Skip to main content

I must be psychic!

Or it's the MCL!

Last April, I was finally able to convince my 85 year old aunt to come and live with us in California, after several years of trying without any success. She had been living all alone in Delray Beach, FL, and was not in the best of health. Her sister, who was also living there, had moved back to New York, near her kids about 3 years prior, due to poor health.

Sylvia did own her own condominium at Kings Point in Delray Beach, so we had to arrange for a realtor to sell it before we left. We managed to ship most of her belongings back to California, leaving all the furniture behind for whoever bought the condo, and giving everything else to charity. We left the condo in the hands of a realtor who sold it for $118,000 in July 2005.

I only bring up the price because, her next door neighbors just sold their condo last week for $20,000, and they were glad to get rid of it at that price. And that is not a typo! Her condo complex was hit very hard by hurricane Wilma in October 2005, leaving all the units that were in her building (consisting of 4 units) unliveable, to this day.

So am I psychic or what? Not convinced? How about this?

On March 29th, I posted to my personal blog my thoughts on fatigue, and two days later, 4/1/06, an April Fools joke surfaces on GoozNews and the Schwitzer Health News Blog about a new disease known as Motivational Deficiency Disorder (MoDeD). I did learn that it wasn't an actual disease, but was part of a conference on disease mongering, designed to highlight

concern over the trend to corporate definitions of diseases, with a primary interest in making profits rather than a concern for the public health.


Still not convinced? Ok, I've got one more.

Today, just one day after posting to my weekly column at the Medical Blog Network, an article titled Is treating cancer always the best choice? there is a report on Sunday Morning (CBS 7 AM PDST), May 7th, about a woman who was diagnosed with NHL, and immediately started treatment on her doctors advice.

She died 3 months later, and the results of an autopsy revealed she didn't have NHL after all, but a benign tumor of the thymus gland.

I couldn't have asked for a better confirmation of my thoughts, had I made that story up myself.

I think I'm psychic! :)

Comments

John Wagner said…
Be careful, Marc. I thought I was psychic but it turns out I was just psychotic! (Sorry, couldn't resist) Anyway, sure glad your Aunt took your advice!
Marcia Forkos said…
Yes, my darling cousin, you are definitely psycho. Whoops, I mean PSYCHIC! I always knew that but the scientist in you just wouldn't accept it. Yayyyyy, Marc!

Popular posts from this blog

History IS repeating itself

I didn't grow up during the rise and fall of Hitler and Nazi Germany, so for me to claim it feels like those are the times we are living in now, must be taken with a grain of salt. But I have seen enough movies, and read enough history to know, if the times we're living in now are not akin to the rise of a Nazism and Facism in Europe in the 1930's and 1940's, then we're not far off. If you can't see the parallels with Nazi Germany, then you must be living in a different country than me. Republicans and other right wing extremists will stop at nothing to subvert the will of the majority, forcing their beliefs, that they are the superior race and have been appointed by God, to impose their will on America, while they blame all our problems on immigrants, blacks and Jews. As I speak, Mitch McConnell, and his minions are raising roadblocks to all legislation designed to help average Americans under the guise of fiscal responsibility. They condone violent and verba...

My concerns reaffirmed today

When I was first diagnosed with MCL, I pretty much read just about everything I could get my hands on, I attended various conferences, and I talked to anyone who would listen. One of the most important lessons I learned, and which I've mentioned numerous times before was No one cares more about you than you. But in addition to that, I learned to fear the drug Doxorubicin , AKA Adriamycin, Doxil, Hydroxydoxorubicin, or more affectionately the Red Devil. Besides being a deadly chemical, as is the case with most chemotherapy drugs, it is one of the few chemotherapy drugs known to cause permanent heart damage. I even heard Dr. Sandra Horning , a noted Stanford lymphoma specialist, state at the first lymphoma conference I attended in LA, there was no evidence Doxorubicin provided any added benefit to chemotherapy protocols. This was music to my ears, since Doxorubicin is very common in most lymphoma treatment protocols. And even though Dr. Horning has since changed her tune [which my sk...

Pet Peeves

Since it's raining today, I didn't have much to do [I couldn't ride my bike], so I thought I'd complain about some of the little things that bug me. I know I'm not supposed to sweat the little things, which I don't [for the most part], but these are so minuscule, I figure they don't really count. One of my biggest complaints are walnuts, or any kind of nuts, in chocolate chip cookies. Nuts have no business in chocolate chip cookies. Chocolate chip cookies are sweet. They're a dessert, and nuts provide an unwanted texture, and flavor that takes away from that. Nuts don't belong in chocolate chip cookies. And come to think about it, nuts don't belong in brownies either, but I don't usually eat brownies (I don't particularly like them), so I don't really care. Still they don't belong. They're OK in Snickers, but that's about it. Another complaint is with people who buy [or rent] a convertible, and then drive around in it with...