Patrick Ball and Noah Wyle inside Allegheny General Hospital with the actual healthcare workers.
photos: Michelle Lay, AHN Anesthesiology Residency

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada
seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Serbia
seen from China
seen from Tunisia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Algeria
seen from Japan
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
Patrick Ball and Noah Wyle inside Allegheny General Hospital with the actual healthcare workers.
photos: Michelle Lay, AHN Anesthesiology Residency
realizing I don’t have to choose between my special interest in medicine and my special interest in math I can actually pursue both
The mistake I made (and told my students about)
I made a mistake in class the other day. A grammar question came up, one of those slippery ones that looks simple until it isn’t, and I gave the wrong answer. Confidently.
Later, when I was alone, I looked it up. I read, cross-checked, double-checked. And yes, I was wrong.
So the next day, I walked into the room and told them.
“My explanation yesterday wasn’t right,” I said. “Here’s what I’ve found since.”
My students, young, wide-eyed, kind, stared at me, genuinely surprised.
“You can be wrong?” one of them asked, half-joking, half-serious. “Yes,” I said, smiling. “A lot, actually.”
🌼
I’m not a native English speaker. I learned the language through years of reading borrowed books, watching subtitles, listening closely, speaking softly. I never had a rulebook in hand, I had instinct, rhythm, and then later, correction.
Even now, I’m still learning the rules that others grew up with. I’ve taught myself enough to teach others. But I’ve never stopped being a student.
I think it’s important that they see this. That their teacher, a figure usually expected to be right, can also be wrong, and own it. That it doesn’t diminish her. That it doesn’t end the learning but instead opens it.
Some lessons are taught by accident. This one was about honesty. About revising. About not needing to perform perfection in order to be a good guide.
If anything, it made the room warmer.
Persimmons Rain, I think, is full of these small, unexpected turns. A lesson where the teacher learns. A correction that becomes connection. A grammar error that becomes a story.
And maybe that’s the kind of classroom I hope to build: not flawless, but responsive. Not rigid, but alive.
Oh, where is she? Where she always is after practice, I suppose. You’ll find her by the sea.
A color study based off this master painting that I turned into Star Wars because I’m obnoxious like that. Most brushes in this are either my own or from kyle webster. (Please do not repost or delete this caption, if you like it, reblog it instead!)
True me.. Tap-2388..
Let’s be real: staying in your comfort zone is cozy, but it’s where ambition goes to snooze. If you want results, you have to live by the mantra: Learning Never Stops, Keep Growing. The moment you feel a little nervous about a new project or a complex task, that’s your cue to jump in! That feeling of initial struggle means your brain is building new pathways. Celebrate the awkwardness of being a…
View On WordPress
True me.. Tap-2378..
The choice is yours.Feeling a bit stuck in a rut? It might be time for a knowledge upgrade! The world isn’t standing still, and your skills shouldn’t either. The message is bold: Learning Never Stops, Keep Growing. Every challenge, a career change, a new technology, a big life event is a demand for a new you. Trying to solve tomorrow’s problems with yesterday’s knowledge is a recipe for…
View On WordPress
True me.. Tap-2368..
You don’t need a year-long course to embody the spirit of Learning Never Stops, Keep Growing.Seriously! Growth happens in the micro-moments. Read one industry article while drinking your coffee. Listen to a useful podcast on your commute. Try one new feature in a piece of software you use every day. These small, consistent actions are low-stress, high-impact investments. Stop waiting for a…
View On WordPress
True me.. Tap-2358..
Who decided learning has a finish line? Spoilers: it doesn’t! We need to embrace the mindset that Learning Never Stops, Keep Growing. Stop viewing education as a one-time event (like graduation) and start seeing it as a lifestyle. Being a “lifelong student” isn’t dusty, it’s dynamic!It means you’re always evolving, always interesting, and always ready for whatever comes next. If you feel…
View On WordPress