Close To You Weblog

Entries from May 2008

Baylor Hospital healthcare screening for men

May 16, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Here is a short list of basic general life truths about men:

1.  If you buy a man a present that plugs in or runs off batteries, they will like it.

2.  If a man is watching sports on television, its not the best time to ask how you look.  We are not capable of watching sports and listening to someone else talk.  At all!

3.  If you need a new outfit or have already bought a new outfit and need to tell us, do it after dinner.  We are more easy going then.  Also refer to #2.

4.  Contrary to what you might think, ductape can be used to fix almost anything.

5.  Men never, ever, ever get sick.

Now as you read this short list, you think to yourself “fix dinner and then go shopping.”  No….  thats now what I am telling anyone.  Any woman that has a man knows that number 5 is not neccessarily true.

Women know that men do get sick.  Women also know that when men are sick, we are babies.  Big babies!  The world is going to end, time stands still, we need our mommies!!  I know a guy who was sick once, so sick that he got out of bed and couldn’t get back in bed.  Why you ask, because he tried to walk and couldn’t.  He decided we would just lay on the floor…  in the hallway…  in his underwear…  and wait till some came to pick him up.  Yes, men are babies.

So women, here is your chance.  Tell your man to help himself.  Baylor Hospital is sponsoring a Baylor Men’s Health Day.  So tell your man to go.

They are having a Men’s Health Day at each of the Baylor Hospital’s in the dallas area.   Baylor Dallas, Baylor All Saints, Baylor Grapevine, Baylor Garland, Baylor Plano.

So women, send you man to the health day and make them get a check up.  They will love you more for it!  And while they are getting there health checked up on, you can have a shopping trip!  Just remember rule number one when your out.  Its a win win for both of you!

Take care!

Categories: Baylor hospital · Close To You · Close To You Store · Dallas · Texas · healthcare · laugh
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Everybody needs a laugh!!

May 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment

So I was sitting at work one day and walked to front of the store.  I picked up a magazine and started to thumb through it.  I found this story by Fran Di Giacomo, a really good writer and artist.  So sit back for a few minutes and read along with me.  Everybody needs a few minutes of laughter.

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     The doorbell rang but I sat motionless while my husband greeted our visitor.  He made the appointment with this new specialist against my wishes and was now directing her to the living room, where I sat staring at my clenched hands.  As a career cancer patient, I was fed up with specialists.  Sensing my reluctance, she put her briefcase on the table and studied me patiently.

“This is really painful, isn’t it?” she said.  I nodded in agreement.

“Do you mind if we begin?”  She was trying to be sensitive, but I resented one more intrusion into my life.  Art is my nirvana/meditation/sanity/soul, and I needed to be at the easel.  Finally I faced her squarely.  “Did you bring anethesia?”

It was more of a challenge than a question, but my fabulous caregiver husband had prepared her.  She pulled from her briefcase the required remedy – frsh, gooey fudge, generously embedded with pecans and drizzled all over with caramel.  Survival comes in many forms.

“Let her start the examination,” I relented.  My husband took her down the hall to the bedroom and opened the closet.  I heard an audible gasp and knew the dreaded diagnosis:  Critial Closet Mass

I wasn’t even into my second chunk of fudge before she was in front of me, wild-eyed demonic.

“Well?”  I looked at her, mumbling through the delicious gunk in my  mouth.   “How bad is it?  Whats the recommended prodedure?”

“Radical de-bulking.  Immediatly,” she replied.

Whoa.  I wasn’t prepared for this!  I needed more time to plan and adjust – maybe hide some things.  She obviously didn’t understand the complex clothing requirements of a chronic cancer lifestyle.  I led her back to the closet and explained my system, which had evolved over several years of chemotherapy and surgical events in the double digits:

     A.  After-surgery garments, large and loose

     B.  between-chemo clothing, for when I can wear normal people clothes

     C.  Chemo-infusion outfits, warm and cozy – with access to medical port

     D.  Drug-reaction clothes to accommodate a full-body rash and peeling blisters

     E.  Easel clothes already spattered with paint

     F.  Fat clothes for when my Graves’ disease, which requires steroids, is acting up.

While my method was alphabetical order, my closet looked like a alphabet soup.  The closet doc was clearly overwhelmed, so I didn’t even try to explain what every exprienced chemo-club member knows:  Never throw anything away, because shopping is impossibly difficult.  So we stood there, our eyes locked in silent negotiation.

My husband had promised to find an experienced specialist.  This one’s toughest assignment so far had clearly been too many pairs of red shoes – I calmed her with an offer of fudge.

It was just in time; her gaze was moving up toward the top shelf, stacked with the essential clothing item for a perpetual chemo patient – hats.  She stared in disbelief at my prized collection, which started 23 years ago with my first cancer diagnosis.  You know the drill – if it fits and you look good in it, buy one is every color.

“Fran, you just have to let go,” she whispered.  Was she kidding?  I’ve spent years clutching at life with my fingernails (beautifully manicured, thank you) and now somebody says, “Let go.”  I don’t think so.

“Do it for your husband,” she pleaded.  “You wrote in your book,’Dare to dream’; your husband dreams of using the closet.”

I sighed in acceptance.  It’s not just the quantity.  During dinner the night before, my husband had tactfully remarked on how much styles had changed over the years while I was “out to chemo.”

Maybe it’s time to throw it all out and start over.  You can bet your boots that this is going to require a lot of fudge.

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Fran was first diagnosed with breast cancer and has lived with metastatic ovarian cancer for eight years.  If you like her musings with this little excerpt, you’ll love her book, “I’d Rather Do Chemo Than Clean Out the Garage: Choosing Laughter Over Tears.”  If you want to purchase her book, follow our link to our store and give us a call and we send you a copy of the book.

Take care! 

Categories: Breast Cancer · Cancer · Close To You · Close To You Store · Fran Di Giacomo
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Compression hose?!?!? I don’t need no stinkin’ compression hose!

May 7, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Compression hose, support hose, ted hose…..  these all make you think of horrbile looking socks that your grandmother use to wear.  It’s true, she might have worn something like that…. back in the day.

Please step with me into the present.  Times have changed.  So has the make up of compression hose.  Todays stockings have so many options, you can’t tell between normal socks and the ones that have compression.  All sorts of colors, different lengths, and different sheerness.

So, I’m sure your asking, why are you telling me this in the first place.  I’m glad you asked.  Close To You now has an online store to purchase these types of products.  Our online store offers the same products that we sell if you were to walk into our store.

Anyways, check it out.  If you have questions about anything on it, give us a call.

Take care! 

Categories: Breast Cancer · Close To You · Close To You Store · Compression · Lymphedema · Varicose Veins
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The cure for cancer!

May 1, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Well, not really.  But I did come across something from the American Cancer Society.

Basicly it tells you what to watch out for when reading websites and what information to trust.

A few things to be on the look out for are:

  • Claims of a “scientific breakthrough,” ”miraculous cure,” “secret ingredient,” or “ancient remedy.”
  • Claims that a product can cure a wide range of illnesses. No single product can do this.
  • Case histories of people who have had amazing results but no clear scientific data are available.
  • Claims that a product is available only from one source, especially if payment is required in advance.
  • Claims of a “money-back” guarantee.
  • Websites that do not list the company’s name, physical address, phone number, or other important contact information.

If you read anything that sounds like this it should raise a red flag to you.  I’m pretty sure that if something came out and it really did do everything it said it would, we all would hear about it on the nightly news and in papers the next day.  If all else fails, consult your doctor, they usually know what going on and can lead you in the right direction.

 

Categories: Breast Cancer · Cancer · Close To You
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