Monday, August 29, 2011

Malang tidak berbau

I woke up this morning, thinking yesterday was all a bad dream, that I shouldn't be waking up at my Miri home, when I should've arrived at Mukah yesterday. but I can still see the event clearly.

It was a nice, sunny day. Well, it all happened when my family (mom, dad, ida) drove in our Kembara to Miri to pick me up. we were happily started driving back to Mukah, around 2pm. We put some Raya songs on the player, and I was wearing my beloved Gucci shades. We snapped some photos with my new digicam. We chatted happily. It was all happy and dandy. then it started raining. and driving through Sarawak roads is already a challenge itself without adding the rain factor. then around 3.30pm, it happened. the worst 5 seconds of our day! there was a motorcyclist riding in front of our car, when he wanted to make a turn, our car slowed down and tried to brake, but the slippery road kinda cancelled out the brake. it was crazy! it happened so fast! I was at the passenger's seat, and I saw everything, the moment our car hit the motorcycle, the impact, the motorcyclist being thrown back to the windshield in front of my face, then thrown to the side! we stopped the car, and I ran in the rain towards the man. he was lying face down in a dry ditch beside the road, not moving. and the scary part is when my dad, who's usually keep a cool head, had a look on his face and said out loud, "oh no, there wont be any Raya for us this year"

the villagers all started coming towards the accident site. women were crying and screaming. the men were yelling, some angry at us, some concerned about the man. my dad tried to explain, but some remained angry, accusing us of carelessness. then the ketua kampung came, and there was some talking and then the crowd calmed down a bit. it was crazy! I was concerned about whether the man was still alive or not, when I heard another villager said "you're gonna pay for all the damage to the motorcycle!"

I saw him breathing and there's no blood anywhere. Ok, I thought, he's alive, but I couldn't rule out any spine or head trauma. or he could have intraabdominal injury and internally bleeding. about 1 minute later, the man kinda woke up and sit up by himself. the ditch was pretty shallow, so I jumped into the ditch. he was alert and orientated. he denied any loss of consciousness, headache and all that. he said he's breathing fine and there was no pain other than at his left shoulder. i could breathe easier at the moment. then we helped him up and brought him to the nearest clinic, where I assessed him more, and from the look of it, he just sustained some bruises and abrasions at the left shoulder and left back. then I escorted him to Miri Hospital in an ambulance (its my first time being in an ambulance!). In the clinic and ambulance, we talked, and he's a nice man who didn't even blame us about the accident, and just thankful that everyone's ok. met my MOs in A&E, who examined him further. Xray was clear. patient was discharged home with some analgesics.

Our car was a wreck, I think the battery's gone coz we cant even start the car. so we went home to my Miri house and settled everything. Its very sad that I'm still stuck here when tomorrow's Raya. the aftermath of the accident is still felt among my family members. lots of "what if"s and "I wish I didnt"s. but I guess what happened, happened. and we just have to be positive about it and just grateful the god allows us to breathe in this world still.

well, Happy Hari Raya to all! Hope this Raya brings us all happiness, and drive safely!
XOXO

2 comments:

atikah said...

salam liyana. i'm atikah just completed my study on mid june. ive applied hosp miri as one of my choices for housemanship. i'm from semenanjung btw. can u pls tell me whats hosp miri like and usually what language the patients use? can it be easily understood if they hv the swak accent? hehe. want to mentally prepare myself. so far do u enjoy ur time there? hope to hear from u. tq! :)

Liyana said...

sorry for the late reply, i was kinda lazy to check in on my blog lately..haha

btw, Miri hospital is a small hospital, so the workload is much less than the big ones. but since we dont have enough HOs here, the HOs have more hands on experience for procedures and op. the language used, mostly sarawakian and iban language. most of the sarawakians can speak malay, but they speak baku malay, so i think its understandable. some of the ibans from the rural area cant, so we may need translators (from the nurses or some of the docs). we have quite a number of HOs from semenanjung here also, and so far, there's not much problem regarding that.

for mental preparation, of course you'll have to be strong, because when i first started my housemanship, there were some breakdown moments and it may take some time to adapt to the new working life.

but it will get easier with experience. so, good luck! :)