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  • Hi, everybody.

  • How are we?

  • Hot.

  • Warm.

  • Tired?

  • Because that's what I am.

  • It's nice to meet you contagious on.

  • And we have five minutes.

  • I'm gonna move quickly.

  • The story's going to start out a little bit grim, but I promise you it gets better.

  • It is one of hope and thankfulness.

  • We'll start with a little known fact that human beings bleed all the time.

  • Like each of you in this room.

  • Like if you ever done anything normal, like carrying a backpack, climbing upstairs, walking to work, you've started bleeding internally.

  • But you stop very quickly before you even notice So you don't get bruises.

  • You don't have major issues with blood loss.

  • Um, second, probably not well known.

  • Fact as I bleed all the time, too.

  • Except for me.

  • I do not stop.

  • So I've been in the emergency room from climbing stairs, opening doors, throwing a ball, going to school.

  • Um, these things have almost killed me multiple times.

  • And if I don't take my medication, I will die.

  • I will just bleed to death from like sitting in the audience and clapping, clapping, literally.

  • Clap was in the emergency room once for clapping.

  • Um there is medication and medication is good.

  • I take it.

  • And that's why I'm here today.

  • Um, the thing is, it costs a lot of money.

  • It costs one roughly.

  • Actually, this is wrong.

  • Pardon me?

  • It costs 10,000 per week.

  • Um, why did I hang on?

  • Let's just quickly.

  • I know.

  • I know I'm short on time, but I correctness is really important.

  • That's the commas in there.

  • Anyway, 10,000 per week.

  • Unaffordable.

  • Right.

  • Um, I was born in India, where it's densely populated, and there isn't that good of a health care system.

  • But very quickly as a baby moved to Qatar, where my father got a job and I'm really thankful to my father because he spent 20 years working this job and the treatment in Qatar was great.

  • The medicine was free, but the treatment model was on demand.

  • And all that means is wait until he's in critical condition near death and then give him medicine.

  • As a result, the 1st 23 years of my life were spent on this like pendulum between living and dying.

  • I would go to school one day and spend the next three weeks in the emergency room I in an entire school year, I would attend only like 19 days of school.

  • So there's not much you can do when everything kills you.

  • Except you can just sit.

  • My brother is healthy, and so he got to go to all the classes.

  • He went to a computer class, learn HTML and would come back home and teach me what he had learned.

  • HTML and I would get really excited with super thankful to my brother for teaching major TML when you can't do anything else.

  • There's only so many movies you can watch and games you can play until they get boring and you start coding.

  • And that's what I did for seven years straight.

  • Just coding, making websites, whatever on.

  • And my mother, who I'm super thankful for, encouraged me to take part in some type of Web design competition that I ended up winning of scholarship to university and the whole bunch of money.

  • And with eventually with that came a job.

  • My 1st 1 of my first jobs eventually work the job for a while, super thankful for people who were willing to work with me, though I needed like four hour lunch breaks for medicine, and eventually that job led to another job where I was able to get on a plane and move to Germany for work now in Germany.

  • This happened 3.5 years ago.

  • So up until this point, I'm on this pendulum right between living and dying.

  • My mind is so messed up.

  • I have PTSD and things, but come to Germany.

  • The healthcare is incredible.

  • It is no longer on demand.

  • It is preventative.

  • What that means is I just take it all the time, whether I'm sick or not.

  • And as a result, I'm just like you now help the I work on one of the greatest teams writing code with such a wonderful team who I'm super thankful for and because I can finally travel and I'm no longer bound by health care or medicine.

  • I've been able to go to so many conferences all around the world doing talks, encouraging people.

  • This is this is my life today that I'm incredibly thankful for to the health care system, to the developer communities and to you.

  • And so today I'm just really committed to doing this and spreading the love, the hope, the positivity.

  • Thank you so very much for coming.

  • Thank you.

Hi, everybody.

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感恩、醫療和編碼社區由Tejas Kumar主持|社區休息室|JSConf EU 2019 (Gratitude, Healthcare, and Coding Communities by Tejas Kumar | Community Lounge | JSConf EU 2019)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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