Monday, February 27, 2012

The Code of the West


Although the Code of the West was unwritten, every cowboy knew what it was. The Ten Principles are Jim Owen's distillation of the timeless, universal cowboy values that are still relevant to our lives today. They are at the heart of cowboy ethics and of Jim's book, Cowboy Ethics: What Wall Street Can Learn from the Code of the West.

1 Live each day with courage

2 Take pride in your work

3 Always finish what you start

4 Do what has to be done

5 Be tough, but fair

6 When you make a promise, keep it

7 Ride for the brand

8 Talk less and say more

9 Remember that some things aren't for sale

10 Know where to draw the line

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Reynaud's Disease, My Cold Weather Companion


Definition

By Mayo Clinic staff
Raynaud's (ray-NOHZ) disease is a condition that causes some areas of your body — such as your fingers, toes, the tip of your nose and your ears — to feel numb and cool in response to cold temperatures or stress. In Raynaud's disease, smaller arteries that supply blood to your skin narrow, limiting blood circulation to affected areas.
Women are more likely to have Raynaud's disease. It's also more common in people who live in colder climates.
Treatment of Raynaud's disease depends on its severity and whether you have any other health conditions.
So, there is the definition and correct pronunciation for the malady. The daily reality is often much more dramatic, more painful and limiting than that short excerpt presents. My own symptoms are worse than that, but not as bad as some sufferers experience. As I age, the symptoms appear more quickly at exposure to cold, become more pronounced, more difficult to reverse. While it has heretofore not been particularly painful, I am becoming more uncomfortable as winters pass.
Raynaud's disease is more than simply having cold hands and cold feet, and it's not the same as frostbite. Signs and symptoms of Raynaud's depend on the frequency, duration and severity of the blood vessel spasms that underlie the disorder. Raynaud's disease symptoms include:
  • Cold fingers and toes
  • Sequence of color changes in your skin in response to cold or stress
  • Numb, prickly feeling or stinging pain upon warming or relief of stress
During an attack of Raynaud's, affected areas of your skin usually turn white at first. Then, the affected areas often turnblue, feel cold and numb, and your sense of touch is dulled. As circulation improves, the affected areas may turn red, throb, tingle or swell. The order of the changes of color isn't the same for all people, and not everyone experiences all three colors.

That's why it is sometimes called the red, white and blue disease. Sounds patriotic, doesn't it? Again, the symptoms can be trivialized and minimized. But, RD can be a precursor or complication to other conditions, such as Lupus Erythematosus not to mention a difficult medical issue to live with. And that numb prickly skin upon rewarming? Rewarming and the reperfusion of blood can be excruciating to experience.

Types of Raynaud's
There are two types of Raynaud's. It can either be:
  • primary: when the condition develops by itself (this is the most common type)
  • secondary: when it develops in association with another health condition
The causes of primary Raynaud’s are unclear. However 1 in 10 people with primary Raynaud’s will go on to develop a condition associated with secondary Raynaud’s such as lupus.
Most cases of secondary Raynaud’s are associated with conditions where the immune system goes wrong and starts attacking healthy tissue, such as:
  • rheumatoid arthritis: when the immune system attacks the joints causing pain and swelling
  • lupus: when the immune system attacks many different parts of the body causing a range of symptoms, such as tiredness, joint pain and skin rashes

Secondary Raynaud’s can cause a more severe restriction of blood supply so it does carry a higher risk of causing complications such as ulcers, scarring and in the most serious of cases of tissue death, which is known as gangrene.

Who gets Raynaud’s?

Raynaud’s disease is a common condition. It may affect as many as one in every nine women and 1 in every 12 men. (It is hard to be entirely sure as rates can differ widely from area to area depending on how cold the temperature is).
Primary Raynaud’s usually begins in your 20s or 30s. Secondary Raynaud’s can develop at any age depending on the underlying condition it is associated with.

I have primary Reynaud's Disease, having several occurrences of it in my 20's and 30's. Now, though, in my 50's, I have an occurrence every day in the winter where I live. Any weather below about 55 causes my hands and feet to turn white. I often have the vasospasms while I am in the house during really cold weather. It is always a blessing to spend time in warmer weather during the winter. I hope to do that every winter from now on. Become a snowbird instead of a white winter dove.



For more information on RD, contact: http://www.raynauds.org/
Content in blue above from The Mayo Clinic site:
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/raynauds-disease/DS00433