An advantage?
Dec. 10th, 2024 07:56 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Sometimes I wonder if surgery recipients may hold a slight advantage at becoming a surgeon over non surgery recipients.
The theory is that: surgeons are actually very violent people. Some of the most helpful members of society, and they are insanely violent. Ask the average member of society: have you sliced someone's skin open before? And of course, you kind of want the answer to be "no".. unless they are a feccing surgeon, damn.
So anyway.. can you imagine the psychological barriers you have to cross, just to be able to do that?
I guess my argument looks like: if you receive surgery, then knowing the changes that occur due to the procedure, may make those psychological barriers easier to over come!
It's sorta like the difference between getting a tattoo from someone that has a tattoo, versus getting a tattoo from someone that doesn't have a tattoo...
The theory is that: surgeons are actually very violent people. Some of the most helpful members of society, and they are insanely violent. Ask the average member of society: have you sliced someone's skin open before? And of course, you kind of want the answer to be "no".. unless they are a feccing surgeon, damn.
So anyway.. can you imagine the psychological barriers you have to cross, just to be able to do that?
I guess my argument looks like: if you receive surgery, then knowing the changes that occur due to the procedure, may make those psychological barriers easier to over come!
It's sorta like the difference between getting a tattoo from someone that has a tattoo, versus getting a tattoo from someone that doesn't have a tattoo...