"First
feed the face and
then talk right and wrong"
*
Yesterday,
right after I had posted my previous blog entry, “Cut Bait,” the
above excerpt from the song “How to Survive” (Bertholt
Brecht/Kurt Weill, The
Threepenny Opera)
floated into my head. So today I am posting an addendum to the
previous discussion of “Give a man a fish . . . Teach a man to
fish.”
*
There
are only two things I remember from my three years of Junior High
School, both acronyms: PAIL and BAPS.
PAIL
is a reminder of the four types of skin injuries: Puncture, Abrasion,
Incision, and Laceration. Good for one's general knowledge, but PAIL
doesn't rise to the level of usefulness of BAPS.
The
latter acronym spurs us to the correct order of treatment should we
happen to stumble across a man in shock who has swallowed poison,
been asphyxiated, and is simultaneously bleeding. (Now, I must admit
that my BAPS knowledge has never been called into play, as I have
never met such a distressed human being. The only person that I can
imagine coming across such an unfortunate is Hercule Poirot, but that
prissy Belgian, I believe, would be of no use in the matter.)
At
any rate, in case you
do come across such a case, here's the battle order:
First,
deal with the most life-threatening problem—the Bleeding;
Only
once that is under control, do you turn to the second most
threatening issue—the Asphyxiation;
After
that is seen to, you move to an antidote for the Poison;
And
lastly (assuming the poor chap is still with you) you attend to the
Shock.
*
And
so, class, what is the relevance of all this to our fish story of
yesterday?
First
things first.
Before attempting to turn a starving man into Izaac Walton, feed his
face!
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