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BlahBlahBabble

Give Some Blood, Share the Love…

Fresh Fruit for DebThis past year has been full of requests for giving. So many people around the globe need help, from the tsunami a year ago, to hurricane victims, to volcano victims, you name it.

This time, it is much, much closer to home for me. You can easily help, and it doesn’t cost you a thing. Seriously. Keep on reading for the details…

First, the background story. Back in 1985, I moved to Houston. That fall, I became friends with a girl at my high school – we will call her J. because we’re keeping her name off the internet, ok? J. and I became best friends, and I simply adored her. Not only did I adore her, I adored her whole family. I loved spending time at her house, maybe because I’m an only child and there are 7 kids in her family. Quite a change from my quiet house. Probably even more for the zany, crazy antics of J. and her whole family. Shortly before my senior year, J.’s family moved to San Antonio, and I was quite sad. We still saw each other though – my parents even let me fly to San Antonio to see her, my first plane trip all by myself! (It was only a $50 flight and I didn’t have a car, so it was the best way to get there.) She dated friends of mine, I met people through her, it was a good life. The last time I visited her in San Antonio, I got to meet her older sister, who took us to Austin and 6th Street. (I hate beer, so I didn’t drink there – but it was still fun to check it out!) Her older sisters had already graduated by the time we met in 1985, so I didn’t know them really, but I remember thinking at the time that she was such a cool person. Not surprising, all things considered.

When I married my ex-husband, J. drove in a horrible rainstorm from Austin to College Station to get to my wedding. I was so happy to see her, I still remember running across the room. You should see the grin on my face in those photographs. That was back in the early 90s. I moved to Germany shortly after that, and we lost touch. I talked to her once, around 1997 or so, but she moved, I moved … you get the picture. Back then, e-mail wasn’t the option that it is today.

Flash forward to December. I’m reading Deb’s blog. She posts about coming from a huge family. 7 kids. She talks about them being Catholic. She mentions having one older sister and two younger ones. Most importantly, how her family is so full of love. I’m thinking how amusing it is, how it reminds me so much of J.’s family. Then I start thinking some more. Then I scroll to find a photo of Deb with hair … one that made me think that she looked like someone I knew before when I saw it … only to realize she IS somone I know. Or rather someone I once knew – J.’s older sister, the one who took us to Austin for that fun-filled night on 6th street. It was late when I figured it all out, and I would have been screaming if I hadn’t been the only person awake in the house. I was so stunned when it all clicked, I got no sleep that night. I was just giddy.

I’ve since confirmed it with Deb, and we’ve talked. I haven’t had a chance to talk to J. yet – I have to admit some fear in doing so. I’m just strange like that. I’ll get over it.

Now here is where YOU come in. If you caught the sentence there about looking for a photo of Deb with hair, you might have realized that Deb is fighting a huge battle right now. In November, she was diagnosed with Leukemia. Very suddenly, out of nowhere, had been sick for awhile and couldn’t shake it, only to discover the truth. I started a post about her back then, back before I discovered the J. connection, to ask people to PLEASE donate blood. It seemed so lost in the shuffle of my medical woes, which felt so trivial at the time compared to hers, that I never took it out of draft mode. So now that my own dust has settled, I wanted to take a moment to ask you to help her out.

Give blood.

It doesn’t cost you a dime, and it will truly help her. You can donate in her name, and she will receive credits for the units you donate. If you live in Houston, you can donate through the blood bank. But living in Houston isn’t a requirement (I will confirm that with the blood bank tomorrow), you can donate no matter WHERE you live. HELP fight the dracula blood. Help save her life, or someone else’s, with your blood.

You can also help by being tested to be a bone marrow donor. I will find her posts about this subject this weekend, but there is a great need for you to do this. Being a donor is not the intensive process that it used to be, and really – if you could save a life, why wouldn’t you?

Another thing she could use right now is you to lift her up with prayers, positive thoughts, healing vibes, whatever is your thing. Her brother is a donor match for her, so she will be having a transplant in the not too distant future. Chemo has been hard on her. Loneliness is a battle too, between being in the hospital and just being away from her daughter and her family. (Kids are around so many cooties and her immune system is so compromised from the chemo, she can’t spend much time with her and so her daughter is living with her sister right now.) The Internet is her lifeline to the world, and she NEEDS you.

I regret that I personally can’t donate blood – living in Germany in the early 90s for over 6 months disqualifies me. I’m not going to let that stop me though – I want to get as many people as I can to donate blood for HER.

I am constantly amazed by her strength and courage. I am inspired by her every time I read her site or talk to her on the phone. She is incredible. Her daily assignments are so amazing – they always hit home for me, it seems like right when I need to be reminded the most to do something, she talks about it. (That is why there is a photograph of fruit up there – click on it to read the story behind it over on Flickr.) Really, I could go on and on. But you should just go see for yourself.

If you can help, please contact me via e-mail – christine at this domain.com – and I will send you the information this weekend (I need a little time to get it all together) that you need to donate in her name. You can also contact her directly through her site.

Appreciate your life. Be tested to be a bone marrow donor. Give blood. Help save her life.

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BlahBlahBabble Changelog

Fancy Fresh!

As you can see (well, if you’re not reading this via RSS, I guess), Mike upgraded my WP install last night to the brand new fancy fresh WP 2.0. So far, so good! Even though it only took him a few minutes to do the upgrade, I had reached my maximum online time already and could tell that any more typing was not a wise idea, so he hooked me up!
As an added bonus, comments are now going live right away! Yeah! I had one or two waiting for moderation, but not 100 (or 1000, or 2000) like I have sometimes in the past. I never could find what was causing the problem with my anti-spam list in my previous WP install. I’m sure there was a blank space in there somewhere, but I couldn’t see it. I’m just happy that it is behaving now! I had Mike set up Akismet for me also – have to contribute to the greater good of hunting down spam! I’m always hesitant to use services that will affect my site if they go down though – what happens if Akismet goes down?

I decided to go with the default template for the moment until I iron some kinks out with my old one. The Pink Paris template is too narrow for my photographs – I need a main column at least 520 pixels wide – so for now, default it is. I’m sure I’ll be tweaking it more over the next week before I go back to school.

Only complaint so far? I’m used to hitting “Enter” twice between paragraphs when writing a post. When I do that in WP 2.0, it translates to something like 3-4 returns instead of just two. Nice of them to make it double space for me, but it is going to take some getting used to using!

Let me know if you see anything wonky going on – especially if you use the RSS feed. I still need to check that out myself. This is so exciting – I have to admit, I think I was still on WP 1.2! I feel so cutting edge now! (Want to learn more about WordPress 2.0? Newsforge has a great article. Thanks to Matt for the link.)

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BlahBlahBabble Picture Time

Drink Up!

Another one of my photographs from our afternoon at the Cockrell Butterfly Center. To see it in its full glory, click on it to get to Flickr.

The fun thing about photographing butterflies, especially when using the close-up filters, is that I never really know for sure what I got until I get home and view the pictures full size. Some of them looked great in the small preview screen on the camera, but when I got home the part I wanted to see as clear (like the face of the butterfly) was fuzzy – I have such a small margin of focus to work with that it makes it more of a challenge – and gives me more satisfaction when I find the quality photographs in the bunch.

Hand Update: I took the steri-strips off last night (ew) and got to see my incisions for the first time. When did I become so freakin’ squeamish? I never had issues with things like this before, and now … ew. That is all I could say, over and over. Ew.

I’ve gone without my splint for most of the day today (the doctor said I don’t need it, but can wear it if I want) and so far, so good. I do still feel like my hand is curved and I can’t straighten it – like I am holding the computer mouse. I think that is just from the soft-cast and the incision in the center of my hand, and I’m sure as the scab goes away it will get better. I have some pain in my wrist and thumb still, especially when I try to move my hand from side-to-side. I also have difficulties opening things like jars or turning doornobs. My overall recovery time is 6 weeks though, and we aren’t even at the 3 week mark yet, so I know some of this will improve with time.

I’m off to try to knit now. I signed up in November for a class on Aran sweater knitting next Tuesday taught by Beth Brown-Reinsel and I want to make sure I’m up for it! I would really hate to miss this class, but there is a waiting list to get in. If I’m not up to knitting, I can pass my spot on to someone else. The doctor said I’m ready; I hope he is right!

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BlahBlahBabble

Ew, Ew, Ew, Ew…

I had my post-op appointment today and they removed my stiches. Ew, ew, ew. That is the WORST feeling in the world. Mike said the doctor went from smiling and being jovial to having a very serious look on his face when he realized that I was, in fact, crying. It was that icky.

My hand feels weird, which I expected after basically being in a cast for two weeks. It feels fragile, like just opening a door is going to snap it off. I know that isn’t the case, but I’m still wearing my old wrist splint until I get over the strange feeling.

I have butterfly strips on my hand now, so I still can’t get it wet until tomorrow night. I’m just happy to have my hand back. And my thumb, my thumb! Oh, how I love having a thumb again, even if it feels strange at the moment. Plus it has that craked skin, “cast for two weeks” look right now. I don’t care though – it is beautiful! A thumb!

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BlahBlahBabble

May You Have Something Wonderful to Drink as You Ring In the New Year!

May You Have Something Wonderful to Drink as You Ring In the New Year!

Photo taken with the lens my parents gave me for Christmas and a +2 diopter filter. More details at Flickr, just click the picture.

We’re heading to Kenny & Elaine’s to ring in the New Years with friends, good food & games. It will be a nice way to start off 2006. This is the 2 year anniversary of our engagement too – I can’t believe it has only been two years – what a wonderful time it has been. I couldn’t ask for a more wonderful husband and a better family.

Happy New Year! Here is to a fabulous 2006!