Kat, CBC video is here:
Natter 64: Yes, we still need you
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
In mememe news, I've finally decided--I've got an appointment with my doctor on Thursday to talk to her about lap-band surgery. I told myself I wasn't going to do it, that it was the easy way out and mutilation of my body, but I'm getting way too big and having problems, so I have to do something. Insurance will cover surgery, but not a diet-food progam that I can't afford to purchase on my own, so I'm going with that.
Here's hoping that I can lose enough weight next year so I can at the very least be able to fly without having to buy two seats (which is why I don't fly Southwest). That's only about half of what I want to lose, so it'll take me a few years to get down to my target weight. Maybe by the time I finish my MLS I can be at a weight where I feel comfortable with job interviews again.
Insurance will cover surgery
Awesome! (I don't know, all I've been hearing about lately is stuff insurance WON'T cover, so it's good to hear they actually cover important procedures every now and then.)
Good luck, Kathy. That can't have been an easy decision.
Finally caught up. Long weekends always put me behind on the board (I took Friday off to get out of Salem for the weekend).
Calling back to the candy discussion last week, I just tried Maltesers for the first time (a Canadian I work with brings back candy from there all the time) and OMG, SO GOOD! I've always loved Whoppers, but these are so much better. Nom nom nom!
Under most circumstances, a metal spike jabbing you in the head is not likely to elicit a smile. Unless, of course, you’re wearing the "Happiness Hat" created by designer Lauren McCarthy. The New York Daily News says McCarthy’s creation includes a sensor to determine whether or not you're smiling. If you're not, the hat jabs you in the head until you do.
[OMG watch the video - this is seriously the most horrifying thing I have ever seen.]
Kathy, it's your body, and -- most important -- YOUR decision. If a doctor/friend/parent/spouse/anyone pushes it on you, guilts you in to it, then yeah, I take a dim view of that.
But you did the research, you know your body, and made the decision that was right for you. And, like -t said, that can't have been an easy decision.
Good job on taking care of yourself!
Okay, has anyone seen Battle of the Blades? I heard about it on NPR and now I'm obsessed with trying to see it
Heh. I heard that story this morning too.
Insurance will cover surgery, but not a diet-food progam that I can't afford to purchase on my own, so I'm going with that.
That's a big consideration. Good luck, Kathy.
Oh dear God - this is horrifying: 'The train took my baby,' mom screams as stroller is dragged
At least the baby was not seriously injured .
Screaming "the train took my baby,'' a mother watched in horror as a CTA train pulled away from a North Side station with her baby and stroller stuck in the doors.
The southbound train dragged the stroller until it hit a barrier at the end of the Morse station and the 22-month-old girl flew onto the tracks, missing the third rail, police said. The mother jumped onto the tracks, scooped up her child and handed her up to someone on the platform, he said.
Swine Flu Fears Lead to Girl-on-Girl Brawl on D Train
After a rough spring that saw as many as 20 to 40 percent of New Yorkers exposed to H1N1, subway riders have resorted to defending themselves with their fists.
Violence struck on a southbound D train Monday morning after two women got into an argument over one's refusal to cover her mouth while coughing. It ended with her spitting on the other, a punch, and the second woman dragging the first to the floor of the car by her hair.