October 2009

Brenden’s Last Wishes

Friday, October 30th, 2009

This story is about a year old, but it just pulls at our heartstrings!  We could all learn a lot from this little boy.

By Elisa Jaffe

081107_brenden_foster_lg

BOTHELL, Wash. — The day I met Brenden Foster, I met an old soul in an 11 year old’s body.

“I should be gone in a week or so,” he said calmly.

When I asked him what he thought were the best things in life, Brenden said, “Just having one.”

I didn’t understand how this child, who was a year younger than my own son, could be so courageous facing death.

“It happens. It’s natural,” Brenden told me.

Three years ago, doctors diagnosed Brenden with leukemia. The boy who once rushed through homework so he could play outside found himself confined to a bed. But there was no confining his spirit.

“I had a great time. And until my time comes, I’m going to keep having a great time,” he said.

Brenden’s selfless dying wish was to help the homeless.

“They’re probably starving, so give’em a chance,” he said, “food and water.”

But Brenden was too ill to feed them on his own. So volunteers from Emerald City Lights Bike Ride passed out some 200 sandwiches to the homeless in Seattle.

Then Brenden’s last wish took on a life of its own.

A TV station in Los Angeles held a food drive. School kids in Ohio collected cans. People in Pensacola, Florida gathered goods.

And here in Western Washington, KOMO viewers from all over took part in the Stuff the Truck food drive in Brenden’s honor. Hundreds with generous hearts donated six and a half huge truck loads of groceries and more than $60,000 in cash to benefit Northwest Harvest and Food Lifeline.

Brenden touched hearts all over the world. His wish came true, and he lived to see it.

“He had the joy of seeing all of the beautiful response to his last wish,” said his grandmother, Patricia McMorrow. “It gives him great peace and he knows that his life has meaning.”

“He’s left a legacy and he’s only 11,” said his mother, Wendy Foster. “He’s done more than most people dream of doing just by making a wish.”

Days before dying, Brenden surprised us with a sudden burst of energy. He wanted to get off the oxygen, hop out of bed and go buy a video game. Wise beyond his years, but still a kid.

“I have been so blessed to have this child. A mother couldn’t ask for a better son,” Wendy said.

The B-Man, as his family called him, had one more wish before going: sprinkle wildflower seeds to save the bees. He had heard bees were in trouble.

Someone answered B-Man’s wish. A retired pilot asked his pilot and flight attendant friends to sprinkle wild flowers around the world, from Bali to Brazil, on Brenden’s behalf.

When asked what made him sad, Brenden said, “When someone gives up.”

Brenden Foster never gave up. Even as he clung to his last hours of life, Brenden kept giving.

“Follow your dreams. Don’t let anything stop you,” he said.

You can help us fight the battle against cancer today by purchasing the I’m Tired of Cancer bracelet. We give half the sale of every bracelet to Bogart Pediatric Cancer Research Program and Concern Foundation.

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Cancer | No Comments »Email Email

The Bottom Line

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Our charity partner, Diabetes Research Institute, sent us this blog post that they found.  We thought it was important to share, to show just how hard it is living with diabetes and why we are so tired of it!

This is from Sara Knicks’ blog on Diabetes Daily:

This has been one of the hardest posts for me to write, and I have been writing it and deleting it for a few days now because I can’t figure out what I want to say.

Basically it comes down to this:

diabetesbraceletblog

I am tired of diabetes. I am tired of writing about it. I am tired of reading about it. I am tired of answering questions. I am tired of carb counting. I am tired of changing my pump sites. I am tired of refilling my insulin pump. I am tired of knowing that the routine I am so tired of will never change.

I don’t want anyone to think that I am not taking care of myself. I am. I might not be checking my blood sugar 8-12 times a day like I used to - but I am still checking. I am taking my insulin with every meal. I am doing the bottom line tasks that are required of me. I almost feel like I should tell you my averages (I actually wrote them here and deleted them), but the numbers really don’t matter. And I know my family who reads this will freak out, but I wanted to be honest with everyone, let you know how I am feeling and why I have been so absent.

I don’t know what this means. I don’t know what I will write next. I don’t know when I will write next. I just know I am so tired of this.

diabetesbraceletblogusYou can help put an end to diabetes by purchasing the I’m Tired of Diabetes bracelets.  We give half of every bracelet you buy to Diabetes Research Institute. Together, we can cure diabetes!

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »Email Email

Breast Cancer Awareness - 12 Things You Should Know

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

breast_cancer_awareness_mothIt’s Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and here’s an article from delmarvanow.com that has 12 things you should know about the disease.

1. Clinical breast exams are as important as mammograms. Mammograms starting at age 40 are crucial (get them earlier if you have a family history of the disease), but they’re an imperfect screening tool, especially in women who have dense breasts. That’s why an annual clinical breast exam from a doctor is a must.

2. Don’t panic if you get called for a mammogram “redo” or have calcifications. Many women over 40 have calcium deposits (calcifications) in their breasts, and most of them are benign.

3. Get your folate. While experts say that an overall healthy diet may help prevent breast cancer, a growing body of research suggests that getting enough of the B vitamin folate (in leafy green vegetables, beans and fortified cereals) may help mitigate the increased risk associated with drinking alcohol.

4. Being overweight is riskiest after menopause. “In postmenopausal women, one of the most significant sources of estrogen comes from body fat,” explained Dr. Isaacs. “So if you’re overweight, you have higher amounts of circulating estrogen, which could stimulate breast cancer growth.” And it doesn’t take much: Losing even 10 pounds may help lower your risk.

5. Active women are less likely to develop and die from breast cancer. Regular exercise has consistently been associated with a lower risk of breast cancer. “Any type of exercise is likely to help by lowering estrogen levels,” Dr. Seewaldt explained.

6. Steer clear of soy supplements. Soy contains isoflavones, which can act like estrogen in your body and potentially stimulate the growth of certain types of breast cancer, explained Seema A. Khan, M.D., a professor of surgery and co-leader of the breast cancer program at Northwestern University in Chicago. But soy foods — edamame, soy milk, tofu — are fine.

7. Lumpy breasts don’t mean a higher risk of cancer. Many women have cysts in their breasts that come and go throughout their menstrual cycles (which are also known as fibrocystic changes). Feeling any kind of lump or bump can be scary, but these types of cysts don’t typically lead to cancer, Dr. Seewaldt points out. Pain also isn’t usually a sign of breast cancer. If you have pain in one or both breasts, rest assured: It’s probably due to hormonal changes, a benign cyst, a ligament strain or another condition, said Dr. Isaacs.

8. Breast cancer risk is not 1 in 8 for all women. That stat applies to lifetime risk, assuming you live to 85 or beyond. At age 40, the average woman has a 1 in 69 chance of getting breast cancer in the next 10 years; at 50, the risk rises to 1 in 42; at 60, it’s 1 in 29; and at 70, it’s 1 in 27. Which means that statistically speaking, women are at most risk for breast cancer in their 70s and 80s-but that’s when breast cancer has the highest cure rate because women in that age group usually get a less aggressive and more treatable form of the disease, said Dr. Seewaldt.

9. Chemotherapy isn’t always a given. These days, doctors do genetic profiling on a breast cancer tumor (using advanced tests like the Oncotype DX or MammaPrint) to gauge a woman’s risk of a recurrence. If chances are low, doctors may not advise chemotherapy.

10. Taking certain medications can help. Tamoxifen and raloxifene are drugs that can block estrogen’s ability to promote breast cancer. They lower the chances of developing the disease by about 50 percent in women who carry the BRCA1 or 2 mutation, said Dr. Brown.

11. If it’s caught very early, breast cancer has more than a 90 percent survival rate in the U.S.

12. If you have the BRCA1 or 2 mutations, removing your ovaries lowers your risk by nearly 50 percent.

breast_cancer_awarenessIt’s Breast Cancer Awareness Month. You can help us fight the battle against breast cancer today by purchasing any of the I’m Tired of Breast Cancer bracelet. We give half the sale of every bracelet to Breastcancer.org.

Bookmark and Share
Tags: ,
Posted by admin | Posted in Breast Cancer | No Comments »Email Email

Cat Saved From Inside an SUV Engine

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

awwcutepuppyYou can help us fight against animal cruelty today by purchasing any of the I’m Tired of Animal Cruelty products (bracelets, t-shirts & bumper stickers). We give half of everything you buy to Best Friends Animal Society. Together, we can fight animal cruelty and help save the animals!

kittyincarIn between catching criminals and deterring terrorism, the NYPD occasionally comes to the rescue of one of New York’s four-legged residents.

Police officers responded to Arthur Avenue in the Bronx where a driver of an SUV said an animal was stuck in his vehicle’s engine Monday afternoon.

Indeed, when officers looked inside they saw a cat jammed in the engine block of the 2005 Nissan Murano, police said.

The driver told cops that he had driven about 2 miles from Marcy Place and the Grand Concourse before pulling over and realizing something was wrong.

Members of the NYPD’s elite Emergency Service Unit came to the scene. ESU’s Det. Jeffrey King and Det. Kris Cataldo worked to free the cat.

The cat was then taken to Animal Care and Control in good condition.

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »Email Email

Tax Deductions Proposed for Pet Care

Friday, October 16th, 2009

You can help us fight against animal cruelty today by purchasing any of the I’m Tired of Animal Cruelty products (bracelets, t-shirts & bumper stickers). We give half of everything you buy to Best Friends Animal Society. Together, we can fight animal cruelty and help save the animals!

pet_collageHas anybody heard of the new bill introduced to allow tax deductions for pet care?

If passed, it could cover up to $3,500 of tax deductions for costs such as veterinary care for legally owned, domestic animals.

It was drafted in order to encourage responsible pet care and reduce pet abandonment cases, especially in the current economic downturn. It also mentions the positive effects of a human-animal bond on emotional and physical well being.

Some, however, worry that this might encourage people to get an animal simply for the tax break. What do you think?

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »Email Email

Funny Dog Signs!

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

americanbulldogjoedirtbuckeyepuppyYou can help us fight against animal cruelty today by purchasing any of the I’m Tired of Animal Cruelty products. We give half of everything you buy to Best Friends Animal Society. Together, we can fight animal cruelty and help save the animals!

dogsign2

I dare you. I double dog dare you.

dogsign3

Scratch & Sniff. What about eat?

dogsign4

Excuse me?

dogsign5

Beware of the flying dogs!

Source: Dogster.com

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »Email Email

Husband & Wife Both Battling Breast Cancer

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

homepage_bc_monthIt’s Breast Cancer Awareness Month. You can help us fight the battle against breast cancer today by purchasing any of the I’m Tired of Breast Cancer bracelet. We give half the sale of every bracelet to Breastcancer.org.

MONROE, Ohio - A husband and wife are both undergoing treatment for breast cancer in a case that illustrates how the disease can strike both sexes.Mike and Barbara Welsh, of Monroe, in southwestern Ohio, each had surgery this year after separate discoveries that they had breast cancer.

Barbara Welsh, 63, had surgery in January, went through chemotherapy and is now starting radiation treatments.

After surgery in July, her 62-year-old husband is determining the next step in his recovery, which may include chemotherapy and radiation. He had a modified radical mastectomy on his right breast.

Mike Welsh says he is speaking up about his cancer to make other men aware that breast cancer is not just something that strikes women.

“If I could help 10 people or 100, that’s a start,” said Welsh, a retired AK Steel bricklayer.

Male breast cancer is still rare, with about 1,900 cases expected to be diagnosed this year, with about 440 men dying from the illness.

Mike Welsh first noticed something was wrong when he got into his car and felt discomfort as he strapped the seat belt across his chest.

After his wife began her treatments, he asked his doctor if men could get breast cancer. His doctor referred him to the Compton Center at Atrium Medical Center, in Middletown, where he got the diagnosis.

The couple, married 41 years, laugh about their experience to help stave off the depression that sunk in after their diagnoses.

“You’ve got to laugh at it,” Mike Welsh said. “You have good days, bad days and better days. We’re having fun with it.”

He and his wife joke that she glows from radiation treatment that she has begun.

“I’m going to set her outside for Halloween,” Mike Welsh said.

Source: Dayton Daily News

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »Email Email

Rescue Dogs to Appear in 101 Dalmatians Musical

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

001074180When animal trainer Joel Slaven first got asked to train dogs for the upcoming 101 Dalmatians musical, he refused, remembering the frenzy of people running out to buy a dalmatian following the release of the Disney movie, and the ensuing flood of dalmatians showing up in shelters. However, after talking to the producers about the sponsor, Purina Puppy Chow’s, desire to use rescue dogs, he changed his mind.

“We realized it was an opportunity to turn this thing around, and instead of promoting people going out and buying dalmatians for pets, we could actually educate the public on what they need to do if they’re going to get any dog for a pet,” says Slaven. (A note slipped into each Playbill distributed to audience members will explain the health-related issues, as well as the time, expense and space required to care for a dalmatian.)

bella1Slaven and his team travelled the country visiting shelters to find the 15 perfect dogs to rescue and train to take stage at the end of Act 1 as well as during the show’s finale.

It seems like a neat production! All human characters on stage will be walking on 15 inch stilts and the set is designed to look like life would from a dog’s perspective.

Source: PeoplePets.com

braceletYou can help us fight against animal cruelty today by purchasing any of the I’m Tired of Animal Cruelty products. We give half of everything you buy to Best Friends Animal Society.

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »Email Email

Lady Gaga and Fellow Celebrities Support LGBT Rights

Monday, October 12th, 2009

58613232

An estimated 100,000 to 200,000 people marched in DC this weekend at the National Equality March to end “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” and to extend full marriage rights to same-sex couples. Many celebrities attended and spoke. Lady Gaga even performed a version of “Imagine” prior to Obama’s speech.

Here are some of the highlights:

Openly gay spoken word artist Staceyann Chin impressed the crowd with her powerful speech: “Equality is more than a word we lend to politicians to garner votes … I march today because I believe that change is not only possible, but that it’s inevitable.”

Out actress Cynthia Nixon also spoke: “We are gathered here today from all over the US … today is a national rally and when we walk away from here tonight, we need to walk away with a common national resolve.” Nixon also le marchers in singing “Going to the Chapel.”

Obama’s speech promised to end the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy but didn’t provide details about how or when it would happen. He said “My expectation is that when you look back on these years, you will see a time in which we put a stop to discrimination against gays and lesbians.”

Prior to the president’s speech, bisexual singer Lady Gaga performed a rendition of the classic song “Imagine” with the lyrics changed slightly to reference 1998 hate crime victim Matthew Shepard.

Source: AfterEllen.com

equality-march-2009-gaga1You can help support the fight against discrimination today by purchasing any of the I’m Tired of Discrimination products. We give half of everything you buy to Human Rights First to support their efforts against discrimination of all kinds. It’s so important that we ban together and put an end to this.

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »Email Email

Animal Cruelty Videos Case - Is it a Matter of Free Speech?

Friday, October 9th, 2009

Currently, US law makes it a crime to sell videos of animals being tortured and killed. What do you think about the Supreme Court case that’s questioning whether it is a matter of free speech to sell these videos? The current law, they are saying, may be too broad, as it possibly bans documentary films and depictions of hunting or bullfights. Is this law infringing on free-speech protections guaranteed by the First Amendment?

When the law was enacted, it was mostly aimed at “crush videos” in which women with high heels would step on small animals. As of late, it was applied in convicting a man that sold videos of dogfighting.

Although convicted, he appealed his case, which is why we are having this debate today. When do we draw the line?

pitbull1Please help us support the fight against animal cruelty by purchasing any of the I’m Tired of Animal Cruelty products. We give half of everything you buy to Best Friends Animal Society to fight this. It’s so important that we ban together and stop all forms of animal cruelty!

Bookmark and Share
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »Email Email

GO BACK

Page 1 of 212»