Tag: First Person

  • Operation Gall Stone: Bloodless, Biley coup

    Operation Gall Stone: Bloodless, Biley coup

    By Priti Prakash

    Did you ever pay attention to this small little organ lying unnoticed in the lap of your liver! I always knew my gall bladder was a moody little organ, but I didn’t realize it had been running a full-time jewellery business inside me. If anyone had told me a month ago that I was secretly running a gemstone factory inside my abdomen, I would have laughed. Lol. But destiny — and a highly accomplished and charming GI surgeon — had other plans.

    It began with the dreaded verdict. When the ultrasound indicated I had gallstones, I imagined a polite handful. Maybe two. Three, if my luck was especially rotten, quietly lounging in my tiny gall bladder like freeloaders enjoying a long-term Airbnb stay.

    But twenty plus?

    Each one bigger than the size of a molar, 10 mm?

    In that tiny gall bladder?

    Honestly, if organs had real estate laws, mine would have been evicted decades ago. Nature, however, had set up an entire colony of twenty plus.

    The ultrasound graphically screamed from the roof top declaring the cohabitation. To make it sound easier the rather suave Doctor said it’s just no problem, they will be out in lesser time than you even fly from Delhi to Jaipur. A time and date were fixed.

    Once surgery was scheduled, my first challenge arrived in the form of the mandatory 6-hour fasting. Now, fasting sounds very spiritual and cleansing — until you’re actually doing it. The night before surgery, I heroically declared, “I’m strong. I’ll manage.”

    By hour four, I was making emotional eye contact with the refrigerator. By hour three, I was giving motivational speeches to myself like a stranded explorer in a survival movie. Water never tasted so delicious.

    The real fun began on the day of my surgery. Morning arrived, and off we went to the hospital, me behaving like a brave warrior on the outside and a hungry squirrel on the inside. After completing endless forms and getting my vitals checked, donning the blue tunic and pyjamas, I landed in the pre-operative waiting area — the limbo between normal life and the mysterious world of the OT. Bracing up for another adventure.

    I was wheeled into a waiting hall where other patients were waiting for their turn of getting under the knife some way or the other all pretending not to be nervous.

    Then walked in my Anaesthetist, giving me a rundown of the many aftereffects of anaesthesia on my body as I happened to be with auto immune. ‘It might trigger flareups’ if it does not suit etc. I wondered if I was in the right place. But now I was already committed to throwing out the crystals from the gall so there was no looking back. Half the way into the Operation Theatre, in the ‘Blues,’ fasting of half a dozen hours, there was no looking back.

    Meanwhile, my stomach was auditioning to play thunder in a sound effects studio. Every nurse who walked by probably heard it. My name was eventually called, and a sense of theatrical intensity swept over me. This was it.

    The moment I stepped into the operation theatre, my first chance, I felt like Alice entering Wonderland — only the Wonderland here was brightly lit, spotless, and filled with smiling humans wearing masks and hair caps. A part of me wondered if I should greet them like celebrities.

    The surgeon’s team, however, ran the place like a five-star hotel making the whole scene pretty comfortable. One adjusted my blanket, another asked if I was feeling okay, someone fixing BP monitoring machine, someone ensuring right pulse rate, when one assured me the anaesthesia would kick in soon. At this point, I was convinced they deserved a hospitality award.

    Then came the anaesthesiologist — the magician of the OT.

    “You may feel a little lightheaded,” he said calmly.

    Lightheaded?

    Sir, within three seconds I was floating like a Bollywood heroine in a dream sequence. If anyone had started singing in the OT, I might’ve joined in. Within moments, I was levitating emotionally.

    And then — poof — blackout. Blissful unconsciousness.

    I woke up later in recovery, convinced only five minutes had passed. Meanwhile, my gall bladder had been neatly removed, stitched, packaged, and metaphorically filed in medical history. The internal gemstone factory shut down permanently.

    But the real shock came at home. My family, with the enthusiasm of archaeologists, presented me with a container. Inside were ‘green stones,’ shining like big UNPOLISHED emeralds from a badly run mine. I stared at them in disbelief and they stared back at me.

    “These were inside ‘me’?”

    “Yes,” my family said. “All twenty.”

    I couldn’t decide which emotion was stronger — awe, horror, pride or the urge to post them on OLX as “lightly used crystals.” Even maybe start a side business selling ‘organic internal crystals.’ Honestly, they looked like props from a fantasy movie.

    Frankly, the gall bladder had been running a souvenir shop without my permission. No symptoms, no warning, nothing. Just quietly manufacturing gemstones like a side hustle.

    It’s incredible how such a tiny organ carried so many uninvited guests without once filing a complaint. Not a warning sign, not a protest. Just quietly running an underground mineral enterprise.

    If stones could talk, mine would surely say, “We lived rent-free for years. Thanks for the hospitality.”

    Looking back, the whole experience was a mix of scientific marvel, personal shock, unexpected glamour and a surprisingly smooth OT adventure made possible by a brilliant, charming and highly accomplished Surgeon, Dr Sumesh Kaistha.

    And let’s be real — I have the strangest souvenir collection anyone could ever boast of: Twenty plus crystals, limited edition, handcrafted by my own body.

    I can now add a degree in manufacturing crystals too among the few other that I have.

    Lucky me, right?

    (Priti Prakash is a New Delhi based Senior Independent Journalist. She is a political analyst & blogs on Diplomacy.)

     

  • Kamla Persad Bissessar: A Diaspora Daughter Who Rose to Lead a Nation

    Kamla Persad Bissessar: A Diaspora Daughter Who Rose to Lead a Nation

    • By Prof. Indrajit Saluja

    New York is once again the arena of world diplomacy, with the 80th United Nations General Assembly drawing presidents, prime ministers, and kings from every corner of the globe. Among them this year is Prime Minister Kamla Persaud Bissessar of Trinidad and Tobago. On September 27, the Consulate of Trinidad and Tobago will host a reception in her honor, and I feel especially privileged to be among those invited. For me, this is not just another diplomatic occasion. It is personal, filled with memories of earlier encounters with a leader whose journey I have watched with admiration for more than a decade.

    My First Encounter: 2010 in New York

    The first time I welcomed her to this city was in 2010, just months after she had been sworn in as the first woman Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago. The Indo-Caribbean community here turned out in force. There was music, dancing, flags waved proudly, and the energy of a people celebrating a historic achievement.

    I was there that day, and I recall the emotion clearly. It was not only the joy of Trinidadians and Tobagonians at seeing one of their own ascend to leadership; it was also the pride of the Indian diaspora worldwide. A daughter of indentured laborers’ descendants had risen to the summit of power in a sovereign state. When I had the privilege of meeting her, I found her warm and gracious, with a quiet confidence that suggested she was ready for the enormous responsibility history had placed upon her shoulders.

    Honored in the Land of Her Ancestors

    Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Prime Minister of the Republic of Trinidad & Tobago was conferred the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman by the President of India, Pratibha Devisingh Patil at the 10th Pravasi Bharatiya Divas Sammelan at Jaipur January 9, 2012.

    Two years later, I met her again, this time in India at the 2012 Pravasi Bharatiya Divas in Jaipur. There she was honored with the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman, the highest award given by the Government of India to members of the diaspora.

    The symbolism was profound. She stood on Indian soil as a head of government, representing a Caribbean nation, yet embodying the resilience of those who had left that same soil in bondage generations earlier. Her speech that day fused pride in her Indian heritage with an unshakable devotion to Trinidad and Tobago. It was a reminder of how the diaspora, far from being rootless, carries with it a living heritage that enriches every land it touches.

    From Siparia to State House

    Prime Minister Bissessar’s biography is as inspiring as it is improbable. Born in Siparia in 1952, she grew up in modest circumstances, yet excelled academically. She studied at the University of the West Indies, trained as a lawyer at Hugh Wooding Law School, and pursued further studies abroad. She entered politics with the United National Congress, rising steadily to serve as Attorney General, Minister of Education, and finally, in 2010, as Prime Minister.

    Her years in office were marked by investments in education, social development, and infrastructure. In the turbulent and competitive world of Caribbean politics, her leadership was sometimes contested, but her historic significance is unchallenged. She was the first woman to lead her nation, and the first woman of Indian descent to serve as head of government in the entire Western Hemisphere. That distinction alone secures her place in history.

    Part of a Global Story

    In many ways, Kamla Persaud – Bissessar’s story is part of a larger global narrative: the ascent of diaspora-origin leaders who are reshaping the politics of their adopted homelands. In recent years, we have seen Kamala Harris, the first woman Vice President of the United States, proudly acknowledge her Indian and Caribbean roots. Rishi Sunak became the first British Prime Minister of Indian descent, while António Costa leads Portugal with equal pride in his Goan heritage. Across the world, diaspora-origin leaders are demonstrating that heritage is not a limitation but a source of strength.

    Prime Minister Bissessar stands tall among them. Long before Kamala Harris took her oath of office in Washington, before Sunak entered 10 Downing Street, Bissessar had already made history in Port of Spain. She showed that a woman of Indian origin could command the confidence of a diverse electorate and guide the destiny of a modern nation. She was, in many ways, a trailblazer for this new era of diaspora leadership.

    A Symbol of Resilience and Representation

    For me, her leadership represents the triumph of the Indo-Caribbean story. When the first ships brought indentured laborers from India to Trinidad in 1845, no one could have imagined their descendants would one day lead the nation. Theirs was a life of hardship, cut off from their homeland, toiling in plantations under difficult conditions. Yet they preserved their culture, their faith, and their dignity.

    Prime Minister Bissessar is the flowering of that resilience. Her story tells us that the sacrifices of those ancestors were not in vain. It tells us that heritage, when combined with opportunity, can produce leaders of global significance.

    She is also a beacon for women worldwide. Leadership remains a male-dominated arena, and women who enter it often face prejudice and resistance. Bissessar’s rise, therefore, was not merely personal—it was symbolic. She proved to young girls in Trinidad, in India, and everywhere else that they too could aspire to the highest office.

    Welcoming Her Once Again

    Now, in 2025, as she comes once again to New York, I feel a sense of continuity. I was there when she first came in 2010, buoyed by fresh victory. I was there in India when she was honored as a daughter of the diaspora in 2012. And I will be there again this week, to greet her as a seasoned leader, her legacy already secure, her place in history already written.

    The reception on September 27 will surely echo with pride, laughter, and music. But for me it will be more than a celebration—it will be a reflection on the extraordinary journey of a woman who has connected continents, bridged cultures, and embodied the resilience of her people.

    I confess to a personal pride in her story. I see in her rise a reflection of our own diaspora’s struggles and triumphs. I see the perseverance of ancestors who left India with nothing but courage and faith. I see the dignity of women who refused to be confined by tradition or prejudice. And I see the future of diaspora communities across the world, who now know that leadership at the highest levels is within their reach.

    As she steps into this week of diplomacy and dialogue, I offer her my warmest welcome and my heartfelt wishes. May her engagements be successful, may her leadership continue to inspire, and may her journey remind us all of what is possible when heritage and history combine with vision and courage.

    Prime Minister Kamla Persad Bissessar is not just a leader of her nation. She is part of a global chorus of diaspora voices now shaping the world. She was among the first to show that it could be done. And for that, as I prepare to greet her once more in New York, I say with pride: welcome back, Madam Prime Minister.