yarns of boyish rumors. Call you names that stick. Sharkbait, Catch, when theyâre feeling particularly bitter. Or the Jewel of the Sea; Parkâs prized (Mother-of-)Pearl, when theyâre feeling particularly childish.
Itâs fine. You can ignore those, and let your work do the talking. Besides, they never do address you that way around Dr. Park, anymoreâ not after heâd nearly bitten the head off of one of the R3âs after heâd overheard you openly be called Chum-dump in passing.
(âThe fuck did you just say?â
âUh⊠Nothing. Iâ It won't happen again. Sorry, Dr. Park.â
âThe hell you apologising to me for and not her?â)
You tell yourself itâs just because Park doesnât want to be associated with the likes of you; that itâs nothing to do with him being chivalrousâ heâs just being professional. Doing his due duty as your Senior Attending to browbeat workplace misconduct.
(Donât think too much of it. He doesnât care. Youâre not of value to him in any way you think.
How does the saying go? Never cast pearls before swineâ)
You wonder if heâs aware of how much his implicit bias has you isolated in an already isolating field for a woman. A target on your back. How his apparent unspoken ambition for you and your capabilities alone have become somewhat of an albatross around your neck.Â
Youâve done the work to get here, you remember him muttering mid-procedure once. I might make a surgeon out of you yet.
Park is utilitarian; he doesnât waste time on petty endeavoursâ he couldnât possibly be doing it on purpose, could he? To keep you orbiting close to him whether you like it or not, lonely from the ostracism you receive from your fellow peers, all for the sake of imparting in you whatâs best. Deliberately exploiting his influence into favouritism so you rely on him and only him for company; starved for kinship.
None of which he ever gives you, either way.
Just his stoic, brooding silence. A single hum of assent or curt nod when you answer his questions flawlessly during one of his rare moods of actual teaching (âHm. Youâll close after Iâm done, pup.â); Or his lingering presence over your shoulder in the breakroom when youâre brewing a fresh pot of coffee, shoulders brushing (âI take it black.â).
Feels more like bait, really. Dangling right in front of you; waiting for you to take the bite.Â
Or have you already bitten?
âEDâs paging. You donât need me in here,â Park declares, over a traumatic pelvic crush injury slowly coming to its end. He nods to the surgeons in Vascular when they say theyâll finish up the rest of the procedure, and jerks his head at you to degown. âYou. With me.â
The elevator sinks both of you all the way down to the bottom-dwellers. Emergency Medicine: a never-ending bustle of nervous energy and raucous commotion of sounds that grates at Parkâs ears. When he sails into Trauma Bay 2 with you tailed close behind, medical staff part for him like the Red Sea; shoal of fish dispersing from an apex predator.
Robby greets him calmly despite the patient groaning his lungs out. Garcia is already rattling off an efficient presentation. âŠCrush injury to foot and ank⊠Compartment syndro⊠torn between salvaging the limb t⊠what do you think?Â
Meanwhile, a pair of impressionable Med Students observe, rapt, as you glove up and curiously round the writhing patient in the exact same way Dr. Park doesâ an unconscious habit youâve picked up from him; circling calculatingly like a shark sniffing out blood in the water. (Do you hear that? quietly nudges one of the Residents, the JAWS theme?)
They watch as you shadow Park, comically insignificant against the hulking brawn of him, scrutinising the X-Ray of the patientâs shattered foot. Itâs a unique case, alright: a complex multiple fracture of practically every bone in his foot up to his ankle from a freak accident.Â
Even Park reacts with a tiny, impressed snort that only you manage to catch by chance proximity.
âGive me something for the fucking pain already!â a voice lashes out, synchronising you and Park into sparing a narrow glance up from the bedside of the patientâs gurney.
âMr. Aldrich, weâve already given you more pain meds after the regional block,â soothes one of the ER nurses, âthe ketamine will take a minute to kick inââ
âScrew you nurses!â he hisses, thrashing his head pointedly at you as he squirms in place. âGet me a real doctor!â
âYouâve got multiple in one room here to help you, Sir,â Garcia overrides, humorously, âtake your pick.â
An exasperated growl. âFucking, I donât know, a bone doctor?!â
âGood news! Youâve got Orthopaedics to your left,â she gestures, shooting you an amused look.
Mr. Aldrich glares harshly at you. âWell? Move, bitch, and let me talk to the big guy behind you.â
Across the bay, Robby doesnât get to snap at the verbal harassment in time. No, itâsâ
âDr. Park, pinning his tenebrous gaze at the patient as he cocks his head ominously.
âYouâre gonna wanna speak respectfully to the âbone doctorsâ responsible for getting you back on your feet, Sir,â he drawls, sangfroid as always before returning his attention completely to Robby.
(You donât try to pick apart the notable undercurrent of⊠something in his tone. Chalk it off as non-negotiable decorum. If it isnât Dr. Park whoâd have said something, youâre sure someone else would have.)
Hell of a fracture, you ignore the patient, running a mental map of the potential procedures itâd take and what the prognosis would look like. Dr. Park busies himself with more details regarding the injury: mechanism, labs, drugs. Pokes and prods clinically at the patientâs numbed foot.
âWeâre gonna need your consent, Sir,â comes everyoneâs eventual finalised conclusion, where you keep your tone as calm as possible in a bid to deescalate the tension, âbefore we get you prepped for surgery.â
âYou better fucking make sure I walk again,â he seethes. âMy legs are my livelihood, you know that? Do you know who I am?â
âMr. Aldrich,â you answer, patiently. âIâm taking that as a yes?â
âOh, you think youâre fucking funny, do youâ?â
An iron-grip stops the patientâs forearm short well before you even register it:
A swing at you. An attempt to snatch at you from the bedside to drag you like an undertow.
Sharks are a predatory species born with sixth sense. An innate electroreception that helps them zero in on the most sensitive of muscle movements within close-range. Top of the food chain. Evolutionarily driven by pure, lethal instinct leading them to their prey.
You wonder, idly, if Dr. Park has it tooâ
Bloodlust. Untamed animalism prowling somewhere behind his hunter eyes. His scrub sleeves are pulled tight from the flex of his biceps, tension of corded muscles in his forearms taut with brutal force from where heâs canceled out the threat in a whipcrack of a second: shackling the patientâs wrist effortlessly in a dizzyingly lightning-quick reflex.
Your heart stutters at the scene.
âGo on,â Park dares, voice glacially cold and sea-pelagic dark. âTake a swipe at my resident again, and I will break each and every single bone in your hand before resetting all 27 pieces of it back together.â
A beat.
Youâd have been able to hear a pin drop in the trauma bay, somehow, from how suspended everything feels.
Akin to witnessing an abyssal leviathan come to breach ashore after being provoked.
It makes something treacherous take flight in your chest.Â
That for as much as a supercilious asshole Park is sometimes, he still keeps a controlled, watchful eye on those in his wake as a mentor. Utilises that intimidating, ubiquitous command of presence he carries to his unfair advantage when things go leeways into dangerous waters.
Itâs not heart, per se. But itâs certainly something rare. Some abstract, omnipresent patina of his that surrounds your being like a levee and safely harbours you. Shoreline rock armour, almost: Feeling like the broad, muscled stonewall that is Dr. Park has become your own living, breathing, metaphorical breakwater.Â
You find yourself foolishly replaying his words like a broken record in your head.
My resident.
The patient visibly deflates, snatching his weak arm free from Parkâs vice-like clutch as he rears back and loses all bravado. âI consent to the surgery,â he grits out, still turning his nose up against everybody. âAfter that Iâll sue all of you assholes forâ for harassment. And you! For threatening me.â
Robby and Garcia bite back a laugh at the irony.
âLooking forward to it,â Park sneers, aggressively snapping his gloves off. He turns back to you and, uncharacteristically, nods at you to sidle past first and make headway towards the exit. âIâll book an OR.â
Thanks, Shark, Robby calls out, gaze flickering curiously between you two before it lands as a side-eye to Garciaâ who also seems to be trying to decipher something nameless as Park hovers close behind you.
The entire ordeal leaves a buzz under your skin.
My resident, you repeat again. His chum. His catch. His coveted pearl; his favourite pupâ
The words are muffled in your memory. Underwater. The flash of canine-sharp teeth as he bit the threat out, cavalier, deceivingly calm. The unbidden warmth of safety blooming in your ribcage after heâd put himself between you and danger, and youâd essentially been tucked protectively behind the fabled Shark of PTMCâs Orthopaedics.
You should neither be allured nor girlishly thrilled at the idea of Park showing any semblance of anger at your behestâ youâre in a hospital, for christâs sake, not the cold open of a romance novelâ But who doesnât like to be defended at times? Let alone by the most notoriously unsympathetic surgeon youâve ever come to know yet?Â
âThank you,â you muster the courage, once both of you are taking the silent ride back up to the Ortho-wards, âfor earlier.â
He scoffs. Itâs delivered, surprisingly, with less bite than you steeled yourself for.
âHow about you keep your head on a swivel,â he advises pointedly, glaring down at you with disapproval. âShouldâve just let him grab you. Mightâve learned a lesson or two.â
But youâve worked alongside him long enough to catch the minutest of tidal shifts in his callous voiceâ an antsiness; the faux-calm of doldrums out at sea. Something hadal in you knows that had the patient actually managed to snatch you in that riptide grip of his, Park would have ensured the man left the hospital with no functioning hands at all.
Or perhaps itâs just a delusion. Feverish calenture. A self-indulgent desire to have secretly collared the terrifying Park the Shark to be your own proverbial seadog:Â
Bristling and snapping his serrated teeth at anyone that got too close; orbiting you like a predator possessively guarding their own claimed territory. Exclusively yours.Â
(âOnly I get to call you pup,â heâd said, once upon a time. Out of context, it makes your head reel every time you recall it.)
âYeah. Sorry,â you say, pathetically. A force of habit; defaulting into deference.
Onlyâ
âAre you?â he narrows, shrewdly.
It feels like somethingâs buried itself right into its target. Harpoon to a sirenâs heart.Â
âIâIâŠâ you blink. Stumble your words. No, comes the candid instinct. You think of how heâd stepped in, how heâd handled the danger; All for you. I liked it.
âDonât get used to me playing nice,â he continues at last, looking damningly straight into your soul.
It lights your body aflame. Feel a rush to your cheeks at the unintended (perhaps?) implication of his words. âThatâs your nice, Dr. Park?â
The elevator dings through the charged air. He turns back forward lazily.
âFor you,â he grunts dismissively. âYeah.â
You blink. The doors slide open.Â
Park the Shark stalks off, and you donât get to answer.