Support for LateToSchool

<p>and another</p>

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<p>[Hill</a> Slug Chronicles: Crazy Season Part II](<a href=“http://perpetualheadwinds.blogspot.com/2008/07/16-july-2008-sunday-was-big-day-for.html]Hill”>Hill Slug Chronicles: Crazy Season Part II)</p>

<p>(P.S. I like the way that Howie’s lung-cancer-“survivor” status is noted, then dropped - as if, yeah, this is worth mentioning, but the guy rides so well that no one would ever know. One day, hopefully, living through lung cancer and then riding your bicycle long distances will be so commonplace that, as here, it just won’t seem like that big a deal.)</p>

<p>(P.P.S. to mythmom: Thanks for the kind remarks, but after 30 years of marriage, through all sorts of both ups and downs, I’m afraid that my wife knows me all too well to regard me as any sort of shiny “trophy.”)</p>

<p>(P.P.P.S. to LTS: Will look forward to hearing about the success of this procedure.)</p>

<p>Good morning LTS!</p>

<p>Thinking of you and your procedure today–hope all goes well!</p>

<p>Edit: I had always thought of the name as e-PIS-trophy. Sort of Greek. So I never noticed the “trophy” part of the word. But I agree, Trophy is an apt description.</p>

<p>LTS, Keep well and my prayers.</p>

<p>LTS, as always you make total sense. and as always I’ll be thinking of you today. Hope it is all as easy as it can be.</p>

<p>Thinking of you LTS!!!
Can’t imagine however that you did not have a port installed BEFORE you even started your chemo regiment. Around here this is like one of the very first things that gets done - ???.
Glad to hear you are back to work !</p>

<p>Continued best wishes and healing thoughts to you, LTS. I hope you come through the port procedure with flying colors!</p>

<p>(An aside to mommusic:</p>

<p>Yes, I think you have the pronunciation correct; it’s the name of a piece by jazz composer and pianist Thelonious Monk - whose music will still be listened to, I suspect, 100 years from now.</p>

<p>[Thelonious</a> Monk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thelonious_Monk]Thelonious”>Thelonious Monk - Wikipedia))</p>

<p>Sending good thoughts and prayers for today. It’ll go great!</p>

<p>LTS:</p>

<p>I hope everything is going well!
Telecommuting is the way to go apparently. So I can picture you working from a rented hospital bed (as I once did) or a recliner. There are pads for putting a laptop. Take good care of yourself.</p>

<p>My radiologist gave me this prayer on the day of my first surgery. I know he was God’s messenger as God works in very small quiet ways.
My Daily Prayer</p>

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<p>That’s a beautiful prayer, keymom.
Thinking about you today, LTS.</p>

<p>LTS: buried deep inside an article about entrepreneurs and medical research in today’s Wall St Journal is a discussion of a woman who has survived lung cancer and what she’s doing to promote research. I can’t put up a link–because the WSJ is a paid subscription–but perhaps you’re also a subscriber and can find it on your own. Title is “Putting Drug Development in Patients’ Hands.”</p>

<p>“Bonnie J. Addario, a former oil-company executive in San Francisco, is a lung-cancer survivor. When she first started thinking about how to make a difference, she figured, “I’ll run a gala and a golf tournament, raise money for research, and that will be it.” Mrs. Addario, 60, raised $800,000 through a foundation she set up in 2006. She distributed the money to a number of researchers, and then realized, “there are a lot of wonderful people doing great work, but lung-cancer survival rates [of 15.5% after five years] haven’t changed for 40 years. Why is that?””</p>

<p>LTS, Hope you are out of the recovery room and feeling good…</p>

<p>Hoping the procedure is long over, and went well.</p>

<p>Dear LTS, </p>

<p>I’m a lurker who has delurked a couple of times. I’ve been in Europe for several weeks and missed the last ten days of postings. I’ve just read through them all to see what has happened and what has been said in the interim. I am so sorry you’ve had such a rough time. </p>

<p>If you haven’t yet read Lance Armstrong’s biography, it is truly inspiring. His athlete’s combative temperament which was focused on defeating his cancer provides some valuable lessons for using imagery and focus in fighting the disease. I particularly thought of this during the recounting of your unfortunate “poop” incidents. Lance’s testicular cancer had spread to his lungs, brain, and perhaps elsewhere when it was discovered, so he underwent brain surgery followed by a very intensive chemo regimen. He said he imagined that every time he expelled some bodily excretion, he imagined that he was pooping or peeing or vomiting the cancer cells out of his body. If that is true, LTS, you must have eliminated a huge number of cancer cells between the office, the shower, and the flatulence! No wonder you are feeling better!</p>

<p>Two asides: When Lance Armstrong recovered from his cancer and went on to win 7 Tour de France titles, the French media said he couldn’t possibly be doing it without performance enhancing substances. I found it easy to understand. Endurance sports are won by those who are able to tolerate the most pain and work through it and recover most quickly to fight again the next day. When you have faced the prospect of death and won that battle, cycling up a mountain is nothing. He also made it a point to ride a bike every day, thinking that somehow if he got on the bike even if it was only to go around the block, he couldn’t really be that ill. Sort of like LTS working 8 hours.</p>

<p>Aside #2: H & I were strolling after dinner in Italy last Wed. and came upon a jazz band performance in a public square. We were curious to see what they would play and they announced Thelonius Monk’s “Epistrophy.” This particular rendition began with a long tuba solo, which I don’t think was anything like the original, but I thought of cc Epistrophy’s postings and wondered how LTS was doing.</p>

<p>Tango14, thank you for that. I will be “back” later, I just wanted to quickly duck in to say to everyone that today’s procedure went just fine, just as everyone prayed it would.</p>

<p>More later…</p>

<p>Yeah, LTS! That’s wonderful news.</p>

<p>LTS:</p>

<p>I’m so glad. Now take a well deserved rest.</p>

<p>We’re all thinking of you!</p>

<p>LTS, thanks for reminding us that your impulse to share with your fellow CC parents started with the Pausch lecture thread…I had forgotten that! </p>

<p>I also enjoyed the “olden days” threads those of you put up in the last week from our first years of chatting here…a few years ago when our children were heading off to college…
I just want you all to know I value this forum, and the ongoing conversation with the valiant, insightful, and ever amusing LTS is meaningful in our history together. I now have a second son facing his senior year in HS…</p>

<p>So glad your procedure went smoothly and you got through all the latest rounds of scans and preps for chemo. thinking of you!!</p>