Anyways, stop genocide
I just took a break from my shift, exhausted as hell, and had a desperately needed hot shower, the first this winter.
Sos, it’s raining now
sos; It's raining now. My world has already fallen apart.
And we are made to believe that resisting despair, injustice, and occupation is useless. Why? Because it never crossed the devil's mind to allow us simply to exist, to let us be, in peace. They have convinced the world, and its leaders, that we are theirs to kill and to torture. They have designed a plan in which our very survival becomes an endless tragedy.
We have come to feel worthless
Before leaving my shift this morning, a father arrived carrying his newborn baby, dead from the cold. Read that again. And last night, I saw a woman arrive in the cold, in labor pain, and she had to be transferred to another hospital to give birth there.
What am I now?
I've never felt this level of sensitivity in my life. I feel like a universe made of endless moments of frustration and devastation, fighting back another universe within me, made of kindness and love.
This is the peace we were promised
This is the peace we were promised, and this is all they could give. Such generous givers!
The terrorizing sound of warplanes when they come every night, threatening us, reminding us that we can stll be erased.
You keep going, because you must
Last night, we faced a severe shortage of doctors. After 18 hours into my shift, I had to deal with many patients alone, all at the same moment. Most of these patients had critical issues, and delaying care for even minutes could have cost them their lives. Their families asked for reassurance and next steps again and again, and it was almost impossible to answer everyone at the same time when I myself was fatigued and stressed, perhapS more than anyone around me. But I stood there acting strong, moving from one patient to another, fighting my own battle and theirs, trying to decide who needed the most urgent attention.
None of this is fair
Why would you take the time to read this, and what would make you think about it, and even feel it? Because it is true and profound? Most likely!
All the love, respect, and shared feelings we send to one another remain crucified at the borders; suspended between sky and land, never reaching the shore where children desperately try to steal a moment of joy.
This life is so strange
I am in bed now, trying to sleep before my shift, knowing it won't be easy, as usual.
I am still sipping my coffee while my bed keeps shaking from massive explosions, and drones are ZZZZZing away any peace I could have. That's literal Zionism.
My homeland has always been a prison to both my soul and my body. At a time when my people are being killed and tortured endlessly, without even being seen as numbers.
Pain is my constant companion
Pain is my constant companion. It has imprisoned me for years. I carry it everywhere, walking in pain, sitting in pain, thinking in pain. Everything I do, I do in pain.
Tonight, I took two tablets: one for my neuropathic pain, and another for everything else. Two hours have passed, and nothing has changed. If anything, the pain has only grown worse.
OUR PAIN CAN NEVER TRULY BE FELT BY OTHERS
Peace. My brother and fellow human, Dr. lan, left me this hat before returning home. I tried it on after my shift, and I took a quick selfie with my sweet niece, Ciela.
.
Don't ask me to have hope, not again
Don't ask me to have hope, not again.
Today, I had to hug one of my closest friends as he cried over his beloved uncle who was martyred.
You and I, we both deserve life
What am I? Simply, I am a kind man surviving a genocide. Did I cry today? Yes, I just did. One dear friend always tells me that I am a sensitive soul, and every time, it makes me wonder: isn't that what everyone should be?
Struggling to feel alive
I didn't learn what I'm feeling right now in medical school. This isn't simple anxiety or the usual restlessness of a long shift. This is not written in books, not even in the darkest eras of history. These heart-shattering feelings were taught to us the hardest way; by living through what no one should ever witness.
Today, I met Dr. lan; a kind and compassionate emergency doctor from Canada who promised months ago that he would do everything he could to come to Gaza and help. My family and I invited him for lunch, and it truly felt like a different kind of day. He felt peace, love, and welcome, and we felt lucky and honored to have him with us.
This misery feels endless
In the emergency rooms of Gaza's hospitals, doctors see strange and atypical medical cases; things that don't even make sense sometimes. But over time, they've become normal, even expected. Everyone is restless, anxious, exhausted, and on top of that, sick without treatment.
On my days off
On my days off, I walk at night along the same street I cross every day, passing by many demolished houses; 'demolished by American tax dollars', surrounded by the same familiar, frustrated faces and voices, 'their lives made miserable by the monsters of war.