Can we have a forum for "older" people with bc?
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Baby shower today for my grandaughter.....The bunny was then, and this is now...so excited this will be great-grand (whatever it is) # 8 for me....
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Forgot to mention --- my school was quite close to being a one room school. Many fond memories of it -- but we didn't have such a thing as dress code. The first three grades were in a small building that did have a stage -- how and why it got there I don't know. The BIG room housed 4th., 5th., and 6th., and there was a big swinging door and 7th., and 8th. were there. So some separation but generally scant.
Many kids just were lucky they could go to school every day as it was a fairly poor community. I have no regrets and feel fortunate that we had a situation where we were all WELL known by our teachers and each other. We were bused after grade school to the next small town to high school. It was a four yr. high school and again though a lot more students --- all were well known. Back then time moved way too slow most of the time --- and somewhere along the way it ( time ) sure caught up.
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ChiSandy: oh my gosh I'd sooo forgotten about those ugly green gym suits! Lol. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
IllinoisLad: my father was in the airforce and I had the experience of one room school around grade three and four. Small village of maybe 100 people where everyone knew everyone and we all looked out for one another. After that it was a big public school. I attended seven different schools throughout the years.
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My Dad would make me put white polish on my saddle oxfords before I ever wore them. It just broke my heart, because they never had that new shine again. Still makes me feel sad when I think about it. I went to school in a town adjacent to an Air Force base. Everyone was having kids by the dozens and they had to build a new school all the time. I was in the 8th grade before I went to the same school for 2 years. There was only one high school and most of us knew each other. We just got back from DH's 60th high school reunion in Anchorage and will go to mine in Okla in Sept. They had a banquet for students and spouses and the next day a picnic for all years. The oldest graduate was 93. Both schools said it's the last reunion for our class. I went to my 50th and was surprised at how many couples in high school had married and were still together. DH and I met in college.
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Pink-is- my-color - I've got you 'beat' - I went to 10 different schools by the time I graduated. The first was a one-room school at a small USAF Depot in France. Daddy had been Army when I was born and went to the Air Force when it was formed and retired on 26 yrs total time.
I did have a pair of those ugly 'saddle oxfords'. Did not want them as I thought they were UGLY (still do) but Mom insisted I had to have a pair as they were 'in-style'. Don't ever remember wearing them - just too ugly.
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I just finished two hours of scanning photographs into my computer-all of them of my younger brother. I want to take him the originals when I see him this summer, but I want copies for my genealogy spreadsheets.
My SIL told me they had no pictures of my brother, other than their wedding pictures. I had taken eight boxes of photographs from my mother's apartment when she died last fall and am trying to get a genealogical photo record put together. I have managed to get through six of the boxes and found about 60 pictures of my brother.
My sister & I started the family trees years ago. Mother & I would visit the churches and cemeteries to get information and my sister did the family contacts. Together we got a lot of information. I learned how to sort & archive photographs using spreadsheets through the genealogy department in our library system. The manager of the department had been a supervisor of mine about 11 years ago, so we know each other well. He showed me how he has been doing his family photographs and later taught a class on it. It looks so neat and clean with each family group cataloged under tabs by years or surname. I am just starting, so mine are still in the chaotic stage.
~Wren~
Sadly, I only attended my ten year reunion and have never been notified of any others.
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Our ugly gym suits in high school were a dull blue color. I still think saddle oxfords are kinda cute. The white part did get scuffed, though.
It didn't get much higher (if any higher) than low 60's here today. It was low 50's in the camper when I got up about 8:30 this morning. I wore a sweatshirt and jeans until about an hour ago when I changed the sweatshirt for a long-sleeve knit shirt.
Dh had a good time in Kansas City at the national wood turners gathering but he said he had "information overload." He should return early afternoon tomorrow. It will be good to have his company and--good to have transportation!
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Sandy- your memories are pretty much mine, except I was in the Bronx. I remember having to wear pants under my skirt on cold days, and our gym uniforms were green bloomer type things. I had starting working on Wall St as ladies wearing pants started being acceptable. But, it had to be a pantsuit or you would get reported. We had our own cafeteria, and they had monitors there making sure you were dressed properly. I'm not a bend the rules kind of person, and I abided by those rules until I went into maternity clothing. I bought 3 tops and three bottoms that could all be intertwined with each other. I went to the cafeteria on day - (we usually ordered out and ate at our desks because the stock market doesn't close for lunch) and I got reported for improper attire. I went back to the office and told my boss about it and he laughed- back then most women stayed home with their babies, and he knew I would be gone long before the 3 mandatory reports needed to fire me. Not that he would have fired me anyway.
Doing ok today- I am moving as little as possible and taking the meds by the clock instead of the pain level. That way the pain doesn't get a grip on me. I'm taking steroids twice a day and half a muscle relaxer with either a 1/4 of the Percocet or an 800 mg Advil. I try to save the Percocet for bedtime, but I can sure see how someone could get addicted to them.
Hope you all had a good day,
Anne
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Hang in their Anne.....
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Anne, sounds like you still have plenty of issues, but glad that you are controlling your pain better. Hopefully a fix can turn up that will get you back to a much better level.
I have had a lazy day --- meant to do more, but it was just one of those times where ( nothing bad mind you ) things just didn't want to fall into place so I could flow through the plans I had. So much I think for making too many plans. It seems like that is what gums up the works. If I just take it on a more flexible casual level I just flit here and there and have lots of progress to show.
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Life may not be all we want, but it's all we have, as my old school precept said, and it's high time we have it. We shall not find its secrets or its possible riches in the advice of others, however wise, unless we complete that counsel with our own grit, gumption, and common sense. - Mary Ellen Chase
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Beautiful very nice cool morning here. Playing catch up today too. How fast this month is speeding along. Rain is coming at the end of the week -- I think. That is what the five day forecast indicates anyway. I'll still try to get my car washed because having as much dirt gone as possible is good. Hoping to be able to start working on getting test results from my tests last week. The mammogram was going to take longer as no one sent to Carbondale for the records they had. Sigh !!! It is okay, because no one would have said beforehand anyway --- but it is longer yet due to that. At least I didn't have to make the long trip to Carbondale this time. I've done it before because they had digital mammography which for me was I think much better. That has been around for a while now and I think all hospitals have them --- so decided to stay as close to home as I could.
Little did I know they ( meaning V.A. Choice Care system ) would send me to our own little ( but big enough ) local hospital which were it not for time and heat, I could have walked there. I was also able to have the Dexa scan and the previous one I had to go all the way over to John Cochran V. A. in St. Louis, Mo --- so I think 170 miles round trip. Both the tests were scheduled -- one right after the other. Couldn't have worked out nicer. I'm a big believer now in using the Choice Care program.
Hoping all of you have a fantastic day full of great weather and not too much work.
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I've had no issues with my care through VA for many years. This 'Veterans Choice' thank is a bunch of 'crap'! (To put it politely).
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Oh Kicks - I love it when you're being polite. (LOL) I see we're both still here.
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Choice Care saves me from having to drive the excessive amts. of miles I would otherwise have to go to get to the V.A. hospital nearest me. I'm not unhappy with my overall care. They ( so far ) have found me excellent Doctors. I'm having to do my utmost to save mileage on my car and the cost of gas to make the round trips. I'm sorry if Choice Care hasn't worked for you -- my only complaint is having to wait for the test results a bit longer. Otherwise I'm VERY satisfied. I went back and forth to Marion V.A. and Carbondale which is a few miles further since I was diagnosed in 2007 --- a fairly long time. It is only recently that I decided to try and save car wear and tear ( mileage ) and gas -- even though it is much cheaper for gas now, by switching some of my appts. to closer to home. I did go a few days ago to get new hearing aids at Marion.
I have a Dr. that I worked for and though he is nearly retired ( just a few patients left ) he has been around here for a long time and can tell me if I'm getting GOOD Dr.'s and so far --- I've had excellent ones.
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"Be of good cheer. Do not think of today's failures, but of the success that may come tomorrow. You have set yourselves a difficult task, but you will succeed if you persevere; and you will find a joy in overcoming obstacles. Remember, no effort that we make to attain something beautiful is ever lost."
-- Helen Keller -
Hope is the companion of power, and mother of success; for who so hopes strongly has within him or her the gift of miracles.
Samuel Smiles -
Going this morning to visit a friend who is having some back issues. Lovely day out with a nice little breeze. Also taking out a friend with a birthday -- so a full day for me. I don't mind full days. I sometimes accomplish more when full days give me a time budget -- then the other way around. Working on several projects here as usual.
Hope you are all going to have a fantastic day. Hugs, to Anne, Sandra and Mike and anyone else who may be struggling through problems.
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My diagnosis was only 9 short months ago yet in a way it has been 9 long months. I remember the fears and the hopes I had and how scary the unknown was. I remember that when I got a plan and became a warrior that I felt so much better and I felt empowered. I have learned so much and grown so much emotionally. Now my best friend just told me her husband has lung cancer and they are experiencing the fears and the hopes. I so hope I can help them in some way as they walk this journey.
Blessings to all! I hope each day there is something for you to smile about! -
Wise people possess humility. They know that their small islands
of knowledge are surrounded by a vast sea of the unknown.
Harold C. Chase -
Hi, all
Just checking in to say "hi". I went for an ultrasound this morning of my liver, pancreas and gall bladder because the Dr last Fri felt a swelling in that area and wanted to check it out. I'm nervous because I have no pain in that area, and to make it worse, the tech asked if I still had my right kidney. She backed off and said it was fine, but never acknowledged finding it. Scary time.
Last Fri, as I got home from the Dr appt, I told the DGS I live with that he could have a friend over. They were in the front room watching TV- a lot of bad language in the movie, but they're going into HS this year, so I let it go. Then as I'm sitting in the family room, reading, I start smelling something. Took a while, but realized I was smelling pot. I walked quietly to the front room and there was Doug, puffing away. I have never seen a child go pale so fast. For me, it was a "What were you thinking?!?" moment. He and his friend both denied it was pot. I said to them, I may be getting old, and I've never smoked pot, but I sure knew the smelll of it. Again, they said it was rosemary, basil and oregano, which he had out on the table. I said not my problem, don't touch anything, and called his mom.
By this time, he was hysterical. I sent the friend home, and told Dog to just sit in front of me, and tried to find out if there was anything on line about smoking spices. I could not find anything anywhere. Every hotline I tried was not in service. I told him to stop crying, it wasn't real, and it wasn't going to sway me. He finally asked if his Mom and still loved him. I said we were so upset because we loved him. I reminded him that his father, grandfather, uncles, etc have all thrown they're lives away because of drugs, and that the females on my side of the family have alcohol issues, including me (I stopped drinking 30 years ago) and his mom. Anyway, his dad was on the way to pick him up, and when he got here, I asked him to step inside and smell it. He immediately agreed that it was rosemary and basil, as did his Mom when she got home. I've never burned rosemary, so have no idea if that's true. His parents were more upset at him for smoking in the house. He has been totally grounded from all activities and electronics. Last summer, he got to choose camp according to the field trips and activities, thisyear, it is not a choice. He is going to camp every single day, first to get him away from his friends, and second to be under supervision every day. It's not as bad as it sounds, my son's camp has 150 teens, and plan lot of activities teens enjoy.
Never a dull day here.
Anne
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How rude of him not to share
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Wow !!! You are not having dull days Anne. Hopefully camp will help keep him occupied. I'm doing colonoscopy prep today. I'm have the Murphy's Law experience. If your on food restriction it is all you will think. The lemon-line gator aid is okay, but no substitute for eating.
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Anne - you are right. The question is not WHAT he was smoking, it is WHY he was smoking at all, and particularly in the house. Can't remember how old he is. Junior High?? So glad he can be under your son's wing this summer.
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Going to the shore for 10 days with my daughter......looking forward to it........hugs everyone.
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Morning all,
Minus two- my DGS is almost 15 and will be starting HS this year. Sandy- I understand that pot is more acceptable now, and that kids experiment with it. In this case, my grandson's father dropped out of 8th grade and spent his days smoking pot with his Dad. My ex-SIL is extremely intelligent but wasted his whole life on pot and other drugs. The only good life he had was 7 years in the military after their divorce. My DGS does not know his dad dropped out, but understands how empty his Dad's life is. He finally rented a house about 2 years ago,after their final breakup. It still is in the exact same condition it was in then,only looks like a garbage dump moved in. He is still sleeping on a mattress on the floor, no sheets, which my grandson shares when he is there. My exSIL is great with remodeling, and building- he redid one of our bathrooms for us and did a better job that the licensed guy we had to use through our insurance on the other bathroom.
He was deployed to the Middle East twice, and says he is too disabled to do any physical work any longer. I am not totally disputing that, but he went into the military with a bad back, and has no problem doing things he wants to do. It is his mindset that bothers me so much. He just drifts from one idea to the next, without doing anything of value. His newest idea is he is giving up the house at the end of the month and moving on to a sailboat someone gave him. People don't give away decent boats, so I am sure it is not sea worthy. And he has no experience sailing at all.
His father lives in another son's garage and also drifts from day to day. My daughter's ex MIL, who is one of my best friends, drifted from man to man while they we're growing up and as they hit their teens, she would move out with a guy, leaving them on their own, except she'd go home to clean and shop. Since our DGS was born, she has really changed and become a hard working, loving mother and GM.
My DGS is in the highly gifted program at school and has an incredible future ahead of him. And since he has lived most of his life with us (and his mom, of course), he has seen what a stable home is, as crazy as we are. He has never had to deal with utilities being shut off, or sleeping on a floor or couch (except as a treat. He has always had food, good food and snack food available, etc. I just don't know if that will triumph over his paternal history. That's what scares me.
Enough of a rant. I had a bad night last night, and ended up taking 1/2 a muscle relaxer 3x, so I have just gotten out of bed. Need to start my day. Our plan was to paint my DGS's room this weekend, but the new comforter arrived yesterday, and we don't like it. We were planning to pick paint colors from the comforter, so don't know what is happening there.
Anne
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Life is not about doing it right.Life is the calling forth of your soul by God, in order for you to live by principles that honor God and see yourself as a part of God for the purpose of doing good.God is good, you know?It is that same God-goodness that life expects from you and will give to you when you live a life of integrity. -Iyanla Vanzant
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Okay, I'll get me out of the way first. The colonoscopy went great. I adore Dr. Yu. No polyps, no nothing. Clean as a little babies behind. Don't know if I ever said, but this was my first colonoscopy. I've avoided them for yrs. as for some reason I don't clean out really well -- or maybe I should say --- the prep takes longer for me than most people. So, I will be close to home today -- as I can't be sure how my system will react at any given time. I finally made up my mind after having the bout of non-pain pancreatitis found by CT scan that I would have the colonoscopy. Why that was the trigger I don't know
Hospital was great too. Really nice people. They not only gave us hot ham sandwich for lunch ( we were done about 12:15 ) but sent a frozen dinner home with us as well. Also since I was a medical corpsman in the service ( so I said yes for sure ) they sent home pictures of my colon. Hope that doesn't turn anyone off but I'm still often fascinated by medical things.
Anne, you could use some good YOU time. I was thinking yesterday that your DGS was at the experimental age/stage maybe. I learned a lot of unworkable things from watching my sister who was 15 months older. Thinking your GS maybe doesn't quite have the benefit of viewing things that way. Still, even then, there are things that maybe have to be tried on for the fit at least once. Also his role models ( men ) have some issues/deficiencies but for now with all those good grades and the stable home the females in the family provide -- hopefully he won't make too many mistakes along the way.
Hang in there.
Meant to say --- if I have anything really screwed it might be my reading ability after anesthesia though I think it is the lightest they can use. I did not know, but many of these procedures ( if nothing is going on ) only take from two to five minutes they told me, so heavy anesthesia is really not needed.
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Yay for the clean colon, Jackie! Know what was the first thing I ate to celebrate at lunch that day after my colonoscopy? Buffalo Wild Wings (albeit “mild") and a near-beer.
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Good news on the colonoscopy, Jackie!
Anne, I'm afraid I would run away from home if I had to deal with all those family problems. You definitely deserve some good family interactions.
Have fun, Ducky!
Happy Fourth of July to everyone.
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