Tuesday, December 30, 2014

2015 Reading Challenge

So Book Riot has a reading challenge that I am going to try. The list is as follows:

A book written by someone when they were under the age of 25
A book written by someone when they were over the age of 65
A collection of short stories
A book published by an indie press
A book by or about someone that identifies as LGBTQ
A book by a person whose gender is different from your own
A book that takes place in Asia
A book by an author from Africa
A book that is by or about someone from an indigenous culture (Native Americans, Aboriginals, etc.)
A microhistory
A YA novel
A sci-fi novel
A romance novel
A National Book Award, Man Booker Prize or Pulitzer Prize winner from the last decade
A book that is a retelling of a classic story
An audiobook
A collection of poetry
A book that someone else has recommended to you
A book that was originally published in another language
A graphic novel, a graphic memoir or a collection of comics of any kind
A book that you would consider a guilty pleasure
A book published before 1850
A book published this year
A self-improvement book

In addition, my cousin Teresa sent me the Pop Sugar Challenge:
Now clearly the two lists overlap, and I will be combining the two challenges into one master list that covers every item, to set my 2015 reading list, which I will track on Goodreads. By combining the two challenges, I will read over 52 books this year. Wish me luck!




Monday, December 22, 2014

NYPD and Tommy

My brother, Tommy, married my baby sister Ellen in 1994. They have three amazing children and live in a lovely house just north of New York City.

Tommy is also a detective in the NYPD.

For over twenty years he has served New York City. He worked Narcotics in the Bronx, was a bike cop, and worked on the pile for 9 months after September 11th's terror attack. 9 months. I just can't imagine that.

He worked every New Year's Eve for over 15 years, missed Christmas, birthdays, and many special events over the course of his career.

He has been assaulted by prisoners to the point of needing surgery to correct his injuries. He works harder than anyone I know. And every single time I hear that a member of the NYPD was shot, I think of Tommy.

I worry.

I pray.

For him and all the good cops out there doing one of the toughest jobs I can imagine... right up there with the military and firefighting I am so glad people like him are willing and able to do it, because I could not do what he does every day.

Two of New York's Finest were executed this week on the job. Both married, one with children. Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos were murdered while doing their job.

Do some cops make mistakes? Absolutely. Are a few cops bad apples? Yes. Just like there are bad apples in every other profession. That said, the vast majority of Police Officers are good, hard working, amazing men and women who are doing their best to make the world safer for the rest of us.

I am praying for all the families impacted by violence, praying for peace. I am also praying for Tommy and his comrades, fighting the good fight. That they do good work and go home safe.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Ebola: Entering Year 2


The Ebola epidemic has entered its second year: 


The Butcher’s Bill: A total of 17942 confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of Ebola virus disease have been reported in six affected countries (Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Sierra Leone, Spain, and the United States of America) and two previously affected countries (Nigeria and Senegal) as of December 7th, 2014. There have been 6388 deaths since December of 2013.  
 
Time Magazine has picked Ebola Fighters as the "Person of the Year"


They deserve the praise- they are working hard in scary conditions. Risking their lives every day. They are all heros.

The beginning:

Patient Zero was a little boy. In December 2013, Emile Ouamouno had a fever, black stool and started vomiting. On December 6, he was dead. 

Within a month, so were his sister, his mother and his grandmother.

The mother suffered bleeding symptoms and died on December 13. Then, the toddler's 3-year-old sister died December 29, with symptoms including fever, vomiting and black diarrhea. The grandmother passed away January 1, 2014.

Ebola had never been in this part of the world before. The cases were not recognized. Months would pass before the Ebola crisis became international news.

Progress has been made. The outbreaks of Ebola in Senegal and Nigeria were declared over on 17 October and 19 October 2014, respectively. The unrelated outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo with a total of 49 deaths is over as well, since more than 42 days have passed since the last case tested negative.

Friday, December 12, 2014

Mom

Mom and her sister Etta were the first of her large family to come to the US in the 1950s.


We used to spend Sunday's at Mom's uncle, Brian Moore's house, about a mile from where I grew up. He was our grandfather in so many ways. Mom lived with him when first here in the US and then she and Dad shared the  tiny basement apartment when they first married. His wedding gift helped them buy their home.

 
My Mom was in Ireland in 2002, just four months before she died, and got to see most of her family while attending my cousin's wedding. It was such a good day and we had such a good time with all the relatives. We didn't know it would be our last big celebration that everyone would attend.


Mom would be 76 years old today. Happy Birthday, Mom.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

The Oxford 2014 Word of the Year is...

The Oxford 2014 Word of the Year is...: "Vape" can be used as either a noun meaning "an electronic cigarette or similar device" or a verb in which one would "inhale and exhale the vapour produced by an electronic cigarette or similar device." CNN reports

Vape is also known as a word I NEVER HEARD OF until voted the Word of the Year and I really cannot imagine a setting where I would ever use it. The same can be said for the runner-up words in the article.

I decided I would collect words that were new to me this year


recalcitrant: having an obstinately uncooperative attitude toward authority or discipline.
elucidate: make (something) clear; explain

Funny story- my friend used elucidate to describe something I wrote on Ebola a while ago, and having never seen the word before, I looked it up to see what it meant. I mentioned looking it up to my son- a big reader in my house- and he told me what it meant... It was used in one of the books he was reading. Starting to see why he is a bit bored in school.

Recalcitrant, on the other hand, was used in a wound care article I was reading to describe a stubborn wound that refused to heal.

Learning something new every day...

Monday, December 1, 2014

World AIDS Day: The Beginning of the End

A look at where we are in the fight on World AIDS Day:

The Tipping Point (Yahoo)

"We've passed the tipping point in the AIDS fight at the global level, but not all countries are there yet, and the gains made can easily stall or unravel," said Erin Hohlfelder, ONE's director of global health policy.

"The number of people newly infected with HIV over the last year was lower than the number of HIV-positive people who joined those getting access to the medicines they need to take for life to keep AIDS at bay."

A Vaccine on the Way? (CNN)

A trial in Thailand that had 16,000 participants and used 2 previously studied vaccines aimed at stopping HIV infection may prove to be the answer, in much the same way as the cocktail of medications changed the HIV world in the late 1990s.

"Two previously developed vaccines, known as ALVAC-HIV and AIDSVAX, were used in combination, with the first priming an immune response against HIV and the second used as a booster once the immunity waned. The duo reduced the risk of contracting HIV by 31.2% -- a modest reduction, but it was a start."  

"When creating vaccines, the desired level of protection is usually 80% to 90%. But the high burden of HIV and potentially beneficial impact of lower levels of protection warrant licensing at a lower percentage... Over 50% is worth licensing from a public health perspective," Koff said, meaning that despite less shielding from any contact with the HIV virus, even a partially effective vaccine would save many lives over time."