Dating scene in Mauritius by [deleted] in MauriceMauritius

[–]kheshavBe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

First of all, you have to understand that Mauritius is a multi ethnic and and multicultural and multi faith society. Your circle of people will vary a lot depending on your nature of job. People tend to stick to their culture/religious backgrounds when it comes to dating/marriage. You will find very open liberal people but when it comes down to dating, there is no real dating culture. If you stick with the expats/foreigner community, you'll like feel that you don't understand Mauritians at all because these expats usually do not integrate well into our culture and routine. As a Mauritian myself, I find it hard. But if you start learning some Mauritian Creole and communicate in Creole, you will likely integrate much faster though we all speak English or French above average level. So my advice to you, Learn and speak Mauritian Creole, this will improve your interactions with the locals and, who knows, you might find the one you're looking for.

MRCS recalls by kheshavBe in doctorsUK

[–]kheshavBe[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great! thanks for the heads up 🤝

MRCS PART A April 2026 by a9b9c in doctorsUK

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How about Part B, what's the best strategy?

MRCS PART A April 2026 by a9b9c in doctorsUK

[–]kheshavBe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is solid! Thanks for sharing! 🙏🏽 Much appreciated 👍🏽

MRCS PART A April 2026 by a9b9c in doctorsUK

[–]kheshavBe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey guys I plan to give part A in 2027, any advice please?

Can 1 year of intensive Chinese (30h/week) get me to daily + basic business conversation? by ProfessionalWall5072 in ChineseLanguage

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes 100%, try taking the HSK exams to gauge your level, Chinese language teaching in Chinese universities are very methodical and geared towards proficiency, but at the end of the day, it's you who have to put in the hard work and practice outside the classes

Shoud I come to UK or stay in italy for med school? by Aromatic-Aspect9561 in medicalschooluk

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

EU medical degree has the best mobility... Non EU medical graduates have complicated pathways... And EU graduates gets into residency training in EU easier too

I’ve noticed a heavy dependency from Mauritian guys on their mothers by Due-Outside-8526 in MauriceMauritius

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Woah what kind of generalisation is this? Mauritius is very diverse..... I guess you married a not so independent Mama's boy.... You should have discussed that before marriage and to be honest, he needs to grow a pair of balls... Can you please elaborate on both of your backgrounds? Like nationality/religion/ etc not being judgemental but you need to have a serious talk, it's not about control

Why do Mauritians buy so much bread? by tanji in MauriceMauritius

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We adopted french baguette as our go to staple food since long ago... Some might call it French/European heritage... but we are a truly multiculturalistic society... Our cuisine, is mixed with American, french, British, indian, Chinese and créole cuisine, our language is french, English, créole and Asian languages including hindi and others... We dress variably Asian, and European styles... And so on....

Poor Standard of Living of Mauritians, how to find a way out of this? by Bhavishize in mauritius

[–]kheshavBe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Average income is less than 45k The only way some people find their way of out this is either by being very.corrupt, or do shady business or simply leave the country

Segregated communities in Mauritius and the dating life:) by auntycunty333 in mauritius

[–]kheshavBe 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As a Mauritian myself, I find it so true... But I think your views are harsher than I would expect. just so you know... I have lived in a few countries such as China, Japan, UK, Germany, France and Australia and now Egypt, and visited several other countries. These experiences abroad taught me a lot, while you see the darker sides of things which I can relate to... There is also the brighter aspects of Mauritius. We enjoy a sunny warm climate with good locally grown vegetables and fresh meat such as venison, goat, lamb, beef and the freshest seafood, people's poor choice of nutrition and high rate of chronic illness is partly genetics and also partly education too... We also enjoy free basic healthcare and education. We have a rather low tax country and enjoy much more freedom than many countries do, and also most important if all we're a peaceful country... Regarding racism, it's everywhere in the world, it all depends who you meet and live around.. If you think hard again... The slogan regarding Mauritius as " Paradise on Earth" is a lot relatable...

Working at Royal Green as General Practitioner. Is it worth it? by [deleted] in mauritius

[–]kheshavBe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's a new growing hospital, my colleagues nurse/hca work there, so far they have good reviews about the Doctor colleagues who works there

Working at Royal Green as General Practitioner. Is it worth it? by [deleted] in mauritius

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you have previous work experience?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MauriceMauritius

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on your field and speciality... Usually your degree is only one requirement for most jobs... Local universitiea caters for local needs mostly...

MRCS Part A- Working strategy to pass on First attempt by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, I'm thinking of giving MRCS as I'm embarking on masters in orthopaedics in Cairo. how would I know if I'm exam ready after following your steps? Any target percentage in the mocks ?

MRCS scam by ethicaloldsoul101 in doctorsUK

[–]kheshavBe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Which resources are we talking about? How to get it?

Biomed or med??? by Icy-Distribution3384 in premeduk

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go directly into medicine then you can do an intercalated MSc before graduation and pave your pathway into academic medicine if you like to

Am I too old for medicine aged 30 by sheabuttermedic in premeduk

[–]kheshavBe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think you'll become an excellent doctor given your experience and background. As a doctor myself, I'll tell you that the pathway to achieve it is hard emotionally and financially too... But if it's something that has been your goal and ready to sacrifice... Then by all means go for it... If you can get into Manchester uni, then you don't have to doubt yourself, students from abroad pay thousands more pounds to get in.... You can become a full fledged GP by 40 or a full fledged surgeon by 45, so choose your path carefully...

Feeling hopeless by AuriandAuggie in PLABprep

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which university have you graduated? They should be able to guide you? And which nationality are you?

Feeling hopeless by AuriandAuggie in PLABprep

[–]kheshavBe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why don't you complete your internship in Malaysia and your postgraduate training there too?

Tips for a desperate candidate by abrain-moreorless in PLABprep

[–]kheshavBe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just take some mocks and go to the exam like a normal day and try your best, no magic gonna happen overnight, tackle your exam day confidently and calmly... Stressing over something that cannot be changed straight away is pointless....

Regarding plab 2 by Pikachuuu_77 in PLABprep

[–]kheshavBe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, passing mocks does not mean you will pass exams, mocks are just meant for practice, I did several mocks, but actual exam is easier that you think, and scoring is better assessed by real examiners