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1. Review of Breakthrough!

murphy_breakthroughstar2 Breakthrough!: How Three People Saved “Blue Babies” and Changed Medicine Forever
by Jim Murphy
Intermediate, Middle School   Clarion   128 pp.
12/15   978-0-547-82183-2   $18.99   g

Murphy (An American Plague: The True and Terrifying Story of the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793, rev. 7/03; Invincible Microbe: Tuberculosis and the Never-Ending Search for a Cure, rev. 7/12) here again focuses on the history of science and medicine. “Blue baby syndrome,” the result of a congenital heart condition, was a significant medical problem in WWII-era America: it killed seventy percent of affected children by the age of ten. This is the story of the Johns Hopkins University medical team that researched and solved the problem, culminating in the first successful 
operation on a critically ill infant. Dr. Alfred Blalock had already made a 
name for himself with his pioneering research on the causes and treatment of shock, and pediatrician Helen Taussig was the worldwide expert on congenital 
heart problems, despite being a woman in a male-dominated field. The final member — and arguably the most crucial one — was Vivien Thomas, Blalock’s African American lab assistant, who developed and refined the surgical procedure. The synthesis of their stories is illuminating, serving also as a commentary on the social status of women and minorities in the mid-twentieth century. If the biographical vignettes interrupt the narrative occasionally, the inherent suspense and drama make up for it. Numerous black-and-white photographs are incorporated into the main narrative, while sources notes, a bibliography, and an index (unseen) are appended.

From the November/December 2015 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

The post Review of Breakthrough! appeared first on The Horn Book.

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2. Mesmerized: How Ben Franklin Solved a Mystery that Baffled all of France - a review

You've heard the term mesmerized before, and you've likely heard of a blind study in medical research (in which study participants are unaware of whether they have been given a treatment or a placebo).  But do you know what these two terms have in common?  Benjamin Franklin!

Mesmerized: How Ben Franklin Solved a Mystery that Baffled all of France
Written by Mara Rockliff. Illustrated by Iacopo Bruno. Candlewick, 2015

When Benjamin Franklin arrived in France seeking support for the American cause, Paris was all abuzz about recent advances in science, but one man in particular was drawing much attention - Dr. Franz Mesmer.  Like the invisible gas that was recently proven to buoy giant passenger-carrying balloons when burned, Dr. Mesmer claimed that he, too, had discovered a powerful new invisible force.


Dr. Mesmer said this forced streamed from the stars and flowed into his wand.  When he stared into his patients' eyes and waved the wand, things happened. 

Women swooned.

Men sobbed.

Children fell down in fits.
Mesmer and his practitioners claimed to cure illnesses in this manner, but was is true?  Or was it quackery?  King Louis XVI wanted to know, and Benjamin Franklin was sent to find out.

Mesmerized is one of those wonderful books that combines history with science and humor.  Using the scientific method, Benjamin Franklin was able to deduce that Dr. Mesmer had indeed discovered something, but not the something he had claimed!

Delightfully humorous and informative illustrations, a section on the scientific method (Oh La La ... La Science!). and a list of source books and articles make Mesmerized a triple-play - science, humor, and history.  Go ahead, be mesmerized!


*This post also appears on the STEM Friday blog today


STEM Friday

It’s STEM Friday! (STEM is Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics)
See all of today's STEM-related posts at STEM Friday.




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3. Great Men and Women in the History of Medicine - an audiobook review


Angus, David. 2013. Great Men and Women in the History of Medicine. Read by Benjamin Soames. Naxos Audiobooks.

It is a shame that this compendium of influential people in the history of medicine is not available in print or e-book format.  It would be a great reference for students doing research or biography reports.  Don't let the audio book format deter you, however.  As I wrote in my review for AudioFile Magazine (linked below), Benjamin Soames conveys a fascination for his topic that is infectious! (pun intended)

Some of the people featured in Great Men and Women in the History of Medicine include:
Hippocrates, Galen, Hildegard of Bingen, Ibn Sina, Al-Razi, Andreas Vesalius, William Harvey, Edward Jenner, Crick and Watson.  You may not know their names, but their discoveries have benefitted you.  I'm not sure of the best audience for this book, but I can tell you that I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Read my review of  Great Men and Women in the History of Medicine for AudioFile Magazine here.

Listen to an audio sample of Great Men and Women in the History of Medicine here.

Read all of today's nonfiction reviews at the Nonfiction Monday blog!

0 Comments on Great Men and Women in the History of Medicine - an audiobook review as of 5/19/2014 7:14:00 AM
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4. This Is What Is Possible (Part 2)

I found this through Upworthy.com–a great site I highly recommend.

Last week it was what was possible as an 80-year-old. Today we’re going quite a bit younger:

0 Comments on This Is What Is Possible (Part 2) as of 4/30/2014 10:51:00 AM
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5. Nonfiction Monday: Invincible Microbe

Invincible Microbe: Tuberculosis and the Never-Ending Search for a Cure by Jim Murphy and Alison Blank.

I'm back taking a closer look at the long list of this year's YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults.

Murphy and Blank do a wonderful job of weaving in multiple strands of the TB story. There's the story of the disease itself, starting in prehistory and going until today, how it affects the body, how it kills, and how we've come to the drug-resistant types we have today. There's the story of those searching for a cure, the doctors with medicine, the quacks with schemes, what has worked, what hasn't, and where we are today. Then there's the story of TB's role in pop culture and policy-- the romantic idea of the consumptive waif, border closings to quarantine areas, the way it spread through centers of urban poor. Lastly, but most importantly, it's the story of those who have suffered from this disease, from prehistoric times until today.

They dip in and out of these stories seamlessly and tying it all together as they follow TB across time and space. It gets scary at the end, when they talk about TB's comback and how what little we had to combat it is no longer working.

It's fascinating and medical and social history at its best.

Amazingly, after I read this, I discovered that I actually know several people with TB. I was even able to explain the reasons behind some of the more annoying parts of their treatment!

Today's Nonfiction Monday is over at Supratentorial. Check it out!


Book Provided by... the publisher, for award consideration

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

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6. Musings on The Invincible Microbe

Murphy, Jim and Alison Blank. 2012. The Invincible Microbe: Tuberculosis and the Never-Ending Search for a Cure. New York: Clarion.

The minute I saw this book, I knew that I would read it, not because I am a fan of nonfiction and Jim Murphy, but for personal reasons.  While my mother would often tell me stories of what it was like to be a child during WWII, my stepfather was older.  He lived what I considered to be a fascinating, history-book life. He was an orphan. He remembered the Great Depression.   He was a runaway. He was a "runner" on Wall Street.  He had tuberculosis.  He recalled being forced to march outside in the cold New York winter wearing nothing but a t-shirt and underpants, a common aspect of a patient's "curing" regimen.  I can only imagine that a poor orphan boy's regimen was harsher than most. To this day, I cannot look at a sepia-tinged photo of poor scantily clad children in the snow without thinking of my stepfather.  The girls on the cover of The Invincible Microbe, "curing" outside on a porch, may be smiling in the photo, but I don't believe for a minute that it was by choice. To the end of his days, my stepfather loved rich foods and warm temperatures - small wonder.


So, to me growing up, TB was a thing of the past - a disease like polio, generally eradicated and of no concern to me.  Then came the late 1980's and 1990's.  My sister lived in Manhattan, and lo and behold, tuberculosis was suddenly a topic of discussion again.  There was an outbreak in the City. She was worried.  So to me, tuberculosis was then an urban thing, of no concern to me, except where my sister was concerned.  My sister moved away from the City, and I thought little of it again ... until my children were born.  Then to me, TB was "the bubble test," and I thought little of it, except that it seemed to be an easier test than the "tine test" I remembered from childhood, and I was thankful that my kids were protected...

or so I thought, until I read The Invincible Microbe.

The Invincible Microbe: Tuberculosis and the Never-Ending Search for a Cure, tells the story of TB from its known beginning, in prehistoric times, through the days of magical, prayerful, and deadly "cures," until today, when TB is still a scourge in five areas of the world (Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, The Philippines, Swaziland, Vietnam) and is only as far away from you as a plane ride.

Thoroughly researched, sourced and indexed, with numerous photographs, The Invincible Microbe is a chronological look at the Tuberculosis germ, containing first-hand accounts (including a poem written by Robert Louis Stevenson en route to a sanatorium in Saranac Lake), period advertising, and quotes from scientific journals and other sources. It incorporates both the scientific and social aspects of infectious disease, answering such questions as:

How were breakthroughs in identification and treatment of the disease achieved? How did the medical community vet new procedures and ideas?  How was public health policy created? How did the germ mutate to survive?  How did Tuberculosis attack the human body?  How was it spread?  Who decided which patients received treatment and which do not?

Sadly, these questions are still being answered, and to date, Tuberculosis has no cure.

Comprehensive and engrossing, this is a book that will appeal to ages 10 to adult.

Want to know more about TB?  Check the Tuberculosis section of the World Health Organization (WHO) website.



2 Comments on Musings on The Invincible Microbe, last added: 12/11/2012
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7. Deadly

Deadly Julie Chibbaro

When I was in high school, I wanted to be a virologist*, a disease hunter for the CDC. The Hot Zone: A Terrifying True Story, And the Band Played On, Outbreak, and The Andromeda Strain were rather influential texts.

Then I realized that I have a pretty crap immune system, so it probably wasn't the best career path to choose.

BUT! I do still enjoy a good virus-hunting thriller, something that I had kinda forgotten about until we rented Contagion a few weeks ago. Fresh off my "what is killing everyone? Smart people will figure it out!" high, I remembered that I wanted to read Deadly. So I did.

Prudence Galewski isn't like most of the other girls in her finishing school. She wants to know real things. Science things. She wants to know why people die and how it can be stopped. She had to watch her brother die after a carriage accident when his wounds became infected. Her mother is a midwife and Prudence often helps-- why do some births go well and some go so wrong? She applies for a job a secretary at the Department of Sanitation and Health. She's hired to do more than take notes, but to take an active part in an investigation in a new series of typhoid outbreaks. Soon, the only thing linking the outbreaks together is an Irish cook named Mary Mallon, but Mary's never had typhoid, so she can't be making everyone sick, can she?

An excellent look at the investigation that brought in Typhoid Mary and the controversy surrounding it-- a controversy dealing with personal rights, crazy ideas in science, and discrimination against immigrants.

It's not as fast-paced as the books and movies I mention above and it's not gross (there are NO descriptions of what happens during typhoid!) but I still really liked it. I liked how Mary was a real person, not villainous joke she's become. I liked the relationship that Prudence has with her mother-- there are a lot of walls (but no acrimony) between them at the start of this book and it's interesting to read how their relationship grows and changes over time.

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8. I Feel Better with a Frog in My Throat: Gross, Gruesome and Great Fun

tumblr_lb070qPLi51qcx2yno1_500

I Feel Better with a Frog in My Throat: History’s Strangest Cures by Carlyn Beccia

Have a symptom?  Look it up in this book, but beware!  Some of the cures listed just may not work.  It’s up to you to try to guess which ones would actually help and which might really hurt.   What would help a cough?  Caterpillar fungus used in ancient China?  Frog soup used in 16th century England?  Cherry bark used by ancient Native Americans?  Readers turn the page to discover which of the three would help.  The reasons behind the use of the cure and then the real results are offered, giving a readers a fascinating tour through medical history.  Happily, some of the cures are gross.  That and the way the information is presented as a guessing game make this book appealing to children, including reluctant readers.

Beccia has taken a cheerful approach to what could have been a very dark book.  Instead the tone stays rather merry, talking about the nutritional boost of frog soup, the healing power of spider webs, and much more.  Her illustrations add to the fun with images like maggots with smiling faces and stinky socks tied around the neck.  They have an interesting blend of macabre and silly.

There are some misses in the book.  At one point, a woman of the 19th century is shown in a short skirt, looking very modern except for her cap.  The book maintains a great pace and tone, but falls short at the end where the healing power of mother’s kisses takes on an overly sweet tone.  I also have concerns about the imagery of the mothers and children, because the only one with darker skin is prehistoric.  The only Asian faces are ancient.  It is a frustrating misstep in a book that is good overall.

Get this into the hands of reluctant readers who enjoy gross things and you too will get to talk about maggots at the dinner table!  Appropriate for ages 7-9.

Reviewed from library copy.

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9. I Feel Better with a Frog in My Throat

Beccia, Carlyn. 2010. I Feel Better with a Frog in My Throat: History's Strangest Cures.  New York: Houghton Mifflin.
(a booktalk)

When you're trying to relieve a sore throat, do you prefer a frog down your throat, a necklace made from earthworms, or a dirty sock tied around your neck?  None of these? Well, I'm not surprised, but these were the cures of choice for Medieval Europeans and early 20th century Americans. Have a stomachache?  Have you tried urine, dirt, or millipedes? Medieval Europeans, Ancient Native Americans and 17th Century Britains did!

 Did any of them work?
 Yes!
To find out which ones, you'll have to read the true, humorously illustrated new book, I Feel Better with a Frog in My Throat: History's Strangest Cures. It's science, history and mystery combined!
Disclaimer: Side effects from reading this book may vary. Patients may experience rapid brain growth.
Highly recommended.

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Today is another Nonfiction Monday. Today's host is Playing by the Book.  Be sure to stop by.



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10. Discovering the Wonders of Science

Hello, I am Dr. Ray Johnson, the Chief Technology Officer for the Lockheed Martin Corporation.

I have a great job that allows me and the 70,000 Lockheed Martin scientists and engineers to explore and discover the wonders of science. We engineer solutions and use new technologies to protect people and improve their lives, and we constantly look for new and exciting ways to be innovative.

Technical careers rely on an educational foundation in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). My colleagues and I also rely on these technical disciplines. We are deeply concerned about the shortage of scientists and engineers here in the U.S. and about the need to reinvigorate future generations to pursue technical careers. We recognize the importance of these areas of study, and through our company’s support, we are involved in a number of initiatives to encourage students to get involved in STEM-related activities.

One initiative Lockheed Martin supports, and that I am greatly excited about, is the upcoming USA Science and Engineering Festival that will be held in Washington, D.C. from October 10-24, 2010. As the Festival Host, we hope to have a million people participate; the best part—it’s free. The event culminates with a two-day Science Expo on the National Mall featuring more than 1,000 exhibits spanning an incredible array of technical fields: aerospace, green energy, medicine, biotechnology, climatology, robotics, nanotechnology, and so many more.

The Festival will be an incredible experience for any student. We hope to inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers to invest in their future and America’s future by studying science, technology, engineering, and math at their schools.

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11. Medical Jeopardy

Image via Wikipedia

 

What do a wheel rut, a flash of lightning and a dining table have in common?

Medical Terminology. Ever think about how a doctor in New York can speak to a doctor in Japan about medical matters. They use the same medical words. I found this fascinating, and hope you will, as well.

I’m also a Jeopardy fan. For those of you unfamiliar with this TV format, a contestant is  presented with the answer, and must deliver the definition to win a prize.

So…..here it is. It’s a medical jeopardy. Here are 127 questions.

If you’re in the medical or health care field, chances are you’ll have no trouble with most of these, The object here is to present to you the oddities of linguistic evolution.

WARNING: DO NOT USE THE MATIERIAL IN THIS ARTICLE AS PRIMARY SOURCE MATERIAL (although you might be tempted). This is simply because much of what is known about language derivatives is  assumed - not fact.*

Answers are presented on the last page.

 

1. FINE POWDER: from the Arabic “al” (the) and koh  l “fine impalpable powder.”

 

2. RUT MADE BY A WHEEL: From the Latin, “orbita.”

 

3. TO MAKE STICKY: From the Latin, “viscare.”

 

4. PERTAINING TO THE FORUM: From the Latin “forum.”

 

5. CAUSE OF DWARFISM: Long bones do not grow. From Greek “a” absence, “chondrus” (cartilage) and “plassein” (to form).

 

6. BULK OR MASS; From the Greek, “ongkos.”

 

7. TO INCREASE: From the Indo-European, “aweg.”

 

8. INSENSITIVITY TO PAIN: from the Greek “an” (without) and algesis (sense of  

pain).

 

9. KNOT or KNOB: From the Latin, “nodus.”

 

10. AN AIR DUCT: From the Greek “aer” (air) and “tereo” (I keep).

 

 

11. NOSE or SNOUT: From the Greek, “mukter.”

 

12. A SHEPHERD’S PIPE: From the Greek, “syringx.”

 

13. DULL TO PERCEPTION: from the Indo-European root, “dheubh,”

 

14. ONE-HALF OF THE SKULL: From the Latin, “hemicrania.”

 

15. LIKE A STRAIGHT SWORD: From the Greek, “xiphos.”

 

16. TO BLOCK or PLUG: From the Latin, “obsterix.”

 

17. TO BOIL OUT: From the Greek, “ek-“ (out) and “zeein” (to boil).

 

18. CRECENT-SHAPED: From the Greek, “meniskos.”

 

19. A PRICK OR PUNCTURE BY A NEEDLE:  from the Latin “acus” (needle) and     

“punctum” puncture.

 

20. FLASH OF LIGHTNING: From the Latin, “fulgor.”

 

 

 

21.  BREAST-LIKE: From the Greek, “mastos” and “eidos.”

 

22. THORN or PRICKLY BUSH: From the Latin, “spina.”

 

23. PRODUCE OR BRING FORTH: From the Greek, “gennao.”

 

24. ONE WHO HEALS: From the Anglo-Saxon, “laece.”

 

25. DRY, ACRID: From the Indo-European, “ters.”

 

26. TRANSPARANT STONE or CRYSTAL: From the Greek, “hyalos.”

 

27. CHEW: From the Anglos-Saxon, “ceowan.” (noun)

 

28. LIGHT GREENISH-YELLOW: From the Latin, “galbinus.”

 

29. WITHOUT WEIGHT or LIGHT: From the Sanskrit, “ laghu.:”

 

30. A CUTTING UP: from the Greek “ana” (up or through) and “tome” (a cutting).

 

 

31. GATEKEEPER: From the Greek, pyle.”

 

32. A COVERLET or CLOAK: From the Latin, “pallium.”

 

33. MINT: From the Latin, “menthe.”

 

34. WITHOUT A NAME: From the Latin, “innominatus.”

 

35. A DINING TABLE: From the Greek, “trapeze.”

 

36. CENTER OF WHEEL HUB: From the Anglo-Saxon, “ nafe.”

 

37. A TRENCH OR ABYSS: From the Old English, “grynde.”

 

38. AN OFFSHOOT:  from the Greek “apo” (from) and “physis” (growth).

 

39. ATTACK or INJURY: From the Latin, “laesia.”

 

40. SERVICE or ATTENDANCE: From the Greek, “therapeia.”

 

 

41. BELONGING TO A WALL: From the Latin, “parietalis.”

 

42. SEEING FOR ONESELF: from the Greek “auto” and “opsis” (seeing).

 

43. JUICE, SAP, RESIN OR GUM OF A TREE: From the Greek, “opos.”

 

44. SILVERY SWELLING: From the Greek, “glaukos” and “oma.”

 

45. TO STRETCH: From the Greek     , “teinein.”

 

46. TO DISGRACE, TO FALL SHORT OF:  from the Latin “degenerare.”

 

47. PIMPLE: From the Greek, “pomphos.”

 

48. A NUT OR ACORN: From the Latin. “glandulus.”

 

49. TO SCRAPE OR SCRATCH: From the Latin, “radere.”

 

50. LARGE STONE IN FRONT OF DOOR TO KEEP IT SHUT:

From the Greek, “thyreos.”

 

 

51. FLAME OR HEAT: From the Greek, “phlegma.”

 

52. PAUNCH or BELLY:   From the Greek, “gaster.”

 

53. FUNNEL: From the Latin, “infundere.”

 

54. YOKE CONNECTING TWO ANIMALS: From the Greek, “zygon.”

 

55. TO PLEASE: From the Latin, “placere.”

 

56. TO BEND OR TURN:  From the Latin, “flectere.”

 

57. EARTH OR LAND: From the Latin, “humus.”

 

58. HEALING OINTMENT: From the Anglo-Saxon, “sealf.”

 

59. TO SEND FLUID IN:  From the Greek, “en” (in) and “ienai” (to send).

 

60. TO DYE, STAIN, CORRUPT or BOIL: From the Latin, “inficere.”

 

 

61. A PRUNING: from the Latin “amputatio.”

 

62. WORKING WITH THE HANDS: From the Greek, “ cheirourgia.”

 

63. A FLOWING SEED: From the Greek, :”gone” and  “rheos.”

 

64. RELATING TO THE SPHINX

 

65. HOLY or CONSECRATED: From the Latin, “Sacer.”

 

66. TWELVE FINGERS: from the Greek, “dodek-daktulon.

 

67. STIFF or STRONG: From the Anglo-Saxon, “stark.”

 

68. A COCK’S SPUR:  From the old French, “argot” (rye plant infected by fungus.”

 

69. AFFLICTED WITH SPOTS: From the Old High German, “masa” and

Middle English, “mesel.”

 

70. TO BE ASHAMED: From the Latin, “pudere.”

 

 

71. TO WIND OR CURVE: From the Latin, “sinuare.”

 

72.  A CIRCULAR OR FLAT STONE: From the Greek, “discos.”

 

73. PAIR OF FOLDING or DOUBLE DOORS: From the Latin, “valvae.”

 

74. A TURBAN: From the Latin, “mitra.”

 

75. LACK OF NOURISHMENT: from the Greek “a-“ (without) and trophe

(nourishment).

 

76. FORTY: From the Latin, “quadraginta.”

 

77. MASS OF MOLTEN IRON: From the Latin, “strictura.”

 

78. A STING OR ITCH: From the Latin, “urtica.”

 

79.  TO TEACH: from the Latin, “docere.”

 

80. TO SWELL or RIPEN: From the Greek, “ orgainein.”

 

 

81. TO TAKE AWAY COLOR: From the Old French, “desteindre.”

 

82. WITHOUT PULSE:  from the Greek “a” (without) and “sphyxis” (pulse).

 

83. CORRUPT MATTER: From the Greek, “Pyon.”

 

84. LIE ON OR BROOD: From the Latin, “incubare.”

 

85. LOVE, HONOR, DESIRE: From the Sanskrit, “wan” and “van.”

 

86. MORE, SHIFT, CHANGE or ALTER: From the Latin, “mutare.”

 

87. TO APPRAISE: From the Latin, “taxare.”

 

88. OPEN SPACE, COURTYARD OR PARK: From the Latin “area.”

 

89. POUCH: From the Norman French, “poque.”

 

90. A TAILOR: From the Latin, “sartor.”

 

 

91. WALKING HOSPITAL:  from the French “hopital ambulant.”

 

92. BARK OF A TREE: From the Peruvian Indian, “kina.”

 

93. LITTLE BEAK: From the Anglo-Saxon, “nib.”

 

94. TO WEAVE: From the Latin,”textere.”

 

95. BOWL or SHELL: From the Nordic, “Skal.”

 

96. RUPTURE or HERNIA: From the Greek, “kele.”

 

97. TO ROLL OR TURN AROUND: From the Latin, “volvere.”

 

98. A BLOW OR STROKE: From the Latin, “ plege.”

 

99. SORE THROAT: from the Latin “angere” (to choke or throttle).

 

100. LITTLE BALL: From the Latin, “pilula.”

 

 

101. POUCH OF LEATHER: From the Latin, “scorteus.”

 

102. WHORL, EDDY or TORNADO: From the Latin, “Turbo.”

 

103. CLEAR WATER: From the Latin, “lympha.”

 

104. LITTLE NET: From the Latin, “rete.”

 

105 ANYTHING SCOOPED OUT: From the Greek, “skaphe.”

 

106. ROUGH: From the Greek, “traxus.”

 

107. LOSS OF MEMORY: from the Greek “a” (without) and “mensis” (memory).

 

108. A SQUEAKING: From the Greek, “trismos.”

 

109. A COOKING: From the Latin, “pepsis.”

 

110. UNCUT or INDIVISIBLE: from the Greek “a-“ (without) and “temnein” (to cut).

 

 

111. PEAR-SHAPED: From the Latin, “pirum” and “forma.”

 

112. A HOOK: From the Latin,”uncus.”

 

113. DIFFERENT WORK:  from the Greek “allo” (other or different) and “ergon (work).

 

114. SEAT OF REASON OR PASSION: From the Greek, “phren.”

 

115. TO WRING OUT: From the Old French,”expraindre.”

 

116. A FOOTPRINT: From the Latin, “vestigium.”

 

117. BLADDER or BAG: From the Latin, “vesiculum.”

 

118. SMALL ENDOCRINE GLANDS ON KIDNEYS: from the Latin “ad” (toward) and

“renes” kidneys.

 

119. A POUNDER: From the Latin, “pistillum.”

 

120. TO ACCUSTOM: From the Anglo-Saxon, “wenian.”

 

 

121. TUB or TROUGH: From the Greek, “pyelos.”

 

122. ARTICULATION OF ULNA AND HUMERUS: A punster’s definition.

 

123. PERTAINING TO NATURAL LAW: From the Greek, “physikos.”

 

124. THE TASTE OF ACID: from the Latin “acidus”  (sour, tart).

 

125: A PUSH OR IMPULSE: From the Greek, “osmos.”

 

126. SPROUT, BUD or OFFSHOOT:  From the Latin, “germen.”

 

127. A COW: From the Latin, “vacca.”

*Thanks to:

Stedman’s Medical Dictionary , 26th Edition

 Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary, 24th Edition

Gray’s Anatomy (any library edition).

The Language of Medicine,  4th edition, Davi-Ellen Chabner

Medical Meanings, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1984

 

 

—————————————————————————————————————-

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    1. Alcohol2. Orbit

3. Viscus

4. Forensic

5. Achondroplasia

6. Oncology

7. Waist

8. Analgesia

9. Node

10. Artery

 

11. Mucus

12. Syringe

13. Deaf

14. Migraine

15. Xyphoid

16. Obstetrics

17. Eczema

18. Meniscus

19. Acupuncture

20. Fulguration

 

21. Mastoid

22. Spine

23. Gene

24. Leech

25. Thirst

26. Hyaline

27. Jaw.

28. Jaundice

29. Lung

30. Anatomy

 

31. Pylorus

32. Palliate

33. Menthol

34. Innominate

35. Trapezius

36. Navel

37. Gum

38. Apophysis

39. Lesion

40. Therapy

 

41. Parietal

42. Autopsy

43. Opium

44. Glaucoma

45. Tendon

46. Degenerate

47. Papule

48. Gland

49. Rash

50. Thyroid

 

 51.Phlegm

52. Gastric

53. Infindibulum.

54. Zygomatic

55. Placebo

56. Flex

57.. Human

58. Salve

59. Enema

60. Inflammation.

 

61. Amputation

62. Surgery

63. Gonorrhea

64. Sphincter (interesting story)

65. Sacrum

66. Duodenum

67. Starch

68. Ergot

69. Measles

70. Pudenda

 

71. Sinus

72. Disc

73. Valve

74. Mitral

75. Atrophy

76. Quarantine

77. Stricture

78. Urticaria.

79. Doctor

80.  Orgasm

 

81. Stain

82. Asphyxia     

83. Pus

84. Incubate

85. Venereal/Venus

86. Mutate

87. Taste

88. Areola

89. Pox

90. Sartorius              

 

97. Ambulance

92. Quinine

93. Nipple

94. Tissue

95. Skull.

96. Keloid.

97. Vulva

98. Plague

99. Angina

100. Pill

 

101. Scrotum

102. Turbinate.

103. Lymph

104. Reticulum

105. Scaphoid

106. Trachea

107. Amnesia

108. Trismus

109. Pepsin

110. Atom

 

111. Piriform

112. Uncinate/unciform

113. Allergy

114. Phrenic           

115. Sprain

116. Vestige

117. Vesicle

118. Adrenal

119. Pestle

120. Wean

 

121. Pelvis

122. Funny Bone (gotcha!)                  

123. Physician/physics

124. Acrid

125. Osmosis

126. Germ

127. Vaccine

 

 

 

 

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12. Medical Jeopardy

Image via Wikipedia

 

What do a wheel rut, a flash of lightning and a dining table have in common?

Medical Terminology. Ever think about how a doctor in New York can speak to a doctor in Japan about medical matters. They use the same medical words. I found this fascinating, and hope you will, as well.

I’m also a Jeopardy fan. For those of you unfamiliar with this TV format, a contestant is  presented with the answer, and must deliver the definition to win a prize.

So…..here it is. It’s a medical jeopardy. Here are 127 questions.

If you’re in the medical or health care field, chances are you’ll have no trouble with most of these, The object here is to present to you the oddities of linguistic evolution.

WARNING: DO NOT USE THE MATIERIAL IN THIS ARTICLE AS PRIMARY SOURCE MATERIAL (although you might be tempted). This is simply because much of what is known about language derivatives is  assumed - not fact.*

Answers are presented on the last page.

 

1. FINE POWDER: from the Arabic “al” (the) and koh  l “fine impalpable powder.”

 

2. RUT MADE BY A WHEEL: From the Latin, “orbita.”

 

3. TO MAKE STICKY: From the Latin, “viscare.”

 

4. PERTAINING TO THE FORUM: From the Latin “forum.”

 

5. CAUSE OF DWARFISM: Long bones do not grow. From Greek “a” absence, “chondrus” (cartilage) and “plassein” (to form).

 

6. BULK OR MASS; From the Greek, “ongkos.”

 

7. TO INCREASE: From the Indo-European, “aweg.”

 

8. INSENSITIVITY TO PAIN: from the Greek “an” (without) and algesis (sense of  

pain).

 

9. KNOT or KNOB: From the Latin, “nodus.”

 

10. AN AIR DUCT: From the Greek “aer” (air) and “tereo” (I keep).

 

 

11. NOSE or SNOUT: From the Greek, “mukter.”

 

12. A SHEPHERD’S PIPE: From the Greek, “syringx.”

 

13. DULL TO PERCEPTION: from the Indo-European root, “dheubh,”

 

14. ONE-HALF OF THE SKULL: From the Latin, “hemicrania.”

 

15. LIKE A STRAIGHT SWORD: From the Greek, “xiphos.”

 

16. TO BLOCK or PLUG: From the Latin, “obsterix.”

 

17. TO BOIL OUT: From the Greek, “ek-“ (out) and “zeein” (to boil).

 

18. CRECENT-SHAPED: From the Greek, “meniskos.”

 

19. A PRICK OR PUNCTURE BY A NEEDLE:  from the Latin “acus” (needle) and     

“punctum” puncture.

 

20. FLASH OF LIGHTNING: From the Latin, “fulgor.”

 

 

 

21.  BREAST-LIKE: From the Greek, “mastos” and “eidos.”

 

22. THORN or PRICKLY BUSH: From the Latin, “spina.”

 

23. PRODUCE OR BRING FORTH: From the Greek, “gennao.”

 

24. ONE WHO HEALS: From the Anglo-Saxon, “laece.”

 

25. DRY, ACRID: From the Indo-European, “ters.”

 

26. TRANSPARANT STONE or CRYSTAL: From the Greek, “hyalos.”

 

27. CHEW: From the Anglos-Saxon, “ceowan.” (noun)

 

28. LIGHT GREENISH-YELLOW: From the Latin, “galbinus.”

 

29. WITHOUT WEIGHT or LIGHT: From the Sanskrit, “ laghu.:”

 

30. A CUTTING UP: from the Greek “ana” (up or through) and “tome” (a cutting).

 

 

31. GATEKEEPER: From the Greek, pyle.”

 

32. A COVERLET or CLOAK: From the Latin, “pallium.”

 

33. MINT: From the Latin, “menthe.”

 

34. WITHOUT A NAME: From the Latin, “innominatus.”

 

35. A DINING TABLE: From the Greek, “trapeze.”

 

36. CENTER OF WHEEL HUB: From the Anglo-Saxon, “ nafe.”

 

37. A TRENCH OR ABYSS: From the Old English, “grynde.”

 

38. AN OFFSHOOT:  from the Greek “apo” (from) and “physis” (growth).

 

39. ATTACK or INJURY: From the Latin, “laesia.”

 

40. SERVICE or ATTENDANCE: From the Greek, “therapeia.”

 

 

41. BELONGING TO A WALL: From the Latin, “parietalis.”

 

42. SEEING FOR ONESELF: from the Greek “auto” and “opsis” (seeing).

 

43. JUICE, SAP, RESIN OR GUM OF A TREE: From the Greek, “opos.”

 

44. SILVERY SWELLING: From the Greek, “glaukos” and “oma.”

 

45. TO STRETCH: From the Greek     , “teinein.”

 

46. TO DISGRACE, TO FALL SHORT OF:  from the Latin “degenerare.”

 

47. PIMPLE: From the Greek, “pomphos.”

 

48. A NUT OR ACORN: From the Latin. “glandulus.”

 

49. TO SCRAPE OR SCRATCH: From the Latin, “radere.”

 

50. LARGE STONE IN FRONT OF DOOR TO KEEP IT SHUT:

From the Greek, “thyreos.”

 

 

51. FLAME OR HEAT: From the Greek, “phlegma.”

 

52. PAUNCH or BELLY:   From the Greek, “gaster.”

 

53. FUNNEL: From the Latin, “infundere.”

 

54. YOKE CONNECTING TWO ANIMALS: From the Greek, “zygon.”

 

55. TO PLEASE: From the Latin, “placere.”

 

56. TO BEND OR TURN:  From the Latin, “flectere.”

 

57. EARTH OR LAND: From the Latin, “humus.”

 

58. HEALING OINTMENT: From the Anglo-Saxon, “sealf.”

 

59. TO SEND FLUID IN:  From the Greek, “en” (in) and “ienai” (to send).

 

60. TO DYE, STAIN, CORRUPT or BOIL: From the Latin, “inficere.”

 

 

61. A PRUNING: from the Latin “amputatio.”

 

62. WORKING WITH THE HANDS: From the Greek, “ cheirourgia.”

 

63. A FLOWING SEED: From the Greek, :”gone” and  “rheos.”

 

64. RELATING TO THE SPHINX

 

65. HOLY or CONSECRATED: From the Latin, “Sacer.”

 

66. TWELVE FINGERS: from the Greek, “dodek-daktulon.

 

67. STIFF or STRONG: From the Anglo-Saxon, “stark.”

 

68. A COCK’S SPUR:  From the old French, “argot” (rye plant infected by fungus.”

 

69. AFFLICTED WITH SPOTS: From the Old High German, “masa” and

Middle English, “mesel.”

 

70. TO BE ASHAMED: From the Latin, “pudere.”

 

 

71. TO WIND OR CURVE: From the Latin, “sinuare.”

 

72.  A CIRCULAR OR FLAT STONE: From the Greek, “discos.”

 

73. PAIR OF FOLDING or DOUBLE DOORS: From the Latin, “valvae.”

 

74. A TURBAN: From the Latin, “mitra.”

 

75. LACK OF NOURISHMENT: from the Greek “a-“ (without) and trophe

(nourishment).

 

76. FORTY: From the Latin, “quadraginta.”

 

77. MASS OF MOLTEN IRON: From the Latin, “strictura.”

 

78. A STING OR ITCH: From the Latin, “urtica.”

 

79.  TO TEACH: from the Latin, “docere.”

 

80. TO SWELL or RIPEN: From the Greek, “ orgainein.”

 

 

81. TO TAKE AWAY COLOR: From the Old French, “desteindre.”

 

82. WITHOUT PULSE:  from the Greek “a” (without) and “sphyxis” (pulse).

 

83. CORRUPT MATTER: From the Greek, “Pyon.”

 

84. LIE ON OR BROOD: From the Latin, “incubare.”

 

85. LOVE, HONOR, DESIRE: From the Sanskrit, “wan” and “van.”

 

86. MORE, SHIFT, CHANGE or ALTER: From the Latin, “mutare.”

 

87. TO APPRAISE: From the Latin, “taxare.”

 

88. OPEN SPACE, COURTYARD OR PARK: From the Latin “area.”

 

89. POUCH: From the Norman French, “poque.”

 

90. A TAILOR: From the Latin, “sartor.”

 

 

91. WALKING HOSPITAL:  from the French “hopital ambulant.”

 

92. BARK OF A TREE: From the Peruvian Indian, “kina.”

 

93. LITTLE BEAK: From the Anglo-Saxon, “nib.”

 

94. TO WEAVE: From the Latin,”textere.”

 

95. BOWL or SHELL: From the Nordic, “Skal.”

 

96. RUPTURE or HERNIA: From the Greek, “kele.”

 

97. TO ROLL OR TURN AROUND: From the Latin, “volvere.”

 

98. A BLOW OR STROKE: From the Latin, “ plege.”

 

99. SORE THROAT: from the Latin “angere” (to choke or throttle).

 

100. LITTLE BALL: From the Latin, “pilula.”

 

 

101. POUCH OF LEATHER: From the Latin, “scorteus.”

 

102. WHORL, EDDY or TORNADO: From the Latin, “Turbo.”

 

103. CLEAR WATER: From the Latin, “lympha.”

 

104. LITTLE NET: From the Latin, “rete.”

 

105 ANYTHING SCOOPED OUT: From the Greek, “skaphe.”

 

106. ROUGH: From the Greek, “traxus.”

 

107. LOSS OF MEMORY: from the Greek “a” (without) and “mensis” (memory).

 

108. A SQUEAKING: From the Greek, “trismos.”

 

109. A COOKING: From the Latin, “pepsis.”

 

110. UNCUT or INDIVISIBLE: from the Greek “a-“ (without) and “temnein” (to cut).

 

 

111. PEAR-SHAPED: From the Latin, “pirum” and “forma.”

 

112. A HOOK: From the Latin,”uncus.”

 

113. DIFFERENT WORK:  from the Greek “allo” (other or different) and “ergon (work).

 

114. SEAT OF REASON OR PASSION: From the Greek, “phren.”

 

115. TO WRING OUT: From the Old French,”expraindre.”

 

116. A FOOTPRINT: From the Latin, “vestigium.”

 

117. BLADDER or BAG: From the Latin, “vesiculum.”

 

118. SMALL ENDOCRINE GLANDS ON KIDNEYS: from the Latin “ad” (toward) and

“renes” kidneys.

 

119. A POUNDER: From the Latin, “pistillum.”

 

120. TO ACCUSTOM: From the Anglo-Saxon, “wenian.”

 

 

121. TUB or TROUGH: From the Greek, “pyelos.”

 

122. ARTICULATION OF ULNA AND HUMERUS: A punster’s definition.

 

123. PERTAINING TO NATURAL LAW: From the Greek, “physikos.”

 

124. THE TASTE OF ACID: from the Latin “acidus”  (sour, tart).

 

125: A PUSH OR IMPULSE: From the Greek, “osmos.”

 

126. SPROUT, BUD or OFFSHOOT:  From the Latin, “germen.”

 

127. A COW: From the Latin, “vacca.”

*Thanks to:

Stedman’s Medical Dictionary , 26th Edition

 Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary, 24th Edition

Gray’s Anatomy (any library edition).

The Language of Medicine,  4th edition, Davi-Ellen Chabner

Medical Meanings, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1984

 

 

—————————————————————————————————————-

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    1. Alcohol2. Orbit

3. Viscus

4. Forensic

5. Achondroplasia

6. Oncology

7. Waist

8. Analgesia

9. Node

10. Artery

 

11. Mucus

12. Syringe

13. Deaf

14. Migraine

15. Xyphoid

16. Obstetrics

17. Eczema

18. Meniscus

19. Acupuncture

20. Fulguration

 

21. Mastoid

22. Spine

23. Gene

24. Leech

25. Thirst

26. Hyaline

27. Jaw.

28. Jaundice

29. Lung

30. Anatomy

 

31. Pylorus

32. Palliate

33. Menthol

34. Innominate

35. Trapezius

36. Navel

37. Gum

38. Apophysis

39. Lesion

40. Therapy

 

41. Parietal

42. Autopsy

43. Opium

44. Glaucoma

45. Tendon

46. Degenerate

47. Papule

48. Gland

49. Rash

50. Thyroid

 

 51.Phlegm

52. Gastric

53. Infindibulum.

54. Zygomatic

55. Placebo

56. Flex

57.. Human

58. Salve

59. Enema

60. Inflammation.

 

61. Amputation

62. Surgery

63. Gonorrhea

64. Sphincter (interesting story)

65. Sacrum

66. Duodenum

67. Starch

68. Ergot

69. Measles

70. Pudenda

 

71. Sinus

72. Disc

73. Valve

74. Mitral

75. Atrophy

76. Quarantine

77. Stricture

78. Urticaria.

79. Doctor

80.  Orgasm

 

81. Stain

82. Asphyxia     

83. Pus

84. Incubate

85. Venereal/Venus

86. Mutate

87. Taste

88. Areola

89. Pox

90. Sartorius              

 

97. Ambulance

92. Quinine

93. Nipple

94. Tissue

95. Skull.

96. Keloid.

97. Vulva

98. Plague

99. Angina

100. Pill

 

101. Scrotum

102. Turbinate.

103. Lymph

104. Reticulum

105. Scaphoid

106. Trachea

107. Amnesia

108. Trismus

109. Pepsin

110. Atom

 

111. Piriform

112. Uncinate/unciform

113. Allergy

114. Phrenic           

115. Sprain

116. Vestige

117. Vesicle

118. Adrenal

119. Pestle

120. Wean

 

121. Pelvis

122. Funny Bone (gotcha!)                  

123. Physician/physics

124. Acrid

125. Osmosis

126. Germ

127. Vaccine

 

 

 

 

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13. Times Have Changed

Times and medicine have changed since the 1800's. Small vials of medicine have been replaced with plastic tamper proof containers that come in all sizes-including jumbo size. Thankfully, our medicines and perscriptions now come with ingredients, directions on how much to take, and when to take it, and warnings of possible side effects, etc. I am SO thankful for modern medicine and the new age in which we live in!

1 Comments on Times Have Changed, last added: 4/11/2009
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14. Non Fiction Monday, Challenges, Awards, and ZOMBIES!

First things first, HT to Bookshelves of Doom.

You may want to preorder your copy NOW of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Classic Regency Romance+Now with Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem! How can you resist?!

Y'all saw the results of this morning's ALA Youth Media Awards, right? For me, it provided the perfect excuse not to work out. Ok, the cuteness of the dog would have worked this morning, but obviously, a good children's librarian should watch the awards webcast instead of working out, right? RIGHT!

I have very strong opinions in some of these categories, but they're the same categories that I'm sitting on non-ALA awards committees for (Cybils and Blue Crab) so I'll keep my trap shut until I'm allowed to discuss such things.

In other news, The New Classics Challenge ends on the 31st. This started in AUGUST, but I forgot about it until this month. Whoops. So far, I've read 2.5 of my 6. Also, I was supposed to read The Bonfire of the Vanities: A Novel but I couldn't find our copy, so given I was checking a book out of the library, I figured it should be The Sandman Vol. 1: Preludes and Nocturnes.

Anyway, the two I finished are both nonfiction! Yay!


The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down Anne Fadiman

I have long wanted to read this book because of the fact it deals with Hmong culture. Growing up in the 80s and 90s in Northeast Wisconsin, the Hmong made up the vast majority of the non-white population, but this isn't an ethnic group that you hear a lot about, which has always surprised me.

One of the reasons I love the Jackson Friends series so much is because there is a Hmong character.

The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down is a heartbreaking tale of a young Hmong girl in Merced, California, who has severe epilepsy. Due to the language and cultural barriers between her family and the medical community, the system fails her utterly.

Fadiman's account explains how each side tried its hardest to help Lia Lee and how each side completely failed her. Mostly, she does this without judgment and anger, but once and awhile, she can't, and I can't really fault her for that.

Fadiman does an excellent job of explaining the medical issues surrounding Lia's condition and treatment, as well as the cultural issues surrounding her life, and the history of the Hmong people and their life in America.

My only fault with the book is that it tends to treat Hmong culture as completely homogeneous, without the usual disclaimers or sentence weakeners you see in other cultural books, such as "traditionally X culture does... " or "many member of Y ethnic group feel..."

My other wish is for an updated version, as many of the troubles facing the community Lia and her family lived in had to deal with immigration and welfare status--both contentious issues that have undergone drastic changes since this book first came out in 1997. Luckily, the book's website does offer updates on how the people we meet in these pages are doing since publication.

Oh, and when discussing China, it uses the Wade-Giles instead of Pinyin system of romanization, but that's a China-geek complaint, and the book isn't about China, so I'll let it slide.


The Glass Castle: A Memoir Jeannette Walls

I picked this one because it's on the scary list.

Jeannette Walls grew up unbelievably poor. Her father was a dreamer and drunk, her mother an artist who didn't want to be tied down with a regular job. As a result, they moved a lot, lived in places with no water or electricity and often went hungry. Despite this Jeannette managed to attend Barnard and is now a gossip columnist for MSNBC.

While Walls life was unbelievably hard, the plot is the only driving factor in this book. The events make it readable, but the characters are flat--there's little insight, or feeling. (Except for Walls embarrassment when she feels people are laughing at her, or staring. So it's odd that she became a gossip columnist, right?) Many times when writing about something horrible, survivors tell their tale in a detached manner--as if truly engaging in the subject matter again would inflict great physiological damage, which it might. While this is quality I will forget in stories that we would otherwise might not hear, such as This is Paradise!: My North Korean Childhood, I'm less forgiving in instances such as these. First this happened, then this, then this, then this. No analysis, just plot.

While engaging, I'm not entirely sure why it won so many awards because the literary merit isn't as there as it could be.

Overall, I give it a resounding "meh"

Nonfiction Round up is here.

New Classics Round up is here.

1 Comments on Non Fiction Monday, Challenges, Awards, and ZOMBIES!, last added: 2/3/2009
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15. Orange feeling


Cartoon for the Dutch Nu.nl news website, about the Dutch public transport company Qbuzz. A spokesman of the company had mentioned that they wanted to express the 'Orange feeling' (related to the Dutch royal family and involving patriotism).

Although the cartoon's meaning is only fully understandable for Dutch viewers I thought to post it here because I am pleased with the 3D image.

More at Sevensheaven.nl

0 Comments on Orange feeling as of 6/27/2008 5:46:00 PM
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16. Slice of Life Story Challenge: Day 7

You still have time to participate in the: Please link your Slice of Life Story to us here by clicking on the Mr. Linky Widget below. To learn more about this Challenge, please visit our Slice of Life Challenge Page. Also, please tag your posts with the words SLICE OF LIFE STORY CHALLENGE. [...]

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17. solc: song on the radio.

What a busy day!  Currently I’m in the midst of a major life change.  Yesterday’s slice of life was too personal to post (not to mention that I left my house at 5:30 am, didn’t return until 10:28 pm and arrived to my pillow until after 1 am), but I’m planning on sharing it next week once other [...]

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18. ruth’s solc: the harmonica.

Snuggled on the couch.  Surrounded by my favorite quilt.  Alone.  I hold a new book.  I take a moment to notice the dark cover.  Although it is hand-drawn, it almost looks like a photo. Barbed wire slashes through a boy in stripes, holding a harmonica.  In the background, more men in stripes look on.   They all look [...]

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19. Slice of Life Story Challenge: Day 4

Please link your Slice of Life Story to us here by clicking on the Mr. Linky Widget below. (Sorry that I didn’t post this ’til the morning. I’m still under the weather and went to sleep early last night.) To learn more about this Challenge, please visit our Slice of Life Challenge Page. [...]

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20. Stacey’s Slice of Life Story: Day 4

We Voted Together! #3 & #4 at the Polling Place! Originally uploaded by teachergal I didn’t care if I am sick. I’m voting today! “What time do you think we need to leave to go and vote?” I asked Marc. “6:50, 6:55…” he responded. “I cannot [...]

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21. Stacey’s Slice of Life Story: Day 3

The alarm buzzed in my ear at 5:15 a.m. I’m still sick, but I’m going in! Therefore, I took about three more minutes and then rolled right out of bed. I headed to the computer (because that’s what all tech-addicted people do when they wake up in the morning) to check my e-mail. [...]

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22. Slice of Life Story Challenge: Day 3

Please link your Slice of Life Story to us here by clicking on the Mr. Linky Widget below. To learn more about this Challenge, please visit our Slice of Life Challenge Page. Also, please tag your posts with the words SLICE OF LIFE STORY CHALLENGE.

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23. ruth’s solc: recovery food.

Let me begin by revealing that I am a really bad taker of naps.  Actually, that is an understatement.  I doubt there are many out there who are worse than I.  Seriously. There are some who can nap for 15 minutes and wake up refreshed.  I live with one of these kinds of people.  For years, [...]

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24. Stacey’s Slice of Life Story: Day 2

I finished attaching ribbon, to the wooden boxes I painted, earlier this morning. I decided I had gotten enough practice painting practice. Therefore, it was time to bring out the stencil and have a go with the stenciling. I’ve been wanting to do stenciling (using a template!) for years. However, I [...]

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25. Ruth’s SOLC: Studio Desk

  The first day of March.  The first day of the Slice of Life Challenge (SOLC).  The first entry I’ve ever written in a Moleskine Notebook.  And I’ve found myself paying attention (even more) to the everyday special of an ordinary Saturday afternoon.  All of this wide-awake living has made it difficult to choose the slice [...]

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