LEST WE FORGET....
17 June 2016
07 June 2016
Muhammad Ali: January 7, 1942 ~ June 3, 2016
Leonard Pitts article on Muhammad Ali's transition with the assertion that he may have been one of the first 'truly free black men in America' was not only a honest tribute but a glorious one.
01 June 2016
B. Smith's & Dan Gasby's Struggle With Alzheimer's
With Michael Shnayerson |
'Before I Forget'
is a love story, informative piece and survival guide on one of the
most insidious of the brain diseases--Alzheimer's. Usually, book reviews
are on my side bar or linked to Goodreads, however, I believe this
memoir deserves both side bar and prominent spaces.
There
was also an initial assumption about this post. The book would have
been of greater interest to senior citizens who worry excessively, at
times, over periods of forgetfulness or other age related maladies or
issues. This disease has a significant impact on many age groups which
entail caretakers, immediate and extended family members. Youth who are
especially close to their grandparents or elderly relatives are
perplexed when they see them slowly drift away with intermittent periods
of the here and now to only set sail again in turbulent waters.
As
I read the book, black folks were cited as being stricken with it
moreso than other groups. We tend to be the less tolerant of mental
disorders and or bizarre behaviors which become more prominent as the
disease progresses.
We as a group are the least informed or suspicious of drug trials or fail to research the disorder than other groups. Economics may play a role and a history of or ongoing less than adequate treatment by mainstream doctors could be rationales for this perception. Frankly, I'm rather exhausted and mind weary of our tribe being the "poster child" for designated dysfunctional or passive societal/medical maladies and issues.
We as a group are the least informed or suspicious of drug trials or fail to research the disorder than other groups. Economics may play a role and a history of or ongoing less than adequate treatment by mainstream doctors could be rationales for this perception. Frankly, I'm rather exhausted and mind weary of our tribe being the "poster child" for designated dysfunctional or passive societal/medical maladies and issues.
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