Posted in commentary

THE FACE OF EVIL

For the last few days, news web pages, blogs, and everything in between, has been plastered with pictures of Seung-Hui Cho, the college student who murdered 32 of his classmates on Monday.

The media coverage of this tragedy is hardly a surprise. As human beings, we can’t help ourselves. Our curiosity must be abated. I’ve sat in front of the tv for hours watching news coverage of such events over the course of my life – the assination attempt on Ronald Reagan, the Challenger disaster, the Oklahoma City bombing, the events as they unfolded on 9-11, the water as it rose in Houston during Tropical Storm Allison, desperate people waiting on the tops of their homes in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and many more. I couldn’t tear myself away from the tv as I watched these riveting events unfold.

On September 11, and during Tropical Storm Allison, Jene’ often told me to turn off the tv (during 9-11, most channels carried the coverage and there wasn’t much else to watch) or to turn the channel. I would get so wrapped up in what was going on on tv that I began to feel stressed out over it.

Media coverage gives us the “next best thing” to being there. We are in the victim’s families’ faces, right behind the microphone. We are on campus, at the foot of the towers, in Mission Control… and we’re there over and over and over again.

Monday, I checked a news website while I was waiting for my lunch to heat up and the headlines brought tears to my eyes. At the time, it was 20 students believed dead on the campus of Virginia Tech. Later, it was revealed that 32 bright, vibrant people lost their lives.

What we were shown over the next two days was the face of Seung-Hui Cho, the murder, who unfortunately left behind film footage – more proof – of his insanity. We were subjected to this tape over and over again, hearing his hatred, his diatribe. Meanwhile, the 32 victims and those who survived were sidebars.

Even if Cho had not made the now infamous tape, we still would have had to look at his face splashed across the front pages of newspapers the world over. By Wednesday morning, I couldn’t turn on the news or check major newspapers’ sites because I couldn’t look at the face of evil any longer. When I stared into that man’s eyes, it made me shiver. I can’t imagine what having to see that picture did to the families and friends of the 32 lost.

I had to stop reading and watching the news because all they wanted to show was the gunman and his tape. By Wednesday noon, however, the media finally heard the outraged cries of thousands of people from all over the world who were outraged that Cho’s tape was given the light of day and they finally backed off and took his picture off their front pages and stopped broadcasting his hateful dialogue.

I understand that a journalist feels the need to share every detail of such a story with the public, but why not post a transcript of the tape rather than show it ad nauseum? His hateful diatribe was broadcast for all to hear, broadcast where others who are on the same troubled frequency as Cho would gain inspiration. No one disputed Cho’s claim of martyrdom (by the way, martyr’s DIE for the cause, they don’t KILL for the cause), but played his tape over and over until we are well aware of what was on his mind.

But what about those 32 lights he snuffed out? What about the man who survived hatred during the holocaust only to be gunned down later? The young man who stood between a girl and a gunman? Their hopes? Their dreams? The thing that disturbs me most about the media coverage is that the evil was the main event – at least that’s what their coverage showed. Finally, days later, we are seeing glimpses of what the world lost on Monday. I think the stories of the 32 are more important than the 1.

So many dreams were shattered Monday. I don’t know how people who have been put through something like that regroup and move on. Their lives have been forever altered.

Ten years from now, people will gather to remember the 32 who lost their lives. Unfortunately, unless the media changes the way they handle their reporting, we will hear a brief blip about remembering what was lost, and we’ll get an eyeful and an earful of the face of evil once again, prominently displayed.

Posted in commentary, movies, pop culture

WEIGHING IN ON DAVINCI

Even with all the hype surrounding the book The DaVinci Code, the movie came and went with a yawn (though it was a very lucrative yawn). The controversy generated that brought the pre-movie hype to a fever pitch seemed to fade away overnight. Truth be told, I was over-saturated by the controversy, the hype and all the books that sought to “break the code,” or “debunk the code,” (and books like that are still coming out) so I still have had no desire to see the movie yet.

Therefore, unlike the woman who has never read a Harry Potter book but wants them banned from her kids’ public school library because she believes they are evil (HP Controversy), I will not comment on something I haven’t seen and therefore do not have firsthand knowledge of. This review of sorts will make no references to The DaVinci Code the movie.

I did, however, finally read Dan Brown’s best-selling novel, The DaVinci Code. About a week ago, I was in Wal-Mart at about midnight after babysitting to pick up some household items and saw the mass market paperback edition in the checkout line available for less than $5. My curiosity got the best of me and I had wanted to read it (otherwise, how could I give an informed opinion on it?), so I purchased it.

I can see why The DaVinci Code has sold over 40 million copies. It’s a very well-written work of fiction and I read it as such. I read it in about three days. It was very difficult to put the book down even as my eyes drooped from tiredness at the end of the day. The DaVinci Code is a page turner in every way. Action. Intrigue. Mystery. An intellectual thriller. Many of my friends who have read the book have commented on how the book draws you in, holds your interest, and doesn’t let go until the very end. Though I found it somewhat predictable, it was still a great read.

Now for the controversy part. Did I mention that The DaVinci Code is sold in the fiction section in bookstores and is also catalogued as such? Yet many in the Christian community feel the Gospel is threatened or that people are being led astray by this work of fiction. Why?

I have searched the book’s prologue thoroughly and I still don’t see the phrase(s) in which many Christian commentators have asserted that this is where Dan Brown says that this fiction book is true, especially the parts about Jesus Christ. Misquotes have abounded and fanned the flames of controversy surrounding this book.

Author Dan Brown merely states in his prologue that the two historical Christian groups mentioned in the book are real (the Priory of Sion and Opus Dei) and the “descriptions of the art, architecture, documents, and secret rituals in this novel are accurate.” That’s it.

Many people did not read the book and freaked out over their trusted Christian commentators’ assertions that what Dan Brown has said about the deity and life of Christ described in his book are true. Hence the umpteen books published on breaking and debunking the code that flooded the market from the time the book was first released until this very moment.

What gets me, really, about The DaVinci Code controversy is that many in the Christian community have gotten up in arms about how the life of Christ is portrayed (and do I need to say it again?) in this fiction book. Granted, what is said in The DaVinci Code about Christ goes directly against what the Bible says and what has been believed for centuries. But again, The DaVinci Code is fiction, right? Can one fiction book take on the Bible?

If, as a Christian, you believe in the inerrant word of God, then how can one little fiction book (or movie) change your mind about what you believe? What, as a Christian culture, are you so afraid of? If, as a Christian, you believe that the word of God is the truth and is the same yesterday, today and forever, do you really think Dan Brown and his 40 million copies of fiction can change that?

No. And yet the books and pamphlets abound.

Giving your neighbor a book or pamphlet (that he didn’t ask for by the way) about how awful The DaVinci Code paints the church is only going to make him wonder what you’re afraid of… because your neighbor knows The DaVinci Code is fiction. If he reads the pamphlet, he wonders why his eternal soul is in question because this book has been published. He wonders why people are protesting this work of fiction when there are children starving in Africa, or even down the street. People are more impressed by words more than actions anyway (“I was hungry and you fed me,” vs. “I was hungry and you preached at me,” but that’s another topic all together).

What is the Christian community really afraid of? Well, from what I’ve seen (and read), it’s ignorance of the word of God within their own ranks. Most Christians are ill equipped to handle The DaVinci Code, because they do not know the Bible well enough to tell fact from fiction and they are afraid that their “less educated” non-Christian friends/neighbors know even less and might believe The DaVinci Code might actually be more truth than fiction.

The book’s controversy really does cast a light on a very sensitive area within the church. Many Christians attend services, but fewer read and study the Bible. They depend on the man behind the pulpit to teach them all they need to know, and quite frankly, that is much more frightening to me than the insinuations made The DaVinci Code.

Posted in commentary

I’D RATHER WAX POETIC

…or nostalgic, or anything else but my legs.

When I get in these moods to do girlie things, I should get a clue when the Roomie gets that sly grin on her face that perhaps some things are beyond my pain tolerance.

Take waxing for instance. Sugaring, rather, which is supposed to aggrevate the skin less than waxing because there is no heat involved. Right.

I have one question.

WHY DO WOMEN DO THIS TO THEMSELVES?!

I am doing this correctly, yet I have a bruise on my thigh. The Roomie, after laughter subsided, provided me with some liquid vitamin K to relieve the irritation on my eyebrows — the part people will actually see tomorrow. Geez.

Of course, I stopped, because the rest of the hair isn’t long enough. Apparently you have to be as hairy as Mr. Snuffalufagus in order to have this particular method of hair removal work.

If this doesn’t work on Saturday, I’m going back to shaving.

Posted in commentary

AN UPDATE! (FINALLY)

So much has transpired in the last month, the least of which was a 7 day virus that knocked me flat on my back and I was sick during Easter. It’s what’s being called, “The Viral Thing,” that basically disguises itself as a sinus infection but really grabs you and won’t let you go. I actually took two sick days (and there was a Good Friday holiday in there as well) off to recover. I haven’t been that sick in YEARS. I also lost my voice, which, if part of your livelihood depends on your voice… well, what’s the point of going to work?

The doctor and I decided it’s also time for me to go an allergist, which means I can’t have any allergy related medications for six weeks. As a result, I’m more sluggish than usual, I’m having trouble sleeping, and concentrating is difficult, so I haven’t been writing much.

That’s not to say I don’t have anything to say…

I’ll break it down by topic.


POPE JOHN PAUL II

I remember when this Pope was chosen. I have admired his pro-life stances and his love of young people. He led the Catholic church to remain conservative when nearly every other denomination in the world is patting themselves on the back for their worldly-acceptable more-liberal, pc tolerant leanings. In some cases, remnants of conservatives in certain denominations are wrestling with their liberal leadership lest they wake up in a few years and not recognize themselves, but the Catholic church has not wavered from its basic doctrines in decades.

Though I am not Catholic, I was deeply saddened by John Paul II’s failing health and ultimately by his passing. He will be a tough act to follow. The following quote shows how deeply and truly devoted to Christ he was.

“It is Jesus that you seek when you dream of happiness; he is waiting for you when nothing else you find satisfies you; he is the beauty to which you are so attracted; it is he who provokes you with that thirst for fullness that will not let you settle for compromise; it is he who urges you to shed the masks of a false life; it is he who reads in your hearts your most genuine choices, the choices that others try to stifle. It is Jesus who stirs in you the desire to do something great with your lives, the will to follow an ideal, the refusal to allow yourselves to be grounded down by mediocrity, the courage to commit yourselves humbly and patiently to improving yourselves and society, making the world more human and more fraternal.”
Pope John Paul II

THE ROYAL WEDDING
Yes, I have to comment on this. I got up early and watched the coverage on Fox News. American commentators really don’t have a clue how to cover anything royally British. Unfortunately, BBC America did not cover the wedding until they televised a condensed program later that day. I enjoyed BBC’s coverage because one, they understand the importance of hats at an afternoon wedding, and two, they actually knew what Camilla had stuck in her hair in lieu of a veil. BBC also know that Mr. Bean is really Rowan Atkinson and they had a better handle of the Who’s Who list of celebrities beyond Kenneth Branagh. BBC also understood the significance of the blessing, and left out a good chunk of sensational stories about the royals that Fox News just couldn’t seem to live without. I still love Fox News, but not for royal wedding coverage.

Personally, I was pleasantly surprised that Charles and Camilla confessed their sins at their wedding. The service was straight from the Book of Common Prayer, and if I’d been awake enough, I’d have tried to follow along. Alas, I was tired and I was fighting off sleep as it was.

I am not going to compare either of Charles’ weddings to each other. There was no comparison and I know that was on purpose. He is starting a new life now, whether we agree how he went about it or not. I personally am not happy with the Church bending it’s rules for the royals, but I’m hoping it means that one day that Charles will be leapfrogged by William for the throne… if William can hold up his end of the bargain.

FINAL THOUGHTS ON LENT
I gave up negative talk and thoughts for Lent and it really has made a visible change in me. That’s what Lent is for, though, to examine your life and make significant sacrifices and changes to draw closer to God and then, after that 40 day intensive treatment, take those changes into the rest of your life. I have always struggled with negativity (an environmental hazard of growing up in my house) and it’s actually made me a bit quieter than usual (ha ha) because if what I would say would be negative, I just didn’t say it. Tough, but doable.

Because I was ill, I did not get to go to any Easter Week services, and I had hoped to participate in the Stations of the Cross. I hope to next year. Lent made a change in me and I hope to continue it throughout the rest of my life.

TERRI SCHIAVO
I really have no words for how the whole situation ended other than it all felt so very, very wrong.

MISCELLANEOUS NEWS
Things are shifting around at work, but in my favor. I will now be three days in one department, all in a row. I will only be on the phones one day a week, which will give my voice a much needed rest during all this allergy mess, and quite frankly, after six years of answering the phone, I’m ready to cut back a bit.

So, that wraps up my big update… I’m sure I’ve left several things out… but these are some of the most important.

Posted in commentary

THE PLIGHT OF THOSE WITHOUT A VOICE

My heart goes out to Terri Schiavo and her parents. If you have been living in an information vacuum and haven’t watched the news or picked up a newspaper in the past couple of years, the briefest synopsis of this case is: (from AP sources)

15 years ago, Terri Schiavo collapsed from heart failure that resulted in severe brain damage. Lower courts have ruled that she is in a “persistent vegetative state.” Seven years ago, Schiavo’s husband and her parents began a legal tug-of-war over whether to have her feeding tube removed and allow her to die.

The main argument surrounding this case is that Terri’s husband says she stated at some point she would want to die if the choice was to remain in a vegetative state.

I am not going to address all the moral arguments here that include a “husband” who doesn’t want to break his marriage vows with Terri yet has had two children out of wedlock with another woman — which I could rant about for hours — or the right-to-life or right-to-die issues that have been brought to the forefront by this case.

What it boils down to for me is how they are treating this person… she still is a living, breathing human being. Reportedly, she is still responsive to others around her, yet because she cannot speak and say she wants to live she has been deemed expendable. NOBODY really knows what Terri wanted. NOBODY knows what she wants now. Because nobody really knows what she wanted, her spouse has the right to say whether she lives or dies.

They are starving her and I can’t wrap my brain around that. Regardless of whether or not she wanted to be in a vegetative state, ending her life by denying her food is unfathomable. There are no machines keeping her alive. Her body is essentially functioning as it has the last 15 years. I just don’t understand denying her food as a reasonable or humane way to bring her life to an end.

NOBODY KNOWS what Terri’s wishes actually are. If proof existed of her wishes, maybe I’d understand where her husband is coming from. Right now, though, it’s his word against Terri’s and she can’t defend herself. I just don’t understand — if her wishes were to die — why he waited seven years to begin the process of ending her life. It all doesn’t add up and because something is missing (proof of her wishes) I believe her parents should keep fighting for her because she can’t speak for herself.

I keep dwelling on Terri’s wishes. What if she’d thought ahead while she was still young and vibrant and made decisions about her life and then told not only her husband, but her parents. “You know, if this happens to me, this is what I want to do,” and then put it in writing. When we’re young, however, we tend to think that we’re invincible and to ponder “what ifs” like this one is the last thing on our minds.

My brother was 35, athletic, fit, and had his entire life ahead of him when the word, “leukemia” hit him like a ton of bricks. He had one more birthday before he died.

While it was tough to see my brother deteriorate like he did, he made some gut wrenching decisions as he saw the handwriting on the wall. He decided, ahead of time, that if he lay dying and there was no hope of recovery, he said, “I do not want to be resuscitated.” He said it to his wife, he said it to his doctor, and he put it in writing.

Several months after his bone marrow transplant his intestines began to reject the bone marrow. His body was failing. The doctors tried several treatments but nothing worked. My brother did not want his wife to have to make the decision to “pull the plug,” and he knew he wasn’t going to live without a miracle, so he made his wishes known again.

One night his heart was failing and in what was described to me as a blurry whir of activity, the doctor asked my brother if he wanted to be resuscitated and my brother moaned. Moaned. My sister-in-law was told it sounded enough like a “yes” and that verbal “yes” superceded any written or previous verbal agreements, so they resuscitated him. They hooked him up to a machine that did all of his breathing for him. He went into a coma.

At the end of the week, my sister-in-law finally had to give permission to take him off life support. She waited for a few agonizing days, but ultimately we all knew he wasn’t going to recover. My mother objected because she felt that while there was any shred of a chance he might recover (and we were assured repeatedly there wasn’t one) he should stay on the machine (and this was a complete reversal of her support for his “do not resuscitate” order). It was a horrible awful mess and I told my sister-in-law I would stand by her no matter what she decided. She took him off life support that Saturday. He died quickly. But she didn’t starve him to death. He was, for all intents and purposes, already gone.

I still waver back and forth, though, on how I feel about life support and at what point we give up on miracles… but I don’t second guess my sister-in-law’s decision, because it’s what my brother wanted and we know it because he said so. I pray I never have to make those types of decisions, but I know I probably will. The question is or not whether I will be prepared for it.

I guess my point is maybe the young and vibrant should think about the “what ifs” more. I know that when we were kids, we figured that Mr. Fit would be the one who outlived us all. None of us saw leukemia coming to change all our plans. Sometimes it’s easier to make the hard choices, though, if we’ve already thought them through ahead of time. My brother always said. “Live your life in pursuit of plan A but always have a plan B in your pocket.” That’s how he lived and ultimately ended his life.

So think about the tough issues you will face when you are older (or God forbid, sooner than you planned). After you’ve thought about the tough issues, let someone know what you’re thinking. Make your wishes clear not only to your family, but put it in writing so that when the emotions and reality of what’s happening hits your family, your wishes are still honored, whether they agree with them or not.

Ultimately, though, my heart aches for Terri’s parents. They brought her into the world yet hold no right to keep her in it. I can’t wrap my brain around that either.

Posted in breast cancer, commentary

THE LIGHT AT THE END OF THE HMO HELL TUNNEL

Well, I’ve had my biopsy. I went in early Monday morning to the Breast Clinic. When I signed in, I wrote them a check for $100. Fortunately, they called and told me a few days beforehand that I would have a significant copay. If they had told me, at 7:15 am (and only minutes past coffee ingestion) that I owed them $100 when I was thinking about a much lower amount, I would have passed out. As it was I had all weekend to figure out what Peter had so I could rob him and pay Paul (aka the Breast Clinic). These copays are killer and I could really whine, but I won’t. (I don’t really like myself when I whine). I feel really sorry for Peter, who is always robbed to pay Paul and I’m pretty sure Paul never pays him back. I’m just so grateful I’m not paying the full price for all of these visits and procedures. I also know God has provided in a many a pinch before and I know He won’t let me down now.

I was glad that I didn’t have to wait long. During times of stress if I contemplate too little, I explode, yet if I contemplate too much I implode. It’s a fine balance I’m still learning how to manage, but I’ve gotten better at it. At 7:30 I was ushered into the changing room, where I was given a small shirt with only two snaps at the top. Showing more midriff than Britney Spears, I was then taken across the hall by a nice female technician.

Tech explained everything to me in fine detail without talking down to me. This was very appreciated. She did an ultrasound, showed me what they were going to do and how they were going to do it. She told me when or if it would hurt. All appreciated…and so was the orange anesthetic (lydocaine).

The doctor came in and did his own ultrasound. He told me he was going to do a biopsy (incision) rather than a needle aspiration. The procedure was over before I knew it and I really didn’t feel any pain. I watched it all on the monitor. It was so cool. The only thing that made me wince was the tissue taker. I don’t know what else to call it. All he said was, “you’ll hear one click, then another.” What he should have said was, “you’ll hear me pump the shotgun slowly.” I wasn’t even looking at it, but when it “clicked” I almost jumped.

I was praised that I didn’t bleed more (ha, that is so rare) and instructed about wearing ice in my bra for the next hour and then alternating ice/no ice every twenty minutes for the next three hours. Check. Don’t lift anything heavy. Check. Check. No strenuous activity. Check cubed.

Before the procedure was finished, however, the doctor inserted a “marker” that will show up on all future mammograms that will tell anyone who sees the film, “abnormality was right here.” I won’t be able to feel it, but it’s there. Unfortunately, this meant I had to have another mammogram so they’d have a record of the marker in case they have to go back and do another procedure.

I thought they were kidding. You don’t smash something you just cut open, right? Wrong. Thank you, Lord, for Lydocaine…Lydocaine that doesn’t wear off quickly.

Then I stuffed ice in my bra and was on my way home by 9 am.

I was a little sore yesterday, less sore today, and I’m sure by tomorrow I’ll feel even better. Thanks to all of you who remembered I had this procedure done and did not HUG me when you saw me afterward. 😉

After one more follow-up visit (on my birthday no less), I’ll be HMO free for a while. I’m almost out! Again, the thought of having to pay for all of this without going through hell makes me sick to my stomach, but what most likely would have happened was I wouldn’t have gone to the doctor at all if I hadn’t had the insurance. I think healthcare should available to everyone regardless of their ability to pay but that’s a whole other debate…

Posted in breast cancer, commentary

I AM IN HMO HELL

I have not blogged in a couple of weeks because Dante left a very important vestibule out of The Inferno. He left out the ever dreadful HMO.

Important abbreviations for this story:

HMO = Hideous Medical Overkill (but it is better than nothing)

PCP = Primary Care Physician

OB/GYN = Doctor who cares for the exclusively female parts of you

First of all, let me say that I have been blessed to have had relatively good health for the past ten years. Therefore, I haven’t had to spend time in a hospital unless it was to visit someone else. I haven’t had any surgery, any major health malfunctions, or any prolonged illnesses. Therefore, I haven’t had to venture out into the world of HMO. I visited my PCP when I had insurance for all my minor ailments, and that was that. No red tape. No hassles other than trying to get an appointment on the day I was actually sick.

After five years with no coverage at all (another vestibule Dante forgot to mention) I managed to get some medical coverage through my current job. I chose the HMO because it was free to me and, as stated in the prior paragraph, I had yet to venture beyond my PCP. Once I had insurance, I waited a few weeks, then scheduled an appointment with an OB/GYN (and you don’t want to know how long it had been since my last visit to an OB/GYN). Those initial tests came back clear. Good news. Cholesterol, good. No abnormalities. We take the next step and he tells me to schedule my baseline mammogram… and this is where my journey into HMO hell begins.

I go for the initial mammogram on November 4th. Bothersome, annoying, irritating, yes, but not the painful experience everybody tried to prepare me for. I had to go to a diagnostic clinic for the exam which means means they do the test and the reports get sent back to the doctor. Fine. They told me that if I had not heard from my doctor in a week, to call him. He should have my results no later than a week after the exam. Got it.

Three weeks, dozens of phone calls and a boatload of confusion later, my doctor finally had the results. His immediate response was to schedule an ultrasound back at the diagnostic clinic. No explanation of why, just that I should go.

Initially, this was not what I wanted to hear, I wanted him to say, “looks good, you’ve beat the family curse,” and I would move on with my life triumphantly, but instead a tiny alarm bell started tolling in the back of my mind. I made an appointment for December 9th, the first I could get.

I arrived bright and early that morning and did my crossword puzzles while other names were called for a myriad of other appointments and ailments. Then, before the ultrasound, a technician pulls me out into the hallway and said she read my initial report and wants to do a “spot” mammogram. This is a mammogram concentrated in one area with much more compression and the horrorific pain everyone tried to prepare me for the first time. While I waited for all this fun to begin, I tried to keep myself calm, wondering why nobody would tell me why I was having this test done. In the back of my mind I knew, I just wanted someone to tell me. Spell it out. Keep me in the loop.

Back to the spot mammogram. Ouch. Several times. At one point, the technician told me to pick a point on the wall to focus on and to brace myself for some pain. As if I hadn’t had any already, but I took her advice. I spotted a calendar on the wall and stared at it while she nearly flattened my breast into a pancake. I can’t tell you what the picture was on the calendar, but I can tell you that it said, “My peace I give to you,” at the bottom. I kept telling myself not to cry. At this point, though, I was on autopilot, so it wasn’t so bad. Then I went back out to the second waiting room and then they came to get me for the ultrasound.

The room was dark and the nice technician chatted away while she worked. Then she was abruptly silent. I saw the screen and saw what she saw. She covered the area again and then stopped to take images. Several images. The spot looked about as big as a quarter. Not comforting. Given my family history (maternal grandmother, mother, 3 of 4 aunts) I said, “That can’t be good can it?” and she said she couldn’t say anything either way. She told me to “relax,” and then she left the room.

I lay there in the dark and wiped away a tear. I was overly emotional that day anyway (my brother’s 39th birthday would have been that day) and the fact I was having a breast ultrasound made me think of many painful memories of how cancer can hit unexpectedly and rob even the young of their once vibrant lives. I took deep breaths and told myself I was okay, and for me, kept relatively calm instead of letting my mind get completely out of control. Though I can easily jump to panic mode, I was calm, certain that I wasn’t alone. I kept thinking of the calendar, “My peace I give to you.”

The technician came back with a doctor in tow. He looked at the ultrasound, nodded at the screen and said, “I am recommending a biopsy.” He shook his head again. “How could you not feel that?” I took a deep, shaky breath and he clarified quickly, “oh, it looks benign, but with your family history, we can’t be too careful now, can we?” Apparently not. Then he asked, as if I hadn’t heard him the first time, “How did you not feel that?” I don’t know. I’ve been doing breast self exams since I was a teenager. I didn’t feel this lump. I still can’t feel it to be honest.

The diagnostic clinic people tell me it takes 24-48 hours for a report to be made, filed, and transfered. Ok. Now I’m in for more drama as I try to communicate between the OB/GYN’s office and the diagnostic clinic over the next 24 hours. Words like, “surgeon,” “biopsy,” and “referral” mixed with, “we don’t have that yet,” “I don’t know what the doctor’s going to do,” and “I can’t tell you that.” I got so frustrated with being the one having to mediate between the two offices and even more frustrated with my inability to find out ANYTHING worthwhile, that I finally made an appointment with my OB/GYN that Monday (13th).

I took that entire day off. I was mentally drained, and I had been fighting a sinus infection and had been running fevers off and on for a week. I just wanted answers and figured if I had the doctor’s attention for five minutes, I might at least understand more of where I was in this process. I hadn’t done any of this before, and I wanted someone to take my concerns seriously.

I was glad I took the whole day off, for they moved my morning appointment to 2 pm. I saw the doctor for about five minutes and all he said was the report didn’t look bad, they just wanted a biopsy because of my family history, blah, blah, blah. Same thing I was able to piece together from words the four people I saw on the Thursday before were tossing around. He said he was sorry everybody was overreacting but with my family history I should expect this every time I get a mammogram. They will probably always find “something,” that will need further review. He wasn’t worried and even seemed to wonder why I was there. I told him I was in his office to get some answers because nobody would tell me anything in a complete sentence and that’s not how it should work. Silly me. Finally, he gave me some antibiotics because I told him that I could cope with all that was happening so much easier if I wasn’t so sick otherwise. He said he would refer me to a surgeon, but that his scheduler wasn’t there and to call her in the morning.

I called in the morning and of course she had no idea what I was talking about. She was still thinking back to Friday when I was worried the diagnostic clinic would not get my records to the their office on time. She was up to speed but then my OB/GYN was out of pocket for two days and all we needed was the name of the surgeon. I was growing more weary of how the people in the HMO machine were treating my concerns. Okay, so it looks benign, but that doesn’t mean I want to wait another month to start the process to find out whether or not it is benign or not. UGH

I finally got the doctor to refer me to a surgeon Thursday (16th). One week had already passed since the ultrasound. Too bad the surgeon isn’t in my HMO! The only two doctors he refers to aren’t on my plan. The OB/GYN receptionist said, “look through your HMO for a general surgeon and call us back and we’ll ‘refer’ you to him.”

I thought, “This ‘referral’ will keep the insurance chain of command going, but I am in HMO hell!” I asked the sweet lady in personnel to see what she could do to help with this problem. I don’t have a clue as to how to “pick” a surgeon. She tinkers around on the insurance website and it spits out 185 names of general surgeons in my HMO.

Beyond frustrated with how long and how difficult this process had become, I took a long walk around the church. I stopped to “talk” to my favorite babies in the daycare (the 9-12 month olds) who cheer me up whenever I see them (who can resist smiling at a kid who can put his whole foot in his mouth), and talked to a couple of people who have actually had this procedure done and asked which doctor they used. Another friend came down, looked over the list and circled the name of a doctor she’s worked with and he has a great reputation. I brought the doctor list home for my nurse roomie to look at and Friday night our doctor friend was over and he looked at it and made some suggestions as well. That helped to narrow the choices down.

I don’t think it’s being too picky to want at least one person to know something or have experience with one of the surgeons, because I just don’t like having to pick someone at random to stick a big needle in my breast.

Thursday night, I took a benedryl, checked out at 9:30, got a good night’s sleep and got my allergies under control. The antibiotics started working, so I felt so much better. I took a day off from the doctor drama on Friday. I finally got a “grip,” and I was feeling much more at ease. I don’t know why I expected it to last.

I took all that information and started calling doctors this morning (the 20th), and their earliest appointments were in the middle of January. Not what I wanted to hear. I finally contacted the surgeon who has done this procedure on a lady I work with and he had an appointment for a consultation on Monday morning (the 27th). The receptionist was beyond nice. I told her my story and she was very sweet and took my concerns seriously and found me the earliest appointment possible. I booked that appointment. Then she tells me I have to get the referal from my PCP for a procedure like that. The receptionist at my OB/GYN agreed when I called her back to verify the referal process.

By now, I’m confused, I thought the OB/GYN referal would be enough, but I ask personnel and she says, yes, that’s correct, call the PCP. The PCP will not do this by phone but they will write up a referal if I come in and see my PCP tomorrow morning. More copays. I am really loving the red tape I’m stuck in at this point. I’m grateful I don’t have anything urgent wrong with me. And by the way, I have to go pick up my ultrasound pictures at the diagnostic clinic and take them to the doctor with me Monday. I still have no idea when I’ll have the actual biopsy.

Don’t get me wrong. So far, I’ve spent less than $100 and had many tests and office visits. Without the insurance, this lump would have gone undetected for Lord knows how long. I just had no idea how complicated the HMO made my healthcare and I had no clue how frustrating this process would be. I also know this is mild compared to how complicated it could have gotten. I know when it’s all said and done, I will get the biopsy results back and the lump will be benign. Everything will be, as they say, all good. The journey between points A & B, however, will have been an enlightening tour through HMO hell.

Too bad Dante didn’t warn us.

Posted in commentary, sports

THE OLYMPICS ARE HERE…

… and not ragging on NBC, but I really miss ABC coverage of the Olympics. Not sure why. Bob Costas is a perfectly adequate host, but there’s just something missing in the NBC broadcasts.

On Dish Network, there is a channel, (#147) that offers Olympic highlights, and on one screen you can see what all 6 NBC networks are offering. You can switch to any channel and hear what’s going on without leaving that screen. It’s pretty cool. I’ve been there a few times already.

I’ve been trying to stay away from the newspapers because they post results as they happen, not as NBC shows them. Of course, Athens is about 7 hours ahead of us, so unless I can watch tv at work, this is the only way to watch the “prime time” events.

Personally, I love the opening ceremonies with countries like Eritrea, Lichtenstein, Cook Islands, and Palau, who have less than five athletes participating. These people are more than excited to be at the Olympics. You can see the joy and wonder on their faces.

My favorite country, though, was Iraq. Their athletes used to be tortured on a regular basis by one of Saddam’s sons. There was no joy in participation, no thrill of victory, but plenty of agony for them for each defeat. This year, however, the Iraqi athletes were “smuggled” out of their own country for their safety’s sake by Italian peacekeepers in their country. Their soccer team won their first match against Portugal, which was “loaded” with three star players from the English Premier League. Yet Iraq was victorious. They tasted yet another victory, and their countrymen rejoiced. I think it’s a safe bet that these athletes are grateful to each person who helped give them their freedom, regardless of whether there were WMD’s in their country or not.

The Iraqi athletes paraded in and they seemed overwhelmed and awed by the whole atmosphere. The crowd greeted them with cheers and applause. The team members’ smiles made me tear up. Wether or not they medal is of no consequence. They can go home and hold their heads high and they will not be tortured or punished, they will be heroes to every Iraqi child (and some adults all over the world as well).

That, my friends, is what the spirit of the Olympics is all about.

Posted in commentary


Ronald Reagan Posted by Hello

GOODBYE, RONALD REAGAN

The death of former President Ronald Reagan has conjured up many memories for me. Some are of President Reagan, others are of my brother, my grandfather and others. Reagan was president while I was in junior high and high school, before I could vote. Politics, in my world, was mostly locally focused during my teenage years, but I remember the assassination attempt, the Berlin Wall speech, the speech after the Challenger tragedy and many more. I remember he was a popular president and I remember he was a classy one as well.

The first memory that popped into my head that wasn’t of Reagan personally was of my older brother. Scott absolutely loved Ronald Reagan. Remember the show Family Ties? The character played by Michael J. Fox — Alex P. Keaton, who idolized Ronald Reagan — had a picture of Reagan hanging on his wall, and so did my brother. He was a total devotee of Reagan and all he stood for. I know Reagan inspired him to be more than he was, and he often said that Reagan was classy and he wanted to be like that. Those memories of Scott still make me smile and miss him that much more.

The second memory was of my grandfather, who like Ronald Reagan, suffered from Alzheimer’s for years before he died in May of 1987. I remember one of the last times I saw him before he went to the nursing home. During a rare moment of clarity, he spoke my name. He rarely, if ever called me by name…he had a nickname for me or often went down the list of his daughters before he’d get to my nickname, but at that moment he called me by name and told me he loved me. At a time when Alzheimer’s was still largely misunderstood and everyone around me told me he really wasn’t “in there,” he looked me in the eye and let me know he was still in there. I grieved for him in that moment, because he was an intelligent, articulate man trapped by a disease that took away his mind, the ability to enjoy his life as well as the ability to let us all know how much he loved us.

I don’t know if Nancy Reagan or the Reagan children had any moments like that with President Reagan over the last ten years. Something in my gut says that though they said goodbye to the man they knew a long time ago, that there were some moments, some signs that he was still present with them in mind as well as body. I’m sure those private, wonderful and gut-wrenching moments will be cherished as much as the memory I have of those last shared moments with my grandfather.

I watched a good portion of the state funeral last night and will watch the funeral tomorrow. My heart is warmed by the outpouring of sympathy from all over the world. Though I knew Reagan was a popular president, I am still grasping the scope of what he meant, not only to this country, but to the world.

Some of my favorite Reagan Quotes:

“Abortion is advocated only by persons who have themselves been born.”

“I have left orders to be awakened at any time in case of national emergency, even if I’m in a cabinet meeting.”

“My fellow Americans, I am pleased to tell you I just signed legislation which outlaws Russia forever. The bombing begins in five minutes.”

— Said during a radio microphone test, 1984

“We will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them — this morning, as they prepared for their journey, and waved goodbye, and ‘slipped the surly bonds of earth’ to ‘touch the face of God.'”

— Speech about Challenger disaster, Jan. 28, 1986

“The best minds are not in government. If any were, business would hire them away.”

“Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first.”

“The nine most terrifying words in the English language are, ‘I’m from the government and I’m here to help.'”

Posted in commentary

STILL SATISFIED WITH SAYING, “NO.”

I’ve had time to think and re-think and I still think I did the right thing by standing up for myself. I’ve also had time to think about all the times I didn’t say no and why it’s still so difficult for some to use that word. After all, “no,” is one of two options, the other being, “yes.” “No” is always there, waiting to do it’s job. I’m not saying that a time to say, “yes,” is wrong or doesn’t exist. I just believe, “no,” isn’t used enough.

Don’t get me wrong, I’ve spent years not saying, “no.” I’ve spent years saying, “yes,” when I should have been saying, “no,” because I can’t stand conflict. I used to sacrifice my own feelings, self respect, my own rights as a human being because I couldn’t say, “no.”

Over the years, as I’ve dug deep and found my voice, it’s still tough to say, “no,” but I’ve been able to more often and let me tell you, it feels better than being a doormat. Not saying, “no,” when it needs to be said and you wake up with the words, “welcome,” on your back. I think most of the word has been erased off my back, but I think there’s still a W and part of an E still visible. I’m not always able to say, “no,” even now, but I have more discernment, too, and sometimes, it’s best not to say anything. Ah, the third option.

The trouble with, “no,” is that so many people are used to hearing, “yes,” they get angry and take it personally when they don’t get what they want. I still don’t know what I will face tomorrow. Probably nothing, just silence. Still, I have no regrets with my choice of words.

Now that I think about it, I used to say, “no,” all the time, just inside my head… where I was screaming it, but nobody heard me. In fact, I used to stand in the middle of crowded rooms screaming at the top of my lungs and nobody heard me. Nobody was listening. Oddly enough, some people don’t hear the word, “no,” even when you’re brave enough to speak it out loud… calmly, respectfully. All they hear is, “I’m not getting my way.”

Jene’ said that as long as I am being obedient, I am not responsible for how my actions or choice of words is taken. I am not responsible for the reaction. No matter what the outcome, I did what was right. No matter how high on the Black Sheep list this puts me, I did what was right. No matter how people talk about me behind my back, I still did something that I should have done a long time ago — stand up for myself.

Unfortunately, sometimes you do the right thing and you end up homeless (ha ha). Donations can be made at…