How Does Stress Affect You?

Posted on April 17, 2008 by surely.
Categories: Life, health.

Do you know the signs that you’re over-stressed? We don’t always feel stressed even when we are. It requires some thought about how you react at times to realize the impact of stress.

Starting in the Fall of 1999, my body started a particularly strange stress reaction. It started as tiny little bumps that looked like blisters. Only on the palm of my right hand. They were very small, no more than about 1/16th of an inch in diameter. But there would be more and more of them. When there got to be a lot of them, they sort of merged into one large sore. It got so bad that I could barely use the hand to grasp anything. There were so many things that I couldn’t do.

I saw a couple of doctors about it. The first one had no real answer for it, but gave me a cream that had only a marginal effect. The second doctor diagnosed it as a “menopause-related” rash. That was sad, his nurse saw me first to get my history, reported to him, and he had his diagnosis BEFORE he ever saw me. I really wish I had walked out on him. I think 30 years ago he probably would have prescribed Valium.

That rash started at the same time that my husband decided to take early retirement and become a contractor. It continued for a while as I changed jobs, we sold 2 houses, we bought a house and moved from Houston to San Antonio. I’m not 100% sure when it went away. It lasted at least a year and then just faded. At its worst, it was miserable, but it did get me out of doing dishes for quite a while. :lol:

Well, last Fall it came back, sort of. It started after my father fell and broke his hip. An injury he ultimately didn’t recover from. And being his executor, I had a lot on my plate. This time it is different. It starts on the little finger of my left hand. More on the side where the skin isn’t quite so tough. In bright light you can see the blisters, but mostly it starts by turning red and hurting. I looks and feels like a burn. It spreads down that finger and up my ring finger. When it’s at its worst, I can’t even wear my wedding ring. Eventually it stops hurting and then a week or so later it peels. And the cycle repeats. It had stopped for awhile, but came back recently as we were preparing for the military service at Fort Sam Houston.

I haven’t been to a doctor about it this time. I’m not sure they would have any better answers. It’s much more tolerable where it is now, though I wish it would just go away. I even gave it a name - I call it a strash. That’s short for stress rash.

Another way that stress affects me is that I can become immobilized. I can sit at my desk w/ a million things to do and can’t even decide what to work on. If this is due to too many things to do, it usually helps if I prioritize things. Some things turn out to be not as important as I first thought. I’ve also found that having a “To Do” list helps. But other times, I become immobilized because of other stress factors. At those times, I just have to work through it, somehow. Ironically, even realizing that it is stress that has me immobilized can help to relieve it.

Not everyone recognizes stress though. When I lived in Houston, I worked downtown. I worked with a woman who drove over 20 miles one way to work each day. If you know anything about Houston, you probably know that the traffic is horrible. Freeways or surface streets, it doesn’t matter. The HOV lanes help, but you have to have a passenger. She didn’t. She drove it alone. And she always insisted that it caused her no stress. Then she would also talk about how she was always so tired, how she would generally go to bed at 8:00 pm. But she never put the tiredness and the driving together.

I have a dear friend who has MS. She has never let it slow her down, although there may be times when she should. She’ll tell me that she doesn’t feel stressed with all her activities. But, whenever she gets very, very busy, her MS nearly always flares up.

Our signs of stress can be telling us different things. It might be telling us we have too much on our plate, or that the stress of our activity is wearing us out. Perhaps we need to slow down, or it could be that we need to find a healthy outlet for our stress. What is that outlet? Only you can answer for yourself. It might be taking a break, talking about what’s on your mind, slowing down, getting more exercise. Whatever it is, you need to listen to your stress.

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Sweet Home Alabama

Posted on April 16, 2008 by surely.
Categories: humor, music.

Ever heard of the Leningrad Cowboys? I hadn’t either until a friend sent a link to this video of them singing “Sweet Home Alabama”:

Love those costumes! The Leningrad Cowboys are a Finnish rock band made up of 11 cowboys and 2 ladies. And that’s the Red Army Choir (Choir Aleksandrov) performing with them. It’s the same choir that served as the official army choir for the former Soviet Union’s Red Army.

And, if you have a bit more time to waste watch, here they are singing a song that always takes me back to high school when we could play this song (by Steppenwolf) over and over and over again.

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Our Senior Gift

Posted on April 13, 2008 by surely.
Categories: image of the week.

I graduated from Theodore Roosevelt High School in San Antonio Texas in 1972. (36 years ago, for the math challenged) It was customary for the senior class to give a gift to the school. Our gift was a tree. At the time it was a small tree. As in you could wrap your fingers around its trunk. Trees are expensive. But they grow. Some people at school laughed at our scrawny gift. But we knew better.

Well, I was at TR last week and here’s that tree now. (Hint - It’s that BIG one taking up most of the picture.):

TR TRee

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How Secure is YOUR Online Banking

Posted on April 11, 2008 by surely.
Categories: security, technology.

Recently, an organization I’m a part of moved their bank account to a new bank because of some issues they had with a former member. Soon afterwards, they got a notice from Old Bank that someone had attempted to log in. After 3 failed password attempts, the bank disabled the password and notified the organization.

As the online bookkeeper for the organization, I received that email. When I called the bank their response was “Well, since you’ve closed the account, now that the password has been disabled you have nothing to worry about. It was probably just someone w/ a similar user name who typed in the wrong information.”

WHAT? Even in spite of telling Old Bank that there had been recent trouble, they seemed unconcerned. No big deal. I would bet money that my bank would not have had such a cavalier attitude. (And no one that knows me would take a bet with me!)

What would your bank do?

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Fun With Photoshop

Posted on April 6, 2008 by surely.
Categories: image of the week.

I found a book online that had some interesting tips on Photoshop. So I applied 3 different filters to this photo:

Flowers

and wound up with this one:

Flowers by Photoshop

The 3 filters were Brush Strokes/Accented Edges, Brush Strokes/Ink Outlines, and Artistic/Underpainting.

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A Lesson in History

Posted on March 30, 2008 by surely.
Categories: history, image of the week.

At the Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery, located in San Antonio, Texas, is a small section containing the remains of World War II Prisoners of War. These were Germans and Italians captured by the United States during World War II. They died before the war ended. Not all of them are there, just the ones whose families never claimed their remains. We were told where they were located and went to see them. We were told, wrongly, that they had swastikas engraved on their tombstones. We found a section that contain 141 German and Italian POWs. There were 7 rows with 20 in each, and a last row with only one grave. Here are a couple of pictures:

Ft Sam Houston German POWs

The picture below is a little closer view:

Ft Sam Houston German POWs

A pastor was the one that told us this little known history tidbit about the Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery. Although I have a vague memory of having heard it before. He also said that there were some Japanese POWs from World War II also. But we didn’t know where to look for them.

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Sunset

Posted on March 23, 2008 by surely.
Categories: image of the week.

A sunset in California

California Sunset

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Cats in the Cradle

Posted on March 16, 2008 by surely.
Categories: cat, image of the week.

My cat takes after me. We both have a container fetish. Only he likes to be in his containers. I left his basket for just a few minutes and he took it over. Slept in her for hours!

080316cat.jpg

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Slip-Sliding Away

Posted on March 9, 2008 by surely.
Categories: cat, image of the week.

When I first caught this guy up here, he looked like he was considering sliding down the banister.

Grayson

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The USS New York

Posted on March 6, 2008 by surely.
Categories: 9-11.

This week, I found this article: US christens ‘9/11 steel’ warship. The USS New York is a warship built partly from steel salvaged from the World Trade Center. Seven and one half tons of steel taken from Ground Zero were used in the bow of the ship. The ship bears a shield with two bars to symbolize the towers and a banner with the slogan Never Forget.

The ship was named in Louisiana recently and will be commissioned next year.

Now for my question: Why is it that the first news I hear of this is from the BBC? Why would this not have been in the mainstream press in our own country?

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