- Joined
- Oct 13, 2019
It's not hilarious. He's 100 percent a monster. No one deserves to deal with him.Not going to lie that was hilarious. He's obnoxious as hell, but I think there is a lot of nurses/ caregivers that need a good screaming at.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It's not hilarious. He's 100 percent a monster. No one deserves to deal with him.Not going to lie that was hilarious. He's obnoxious as hell, but I think there is a lot of nurses/ caregivers that need a good screaming at.
72 hours physical withdrawal symptoms are just for heroin too, afaik. For other opiates it can last significantly longer than that.How is he going to deal with about 72 hours of deep down body pain, where your very bones ache, you can't sleep, your head feels like it's going to explode and the sluices are open at both ends?
He'd be back on the pills in a heart beat.
I also took bodies to morgues for 2 different hospitals and I can verify this shit show happens. You get employees who don't wanna do the job and they leave a body rot outside the fucking morgue.On the topic of how they'd cremate or bury him...
When I worked at a hospital with a morgue (my current hospital doesn't have one), I used to do morgue calls. My coworkers would always pass those off onto me because I had experience with autopsies and shit in university, so it didn't gross me out.
Anyway this one time, I get into work and get a morgue call. Immediately everyone is like "oh hell no, metalparakeet is doing it." Even though I typically did them anyway, I was suspicious by how everyone recoiled and absolutely refused instead of just asking me if I minded taking over like they usually did.
So whatever. I go down all cautious and low and behold, there's a dude a bit thinner than Asanti laying out in the open. And I could immediately tell by the smell that he had probably been outside the freezer for the majority of my 3 days off work.
He didn't fit in the regular freezers and the double wide had two bodies. Since it was a holiday weekend, none of the bodies were really being picked up fast enough so they had no choice but to just let the dude sit there outside the freezer.
So let's hope Steven's hospital is a bit better equipped
It's not hilarious. He's 100 percent a monster. No one deserves to deal with him.
I mean, no one in our situation did it because we didn't care. And the morgue is all chilled, so while he wasn't frozen he wasn't necessarily rotting at an expedited rate. I definitely didn't uncover him to see what he looked like though.I also took bodies to morgues for 2 different hospitals and I can verify this shit show happens. You get employees who don't wanna do the job and they leave a body rot outside the fucking morgue.
No thought for the loved ones of the rotting corpses and how they'll be hard to make look good after the rots been going for 3 days.
Offends me man. I'm not easy to offend. Gimme me Mati idc. When people die they're square with the house. They paid their dues with their life. No reason to let them rot like that. Smh.
Where I worked we just had had lazy fucking human beings who didn't think past their own literal worlds they live in. Not gonna rant about it. I've done that already years ago.I mean, no one in our situation did it because we didn't care. And the morgue is all chilled, so while he wasn't frozen he wasn't necessarily rotting at an expedited rate. I definitely didn't uncover him to see what he looked like though.
Unfortunately it happens due to poor infrastructure. Despite this hospital being a major one, I think we had maybe like 15 freezers with one being extra large. And the autopsy room was connected, so when you picked up a body you had to go through the autopsy room and into the freezer room. The door was only separated by a small closet like space that held bottles of organs. (None about to be used but like....leftover curiosities? I dunno wtf was going on with that, some of them were old af).
Crazy that people got away with it. Typically when I did morgue calls, I was meeting with either a mortician, funeral home or pathologist so there was no dumping the body and running. You also had to sign the bodies in, write their codes on their ID tags and what freezer you put them in. When you removed them, you had to have two signatures (yours and the person taking the body) to sign them outWhere I worked we just had had lazy fucking human beings who didn't think past their own literal worlds they live in. Not gonna rant about it. I've done that already years ago.
I'm still bothered by it obviously. We had great infrastructure and funding. The issue was always a few bad apples in every department be it radiology, radiation oncology, etc.
takes time. but he's a cockroach, they have better oddsEvery one surprised he is not dead gang
Glad they had that down pat for you all.Crazy that people got away with it. Typically when I did morgue calls, I was meeting with either a mortician, funeral home or pathologist so there was no dumping the body and running. You also had to sign the bodies in, write their codes on their ID tags and what freezer you put them in. When you removed them, you had to have two signatures (yours and the person taking the body) to sign them out
My experience was only about 5 years ago and I always thought the logging system of the bodies was ghetto. Writing down info on a notebook that was kept by the door seemed really unreliable to me but hey, wasn't my job to ask questions.Glad they had that down pat for you all.
When it came to bodies it was different than a live person and varies by hospital in my own experience. This was 7-8 years ago though. Time have changed so much in that short amount of time I wouldn't be surprised if the way we worked back in 2012/13 is now a thing of the past.
Looks like Karma got to himForgive me for not being able to figure out how to post a link but apparently the homie has covid/pneumonia. This could be it.![]()
‘My 600-Lb. Life’ Steve Assanti Hospitalized: Seeks Prayers
‘My 600-Lb. Life’ cast member Steve Assanti seeks prayers as he’s been hospitalized. What is wrong with him?www.tvshowsace.com
december 2 1981How old is this guy?
Bariatric stretchers are truly a marvel of modern engineering and sadly an adaptation to the times. At least we don't have to demolish someone's house to extract deathfat patients using cranes nowadays.Mad props to the stretcher manufacturer.
Only if someone films and post it online - for the taxpayers.Would have been so funny if the stretcher tripped and he fell down on his head, squishing it flat.