Rapport. Setting boundaries.

When I worked in an emergency setting at a district hospital many years ago, I was asked by a younger colleague “How do you get people to listen to your orders and execute them?”. She was referencing to the fact that whenever I put up an order for a blood investigation to be drawn out or a medicine to be infused, it get’s done right away.

I have no idea myself.

The easy answer would be perhaps I communicated my intentions well. Or the involved team member had a high degree of accountability and responsibility resulting in them carrying out the order anyway regardless who asked for it. However, there is admittedly an element more subtle than the ones mentioned that could exert an influence over the situation.

Rapport.

I am a petite lady to begin with. It makes people guess on first encounter whether I’d turn out to be an Edna, the teapot lady in Beauty & the Beast or a speck in Totoro. Coming across as being too warm and polite (for a petite lady) gives an idea that you’re submissive and easily manipulated or trampled over. Too distant makes people uncomfortable to work with you and creates that communication gap which may impair patient care. So I try to put myself out as someone in between. Mesra enough to facilitate another person’s intention to ask for help or consult but setting the boundaries as to what topics we can talk or joke about.

I find these boundaries hardly exist in male-male interactions. They can coexist to jam together and still exhibit good working ethics with each other. That is some psychology I still need to study and perhaps apply in female-female or female-male interaction. I cannot afford to do that. To me, once I relax the boundaries, that is when the other party feels it is OK to not oblige to my requests.

In fact I experienced that on several occasions especially with male colleagues with a bigger body composition. The ones who would tower over you when both of you stand next to each other. Hence, to save myself from a headache I’d tend to just keep a social distance from these people. Meaning I don’t laugh at a joke, share a gossip or anything along those lines. It gets things done and at the same time hinders me from situations where I have to do difficult favours. Most often it involves things like prescribing a relative’s medication list cause the relative missed an appointment, giving out medical certificates (MC) to ‘husband’s for regular checkups because they just do not want to apply for their annual leave. Despite being good natured about it, these favours still came with a gentle advice and empathetic gesture from my side. I’d prescribed the medications for a month and have these colleagues remind their relatives to come for a proper checkup. As for the MC situation, I think I’ve only seen that ‘husband’ once because of the honest remark I made about giving it out . Soon enough, the husband was brought in to see a different doctor the next visit. I felt that the burden of ethical dilemma was relieved off my shoulders.

Rapport does not mean obliging to every single request, on the grounds of wanting to be accepted. Or being cool. It is also about setting boundaries that each party is comfortable with.

Advise an advice

I saw a reel the other day about a guy speaking his mind to a group of girls regarding ‘Advice’. He said the girls should choose their role models carefully and take in any advice with a pinch of salt. He said he feared that if these girls listened blindly to someone’s words, their lives would end just like that person’s.

Come to think of it – his words do have some weightage to it.

Social media is a free world on its own. Anybody can say anything using their own accounts. Thus, we see a lot of people making content and sharing their personal life experiences with anybody willing to listen. The aim is to share but to take it depends on the viewers/audience. This is where it gets tricky. There is no one piece of advice that fit’s all. There will be clashes of values confined by age, culture, religion, economic status etc.

If a young woman who plans on climbing the corporate ladder hears advice from a successful lady boss about ‘Keep hustling, don’t care about what other people think about you’ may seem right and motivating. If an adolescent hears this and puts it in her context, you might get a rebellious, argumentative teenager instead. Ha ha.

Not everything on social media is ugly though. There are still some old-school bloggers that I still love to follow like Diana Ishak. I tend to check in with her (=read blog) on certain issues and see if our values align with each other. She is like MY moral compass for what is socially and morally acceptable and not. So far I agree with most of the things she writes about. Maybe it’s because we are kind of in the same generation – not much of a gap. Then there are figures like Cik Epal with her ‘million international’ business and loving family. She appears genuine in her daily life and adventures. And then I got to discover new personalities too. My favourite has got to be this lady called Jaja. She seems relatable as she juggles her life as an entrepreneur, influencer, wife and mom of a boy and cats. One surprising and humbling thing I found out about her was that she and her groupie has the occasional halaqah session with an ustazah to learn about religion. Her groupie are not just some ladies but top-notch ladies who own businesses yet are still able to find time to listen to an ustazah on a weekend or so.

Jaga hubungan dengan Allah

Jaga hubungan sesama manusia

Jaga hubungan dengan persekitaran

The world is full of advice. The people around you will always want to share their life experiences with you. It is up to you to think about it, to pick and choose which advice suits you best.

The Cupid Song

The catchy tune is everywhere on Instagram grabbing attention all around the world. Recently, there were claims that this song was plagiarized from a Turkish song? To be honest, I would not be surprised. Big companies, big names – they get away with taking other people’s work, making little tweaks and calling it their own. Remember the Duck story?

Bloggers with more prominent names or famous news portals could easily pick up an ‘idea’ in the form of an article from a small-time blogger and also call it their own. The small-time blogger would probably be unaware of it unless the piece is widely circulated or is being made known by their blog readers.

So I am interested to see how this accusation will unfold – plagiarism or not.

54 videos

This is the 54th video on my Youtube channel.

Sometimes I’d scroll through my old videos just to see how it was a few years ago especially the kids cause you can just see how they’ve grown in personality and physically. You also get to see yourself and see what has changed. There are also a few Unlisted Videos, mainly my OUM assignment videos. The links are sent to my assessors or friends who helped with the assignment.

I am still working on the craft of so-called faceless Youtube-ing. Will get somewhere, sometime.