Keep your eye on the box
I purchased the wrong size box, when I was mailing the skirts. So, what to do with this box?
Medium flat rate, hum.
You do what any grandma would do when given a box to fill. You fill it with LOVE.
So keep an eye on the box
as it fills with LOVE
Yes, indeed
A big priority
Friday, May 29, 2015
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
My Macular degeneration journey
A reminder to get those eye's checked!!
For me what started out as a routine eye check up, ended up to be nothing even close to routine.
This is my normal room. I get to read the letters in the mirror, I get ton's of eye drops. Sometimes I have a friend or hubby go with me.
I think it is the shot's in the eye that make them squirm so I do not get very much company in this room.
Macular degeneration--This is a good place for some information.
Since I had no clue there even was such a thing, I came close to losing my vision in my right eye.
Looks like a torture contraption.
Not sure what the Dr. is looking at with this thing.
If there is any good news to all of this, my last check, which was yesterday, noted some inprovment.
I got my usual shot in the eye an appointment to return in four weeks. The only difference this time is the Dr. said there is improvement and that we will re-evaluate.
Yes, they actually give you a shot right in the eye!! I was sure they were mistaken when they told me that. does it hurt? not when they give it, they deaden the eye. After, when the 'stuff' comes out??? Yes! it hurts like all get out.
For me what started out as a routine eye check up, ended up to be nothing even close to routine.
This is my normal room. I get to read the letters in the mirror, I get ton's of eye drops. Sometimes I have a friend or hubby go with me.
I think it is the shot's in the eye that make them squirm so I do not get very much company in this room.
Macular degeneration--This is a good place for some information.
Since I had no clue there even was such a thing, I came close to losing my vision in my right eye.
Looks like a torture contraption.
Not sure what the Dr. is looking at with this thing.
If there is any good news to all of this, my last check, which was yesterday, noted some inprovment.
I got my usual shot in the eye an appointment to return in four weeks. The only difference this time is the Dr. said there is improvement and that we will re-evaluate.
Yes, they actually give you a shot right in the eye!! I was sure they were mistaken when they told me that. does it hurt? not when they give it, they deaden the eye. After, when the 'stuff' comes out??? Yes! it hurts like all get out.
Sunday, May 24, 2015
Betty's Butterfly
Betty's butterfly
So when asked by my grand daughter for some skirts, I wanted to be able to use Betty's butterfly. I didn't want to use the butterflies in the skirt fabric, I wanted it to look like a butterfly had landed on her skirt.
I think it looks like a butterfly just
thought that would be the perfect spot to land.
I think she also needs a flower garden, a skirt full of fun.
Thursday, May 21, 2015
102 blooms and counting
That was the post on Fb. Jean also added they are three weeks early.so when asked if I would like a few starts to grow cally lilies of my own of coarse I said yes!
I put a few plant starts in a container, to wait for them to grow a little.
I was so surprised to see one little baby try to be a big lily.
I know, my picture is pretty sad at this point. But someday that little flower will grow up and be a show plant.
Not really, but it is nice to dream.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
I love this blogger- At sweetnothings
http://bj-sweetnothings.blogspot.com/
Love is the only word I can think to describe, how much I like this blogger.
I wish I could remember just when I started to follow her.
Maybe it was the pineapple upside down cake she makes:
Love is the only word I can think to describe, how much I like this blogger.
I wish I could remember just when I started to follow her.
Maybe it was the pineapple upside down cake she makes:
That has love all over it!!
BJ, made that doesn't it look yummy??
Or just maybe it was the beer bread she bakes, oh who could not lose themselves in some yummy beer bread, hot from the oven. Well, BJ can make that happen.
Oh help me!
Follow her and you will see things like this.
This lady is so full of love. She inspired me to find a bracelet to encourage Zoe.
This is the bracelet BJ chose.
I think every grandaughter needs one of these.
This one is Zoe's
All the reason's I love BJ's blogg and more.
I hope you add her to your list of blogging friends.
She will inspire you, encourage you and become a best friend you never met in person.
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
God's Garden
After spending two days in my garden, I am sitting back and enjoying God's garden.
No weeding, no fluffing, yet it is perfect.
Enjoy
Balsam root, it covers the hills in the
spring.
I wonder if birds carried the seeds here, or was there once a homestead. Now, they are happy in God's garden.
I was able to get some wild roses to take hold in my garden but they are not this pretty.
No weeding, no fluffing, yet it is perfect.
Enjoy
Balsam root, it covers the hills in the
spring.
I wonder if birds carried the seeds here, or was there once a homestead. Now, they are happy in God's garden.
I was able to get some wild roses to take hold in my garden but they are not this pretty.
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Sandra Lee
I want to share this message from Sandra Lee, who has just been diagnosed, with breast cancer. I just love her and have been a fan of hers for a long time.
Sandra shared a very important message about getting those check ups.
News Feed
Controversy and confusion have always been a part of breast cancer diagnosis and treatment -- and I'm learning all about that on a personal level since my own diagnosis. But please don't let the sea of opinions cloud your own judgment, and get yourself screened. Don't think because it's not in your family you don't need to be concerned. 5 to 10% of women diagnosed with breast cancer had the disease in their family. So 90 to 95 % were like me -- with no family history.
I understand the messages being sent are muddled and even contradictory -- Especially when it comes to young women. What's "young"? An article in JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) addressed the rise in younger women being diagnosed with breast cancer -- defining younger women as those aged from 25 to 39 years. I've been researching the facts on all of this since my March 27 diagnosis as if my life depended on it, because.....Well, because it does. But please know that yours does too-- and the life of your sisters, mothers, daughters and friends does too. So keep these facts in mind when you're trying to make decisions about your own health -- I've tried to streamline the research highlights that every young woman should know. Take a look and share with your family and your girlfriends -- Tell them Sandra Lee wants them to know!
At a time when there is progress being made overall against cancer, there is a rise in the number of young women diagnosed with advanced, incurable breast cancer.
At a time when there is progress being made overall against cancer, there is a rise in the number of young women diagnosed with advanced, incurable breast cancer.
Breast cancer is generally more aggressive in younger women, --women in this age group are 40% more likely to die of their disease than postmenopausal women.
Early testing saves lives-- Even though more women under 50 are being diagnosed with breast cancer than in the past, the rate at which these women die from the disease has declined by 40% since the beginning of the 1990s:
▪ In the early 1990s, 9 per 100,000 younger women died from breast cancer
▪ By 2010, five per 100,000 younger women died from the disease
▪ In 1995, approximately 7,700 women under the age of 50 were diagnosed with breast cancer. By 2010, the number had risen by 11% (more than 10,000 cases). Breast cancer incidence among females of all ages grew by 18% during the same period.
The number of women in this age range diagnosed with advanced disease rose from about 250 a year in 1976 to about 850 a year in 2009.
The largest increases were in the youngest women, from ages 25 to 34. There were also slight increases in metastatic diagnoses among women ages 40 to 54, but no increase in older women.
The number of American women ages 25 to 39 diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer — which has already spread to other organs by the time it's found — rose about 3.6% a year from 2000 to 2009, according to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The trend began in the 1970s, although the most rapid increases occurred in about the last decade.
With the increases in mortality if screening is postponed -- and the lives saved, including, I pray, my own by early detection -- the course of action seems clear to me, as it was for so many of you who have been kind enough to share your own stories with me. They inspire me -- and they give me fear for young women who don't get tested - so whose lives are at risk. I am blessed to have a platform to spread a message of hope - through knowing the facts and taking action -- but you now have that platform too...I am going to post the stories you've sent me through Facebook and onSandraLee.com.
▪ In the early 1990s, 9 per 100,000 younger women died from breast cancer
▪ By 2010, five per 100,000 younger women died from the disease
▪ In 1995, approximately 7,700 women under the age of 50 were diagnosed with breast cancer. By 2010, the number had risen by 11% (more than 10,000 cases). Breast cancer incidence among females of all ages grew by 18% during the same period.
The number of women in this age range diagnosed with advanced disease rose from about 250 a year in 1976 to about 850 a year in 2009.
The largest increases were in the youngest women, from ages 25 to 34. There were also slight increases in metastatic diagnoses among women ages 40 to 54, but no increase in older women.
The number of American women ages 25 to 39 diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer — which has already spread to other organs by the time it's found — rose about 3.6% a year from 2000 to 2009, according to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The trend began in the 1970s, although the most rapid increases occurred in about the last decade.
With the increases in mortality if screening is postponed -- and the lives saved, including, I pray, my own by early detection -- the course of action seems clear to me, as it was for so many of you who have been kind enough to share your own stories with me. They inspire me -- and they give me fear for young women who don't get tested - so whose lives are at risk. I am blessed to have a platform to spread a message of hope - through knowing the facts and taking action -- but you now have that platform too...I am going to post the stories you've sent me through Facebook and onSandraLee.com.
Again, THANK YOU for all of your words of support-- I don't only read them, I feel their strength carrying me through these tough days...and I love you for that!
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