Martha Stewart's Woodland Christmas |
This blog is designed to engage the spirit, provoke some thought and introspection, and to focus on positive energy inspite of life's most difficult challenges.
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Monday, November 26, 2012
How slow can you go??
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
In awe of the living things with which we share our planet
The President in Sequoia National Park courtesy of Nat Geo |
Sequoia National Park by Nat Geo |
Monday, November 12, 2012
Your pain experience is unique and personal
Pain is a poorly understood phenomenon. Pain has been treated and studied for so long, and Western medicine has made extraordinary advances in so many areas, but we still have only a fundamental understanding of pain's mechanism. Pain is a complex mechanism that involves physiology, spirituality, emotions, and perceptions. As in all health issues, it involves the mind/body connection. When people are in pain it is a completely subjective and personal experience. Pain makes people feel emotionally out of control, which increases anxiety levels and increases the intensity of the pain experience. That is why lavendar aromatherapy decreases the perception of pain; lavendar is a calming herb. When I was working with an Interventional Radiology Department I observed that women experienced more pain than men when a chemotherapy port was placed in the upper chest. When I presented that information to the port placement team it was decided to give women a prescription for pain medication before they were discharged back home. In my follow up calls women reported they didn't fill the analgesic prescription, they still had pain, but they tolerated that pain better because they knew they were in control and could opt to fill the analgesic prescription if they wished. I have also observed from my own experience that the more pain medication I use the more I seem to have a rebound increase in pain. Therefore I use pain medication as judiciously as possible. That rebound pain experience
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Hanging on the precipice of change
How are all of you on this beautiful day? We have stormy clouds and scattered rain today. It's the kind of day that I usually enjoy, especially because the garden celebrates the rain. But on this day the weather seems to be oddly symbolic for the state of my beloved country. A storm brews with the outcome of our election and I fear that life as I have known it with the abundant freedoms I have enjoyed is now gone forever. I am in mourning. We are a divided nation that believes throwing darts at each other in the form of hateful rhetoric will solve our critical problems. We are on the Obama Care implementation path that will lead to a disastrous destruction of our healthcare system. The thought of our healthcare system moving toward care rationing is frightening to those of us with chronic illness. No one in the current Administration talks about care rationing, but that will be the result of this healthcare model. In addition, we are perched on the edge of a fiscal cliff so high that the bottom is not visible. I fear that solutions will come too late or not at all. The change that looms before me and all Americans will be one of the greatest challenges of our lives.
Friday, November 2, 2012
The personal search for a cure . . . or do we write our next life chapter?
Autumn colors in Lori's yard in Missouri |
Rose in Lori's garden in Missouri |