Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Lassi With Lavina
    • Home
    • About Lassi with Lavina
      • About Lavina Melwani
    • The Buzz
    • Features
      1. Art
      2. Books
      3. Cinema
      4. Daily Pep Pill
      5. Dance
      6. Faith
      7. Fashion
      8. From Me to You
      9. Lifestyle
      10. Music
      11. People
      Featured
      March 29, 20250

       Reinventing Widowhood: When the ‘weaker sex’ is the stronger sex

      Recent
      March 29, 2025

       Reinventing Widowhood: When the ‘weaker sex’ is the stronger sex

      March 26, 2025

      Asian Art, Past and Present, Meet in Asia Society’s ‘(Re)Generations’

      March 2, 2025

      Box Office Guru, Hollywood and the Oscars – a Love Story

    • Foodisphere
      1. Food Articles
      2. Restaurants
      Featured
      May 5, 20259

      Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

      Recent
      May 5, 2025

      Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

      October 28, 2024

      Exploring the Veggie Food Trail to India

      May 11, 2024

      Holi Moly! It’s Cocktails from India by way of NYC’s Bungalow!

    • Events
    • Videos
      • Health & Wellness
      • Fashion & Style
      • Food & Drink
      • Travel & Leisure
    Lassi With Lavina
    You are at:Home»Features»Lifestyle»Heart and Art, The Two Worlds of Chetna Singh

    Heart and Art, The Two Worlds of Chetna Singh

    0
    By Lavina Melwani on February 8, 2021 Lifestyle

     

    Drs. Chetna and Arun Singh with their family
    Drs. Chetna and Arun Singh with their family

     

     Heart and Art: The Two Worlds of Chetna Singh

    An ER Physician Finds Pandemic Respite  in Painting A Beautiful World

    [dropcap]M[/dropcap]eet Dr. Chetna Singh, emergency care physician at Ocean Medical Center in New Jersey. For the last year she has grappled with the unending coronavirus pandemic, working the frontline in the emergency room.  Right from the first beginnings through the first wave to the second wave life has been lived out with the somber reality of packed hospitals, with patients on ventilators and near death, fighting against a relentless virus.

    For Chetna, whose husband Arun is also an ER physician, work means long 12-hour days, including a 50 minute commute each way.  She’s been doing this work for 18 years but COVID-19 has changed everything: “This is just something totally different, we’ve never encountered anything like this, and its life changing for us,” she says.

    “When the pandemic first started, everybody was scared. We were scared too, just going in and putting our lives at risk every single day. Over time you get over the fear and you do the best you can to protect yourself and protect others, and you just have to take the proper precautions. We’ve got three children so we try to be protective of both the home and the hospital.”

    Chetna Singh with fellow physicians
    Chetna Singh with fellow physicians

    [dropcap]T[/dropcap]he Singhs have seen the toughest part of the pandemic with the country in the throes of Covid-19 with escalating cases, inadequate supplies and overrun hospitals. The worst she says was “just seeing people struggling to breathe and sometimes you’re at a loss, even with all the support you have, you cannot help them to survive. The worst is probably just seeing them die alone. There have been days where I have had to call multiple families on one day, and tell them that we can’t do anything anymore.”

    Tribute to health workers by Chetna Singh
    Tribute to health workers by Chetna Singh

    [dropcap]S[/dropcap]ometimes she finds herself in the position of calling families to tell them their loved one needs to be put on a ventilator, and knowing that the patient will be alone, scared and with no family member to hold on to.  It has been heart-wrenching but finally there finally seems to be a light at the end of the tunnel, with the vaccinations finally being administered, first to the healthcare workers and the elderly.

    Having her spouse in the same field has been a great support. As she says, “It’s an absolute blessing because we can talk to each other about it, and that, I think, really does help to de-stress.”

    [dropcap]W[/dropcap]hat really helps Chetna to build resilience and face the tough times is the other world she inhabits – the world of an artist. Growing up in Patna, the daughter of two professors, she was always encouraged to paint and found inspiration in the colors, the beauty and the cultural mix that is India. Over the years even as she attended medical school in Patna and later became a medical professional, she turned to art to relax and create.

    Chetna Singh - portrait of Amanda Gorman
    Chetna Singh’s portrait of Amanda Gorman

    [dropcap]W[/dropcap]hile she’s always worked on canvas, she was intrigued by the thought of wearable art and launched a very popular line of art scarves in 2013 with her artwork digitally printed on luxurious scarves of silk, cotton, cashmere and chiffon. Over the years, Chetna Singh scarves are almost like art stories, reflections of her travel to India, Mexico, Paris, Venice and Istanbul with renderings of Buddhas, butterflies, horses and florals.   She says, “Art is more beautiful when it is shared and even more beautiful when it is worn.” Chetna has shown her work in Fashion Week in NYC and her line is carried by boutiques and online.

    Chetna Singh's scarves on silk
    Chetna Singh’s scarves on silk

    [dropcap]S[/dropcap]ometimes, her two worlds intersect. As a child she had often played at being doctor, injecting her family with pretend vaccines with talcum powder and knitting needles. Now that she is a real doctor, she is often inspired to paint canvases of ER physicians. As she wrote on Facebook recently after a rough day in the hospital: “The last few days have been stressful to say the least. On my day off from the ER I painted this today. For all my frontliners – physicians, nurses, midlevels, techs, medics, EMTs and all other staff – this one is for you.”

    Prints of this powerful portrait were sold to support those who have been affected financially by the pandemic. This portrait of an ER physician kneeling down in exhaustion, yet still not giving up and continuing to fight is right from the heart. She says, “That’s the way I felt – it’s like we are all burnt out, totally exhausted but we continue to fight every day.”

    Art is certainly her creative outlet and respite from the pressure cooker of the ER. What does she suggest for others who are facing the stress of the pandemic? “You have to find something that makes you happy, find joy in something that you do, whether it is talking to a friend on the phone or sharing a glass of wine on Zoom,” she says. “It’s whatever makes you happy because  the world as we know it has changed and it’s going to be some time before it goes back to where it was.”

    [dropcap]I[/dropcap]ndeed, the past was always about a adventurous travel to many parts of the world as Chetna translated those scenes into impressions on silk and cashmere scarves. Travel will not be on the agenda for a long time and she now relies on memories of the past to paint the magic of a lost world.

    Dr. Chetna Singh encourages everyone to get vaccinated like she did.
    Dr. Chetna Singh encourages everyone to get vaccinated like she did.

    Recently as health professionals, the Singhs got their second dose of the Pfizer vaccine and she encourages everyone to get their vaccinations as they become available.  She says 15- 20% of people may have side-effects similar to the flu, usually 12 hours after vaccination. “In our case I was the one with fever, chills and body-aches for 24 hours and milder symptoms after, but this was completely resolved by 48 hours. I would absolutely do it again as it means that it gives me protection against Covid.”

    (This was first published in my weekly column India in America in CNBCTV18.com)

     

     

    Lavina Melwani
    • Website

    Lavina Melwani is a New York-based journalist who writes for several international publications. Twitter@lavinamelwani & @lassiwithlavina Sign up for the free newsletter to get your dose of Lassi!

    Related Posts

     Reinventing Widowhood: When the ‘weaker sex’ is the stronger sex

    Love and Drama at My Big, Fat Desi Wedding

    Adoptions from India – Everything You wanted to Know

    Leave A Reply

    top Indian blogs
    Find Us on FaceBook
    Recent Posts
    May 5, 2025

    Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

    April 28, 2025

    Come celebrate Cherry Blossoms in New York’s Central Park

    April 22, 2025

    Steve Tobin’s Towering Sculptures Celebrate New York City

    March 29, 2025

     Reinventing Widowhood: When the ‘weaker sex’ is the stronger sex

    March 28, 2025

    NYC artist paints Spring into the cold East River Waterfront

    * indicates required
    Close
    Translate Lassi with Lavina
    Photo Blog
    Women Warriors
    Lassi with Lavina Tweets
    Follow lassiwithlavina on Twitter
    Connect on LinkedIn…
    View Lavina Melwani's LinkedIn profileView Lavina Melwani's profile

    About

    Lassi with Lavina is a dhaba-style offering of life and the arts through the prism of India. It shares the celebrations and concerns of the global Indian woman. Supported by the Knight Foundation for Journalism, it brings stories from New York to New Delhi to readers globally. About Lassi with Lavina

    Copyright © 2015 Lavina Melwani and Lassi with Lavina. Photos © Copyright 2015 Respective Photographers. Reproduction of material without written permission is prohibited

    Children’s Hope – every child counts. Click to learn more

    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.