 Harper Collins presents Secrets of the Human Body by Chris Vantulacan, Zandvantulacan and Andrew Cohen. Read by Zandvantulacan. Introduction. Secrets. The human body is in the business of keeping secrets. This was never more apparent to me than in the dissection room in my first year at medical school. The cohort of students was divided up into groups of six and we each had our own cadaver, the euphemism used for a dead human body. Looking back, there was a great deal of secrecy about the whole endeavour. We were not allowed to know our body's names or their life story, though peculiarly we were later allowed to attend their funeral if we wished. We were not allowed to take photographs. Only medical students and staff were allowed into the room, no backstage tours for curious friends. We were meant to be respectful, which generally we were, although the atmosphere was cheerful. We were not really exploring uncharted territory. After all, there isn't much anatomy left to be discovered, at least not any that I was likely to find with my scalpel and forceps. We were more like a little gang of tourists trying to get to know a new town with the help of a guidebook and our tour guide in the form of our instructor, Professor Hall Craggs. And yet we were uncovering secrets. We had views of our cadavers that few people had ever seen before. How many people in your lifetime will you see stark naked? Ten? Maybe twenty? Okay, maybe more, depending on your job and your physique. But most of us keep most of our physical bodies concealed most of the time. For many of us it was our first experience with the intimacy with which we would later have to examine living bodies. I can really only speak for myself, not my classmates, but I had seen very few naked people at age 18. And how many people have seen the inside of your body with its various anatomical irregularities? Probably none, perhaps a surgeon. When cutting open a body, whether alive or dead, we get a sense of seeing into a place that no one has seen before, of being privy to a secret. My group found that our cadavers' false teeth had been left in and that they had a name engraved on them, I suppose to avoid mix-ups, which must be a concern when surrounded by older contemporaries later in life. It was a shock to think what else we didn't know about this previously anonymous man, likewise finding his tattoos, reminders of the secrets that were kept from us. We got used to the smell of chemicals, particularly formalin, not rot or decay, and to the cold, slippery texture of the bodies, like kelp on a beach in winter. We also got used to the squeamishness that I think we all felt with the gristle and stomach contents and vast quantities of congealed fat. I remember Professor Hall Craggs running his hands through his hair in exasperation at my continued failure to identify the various parts of the brachial plexus. He had been dissecting all morning and his hands were covered in bits of human, and so a large globule of human fat lodged in his hair, along with a decent amount of formalin and other small bits and pieces. I was a... Sample complete. Ready to continue?