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pink_bagels April 14 2007, 23:53:27 UTC
I feel your pain. Though I try to be a naysayer, I keep feeling like I'm in a highly unwelcome minority for pointing out what I believe are huge flaws in the show's ending. I've rewatched it a few times, and I still hate it, in fact more than ever ( ... )

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Cheering journalists hmpf April 15 2007, 14:36:29 UTC
Yeah, that mystifies me, too.

Also, I totally understand your feelings about Sam. I can't say I *hate* him, exactly, but I've gone off him in a big way. So, so sad. Liking him was nice. Now I have to reinvent him before I can like him again. :-(

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Re: Cheering journalists pink_bagels April 15 2007, 16:00:28 UTC
Btw, if you want to ask me questions about working in a long term care facility, you can direct all of them to this email: lavenderonion@yahoo.com

:D

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E-mail hmpf April 15 2007, 17:28:41 UTC
What is it with you and bizarrely coloured foodstuffs? ;-)

Will e-mail you when I've collected my first batch of questions. The main question's really: Got any experience with patients in a persistent vegetative state?

I basically need to know what a typical day would look like in the 'waking-up phase' of one such making an unlikely recovery. I.e. typical nursing routines, types and frequency of therapy (once he's properly awake... well, actually, he'd probably be transferred to a specialised rehab facility pretty soon for that, wouldn't he?) etc. Loads of little details. Also, would there be a prognosis at some point or would they adopt more of a 'wait and see' approach due to the unpredictability of brain injury recovery?

So many questions... these are really just the tip of the iceberg.

Not sure how many of those questions you can answer; it really all depends on the first, doesn't it?

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Re: E-mail pink_bagels April 15 2007, 18:06:56 UTC
Actually, I have first hand experience with people in persistent vegetative states due to acquired brain injuries--there have been a few elderly people in the facility who have atrophied to the point of having little else other than eye-movements, and some whose consciousness is debatable. We do have a man in his mid-thirties who, while not in a true vegetative state, has what we call 'automatic movements'--ie: constant tics of him touching his head, swinging his legs, and no real consciousness that can be discerned due to the amount of brain damage he has suffered.

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You're my perfect source of information! hmpf April 15 2007, 18:32:11 UTC
Will e-mail soon. May take a day or two, as I need to devote a bit of time to Real Life now...

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