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Cancer Diary: Location of Tongue Sores

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  Does the Location of a Tongue Sore Matter? Yes — Here’s How 1. The Side of the Tongue (High‑Risk Zone) This is the most common location for tongue cancer to appear. Why: The sides of the tongue experience constant friction against the teeth. They have a high density of squamous cells , the type that most oral cancers arise from. Irritation + cell turnover = more opportunities for abnormal growth. What cancerous lesions look like here: A firm , irregular ulcer A raised or thickened patch A sore that doesn’t heal after 2–3 weeks Sometimes painless What benign sores look like here: A bite mark (crescent-shaped or linear) A soft, tender ulcer that improves daily A sore that heals within 1–2 weeks If a sore on the side of the tongue lingers, clinicians take it seriously. 2. The Top of the Tongue (Low‑Risk Zone) The top surface is rarely where cancer starts. Why: It’s covered in papillae (the little bumps), which are less prone to malignant change. It’s e...

Publisher's pride: Books on bestseller lists - RV Oopsies (MacDonald)

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  Today's publisher's pride is  RV Oopsies   by Larry MacDonald, which reached  #32 in travel humor and #54 in hospitality & tourism.  (This book has been in the Amazon top 100 nearly every month since its release.) Book Description:  101 Hilarious (and Painful) Lessons from Real-Life RV Mishaps Every year, thousands of people hit the road in their RVs chasing freedom, fun, and the great outdoors—but even the best adventures come with their fair share of epic fails. From backing into trees and bending jack stands to the infamous black tank blunders, RV life is full of surprises… and not all of them are good ones. For over a decade, author [Name] has asked fellow RVers one simple question:  “What’s the dumbest thing you’ve done while RVing?”  The answers? Outrageous, laugh-out-loud funny, and surprisingly educational. RV Oopsies  gathers  101 true stories of RV mistakes, misadventures, and mechanical mayhem , each offering a valuable ...

The Ides of March: A Day That Reminds Us to Pay Attention

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  Every year, the Ides of March arrives with a whisper of drama. It’s one of those dates that carries its own weather system—part history, part superstition, part Shakespearean thundercloud. Even people who haven’t opened a Roman history book since high school feel a little prickle when March 15 rolls around. But beneath the theatrics, the Ides of March is really about something quieter and more human: the moment when what has been simmering finally comes to the surface . 🌿 A Day Built for Reckoning In the Roman calendar, the Ides weren’t ominous at all. They were simply the midpoint of the month—a time for settling accounts, taking stock, and squaring up what needed attention. It was a practical pause, a reminder that life runs better when we don’t let things drift too far out of alignment. Then Julius Caesar walked into the Senate in 44 BCE, and the date acquired a reputation it has never shaken. But even that story, stripped of its political intrigue, is about something u...

Precerpt from Raising God's Rainbow Makers: Doah Expects Me to Fix Everything! Really!

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Doah is, by nature, a remarkably robust person. He almost never complains. People who know him well often remark on how much discomfort he tolerates without a word. But there is one situation where his patience vanishes instantly: when he cannot breathe well. Doah has sensory overload, something first identified by his pediatrician, T. Berry Brazelton, during our Boston Children’s Hospital stay  in 1980. Most of the time it sits quietly in the background of his life. But when he is sick— especially with something like bronchitis— and breathing becomes difficult, the overload can come quickly. And when it does, patience disappears. The echoes of his earlier airway struggles— the tracheotomy and the subglottic stenosis— are never very far away. Add depleted oxygen levels to the mix ( he is on oxygen 24/ 7 now), and even a routine respiratory illness can push his system past its tolerance point. When that happens, Doah does not wait politely. He demands that I fix the problem. ...