Looking at ourselves and the world through the lens of the 21st century.

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Heard it on the Podcast - January 29, 2025

 

 
 
Did you miss a link we mentioned on the podcast? Here's a quick post we'll do every Wednesday to share any links or information from the podcast. We'll also keep a running post on the "Links from the Podcast" tab so you can refer back to any previous episode. 

29-JAN-2025
S5E5: Men's Health

Listen to the podcast:   HERE

Here are the links for this week:


Don't forget to visit our Facebook group, MMC Chat. Let us know what you think! 

 

Monday, January 27, 2025

Male Ego: Why it's Killing Them



On this week’s episode, we are talking about men’s health, particularly prostate cancer, and the challenges faced by our guest, John Griffith of Score Men’s Wellness. I don’t want to give away too much about the episode (you really should have a listen!), but one of the things we talked a lot about is men’s reluctance to take care of themselves physically by going to the doctor. I don’t think it’s just a male ego thing, after all, I’ve known plenty of women who put their heads in the sand when it came to their health. I denied the possibility of a diabetes diagnosis for years before the occurrence of breast cancer forced my hand. And my mother-in-law took care of everyone before she took care of herself, even after she’d had deep vein thrombosis, heart issues, and more. But men sometimes take the idea of ignorance as bliss to a new level – often a deadly one.


I have first-hand experience with this male egoic refusal to go to the doctor with my late husband, Mark. On the mildly annoying end of things, he would often get strep throat and wouldn’t go in for a check-up until he was too sick to function. In fact, on my son’s 1st birthday, I had to send a friend to pick him up from the local urgent care because he waited until that morning to go in. As luck would have it, he was stuck there during the party and was so sick he actually passed out, so they wouldn’t let him drive home. He came home and went straight to bed, missing the whole party.


He eventually started taking his health more seriously, but that still did not include going to the doctor unless he had to. He quit smoking, lost a few pounds, and developed a great habit of exercising and eating well. One of his hobbies became mountain biking, and he often went out to the local trails on the weekend for some outdoor exercise. Then he had a big crash, and he was pretty sure he injured his arm. Instead of going to the urgent care or the emergency room to have it checked out, he decided to wait and see if it got better. A few days later, when he was still in pain, he went to the urgent care and had an x-ray. They said they would call him back with the results. They never called, and he never called them. Assuming that no news was good news, he played ostrich and continued his business. But he was still in pain, and he didn’t have full use of his arm. No amount of nagging on my part would get him to call that doctor back to get the results…that is until he went to his primary care physician to get a physical for Boy Scouts. She sent him off for an MRI and to see an orthopedist. Guess what? He had torn the ligament that attached his elbow to his upper arm. It was almost detached. Months of ignoring the problem had worsened the original injury. It was quite serious and would have required surgery to repair if he’d waited any longer. 


The most offensive incident was when he ignored his persistent cough. Mark had asthma as a child, and even though he sometimes still had episodes, he mostly ignored them. While most people think of an asthma attack as a wheezy struggle to get air into the lungs, I learned years ago that asthma can also present as a cough…often a persistent one. Mark coughed all the time. It was so frequent that I don’t think he even noticed it. I reminded him often to ask his doctor for an inhaler. He had an albuterol inhaler at one time, but he never had it refilled. He just ignored the cough and me. The cough wasn’t enough to bother him greatly or to interfere with his other plans, so it wasn’t worth addressing.


In June, our family spent a weekend canoeing down the Brazos River. It was a fun annual adventure for us. Mark, being the most physically fit of all of us, normally ends the weekend with little more than a bit of sunburn wherever he missed putting on sunscreen, but after this trip, his shoulder was hurting him. True to his nature, rather than getting it checked out, he decided to give it time to heal before he gave in and went to the doctor in July. I’ll skip all the details of that experience to get to my point – he had a tumor on his spine. Grade 4 adenocarcinoma – lung cancer.  It had already spread to multiple areas of his spine, liver, and hip. The doctors gave him 1-5 years. He lived 18 months.


Mark often told people that he had no previous symptoms – that the pain in his neck was the first inkling that anything could be wrong. But remember that niggling cough that I kept asking him to take care of? That was his early warning sign, and he ignored it. He had smoked for 20+ years, but because he assumed it was his asthma, he didn’t think that little cough was important enough to get checked out. If he’d gone to the doctor, they might have been able to catch that tumor in his lung before it spread, and the outcome of treatment was still good. He might still be alive today. A simple chest x-ray would have done it.


Lung cancer, diabetes, heart disease, breast cancer, colon cancer, prostate cancer… these are all illnesses that can be cured, and yet, so often, treatment doesn’t come until it is too late. We avoid simple tests like a chest x-ray, a mammogram, a blood test, or a colonoscopy because it is uncomfortable, embarrassing, or inconvenient. Or maybe it is because we are afraid – we don’t want to know. Whatever the reason, it is a waste of the life we’ve been given and a disrespect to the people who love us. Is our ego more important than that? We should want to do everything we can to stick around for the people who love us, no matter how intrusive, awkward, time-consuming, or unpleasant it might be.


Mark was just 62 when he died. He likely would have had another 20 years to make music, ride bikes, canoe the Brazos, and spend time with his friends and family. Those 20 years were stolen from all of us, but they didn’t have to be. The lesson is simple – if you can’t do it for yourself, do it for the people you love and encourage them to do the same for you. Whatever it takes – don’t squander the life you have on your ego.


 

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Heard it on the Podcast - January 22, 2025

 

 
 
Did you miss a link we mentioned on the podcast? Here's a quick post we'll do every Wednesday to share any links or information from the podcast. We'll also keep a running post on the "Links from the Podcast" tab so you can refer back to any previous episode. Here's the links for this week:

22-JAN-2025
S5E4: Monthly Book Challenge

Listen to the podcast:   HERE

  • Book Challenge video on TikTok
  • List of Books Christen and Amber Read
  • Amber's 40th Birthday Book Challenge
  • 2025 Book Challenge Prompts
  • The StoryGraph app (also available on the Apple App Store or on Google Play
  • The Hardest Reading Challenge You'll Ever Do on The StoryGraph
  • 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die - Amazon
  • Amazon Book Tracker
  • 1001 Books Blog November, 30, 2023

Don't forget to visit our Facebook group, MMC Chat. Let us know what you think! 

 

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Heard it on the Podcast - January 15, 2025

 

 
 
Did you miss a link we mentioned on the podcast? Here's a quick post we'll do every Wednesday to share any links or information from the podcast. We'll also keep a running post on the "Links from the Podcast" tab so you can refer back to any previous episode. 

15-JAN-2025
S5E3: How Can You Make Someone's Day Better?

Listen to the podcast:   HERE

Here's the links for this week:

  • National Compliment Day is January 24
  • The tough CEO that Cindy mentioned was Jensen Huang of Nvidia
  • Love Languages episode

Saturday, January 11, 2025

No Time for Hobbies? Maybe They're Not That Important


 

This week on the podcast, we talked about hobbies, and I have to laugh a little bit because I have so many of them. For me, anything I do recreationally, whether I’m serious about it or not, is a hobby. I use the term very loosely. I might even admit that taking a nap is a hobby – a favorite one – even though I don’t get to do it as often as I like. If it’s not work or a household chore, and I enjoy doing it, then it’s a hobby to me.


I have a few hobbies I’ve kept around for most of my life – like reading. I love reading. I don’t get to spend as much time reading as I used to because the lack of naps makes me tired, and as soon as I start reading, I start falling asleep. When I was younger and more energetic, I read off and on all day. I would even sometimes finish a book in one day.


I like binge-watching TV, too, if you can call that a hobby. But I never just watch TV without something else to do at the same time. Maybe I’ll scrapbook or work a Diamond Dots pattern. I’ve spent many hours hand-stitching the binding on quilts. When I was younger, it was almost always crochet.


Crochet is one of those lifelong hobbies. I first learned how when I was about eight. My mother and my great-grandmother taught me. They were both quite accomplished crocheters. My Grandma Thacker made me an afghan when I was in high school that I still have to this day. She was also well-known for her baby booties, which I eventually learned how to replicate.


I do a little sewing, too. I like to make quilts. I’ve made a few t-shirt quilts for my family, and I have more shirts stashed aside to create even more. I just finished a quilt for my granddaughter. It took me a long time to do it…more than two years. There was just so much going on all the time I could never manage my schedule enough to make time for it. 


And that’s a bald-faced lie. 


The truth is that I didn’t make time for it. We often tell ourselves that we don’t have time for this or that, but the truth is that we have plenty of time for the things we prioritize. Think about that for a minute. Whatever is most important to you, that is what you will spend your time doing. Wow! That makes me sound like a terrible grandma! But it’s true. Part of me said that I could wait and not rush the quilt project because I could get it to her any time, and there were more important things I needed to deal with. Were those other things really that important? Some of them. Others were just things I chose to do instead, like scrolling on my phone or mindlessly eating popcorn while watching TV. If I had dedicated even 10 minutes daily to working on that quilt, it could have been finished a year ago (or sooner)!


Don’t let poor planning and messed up priorities interfere with the things you need to do or the things you say you want to do. If it’s really important to you, make the time for it. And don’t forget that hobbies and downtime are important and should be scheduled, too. It helps us rest, rejuvenate, and refill our inner well. Just don’t over-prioritize the fun over what’s truly important to you. If you consistently prioritize other things over something you say is important, then maybe it’s time to reassess its importance and let it go.

 

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Heard it on the Podcast - January 8, 2025

 

 
 
Did you miss a link we mentioned on the podcast? Here's a quick post we'll do every Wednesday to share any links or information from the podcast. We'll also keep a running post on the "Links from the Podcast" tab so you can refer back to any previous episode. 

8-JAN-2025
S5E2: National Hobbies Month

Listen to the podcast:   HERE

Here's the links for this week:

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Heard it on the Podcast - January 1, 2025

 
 
Did you miss a link we mentioned on the podcast? Here's a quick post we'll do every Wednesday to share any links or information from the podcast. We'll also keep a running post on the "Links from the Podcast" tab so you can refer back to any previous episode. Here's the links for this week:

1-JAN-2025
S5E1: New Year, New Goals

Listen to the podcast:   HERE

  

5 Ways to Manifest Your Best Life

Hi there, and welcome back! Since we have been heavily focusing on goals and planning, I thought we should discuss manifesting. I love this ...