kevalhi
Level 7
KARAKURA HOSPITAL APPLICATION
Out-Of-Character (OOC) Section
IGN (In-Game Name):
Lovhness (applying on)
Kevalhi (main account)
What is your discord username?
Kevalhi
Describe your activity on the server:
I have been very consistent with getting on the server and roleplaying. As of currently, I am employed working Monday, Tuesday, and Friday.
Even with my tight schedule, I know my responsibilities to show up and be active within the communities I partake in.
EST
Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
Busy until 3:30 PM | Busy until 3:30 PM | All Day | Busy until 3:30 PM | Busy until 3:30 PM | All Day but depends | All Day But depends |
What is your timezone?:
Eastern Standard Time [EST]
List your current and past applications:
Language :
Kevalhi's Other Application
Kevalhi's Language Application
Kevalhi's Gaelic Application
NO1UNKO's Gaelic Application
Vuliwais German Language Application
Kevalhi's Gaelic Application
NO1UNKO's Gaelic Application
Vuliwais German Language Application
Russian Application
Korean Application
Korean Application
Faction
Kevalhi's Professor Application.
List your current roles on the server?:
Kevalhi [Main Account] :
Charlotte Donahue: Bobcat F football Captain
Britney Donahue: Fox
[ALT] : Lovhness
Kang Eun-Hee : High School (unless accepted)
N/a : Cat
What experiences do you have with roleplay?:
Over my six years on SRP, I’ve gone through many different roleplay experiences. When I first joined the server, I indulged in CrimeRP, although I was terrible at it and very likely failed to roleplay correctly many times. From CrimeRP, I drifted into GangRP. During this time, rules were changing throughout the gangRP community, and after a while, the gangs I’d join would quickly become inactive or randomly be deleted.
From that point, I tried other factions. I applied and was accepted to the EMS faction on Jan 29, 2021. This wasn’t long after I originally joined the server, so there were still mistakes made in my roleplay. During this time, I started joining sports teams. I was accepted into High School female Football, which I ended up leaving for OOC reasons. Although I left, I found myself enjoying jockRP and committed the time I had into partaking in that.
More recently, I was on the College female Basketball team, along with the College female Volleyball during this time, I also became a lawyer. As of most recently, I became captain of the Bobcat female Football team, and I believe I have made the team progress vastly. Now, I can confidently say my roleplay has become something I’m proud of, and I work hard to constantly become better at roleplay.
What is your motivation for applying?
I was in the hospital faction a while back, and I didn’t succeed the way I know I could’ve. I wasn’t truly fulfilling the tasks that were at hand, and in doing so, I was kicked from the faction. Now, my motivation stems from the fact that I want to try and experience the opportunities within the hospital faction that I had missed out on. I am eager to rejoin the hospital faction to prove my growth, dedication, and ability to contribute meaningfully. I want to take responsibility for past shortcomings and show how I’ve developed both in roleplay and community.
Which role are you applying for?
(Doctor or Psychiatrist)
I'm applying for the Psychiatrist role.
What knowledge do you have of the roles within the Hospital Faction?
(This is to gauge at your current understanding of the faction prior to acceptance)
❀Paramedic: Paramedics are in the field responding to 110 emergency calls, usually at the ready to arrive on the scene to assist or transport patients. I believe paramedics are able to give quick life-supporting aid. (Gauze to stop bleed outs)
❀Psychiatrist: Psychiatrists work on mental health assistance. They work closely with their clients, listening to their situations to help figure out what may be the cause of said difficulty. They diagnose mental illnesses and disorders.
❀Doctor: Doctors work on the more hands-on side of the medical department. They handle medical situations with a wide range of situations, whether it’s an open wound, a broken leg, or, if you’re like my character, pink eye…
Honorable mention,
❀Hospital Director: The big boss of the Karakura Hospital, quite literally sitting at the top of the food chain. This role oversees the departments, making decisions for the well-being of the hospital, from accepting new staff.
❀Clinical Lead: They’re the head of their department and the person you go to about situations that don’t need to go to the hospital director. This role is in charge of training new staff and making sure all is running as best as possible.
❀Clinical Supervisor: The Robin to the Clinical Leads' Batman (right-hand man). They watch over, helping assess the hospital's day-to-day, and they’ll be seen helping newer staff along with
Do you acknowledge that if training is held whilst you are online, you are expected to attend or you will be punished?
Yes, I’m fully aware of this factor and plan to attend training.
⋆˚꩜。SECTION 1: PERSONAL DETAILS⋆˚꩜。
Character’s Full Name:
‘Kang Eun-Hee’
Character’s Gender and Pronouns:
Female || She/her
Character’s Age (if accepted):
‘30 years old.’
Character’s Academic Background:
(Grade-12/Bachelor/Masters/PhD)
Forensic Psychiatry Fellowship
Doctor of Medicine (M.D.)
Subspecialty Certification in Forensic Psychiatry
Character’s Nationality:
‘South Korean.'
Character’s Marital Status:
‘Single.’
Character’s Religious Denomination:
‘Undecided.’
Character’s Spoken Languages:
‘Korean and Japanese’
Character Backstory (Optional):
Kang Eun-Hee was the first but not the last-born child of Kang Ji-sung, a successful businessman, and Yoon Hye-ja, a local ‘doctor’.
Prior tp the birth of Eun-Hee, Ji-sung had openly expressed his desire for a son. As the eldest child, they’d be able to take over his business someday. He constantly imagined passing the business on, building an empire for the Kang family name. Ji-sung and Hye-ja had decided to keep the baby’s gender a surprise to all, because they had hoped the baby would end up being a boy. How couldn’t it? When Hye-ja had taken up old wives' tales on ‘fixing’ a baby's gender. But on November 8th, 1998, Eun-Hee was born—a baby girl. Although at first he never abandoned or neglected her completely, during her young years you could see he was struggling when comparing to other fathers. Her birthdays weren’t celebrated for Ji-sung, the day was a constant reminder of a burden he had created, her birth represented the collapse of his dreams.
As Eun-Hee started to grow older, she became increasingly aware of the burden she was to her father. It was never expressed directly. But it appeared through casual remarks from family members, comparing her to the son her father had hoped and dreamed for. However, unlike many children that saw the reflection of a burden in their parent's eyes, Eun-Hee did not respond by becoming rebellious or outspoken. She became quiet.
At the age of seven, she had developed a habit of sitting silently ‘playing dolls’ but in reality, she was observing conversations without partaking in them. Family members often forgot she was even there; this allowed her to overhear adult conversations she was never supposed to hear. She knew about her father’s business crashing before her mother had even realized it. And this habit became useful and grew into a trained that defined her personality. Many folks would refer to her as “ghost-like”, not because they meant it in a harsh way but because she would come and go as she pleased, often not making a sound when she’d enter.
While Eun-Hee’s relationship reminded strained with her father, she developed a strong bond with her mother. Kang Hye-ja was known throughout the area as a ‘healer.’ But the story would change depending on who you asked, some described her as an herbalist, spiritual practitioner, fortune reader, a healer of all, or a “witch doctor.”
The local residents publicly dismissed Hye-ja and referred to her methods as superstition. Yet, whenever someone faced illness, misfortune, or unexplained struggle, they’d always find themselves standing at the Kang family’s front food seeking her help.
Growing up, Eun-Hee spent countless hours watching her mother’s work, she learned quick that people will judge you, but when you have the answers they need they’ll do anything to receive them. Her mother’s kindness went further then proscribing the remedy, she’d truly listen to her patients fears and frustrations. By the time Eun-Hee entered middle school, she had become highly preceptive when it came down to people's emotions.
Kang Ji-sung remained heavily focused on rebuilding his business throughout Eun’s childhood. He valued achievement, discipline, and reputation. He was growing in a path that didn’t include Eun-Hee or her mother, he believed he deserved better. And with that, he called for a divorce. By the time she was sixteen, her parents were officially split. Eun-Hee grew further from her father, when he didn’t ask for an inch of custody, he had moved on from them.
Not very long, Ji-sung had remarried Chihiro, a Japanese tea farmer. The following years, Chihiro gave birth to 3 children Ha-na, Jun-seo, and Seol-ah. Initially, Eun-Hee had no interest in her newfound ‘family’ members and expected to remain detached from them. Instead, the opposite happened.
As Eun-Hee aged so did her passion for the human brain. What had started as a childhood habit of observing others turned into a academic passion. Her mother’s work had exposed her to every type of person, people burdened by grief, fear, loneliness, and desperation. Eun-Hee grew more and more interested in why people behaved in the ways that they did, why make irrational decisions, and what caused people to be shaped by suffering.
Throughout high school and university, Eun-Hee devoted herself to psychological studies. Professors often impressed by her abilities and attention to detail, though they found her difficult to know personally. She rarely spoke unless it was something she knew was worth stating, most of her days were spent with her nose to her pages and coffee in hand.
After earning her credentials, Eun-Hee knew she needed to see opportunities beyond South Korea. She needed space to grow, space to truly learn what she could put her mind to without thoughts of her father circling her mind. And luckily for her an opportunity came up so she could continue training in Japan.
She was relocated to Churu Japan and began working under an experience's psychiatrist Dr. Takamura. Who she later calls, Web for Brains. Dr. Takamura a respected psychiatrist who had decades of experience. Experience that had caused him to be very stubborn, blunt, and irritated by almost everything Eun-Hee did. To say the two clashed would be an understatement. He would undermine almost everything she’d say. While his methods often irritated her, she also quickly realized many of his insights were frustratingly accurate.
Not long after her initial move to Japan, tragedy struck in the family.
Chihiro, her father’s second wife and mother of her many other siblings had passed away after prolonged illness. Although Eun-Hee’s relationship with Chihiro wasn’t very close, she had nothing but respect for her late stepmother.
On the other side of things for Jun-seo the loss was especially difficult.
He was never close with his father, if anything he hated the man. And at sixteen years old, he found himself in a pickle, either Jun goes to live with his father or foster care. At the same time, Jun-seo had developed a growing interest in Japanese culture. Having grown up with a Japanese mother, her felt that his knowledge about Japan lacked. He felt like that part of his blood was blurred, he hardly understood his own heritage and his mother’s passing made the feeling more intense. The solution seemed obvious to him quickly.
Eun-Hee was already living in Japan…
Without warning, Jun-seo announced his intention to move to Churu and to continue his education there. Eun-Hee opposed the idea almost instantly; a brother she hardly knows up and decides he’s moving here? Yeah, no. She understood his reasons, but all she could see was how difficult this transaction would be. She’d have to work harder than ever, so she could feed not one, but two mouths… But Jun-seo refused to back down.
Within a week Eun-Hee’s one bedroom home, turned into Jun-seo’s bed and her on the couch.
During their time in Chubu, Jun-seo worked as a paper boy while Eun-Hee kept up with her psychiatric training. The siblings living situation went surprisingly well, the two rarely argued due to the fact of how similar their personalities were.
As time passed, Eun-Hee completed her training under Dr. Takamura and stared taking on her own clients. In some ways, she didn’t feel she fully accomplished the milestone, like it was hanging over her head teasing her. She had expected everything in life to feel clear, for her to know what to do next but, that never came for her, the lingering feeling of not fully accomplished her goal was stuck in the back of her mind.
(I'm sorry the rest is a WIP)
⋆˚꩜。SECTION 2: MEDICAL HISTORY ⋆˚꩜。

What is your character’s medical speciality? Why did they choose this focus?
(Ensure this is appropriate to the position you have chosen. Some examples can be found here)
As Eun-Hee grew older, she realized she cared less about what people did and more about why they did it.
When she lived with her mother back in Korea, their house door was open to all kinds of people imaginable. Some would seek remedies for bad luck or illness, but many ended up revealing much more than the original problem they entered with. Fears, grudges, and guilt were things they had carried for years. The fascination grew more and more during her teenage years when she began finding interest in true crime cases. Some were captivated by the mystery of the crime itself, and Eun-Hee was drawn to the person behind it. She wanted to understand the person behind the crime, what could drive someone to harm or betray another person.
Does your character have any work experience in medical positions?
Eun-hee would probably describe her medical experiences as hardly satisfactory. For her first few years of studying, she excelled vastly, but then, when it came to working under a psychiatrist, she realized she could NOT end up like him. He was a grouch, hardly took his patients seriously, and would ALWAYS chew his gum too loudly; all of it ticked her off more and more.
She knew for a fact, while working for him, she needed to find a way in life to outshine him, to be a psychiatrist who actually cared enough to write down notes. So, she studied 10x harder, made sure she paid attention to every detail, so when the time came for her to have her first patient, she would succeed.
What is your character’s medical speciality? Why did they choose this focus?
(Ensure this is appropriate to the position you have chosen. Some examples can be found here)
As Eun-Hee grew older, she realized she cared less about what people did and more about why they did it.
When she lived with her mother back in Korea, their house door was open to all kinds of people imaginable. Some would seek remedies for bad luck or illness, but many ended up revealing much more than the original problem they entered with. Fears, grudges, and guilt were things they had carried for years. The fascination grew more and more during her teenage years when she began finding interest in true crime cases. Some were captivated by the mystery of the crime itself, and Eun-Hee was drawn to the person behind it. She wanted to understand the person behind the crime, what could drive someone to harm or betray another person.
Does your character have any work experience in medical positions?
Eun-hee would probably describe her medical experiences as hardly satisfactory. For her first few years of studying, she excelled vastly, but then, when it came to working under a psychiatrist, she realized she could NOT end up like him. He was a grouch, hardly took his patients seriously, and would ALWAYS chew his gum too loudly; all of it ticked her off more and more.
She knew for a fact, while working for him, she needed to find a way in life to outshine him, to be a psychiatrist who actually cared enough to write down notes. So, she studied 10x harder, made sure she paid attention to every detail, so when the time came for her to have her first patient, she would succeed.
⋆˚꩜。SECTION 3: CHARACTER KNOWLEDGE⋆˚꩜。
Describe your character; how do they look, what makes them unique? How would they be perceived by others?
Eun-hee walks with a professional yet stiff grace, carrying herself with the posture of a woman who learned early that she has to prove she is deserving of her title. Her face is framed by what she refers to as ‘reading glasses,’ despite them being prescribed for constant wear… She has light brown hair that fell over her past her shoulders, curled just at the tips. Usually, she kept her hair well-maintained and practical instead of styled for the attention of others. Eun-hee’s skin is pale, porcelain, some may say, with a slim build, giving the effect of being delicate at first glance.
Eun-Hee’s most striking feature is her gaze. Dreary, observant eyes that take in every detail of a room before she even greets the room. She rarely speaks first, she’s more of a speak when spoken to kind of lady. As a result, to some, she could be perceived as intimidating, aloof, or overly serious. But friends know better. She had a quiet presence that felt dependable and steady, the kind of woman who trusts with responsibilities… or secrets!
How does your character act around the hospital?
Eun-Hee keeps a professional exterior when it comes to walking around the hospital; she’ll bow at her colleagues, ask how they’re doing, and even offer them a cup of coffee if she’s on her way to fill up her cup.
When she’s in the space with her patients, she offers a listening ear, one that’s gentle and appreciates the strength it takes to open up. While Eun-Hee could be seen as quiet or reserved, she always has her eye out, whether it’s a new hairstyle or where the nearest EXIT is in case of an emergency.
Does your character function better on their own or with others?
Eun-Hee thrives in both environments. She has worked under many people to better her studies because she knows some things have to be learned from others; people aren’t programmed with information. In some cases, she’s what’s called a visual learner; she needs to see what’s being taught to fully comprehend.
On the other side of things, she does like her quiet time. A space where she can work directly on a project without the complication of having to explain it to another or wait for them to catch up. For Eun-Hee, it depends on the task at hand; she knows better than to cross out the idea of working with others but also doesn’t want to always work alone.
I will mention that my lawyer tag was taken 6/11/26, I was taken out of the faction 3/1/26.
Thank you for reading my application!
Thank you for reading my application!
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