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Go to first message Go back 20 messages Messages 7153 - 7172 out of 8032 Go forward 20 messages Go to most recent message
7153. arkymalarky - 7/18/2007 12:33:53 AM

Oh cool! Thanks Judith!

7154. arkymalarky - 7/18/2007 7:48:13 PM

Well, went to the doctor, have meds in order and a plan lined out, and I'm done. I will check back with her wrt meds in 2 months and with my allergist at the end of Sept. I'll either stick with my plan or not, but my meds, supplements, diet, and exercise are all in place. Thanks for all the good advice and support! I feel I can take control of my routine for the first time in several years, and if it doesn't work it's all on me.

7155. thoughtful - 7/18/2007 8:07:42 PM

Or, if it doesn't work, there's always more adjustments.

I've found I do much better with gradual adjustments than drastic changes.

I'm amazed at how I used to never drink coffee without sweetener/sugar, and now just the smell of is such a turnoff.

I'm amazed at how I used to mainline diet soda and now regular soda smells like sugar syrup and the diet smells flat. BLECCH!

But if someone told me I had to give them up all up at once, I'd've never done it. I would've felt deprived and craved it, and gone back.

And just as bad habits can be a problem, good habits can also be your friend. I miss veggies if I don't have them at breakfast and I go nuts if I miss more than a day or two of my walk. A few years ago, if you asked me if i'd ever eat broccoli at breakfast, I'd have told you you were nuts!

7156. wonkers2 - 7/20/2007 3:17:57 PM

2008 brings big stakes for health care

7157. concerned - 7/20/2007 5:59:10 PM

Re. 7155 -

Broccoli for breakfast? Isn't that taking things a bit far? Unless you're talking broccoli filled doughnuts, of course.

7158. concerned - 7/20/2007 6:02:02 PM

Can you become 'addicted' to supplements? One weekend, I tried not taking mine and by Monday morning, I felt like I used to when I had a hangover, even though I had almost nothing to drink during the weekend.

7159. judithathome - 7/20/2007 8:51:43 PM

Keoni is on week 4 of his Chantix (to stop smoking) and not only is he off ciggies, he isn't as enthusiastic about coffee, either. Bizarre, because he drinks coffee almost every waking hour.

7160. robertjayb - 7/26/2007 4:55:34 AM

Scat! Get that cat outta here!

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Oscar the cat seems to have an uncanny knack for predicting when nursing home patients are going to die, by curling up next to them during their final hours.

His accuracy, observed in 25 cases, has led the staff to call family members once he has chosen someone. It usually means they have less than four hours to live.

"He doesn't make too many mistakes. He seems to understand when patients are about to die," said Dr. David Dosa in an interview.

7161. wonkers2 - 7/26/2007 1:38:15 PM

There must be a scientific explanation?? Maybe the cat is somehow speeding up the process!

7162. arkymalarky - 7/26/2007 1:42:03 PM

Maybe when he curls up on their beds he's pinching an oxygen tube.

7163. Wombat - 7/26/2007 2:51:20 PM

More likely, he doesn't get petted or otherwise fussed over, so he can get some rest.

7164. arkymalarky - 7/26/2007 5:34:24 PM

OOoooh.

BTW, Wombat, did you get my email a while back? My syllabus was approved, so now all I have to do is implement it. ;-)

7165. Wombat - 7/26/2007 8:04:11 PM

Arky:

Yes I did. I looked it over. I did have some comments, but obviously did not get around to sending them to you. I will do so today. I am glad that it was accepted.

7166. arkymalarky - 7/26/2007 9:10:42 PM

Thanks so much!

7167. robertjayb - 7/28/2007 4:31:48 AM

After Oscar, more on pets as health monitors...

7168. wonkers2 - 7/29/2007 3:19:30 PM

Viagra anyone?

7169. robertjayb - 8/7/2007 8:33:21 PM

The case for single payer...

The American Prospect talks to the co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program about why a single-payer system remains not only the most desirable reform goal in the United States, but an achievable one.

7170. wonkers2 - 8/8/2007 1:45:59 PM

The current health care system doesn't pay hospitals, doctors and nurses to keep peole healthy; it pays for tests, surgeries and drugs. So Americans often get expensive invasive care of dubious medical benefit while missing out on sensible basic care. Millions of other people go without any care for chronic illnesses like heart disease and diabetes. If Medicare and private insurers paid for more preventive care, Americans would be healthier than they are today and live longer. No Free Lunch on Health

7171. robertjayb - 8/16/2007 6:39:19 PM

He should have gone to an emergency room as * said.

KANSAS CITY, Missouri (AP) -- A man threw his seriously ill wife four stories to her death because he could no longer afford to pay for her medical care, prosecutors said in charging him with second-degree murder.

According to court documents filed Wednesday in Jackson County Circuit Court, Stanley Reimer walked his wife to the balcony of their apartment and kissed her before throwing her over.


No emergency rooms charge, too.

7172. robertjayb - 9/13/2007 4:22:54 PM

Women and heart attacks...a personal account...

Did you know that women rarely have the same dramatic symptoms
that men have when experiencing heart attack...you know, the sudden
stabbing pain in the chest, the cold sweat, grabbing the chest &
dropping to the floor that we see in the movies. Here is the story of
one woman's experience with a heart attack.


(democratic underground)

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