Dad’s Answering Machine Speech

I usually wake up before my alarm goes off. I was so tired the other day I slept until ‘the alarm’ went off. Let me share with you about my alarm. I have an ultra-cool alarm to awaken me. How many people can claim to have a cool alarm to wake up to?

There was a day and age before all this modern digital technology. In those days, the typical home had one phone and one answering machine. We didn’t have “voicemail,” we had messages on our answering machine.

Media and storage capabilities have changed over the years. These older answering machines used something that has nearly died out now, “tape.” It wasn’t a sticky kind of tape, but a type of physical medium that sound could be stored on. I still have some of these micro cassette tapes lying around with various recordings.

So many memories of the old style answering machines. Come home, walk down the hall, look at this beige box, and see if a red light was blinking. If it was, that meant there were messages!

It was always fun to get messages in those days. Answering machines became popular in the later 1970s. I recall a time that if you weren’t home and could hear the phone ring, you didn’t get any communication outside the home. Email, personal cell phones, the internet, those things didn’t exist. We had the family phone and it cost a lot of money to make a phone call, unless the distance was considered local.  Just calling six miles away from one small town to another in 1996 would have been around 10 cents a minute, give or take, depending on your plan. Out of state phone calls were more expensive, so those were kept short.

One day I got an answering machine message that has been really special to me. We were living in Bishop, TX at the time and the red light was blinking. Dad did something he rarely did, which was to leave a message on my answering machine. I recall chuckling at the message. As a matter of fact, I was so happy with his message that I found a way to get that micro cassette out and I transferred the audio over to my new little pc computer I had just purchased. I have managed to keep that (now) digital audio file all these years.

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dad (left) and his brother Clancy (right) on a boat during one of Matagorda, Texas infamous “river rises.” Matagorda now has a levee and the rises are stuff of legend. Could that be a mailbox or a street sign between the boat and house in the distance?

Along comes the iPhone and all the modern features it offers. I found out how to import that phone message from dad into iTunes. I then learned how to assign the answering machine message to my alarm.

I get to wake up to dad’s voice, something I treasure more now than ever.

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dad (left) and his brother Clancy (“uncle Bo” to me) outside their home in Matagorda. I’m guessing they were hitting or near the teen years in this pic.

Here’s the transcript of what he said:

“I was just calling to check up on ya, sure hate to talk to a darn machine!  It don’t answer any questions whatsoever. What I just wanted to find out is what is happening as far as the family reunion and all that, how’s the babies doing, how’s Janice doing, and if you got supper read? But I know if you ain’t home you don’t got supper ready. But I guess I’ll have to call you back later on tonight, tomorrow, or the next day. Alright, goodbye.”

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dad (left) with “Smitty,” his brother-in-law. I believe that is my cousin Nancy, Smitty’s first child, he is holding. Two fishing buddies. Keep in mind, fishing wasn’t their hobby, it was their occupation. They lived off of Matagorda Bay until that was shut down by law.

“If you got supper ready”. I love that phrase!

It conjures so many memories of dad. Oh my, if you only knew dad! He was a professional food pusher. When you came to his home, you were going to get a mess of shrimp, or a pot of beans with corn bread, or even the gold standard: white bread with butter and “bunny rabbit” (Brer Rabbit Brand) molasses. The food might change depending on the season of his life, but food was expected and central to any visit with dad.

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dad (left) and an unknown deckhand on a shrimp boat. I’m going to guess this was in the early 1970’s shortly before or right after mom/dad divorced. I’m thinking that is a grouper, feedback? That might make enough fish for one or two meals! 

Want to hear dad’s answering machine speech?

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dad (left) and his brother-in-law Smitty a few years later. Not sure the location or date, but going to guess the later 1970’s? 

Today, January 15th, 2017, is a special day. It is dad’s 83rd birthday! I wish he were still here with us to hug, call, and hear his voice. Yet that isn’t the case. He died to the day, 3 years exactly, that I was diagnosed with Burkitt’s Lymphoma.

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dad with my step mom Terry and their second son together, Burt. This was taken at a family reunion on June 6th, 1992 in Matagorda, Texas. 

Want to know what day that was? Valentines day, 2008. I was diagnosed on Valentines day 2008 and I received a phone call Valentines day 2011 to inform me dad had passed unexpectedly. It is indeed a bittersweet day for me.

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dad with Eric Scott (I think), in his natural habitat: the kitchen. Eric is my first adopted foster brother. Although I do remember one other foster child who might be the one in the picture. My brain is chemo fried, what can I say? Notice the sea shells hanging around? Always something water related in our lives.

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dad carrying out the trash. I’m thinking this was mid 1990s. You can’t see it in this picture, but there is an anchor or two that adorn the yard. 

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family Christmas photo. I was going to try to go through and systematically label and name and explain each person. Oh my, not sure I have enough time between now and eternity. Suffice it to say, dad and step mom in the back to the left, I’m in the blue scrubs on the right front, and the rest are a wonderful mixture of brothers, sisters, my wife and daughters, and nieces/nephews. Just for fun, the little squirt up front near me with the HUGE grin with his legs crossed is one of my younger brothers who I spoke with two nights ago, he is about to enter nursing school. The cute little girl to the left of my right shoulder (and behind the HUGE grinner) is entering the second semester of nursing school. Both are going to be RNs like me. 

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dad and I March 4th, 2008. I was almost three weeks into my first round of chemo and had just lost my hair. Dad had lymphoma also, diagnosed in 1993 if memory serves correctly. His lymphoma was very different from mine, though, his was very slow growing.

I suppose I could go down memory lane for a long time. Suffice it to say, dad was a normal good man like most dads. He was a man of few words in his younger years and grew to be a bit more talkative as time went on. Like myself and many dads, he softened with age as he could focus more on life and relationships and not focus so much on working so hard to provide for family. He never did stop working to the day he died. Dad was a very, very hard worker and instilled in me a solid work habit. While I hated working on the back deck of the shrimp boat in summers, what would I ever give to do that these days?

What would I give to hear one more answering machine message from dad?

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dad on the back deck of his shrimp boat, the Ida B., named after his mother who died when he was 12, I think. I was balancing on the “bridle cables” over the water, holding onto a rail with one hand and the camera in other hand. Oh to hear the sailor speech he was giving me at that moment…”hot dammit boy, you and that camera are going to wind up in the water, get down from there!” He wasn’t happy with me at that moment. I’m glad I took this pic! 

The last three weeks of his life, he called me several times and started talking, just chatting, about anything and everything. I learned more about him in that 3 week period than most of the previous years combined. He shared about family, his recent work activities, memories of early life, and I ate every bit of it up. I was actually surprised at how chatty he was. Little did I know that was about to end. I am grateful for our relationship and how close we became by the end of his natural life.

Love you dad. Happy birthday and I look forward to you waking me up next time.

Posted in cancer, Child, family, Fathers, food, happy, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Dodged a Bullet

I had Burkitt’s Lymphoma twice, once in 2008, and again in 2014. The second diagnosis resulted in two kinds of chemotherapeutic agents being used and then a stem cell transplant.

On December 13th and 14th of 2016, I had my two year stem cell transplant follow up appointment. It was intended to be one long day of testing on December 14th where the evening ending off with a visit with the oncologist to discuss all the findings.

I wanted to change this schedule a bit despite UT Southwestern’s groans to the contrary. They actually pushed back a bit over the phone stating it is hard to reschedule so many tests. I can respect that. I wanted to attend a meeting at work that was important for me on the 14th and told them to figure out what they could do. I held firm. They managed to do half of the testing between 7am and noon on the 13th and then 2-5 pm on the 14th.

My day started as usual: finding parking. I kept my parking ticket stub as UT Southwestern will only make you pay once a day for parking and I was going to several locations.

I started with a pulmonary function test on the morning of the 13th. I’m glad they did it then. I had started coming down with a lung infection the day prior.

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this sign randomly posted on the wall pointed in the direction of an endless number of unmarked doors

Confusion reigned on the first location. They were moving in that very morning to a newly rebuilt location in an old building. No signs except the one above were visible. Elevators were working intermittently. I caught one on the way up, feeling fortunate to have got it.

I was a bit lost in the whole deal honestly. The information desk said to go up to the second floor and take a right as you come out of the elevators. There are elevators on both sides of the hallway facing each other. Which was “to the right?” That could vary depending on which one they meant you were coming out of. I starting opening doors randomly, walking around, and no one knew much of anything at that point. I eventually wound up in a lobby behind an unmarked door with a lady who apologized. She said they were moving that morning and it was chaos.

The first test was for lung function. I found that ironic considering I seemed to be coming down with lung junk. The PFT, or pulmonary function test, isn’t too bad a deal. They make one sit in a glass box that seals shut tightly. I have to puff in and out in a rhythmic pattern into a breathing device.img_8663

It is a bizarre test to be honest. The other half of the test involves breathing in certain gases and then the machine checks to see if my lungs are actually moving the gases into my body sufficiently or not.

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yummy carbon monoxide, methane, oxygen, and nitrogen for the PFT

When I was through with that, I found the stairs and went down to the first floor. I overhead a security desk tell an elderly couple their cardiology appointment was on the 9th floor and they would have to take the stairs. Nine floors worth of stairs for an elderly couple and one of them was clearly ill. The fella with the oxygen tubing stood there speechless. How was he to manage 9 flights of stairs? I walked on, not sure how this day would turn out for them.

I walked a ways to the second building. I didn’t get lost despite it being located across ‘the campus.’ That was a bone density scan. I had the pleasure of enjoying laying in odd positions while they scanned various bones to see if I had lost any bone density. Then I had to get in my car to drive to the next building for my next test. I have no choice but to use Valet parking at this location, they offer no other option.

The final test for today is rather a complicated test called a PET scan. It tests for the presence of tumor activity. That is always a joy. Got undressed and put on their paper gown. Then they started an IV, I received an injection of radioactive sugar (serious), drink this nasty liquid, and then lie still for one hour. Thereafter I walk across the hall and lie still under the machine for another 20 minutes while it checks to see if there is any hyper metabolic activity (tumors!) growing.

Altogether, it took 1/2 day to complete those three tests. My next event had a moment of friction. I went to retrieve my car from valet as I have done for over 2 years at this exact location. A new employee was working behind the desk. I have seen few people so clearly unhappy, she was literally frowning. No hello, goodbye, kiss my grits or anything, just takes the ticket and states “that will be $20.” I said, “nope, been doing this 2 years and I know the rules, once I pay somewhere on campus once a day, I don’t have to pay a second time that same day.” You wouldn’t believe how rude she was, it was quite the scene she created. I said only that one sentence, never said another word, and she was so grumpy. The security or manager dude apologized and told me to proceed.

I was done after that. Since I was in the neighborhood, hit my favorite burger shop: Maple and Motor. Yummy. Can’t beat their bacon jalapeño cheeseburger.

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Then I went home and rested. The next day I made my meeting and then drove back to UT Southwestern for lab testing and then to meet with the oncologist. I first made the obligatory climb up “the stairs.” Won’t be denied that if I can help it!

They then managed to milk my body for a 55 gallon drum full of blood, testing me for everything and nothing. Then I waited. This is where it gets interesting.

I sat in the small oncology office waiting for the oncologist to come in. I have done this a lot since I was diagnosed with Burkitt’s Lymphoma the first time in 2008.

I can read their mood based on their entry and introduction into the room.

Today’s entry wasn’t good.

Instead of going directly to the computer to pull up results, he pulls up a chair and sits down looking directly at me. Then I realized he had nothing in his hands and he was resting his elbows in a compassionate way on his knees, eye level with me.

He didn’t say a word for a brief moment. An awkward silence filled the room. The position of empathy with a pause is a direct signal to take a deep breath and hang on.

He asked me how I doing. I shared that I was coming down with some kind of lung junk the last 24 hours, my nose was congested, coughing a bit, and otherwise ok. He said “we need to talk, your PET scan lit up with a possible tumor in your neck.”

You know, I’ve been through this twice now, once in 2008 and again in 2014. Nothing can prepare one for such news. I don’t care who you are and how ready you may think you are. I was caught off guard and the oxygen left the room. Time seems to stand still in such moments and the immediate sense of heightened everything is overwhelming.

He said the PET scan showed an area on my neck of hyper metabolic activity. The rate of uptake was a 4.5. As a comparison, the uptake of my tumor (seen in the pic below) was in the double digits.

He asked if he could biopsy it.

I stared at him and felt my blood draining away honestly. With only a moments pause to make sure I wasn’t going to get emotional, I said to the effect my position hasn’t changed on this topic. If my cancer returns, I’ll go straight into hospice. I don’t have another battle in me. This last battle lasted 15 months and sucked me dry. We had already had “the talk” and he knew my position. He again confirmed I would choose hospice and not any form of treatment.

He said he understood. Then he shared that the radiologist and he honestly had already decided it was probably more likely a lymph node doing its job. He said “I’m honestly glad to see you are sick, fits with the PET scan picture, although it could be the very start of a tumor. We won’t actually know unless we biopsy the tissue.”

These oncologists are good at just saying it like it is. He said the truth is, if it is my cancer coming back, we’ll know in about 14 days as the knot in my neck will balloon outward quickly, just like it did in July 2014. Below are two pictures, the first being the night I discovered the tumor, then 25 days later.

The first pic above was taken June 7th, 2014. Twenty five days later, you can see the size of the tumor on July 2nd, 2014 as I was preparing to enter for my first round of chemo. Burkitt’s lymphoma is the world’s fastest growing cancer and we both knew if I had Burkitt’s, it would be over with on a short order.

I walked down “the stairs” and the same grumpy lady was behind the desk. Her frown from a distance was clear and unmistakable. I was in no mood to tangle with her and found my wallet, prepared to pay the fee. Today she didn’t try to charge me and I was nice to her. She treated me the same as she did the day before. She clearly is not a people person.

I went home in a  deep funk, needless to say. I was not in the mood for my normal hamburger stop. I shared with my wife and a few tears flowed. My wife and I decided to not really tell anyone else. I know mom might be mad (sorry mom!) but I didn’t see any reason to make people share the angst my wife and I were walking through.

I kept going forward, worked as usual, but it was not easy. I was pondering bucket list activities just in case. I rehashed several thoughts I have chewed over before, such as “what is the meaning of life,” “how to make every moment count,” “what is the most important thing for that one moment,” and other such depth of meaning topics.

It was a mind game and an emotional time for me. Insult seemed to add to injury. My six year old laptop then died on me. I ended up dealing with something difficult for me that I won’t otherwise share, but it was hard. I took antibiotics for 10 days to fight the growing lung infection. Scheduled an appointment for a hearing test, which will be on January 20th, as I have come to the conclusion I very well might have hearing problems. I shaved off my beard so I could watch my neck really closely. Despite such potentially heavy news, life goes on. I didn’t totally fall apart, but had some somber moments and emotional ones for sure.

Christmas was ok for me. I am alive and no knot appeared on my neck! I’ve slowly started sharing with one person here and there what happened. I didn’t choose to go public with this ordeal for a while or share it with many as I am honestly tired of the whole thing. I guess it is my burden to carry now.

I woke up Tuesday January 10th not feeling well. Got weak, couldn’t seem to quit coughing up nasty stuff. I have been in the hospital before for pneumonia and know it can take me down if I don’t act on it. Off to Carenow I went and they did an x-ray and blood tests. The x-ray confirmed fluid in the right lung and that both lungs ‘were really nasty’ according to the doctor. She did say I have pneumonia and the race is on to keep me from going into the hospital.

I endured my second most painful injection ever. I didn’t realize Rocephin IM hurt like that. I nearly saw stars. But it doesn’t hurt as bad as Phenergan; that still takes the cake for supremely painful shot. I was given Ampicillin to take 3 times a day for 10 days and a z-pack to munch on. Joy! I promptly went home and laid on the couch all night.

In the dark.

Just laid there.

Maybe that is just what I needed to do. I had *zero* energy and was wiped. I concluded my cancer is not back right now but I do have pneumonia.

It is now Thursday night and I’m feeling a touch better. The lungs have slowed down the production of yucky green stuff, the neck still has no visible knot. Life must go on.

I feel I have just dodged a bullet this last few weeks and am grateful to be able to write on my blog that all is going to return to normal. Thank you Lord!

Posted in antibiotics, cancer, care, christian, family, healing, Hospice, recovery, stem cell transplant, Tumor, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments

Dear Kitten

This is a self explanatory video. Really cute depiction of senior cat giving instructions to the new kitten. Really worth two minutes of time to watch!

Click here to watch

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Christmas through the eyes of kids

You like small kids? You need to watch this short video. It is so cute. 

Adults act out what the kids say about the birth of Christ. Really cute and original. Thanks to Southland Christian Church for putting this together. 

You can click this sentence to watch this video

Posted in baby, celebration, Child, christian, humanity, humor, joy | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Opportunity for Super Bowl Tickets

Thought I would let you know a friend of mine has two tickets for the 2017 Super Bowl. He paid $1,700 each and didn’t realize last year when he bought them that this was going to be on the same day as his wedding.

His fiancé and he looked at various options. If you are interested he is looking for someone to take his place.

It’s at St Peter’s Church, in Spring Branch at 3pm. Her name is Sally, she’s 5’4″, about 115 lbs, good cook… She will be the one in the white dress.

Posted in Cowboys, Dallas, Fathers, Football, Games, generosity, humor, kindness, love | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Until It Is Denied

People don’t know what they have until it is denied. My thoughts on this come out of two seasons of life where I was denied much due to cancer and chemotherapy. I have fought and defeated Burkitt’s lymphoma in 2008 (read it here) and again in 2014 (videos and blog links in this wordpress blog).

One specific moment in time set in motion many thoughts about not knowing what one has until it is denied. I was slowly shuffling into the oncology office in March 2008 after having spent about 6 weeks in the hospital. The automatic doors opened and there it was, staring at me, just daring me to try. Really, it wasn’t as much as a dare as it was a taunting.

The birth of desire sometimes occurs when a boundary is established that wasn’t previously there. I never knew the challenge existed until it stared me directly in the face and I was unable to respond as I normally would. I didn’t know how much I could want to do something that was otherwise rather mundane.

What would have the gall to taunt a person suffering the effects of severe chemotherapy? What would be so bold as to induce jealousy in a cancer victim, someone in the grips of weakness due to chemotherapy and anemia?

A simple flight of stairs.

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These are the stairs that taunted me during my second battle with Burkitt’s Lymphoma

I was so tired walking into my oncology office that I had to sit down at the first bench. I sat and rested. While sitting on the bench, the stairs stared at me. Their escalating silence was loud and bold. The sheer size was impressive and the longing was birthed consciously to scale this impediment in front of me. I can’t recall having ever had the conscious desire, an actual yearning, to walk up a flight of stairs until it was denied me.

Let me ask you, how long is one minute?

Think carefully now….

I’ll tell you my answer to that question: depends on which side of the bathroom door you are on. Sixty seconds can be a flash of time or an eternity. Somehow bladder and/or bowel pain can slow down time proportionate to the level of emergency.

It is all about perspective people. I didn’t know my perspective on stairs could change so profoundly.

My second time battling cancer I was ready for the challenge and emotional turmoil of being denied certain physical norms. When I saw The Stairs just gloating at me, I took on the challenge whenever possible. I was so freaking determined to not let the stairs beat me that I scaled them probably more than I should have.

It felt good, too.

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Just having scaled “The Stairs” at the oncology office. I was so proud I made it I had to memorialize the moment with a photo.

Don’t pick on people, look down on others, when they express simple desires denied them. You don’t know the perspective that can impact a person’s life until you’ve walked in their shoes. I would have never known stairs would be so personal to me. Things as simple as walking a certain distance, transferring from one chair to another, and other such mundane things become really personal when they are no longer taken for granted.

Want to know how personal it has become? When I go to work now, I am steadily parking higher up in the garage. It isn’t so much an exercise thing, for I don’t value exercise as I should based on the choices I make other hours in the day and on days off. But when I am faced with those stairs at work, it is personal. Now when I see stairs in front of me, I can’t explain the inner stirring that occurs as I desire to surmount that obstacle that once mocked my desire to live.

I have this something that burns inside me that I must conquer regularly simply because there was a time when I was denied that basic ability. It is personal to me and I love the feeling of being able to choose, or not, to scale the stairs. Try to go easy on people who have odd quirks based on trauma in their life.

I’d like to share one other perspective that I didn’t know would be different based on the effects of chemo. Simply going to the drug store was an exercise in comedy because I was denied hair. Where I would have never noticed brushes and Rogaine before, it was a temptation and taunt that I could not deny.

I still walk by those items and see them differently now. img_1243

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You just never know what your perspective will be until you’ve had your spirit deeply broken due to personal tragedy. You never know what can become personal and powerful until it is denied.

Posted in Acceptance, burkitts, cancer, chemotherapy, Independence, lymphoma, stairs, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Christian Humor

Can such a thing really exist? I think so!

As a Christian man since 1985, I find humor lacking in church circles. Honestly, a lot of us could stand to lighten up. Evidently I’m not alone with this thought.

The Babylon Bee, your trusted source for Christian news satire, is a fresh offering as of 2016. Take a look at their front page today:

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Today’s Babylon Bee Christian Satire Webpage. Way too funny!

According to Wikipedia,

The Babylon Bee is a satirical evangelical Christian website. It was created by Adam Ford,[1][2] and was launched on March 1, 2016.[3] It models itself on The Onion.[4]

As is true with any steady humor attempts, things might get edgy. They have received some criticism for a topic or two that might have pushed the limits too far, but I’m going to say that for the moment, I love the majority of what they are doing.

The headline “Nation Shocked, Horrified As Christians Hold Christian Position” got my attention. Follow that link and read the great take they have over the witch hunt occurring over this Waco couple attending a church that holds traditional Christian values. I couldn’t help but laugh quit hard on that one.

Ever think the music on a “Christian” music station can be repetitive? Then follow that link, it is satire at its best. Ever fallen asleep during a sermon? You need to read that one! Ever feel like a church is a bit too stiff? Then you need to read that one! Ever heard a scripture used in a way you thought was just odd? You REALLY need to read that one!

I tell you what, a few of them were a bit edgy for my taste, but not too many. I found most of the jokes and news articles (all satire that I read) quite tasty and well done, well deserved, and I hope Adam Ford can remain humble, focused, and that success won’t go to his head nor change his direction.

We need a good dose of humor in America today. The church has needed a witty take on church life for a very long time. Folks, now you have a place to go

Posted in christian, happy, humanity, humor, joy, news, Satire, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

A Priceless Photo!

I work in a neonatal ICU. I’ve had the joy of doing this off and on since first starting at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston in 1990 right out of nursing school. I love my job.

I took care of Kasen off and on for a few months in 2016. He was a super tiny little guy and went through the usual course of maturing his body systems to the point he was able to be discharged to his parents.

Thanks to the propagation of social media, it is now easy to keep up with little NICU graduates as they grow and take joy along with the family at various stages of growth. I have one such moment that occurred in the last few days I want to share with you. This is shared with permission.

Lindy and Rob decided to do the obligatory professional family photo shoot. Lindy then posted a super cute picture. I initially glanced briefly at the picture and thought it was a nice normal family newborn photo shoot. But then I looked again and locked onto Kasen’s expression.

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Photo Shoot fee $50. Full set of professional printed pictures $150. Expression on a NICU graduate’s face during smooch pic: priceless!!

I have no idea what the photo shoot cost, just putting prices out there simply for humor’s sake. I know that a picture like this is exceptional. What a priceless photo!

Posted in baby, Beauty, expression, family, graduate, humor, joy, kindness, love, Premature, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Any Song, Any Key, Any Style

 

I played in band during school and have dabbled in writing a little music. I attempted to play the piano for a short while. I’m here to tell you, it is not easy to learn.

Unless you’re Derek Paravicini, that is. Derek is a musical savant, a distinguished musician. His story is stunning.

His discovery of communication through 88 keys is deeply touching. From pushing a piano teacher off the bench at an early age so he could karate chop on the piano, he now leads command performances that wow audiences world-wide. Of special note is his ability to recall any song, play it in any key, and in any given musical style.

All this from a man who cannot count to the number three.

I love highlighting stories that are amazing. This is one of those stories. Want to be amazed? Then click this link to a 60 minutes story on Derek Paravicini.

https://youtu.be/Ak2jxmhCH1M <–click here if the above link doesn’t work.

Posted in genius, musical, savant, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

A Mannequin Thanksgiving

We went to a friend’s house for Thanksgiving. The suggestion was made to do a mannequin challenge. 

The rest is history!

This was so much fun!

Click here to watch!

Posted in celebration, Cowboys, Dallas, family, Football, Games, happy, humor, joy | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment