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Atricle Dump - What Not To Say When Your Loved One Tells You She Has Breast Cancer
Self-Promotion Is Your Key To Long Term Success get it early? Do you want to make her feel worse about that? Secondly, what if it was detected early, but early detection doesn’t save her? In spite of what you may think, not all women survive cancer with early detection. Don’t push her to tell you the stage at which her cancer was detected. Keep your curiosity to yourself. If she wants to talk about it, she will.Ever heard of;Dale Earnhardt Dr. Phil Martha Stewart Donald Trump Madonna Billy GrahamRegardless of their chosen profession, business or discipline each of them are successful for a variety of reasons but one thing they all have in common is that they are or were ruthless self-promoters.Being a self-promoter can conger up many different images in the minds of many, some negative, some arrogant, some self-serving and some envy, but in the end this ability separates the also-rans with the supper successful. If you think of Herb Kelleher, (the founder of Southwest Airlines) you might think he was a lunatic. If you mention Bill Clinton, you’ll get two very opposing reactions and if you bring up the name Michael Jordan, you might get very similar reactions. “You have to keep a positive attitude. It helps you heal.” What a load of malarkey. Let’s be real: if being positive was all it took to have a good medical outcome, we could wish away all our illnesses. The American Cancer Society notes that although optimism has been promoted by some as a path to longer survival for cancer patients, in re Some Of The Factors To Consider When Choosing The Best Web Host For Your Personal Website Your best friend just told you she has been diagnosed with breast cancer. You have been friends for years, but now you don’t know what to say. Your mind goes into overdrive, suddenly thinking up and casting off all kinds of remarks and platitudes. So, what exactly do you say and how do you say it?Choosing the right Web Host for your Personal Website is important for your future business. This is why you need to do a lot or research and comparative study before opting for a web host.Some very important criteria for choosing a web host include the facilities of data storage and the data transfer. The kind of business you are in would define your requirements. Simple content and static designs require less space than the dynamic flash oriented sites.If your site has backend or ASP then you would need higher bandwidth to support these activities. Bandwidth allows data to be transferred in a specified time and quality. The higher the bandwidth, the better the transfer capabilities of your site. You need a very professional web host server to handle your needs who will not only be req This scenario is being played out every day across the country. According to the National Cancer Institute, an estimated 213,000 American women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in 2006. With numbers like that, it is critical that women get the support they need right from the beginning. What a breast cancer patient won’t tell you is that those first reactions and subsequent comments made early in her diagnosis have a huge impact on her state of mind throughout her cancer journey. Not all comments are helpful, and in fact, many well-meaning statements can actually be hurtful. The first thing to keep in mind is that a newly-diagnosed person is not her usual self. Her sense of who she is has just been turned upside down. There’s no way to sugar-coat it: she has just been told she may be dying. She experiences panic, dread, fear, depression, despair, hopelessness, and other emotions, often from one minute to the next. Her grounded world has fallen away leaving her brittle and vulnerable. Later on her the cancer journey, a survivor may become acclimated to a new identity of a woman with breast cancer and a different sort of “normalcy” will start to form. It doesn’t take the place of that once-secure reality, but it allows life to go on. I was diagnosed with breast cancer on a cold January morning via the telephone. Yes, that’s right: by telephone. I then called family and friends for support. Here’s a few of the first reactions people had to the news of my breast cancer. I like to call this, “What NOT to say to a woman who just told you she has breast cancer.” “You will be OK. I promise!” (Let’s be real. No one can promise you that you will be OK. You’re already not OK.) While a lot of women are successfully pushed breast cancer out of their lives, some will die. You don’t have to say anything about that, but just remember that the woman knows she faces a journey of the unknown, so don’t lie. Just simply say you will be there for her every step of the way. “There are so many things medicine can do these days. The treatments are so much better than they used to be.” While that sounds encouraging, my mother, who died of breast cancer in 1979, was treated with surgery, chemo, radiation, which was exactly what I was treated with last year. If you aren’t an oncologist, avoid statements about what treatments can and cannot do these days. Support her choice of treatment even if you don’t like it. “You got it early, didn’t you?” Don’t ask this question! OK, first, what if she didn’t get it early? Do you want to make her feel worse about that? Secondly, what if it was detected early, but early detection doesn’t save her? In spite of what you may think, not all women survive cancer with early detection. Don’t push her to tell you the stage at which her cancer was detected. Keep your curiosity to yourself. If she wants to talk about it, she will. “You have to keep a positive attitude. It helps you heal.” What a load of malarkey. Let’s be real: if being positive was all it took to have a good medical outcome, we could wish away all our illnesses. The American Cancer Society notes that although optimism has been promoted by some as a path to longer survival for cancer patients, in rea What A Year For Investing er diagnosis have a huge impact on her state of mind throughout her cancer journey. Not all comments are helpful, and in fact, many well-meaning statements can actually be hurtful.Last year provided us with one of the best investment returns in recent memory, a pleasant surprise to most of us. Now would be a great time to rebalance your portfolio and reposition the gains that you made last year.No one knows whether the stock market will go up or down from it’s current high. We are however certain that it will not stay at this level. When the market provides you with gains it is always a good time to rebalance your portfolio, don’t wait for the market to go back down to contemplate whether your investment allocation was too risky.Do you know how much money you have in stocks versus bonds; international versus domestic or large company stock versus small. Why are your investment allocated the way they are and is that still appropriate?There are many question The first thing to keep in mind is that a newly-diagnosed person is not her usual self. Her sense of who she is has just been turned upside down. There’s no way to sugar-coat it: she has just been told she may be dying. She experiences panic, dread, fear, depression, despair, hopelessness, and other emotions, often from one minute to the next. Her grounded world has fallen away leaving her brittle and vulnerable. Later on her the cancer journey, a survivor may become acclimated to a new identity of a woman with breast cancer and a different sort of “normalcy” will start to form. It doesn’t take the place of that once-secure reality, but it allows life to go on. I was diagnosed with breast cancer on a cold January morning via the telephone. Yes, that’s right: by telephone. I then called family and friends for support. Here’s a few of the first reactions people had to the news of my breast cancer. I like to call this, “What NOT to say to a woman who just told you she has breast cancer.” “You will be OK. I promise!” (Let’s be real. No one can promise you that you will be OK. You’re already not OK.) While a lot of women are successfully pushed breast cancer out of their lives, some will die. You don’t have to say anything about that, but just remember that the woman knows she faces a journey of the unknown, so don’t lie. Just simply say you will be there for her every step of the way. “There are so many things medicine can do these days. The treatments are so much better than they used to be.” While that sounds encouraging, my mother, who died of breast cancer in 1979, was treated with surgery, chemo, radiation, which was exactly what I was treated with last year. If you aren’t an oncologist, avoid statements about what treatments can and cannot do these days. Support her choice of treatment even if you don’t like it. “You got it early, didn’t you?” Don’t ask this question! OK, first, what if she didn’t get it early? Do you want to make her feel worse about that? Secondly, what if it was detected early, but early detection doesn’t save her? In spite of what you may think, not all women survive cancer with early detection. Don’t push her to tell you the stage at which her cancer was detected. Keep your curiosity to yourself. If she wants to talk about it, she will. “You have to keep a positive attitude. It helps you heal.” What a load of malarkey. Let’s be real: if being positive was all it took to have a good medical outcome, we could wish away all our illnesses. The American Cancer Society notes that although optimism has been promoted by some as a path to longer survival for cancer patients, in re 7 Surefire Ways To Repair Bad Credit cancer and a different sort of “normalcy” will start to form. It doesn’t take the place of that once-secure reality, but it allows life to go on.Do you have a poor credit rating? If so, you are one of tens of thousands of Americans with the same problem. In fact, it seems that this has become a national ‘disease.’ And just what do people need that have a disease? They need a cure.Here are some sure-fire solutions to ' repair bad credit '. Keep in mind, like most ‘diseases,’ credit repair can take some time, but complete healing is possible.The First StepThe first thing you need to do is find out what is being reported about you. This is easy and inexpensive. For under $10, you can get your credit report from one of the three main credit reporting companies: Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion. Keep in mind however, that if you have recently been denied credit, you can get a free report from the same credit bureau the lender I was diagnosed with breast cancer on a cold January morning via the telephone. Yes, that’s right: by telephone. I then called family and friends for support. Here’s a few of the first reactions people had to the news of my breast cancer. I like to call this, “What NOT to say to a woman who just told you she has breast cancer.” “You will be OK. I promise!” (Let’s be real. No one can promise you that you will be OK. You’re already not OK.) While a lot of women are successfully pushed breast cancer out of their lives, some will die. You don’t have to say anything about that, but just remember that the woman knows she faces a journey of the unknown, so don’t lie. Just simply say you will be there for her every step of the way. “There are so many things medicine can do these days. The treatments are so much better than they used to be.” While that sounds encouraging, my mother, who died of breast cancer in 1979, was treated with surgery, chemo, radiation, which was exactly what I was treated with last year. If you aren’t an oncologist, avoid statements about what treatments can and cannot do these days. Support her choice of treatment even if you don’t like it. “You got it early, didn’t you?” Don’t ask this question! OK, first, what if she didn’t get it early? Do you want to make her feel worse about that? Secondly, what if it was detected early, but early detection doesn’t save her? In spite of what you may think, not all women survive cancer with early detection. Don’t push her to tell you the stage at which her cancer was detected. Keep your curiosity to yourself. If she wants to talk about it, she will. “You have to keep a positive attitude. It helps you heal.” What a load of malarkey. Let’s be real: if being positive was all it took to have a good medical outcome, we could wish away all our illnesses. The American Cancer Society notes that although optimism has been promoted by some as a path to longer survival for cancer patients, in re Buying & Insuring Imported Cars - Top Tips To Save Money anything about that, but just remember that the woman knows she faces a journey of the unknown, so don’t lie. Just simply say you will be there for her every step of the way.With new cars in the UK coming at high prices, it's not surprising that many people turn to importing vehicles from other countries. If you are prepared to put in the effort it can save you a lot of money, but there are many things to be aware of when considering importing a car. The Law European Law prohibits any manufacturer from preventing an EU citizen from purchasing a vehicle at the pre-tax price in any other EU country. What this means is that there's nothing stopping you from buying a car from anywhere within the European Union. There are also no holds in place to prevent you from importing a car from America. However, bringing a car over from the states will cost you an extra 10% import duty as well as the standard 17.5% VAT. V “There are so many things medicine can do these days. The treatments are so much better than they used to be.” While that sounds encouraging, my mother, who died of breast cancer in 1979, was treated with surgery, chemo, radiation, which was exactly what I was treated with last year. If you aren’t an oncologist, avoid statements about what treatments can and cannot do these days. Support her choice of treatment even if you don’t like it. “You got it early, didn’t you?” Don’t ask this question! OK, first, what if she didn’t get it early? Do you want to make her feel worse about that? Secondly, what if it was detected early, but early detection doesn’t save her? In spite of what you may think, not all women survive cancer with early detection. Don’t push her to tell you the stage at which her cancer was detected. Keep your curiosity to yourself. If she wants to talk about it, she will. “You have to keep a positive attitude. It helps you heal.” What a load of malarkey. Let’s be real: if being positive was all it took to have a good medical outcome, we could wish away all our illnesses. The American Cancer Society notes that although optimism has been promoted by some as a path to longer survival for cancer patients, in re Let The Ladder Roll- A Strategic CD Investment get it early? Do you want to make her feel worse about that? Secondly, what if it was detected early, but early detection doesn’t save her? In spite of what you may think, not all women survive cancer with early detection. Don’t push her to tell you the stage at which her cancer was detected. Keep your curiosity to yourself. If she wants to talk about it, she will.Forget ordinary money market investments now. Think big and get real, for, Certificates of Deposits (CDs) is one surefire way to help your funds grow and earn high interest rates. However, there is one condition to having CDs. Your money is locked for a specific term and does not stay liquid anymore. This term generally ranges between one month and five years. If you withdraw money before its maturity, you lose a good deal of interest as a penalty.CDs offer some of the best interest rates, but the funny thing about these is that you will never be able to predict the peaks or troughs. Trying to predict the future path of interest rates is not just an impossibility, but also silly. No matter how much facts and figures you have at your disposal, you will never know for sure! So why get into foret “You have to keep a positive attitude. It helps you heal.” What a load of malarkey. Let’s be real: if being positive was all it took to have a good medical outcome, we could wish away all our illnesses. The American Cancer Society notes that although optimism has been promoted by some as a path to longer survival for cancer patients, in reality the scientific evidence of its true role has been (at best) mixed. So don’t dump that extra burden on her. What if she doesn’t feel positive, but instead feels sick, fatigued, puffy, depressed, angry, or drugged? Negative feelings are entirely appropriate under the circumstances. Let your friend express her feelings around you without the pressure to be a Pollyanna. That’s you being a real friend. Having said that, don’t become Debbie Downer either. Since most people are just plain frightened by the topic of death, they react to cancer in ways to make themselves, not the cancer patient, feel better. Bad news dredges up memories of surgeries, emergencies, and/or traumas for some people, and they just can’t seem to stop themselves from sharing all about those experiences, usually in vivid detail. If the urge is there to tell a newly diagnosed woman about your sister’s breast cancer, please repress it. Don’t blab about other traumas to an already-worried person. Hospitals, doctors, needles, procedures, the euphemistic “discomfort” are not areas that she needs to dwell on right now. She could be on her last nerve and have no more resources to absorb these stories. Trust me; you are not the only one telling her. The accumulation of such tales over the course of a day would send the strongest of us to hide under the covers. In my breast cancer support group we joke that we could make big money making smiley-face tee-shirts for breast cancer patients that say: “Thank you for NOT being compelled to tell me your (or other person you have known) disease, surgery, illness, death, dying, trauma, injury, loss, or similar story. Talk less and listen more.” Show her she has real, tangible help. If you are close enough, offer to go with her as her as an advocate through the medical and/or insurance system. Take notes for her at doctor appointments. Make meals for her and her family so she doesn’t have to cook. Buy loungewear sets so she can rest without being in t-shirt and pajama pants all the time. Run the vacuum on Tuesdays. Read to her or tape her favorite shows. Tune in to her likes and needs. Send her chocolates if she likes them; peanut brittle if she doesn’t. And most of all, don’t make a big show of concern in the beginning of her cancer journey and then forget about her over the subsequent months or years. Yes, being a support person for someone with cancer isn’t easy, but you can find great joy in it, too. Help the woman you know with breast cancer by laying a foundation of support and love that she can return to in her mind over and over again. Here’s one of my favorites: “You are an exceptional, irreplaceable person in my life. You are rare and matchless. I want you to be as healthy and happy as you can possibly be, and I plan to do whatever I can to make that happen for you.
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