This is how amputation was performed in 1805

čas přidán 15. 09. 2023
#absolutehistory
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Komentáře: 14 000

  • “i was born in the wrong generation” been quiet ever since this dropped

    • This is the best comment on this video 😂😂😂

    • I will go through this pain if i can see people in periwigs 😂

    • Not really. Living 80 years is literally torture

    • @@Matt-id4qp So is dying slowly of a horrible infection in your leg.

  • Wounded soldier: “AHHHHH!!! MY LEG” Medics: “We got a fighter boys, jump on him!”

  • "I'll watch one last short before bed" The short:

  • imagine you're the last guy who went through this just before anesthesia was invented.

    • guyyyyyyyyyy. the agonyyyyyyy

    • 😅

    • hello, satan !

    • Honestly, it's probably still happening a lot more recently than you'd think. There's still amputations that happen by accident, though very very rare

    • Opium still existed back then

  • “I wish we could go back to the good old days” The good old days:

  • “His knee is shattered” “Fuckin chop it off then tf?”

    • there was no way to go in and set the bone back and the person risked infection and then their limb would begin to rot … so, it had to be cut. surgery was basically amputations most of the times back then. 🥲

    • @HeydeeC there definitely was a way. It just wasn't discovered yet. Giving people credit due to their understanding of the times is nice and all. But there was a way for it to be better. And if you keep giving excuses for things that don't even effect you, it will cause you to make excuses for the wrongdoings of today. And that isn't healthy. It is okay to make fun of the past's understanding.

    • ​@@kryptico2240bro expects them to be hundreds of years ahead in medical knowledge and technology 😭

    • ​@@Rokumi13Yeah, even considering that it took..oh, I don't know, several thousands of years to get where we are technologically? Like literally, him thinking that is kinda insane.

  • Guy who invented anesthesia: “You’re welcome.”

    • Guy who invented antibiotics so we can fix these injuries instead of lopping off entire limbs: you're welcome

    • @@naverilllang I don’t think antibiotics would help a shattered knee

    • ​@@fishscalecocainewdf is ur pfp ....bruh ....😂🤣😂

    • @@naverilllangOften the limbs are so damaged there’s no choice but to amputate. My leg was mangled in 16 ton of steel, no antibiotics would fix that.

    • @@thenoneckpeoplerepresentat8074u jumped into a mill or what?

  • They did this to a guy in the show "1883". The had him drink a whole bottle of whiskey until he passed out drunk and then cut his leg off, the guy slept through the knife cuts but as soon as the bone saw started he woke up screaming for not even 15 seconds and then passed back out, I'm assuming feinted from the pain

  • I got stabbed in the leg Medic: "grabs a fucking 20 inch saw" i got this

  • Imagine crawling for your life back to base and then your medic just starts hacking your limbs off

    • That's scary man, I'd just kill myself at that point

    • better then an infection

    • @@newheadstart you'd rather die than lose a limb or two?

    • @@orfeo793 the thing is not losing limbs, it's the process that is nightmare.

    • 😂😂😂 I'd do the hacking

  • Gets doctor appointment *card delinces * The doctor:

    • Lmao 😂

    • Hold up, that means that the doctor somehow managed to stick your leg back on but then your credit card declines so he cuts your leg off.

    • *unshatters knee and reshatters it*

  • For anyone who wants to know, the group is called Deeds of Arms, they took part is many historial demonstrations from Roman, Georgian and Medieval periods. (I should know as I was a part of it 😅)

  • Soldier : You got anything for the pain? Doctor : Yeah. Hold him down boys.

    • Me: screams bloody murder

    • 😂😂 underrated comment

    • 😂

    • Some brandy and a towel to bite down on

    • Casser sa pipe (To break your smoking pipe) is a French expression from this era that mean 'to die'. They had to bite their pipe during the surgery. If they died, the pipe would fall and break.

  • "I twisted my ankle doc" "I'll get the bone saw" "The what now?"

  • Damn digging it out like it’s a Ben n Jerry’s pint

  • I like how doctors and butchers are two separate professions nowadays.

    • Amen to that!!! Jesus that's sounded fucking terrifying

    • Don't forget barbers around 600 years ago in Europe barbers and surgeons were the same profesional. Good luck with infections.

    • Someones gonna say something transphobic any time soon in this comment section

    • ​@@joaquinsolis8597are you degnerated or what is your Problem?

    • That's progress!

  • now if i ever have to time travel back to 1805 and perform amputations on someone i know what to do thanks to you

  • It’s really cool how much this guy knows about this kinda stuff

  • Soldier: i'm in pain Medic: *best i could do is even more pain*

    • Wait until the Medic pulls out the Medi-Gun

    • And so a spy was turned into a living head with no body

    • “I'm in pain!” “Oh ho! Well, have I got some _bad_ news for you, mon ami!”

    • @@MrO111instant headache relief

    • LOOK, RED, HES A SPY

  • The guy who invented Anastasia needs a raise 💀

  • I’m happy we’re living in this era

  • Soldier: *escapes enemy with broken kneecap to avoid torture* The Doctor:

    • Lmaooooo

    • Ahhahahaahahahhahahhaha

    • Yoo this one is too funny

    • At least the doctors make it as quick as they possibly can.

    • ​@@tmoney1487+ the wound will cause gangrene so it would be worse than amputation

  • i got shot in my patella which totally shattered my knee cap , just a little anesthetic and a tweezer and i was good to go .. after 10 months in a cast 😅

  • Digging going for those arteries has to be the hardest thing to do and go through

    • It's easy to identify arteries because they are always spraying blood all over the place. It must have been a nightmare for that patient .

  • Damn. My professor ain’t lying when she told us that humanity’s greatest creation was anesthesia

    • No that award would go to penicillin

    • @@andrewoverhere8525 damn, you right about that. One of the greatest then

    • Beer

    • On the flipside it also enabled people to do more fucked up shit without all of the consequences

  • We have the first creation of Ether by a Spanish chemist named Raymundus Lullius all the way back in 1275, Ethyl Ether was first created in a laboratory in 1540 by a German scientist named Valerius Cordus. However, it wasn't until 1841 that the anesthetic property of ether was FINALLY put to work. So we have several men's discoveries to thank across varying histories that led us not only to Ethyl Ether, but also eventually paved the path(s) for other forms of following anesthetics.

    • tks for the info; when I've got to be fixed in hospital I've remember the sharp pain of the needle and the feeling of the liquid being introduced, then i feel nothing and was wondering my god how many pain mankind suffer to develop these medical marvels.

  • Soldier: I stubbed my toe. The doctor:

  • "Sir i got shot in the leg! What can we do?" "There's nothing we can do" **grabs the saw**

  • '' They dont care how much pain''💀💀💀

  • The Marine recruiter calls every month or so for my son and I always tell him he enjoys living too much !

  • “And just dig around” I would not wish this pain on my worst enemy 💀💀💀

  • This deserves way more views.

  • And this is the reason why physicians back then looked down on surgeons as surgeons where seen as barbaric much in the same league as barber-surgeons and butchers. Physicians on the other hand needed more education to be able to diagnose and give the proper medicine. Surgeons were called Mister instead of doctors . In some countries , surgeons are still called Mr. or Ms.

    • It's Mr or Ms in the UK. You spend all those years of training, become a doctor and wear the proud title wherever you go. Then become a surgeon and you revert back to plain old Mr. Or Ms. I think I'd be a bit disappointed...

    • @@lozzylols ikr? Now , i read sometime back that the surgeons in UK wants to be called doctor again . Dont know what happened to that movement.

  • I sincerely appreciate the forces above for putting me in the 2000s and not the 1800s

    • Me too.

    • Me too...but maybe we were incarnated in that era as well....reincarnation..you know.

    • When people say they want to live in Victorian times they seem to forget how much we rely on antibiotics and anesthesia.

    • if i was in 1800's. i would do everything imaginable. let me rephrase. "EVERYTHING IMAGINABLE"; whether good or bad

  • imagining my grandfather went through an amputation in WWI gives me the chills🥶

  • This really helped me get through my dinner 🙃

  • The guy that invited anesthesia should be on the $100 bill.

  • Just how beautifull light saber is.

  • A soldier: survives by hiding with a broken leg with the enemies getting away from where he was Medic: Achievement unlocked! “ Old Yeller”

  • "JUST KILL ME" must have been one of the most common phrases at that time.

    • People were just mentally stronger. We are more scared of pain and death in our time, see what happen over covid...

    • ​@@djo-dji6018holy shit if you think it was normal to be "mentally strong" enough to go through that without at least swearing up a storm, you are putting your ancestors on too high of a pedestal. They weren't dumb, but they weren't gods.

    • ​​@@djo-dji6018yeah that's not true. You should look up what happened to those men after they came home. Some of them never even suffered injuries but were mentally destroyed. There is only so much the human mind can handle before it irrevocably breaks. No such thing as these folks back then were somehow super human in mental strength. Also amputation like that is inhumane but the only way to do it back then. Even medical officers ended up mentally ill after having to perform such things on young men in the field. Please don't distort history and their suffering to push your weird narrative of modern society.

    • ​@@djo-dji6018lol? People were held down as their limbs were hacked off they were far from willing participants.

    • @@djo-dji6018People were more used to hardship but that in no way means that they did just calmly let someone took of their leg.

  • At this point I’d just die lmaooo

  • understated line: if it was found fit enough, it was sent to the ships cook

  • Dear modern medicine, thank you for being better than literally NO medicine.

    • This was better than no medicine, with no medicine you'd bleed to death right there. Or worse, you'd close the wound and die of infection.

    • What the Jedi Master said. This is pretty fucking advanced medicine. Cutting off a chap's leg and fixing him up so that he can live a long life is not an easy thing to do.

    • THAT IS MEDICINE!

    • @@Obi-WanKannabis well yeah, but I think they meant modern medicine. While it is impressive to survive losing a leg, i think they are meaning they're grateful it isn't basically torture today

    • Is this a sam o’nella reference???

  • You're a true inspiration.

  • This is absolutely fascinating, and still managed to trigger my absolute discussed with blood and guts

  • "Not a cellphone in sight. Just people living in the moment."

  • This is pure talent, no doubt about it.

  • I'm hooked on your content.

  • This is a "no thanks, I'll just die" situation.

    • Ill bite a bullet in another way tyvm...

    • It's not necessarily an either/or scenario

    • @@1physicsexactly. And dying may take longer and be as excruciating as the surgery. It’s almost lose lose.

    • ​@@rtothec1234just take the L moment

  • “oops wrong leg”

  • I had to listen twice to make sure he didn’t say that they would take the arm and send it to the ship’s cook.

  • I know these men are long gone but my heart goes out to the people that had to endure this sort of pain. We could learn to be more grateful for the time we were born in.

    • too many people fighting for who ever is more pressed these days. Forget any sympathy if you are a man. sad times we are in.

    • @@GabrieleClare 12 year old boys were being sent off to fight in wars and you’re talking about modern day male sympathy? My point still stands.

    • @@GabrieleClare you brought up social justice issues and I was referring to the leaps and bounds made by modern medicine.

    • Just learn how dont make wars again, but this is the lesson we dont learn for thousands of years...

  • “Chef kiss “no no no let me correct you “chef kids💀“

  • "if its found fit enough its sent to the ships cook" is wild

  • A insanely high amount of pain for like 8% chance of survival

    • The most soldiers died from disease in the Napoleonic wars so I'd assume that's way worse than getting amputated

    • @@potatomine6678an amputee seems pretty damn susceptible to disease wouldn’t ya say?

    • @@KarlOttermanExactly. Without any antibiotics, chopping off a leg just leaves so much area for bacteria to enter the leg. I dont know how this was a fix.

    • @@skellq4385It’s definitely a “knee jerk” reaction. Unfortunately the soldiers just weren’t able to stand up for themselves.

  • Top-notch content right here!

  • Got distracted and thought the leg was "...sent to the ship's cook" Had to replay the last part

  • I've never been happier to live in 2023

    • I rather live in 3023. Where they regenerate the leg instantaneously. They’ll look at our technology as primitive. “You mean you had to lose your leg still in 21st century? Those savages!”

    • Yeah fuck the good old days I’m good

    • “i was born in the wrong generation” been quiet ever since this dropped

    • @@test-jb6wcyeah but everyone will be queer and meat will be banned

    • @@gsp1634this is the future i look forward to. all hail queers and veganism!!!

  • Such a creative idea!

  • The timing is perfect!

  • “Doc I’ve stubbed my toe” Anyways, I started amputating

    • _Doctor looks up from sawing your knee_ "Ah, don't worry, you won't feel a thing in your toe after this!"

    • Underrated comment

    • 😂😂

    • I haven't laughed that hard in a long time. Caught me off guard with this.

    • This still happens to diabetics, especially in the USA!

  • Don't forget the "shirt tail" cut ready for sewing up.

  • Soldier: *going to the base since his hands were burned and cant fight* The doctor: Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. Where are your fingers? Seriously. It’s a pretty easy question. You should be able to answer it. But how do you know? How does anyone know anything? You might say, well, I know where my fingers are. I’m looking right at them. Or, I can touch them, I can feel them, they’re right here and that’s good. Your senses are a great way to learn things. In fact, we have way more than the usual five senses we talk about. For instance, your kinesthetic sense, proprioception. This is what the police evaluate during a field sobriety test. It allows you to tell where your fingers and arms and head and legs in your body are all in relation to each other without having to look or touch other things. We have way more than five senses, we have at least twice as many and then some. But they’re not perfect. There are optical illusions, audio illusions, temperature sensation illusions, even tactile illusions. Can you turn your tongue upside down? If so, perfect. Try this. Run your finger along the outer edge of the tip of your upside-down tongue. Your tongue will be able to feel your finger but in the wrong place. Our brains never needed to develop an understanding of upside-down tongue touch. So, when you touch the right side of your tongue when it’s flipped over to your left side, you perceive a sensation on the opposite side, where your tongue usually is but isn’t when it’s upside down. It’s pretty freaky and cool and a little humbling, because it shows the limits of the accuracy of our senses, the only tools we have to get what’s out there in here. The philosophy of knowledge, the study of knowing, is called Epistemology. Plato famously said that the things we know are things that are true, that we believe, and that we have justification for believing. Those justifications might be irrational, or they might be rational, they might be based on proof, but don’t get too confident, because proven is not a synonym for true. Luckily, there are things that we can know without needing proof, without needing to even leave the house, things that we can know as true by reason alone. These are things that we know a priori. An example would be the statement “All bachelors are unmarried.” I don’t have to go survey every bachelor on earth to know that that is true. All bachelors are unmarried because that’s how we define the word bachelor. Of course, you have to know what the words bachelor and unmarried mean in the first place. Oh, you do? Okay. Perfect. That's great. But how do you know? This time I mean functionally, how do you know? Where is knowledge biologically in the brain? What are memories made out of? We are a long way from being able to answer that question completely but research has shown that memories don't exist in the brain in single locations. Instead, what we call a memory is likely made up of many different complex relationships all over the brain between lots of brain cells, neurons. A major cellular mechanism thought to underlie the formation of memories is long-term potentiation or LTP. When one neuron stimulates another neuron repeatedly that signal can be enhanced overtime LTP, wiring them more strongly together and that connection can last a long time, even an entire lifetime. A collection of different brain cells, neurons that fire together in a particular order over and over again frequently and repeatedly can achieve long-term potentiation, becoming more sensitive to each other and more ready to fire in the exact same way later on in the future. They're a physical thing in your brain, firing together more easily because you strengthen that pattern of firing. You memorized. This branching forest of firing friends looks messy, but look closer. It could be the memory of your first kiss. A living souvenir of the event. If I were to go into your brain and cut out those cells, could I make you forget your first kiss or could I make you forget where your fingers are? Only if I cut out a lot of your brain. Because memories aren't just stored in one relationship, they're stored all over the brain. The events leading up to your first kiss are stored in one network, the way it felt to the way it smelled in different networks, all added up together making what you call the memory of your first kiss. How many memories can you fit inside your head? What is the storage capacity of the human brain? The best we can do is a rough estimate, but given the number of neurons in the brain involved with memory and the number of different connections a single neuron can make Paul Reber at Northwestern University estimated that we can store the digital equivalent of about 2.5 petabytes of information. That's the equivalent of recording a TV channel continuously for 300 years. That's a lot of information. That is a lot of information about skills you can do and facts and people you've met, things in the real world. The world is real, right? How do you know? It's a difficult question, but it's not rocket science. Instead, it is asking whether or not rocket scientists even exist in the first place. The theory that the Sun moved around the earth worked great. It predicted that the Sun would rise every morning and it did. It wasn't until later that we realized what we thought was true might not be. So, do we or will we ever know true reality or are we stuck in a world where the best we can do is be approximately true? Discovering more and more useful theories every day but never actually reaching true objective actual reality. Can science or reason ever prove convincingly that your friends and CS-tv videos and your fingers actually exist beyond your mind? That you don't just live in the matrix? No. Your mind is all that you have, even if you use instruments, like a telescope or particle accelerators. The final stop for all of that information is ultimately you. You are alone in your own brain, which technically makes it impossible to prove that anything else exists. It's called the egocentric predicament. Everything you know about the world out there depends on and is created inside your brain. This mattered so much to Charles Sanders Peirce that he drew a line between reality, the way the universe truly is, and what he called the phaneron, the world as filtered through our senses and bodies, the only information we can get. If you want to speak with certainty you live in, that is you react to and remember and experience your phaneron, not reality. The belief that only you exist and everything else, food, the universe, your friends are all figments of your mind is called solipsism. There is no way to convince a solipsist that the outside world is real. And there is no way to convince someone who doubts that the universe wasn't created just three seconds ago along with all of our memories. It's a frightening realization that we don't always know how to deal with. There's even The Matrix defense. In 2002 Tonda Lynn Ansley shot and killed her landlady. She argued that she believed she was in the matrix, that her crimes weren't real. By using the matrix defense, she was found not guilty by reason of insanity, because the opposite view is just way healthier and common. It's called realism. Realism is the belief that the outside world exists independently of your own phaneron. Rocks and stars and Thora Birch would continue to exist even if you weren't around to experience them. But you cannot know realism is true. All you can do is believe. Martin Gardner, a great source for math magic tricks, explained that he is not a solipsist because realism is just way more convenient and healthy and it works. As to whether it bothered him that he could never know realism was true, he wrote, "If you ask me to tell you anything about the nature of what lies beyond the phaneron, my answer is how should I know? I'm not dismayed by ultimate mysteries, I can no more grasp what is behind such questions as my cat can understand what is behind the clatter I make while I type this paragraph." Humble stuff. What strikes me is the cat. Cats do not understand keyboards, but they know the keyboards are a fun place to be. It's a great way to get the attention of a human, they're warm and exciting, surrounded by noises and flashing lights plus cats love to get their scent on whatever they can, a mark of their existence. We aren't that much different, except instead of keyboards we have the mysteries of the universe. We will never be able to understand all of them. We won't be able to ever answer every single question, but walking around in those questions, exploring them, is fun. It feels good. And as always, thanks for watching.

    • My word.. You really went for it 😂

  • When people say "this is the worst time to be alive" refer them to this video.

    • very true

    • You could say that about a lot of time periods. People just like to believe they have it harder than anyone else.

  • This is fantastic!

  • The doctor's K/D ratio was wild and he didn't even know it

    • This is funny asf mate 😂😂 fuck

    • Amputating was the best option

    • I remember that story about the surgeon that had the only recorded 300% mortality rate in one surgeon (the amputated patient, the accidentally amputated assistant, and one of the audience). He's still regarded as a great doctor because his lifesaving rate is one out of four, while others are averaged at one out of seven.

    • I think he inherently knew it, just not in the terms youre thinking of. My fkn god.

    • @@ctdieselnutcringe

  • This made me feel light headed

  • This made me smile.

  • “The design is very human” -Some 1805 amputator💀

  • Wow! Amazing show and tell! Thanks!

  • “Your PTSD is not related to service, sir”

    • they didn't have ptsd in 1800s😭

    • ptsd has always existed, just not well documented

    • The VA every damn time

    • @@tink6225It was known of, but went by different names. Terms like “shellshock” or “war fatigue”.

  • "One more short before I go to bed..." The real:

  • Respect towards people who went through this 😬

  • “No Pain ,No Gain” The Pain:

  • Thanks for the tutorial

  • The last sentence had me needing clarification 😮. "The leg will be assigned to the cook" or "He will be assigned as a cook."?

  • Trauma upon trauma upon trauma. His description of the amputation had me gritting my teeth 😬😬

    • ikr 🤣

    • Careful with your teeth, unless you wanna hear about how they dealt with dental problems back then 🦷👀

    • Ikr I thought it was over after the bone saw, but then he said they used that hook thing to dig and find the arteries to tie them off 🫠

    • And I bet you the guy didn’t come out of the operation triggered by someone not using his correct pronouns.

  • My leg jumped when he demonstrated bonesaw's movement inside the leg.

  • Very interesting, Thanks

  • "If you're screaming, you haven't bled to death"

    • Always look on the bright side 😁

    • So you've seen that comment too :d

    • Obviously?

    • If your screaming, you can breathe.

    • Well at that point things are going pretty well, specially if it's really loud

  • I know this but it hurts listening every time😭

  • This VA hospital needs major updating

  • I’ll never complain about modern healthcare again

    • Modern medicine is great it’s the prices and lack of insurance that brings the pain in modern day. Speaking from experience in both scenarios 19th century and modernity I politely ask the doctor to just let me die it’s not worth all the anguish

    • This is the only way I know how to fix anything

    • You should if you're American

    • @@velderyx2135lmao good one you're so original 😐

    • @@weler1say that to an unnecessary $80,000 airlift when the patient is walking around.

  • Did anybody notice at the end where he said if the leg they cut off was seeing fit enough they take it to the ship's cook see how they snuck that in there.

  • The way he looked at the camera sorrowfully when he said this chaps unfortunately got a shattered knee made it feel more real to me

  • God bless anesthesia and Penicillin. I heard people used to pass out unable to handle the excruciating pain, just to be woken up by the same excruciating pain.

    • After having multiple surgeries on my foot and abdomen, anesthesia is a blessing. But as soon as they take you off the ultra strong pain killers, you feel everything. I had tooth surgery to remove an impacted wisdom tooth and it got infected. The dentist had exposed the nerve too when he pulled the tooth out. Having them press on my cheek to squeeze all the pus out was enough to make me see black and almost pass out but unfortunately, I didn't pass out. I wanted to really bad. I cried so hard afterwards, even the dentist kept telling me he was sorry. Those poor guys that had amputations without pain killers went through hell.

    • @@lucidbarrier those poor guys? Poor you dude. Hang in there. All the best. 👍🏽

    • Your forgetting thank God for pain killers as well .

    • @@krucial88 Yes!

    • Both Scottish inventions weirdly enough

  • I appreciate everyone who went through this, it helped advance surgery and medicine so now we don't have to go through that bullshit 😬

  • When you sleep first at a sleepover:

  • “They don’t really care how much pain your in.” Shivers went down my spine…

    • "YOU(the poor chap) didnt really care how much pain youre in" as in at that point it literally couldnt light up any more pain nerves after everything exxcept the bone severed that you were at max level

    • well I mean, they were trying to save your life, so yeah, at that point they won't just let you die bc you're in enormous pain. btw, I'm pretty sure they made the patients drink some alcohol or sth, which is ofc not comparable to anesthesia, but it helped a bit.

    • ​@@davidovics92 wasn't opium common in that time?

    • ​@@davidovics92 they would not have really cared about how much pain you are in because they must save your life first then do something about pain

    • there was nothing they could do about it.. no point crying when there was bo anesthetic to administer back then. they had a pretty good survival rate in British army and navy from these amputations. ppl were tough back then.

  • Sorry is no one gonna mention that last bit about being sent off to the ships cook?

  • very useful thanks

  • “Doc, I’m sick!” Doc: **grabs bone-saw**

    • “Bonesaw is readyyyyyy!”

    • Pshaw, for sickness he’d merely bring in the blood-letting bucket. Bad humors, bad!!

    • i rated your comments as 5 stars and called it excellant and relatable

    • ​@@jaminsim5965i know someone will say this as soon i read the bone-saw

    • Instead of Ice pack lol

  • I told myself "one more short before I go to sleep." And this is what it landed on. Needless to say, this is not going to be my last short before I go to sleep.

  • Did anyone else hear that at the end? “It’ll be sent off to the ships cook.”

  • Never thought an amputation video would humble me so much to be alive rn. I’m gonna go for a walk, it’s beautiful and sunny outside

    • So true

    • I'm with you on that. Going through a procedure like that with no pain medice looks like hell.

    • 😂

    • No ur not

    • 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • I can’t even imagine 😢

  • Imagine being the surgeon having to do this essentially on an assembly line over and over again.

  • “They don’t really care how much pain you’re in”💀

    • *Yeah, he really meant it for real though cuz back then Anesthetic drugs or gases hadn't been invented and introduced into the health care system yet so em doctors and surgeons couldn't do anything about the pain that em patients were going through and subjected to, to the point that they wouldn't care bout it than just continue with em procedures to whatever that was needed to be done onto the patient..* 😅🤗

    • Bite a bullet, hope for the best

    • They still dont to this day.

    • I'd rather die

  • Why does this remind me of the wooden Velcro food we used to play with when we were little?

  • I guess I have to take Zeref’s role as a headchef then