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Alzheimer’s Hurts More than Alzheimer’s Patients

July 30th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Daily Life, Health, Lifestyle, Tidbits

My great grandpa had Alzheimer’s disease - the most commonly known symptom of which is recent memory loss. A lot of times an Alzheimer’s patient can remember 50 years ago like it was yesterday (and sometimes they think it is yesterday), but yesterday is just a blurry memory. It can be very simple at first, and really bad once it progresses and leads to eventual death.

Having a loved one not recognize you anymore is one of the most sad things you can experience in life. It’s sad for the person who can’t remember, and sad for the one whose name they can’t recall. But they know you love them, usually that feeling is strong enough they at least know that. It’s hard on a family. My dad didn’t have Alzheimer’s, but his condition often left him disoriented in a similar fashion. My great grandpa did have Alzheimer’s, and that was hell on his daughter - my grandma.

The Alzheimer’s Association is having a Alzheimer’s Memory Walk to raise awareness about Alzheimer’s patient care and research. There are over 600 communities having walks already. It’s typically a 2-3 mile walk on a Saturday morning sometime in the fall. There is a great need for team captains to help organize and raise funds.

I’m asking all of my readers to take some time out of your schedule to see if there’s a walk in your community, and if not, see what it takes to start one. I’m sure you know plenty of people that have legs and can walk, and if not, I’m sure they accept people who can’t walk too.

Sponsored by Alzheimer's Walk

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Oh Quizmasters, You’ve Never Been More Wrong

June 18th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Energy, Entertainment, Health, What the...?!

It is my firm belief that the following test is skewed, and does not properly account for computer geeks or gamers, who have an unbelievable practiced speed-click ability with a computer mouse.

This seems like an entirely silly way to determine someone’s caffeination levels. If you want a truly scientific method, test your blood. The only sad thing is, by the time you get the results, they probably won’t help you, since caffeine only stays in your blood for like 4 hours before you pee it out.

Today I am exhausted, I didn’t sleep well at all last night. I got up, got into the shower, and for some reason it just would not stop squeaking at me. I usually get rid of that sound by turning the shower part off and on again and after a couple of times it will usually adjust and stop making noises. Today it was like pure torture, being half-comatose and having to deal with that ungodly squelch every fifteen seconds.

The Caffeine Click Test - How Caffeinated Are You?
OnePlusYou Quizzes and Widgets

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Tired of the Roller Coaster

June 4th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Health, My Life

If you were able to keep riding on the same violent roller coaster over and over again, eventually you’d want to take a break just to get your equilibrium back, even if by then the fear had temporarily subsided. That’s how I feel. My fear of losing my dad has (I’ll give you that it’s probably temporarily) subsided.

I thought I’d get a break from worrying and from thinking about how to prepare for the worst. I thought I could be fairly sure I’d get to keep my dad around again for years. I thought I’d get to do my retarded chicken impression for him to make him laugh at least a thousand more times.

But the ride’s not over, at least not yet. I got a call the other day from my mom, after I posted the update about my dad the other day. The doctors say even though they can’t find a mass, he’s only gotten a very tiny bit better, and he’s still jaundiced and still having shooting pains in his abdomen. They say he has cirrhosis of the liver, and they aren’t sure how bad it is or what’s causing it.

They also say they’re leaning again towards him still having cancer somewhere in his liver or pancreas that’s causing the problem. They can’t be sure without a biopsy, and they won’t do a biopsy because they don’t want to put him through that and he doesn’t want them to do it.

I just want him to be better, and not to suffer. They’ve got him pain meds for now, and morphine ordered up in case he ends up needing it.

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I Try to Find the Humor in Everything

May 30th, 2008 | 1 Comment | Posted in Daily Life, Health, My Life

My dad has been in off-and-on declining physical health since I was a little kid. He dealt with depression and some other things when I was in middle school. Around sophomore year of high school, he got into a car accident and had to go to the hospital. While he was there they gave him some percoset for the pain, but you can’t give that to people with chemical imbalances or it screws them up.

A while later he started having “shutdowns” - he’d just sort of go away from the world inside his head and would go unresponsive for days at a time. He’d end up at the local psychiatric hospital because there was really nothing they could do except monitor him.

Eventually, these started happening about once a year. Then every six months. Then every couple months. Then he started having seizures that sent him to the ER. I spent several nights out of three straight weeks with my mom waiting on my dad in the ER.

After they got his seizures under better control with medicine, he really didn’t seem the same anymore. He was more docile, less fierce, and was very polite and nice to everybody, and he was weaker.

Eventually, he started getting so weak that he would fall in our house. My mom and I weren’t strong enough to pick him up off the floor - he’s about six foot tall and weighed a lot. He wasn’t fat; he is just a tall, big man. When I was a senior in high school, mom made the decision for his own well-being that dad would need to move into a nursing facility to protect him and get him the middle-of-the-night medical care he might need.

Dad’s health issues progressed until he required a walker to go places. I used to take him to Wal-mart or Hardee’s or KFC and help him do the things he enjoys doing. The doctors say he developed Parkinson’s disease and that it would only progress. He’s in a wheelchair now, and has to be fed because he can’t use his hands. His mouth and jaw muscles have atrophied to the point that his speech became slurred, and then came to the point where all he can do now is sort of grunt at us. He’s still very much of sound mind. It’s got to be as frustrating for him not to be able to express himself as it is sad for us that we can’t have regular conversations with my father anymore.

For almost a year now, I’ve had haunting dreams of being called in the middle of the night or early morning and told that he’d passed away. I didn’t know how I would deal with that in real life, so each time I have this dream it’s just as scary. I know he’s going on to a better place when he does go. He loves Jesus, and I know he’ll go to Heaven.

I got some scary news the other day. I went home last weekend and saw my family, and I noticed Dad was a little yellow. I know that usually means liver problems. I brought it up to Mom, who said she’d noticed to. The doctors looked at him this week and said it might be three things: hepatitis, stones blocking blood vessels to his liver, or cancer. Yesterday I called my mom, and she said they had in all likelihood ruled out cancer.

Today I got an e-mail from my mom saying now they aren’t sure again, since they didn’t find any stones during the ultrasound, and now that there are pancreatic issues that seem to be affecting the liver, they are leaning more towards cancer. They are doing an MRI of his liver and pancreas today to look for masses. Pray for him and my family, please.

My friend Ruff and I were talking about the high costs of medicine and how it, in the end, hurts patients to keep doctors and technicians in a lifestyle they’ve grown accustomed to. We also noted how if they changed the salaries of these people and lowered the cost of their education, that someone would still suffer and as a result the patients would still suffer in the end.

Then, because I’m silly sometimes when I don’t know how to deal with things, I thought about X-Ray technicians, and thought “What if you didn’t wear that lead apron when you got an X-Ray, and instead of getting testicular cancer, you got radiation-induced enlargement and super powers? I brought this up to Ruff, and asked “If there was an equal chance that you’d either get testicular cancer, or super powers in your crotch, would you opt-out of the lead apron at X-Rays?” and he and my other coworker both said that might actually be worth the gamble. We were all beingĀ  facetious of course, no one wants to risk testicular cancer. But still, imagine what you could do with super powers down there.

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Coming Out of My Shell

In the spirit of “Coming Out of My Shell,” I’m posting this rare video of me, telling you about an embarassing moment. And when is this embarassing moment, you might ask? It’s from JUNIOR HIGH. You know you all just shuddered a little. Junior high: one of the most awkward times of anyone’s life. Watch the video and leave me feedback in the comments section, maybe share your own awkward, embarassing moment.

Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.

Now that you’ve seen me sans-shell, take a look at the Gulf oysters website at BeOysterAware.com. There’s information there that could save your life!

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