Topic: Can you help do a good thing? Pretty please?  (Read 1152 times)

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Offline AlienLXIX

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Can you help do a good thing? Pretty please?
« on: September 16, 2004, 01:54:09 am »
Hi everyone!  Sometimes I get SPAM like everyone else but sometime I do get something I do believe in.  I did check to see if the stamp was still in production and it is, the links are at the end of this post.

The reason I'm posting is because for my family there has been quite a few of my mother's female relatives that have died of this type of cancer.  I can't help them but I can help me and the living women in my family.  I have purchased this booklet before and will again!

Heh.  Yes, that means I check and I also have Ferret check me every month.

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Please read the following story and follow the instructions at the end!  Thanks.

Like most elementary schools, it was typical to have a parade of students in and out of the health clinic throughout the day. We dispensed ice for bumps and bruises, Band-Aids for cuts, and liberal doses of sympathy and hugs. As principal, my office was right next door to the clinic, so I often dropped in to lend a hand and help out with the hugs. I knew that for some kids, mine might be the only one they got all day.

One morning I was putting a Band-Aid on a little girl's scraped knee. Her blonde hair was matted, and I noticed that she was shivering in her thin little sleeveless blouse. I found her a warm sweatshirt and helped her pull it on. "Thanks for taking care of me," she whispered as she climbed into my lap and snuggled up against me.

It wasn't long after that when I ran across an unfamiliar lump under my arm.

Cancer, an aggressively spreading kind, had already invaded thirteen of my lymph nodes. I pondered whether or not to tell the students about my diagnosis.  The word breast seemed so hard to say out loud to them, and the word cancer seemed so frightening!

When it became evident that the children were going to find out one way or another, either the straight scoop from me or possibly a garbled version from someone else, I decided to tell
them myself. It wasn't easy to get the words out, but the empathy and concern I saw in their faces as I explained it to them told me I had made the right decision. When I gave them a chance to ask questions, they mostly wanted to know how they could help. I told them that what I would like best would be their letters, pictures and prayers. I stood by the gym door as the children solemnly filed out. My little blonde friend darted out of line and threw herself into my arms.  Then she stepped back to look up in to my face.

"Don't be afraid, Dr. Perry," she said earnestly, "I know you'll be back because now it's our turn to take care of you."

No one could have ever done a better job. The kids sent me off to my first chemotherapy session with a hilarious book of nausea remedies that they had written. A video of every class in the school singing get-well songs accompanied me to the next chemotherapy appointment.  By the third visit, the nurses were waiting at the door to find out what I would bring next. It was a delicate music box that played "I Will Always Love You."

Even when I went into isolation at the hospital for a bone marrow transplant, the letters and pictures kept coming until they covered every wall of my room.  Then the kids traced their hands onto colored paper, cut them out and glued them together to make a freestanding rainbow of helping hands. "I feel like I've stepped into Disneyland every time I walk into this
room," my doctor laughed. That was even before the six-foot apple blossom tree arrived adorned with messages written on paper apples from the students and teachers. What healing comfort I found in being surrounded by these tokens of their caring.

At long last I was well enough to return to work. As I headed up the road to the school, I was suddenly overcome by doubts. What if the kids have forgotten all about me? I wondered, What if they don't want a skinny, bald principal? What if . . . I caught sight of the school marquee as I rounded the bend.

"Welcome Back, Dr. Perry," it read. As I drew closer, everywhere I looked were pink ribbons -ribbons in the windows, tied on the doorknobs, even up in the trees.  The children and staff wore pink ribbons, too. My blonde buddy was first in line to greet me. "You're back, Dr. Perry, you're back!" she called. "See, I told you we'd take care of you!" As I hugged her tight, in the back of my mind I faintly heard my music box playing. "I will always love you."

Breast Cancer Research Stamp
The Breast Cancer Research semipostal was issued on July 29, 1998, at a first day ceremony held in the White House. It was the first semipostal in U.S. history.

To date, the stamp has raised more than $37 million for breast cancer research. By law, 70 percent of the net amount raised is given to the National Institutes of Health and 30 percent is given to the Medical Research Program at the Department of Defense.

Designed by Ethel Kessler of Bethesda, MD, the stamp features the phrases, "Fund the Fight" and "Find a Cure" and an illustration of a mythical "goddess of the hunt" by Whitney Sherman of Baltimore.

Subject: Breast Cancer Stamp Booklet
We need those of you who are great at forwarding on information with your e-mail network. Please read and pass this on. It would be wonderful if 2005 were the year a cure for breast cancer was found!

Instead of the normal 37 cents for a stamp, this one costs 45 cents. The additional 8 cents will go to breast cancer research. A "normal" book costs $7.40. This one is only $9.00. It takes a few minutes in line at the Post Office and means so much. If all stamps are sold, it will raise an additional $35,000,000 for this vital research.

Just as important as the money is our support.  What a statement it would make that we
care enough to help find the cure.

I urge you to do two things:
1. Go out and purchase some of these stamps.
2. E-mail your friends to do the same.

Many of us know women and their families whose live are turned upside-down by breast cancer. It takes so little to do so much in this drive. We can all afford the $0.45. Please help and pass it on.

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http://shop.usps.com/cgi-bin/vsbv/postal_store_non_ssl/display_products/productDetail.jsp?OID=1555262

Aloha,
AlienLXIX


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The things that will destroy America are prosperity-at-any-price, peace-at-any-price, safety-first instead of duty-first, the love of soft living, and the get-rich-quick theory of life. - President Teddy Roosevelt

Offline Bonk

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Re: Can you help do a good thing? Pretty please?
« Reply #1 on: September 16, 2004, 06:35:17 am »
I lost a relative to breast cancer. It was awful. Research is progressing and well worth supporting.  :thumbsup:

Offline Don Karnage

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Re: Can you help do a good thing? Pretty please?
« Reply #2 on: September 16, 2004, 06:47:55 am »
the story remind me of made one so the will look miserable and you will find sympathy to help them, WE do need to find a cure for cancer but when the make a story to make people sympathise to the cause i don't like it, its like the poor children in Africa and other place like that who need food, education, medicine etc, sure the do but also the adult and there a government in these contry and if the government is not helping the cityzen of there contry we can't keep putting money into a black hole thinking it will help, the need to see how much is spend on the recherche and how much administration using the money.

Offline The Bar-Abbas Anomaly

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Re: Can you help do a good thing? Pretty please?
« Reply #3 on: September 16, 2004, 12:18:19 pm »

I can't speak for the story, but the stamp info. is true.

http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/charity/breaststamp.asp
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