Is There A Higher Power That Participates In Our Lives? 27 Physicians Collaborate On A New Book Detailing Unexplained Medical Miracles

You’re reading Is There A Higher Power That Participates In Our Lives? 27 Physicians Collaborate On A New Book Detailing Unexplained Medical Miracles, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’re enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

My name is Dr. Scott Kolbaba and I have been a physician in the Chicagoland area for over 35 years. The answer to whether there is a higher power that participates in our lives was not one I learned in medical school. Quite the opposite actually. In medical school we are taught to base our findings on science. X=Y and so forth. However, as humans, our natural instincts are to seek answers to questions about who we are, where we come from, and where are we going. It was possibly those very instincts that made me realize some of my personal experiences as a doctor, as well as those of some of my colleagues, couldn’t be explained by science and fact alone. These experiences were truly divine intervention, the work of something we could only see through the eyes of our faith.

Dr. Kevin Russeau is a chiropractic physician in Wheaton, Illinois. I recall his captivating story like it was yesterday. He was a new practitioner in town and was working to build up his clientele. After receiving an invitation to a meeting of local professionals, he thought for sure this would have the networking potential to launch his practice to the next level. He attended the meeting and was excited about the opportunity to be in a room filled with the local movers and shakers. John Robertson, a crisis intervention specialist, was seated next to him. After the leadership introductions, Dr. Russeau and Mr. Robertson had a polite conversation over lunch. Once lunch was finished, Dr. Russeau excused himself to network with the other guests. It was then that Mr. Robertson invited him to sit for a minute longer to listen to a story he felt he needed to hear. His sincerity and gentle smile is what made Dr. Russeau pause and decide not to refuse. Settling back into his chair he listened intently.

Mr. Robertson told him a story about a young lady who had called into the crisis line. He spoke to the woman who denied she was depressed, but as they spoke, he kept getting the distinct impression she needed to be hospitalized. The feeling grew stronger and stronger until finally he revealed his impressions to her. She had broken down in tears and admitted she was planning to take her own life. Because of the bond that developed during their conversation, she agreed to go to the closest hospital for help. He checked later that same day and found she had been admitted to the community hospital psychiatric unit. After a short stay, she ultimately recovered and was discharged. As Mr. Robertson relayed his story, it was evident he had a passion for his work. He told about acting on feelings and instincts, not facts alone. When he finished, Dr. Russeau looked up and realized people were leaving and the meeting was over. While he enjoyed his conversation, he was disappointed about missing an opportunity to accomplish any networking. He headed back to the office and saw patients the remainder of the day.

At 7:00 PM, he saw his final patient, a laborer who had injured his back on the job. Dr. Russeau sensed there was something unusual in their interactions but completed his intake and started the treatment for his significant back injury. By the time he finished and was ready to leave the office, it was after 8:00 PM. He headed toward the door but suddenly and inexplicably had an urge to call his last patient. He turned around, heading back to his desk and dialed the number. His patient answered and Dr. Russeau told him he felt the need to follow up after his appointment. After an uncomfortable pause, his patient began to open up. He said he had been struggling with depression and was unhappy with his life. Since Dr. Russeau had spent some time earlier in the day with a social worker who specialized in depression, he asked if he could introduce them. His patient agreed. Finding John Robertson’s card on his desk, he called the number expecting to leave a message as it was after hours. He was surprised when Mr. Robertson personally answered saying he been working late as well and was just leaving the office when his phone rang. Dr. Russeau briefed him on his patient, hung up and called his patient back to provide him with John’s contact information. After this, he left the office and went about his evening, satisfied he had done what the little voice in the back of his head was telling him to do.

It was six months later, during a typical office day when Dr. Russeau discovered that same patient in an exam room waiting for him. He walked in with a smile and went to shake his hand but his patient suddenly broke down and cried uncontrollably. Attempting to comfort him, it took some time before he was composed enough to tell him his emotional story. He said that when he had come in to see Dr. Russeau six months before, he was in the depths of a depression and planned to take his own life. He admitted to having everything ready but the call that evening literally stopped him. He spoke to Mr. Robertson who recognized his desperation and was convinced to go to the emergency room for help. He was admitted to the psychiatric center where counseling and medication turned his life around. He said he felt great and thanked Dr. Russeau for saving his life.
Dr. Russeau was overcome by this revelation. What he thought had been an unproductive day six months earlier turned out to be a day he would remember forever. He realized the real purpose of that “networking” meeting was not about networking at all, but about saving a life.

I was so emotionally moved by this and other stories that I felt the urge to start writing them down. Physicians’ Untold Stories was born. It features ordinary doctors in private practice who experienced or witnessed events that could not be explained by anything we learned in medical school. The narrators of these stories are men and women of science. The one thing they all have in common is they are physicians touched by a divine moment so miraculous, they needed to share it with you. I’ve realized there is a higher power that often intervenes, guiding us down the right path if we just listen.


Scott J. Kolbaba, MD, is a doctor of internal medicine in Wheaton, Illinois. After being awarded a degree in economics from Cornell College and serving with the Marine Corps Reserves, he completed his medical degree at the University of Illinois and graduated with honors. Kolbaba interned with Rush-Presbyterian St. Luke’s Medical Center and completed his residency at the Mayo Clinic. He is a member of the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society. Visit http://ift.tt/2e1l7ma or order his new book at Physicians Untold Stories: Miraculous experiences Doctors are hesitant to share with their patients, or ANYONE on Amazon now.

You’ve read Is There A Higher Power That Participates In Our Lives? 27 Physicians Collaborate On A New Book Detailing Unexplained Medical Miracles, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’ve enjoyed this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

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Derbyshire, Englandphoto via patrick

Derbyshire, England

photo via patrick

[In]Exterior, Falahatian Yard-House / [SHIFT] Process Practice


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff


© Parham Taghioff


© Parham Taghioff


© Parham Taghioff


© Parham Taghioff

  • Architects: [SHIFT] Process Practice
  • Location: Pir Bakran, Isfahan Province, Iran
  • Architects In Charge: Rambod Eilkhani, Nashid Nabian
  • Team : Rambod Eilkhani, Nashid Nabian (Senior and Founding Partners), with Ehsan Karimi , Parnian Ghaemi, Dorna Mesrzadeh (Junior Partners)
  • Area: 677.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Parham Taghioff
  • Project Manager: Dorna Mesrzadeh
  • Designer Associate: Golnaz Jamshidi
  • Presentation & Graphic Associates: Naghmeh Asadbeigi, Mohammad Hasan Tavangar, Amir Fallahi, Mahta Aminali
  • Physical Model Associate: Forouzan Farhadi
  • Constrouction Manager: Pouria Shafiee
  • Structural Consultant: Pedram Mosahebi Mohammadi (Sarvin Structural Consultants)
  • Mechanical Consultant: Ali Piltan

© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

[In]Exterior is an exercise in challenging the well-established conventions of designing for a second home or a retreat family house.


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

Conventionally speaking, retreat homes are conceptualized as villas in the park with a focus on maximizing the visual access of the interiors to the surrounding natural vista through transparent exterior thresholds of a solid volume.


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

First Floor Plan

First Floor Plan

© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

[In]Exterior is a family house located in a retreat village in the periphery of City of Isfahan. The suburban context of the project offers no substantial natural view or meaningful topographic variation. Hence, the spatial organization of the project is fundamentally transformed to introduce two connected semi-courtyards. Instead of looking outward at a non existing natural vista or impressive view, the project is shifting its visual focus to the inner yards, arriving at maximum transparency of the architectural thresholds where the interior spaces meet the interiorized yards.


Section

Section

The redefinition of inside/outside relation is also deriving the material condition of the architectural surfaces. The commonalities of surface material and texture, both in interior and exterior voids, allow for certain level of ambiguity in differentiating the interior and exterior condition from a perceptual point of view.


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

The spatial uncertainty in identifying the borderline between in and out is further established through the introduction of sliding walls that transforms the interior yards of the project to semi-open gardens. 


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

Meanwhile,  the introduction of the yards within the heart of the spatial organization of the house, allows for performative division of the house between the categorically different  functions with private and public nature. 


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

Product Description: For the facade of the building we decided to go for a white modular material to emphasize on the abstractness of the platonic forms of the project. Hence, the white industrially produced bricks of Namachin Esfahan were chosen. 


© Parham Taghioff

© Parham Taghioff

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Philip Johnson’s Interfaith Peace Chapel vandalised in Dallas

Interfaith Peace Chapel by Philip Johnson

A Philip Johnson-designed chapel in Dallas, Texas, has been defaced with graffiti. Read more

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Chetian Tourist Center / West-line studio


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

The Tourist Center is located just outside Chetian Village (车田村), on the main road arriving from Guiyang, the capital of Guizhou province. The stone village, famous for its houses built with local blue-stones, has more than 400 years of history and its population is mainly composed by Miao (苗), one of the oldest ethnic minority groups in China. 


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

The Village runs parallel to a river and the local traditional architectural style is characterized by single units (stone houses with open air courtyards) repeated in a parallel way. Each unit is linked to the others and all these parallel bands form separated groups.


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

Floor Plans

Floor Plans

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

The Architects integrated this characteristic parallel feature in the design of the tourist center. Three parallel units (bands) are arranged following a L shape, which creates interesting outdoor spaces, in China categorized as “Yuan” (院), courtyard. This first band is characterized by white walls embracing the courtyards, white walls which create a ritualistic impression in contrast with the stone ones.


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

Categorized as “Xiang” (巷), lane, the space created by the second band is located on the widest area on site, on its north end. The building at the very end of the long quite secluded corridor hosts the restrooms facilities and has been built according to Chetian Village’s traditional stone masonry techniques.


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

The third band is the largest volume on site and it is categorized as “Tang” (堂), hall. Here are located the visitor center’s public functional areas: reception and info point, an exhibition hall and a tea room. Upstairs is the private office area. The interior units follow the parallel flow and have been partitioned according to their functions. Architects deliberately designed the turn near the south end of the first band and the second band in order to combine the three bands into one structural group. Group which still preserves the singular L shape units in aim of retaining the relative independence among the parallel bands, while gaining the benefits of uniformity and integrity. 


© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

Axonometric

Axonometric

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

© Jingsong Xie / West-line studio

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Residence S-91 / Design Buro Architects


©  Aman Sonel

© Aman Sonel


©  Aman Sonel


©  Aman Sonel


©  Aman Sonel


©  Aman Sonel

  • Architects: Design Buro Architects
  • Location: 91, Phase 2, Shri Krishna Avenue, Rani Bagh, Indore, Madhya Pradesh 452020, India
  • Architect In Charge: Navendu Shrivastava
  • Area: 270.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2014
  • Photographs: Aman Sonel
  • Structural Consultants: Pyramid Consultants

©  Aman Sonel

© Aman Sonel

The house was conceptualized around keeping the family interactive all round the day. The footprint of the residence was confined to only half of the available site, overlapping the spaces for increased interaction; as well provide an open space for various activities. The dichotomy between the built and the un-built, play of light, space and materials provided for the quality of spaces.


Section

Section

The residence is built only on a narrow plot of 1050 sqft, and utilizing the complete width of the plot, the rooms and spaces stay comfortable for a lavish living. The walls are only 125m thick and with no columns in the residence, the spaces come out to be neat and cozy.


©  Aman Sonel

© Aman Sonel

The minimalistic approach makes the whole depth read as a single space, integrating the way the family lives. The sequence of spaces ensured that the privacy wasn’t hindered but at the same time maintained a connection when required. The extended living room eradicated the feeling of living on a busy city street with the hybrid between the organic nature and rectilinear concrete.


©  Aman Sonel

© Aman Sonel

The void in the centre of the building envelope celebrates the spaces connected to it and maintains the joy in the family. Sunlight filling in from the courtyards and the greens segregating the spaces provide a comfortable atmosphere for living. 


©  Aman Sonel

© Aman Sonel

The light washes smoothly on the walls through the large glass opening and skylights, creating a strong dialogue between the rough and the smooth.


©  Aman Sonel

© Aman Sonel

Product Description:The postform sunmica panels provided for a clean and minimalistic furniture that blends seamlessly with the plain concrete walls and roof and at the same time providing a contrast in the colour and texture.

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Hamptons home by Bates Masi features cantilevering upper floor

Atlantic by Bates Masi + Architects

American firm Bates Masi + Architects took cues from a historic lifeguard station while designing this cedar-clad dwelling on Long Island, New York. Read more

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Las Vegas hopes to entice Oakland Raiders with $1.9 billion stadium

Oakland Raiders stadium for Las Vegas by Manica Architecture

This new stadium designed for the Oakland Raiders could facilitate the American football team’s proposed move to Las Vegas. Read more

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Rapt Studio designs office space to allow HBO to “reimagine entertainment”

hbo-code-labs-rapt-studio-office-interiors-usa_dezeen_2364_sqc

Entertainment powerhouse HBO uses this office space in Seattle, designed by New York firm Rapt Studio, to develop and test its digital and interactive products. Read more

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