Home » today » Health » He took yellow roses to his future spouse – 2024-03-29 01:01:47

He took yellow roses to his future spouse – 2024-03-29 01:01:47

Hanna Nohynek’s biography paints a picture of a feminist doctor dedicated to her work, who also knows how to party and have fun.

“You mocking woman, jezebel’s henchman, you will burn in the fire of hell and I will personally tear your head off if you walk against me. This is a promise, not a threat. Amen.”

This feedback received in the email went too far from Hanna Nohynek.

The chief physician of the Institute of Health and Welfare (THL) became a familiar face to Finns during the emergency of the corona pandemic. He started getting a lot of feedback, some of which was just rude and some of which was violent threats.

Devoted to his work, Nohynek worked really long working days, without time off, during the pandemic emergency. The threats and hate mail seemed like an unreasonable thank you, even though he didn’t do his work due to the pain of the thank you.

Nohykekia began to wonder if something could really happen. He filed criminal reports for the worst threatening messages.

The threat who called Nohynek a henchman of Jezebel was sentenced in October 2023 at the Kymenlaakso District Court to a five-month suspended sentence. This case is also described in more detail in Nohynek’s biography.

In the biography, Hanna Nohynek is described as an inspiring and enthusiastic colleague. Matti Matikainen

Hell of a rumba

Teos Hanna Nohynek – Peloton (WSOY) presents aspects of the chief physician that are partly flattering, partly not. Biography is written by Terhi Hautamäki.

Nohynek himself was the first corona patient in Finland.

In the grip of Corona, Nohynek did his expert work from home, even though the severe disease sometimes made him fall asleep in the middle of remote meetings.

He got the virus from an international seminar for doctors in Stockholm in the spring of 2020. His spouse also got the disease Mika Salminenwho became so seriously ill that Nohynek sometimes feared for his life.

When the pandemic just continued and continued, and Nohynek worked without a break, loved ones started to worry.

“Everyone was worried about how long Hanna would last, how the hell would she last that drum”son of Nohynek’s spouse Teemu Salminen recalls in the book.

Against my own instructions

In the spring of 2020, Nohynek, on behalf of his office, urged Finns to stay isolated and separate from each other, but he himself acted differently.

Nohyne’s father’s leukemia was at the stage where it was known that the man did not have much time left to live.

The book says that Nohynek’s father wanted to take the risk of corona infection rather than isolate himself from his loved ones for the last months.

With the joint decision of the close circle, the father was met every week. Even the Easter meal was celebrated together, although the rest of Finland did it differently.

During the pandemic, Nohynek wondered many times what kind of quarantines and restrictions were really necessary due to this travel disease.

In the end, what was health-supporting and what weakened it?

During the emergency of the corona pandemic, Hanna Nohynek was a familiar face in the media. Pete Anikari

The intellectual savage and abortion

In the book, Nohynek opens up about his childhood and youth.

He remembers getting a thong from his explosively demanding and overactive father. Once, the father threw his six-year-old daughter on the head with a shoe, and the reason for that action was never found out.

15-year-old Hanna wrote in her diary: “Father shithead. I can’t take it anymore. I’m going to see a psychologist.”

As a teenage girl, Hanna was an intellectual freak. He excelled at school, pursued music with a purpose and walked around with frits around his neck, his docket and his style.

Just before her senior year of high school, she got pregnant despite the IUD. In the book, Nohynek says that he remembers very little about the time when he made the decision to have an abortion.

During his student days, he went to therapy for anxiety. In the book, he reflects on the causes of his anxiety. Perhaps one reason was abortion and the associated shame.

In therapy, opening my own knots woke me up. “I thought that it’s terrible, am I that broken,” Nohynek says in the book.

A woman’s secondary life

In the book, Nohynek reflects on recent abortion debates in Finland and the United States. The rise of anti-abortionism has given him flashbacks.

From Nohynek, those who have a negative attitude towards abortion elevate the life of the fetus so that the life of the woman remains secondary. This is hard for him to understand.

As a young student, he himself specifically wanted to become a pediatrician and work in developing countries. This is how she says that she hoped to be able to make up for having an abortion, which she had done in order to study.

During his student days in the 1980s, Nohynek was involved in the Koijärvi movement, the purpose of which was to prevent the drying of Forssa’s Koijärvi, which is considered an important bird area.

Nohynek was one of the hundred or so Koijärvi activists who received fines in 1982 for violating the Water Act. The amount of his fine was 180 marks.

Koijärvi was not drained, and later the lake was pacified.

Hanna Nohynek has worked as a doctor for a long time in the Philippines. Matti Matikainen

“Eat, drink, fuck”

Student life in the 1980s was marked by the threat of nuclear war. At the peace march, slogans that encapsulated the spirit of the time were shouted: “Eat, drink, fuck – half a year to go!”

In student circles, they wondered if it makes sense to study, because a bomb can make everything clear in an instant.

According to the book, these thoughts were also overwhelming for Nohynek. Work as a doctor still inspired him, because he had a strong desire to make the world a better place in the medical community.

Nohyne’s student life was also colorful and socially active.

“The sprinkles were moist, liquor was used”Nohynek describes.

After graduating as a doctor, he came across different social patterns. In medical circles, people higher up in the hierarchy grope the breasts of young female doctors.

“There were quite a few sex offers in EU circles and international circles”Nohynek says in the book.

Such behavior was unbelievable from a young feminist doctor.

Bad mother feeling

Nohynek has been characterized as a workaholic, and his spouse Mika Salminen does not try to change the matter. Salminen confesses in the book that he once wanted to throw his spouse’s laptop and phone to the bottom of the lake.

Nohynek says that he wondered if his focus on work prevented him from noticing his spouse’s serious heart symptoms, which is why Salmi underwent emergency bypass surgery during the corona emergency.

Nohynek admits in the book that she has had a bad mother feeling in the back of her mind because she was not with her child enough when the child was small.

She thinks she missed out on a lot because, for example, she didn’t take maternity leave at all. The child was taken care of in the early years by Nohyne’s spouse at the time.

“But the moments when I was with the child, I tried to be pretty good”Nohynek continues.

At home, Hanna Nohynek is very playful. Matti Matikainen

Yellow roses

In the book, Nohynek tells how he met his current spouse.

In the spring of 2004, Nohynek had ended up at Hotelli Tulisuudelma in Vantaa, at the behest of his daughter, where Maija Vilkumaan gig.

Construction supervisor Mika Salminen had also come by chance. Salminen’s and Nohykek’s dance steps immediately fit together.

For the next meeting, Nohynek bought Salmise yellow roses, her favorite flowers. The relationship progressed quickly.

The couple got engaged in 2005 at the Eiffel Tower. Their rings bear the date of the engagement and the text Carpe diem, which means Seize the Moment.

Salminen’s son Teemu characterizes Nohyneki as follows: “She is a work-oriented hippie girl whose value base is very liberal.”

#yellow #roses #future #spouse

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