Showing posts with label parade magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parade magazine. Show all posts

Monday, December 16, 2013

What's In Your Family DNA? Use Holiday Time To Find Out How Healthy Your Roots Are, Parade Magazine


When 46-year-old Efrat Roman went in for a breast MRI at age 40, the results confirmed her worst fears: She had cancer. She wasn’t surprised. Roman’s mother, grandmother, and several great-aunts had also had the disease. Knowing it ran in her family prompted Roman to be proactive about screenings. “I believe more knowledge is power,” says ­Roman, now a cancer survivor.
Sometimes, though, your family history isn’t so obvious. That’s what Karen Diaz, 34, found when her father was diagnosed with Factor V Leiden thrombophilia, a rare blood-clotting disorder. “I got tested, and discovered that I have the condition, too,” she says. Diaz now knows that because the disorder may prevent her body from dissolving blood clots, she’ll need to be closely monitored if she ever has surgery.
“Genetics have a big effect on your risk of acquiring countless conditions—from cancer to heart disease to diabetes,” says David Harrison, M.D., U.S. medical director for Best Doctors, a global health company based in Boston. This time of year offers a great opportunity to create a history. “When you get together with family, you relive memories, making it easy to ask about health issues,” says Kathryn Teng, M.D., director of the Center for Personalized Healthcare at Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.
Immediate family members like your parents and siblings are a good place to start. “This will get you 90 percent of the way,” Harrison says, adding that in most situations, it’s not necessary to go beyond aunts, uncles, and grandparents when you trace your medical lineage.
What are you looking for? Conditions that family members have been diagnosed with, ages at which they were diagnosed, and risk factors or behaviors—“if your mother had lung cancer, note whether she was a smoker,” Harrison says. You can also find out more about the countries of origin of your relatives, which can help you figure out what diseases your family might be prone to.
Once you have the information, share it with your family and update it yearly.

My Real Holiday Wish...To Cure Cancer, & Video Series, Parade Magazine

Parade Magazine:

My Real Holiday Wish...To Cure Cancer

Some kids ask Santa for goodies and gadgets, but one 12-year-old has something else on her wish list.  Maddy Stultz of Columbia City, Ind., survived a rare cancer as a baby; now she and her family want to help find a cure.  Watch Maddy's story, and our entire "My Real Holiday Wish" video series, at parade.com/wish:



Parade recently traveled across the country to listen to the real wishes of Americans this holiday season.
Krissy Powell went through a harrowing experience when her infant daughter, Maddy Stultz, was diagnosed with cancer (stage 4S neuroblastoma). She shares their story—and her holiday wish for children around the world—in the video below.
For more real holiday wishes check out:

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Pastor Rick Warren 6 Stages of Grief

Parade Magazine, December 1, 2013 Interview with Pastor Rick Warren "The Purpose Driven Diet"


PARADE;  This will be your first Christmas without (son who killed himself) Matthew.  How are you and your wife approaching the holidays?

PASTOR WARREN:  Every holiday when you've lost a loved one is going to be painful, particularly the first year--the first Thanksgiving, first birthday, first Christmas.  But we have the Lord; we have our church family; we have each other.  The other thing is, we're not hiding our grief.  We're walking through it.  You can't get over grief; you get through it.  I have cried every day since Matthew died.  That's not a bad thing.  Tears are a sign of love, not weakness.

(At parade.com/warren, you'll find our video of the pastor speaking about his six stages of grief, plus an excerpt and advice from his book, "The Daniel Plan.")

Saturday, October 26, 2013

"When Will the Heaven Begin?" by Ally Breedlove/Parade, CBS Sunday Morning

Parade Magazine, Sunday, October 27, 2013, Page 4:

"Before dying of a heart condition at 18, Ben Breedlove created a two-part video describing the peace he felt during several brushes with death.  In this touching memoir, Ally Breedlove celebrates her brother's inspiring life.  Watch Ben's video at parade.com/heaven."

CBS Sunday Morning, October 27, 2013:



October 27, 2013 10:49 AM

Ben Breedlove's video message of an afterlife

(CBS News) One boy's brief but inspiring life story has provided a heaven-sent message of hope to millions. Tracy Smith will tell us all about him.
Ben Breedlove seemed to be the kind of kid everyone wanted to be: bright, eternally cheerful, with his own popular TV show on YouTube.
He practically grew up on the lake behind his family's Austin, Texas, home.
But he was also born with a condition called hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a thickening of the heart muscle that can cause high blood pressure, and sudden cardiac arrest.
At various times in his life, Ben's heart did fail. But for him, it seemed those near-death episodes were always, somehow, a reason to smile.
At age four, Ben almost died during a violent seizure, but when he woke up in the hospital, he saw something he could barely describe to his parents, Shawn and Deanne.
"We were being wheeled down a hallway," recalled Deanne. "And he had commented to me that there was this white light above him. And he even said it was a pitch-white light. He didn't know pitch was black tar. He said, 'Mom, it's pitch white. It's right above me. Do you see it?' And I said, 'No.'"
"And it was significant because the hallway that they were being wheeled down, there were no lights on in that hallway," said Sean.
Little Ben recovered, but the vision stayed with him.
As the years passed, Ben's life looked like any other kid's: on bad days, his heart would act up and he'd have to take it easy . . . and on good days he'd do things not for the faint of heart.
"He had this adventurous spirit," said Smith, "and you didn't hold him back."
"Well, that you know of," said his mother.
But Ben was always mindful of the fact that his days might well be numbered.
In December 2011, while changing classes at Austin's Westlake High, Ben suddenly collapsed on a bench. His heart: stopped. The school nurse and emergency techs managed to bring him back, and later on, Ben described what he believed was another glimpse of heaven.
"He said he was in a white room," said Deanne, "and that the peace was more than he could explain. He couldn't describe it."
And he told big sister Ally that he had seen a place he didn't want to leave.
"I asked him if he was happy that he had woken up from his vision, and he said, 'I guess,'" Ally Breedlove recalled. "And he started crying really hard. And that was really difficult for me to hear, as his sister.
"There are some people who say, 'Oh, these visions can be explained by medicine -- that wasn't heaven. That's just what happens when your heart stops.' What would you say?" asked Smith.
"I could just see it in his eyes, this peace that he felt," said Ally. "There was no way he could ever describe it to us."
Two and a half weeks later, on Christmas Day, Ben was out in the backyard playing with kid brother Jake, when his heart suddenly gave out again.
Eighteen-year-old Ben Breedlove had cheated death before, but this time would be different.
"All the medical things went on for quite a while, in the backyard and in the ambulance," said Deanne, "and that whole time I just wondered where Ben really was -- if he was still here in his body or if he had gone to where he couldn't wait to go."
When the heartbroken family came home from the hospital the next morning, a friend told them they hadn't seen the last of Ben. Not really.
"And as they were leaving, my business partner's wife said, 'And you're really gonna like the video,'" recalled Sean Breedlove. "And we said, 'What video?'"
A few days before he died, Ben had recorded his life story, told without a single spoken word, about hsi struggles in this life, and his vision of the next.
"And then as we watched that video," said Sean. "Our son was there, he was smiling big, he was alive, almost like he was giving us a message."
You may watch Part 1 of Ben Breedlove's YouTube video by clicking on the player below. Part 2 can be viewed here.
But it wasn't a message just for them. And within a few days, it caught the world's attention.
For millions, Ben Breedlove's vision of something beyond death seemed to be just what they were longing to hear. Within hours, people started posting their own videos, with their own messages of inspiration and hope.
/ NAL
YouTube says that, as of this morning, Ben's video has been viewed more than 12 million times.
But Ben's sister, who wrote about her brother in a new book, says she's only been able to bring herself to watch the video twice.
"You know, that is the only reason that I'm able to cope with missing him every day, is because I believe that he is more alive now than he's ever been," she said.
Thanks to Ben Breedlove, there may well be a few more.



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