Guest guest Posted January 24, 2007 Report Share Posted January 24, 2007 Hi...hope you and your husband are doing well. I well appreciate your frustration with medical insurance. When I was in college, I worked in the industry during the summer and part-time while in school. I am not a wild-eyed crazy socialist, but it seems to me that we need a system that will make available medical care for everyone. We are the last " western " country to not provide medical care for all. To do so, could make everything less expensive for all of us in the long run. I guess you and I and a few others here on the site come across as " lecturing " when, in fact, we're just trying to help. You,like I, never had liver problems, but had " problems " of your own, as have I. We both were caregivers to a spouse with very serious medical problems. I'm not sure that Kjersten could have gone through a transplant. She was very much worn down by her illness and while her wit and sense of humor stayed with her until the last night...I sat in her hospital room and we told stories and made each other laugh until well past midnight...while her mind was still strong, her body was too weak to survive. One of the causes of death was " failure to thrive. " At death, she barely weighed 75 pounds. A friend of mine once sent me an e-mail that said, " Life is a terminal condition. It always results in death. " Of course, that's true. My great grandfather lived to be 99 in Inverness, Scotland; my mother is currently 85 here in Vero Beach (my Dad fell down two flights of concrete steps at age 85 and died from internal bleeding but, according to the coroner, was in " otherwise " excellent health....go figure). In looking through Kjersten's journals and notebooks I am struck by her realization that she was " lucky to be alive " at any age. A premature baby born to older parents (mid-forties), she had every illness you could imagine. When Kjersten was almost eight, her sister Kathi died in a terrible car crash. Her old brother was driving the car; her father, in the back seat, broke his back in the accident. Kathi was a blonde Nordic " beauty, " if you will. Kjersten, who took after the brown haired German side of the family, tucked her long hair under her baseball cap (she was a Pirates fan courtesy of summers with her Uncle Joe in suburban Pittsburg), and played with the boys. Even when she was in her forties and fifties, one of her fondest memories was waiting after school (elementary school mainly) for the boys to come out and then she would race them home. She always won. When we had family reunions and the ineveitable softball game, she was the most competitive of all. Her operation for diverticulosus left her " an inch away " from a bag on her hip. Several years before her death, she was told by her GI doctor that she would be lucky to live another year. So, she changed doctors. I sat out on my back porch today (it's screened in) and watched the squirrels and rabbits as well as the fat robins and doves as well as the smaller than expected ,but brilliantly scarlet, cardinals. It's a kind of bonus for living in Florida. My three cats sat out there with me and watched. There is something very calming about stroking a cat who is sitting in your lap. B.C. also likes to " knead " my chest. I walk away with some puncture marks in my chest, but, as I recall, the medical info is that petting a purring cat lowers your blood pressure by ten points. Most of us on this site are dealing with life and death situations...whether we recognize it or not. Still, there are moments of silence and reflection which make us more than we are. Peace and love.....Dennis dhtaylor4@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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