everyone has a story, here is mine:

I have Cystic Fibrosis, diagnosed at birth by Meconium Ileus (an intestinal blockage requiring surgery). Although considered healthy most of my life (with no lung involvement), I've always dealt with fatigue, digestion complications and sinus issues.

As a child it was thought I was miraculously spared the devasting effects of CF - it was believed I had a mild case of CF, and wouldn't develop the typical complications of a person with Cystic Fibrosis. Respectively, my health was taken for granted, and I wasn't taught the importance of lung maintenance.

So, when I woke up sick one January morning in 2002,
I simply thought I had the flu, and didn't feel the necessity to go the doctor. Two weeks later after no improvement, I found myself in the hospital, on I.V. antibiotics and oxygen for no less than 14 days.

Not until just recently have I come to understand that what I experienced was my first CF exacerbation, which, sadly, caused irreversible lung damage by waiting for treatment.
So much for being "healthy".

Although I tried to return to work, it proved to be too stressful, too demanding, and too exhausting.
So, that October I retired and started my "life with CF".
And here we are today....

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Moving day draws closer for Earthlings

By Dale McFeatters - published 04/03/08
mcfeattersd@shns.com

For your planning purposes, scientists have determined that Earth will end in 7.59 billion years.

Billion? For a second you had me scared there. I thought you said million. These kinds of huge numbers should be left to deep-space astronomers and the gnomes who draw up the federal budget.

If you must know, a gaseously expanding sun will suck Earth out of its orbit and engulf it in a lethal fiery embrace. Earth, so to speak, will be toast.

Earth could survive. We won't, but our planet, now reduced to a lifeless cinder, could be kicked into a higher orbit where it would circle what little is left of the sun to the end of time, serving as a warning to passers-by: Pick your solar system very, very carefully.

In fact, we'll go mucher earlier.

The science section of The New York Times, reporting on the end of days, says, "About a billion years from now, the sun will be 10 percent brighter. Oceans on Earth will boil away." And that can't come soon enough for the global-warming crowd, who see immolation as a small price to pay for telling the rest of us, "We told you so but you wouldn't listen."

The real trouble begins in about 5.5 billion years, when the sun transforms itself into a red giant. The fun-loving astronomers who calculated all this, Klaus-Peter Schroeder of the University of Guanajuato in Mexico and Robert Connon Smith of the University of Sussex in England, say, that as a red giant, the sun will be 256 times as big as it is today and 2,730 times brighter. That's beyond sunblock, people.

But, face it, it would be fun to watch - and we might be able to. While you were trying to figure out how long 1 billion years really is, your government and the astronomy community have not been idle.

About 15 years ago, no one had seen a planet outside our solar system and many believed one might not exist. Since then, according to NASA's Web site, 277 extra solar planets have been discovered, most of them gas giants, not the most desirable real estate in the heavens.

But as the search techniques have improved, astronomers have begun finding smaller, more Earth-like planets, some very likely with water and organic compounds. NASA's featured planet, Gliese 581c, is only five times the size of Earth, reasonably convenient at 20.5 light-years away and in the "habitable zone" of its sun, although NASA's idea of "habitable" is not quite the same as yours and mine. However, its "year" is only 13.5 days, a little too whirlwind for our tastes.

Viewed another way, we have 999,999,999 years to find another nice planet in a solar system whose sun won't incinerate us and arrange a move there. Start looking.

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