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Archive for July, 2011

A Beautiful Story of Appreciation

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

One young academically excellent person went to apply for a managerial
position in a big company.

He passed the first interview, the director did the last interview, made the
last decision.

The director discovered from the CV that the youth’s academic achievements
were excellent all the way, from the secondary school until the postgraduate
research, never had a year when he did not score.

The director asked, “Did you obtain any scholarships in school?” the youth
answered “none”.

The director asked, ” Was it your father who paid for your school fees?” The
youth answered, “My father passed away when I was one year old, it was my
mother who paid for my school fees.

The director asked, ” Where did your mother work?” The youth answered, “My
mother worked as clothes cleaner. The director requested the youth to show
his hands. The youth showed a pair of hands that were smooth and perfect.

The director asked, ” Have you ever helped your mother wash the clothes
before?” The youth answered, “Never, my mother always wanted me to study and
read more books. Furthermore, my mother can wash clothes faster than me.

The director said, “I have a request. When you go back today, go and clean
your mother’s hands, and then see me tomorrow morning.

The youth felt that his chance of landing the job was high. When he went
back, he happily requested his mother to let him clean her hands. His mother
felt strange, happy but with mixed feelings, she showed her hands to the
kid.

The youth cleaned his mother’s hands slowly. His tear fell as he did that.
It was the first time he noticed that his mother’s hands were so wrinkled,
and there were so many bruises in her hands. Some bruises were so painful
that his mother shivered when they were cleaned with water.

This was the first time the youth realized that it was this pair of hands
that washed the clothes everyday to enable him to pay the school fee. The
bruises in the mother’s hands were the price that the mother had to pay for
his graduation, academic excellence and his future.

After finishing the cleaning of his mother hands, the youth quietly washed
all the remaining clothes for his mother.

That night, mother and son talked for a very long time.

Cassandra

Today we are here and tomorrow we could be gone.

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

By Tammy Francoeur, Mother, Wife of Loved One in Recovery, Co-founder of Turning Point, and Director of Peer Support

I know we all live as if we had all the time in the world, with no real thought of not being here at the end of this hour or end of the day. I am sure Amy Winehouse’s family thought they had time. I am sure Amy thought she had time.

Time to get things done; time to see her family; time to fulfill her hopes and dreams and Time to turn her life around. We never know when enough is enough; we never know when we have used up our time.

“We must accept the things we cannot change; and have courage to change the things we can; and wisdom to know the difference”.

So what does that all mean? We must accept that we cannot change our loved one; they need to do that… but we can certainly provide reasons for those changes…. good ones and bad ones.

We have to have the courage to take that leap of faith. Individuals and families are struggling with addiction at this very moment. When are they going to take the leap of faith and trust that the only way to change things… is with real changes.

Wisdom is a funny attribute as we have to be smart about how much control we actually have, and be honest about what is really happening. Are we fooling ourselves by believing our own lies? Do we think we are smarter than what we really are? OR are we hiding behind the truth.

Most of us think we have time. Time to think about it, time to see what happens if someone else intervenes, time to see if things just work out on their own…. But do we?

Most of us justify our reasons for being stuck. If we had more support, if we had the time off work, if we didn’t have so many other obligations, if we had the money, if we had fewer bills, if we had the solution put in our laps…. then we would do something.

The reality is that when someone is really in crisis, we always find the time, we always find the money and we also find the support. The solution is sitting right in front of our noses; we just didn’t see it through all of our own barriers.

If you had cancer and were told you had to start treatment now or you would die, would you make excuses that you could not find the time, money or support to get you there?

Who are we kidding when we lie to ourselves and those around us? Who says tomorrow will be there tomorrow? Who says you have time to think this through? Who says you will always have everything in place before you can make those life altering decisions?

Do we tell our families that we will bury our loved ones once we get the time and money to do it? Really? What are you waiting for? Second by Second and maybe minute by minute… that is what we have for today.

Every minute is a blessing and an opportunity to make changes… Don’t wait until tomorrow.

Life

Friday, July 22nd, 2011

There comes a time in your life, when you walk away from all the drama and people who create it. You surround yourself with people who make you laugh. Forget the bad, and focus on the good. Love the people who treat you right, pray for the ones who don’t. Life is too short to be anything but happy. Falling down is a part of life, getting back up is living.

author unknown

Canadian’s Be Warned Bath Salts becoming a growing drug problem

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

From the Associated Press Reported on www.ctv.ca

When Neil Brown got high on bath salts, he took his skinning knife and slit his face and stomach repeatedly. Brown survived, but authorities say others haven’t been so lucky after snorting, injecting or smoking powders with such innocuous-sounding names as Ivory Snow, Red Dove and Vanilla Sky.

Some say the effects of the powders are as powerful as abusing methamphetamine. Increasingly, law enforcement agents and poison control centers say the bath salts with complex chemical names are an emerging menace in several U.S. states where authorities talk of banning their sale.

From the Deep South to California, emergency calls are being reported over exposure to the stimulants the powders often contain: mephedrone and methylenedioxypyrovalerone, also known as MDPV.

Sold under such names as Ivory Wave, Bliss, White Lightning and Hurricane Charlie, the chemicals can cause hallucinations, paranoia, rapid heart rates and suicidal thoughts, authorities say. The chemicals are in bath salts and even plant foods that are sold legally at convenience stores and on the Internet. However, they aren’t necessarily being used for the purposes on the label.

Mississippi lawmakers this week began considering a proposal to ban the sale of the powders, and a similar step is being sought in Kentucky. In Louisiana, the bath salts were outlawed by an emergency order after the state’s poison center received more than 125 calls in the last three months of 2010 involving exposure to the chemicals.

In Brown’s case, he said he had tried every drug from heroin to crack and was so shaken by terrifying hallucinations that he wrote one Mississippi paper urging people to stay away from the bath salts.

“I couldn’t tell you why I did it,” Brown said, pointing to his scars. “The psychological effects are still there.”

While Brown survived, sheriff’s authorities in one Mississippi county say they believe one woman overdosed on bath salts there. In southern Louisiana, the family of a 21-year-old man says he cut his throat and ended his life with a gunshot. Authorities are investigating whether a man charged with capital murder in the December death of a Tippah County, Miss., sheriff’s deputy was under the influence of the bath salts.

The stimulants aren’t regulated by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, but are facing federal scrutiny. Law officers say some of the substances are being shipped from Europe, but origins are still unclear.

Gary Boggs, an executive assistant at the DEA, said there’s a lengthy process to restrict these types of designer chemicals, including reviewing the abuse data. But it’s a process that can take years.

Dr. Mark Ryan, director of Louisiana’s poison control center, said he thinks state bans on the chemicals can be effective. He said calls about the salts have dropped sharply since Louisiana banned their sale in January.

Ryan said cathinone, the parent substance of the drugs, comes from a plant grown in Africa and is regulated. He said MDPV and mephedrone are made in a lab, and they aren’t regulated because they’re not marketed for human consumption. The stimulants affect neurotransmitters in the brain, he said.

“It causes intense cravings for it. They’ll binge on it three or four days before they show up in an ER. Even though it’s a horrible trip, they want to do it again and again,” Ryan said.

Ryan said at least 25 states have received calls about exposure, including Nevada and California. He said Louisiana leads with the greatest number of cases at 165, or 48 percent of the U.S. total, followed by Florida with at least 38 calls to its poison center.

Dr. Rick Gellar, medical director for the California Poison Control System, said the first call about the substances came in Oct. 5, and a handful of calls have followed since. But he warned: “The only way this won’t become a problem in California is if federal regulatory agencies get ahead of the curve. This is a brand new thing.”

In the Midwest, the Missouri Poison Center at Cardinal Glennon Children’s Medical Center received at least 12 calls in the first two weeks of January about teenagers and young adults abusing such chemicals, said Julie Weber, the center’s director. The center received eight calls about the powders all of last year.

Dr. Richard Sanders, a general practitioner working in Covington, La., said his son, Dickie, snorted some of the bath salts and endured three days of intermittent delirium. Dickie Sanders missed major arteries when he cut his throat. As he continued to have visions, his physician father tried to calm him. But the elder Sanders said that as he slept, his son went into another room and shot himself.

“If you could see the contortions on his face. It just made him crazy,” said Sanders. He added that the coroner’s office confirmed the chemicals were detected in his son’s blood and urine.

Sanders warns the bath salts are far more dangerous than some of their names imply.

“I think everybody is taking this extremely lightly. As much as we outlawed it in Louisiana, all these kids cross over to Mississippi and buy whatever they want,” he said.

A small packet of the chemicals typically costs as little as $20.

In northern Mississippi’s Itawamba County, Sheriff Chris Dickinson said his office has handled about 30 encounters with bath salt users in the past two months alone. He said the problem grew last year in his rural area after a Mississippi law began restricting the sale of pseudoephedrine, a key ingredient in making methamphetamine.

Dickinson said most of the bath salt users there have been meth addicts and can be dangerous when using them.

“We had a deputy injured a week ago. They were fighting with a guy who thought they were two devils. That’s what makes this drug so dangerous,” he said.

But Dickinson said the chemicals are legal for now, leaving him no choice but to slap users with a charge of disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor.

Kentucky state lawmaker John Tilley said he’s moving to block the drug’s sale there, preparing a bill for consideration when his legislature convenes shortly. Angry that the powders can be bought legally, he said: “If my 12-year-old can go in a store and buy it, that concerns me.”

My Wishes For You

Friday, July 15th, 2011

May today there be peace within.
May you trust that you are exactly where you are meant to be.
May you not forget the infinite possibilities that are born within yourself and others.
May you use the gifts that you have received, and pass on the love
that has been given to you.
May you be content with yourself as you go through this journey.
Let this knowledge settle into your bobody, and allow your soul the
freedom to praise and love, that is there for each and every one of us.

A Secret Scrolls message from Rhonda Byrne

Monday, July 4th, 2011

Creator of The Secret and The Power

From The Secret Daily TeachingsWhat is the most powerful thing you can add to the process of creating what you want? Ask for others as you ask for yourself. An easy way to do this is to ask for ALL, which of course includes you. Ask for a good life for all, peace for all, abundance for all, health for all, love for all, and happiness for all.

When you ask for others, it comes back to you, so the law has it ALL covered.
May the joy be with you,

Rhonda Byrne

 

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