Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 7 | Page 12

REFLECTIONS ELECTIONS 2016 Teresita Bacani-Oropilla, MD A rchaeological digs are always fascinating. They bring back into focus how people at a particular time and place lived, loved and died. The tombs of Egypt, the stone warriors in China, the ruins of Pompeii, the temples of Athens and the Incas, the Indian mounds in the Americas all tell stories of their own. From these reconstructed cities, architecture, murals and art of whatever medium, we speculate on their actions, their upheavals and times of peace. How they kept their civilizations intact, how their religious beliefs, philosophies and seers influenced their successes and downfalls are still matters of conjecture. In the distant future, what will our progeny, in turn, think of us? Those born at the cusp of this century have seen innovations that the world had only dreamed of in the hundred years preceding. The conquest of space, the proliferation of technologies in communication and travel, the unlocking of secrets of the human body - how it works and how its parts can be replaced - are all great things man has achieved and will continue to improve. On the agenda is still finding the proverbial Fountain of Youth. With all the material heights that we have achieved however, will they be able to reconstruct what we have done for the welfare of our fellow human beings? Will they detect the shift of our populations and distinguish whether the causes were from natural versus man10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE made calamities? Will they know that our ideologies affected the world we passed on to them? At present, in our own good old USA, we are in the throes of electing those that would lead us to that future, their past. The rhetoric has been brutal, many times uncivil. Skeletons long hidden had been resuscitated from their closets and exposed, unclad, their hollow eyes staring us in the face, their dangling bones askew. The frustrated populace was faced with choices that many opine were not perfect nor ideal. But since when was man’s best asset “perfection,” anyway? Great indeed is the responsibility that will rest upon those who are elected. They will steer the Ship of State of one of the great nations of these times. Upon their judgments and policies will depend the course of this country. It is our turn to discern well and do a good job with our choices. We must not forget that out of the roughest ores, gems may be cut that shine in the light. We hope that tomorrow may look kindly upon us. May we in turn, these days, be blessed by the Almighty, with shining hope and peace! Dr. Oropilla is a retired psychiatrist.