The first question everyone asks after a fundraiser is "How much money did you-we make?".
I find this a bit offensive purely because the money is not the only goal in having these events. The funds are very important, don't get me wrong, and we could not have the high level of research and care we have with out public sponsors and donors, yet the most important part of these events is the show of support from friends, family and the community. The second is educating and bringing awareness to this devastating disease. "If the disease does not kill you the side long term effects and medications will". This is one of the messages we want to get out when it comes to research fund drives. I want people to understand that lupus is a life long disease that continues to affect the patient even after years of remission. The side effects from current treatments leave some of us with out bones, swollen, half crazy, nauseous, tired, weak, poor, with out much social or professional life, stomach problems, heart issues, high blood pressure, unable to bear children, sometimes with cancer or other secondary illnesses and open to all kinds of infections. The toll taken on the kidneys, liver, heart and other major organs is devastating as well. We are talking about toxic drugs and a disease that attacks it's own tissue. There is no real end in sight for severe lupus patients. I want people to walk away from these events knowing it is their duty to help find better treatments and a cure because someone you know does or will have lupus and it could be your daughter, wife, sister, brother or son. The other important goal is for the public to see we are also strong, willful and courageous people with a great attitude under the worst of circumstances and we are VITAL SURVIVORS !!! There is a message of hope in all this as well and this group shines where this is concerned. The support and positive attitudes are strong and rise above the ashes of the disease. We are not just patients or sick people we are fighters and yet have accepted our fate and we handle it with grace. We do this in hopes of helping someone who is newly diagnosed and to survive. We do it for our loved ones and for our own sanity. In the end we are blessed to have had the experiences as a teacher of strength, fortitude and courage. We do not have our hands out for funds for our own selfish needs because we have already travelled this path. We do this for future generations. So wake up and smell the roses and get involved. Don't forget to tell that person whom you know has lupus how inspirational and strong they are. This is most healing !!!
YES we raised money and we had @300 people show up even in the pouring rain. I give thanks for everyone who made the effort on a Sunday morning to show your support and for those who just came to find out more and help. The local football team at Trenton High helps every year, the community of Woodhaven and Trenton really support this event and that is what I love !!!
AND we still need funds. If you can even spare $10.00 per month ( three Starbucks) it would help tremendously.
I give thanks to all my loved ones who sent money and who came to the walk !!!!! I love you guys...Photos soon to follow !!!
Thursday, August 23, 2007
Friday, August 17, 2007
Butterfly Walk is Sunday
Look at my web site angela@lupusadvocacy.org for further information on the walk or go to http://www.amsterlupus.org/. It all, 100%, goes to lupus research at The University of Michigan lupus research clinic. Make a donation of $3.00 or $3,000 or walk or wheel for $15.00 includes a breakfast. See you there outside of Detroit.
Αληθεια-Truth: Greek Word Study- "patience" μακροθυμια (pronounced ...
The verb form is makrothumeo “to be patient” and the adverb is makrothumon “patiently” and makros “long, distant” (Robinson 85). Greek words that are ...
Patient - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A patient is any person who receives medical attention, care, or treatment. The person is most often ill or injured and in need of treatment by a physician ...
I can not help but believe that there is a connection to these two words because one must bare an amazing amount of patience to be a patient. The long waits in Dr.'s offices, waiting for tests results, diseases which take months and even years to diagnose, long days feeling tired and sick, endless sleepless nights, going from one medication or treatment to another finding the perfect one, careers and lives on hold, families challenged and the list continues. One must hold tight to waiting and the eternal limbo with a long-term illness. When people speed pass me on the road or act inpatient in the grocery line I wonder if they understand how flipping hard it is for me to just stand there? I want to ask them why they can not simply wait, perhaps strike up a conversation? Then I want to say : "Hey man I am on chemo, had three hips replaced, standing on thin and dying bones and fatigued as hell due to a life threatening illness so chill out and be glad you are not in Iraq getting the crap blown out of you. So There".
I walk through the halls of the hospital with waiting rooms filled with sad eyes and worried looks of loved ones, people asleep on benches, Dr.'s running from room to room trying to stick to the schedule of fifteen minutes per person so insurance companies and the head chiefs are happy. That is patience.
I think we grow a country of fast food inpatient people who can not even stay off the phone for five minutes while driving to look around, pay attention, smell the roses and live in the moment. It is an amazing moment if you are breathing, fed, loved and loving. I am blessed to have learned this and it made me a better person.
So now as I wait for more tests and more positive chemo results I still heal, go to PT three times a week, Yoga once a week, garden and carry on with a minimal existence that is simple and worth waiting for. And my husband comes home tomorrow after two weeks in Asheville so I am a Happy girl !!!! Now he is worth waiting for !!!!!
Αληθεια-Truth: Greek Word Study- "patience" μακροθυμια (pronounced ...
The verb form is makrothumeo “to be patient” and the adverb is makrothumon “patiently” and makros “long, distant” (Robinson 85). Greek words that are ...
Patient - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A patient is any person who receives medical attention, care, or treatment. The person is most often ill or injured and in need of treatment by a physician ...
I can not help but believe that there is a connection to these two words because one must bare an amazing amount of patience to be a patient. The long waits in Dr.'s offices, waiting for tests results, diseases which take months and even years to diagnose, long days feeling tired and sick, endless sleepless nights, going from one medication or treatment to another finding the perfect one, careers and lives on hold, families challenged and the list continues. One must hold tight to waiting and the eternal limbo with a long-term illness. When people speed pass me on the road or act inpatient in the grocery line I wonder if they understand how flipping hard it is for me to just stand there? I want to ask them why they can not simply wait, perhaps strike up a conversation? Then I want to say : "Hey man I am on chemo, had three hips replaced, standing on thin and dying bones and fatigued as hell due to a life threatening illness so chill out and be glad you are not in Iraq getting the crap blown out of you. So There".
I walk through the halls of the hospital with waiting rooms filled with sad eyes and worried looks of loved ones, people asleep on benches, Dr.'s running from room to room trying to stick to the schedule of fifteen minutes per person so insurance companies and the head chiefs are happy. That is patience.
I think we grow a country of fast food inpatient people who can not even stay off the phone for five minutes while driving to look around, pay attention, smell the roses and live in the moment. It is an amazing moment if you are breathing, fed, loved and loving. I am blessed to have learned this and it made me a better person.
So now as I wait for more tests and more positive chemo results I still heal, go to PT three times a week, Yoga once a week, garden and carry on with a minimal existence that is simple and worth waiting for. And my husband comes home tomorrow after two weeks in Asheville so I am a Happy girl !!!! Now he is worth waiting for !!!!!
Thursday, August 9, 2007
Voices of lupus
Check out this site. A friend Ginger shared it with our lupus group and it is kind of what I am doing with my book. I want to hear stories from lupus patients, family and friends which are inspirational and honest. It is important to let the world know what we go through and what our loved ones go through. If you would like to be in my book either anonymous or named please let me know. It could even be a poem or a journal entry...Whatever you want to share. I have a publisher and is waiting for me to get over writers block so help me by sending me inspiration. Blessings Angela
http://www.lupusvoice.com/Home.html
http://www.lupusvoice.com/Home.html
Monday, August 6, 2007
much ado about nothing
Hearts are hearts in physical and in ethereal forms. My grandparents have both had heart attacks in the past few months. My friend has had lupus related heart issues. I feel too much emotionally.......and our common bond that is "we feel" !!!! What and how we feel is the question.....My grandmother is reading a book on "living with heart failure".....of which heart do we speak? Is there a connection? Do our emotions relate directly to our organ? To what degree do we sense our emotions to the degree at which we can avoid the heart attach? Do we really want to see our emotions to that degree? "I DO" !!!! I have had heart issues with lupus and am on heart meds etc.....I have a systolic murmur and high BP. I am examining this aspect of my life. I saw my lupus Dr. today and he said "You are looking good for being the only patient I have with every complication possible and fulfill every criteria for lupus............" Well....that is great but what does that mean? I guess I am lucky to be alive and feeling "healthy" for whatever that is worth. So tests are ordered, blood drawn, urine given, body fully examined and daily chemo pills(cellcept) starting again tomorrow. I come home and feel lucky to have care yet not quiet sure how lucky I am??? on a heart feeling level. The other side of the fence is that I wish some days were just days without being labeled "sick"...........With that said I am not sick I am healing. I refuse to accept being set aside for statistics. I will focus on that !!! I will find my way though this thick forest of fatigue. My Dr. "Joe" is great because he encourages(even pushes) my gardening knowing that is my workout and meditation and encourages exercise !!!. He also has me paired with a fellow patient friend with whom we work out. He also wants to experience the amazing heirloom varieties which we have been able to grow, and how could you blame him? His mom is or was an avid gardener and it healed her heart.That is the insight healers need to have.
Growing love, tolerance, peace, hope,food and understanding is the whole point. My heart aches for the healing of worldly issues since I was 4 years old. I know I took on a big part of that healing as I thought I was once a conduit for this work. Call it spiritual healing or whatever you want. I do feel others pain. Always have and always will. Now I must separate myself and heal my own pain. That is the quest for the week..........Oh where to start. In the moment perhaps?
Growing love, tolerance, peace, hope,food and understanding is the whole point. My heart aches for the healing of worldly issues since I was 4 years old. I know I took on a big part of that healing as I thought I was once a conduit for this work. Call it spiritual healing or whatever you want. I do feel others pain. Always have and always will. Now I must separate myself and heal my own pain. That is the quest for the week..........Oh where to start. In the moment perhaps?
Wednesday, August 1, 2007
Feeling My Oats
"Every generation has the obligation to free men's minds for a look at new worlds....to look out from a higher plateau than the last generation"
Ellison S. Onizuka
I worked in the garden today with Douglas and picked our first cherry tomatoes from the vine and a rare yellow heirloom cuke which is round like a ball. What a great feeling. I also observed the delicate flower of an okra plant which is beyond words. I had no idea. Then sat in wonder of the hibiscus or "moon flower" growing larger every day producing huge blooms of pink and white. I feel how strong the urge for nature is to grow and how it take so little for this process. It is just a miracle. Through all the draughts this past month the grass is dead but flowers and food are in abundance. If anyone wants any zucchini please come pick.
I had a month of shoulder replacement recovery and now can drive !! Freedom at last. Douglas is here this week and my family has been visiting as well as girlfriend Constance. I feel so full and happy. It will be a long job for Douglas in NC but it is good for our bank account and he is loving the design aspects. It will be a fabulous exterior renovation. It look like it will drag on till winter which is not the optimal for us but I might go down in September after friend Sharon visits. If anyone knows of a place where we can stay-rent in downtown Asheville let us know. House sitting included.
On a "Blue Funk" note, as my Grandma Gross says, my Popa Gross had a heart attach yesterday and is in the hospital recovering. My friend here just had a lumpectomy yesterday. There are a few others who I will hold in my thoughts as well.
Thank you Dad Saul for the lovely framed piece and for introducing me to Lola. She is a bright and sweet woman. I can see how you make each other happy. Good to see Uncle Myron too.
During these times of utter chaos in the world it is my hope and dream to see a better place evolve from the ashes of this time. Let the fear and fighting end. Take the word Greed out of the dictionary and let;s make it a rule that everyone must perform one good deed every day. Call your elderly neighbor, offer to take food to someone who is ill, write a hand written card telling someone you love just what they mean to you, volunteer or simply open the door for someone at the grocery store. Smile and be happy to be alive and making a difference. Don't sweat the small stuff....life is too short to waste. Spend it well and it will give back tenfold. I am on a cliche kick.....Love A
Ellison S. Onizuka
I worked in the garden today with Douglas and picked our first cherry tomatoes from the vine and a rare yellow heirloom cuke which is round like a ball. What a great feeling. I also observed the delicate flower of an okra plant which is beyond words. I had no idea. Then sat in wonder of the hibiscus or "moon flower" growing larger every day producing huge blooms of pink and white. I feel how strong the urge for nature is to grow and how it take so little for this process. It is just a miracle. Through all the draughts this past month the grass is dead but flowers and food are in abundance. If anyone wants any zucchini please come pick.
I had a month of shoulder replacement recovery and now can drive !! Freedom at last. Douglas is here this week and my family has been visiting as well as girlfriend Constance. I feel so full and happy. It will be a long job for Douglas in NC but it is good for our bank account and he is loving the design aspects. It will be a fabulous exterior renovation. It look like it will drag on till winter which is not the optimal for us but I might go down in September after friend Sharon visits. If anyone knows of a place where we can stay-rent in downtown Asheville let us know. House sitting included.
On a "Blue Funk" note, as my Grandma Gross says, my Popa Gross had a heart attach yesterday and is in the hospital recovering. My friend here just had a lumpectomy yesterday. There are a few others who I will hold in my thoughts as well.
Thank you Dad Saul for the lovely framed piece and for introducing me to Lola. She is a bright and sweet woman. I can see how you make each other happy. Good to see Uncle Myron too.
During these times of utter chaos in the world it is my hope and dream to see a better place evolve from the ashes of this time. Let the fear and fighting end. Take the word Greed out of the dictionary and let;s make it a rule that everyone must perform one good deed every day. Call your elderly neighbor, offer to take food to someone who is ill, write a hand written card telling someone you love just what they mean to you, volunteer or simply open the door for someone at the grocery store. Smile and be happy to be alive and making a difference. Don't sweat the small stuff....life is too short to waste. Spend it well and it will give back tenfold. I am on a cliche kick.....Love A
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