Transcribe your podcast
[00:00:00]

How many years have you been doing surgery?

[00:00:02]

Since 1986.

[00:00:03]

This process of doing surgery over 40 years, how does it change a human's mind? What ends up happening to you?

[00:00:09]

Me and a cobbler, we both cut the leather or skin and put stitches. The difference is that I cut those stitches after 10 days and the wound heals. It doesn't gait. And in a cobbler's job, even after 10 years, when the stitch is taken out, it opens up. So there is something which is not in my hand, which helps the healing, which keeps the tissues together. That power needs to be recognized. No one better than a surgeon will recognize the power of healing. Today, I'm sitting here. You call me because I am perhaps a successful surgeon. That And that healing is, unfortunately, not in my hands. I'm just taking credit. That power needs to be recognized.

[00:00:55]

There's an element of nature in your work.

[00:00:57]

Exactly. That's what we are coming to.