MONDAY’S WALKING

WELL I WENT WALKING YESTERDAY AND I THOUGHT I WAS GOING TO DIE! I WALKED TO FAST AND I WAS SO OUT OF SHAPE. I SHOULD HAVE KNOW BETTER BECAUSE I HADN’T REALLY WALKED IN FOREVER. TONIGHT I AM SURE WILL SUCK JUST AS MUCH AS YESTERDAY DID. ALL I CAN DO I KEEP TRYING AND HOPE ONE DAY THAT I WILL BE IN SHAPE AND WALKING WILL BE EASY FOR ME.
THE GIRLS ARE BEING SO BAD LATELY! THEY ARE ALWAYS GETTING INTO TROUBLE AND DOING THINGS THEY SHOULDN’T BE DOING. WE ARE HAVING TO BRUSH ONE OF THEM EVERYDAY TO TRY AND KEEP THE HAIR BALLS DOWN. THEY ARE THROWING UP SO MUCH IT ISN’T EVEN FUNNY. WE ARE LUCKY IF WE GO A DAY WITH OUT THROW UP. IT GETS TO BE A JOKE AT TIMES THAT IS FOR SURE. THEY ARE LOVING THE WARMER WEATHER THOUGH. THEY SPEND MOST OF THE NIGHTS AND MORNINGS OUTSIDE. I AM SURE THEY WOULD SPEND ALL THEIR TIME OUT THERE IF THEY DIDN’T HAVE TO COME INSIDE TO EAT.

PLAYING IN THE RAIN


THIS WAS ME PLAYING IN THE RAIN AND LIGHTING ON SATURDAY!!!!! IT WAS ALOT OF FUN AND LACHELLE AND MY BROTHER JOINED ME AFTER THEY SAW ME OUT THERE PLAYING IN IT. GRANDMA AND GRANDPA WERE IN THE GARAGE WATCHING US AND ALL OF OUT NEIGHBORS THOUGHT WE WERE CRAZY I AM SURE!

COOL STORY

Teen Outsmarts Doctors In Science Class Self-diagnosis impresses docs who’ve missed signs of her disease for years
By EMILY FELDMAN
Updated 6:25 PM PDT, Mon, Jun 15, 2009
High school senior Jessica Terry studied her own tissue samples as part of her school’s biomedical course. (Photo courtesy Sammamish Reporter)
Eighteen-year-old Jessica Terry, brought slides of her own intestinal tissue into her AP science class and correctly diagnosed herself with Crohn’s disease.
“It’s weird I had to solve my own medical problem,” Terry told CNN affiliate KOMO. “There were just no answers anywhere … I was always sick.”
For years she went from doctor to doctor complaining of vomiting, diarrhea, weight loss and stomach pains. They said she had irritable bowel syndrome. They said she had colitis. They said the slides of her intestinal tissue were fine, but she knew that wasn’t right.
“Not knowing much about a disease you’re growing up with is not only nerve-wracking, but it’s confusing,” Terry told the Sammamish Reporter.
So when local pathologists stopped in to teach students in her Biomedical Problems class how to analyze slides, the high school senior decided to give her own intestines a look.
What she found? A large dark area showing inflammation, otherwise known as a granuloma-a sure sign of the intestinal disease.
To confirm her suspicion, she checked in with her teacher.
“‘Ms. Welch! Ms. Welch! Come over here. I think I’ve got something!” she shouted.
Mary Margaret Welch, who has spent 17 years teaching science at Eastside Catholic School, had a feeling Terry was on to something.
“I snapped a picture of it on the microscope and e-mailed it to the pathologist,” Welch said. “Within 24 hours, he sent back an e-mail saying yes, this is a granuloma.”
The finding impressed doctors.
“Granulomas are oftentimes very hard to find and not always even present at all,” said Dr. Corey Siegel, a bowel disease specialist at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. “I commend Jessica for her meticulous work.”
While Terry’s glad to finally have answers, she now knows she’ll have a tough road ahead.
Crohn’s disease is an incurable, though treatable condition caused by inflammation in the intestines. It can cause malnutrition, ulcers, pain and discomfort.
Still, she looks towards the future with optimism. She’ll begin nursing school in the fall and hopes to have a kid’s book on Crohn’s disease published.

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