Yoshio Ikeda 2012 . 7 . 19

森川 一彦 プロフィール

 

 

 

 

 

昭和62年北里大学医学部卒業。形成外科、一般外科、整形外科、麻酔科、救命救急科等広い分野の診療を手がける。平成9年北里研究所病院形成美容外科医長、茅ヶ崎徳洲会総合病院形成外科・美容外科部長を歴任。平成10年4月より銀座美容外科副院長として父子で美容外科診療に携わる。

平成20年4月より銀座・いけだクリニックの顧問医師に就任。

<資格・免許>

  • 医学博士
  • 日本形成外科学会認定専門医
  • 日本美容外科学会専門医
  • 世界美容外科学会正会員
  • 日本美容医療協会正会員
  • 平成20年4月銀座いけだクリニック顧問医師に就任

“森川 一彦 プロフィール” への235,047件のフィードバック

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    “So then we just shifted to talking about other things, everyday things, in a nice, relaxed atmosphere,” says Savery. “And I was very at ease speaking with Giselle right away. We started having meals together and as the trip went on, we would spend more and more time together.”
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    Over the next couple of days, Savery and Giselle also got to know the other solo travelers on board The Canadian. They became a group, and Giselle recalls plenty of moments when they good-naturedly teased Savery “because of him being the only prestige passenger.”
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    She appreciated having a gang of new friends. Their company distracted from the inevitable loneliness that would sometimes settle over her in her grief.
    When the train arrived in Toronto, Savery and Giselle shared a final dinner together before going their separate ways.

    The reservedness that marked their first meal together had all but melted away. It was an evening marked by laughs, recalling favorite memories of the trip across Canada and talking about their lives back home.

    The next day, they said goodbye. Appropriately enough, their farewell took place at a train station.

    “I was taking the airport shuttle to fly back home to Boston, and Giselle was taking the train to Montreal. So we said, ‘Well, let’s just say goodbye at the train station, since we’re both going to be there at the same time tomorrow,’” recalls Savery.

    “We were under the big clock in Toronto station, and she was watching the clock. She said, ‘I really gotta go. I have to catch my train.’ And I just… I said, ‘I can’t not see you again.’”

    Their connection didn’t feel romantic — both Giselle and Savery were sure of that. But it felt significant. Both Savery and Giselle felt they’d met a like-minded soul, someone who could be a confidant, who could help them through the next chapter of life which they were unexpectedly navigating alone.

    Saying “goodbye” felt too final. So Giselle, who is French-Canadian, suggested they say “au revoir” — which translates as “until we meet again.”

    And as soon as they went their separate ways, Giselle and Savery started texting each other.

    “Then the texts became phone calls,” recalls Savery.

    On these calls, Giselle and Savery spoke about their lives, about what they were up to, about their interests.

    “Music was like a common interest that we both shared,” recalls Giselle.

    Savery is older than Giselle, and their music references spanned “different eras of music, but very compatible musical interests,” as Giselle puts it.

    On one of their phone calls, Giselle mentioned she was considering booking a train trip across North America.

    Soon, she and Savery were planning a train journey across the US for the fall of 2024, together.

    And in the meantime, Giselle invited Savery to visit her in her home in Victoria, Canada, for a week’s summer vacation.

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    Savery boarded The Canadian on April 1, 2024, in Vancouver. He treated himself to the prestige class ticket, just as he and his late wife had planned.
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    As soon as he boarded the train, Savery felt a surprising feeling of contentment. He was proud of himself. And excited for what was to come.
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    It turned out Savery was the only passenger in prestige class. The whole front row of the domed viewing carriage was reserved just for him.

    But on the second day of the journey, Savery was surprised when he walked up the stairs into the domed car and saw “the back of someone’s head sitting in one of those reserved seats.”

    He raised an eyebrow, but didn’t say anything, instead sitting on the opposite side of the aisle from the mystery passenger: a woman with long curly hair, reading.

    Savery recalls thinking: “She’s reading a book, so obviously can read the sign that says this is for prestige passengers only.”

    But he kept the slightly ungenerous thought to himself.

    “I didn’t say anything,” he says today. “And after a while, she got up and left without a word.”
    Later that day, at dinner, Savery was sharing a table with a friendly couple, chatting about what prompted them to book The Canadian. Savery told them about losing his wife, about deciding to fulfill their shared dream, solo.

    “Have you met Giselle?” asked the couple, glancing at one another.

    Savery told them, no, he didn’t think he’d met a Giselle yet. The couple described her — tall, long hair.

    “I know who that is,” said Savery, realizing the description matched the woman he’d spotted sitting in the prestige class seat.

    “She lost her spouse too,” said the couple. “Quite recently.”

    Taking in this information, Savery decided he’d make a conscious effort to seek Giselle out on board the train.

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