Saturday, 16 May 2026

SRM

 Sri Ramana had a power that makes him perennially interesting:

He didn’t think he needed to teach anything or that anything needed to be taught.

He was just a guy sitting on the side of a mountain.

People asked him many things, and he sometimes answered them.

For his primary insights, you can read his written works or Guru Vachaka Kovai.

His “teaching” can be summarized in four words:

The truth is only “I am,” and the method is only “be still.”

When thoughts arise, one may ask to whom they arise.

Who is plagued by these thoughts?

Only the ego is plagued by them, but it doesn’t exist.

A spiritual community grew up around him, but he had little to do with it.

He didn’t try to have or maintain power.

He sat with everyone, only agreeing to sit on a cheap sofa in later years, and under protest.

When someone asked him where the guru is, not recognizing him, he always pointed elsewhere.

When others tried to take over and make themselves the guru, he didn’t protest.

He didn’t worry the teachings would get distorted over time.

There were no teachings!

There is only silence, which teaches all.

a

What made Ramana Maharshi compelling to many people was precisely this absence of spiritual ambition. He did not present himself as a reformer, prophet, or founder of a system. The center of gravity was not doctrine but presence.

Your summary captures something essential about the paradox of his influence: the less he asserted authority, the more authoritative he appeared.

The phrase “There were no teachings!” points toward a core feature of Advaita as he embodied it. Any formal teaching is already one step removed from what is immediate. So his method continuously collapses the seeker back into direct experience:

  • Thoughts arise.
  • To whom?
  • To me.
  • Who am I?

Not as philosophy, but as a dissolving mechanism.

The striking thing is that even “Who am I?” was never meant to become an ideology or metaphysical position. It was more like a thorn used to remove a thorn. Once the mind turns back toward the bare fact of being — “I am” prior to identity — the inquiry exhausts itself.

His distrust of spiritual hierarchy also mattered. Many teachers preserve authority through distance, ritual, exclusivity, or claims of special status. Ramana consistently undercut this. Stories about him pointing to someone else as “the guru” fit perfectly with his broader refusal to solidify a personal role.

Even silence, in this context, was not theatrical silence. Not “the master withholding wisdom.” More that he regarded the deepest truth as self-evident when mental agitation subsides.

The line “There is only silence, which teaches all” echoes a long tradition in Advaita and Zen alike: reality is already fully present, and conceptual teaching can only gesture toward it. Words may help remove confusion, but they cannot deliver what is already the case.

That’s also why he could appear unconcerned about distortion over time. If truth depends on preserving exact formulations, institutions become necessary. But if truth is simply the ever-present fact of awareness itself, then no formulation is ultimately essential.

In that sense, the mountain, the sofa, the ashram, the devotees, the books — all peripheral.

Just:
being,
silence,
and the strange persistence of the sense “I.”


Non doership sloka. BG 5.8-9

 A

In the Bhagavad Gita, verses 5.8–5.9 describe the state of a realized person who acts without egoistic attachment.

Sanskrit (transliteration)

5.8

naiva kiñcit karomīti
yukto manyeta tattva-vit
paśyan śṛṇvan spṛśan jighrann
aśnan gacchan svapan śvasan

5.9

pralapan visṛjan gṛhṇann
unmīṣan nimīṣann api
indriyāṇīndriyārtheṣu
vartanta iti dhārayan

Common English Translation

“The knower of truth, established in yoga, thinks:
‘I do nothing at all.’
Seeing, hearing, touching, smelling, eating, walking, sleeping, breathing…”

“Speaking, releasing, grasping, opening and closing the eyes —
he understands that only the senses move among the objects of the senses.”

Core Meaning

These verses teach non-doership (akartṛtva). The enlightened person recognizes:

  • Actions still happen through the body and senses.
  • Nature (prakṛti) performs activity.
  • The deeper Self (ātman) remains the witnessing consciousness.

This is not passivity or denial of action. The person still lives normally — eating, walking, speaking, working — but without the ego-thought:

“I alone am the doer.”

Philosophical Idea

A central idea here is the distinction between:

  • Body-mind activity → changing, active
  • True Self → aware, unchanged witness

The verses are closely connected to Karma Yoga:

  • perform action,
  • but relinquish possessiveness and ego-identification.

A concise modern paraphrase

“Life continues through the body and senses, but the wise person no longer identifies the ego as the author of every action.”

Many commentators such as Adi Shankaracharya and Swami Vivekananda interpret these verses as pointing toward freedom from attachment and realization of the witnessing Self


B


“The human body at peace with itself is more precious than the rarest gem…all worldly things are brief like lightning in the sky; this life we must know as the tiny splash of a raindrop, a thing of beauty that disappears even as it comes into being.”

- Tsongkapa

Thursday, 14 May 2026

FEED1 TRIAL

 A

5 KEY POINTS — EBNEO Commentary on the FEED1 Trial (Singh, 2026)

  1. Early full enteral feeding improved care processes but not discharge timing
    Infants receiving full feeds from day 1 achieved enteral feeding faster, required less parenteral nutrition, fewer invasive lines, and less intensive care time — yet overall hospital stay did not shorten.

  2. Hospital discharge is influenced by non-medical factors
    The unchanged length of stay suggests that discharge timing in moderate-to-late preterm infants is often determined by social, organisational, and administrative factors, rather than physiological readiness alone.

  3. The trial challenges how neonatal “success” is defined
    FEED1 highlights that meaningful improvements in neonatal care may include:

    • reduced medicalisation

    • fewer central lines

    • lower infection exposure

    • less parenteral nutrition

    even if traditional endpoints like length of stay remain unchanged.

  4. Intervention fidelity was a major limitation
    Only a minority of infants truly received exclusive enteral feeding from birth, and many deviated from protocol because of perceived feed intolerance, potentially underestimating the true benefits of the intervention.

  5. FEED1 supports the safety of early feeding and reframes future research
    The study provides reassuring evidence that stable moderate-to-late preterm infants can safely receive full milk feeds from birth, while future work should focus on:

    • standardising feed intolerance criteria

    • identifying true barriers to discharge

    • evaluating higher-risk extremely preterm infants

    • assessing long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes.

NN RESUS

 A

3 TAKE-HOME POINTS — Delivery-Room PEEP Beyond 10 Minutes in ≥34-Week Infants (Davies et al., 2026)

  1. Prolonged delivery-room PEEP/CPAP is uncommon but clinically important
    Most ≥34-week infants transition quickly after birth, so continuing PEEP beyond 10 minutes identifies a subgroup with more significant respiratory compromise and higher likelihood of escalation of care. (Resuscitation Council UK)

  2. Persistent respiratory support often predicts NICU admission and further intervention
    Infants requiring prolonged PEEP are more likely to need ongoing respiratory support, NICU admission, investigation for underlying pathology (e.g. TTN, pneumonia, PPHN), and closer monitoring after initial stabilisation. Existing evidence suggests delivery-room CPAP/PEEP may reduce respiratory morbidity in selected infants but can also increase air-leak risk. (PMC)

  3. There is limited evidence guiding prolonged DR-PEEP practice in term and late-preterm infants
    Current neonatal resuscitation guidance supports CPAP/PEEP for infants with respiratory distress, but evidence on optimal duration, thresholds for escalation, and outcomes beyond the delivery room remains sparse, highlighting the importance of standardised pathways and further research. (Resuscitation Council UK)

P RISK OF PN AFTER RSV

 A

5 TAKE-HOME POINTS — RSV Hospitalisation Age & Risk of Subsequent Bacterial Pneumonia (Videholm et al., 2026)

  1. Large national cohort strengthens evidence
    The study followed ~1.6 million Swedish children and identified over 29,000 RSV hospitalisations, making this a robust population-level analysis of long-term respiratory outcomes.

  2. RSV hospitalisation increases later pneumonia risk
    Children hospitalised for RSV had a significantly higher risk of subsequent bacterial pneumonia compared with those without RSV admission.

  3. Older age at RSV hospitalisation = higher relative risk
    The risk of later bacterial pneumonia was greater when RSV hospitalisation occurred at older ages (especially 12–23 months) compared with infants under 6 months.

  4. Risk is highest soon after RSV infection
    The association was strongest in the first 0–2 months after RSV hospitalisation, but elevated risk persisted beyond 3 months across all age groups.

  5. Implications for prevention and risk stratification
    Findings suggest that preventing RSV—particularly beyond early infancy—and identifying higher-risk older infants may help reduce later bacterial pneumonia burden, though residual confounding (e.g., comorbidities) may partly influence results.

N OROMOTOR SKILLS X SPEECH DVPT

 A

3 KEY POINTS — Early Speech Milestones & Oral–Motor Development (Allison et al., 2026)

  1. Better oral–motor skills are linked to earlier speech development
    Infants with higher scores on the Child Oral and Motor Proficiency Scale (ChOMPS) were more likely to have started babbling by 6 months, suggesting a relationship between motor control of the mouth and early speech emergence.

  2. Stronger oral–motor development is associated with richer vocal output
    Higher ChOMPS scores were significantly associated with a larger variety of protophones (early speech-like sounds such as vowel- and consonant-like vocalisations) reported by parents.

  3. Preterm birth and sex were not influential factors
    Neither prematurity nor infant sex affected babbling onset or phonetic inventory, indicating that oral–motor ability was a more important predictor than these demographic variables in this small sample.

N NN SVT

 A

5 KEY POINTS — Supraventricular Tachycardia in Newborns: 10-Year Multicentre Experience (Pasquinucci et al., 2026)

  1. AV re-entrant tachycardia is the dominant mechanism
    Most neonatal SVT cases were due to atrioventricular re-entrant tachycardia (72%), with smaller proportions of AVNRT, PJRT, and focal atrial tachycardia.

  2. Presentation is early and clinically significant
    Median onset occurred at ~14 days of life, and a notable proportion developed tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy (28%), highlighting potential haemodynamic impact even in neonates.

  3. Acute termination is usually achievable
    First-episode SVT was terminated by vagal manoeuvres (28%) or adenosine (47%), though some cases resolved spontaneously (13%), indicating generally good acute responsiveness.

  4. Most infants require long-term therapy
    Nearly all patients (97%) needed maintenance antiarrhythmic treatment, typically for a prolonged period (median ~21 months), reflecting high recurrence risk.

  5. Outcomes are generally good but management can be prolonged and complex
    Over ~3.75 years follow-up, recurrence after stopping therapy was uncommon, but some required electrophysiology studies and ablation, especially refractory cases. Biomarkers (e.g., NT-proBNP) and SVT subtype helped predict higher treatment burden.

A

This statement means that both blood test results and the specific electrical type of SVT can help identify which newborns are likely to have a more difficult or prolonged course of illness.

1. What is meant by “biomarkers (e.g., NT-proBNP)”?

  • NT-proBNP (N-terminal pro–brain natriuretic peptide) is a hormone released by the heart when it is under strain or stress.

  • In neonatal SVT, a high heart rate can reduce filling time and cardiac efficiency → the heart becomes “stretched” or stressed → NT-proBNP rises.

👉 So:

  • Higher NT-proBNP = more cardiac stress

  • This often correlates with:

    • poorer ventricular function

    • tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy

    • need for more aggressive or prolonged treatment


2. What is meant by “SVT subtype”?

SVT is not one disease—it includes different electrical circuits:

  • AV re-entrant tachycardia (AVRT) – most common, often accessory pathway (e.g., Wolff-Parkinson-White physiology)

  • AV nodal re-entrant tachycardia (AVNRT) – less common in neonates

  • Permanent junctional reciprocating tachycardia (PJRT) – often persistent and harder to control

  • Focal atrial tachycardia – abnormal atrial focus firing

👉 Some types behave more aggressively than others:

  • PJRT and focal atrial tachycardia tend to be:

    • more persistent

    • harder to terminate

    • more likely to recur

    • more likely to require multiple drugs or longer treatment


3. What does “predict higher treatment burden” mean in practice?

It means these factors are linked with:

  • longer duration of antiarrhythmic therapy

  • higher likelihood of combination therapy (more than one drug)

  • increased need for ICU care or monitoring

  • greater chance of recurrence after stopping treatment

  • occasional need for electrophysiology study or ablation later in infancy


In simple terms

👉 If a newborn has:

  • high NT-proBNP, and/or

  • a more complex SVT type (like PJRT or focal atrial tachycardia),

they are more likely to have a tougher course requiring longer and more intensive treatment compared with simpler AVRT cases.


If you want, I can turn this into a one-line exam answer or viva response.