I couldn't even write it in the title. Fuck. That word and others in it's vein make me cringe. I didn't always use to be this prudey and it's only been the last couple of years that I've noticed this internal reaction to a combination of letters strung together. Notice I even took Bitch out of my blog title?
Even in my younger years, I was never a big swearer. Sure, some mild swearing, the type you hear on TV nowadays i.e. bitch, crap, ass, occasionally pepper my world. If I'm really mad or have an unexpected injury the f-bomb has been known to slip out, but it embarrasses me. When my kids were little and experimenting with language I told them words were nothing but letters and sounds put together, but it was the meaning people ascribed to them that made them important. Words and language fascinate me. What they mean, how we learn them, their origin, how they're spelled, how words in other languages can be very similar. I've taken classes in Spanish, American Sign Language, Mandarin Chinese and French but only remember a few words of the latter two and a dabbling of the former.
I've seen facebooks posts and memes recently that extol the virtues of swearing - people who swear tend to be more honest and trustworthy, that swearing releases emotion that relieves pain, etc. Interestingly, regular words and swear words come from different areas of the brain. This article explains how it works and makes a lot of sense. Maybe it's not the curse words I'm uncomfortable with but the display of emotion. Though, a lot of swearing I see on facebook doesn't come from emotion, more of just a word filler. Anyhoo, I've been sitting on this post for months now and thought I'd put it out there.
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Thursday, March 3, 2016
What if . . .
Sometimes an idea hits you unexpectedly and just feels
right. Don’t most things start with
someone thinking “what if…” Recently
someone in my life was diagnosed with cancer.
I’m a research and action person.
What is it, and what can I do.
I’m not an outwardly emotionally expressive person and I have a hard
time being comforting. I express myself
through gifts. I love to surprise others
with small treasures or a “get-well” bag.
At times, I’ve anonymously left a greeting card or a small gift for
someone sick or feeling down.
I googled “gift ideas for cancer patients” to try to come up
with some appropriate things and I found lots of cancer medical information,
discussion forums, cancer awareness sites and a few cancer related shops. Not
exactly what I was looking for, but I did learn a few things. For example, chemo patients often get very
dry skin and lips, but can be sensitive to fragrances and chemicals that never
bothered them before. Flowers and
plants can carry mold spores that are dangerous to those with a lowered immune
system, and mylar balloons may interfere with medical machinery. Most people would not think to consider these
things in their well-meaning attempts to reach out.
Also, did you know that chemo can cause your finger and
toenails to separate and there are ice pack gloves and slippers that may help
prevent that from happening? These
gloves and slippers also help with neuropathy that may develop from chemo. A cancer survivor suggested a Clapper would
have been a welcome gift for when she was too sick to get out of bed to turn
the lights off and on. Another said hard
candy kept her from the after effects of a metal taste in her mouth. From my previous work in healthcare, I’ve
heard the suggestion of peppermint candies helping with nausea in AIDS as well
as cancer patients.
What if I made a place that is warm and comforting, that
gives you hope and lifts your spirits a little: humorous books and gift items,
inspirational wall hangings and things that make you feel beautiful. I want the prettiest scarves and the softest
slippers. Chemically-free soaps and
make-up. Surgical grade hypo-allergenic
jewelry. Organic chocolates and
candy. Gorgeous pajamas that don’t hurt
your skin and are easily put on/removed and washable. A place you can indulge
without suffering or feeling guilt.
Along with these things, I want practical items. Long-handled shoehorns, reacher /grabber
sticks, decorative barf bags. Incidentally,
I discovered once that those rolls of plastic doggy waste bags are excellent
for puking while traveling.
I would have a section with local resources and support
groups. Maybe monthly sessions featuring
wig designers or make-up lessons after losing your eyebrows and eyelashes, or
holistic support with nutrition classes, yoga classes, feng shui, reiki or
spiritually based workshops. The
possibilities are endless because unfortunately my market base has a never
ending supply of new people. Above all,
it would be a place that helps make life a little brighter for loved ones going
through a disease process. A place you
can go to when you’re at a loss on how to help the newly diagnosed person in
your life in a practical and comforting way.
What if this is what my life has been leading up to being. I’ve spent over 20 years working in
healthcare and social services. People
find me compassionate, patient and understanding. Starting a business scares me, that is a
giant leap of faith. But, isn’t that
what living life is all about?
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