I enjoyed Dan Small’s article entitled “An anthropological examination of an exotic tribe: The Naicisyhp” in the January/February, 2011 issue [BCMJ 2011;53:32-34 [9]].
As a retired Naicisyhp I write semordnelap but your tattarattat woke me up. Your rotavator stirred up many medical sagas and loads of BS: my medical colleagues sometimes could be “drab as a fool, aloof as a bard.”
After 40 years in medical practice I retired to Ogopogo land and now drive a Civic and a Toyota. You can contact me at 11-22 Kinikinik Place where I run a drop-in centre for Malayalam, retired shaman.
—Sterling Haynes, MD
Westbank
Links
[1] https://bcmj.org/cover/april-2011
[2] https://bcmj.org/author/sterling-haynes-md
[3] https://bcmj.org/node/4070
[4] https://bcmj.org/print/letters/warning-palindromes-ahead
[5] https://bcmj.org/printmail/letters/warning-palindromes-ahead
[6] http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=https://bcmj.org/print/letters/warning-palindromes-ahead&via=BCMedicalJrnl&tw_p=tweetbutton
[7] https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=Warning: Palindromes ahead&url=https://bcmj.org/print/letters/warning-palindromes-ahead&via=BCMedicalJrnl&tw_p=tweetbutton&via=BCMedicalJrnl&tw_p=tweetbutton
[8] https://bcmj.org/javascript%3A%3B
[9] https://bcmj.org/issues/anthropological-examination-exotic-tribe-naicisyhp
[10] https://bcmj.org/modal_forms/nojs/webform/176
[11] https://bcmj.org/%3Finline%3Dtrue%23citationpop