Dr. Mayank (Fictional Name) had newly joined as a junior resident in the surgery department at AIIMS, New Delhi. Being the junior most the task of preparing the tea for the unit head Prof. (Dr.) Tarun Kumar Chaturji (Fictional Name) was given to him.
After the ward round was over and the academic discussion was going on in the duty room. Dr. Mayank placed the cup of tea prepared by him with special care in front of Dr. Tarun Kumar Chaturji.
Dr. Chaturji took one sip and exclaimed, “Why is there so much milk in my tea? Do you think I am a kid and you want me to feed milk?”
There are two kinds of people in India. One prefers lots of milk in their tea, loving the rich taste of milk in their tea. The other prefers minimal milk in the tea, as the excess of milk may mask the delicate and subtle flavor of the tea. Unfortunately for Dr. Mayank, Dr. Chaturji was in the latter camp.
Like James Bond’s famous Vodka Martini, shaken not stirred, knowing the different variant of the tea/coffee/drink preferred by your boss may be one way to please your boss. But the plan may backfire if you overlook even some minor detail, creating a negative impression rather than a good one.
(Based on true incident)
— ND
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DISCLAIMER: This article is intended only for fun purpose. The author does not promote or recommend any behavior illustrated here or claim it to be useful. Use of the information herein is at you one's own risk. Before trying to emulate or follow anything the reader is well advised to take into account ethical, moral, legal and other considerations. The author recommends that Medical Practice should be of the highest ethical and moral level keeping in mind the interest of the patient as foremost.
DISCLAIMER: This article is intended only for fun purpose. The author does not promote or recommend any behavior illustrated here or claim it to be useful. Use of the information herein is at you one's own risk. Before trying to emulate or follow anything the reader is well advised to take into account ethical, moral, legal and other considerations. The author recommends that Medical Education should be of the highest ethical and moral level keeping in mind the interest of the patient as foremost and according to MCI and other Board’s norm.
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