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Midwestern University's first Journal of Arts and Humanities showcasing the creative works of students, faculty, and staff. Thank you to everyone who submitted! We hope you enjoy viewing them.

THRIVE 2018


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THRIVE Journal of Arts & Humanities Midwestern University - Glendale 2018 THRIVE is a student-organized Arts & Humanities Medical Journal. This publication showcases artistic pieces created by Midwestern University - Glendale students, faculty, and staff. Simply put, to survive refers to one’s continued existence; however, to THRIVE refers to one’s ongoing evolution and growth. Those committed to thriving lead a life of authenticity that is driven by a sense of purpose. A life shaped solely by themselves which aligns who they are with who they want to be. A thriver influences those around them, positively shaping the world we live in. As osteopathic student doctors, we founded this journal in hopes of integrating art and medicine. Osteopathy has taught us that each person is a unit of mind, body, and spirit, capable of self-regulation, self-healing, and health maintenance. Through promoting humanism, creativity, self-awareness and personal growth, we hope to help the body function properly, by keeping one’s mind and spirit balanced. THRIVE EDITORS-IN-CHIEF Caroline Bakhit, OMSII Naira Sargsyan, OMSII CREATIVE WRITING & VISUAL ARTS EDITORS Divyash Chhetri, OMSI Chris Chu, OMSI Duy Phan, OMSII Emma Smith, OMSI COMMUNITY OUTREACH & SELECTION COMMITTEE Melody Avakian, OMSII Nareh Avanesian, OMSII Raffi Gharakhanian, OMSII Edwin Tsang, DMSII We are strong advocates for mental health awareness. As such, we aim to cultivate the values that help others thrive by encouraging self-expression, confidence, and self-worth. This journal provides a safe environment for allowing others the opportunity to express themselves creatively and gain recognition in doing so. We thank each and every individual who took the time to share some of their creativity and are grateful for all contributions. It was our pleasure compiling these pieces together and hope that the incredible talents resonate with you as much as they did with us. Thank you to our editors, staff, and faculty for their continued support in making Midwestern University’s first Journal of the Arts & Humanities possible. We would like to give special thanks to our faculty advisor, Dr. Andrew Yorgason and Assistant Dean of Student Governance, Julie High Horse Gregg - this publication would not have been possible without your continuous support and guidance. THRIVE 2018 1
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CONTENTS Literature 5 Machine C. Divyash Chhetri 8 The Gift Michael T. Rupp, PhD 10 Tension Pneumothorax Connor Welsh 13 C57BL/6 C. Divyash Chhetri 14 I Sense You Melody Avakian 15 Dear Stranger Anonymous 17 The Himalayas Stole My Ego C. Divyash Chhetri 20 Game on MSII: Name Withheld for HIPAA Considerations Nasser Koucheki 21 A Message for First Years Jesse Fitzgerald 25 Color Naira Sargsyan 36 Almost Monkey Island Melody Avakian 38 Puddles On My Painting Naira Sargsyan 40 Life Lessons Sameen Naqvi 41 A Student Tries Sleep for the First Time Justin Stanford 45 Halloween Finals Jesse Fitzgerald 50 My Favorite Things…Of Med School Jesse Fitzgerald 51 For the Birds Anonymous Art 6 Japan Cory Nielsen 6 Dreams Lori Kemper, DO 9 Empathy Katherine Chen 10 Closer Brandon Le 10 Infinity Brandon Le 12 Arizona Sky Series Katherine Chen 12 Desert Sunset Caroline Bakhit 13 You’re Doing Great Lucy Shi 13 Science & Discovery C. Divyash Chhetri 2 THRIVE 2018 16 Wanderlust Caroline Bakhit 16 Fish Conor Farley 17 Emancipation Brandon Le 18 Bear Trap Stuart Hepworth 20 Science Rocks! C. Divyash Chhetri 21 Creativity + Mathematics = Love Lisa McPhee Grinnell 21 Sego Lilly Matthew Balls 22 Green Cheeks Bridget Nazar 22 Misc. Conor Farley 22 Misc. Conor Farley 23 Colorful Swirly Sky Barbara Dickerson 23 Long Needle Prickly Pear Monica Henson 23 Prickly Pear Monica Henson 23 Bright Colors of Kilauea Scott K. Stapley 24 Dinosaur Skull Daniel Sitton 25 Graffiti Gorilla Conor Farley 27 A Collection of Failed Attempts to Breathe (ACOFAB) Connor Welsh 27 Carnival Alexander Young 28 Tulips in Blue Barbara Dickerson 29 And So She Waits Naira Sargsyan 30 Large Pink Flower Gloria Rhodes 30 RHODES Gloria Rhodes 30 Did You Say Walk? Melanie Jordan, PhD 31 You’re Not Alone Shaghayegh Assar 31 Momento Brandon Le 32 The Vineyard Scott K. Stapley 32 Mountain For All Seasons Scott K. Stapley 32 McPolin Farm, Utah, USA Scott K. Stapley 32 Standard of Liberty Scott K. Stapley 33 That’s no Moon Nicholas Winter 33 At Rest Melanie Jordan, PhD Art 34 RHODES Gloria Rhodes 35 Sunflower Monica Henson 35 3 Flowers Monica Henson 38 MWU Brandon Le 39 Leaf Monica Henson 39 Sunset at the Beach Gloria Rhodes 39 Trees Daniel Sitton 40 Life Lessons Sameen Naqvi 41 CDMA21 Timothy Jaryd Royer 41 Holding Myself Together Justin Stanford 42 Caseous Necrosis Jasmine Zahid 42 Sugar Creamer Set Stuart Hepworth 42 Bamboo Handle Teapot Stuart Hepworth 42 Square Teapot Stuart Hepworth 44 Lucy Sydney Beals 45 Frankenstein Stephanie K. Kana 45 Sky on Fire Naira Sargsyan 47 Somewhere in Hawaii Gloria Rhodes 47 Orcas and Dobermans Daniel Sitton 47 You Maniacs! Nicholas Winter 48 Clash of Kings Nicholas Winter 50 Raccoon Coat Girl Stephanie K. Kana 51 Not for the Cages Anonymous Photography / Film 4 Havana Cruising Jennifer Wild, DO 4 Room With A View Hannah Mitchell 4 Havana’s Malecon Jennifer Wild, DO 5 Old Steamer 480 Michael R. Meharry, DDS, MS 5 Beautifully Bleak Hannah Mitchell 7 The Magic Tree Sameen Naqvi 7 Riverbed Vasculature Andrew Marshall 11 Iceland’s Godafoss Jennifer Wild, DO 11 Bored Black Panther Kristen Clement 12 Desert On Fire Caroline Bakhit 14 My Backyard Hannah Mitchell 15 Dear Stranger Anonymous 16 Route 66: California Stephen Hardy, DMD 17 Guatemala Rhett Bushman 18 Lazy Afternoon Bhairav Shah 18 The Winding Path Bridget Nazar 19 With Some Friends Tim Lui 19 Upper Antelope Canyon Stephen Hardy, DMD 21 Wisps of Time Kristen Clement 24 Last Hope Bhairav Shah 24 Wild Side Alison Belliveau 25 Colorfools Bhairav Shah 26 Bass Guitar and Neon Hofner Bass Stephen Hardy, DMD 26 Antelope Canyon Jennifer Wild, DO 28 Tranquil Bridget Nazar 28 Water Lilies Bridget Nazar 29 The Wonder of Water Michael Meharry, DDS, MS 31 Night, Beloved Night Kristen Clement 34 Simplicity Caroline Bakhit 35 Emerald Pool Sarah Mauldin 36 Almost Monkey Island Melody Avakian 37 Pleasant Surprise Melody Avakian 37 Templo das Colunas Kristen Clement 43 Largo do Terreirinho Kristen Clement 43 Svartifoss Andrew Marshall 43 Mystic Djúpalónssandur Andrew Marshall 44 Sunset - Nareh Avanesian 46 Light Within The Fog Raffi Gharakhanian 46 Skydiving Jude Alatorre 48 Suspended In Time Raffi Gharakhanian 49 European Eagle Owl Stephen Hardy, DMD 49 Morning Glow Sarah Mauldin 49 Feathery Reflection Michael R. Meharry, DDS, MS 50 Desert Campus Rhett Bushman THRIVE 2018 3
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The Gift Michael T. Rupp, PhD Professor of Pharmacy Administration The old Roi-Tan box was right where I’d left it; top shelf, far left corner of the garage. We’d lost Mom in 2003, and now Dad. Each of us had taken something of sentimental value from the house. The rest was sold, given away or thrown away. Now there was just one last piece of unfinished business. I blew 46 years of dust off the top of the cigar box and opened the lid. It was May, 1967. Western Kansas had staggered through another brutal winter and was preparing to lurch into another oppressive summer. “Don’t like the weather in Kansas? Just wait a few minutes and it’ll change!” Yeah, right. If only that were true. Still, today was beautiful. I guess if you place an ice cube on a hot stove there is a fleeting moment when the temperature is perfect. Today was that day in Western Kansas. My 13th birthday was approaching and I was lost in my favorite fantasy: Mom and Dad had surprised me with a red mini bike just like the ones the Shriners ride in the July 4 parade. There I am, sitting on 50cc’s of rumbling thunder: Collar up, hair dangerously askew, I look just like James Dean. The vision is so real I can taste the cigarette between my sneering lips. A banging on the front door shook me from my dream. “Michael? Michael, are you in there?” Mrs. Hanson was frantically ringing the doorbell with one hand and pounding on the screen door with the other. I stumbled to the door and tried to catch what she was saying. “You lost your boots?” “No, Mr. Boots. I’ve lost Mr. Boots!” “Oh, your cat. Hey, I’m sorry, Mrs. Hanson, I haven’t seen him.” “Could you help me look for him? He bolted out the door when I got home from the grocery and I think he headed for the park.” The park, that was trouble. “Sure thing,” I said. “You take the neighborhood and I’ll check the park.” Little more than a grove of trees bounded by raw prairie, the Town Park was a microcosm of the food chain: Birds hunted worms, cats hunted the birds and coyotes hunted the cats. 8 THRIVE 2018 Occasionally, a passing pickup would slow and someone would complete the cycle by popping a coyote from the window. The park operated by one law; the Law of the Claw and the Fang. I found what remained of Mr. Boots in a patch of clover under an old elm tree. Poor Mr. Boots, he had almost made it. I kneeled, smoothed his black fur and marveled one last time at the perfectly white feet. “Socks,” I had suggested when he had first turned up at Mrs. Hanson’s door. “No, that’s too wussie,” she’d said. “Boots, that’s his name. Mr. Boots” I gently removed the tattered collar. Below the collar hung the ultimate expression of Mrs. Hanson’s affection; a tiny silver bell. Ironically, it was probably the bell that had led to his tragic end. Poor Mr. Boots. “No sign of him at the park,” I told her later. “I’ll bet Mr. Boots is just off visiting one of his girlfriends. You know how he is; he’ll be back when he gets hungry.” “You’re probably right,” she said. “He’s a scamp, that one.” We lost Mrs. Hanson during my sophomore year at college, still waiting for Mr. Boots to return and imagining all the adventures he must be having. I closed the old cigar box and put it under my arm. “We’re done here,” I said to no one in particular. - End ► Empathy Katherine Chen, AZCOM 2020 Soft pastel THRIVE 2018 9
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I Sense You Melody Avakian, AZCOM 2020 The sun rises, I think of you. I think about what you would do If you saw it rise, too. I walk on the grass, I look up at you. I look up because it’s true That you used to walk on the grass, too. The trees dance, I remember you. I remember how so few Could dance like you, too. When birds sing, I hear you. I hear the voice with which I grew And want to sing with it, too. The sky, it cries, I talk to you. I talk of the fear I wish to subdue Sometimes I cry with the sky, too. ▼ My Backyard Hannah Mitchell, AZCOM 2020 Prusik Peak, Leavenworth, WA Water hits my skin, I feel you. I feel a touch that I once knew Oh, how you loved the water, too! The clouds, they clear, I see you. I see your face within my view Beneath the clouds, can you see me, too? Flowers bloom, I smell you. I smell a scent I never outgrew You were lovely like the flowers, too. The sun sets, I think of you. I think about what you would do, If you saw it set, too. 14 THRIVE 2018 Dear Stranger, I wish you love and I wish you warmth. I wish you books and I wish you brunch. Candles and cuddles, sunny skies, those twinkling eyes. A light breeze or gentle drizzle; Starry nights with someone to hold tight. Desert sunsets, blooming flowers. Adventure that leaves you feeling empowered. I wish you purpose, and a passion to fuel your fire. A sense of belonging, and fulfillment of your innermost desire. The courage to chase your dreams and conquer your demons. Failure is temporary while regret may last a lifetime. But this is your time—so if you’d like, I wish you forever. I wish you well. -Friend Anonymous Poem & Photograph THRIVE 2018 15
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Game on MSII: Name Withheld for HIPAA Considerations Nasser Koucheki, AZCOM 2020 Time to wake up! Oh look there’s no sun. Needed some sleep! I sure wasn’t done. The games getting started! 7 AM for you. As it most often does, Med Student Two. Path. Pharm. Micro. Let’s go Again. What question am I on? Fifty? Damn. Ten. Study. Read the Slides. Listen to lectures. With research and facts and teacher conjectures. Stay awake, drink that coffee, read one more page. Before sitting down in that Glendale Hall cage. Can you do it? Can you cut it? You’ve shown that you can. They told us they’d beat us, it’s part of the plan. To heal is a privilege. We work these long hours. So they’ll give us a license with magic doctor powers. But first this big test, they call it Step 1. They say it’s gonna be even more fun! Nervous? Why Bother? It’s what you’ve been through. It’s 7 AM. Game On. Med Student Two. 20 THRIVE 2018 ◄ Science Rocks! C. Divyash Chhetri, AZCOM 2021 ▼ Creativity + Mathematics = Love Lisa McPhee Grinnell, AZ PA Mast 19 Recycled Wood, Nails, String A Message for First Years Jesse Fitzgerald, AZCOM 2020 To ace those tests--that is our goal. Stay on target. You're on a roll. Just persevere. Have self-control. Here it comes, Dark Night of the Soul. Memorize, review, quiz, highlight. Make sure to get some sleep at night. It's not the Boards, no need for fright. So rest assured; you'll be alright. [The Dark Night of the Soul reference was inspired by Dr. Plochocki, who used that phrase to describe the night before the first final of the week.] ▲ Wisps of Time Kristen Clement, Office of Communications DSLR Camera ▲ Sego Lilly Matthew Balls, AZCOM 2018 Steel wire “This was designed for my wife as a gift while I was on an away rotation.” “Ornate doorways are fine, but decrepit are best.” 21 THRIVE 2018
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Almost Monkey Island Melody Avakian, AZCOM 2020 Poem & Photograph Off to Monkey Island we go, Where it is, we don’t really know. We crave adventure, we crave to explore Can’t tell us what to do anymore. Let’s take a ride, shouldn’t take too long Soon we’d learn that we were wrong. Driving past the city with no end, Saying words the driver can’t comprehend. Where are we? Oh, we’re in Ho Chi Minh, A place the three of us have never been. Driving now for two long hours, We’re all nervous about this plan of ours. He pulls up to a dead-end road, Hesitantly out of the car we flowed. Looking around thinking “is this the place?” If you could only see the look on my friend’s face! A tiny boat portrayed as a ferry, Us? We refuse to let it carry. No cell phone service, no ride back to the city, This situation is far from pretty. Alas, a corner store up ahead “Maybe they can help us,” I said. A kind man pointed across the street To a bus that looked kind of beat. The bus was the lifeline we did need, For it would take us back, Godspeed. Saved from our adventure gone awry, Thankful today we did not die. Although to Monkey Island we did not go, We did see some water buffalo! Our trip was not how we thought it would be, But we’ll always remember the story of almost monkey. 36 THRIVE 2018 ◄ Pleasant Surprise Melody Avakian, AZCOM 2020 “Driving through the countryside of Southern Ireland, I turned into a small road for a shortcut. Near the end, I stopped the car to go over the map with my friend. Little did we know that we were being watched by a set of friendly eyes. We looked over to the right and saw this cow staring at us and we admired him right back. When I look at this photo, I think to myself that sometimes it is the road that we do not plan on taking that leads us to the best destination.” ▼ Templo das Colunas Kristen Clement, Office of Communications DSLR Camera THRIVE 2018 37
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My Favorite Things… Of Med School Jesse Fitzgerald, AZCOM 2020 Speed bumps and potholes and sacralization Ocular movements and accommodation. Healthy gallbladders that do not have stones. Knowing the landmarks of all of the bones. Lack of GLUT 4 will cause hyperglycemia Low Hemoglobin's a sign of anemia. Urobilinogen causes white stool. These are the things that you learn in med school. Type 2 bipolars may have hypomania. High serotonin can yield schizophrenia. L4's the level of the pelvic crest. Make sure you know that one for the next test. ▲ Raccoon Coat Girl Stephanie K. Kana, Medical Admin. Assistant ▼ Desert Campus Rhett Bushman, AZCOM 2020 Drone Photography When exams come, HPIs due, When we're going mad, I simply recall one of Plochocki’s puns, And then I don't feel so bad. [This designed to be sung during the holidays] 50 THRIVE 2018 ► Not for the Cages Anonymous Pencil & Teabag For the Birds Anonymous Land of the free, home of the brave Where freedom is conditional, but bravery stays. In Portland, Oregon we defend each other Hands held, lives lost, the message is clear: We are not alone, and love trumps fear. United we stand, divided we fall Some of us kneel because black lives matter, and inequality is real. Diversity is our strength, until used for division Arbitrary lines legitimized by flawed decisions We settle into self-limiting boxes, contrary to Dr. King’s vision. Suicide, depression, ill-will on the rise Guns and bibles used for comfort and disguise Complacency has never been a friend of time. We the people demand better, Screaming, this is our chance to fly. I’m with her and I’m with him, Anyone who protects life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness from within. The struggle continues, as it always will To keep burning the iconic flame, Which welcomes all who dream of hope and change. THRIVE 2018 51