Monday, November 16, 2015
Monday Musings - November 16, 2015
1. November is half over. It only just began, it seems. But it certainly is tumultuous.
2. I received my mid-month golf handicap adjustment yesterday with a note that the season in Maryland has officially closed until March 15th. It must truly be winter.
3. Oblivious drivers are everywhere. I noticed more than just a few during my weekend travels to Upstate NY. They are dangerous!
4. My prayers are with and for those who were caught up in the terrorism in Paris over the weekend. Vive la France!
5. It is sad to see all the trees standing without their leaves ready for winter's onslaught.
6. A weekend in Upstate NY is not complete without stopping at at least one winery!
7. My view--it is time for the peace-loving peoples of the world to finally unite and repulse the barbarism and terrorism being spawned by ISIL and other groups across the globe. Maybe a coalition with Russia, the US, China, and NATO along with nonaligned countries can finally be formed. Oh, yeah--that would be the United Nations.
8. The NFL continues to confound with obviously bad calls even after video review. Something's gotta give.
9. The week is beginning. What wonders are in store for us?
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Sunday, November 15, 2015
Apple Tree
I came upon an apple tree yesterday that caught my eye. It was sitting at the corner of a country road prepared for the winter season ahead.
| Apple Tree in Danby, NY |
I would have liked to walk up an grab a truly fresh apple, taken a bite and savored its smell and crispness. But as the tree was clearly not on public property, it would have been wrong.
Looking at the ground under the tree, I gained a renewed awareness for the phrase that apples don't fall far from the tree.
Autumn is rapidly fading into winter. There was some snow on the hills above Cayuga Lake yesterday. And while pretty in a surreal way, it was a prelude of the coming season.
The apple tree reminded me of the summer behind and the cold season ahead.
And it stood tall with a few apples remaining on its branches, braced for the snows I know are coming.
-- Bob Doan, writing from Ithaca, NY
Saturday, November 14, 2015
150 Vacation Days
I want a job where I get 150 vacation days per year.
Crazy?
And they think that federal employees who work for the Executive Branch are overpaid because we have to work every weekday except for holidays.
Welcome to the land of reactionary legislation. Nothing is going to get accomplished unless it is a crisis
I want a job like that. That have reversed the workweek. They work two days and have five day weekends. Sign me up.
Something has to change. There is an election coming. Don't forget.
-- Bob Doan, writing from Ithaca, NY
Friday, November 13, 2015
In Need of Another Vacation
![]() |
| The Blue Hole, Belize |
Specials, discounts!
Except, none are for next summer. They all want me to leave tomorrow or next month!
Oh I wish that I could. The ultimate escapism.
![]() |
| Cathedral Cove, New Zealand |
Perhaps the darkness, the rain, the gloom, and the too cool temperatures are beginning to get to me! I even see that snow is beginning to creep into the forecasts of cities around me.
Brrr!
It is November after all! The news were talking about the November Witch yesterday providing frigid weather to the mid-section of the country. The same witch that may have been responsible for the wreck of the SS Edmund Fitzgerald, which was 40 years ago.
Well, after all, it is almost Thanksgiving and time for the bad weather to begin affecting activities. Darkness and bad weather. What a combination.
Find me a warm, sunny beach somewhere with gentle waves breaking along the coast.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Holiday Busy Day
I have to admit, I look forward to the autumn holidays. They allow me to get projects done, especially in preparation for the upcoming season. Yesterday was no exception.
Makayla had a dental cleaning and so I didn't even get to sleep in. She had to be at the vet by 7:30 AM. She did very well and her teeth look great!
| Christmas Lights Installed and Checked |
And then there were the leaves on the lawn which needed to be repositioned. Fortunately, my tractor does an excellent job of moving the leaves from the lawn and back into the forest from which they came.
Believe it or not, I had a couple of gifts that needed to be wrapped. Christmas is closer than I think, I guess.
I had hoped to get in a round of golf, however, by the time I got everything done the course was busy and I decided to go to the driving range instead to work on my swing. Working out at the range is not nearly as much fun as missing a short putt on a green at the course of driving a ball into the deep woods off the tee, but after 168 shots, followed by about 40 putts, I had accomplished a pretty good workout and wrung out some of the problems I had been experiencing.
On the way home, I picked up Makayla dropped her off at the house and then, given a small window of opportunity, I decided to get a haircut. Later that same evening, Chris and I had a dinner date with Patrick and Tina followed by some entertainment back at their house.
All-in-all, it was a busy and great day. A lot accomplished and I even took time to thank a few veterans along the way!
When is the next holiday? Oh yeah, Thanksgiving when I give thanks and eat too much!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Veteran's Day Special
Thank them!
Remember them!
Across the seas and even here in our own land, America's military veterans have served with distinction!
![]() |
| American Cemetery in Luxembourg |
Pause for a moment and reflect on the freedoms that you have and then remember that someone made a sacrifice for you.
Those who served are all around and most a very humble about their service. I always blush when someone thanks me for my service.
Veterans, be proud!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
My Take: Red Cup Furor Overblown
![]() |
| Starbucks' Red Holiday Cups |
My thought was, why not orange for pumpkins?
Can someone really, in good conscience accuse Starbucks of being anti-Christmas?
I worry that we are becoming a paranoid society and that people are searching for ways that they can feel persecuted. There are real issues out there, like the climbing Baltimore murder rate and people are seriously worried that Starbucks is using a plain red cup for the holiday season?
Get a life!
For me, I like the minimalist holiday look. I find it festive and simply elegant! Good job Starbucks. I may even head over to Starbucks for a cup-of-joe in a red cup.
And that is My Take!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
It was a Dark, Dreary November Evening
| Steaks on the Grill |
Yesterday was even tougher. It was rainy and seasonably cool--meaning, all outdoor activity ceased.
Ugh!
I found a way to beat the darkness! Cooking steaks on the grill! It brought back the smells of summer and the tastes that I long for. Served with a nice dark red wine--a Grenache, it drove out the darkness--at least for a moment.
I need to keep reminding myself that the darkness, in and of itself is not a bad thing. It need to overcome the darkness by doing things that remind me of the summer and sunlight.
Summer is not just a season, it is a state of mind.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Monday, November 9, 2015
Monday Musings - November 9, 2015
1. November has been extremely mild and enjoyable, prolonging a spectacular autumn for the region.
2. Veteran's Day is this week. Thank you to all who have served and who continue to serve!
3. It is good when the team I'm rooting for doesn't lose, even if they don't play. Go Ravens!
4. Scented candles are just a bit much! And they are polluting our home environments.
5. It is baseball season, yet?
6. On this day in 1965, the great Northeast blackout happened. I remember where I was when the lights went off.
7. I have had a cold that just keeps lingering. It is miserable.
8. This is only week two of standard time! And it keeps getting darker, earlier.
9. The end of predatory towing companies freedom to pillage and plunder may be in sight!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Sunday, November 8, 2015
My Take: News Media Run Amok
It has been clear for some time now, that the news media is over stepping their boundaries when it comes to reporting.
No longer, it seems, is the media, which I use as a collective term, satisfied to report the news of the day, they want to create the news.
No where is it more evident than the Presidential olympics. Why are the discussions of the candidates overshadowing more pressing news of the day? Because not only can the media report, but, they can create and then shape the news in a sensational manner.
The scary part is? Who will elect the next President? The news media! I have heard arguments about whether the media, collectively again, is liberal or conservative and it really does not matter. The shaping and uneven reporting does a disservice to Americans who depend upon the news media for information.
There needs to be something sensational every day!
It makes the ratings go up! And that means money. It does not equate to full and truthful reporting.
Not everything being reported is really news! A lot of it is opinion, beware.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Saturday, November 7, 2015
My Take: Police Abuses
I read a particularly disturbing article about a police chase in Louisiana this morning that continues to highlight the changing nature of police departments around our country. And this comes after a particularly rough summer where police abuses have been highlighted.
![]() |
| Jeremy Mardis Killed by Police Bullets in Louisiana |
This comes after another young man was killed a few weeks ago after his car broke down along I-95 near Jupiter, Florida.
And it comes after a summer of unrest around the country about the aggressive, shoot-first and ask questions later approach to law enforcement that is being employed.
This is not the 1930's with gangsters riding around the country laying trails of death and destruction behind them robbing banks and using automatic weapons. Innocent bystanders are being killed by direct fire!
I remember that, in olden times, the police were the servants of the people. When someone strayed, they packed the person up and took them home. An encounter with the police was not a life threatening event. Look at old TV shows how the police are portrayed--they lived in the neighborhoods they protected and knew the people. The police helped people and only addressed the most egregious violations.
We, apparently, have become a society intolerant of even the most minor transgression and the result has been the militarization of the police forces which have transformed them from being servants of the populace to being the enforcers first.
I fear the abuses will continue.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Friday, November 6, 2015
My Take: We have Lost the News
We are a news starved society, out of touch with what is happening in the world unless it is dramatic. Our major news sources are myopically focused upon the upcoming--still over a year away, election at the expense of keeping Americans in touch with what is going on around the world.
Does I really care what Donald Trump's current ranting is about, and is it news worthy? I think not!
Yes, most Americans may understand that a Russian airliner was downed, probably by ISIS/ISIL over the Sinai, but do they even know where the Sinai is?
How many people know that a dam burst in Brazil engulfing a community in a river of mud and killing at least 15?
Or that refugees from Syria and the Middle East are still trying to get into Europe?
How many have already forgotten that the Russians are actively fighting in Syria?
We live in a connected world, but we have blinders on. We ignore most of what is happening around us and form opinions based only upon what others are screaming at us.
We have lost perspective because we are not getting the full story, and are only hearing occasional sound bytes. Maybe it is because we are not reading the newspapers anymore. I know what I actually have a paper in my hands, I read a lot of the smaller stories that provide insights into what is going on around the world.
Journalism has become entertainment and we have lost the news and its critical perspective as a result.
And that is My Take!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Thursday, November 5, 2015
As the Cactus Blooms
| Cactus Blooming |
It is another one of those autumnal events that mark the ending of another year and the approach of the holiday season.
It is funny that the cactus sits around all year apparently doing nothing and unaware of the beauty of summer, but once November arrives it blossoms.
We own two of the cactus--originally we thought that they were Christmas cactus, but now they apparently have become Thanksgiving cactus. Turns out, there are both Thanksgiving and Christmas cactus varieties AND it is possible to tell the difference between them! The linked article from the Clemson Cooperative Extension describes the cactus and an Easter relative as well.
Another sign of the season--flowering cactus!
Enjoy November. Well, as much as possible!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
My Take: November versus Christmas
I had the opportunity to accompany Chris into Target the other evening where the Halloween section was rapidly being replaced by the Christmas-related items for sale.
What happened to November? They skipped right over the turkeys and the pilgrims. That is a holiday foul!
Maybe it is me; I just do not want to deal with the idea of Christmas. Don't get me wrong, I love Christmas, it is the holiday shopping season that I could live without. The advertisements for Black Friday sales are already in full swing--and it isn't even Black Friday yet.
How about breather to enjoy the season that is and not rush headlong into the season that is coming.
| Fireplace at Home |
There is more than enough time for December decorations, when the time comes. Let's not rush the season. I almost wish for January 2nd, when we can begin to get back to a normal pace of life.
I we are going to rush something, let's skip over it all and get right to April and pool opening season!
Like that is going to happen.
Enjoy November and Thanksgiving. I know at least one member of my family thinks that Thanksgiving is the best holiday, ever! So let's enjoy it!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Autumn's Blast
![]() |
| My Neighbor's Trees in the Evening Light |
Autumn is a second spring when every leaf is a flower.
It is definitely true this autumn, when I have been appreciating the leaves as they don their autumn colors before falling into piles on my lawn ready to be swept back into the forest near the bases of the trees from which they fell.
![]() |
| Trees around my yard November 2, 2015 |
![]() |
| Sunset in the Window |
I captured an interesting view of the sunset reflected in the window of Chris' car. I thought it to be interesting view of the sunset.
And as the autumn deepens, sunset comes earlier and earlier, the dark season is at hand stifling the brilliance of the leaves.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Monday, November 2, 2015
Monday Musings - November 2, 2015
1. I can't believe that it is November already! It seems like yesterday, I was just closing the pool.
2. Happiness is something I can choose!
3. The Ravens won yesterday, they are no longer tied for the worst record in the NFL. Miracles do still happen.
![]() |
| GORC 80lb Wildcats after Playoff Win November 1, 2015 |
5. Congrats to the Kansas City Royals on winning the 2015 World Series. Now we can get down to business and start building the Orioles into a World Series contender.
![]() |
| Spruce Goose in Flight |
7. Bad fog is cancelling flights and snarling traffic in the UK today.
8. I had another frustrating day on the golf course yesterday in that I didn't play as well as I believe that I can. I feel like I am close to playing really well, but each new round highlights another aspect of my game requiring attention.
9. China dropped its one-child policy! I think that is a win for the people of China.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Sunday, November 1, 2015
Season of the Turkey
With the arrival of November, the Season of the Turkey is upon us!
As the Halloween decorations find their spots in boxes and before the onslaught of the Christmas season, there are a couple weeks of respite when the Season of the Turkey provides comic relief culminating with the celebration of Thanksgiving!
![]() |
| Wood to be Stacked |
![]() |
| Stacked and Ready for Winter |
It was a bright and sunny autumn day, the culmination of which was Halloween and Trick or Treating. The numbers of children seemed lower this year, but the neighborhood parties were definitely increased. I was amazed at the obvious presence of the police to ensure the festivities were celebrated without incident.
![]() |
| Autumn View of the Lawn October 31, 2015 |
With each passing day, I am more ready for the Season of the Turkey.
For now, I will take a deep breath and enjoy the pause before the craziness of the holiday season crashes upon me!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Saturday, October 31, 2015
Halloween and the Zombie Apocalypse
![]() |
| Lucas: The Piñata must Die! |
This paragraph from the History Channel article defines the context for the holiday as it evolved in America.
Celebration of Halloween was extremely limited in colonial New England because of the rigid Protestant belief systems there. Halloween was much more common in Maryland and the southern colonies. As the beliefs and customs of different European ethnic groups as well as the American Indians meshed, a distinctly American version of Halloween began to emerge. The first celebrations included “play parties,” public events held to celebrate the harvest, where neighbors would share stories of the dead, tell each other’s fortunes, dance and sing. Colonial Halloween festivities also featured the telling of ghost stories and mischief-making of all kinds. By the middle of the nineteenth century, annual autumn festivities were common, but Halloween was not yet celebrated everywhere in the country.
![]() |
| Ethan in Costume |
I am not a huge fan of Halloween--but, I have come to appreciate the social exchange that occurs in many neighborhoods as neighbors meet, perhaps for the only time each year, on their doorsteps and neighborhoods are drawn together.
![]() |
| Nicole, the Hostess in Costume |
Tonight, I will wander a neighborhood following behind the grandchildren and their friends as we visit the holes of their neighbors. Along the way we will bee up with other neighbors that we know from years past and marvel as the growth of the kids i na year. We may exchange some punch or other adult beverage, and we will enjoy the youthful enthusiasm of the evening.
That is bad, how? I think some overly moralistic and self-anointed keepers of tradition need to get over themselves.
I do have a thought! What if the Zombie Apocalypse happened on Halloween? Would we know until it was too late? I don't want to get into a discussion of Zombies--according to the definition, they are fictional characters and they are best left that way.
They are fictional, right?
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Friday, October 30, 2015
Autumn Light
Driving home yesterday afternoon after a quick round of golf, and before the ending of Daylight Saving Time causes these infrequent afternoon delights to end, I noticed the clouds in the sky highlighting the autumn leaves of the trees.
It was an idyllic afternoon.
I was able to play 11 holes of golf in less than two hours after working a whole day and enjoy the weather.
I did encounter some interesting shots on the golf course which tested both my skills and patience, like the plugged ball in the side of a bunker on the par 3, 5th. I was able to get it out in two strokes and salvaged a double bogey on the hole.
It was a beautiful afternoon made even more so by the reflection of the setting sun off the clouds highlighting the golden and red leaves of the autumnal trees.
I definitely noticed the fast approaching darkness as the light began to disappear at about 5:30 PM. It was too bad that darkness was so quickly falling, because I was able to make par on both the 10th and 11th holes. This was a great way to end probably my last mid-week golf outing until Daylight Saving Time returns during March.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
![]() |
| Plugged Ball in the Side of a Bunker October 29, 2015 Timbers at Troy |
I was able to play 11 holes of golf in less than two hours after working a whole day and enjoy the weather.
I did encounter some interesting shots on the golf course which tested both my skills and patience, like the plugged ball in the side of a bunker on the par 3, 5th. I was able to get it out in two strokes and salvaged a double bogey on the hole.
It was a beautiful afternoon made even more so by the reflection of the setting sun off the clouds highlighting the golden and red leaves of the autumnal trees.
I definitely noticed the fast approaching darkness as the light began to disappear at about 5:30 PM. It was too bad that darkness was so quickly falling, because I was able to make par on both the 10th and 11th holes. This was a great way to end probably my last mid-week golf outing until Daylight Saving Time returns during March.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Thursday, October 29, 2015
Debate-o-rama
Another debate and another loss for the American people.
The line of Republican hopefuls were struggling to be heard and yet, when they were heard, they all sounded the same.
I seemed like a group of angry men and women.
Angry that they could not control the format or the questions. And if they didn't like a question they either ignored it or complained that their question was harder.
One of the funniest moments was when a particularly contentious issue was being discussed and the candidates inquired what the rules were for allowing follow-on comments. They did not like the answer--moderator discretion. It was humorous.
The NY Times provides a summary of each candidates' performance in How They Did: A Breakdown of the Republican Debate on CNBC. Reading the article is a lot more interesting that watching the so called debate. I have to agree, the CNBC moderators did not and could not moderate the event.
In my mind, the big losers were Jeb Bush and Rand Paul. They failed to clearly get their messages out and at times appeared petty.
There was no big winner, but Marco Rubio was clear and focused.
Donald Trump and Ben Carson were too busy trying not to lose that they almost failed to make an appearance.
The rest of the crowd were lost in the noise and confusion of the evening.
What I heard--everyone has a tax plan! Everyone has a reason for trying to sound different.--but they all are beginning to sound alike and the same.
All I heard was more whining and less substance.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
For All the Pigs in Iowa
I read a fascinating fact in the Washington Post yesterday. According to Senator Grassley, the senior U.S. Senator from Iowa, "one out of every three pigs in the U.S. lives in Iowa!" Yes, the story was about lifting the pork ban in Federal Prisons, but the factoid was interesting nonetheless.
Is it just a weird coincidence that the Presidential Olympics is currently playing out in Iowa in advance of the caucasus? Most of the candidates are spending time in Iowa and, perhaps, the will of the hog farmers is being heard in the reversal of the Federal Prison ban on pork and pork products?
![]() |
| Pork on a plate |
I wonder if the recently forged budget deal has anything to do with Iowa and the hog farmers?
Just saying.
Well, if the government is funded through September 2017 and we don't have to worry about shutdowns and furloughs, is that a bad thing?
And maybe is it all because one in three U.S. pigs live in Iowa?
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Return of the Dark Season
Many people have noticed that I hesitate to call the season that officially begins during December, in the Northern Hemisphere, by its given name. I actually have a reason. By calling it the Dark Season, I can more closely align the actual season when Daylight Saving Time ends with the calendar.
This year on Sunday, November 1, Daylight Saving Time ends and the Dark Season begins. That is the coming Sunday. By the way, did you notice that Daylight Saving Time is singular and not plural?
During the dark season, all hope of getting out of work on time and getting in a few holes of golf evaporates. One week from today, the sun will set in Elkridge, MD, at 5:04 PM and it will be dark by 5:32 PM--effectively ending outside activities.
Preparations for the dark season are in full gear! There are grasses to cut around the pool area and windows to replace. There are leaves to be raked and lawns to be prepped for the coming season. The loss of the evenings means that I will be spending more time inside--wishing that I was outside.
And with the darkness, the cold arrives!
With the loss of thermal warming from our good friend Sol, the temperatures drop and the warm rains of summer turn into the frigid blizzards of December!
Face it--the dark season is not my favorite.
Last evening I was outside at 6 PM, in daylight, hitting golf balls into my net. Next week, I won't even be able to see my net at that time.
The dark is coming!
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Monday, October 26, 2015
Monday Musings - October 26, 2015
![]() |
| New Entrance Light |
2. Here is a question, why do NFL teams needing for a first down on a 4th and 8 yards to go throw a 5 yard pass and think that is somehow going to be successful?
3. The World Series is finally beginning. It is the Royals against the Mets. I am cheering for the Mets since the Royals eliminated the Orioles last year.

4. The weather this past week was mild and enjoyable. The leaves are falling off the trees in droves. I cleared them from my lawn on Wednesday and it looked as if I had done nothing by Thursday evening.
![]() |
| Statement on the Side of a Case of Wine |
6. I was reading an advertisement from the New York Times and was amazed to discover that modern homes burn faster, much faster, than older homes. That just doesn't make sense to me.
7. I have never caught a baseball while sitting in a stadium. Apparently, there is a science to catching baseballs in the stands as detailed in the article How to Catch a Baseball in the Stands. Who knew?
8. I was amazed at how much work I was able to get done around the house by just staying home and working yesterday. What a concept! My biggest projects of the season is still out there: cutting the grasses around the pool and replacing two more basement windows.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Sunday, October 25, 2015
Spectacular Saturday
It was a busy and enjoyable Saturday that started early and finished late.
I am amazed how many things we can cram into a day that, while related, require travel and preparation.
First up was the last regular season game for the GORC Wildcats 80lb. football team! Go Cats. Unfortunately Jax's team suffered a crushing defeat at the early morning game. It was cold on the field as the sun was rising over the trees in Crofton, MD, and that did not help the play of the Wildcats.
Look at how long the shadows are in the image. Yes, it was that early, especially considering that the sun went behind the clouds for the rest of the day about 9:30 AM. Did I mention cold? It was pretty cold, too!
From the gridiron to the golf course was the next part of my day! Yes, somehow I tried to squeeze in 18 holes of golf. I wasn't entirely successful because the groups in front of us were playing slow and I had to leave after 4 hours and 10 minutes and 15 holes for my evening dinner engagement. Jeremy and I were teamed up against the Haslup brothers and although we were tied at the turn, the match got away from us and we were too many holes behind when Jeremy and I had to leave. We will get them, next time!
It was a beautiful autumn day, a bit overcast, as the image shows, but a nice day for a round of golf. I wish we could have played better, but it was good to get out and play. The course was in good shape and made for great competition.
The evening included a dinner at Dinosaur Bar-B-Que in Baltimore. The Syracuse phenomenal restaurant has made it to Baltimore! And it was great barbecue. We were out with Jeremy and Nicole to celebrate a birthday and an anniversary! hat an awesome evening in Baltimore enjoying great company.
What a busy day. But what great memories.
I wonder what is in store for today?
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
I am amazed how many things we can cram into a day that, while related, require travel and preparation.
![]() |
| GORC 80 Lb. Wildcats October 24, 2015 |
Look at how long the shadows are in the image. Yes, it was that early, especially considering that the sun went behind the clouds for the rest of the day about 9:30 AM. Did I mention cold? It was pretty cold, too!
![]() |
| Jeremy Walking to the Green Eisenhower Golf Course October 24, 2015 |
It was a beautiful autumn day, a bit overcast, as the image shows, but a nice day for a round of golf. I wish we could have played better, but it was good to get out and play. The course was in good shape and made for great competition.
![]() |
| After dinner in Baltimore |
What a busy day. But what great memories.
I wonder what is in store for today?
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Saturday, October 24, 2015
Cancer Awareness of the Month
October is breast cancer awareness month. Sadly, though, I wonder if other cancers are forgotten about and under researched as a result of the explosion of awareness for this one aggressive form of cancer?
I have been seeing sports teams wearing pink all month and while I appreciate the emphasis, I would prefer to see other cancer colors represented more widely.
My awareness to other forms of cancer was increased when I was talking with a neighbor who just had a radical surgery as part of their battle against this insidious invader.
As it turns out, breast cancer is not unique by having an awareness month. Almost every month is designated for awareness of other specific cancers.
Who Knew?
April, for instance, is testicular cancer awareness month and orchid is its color. Most people don't know that.
October we know is for breast cancer and its color is pink, but did you know that October is also liver cancer awareness month and its color is emerald?
Check out the full list here!
Cancer sucks! I just want to be sure that all forms of cancer are receiving the research necessary to defeat them.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
I have been seeing sports teams wearing pink all month and while I appreciate the emphasis, I would prefer to see other cancer colors represented more widely.
My awareness to other forms of cancer was increased when I was talking with a neighbor who just had a radical surgery as part of their battle against this insidious invader.
![]() |
| Orchid for Testicular Cancer Awareness |
Who Knew?
April, for instance, is testicular cancer awareness month and orchid is its color. Most people don't know that.
![]() |
| Emerald for Liver Cancer Awareness |
Check out the full list here!
Cancer sucks! I just want to be sure that all forms of cancer are receiving the research necessary to defeat them.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Friday, October 23, 2015
The Bad-Boy or the Socialist?
Labels.Sometimes they tell me what I need to know in a brutally truthful manner.
I have been watching the Presidential Olympics and am concerned that the final two frontrunners may require a choice between a "bad-boy" businessman who is making it a campaign issue to be politically incorrect or a self-admitted and labeled democratic socialist!
Wow! I'm feeling on the outside of the inner workings of the political system.
Does Trump ever smile?
Is there no joy?
I am surely hoping that there is a moderate hidden in there somewhere. Someone other than the current front runners.
I do not think we need bigger government to solve our problems. I think that is what has caused many of our problems, people are looking for the federal government to resolve issue that should be handled at the state or local level. That means bigger government and higher taxes. All of the candidates seem to be trying to impose their personal view of the world upon everyone living in the U.S.
The bad-boy or the socialist? Surely there has to be another option!
Why yes, it appears there is--a former Secretary of State and First Lady who is, in my mind, a flawed choice. She never smiles either.
And then there is the world renown doctor who has some isolationist ideas and has made a few politically incorrect statements of his own while trying, apparently, to be more "Trump-like."
There are a couple of former governors who are rapidly falling off the pace because their messages are fuzzy.
Fortunately, the is still a year until the election and we will be able to watch the candidates under the microscopic inspection of the news media.
Maybe something good can still happen for the country.
-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)








































