Did you know that 1 in 8 women are diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime?

Breast Thermography
In 2007 OCBreastThermography.com posted an article outlining steps that if followed would reduce a woman’s risk of breast cancer up to 90%.

We also offer a test that is …
Painless – FDA approved – Accurate (90%) – Safe.

The current model, mammography, for the screening for breast cancer is a miserable failure if we just look at the statistics.

Not only have the numbers become worse in the rates of breast cancer over the last 40 years, mammography may well be a part of the problem.

I mentioned safety as a fundamental pillar of the new model. Mammography is not safe. Mammography uses low energy x-ray, the most dangerous form of x-ray. The leading experts in the world on cancer prevention believe the whole mammography industry maybe just a break even in the good it does compared to the harm.

I wouldn’t be writing this if there wasn’t a far better answer to breast cancer screening.

Breast Thermography is the most widely studied, safe breast cancer screening tool. The vast majority of those studies have shown it to be safe, accurate and painless. I mentioned earlier it isn’t perfect. There is no perfect test for breast cancer.

We believe we have found the perfect adjunct to breast thermography and plan on adding that at no additional cost to our screening protocols making our screening second to none.

We will go into more details in our next blog.

A breast thermography screening at our office is $235.00. Have a private “Breast Thermography Party” at your house with a minimum of 5 ladies and your screening is FREE. Call Janice for details (714) 363-5595.

Repair the World One Person at a Time

make a difference

When I began writing, my initial goal was to be a dad advocate as my own experiences motivated me in that direction. I still advocate on behalf of dads and all parents. But, as I ventured into the world of Social Media, I realized I had another goal of larger importance and that was to do my part to make the world a better place.

In Judaism, it’s called Tikkun Olam, which roughly means to “Repair the World.” A further Jewish belief is that when you help ONE person, you are helping the world. After all, one person at a time can add up to a lot of people if everyone adopted that behavior.

Later in this column, I will list ideas for you and for your children to employ. Doing these separately or together will indeed help “Repair the World,” but more importantly it will make you feel better. I’ve often said that the more you give, the more you get.

A favorite example of mine was when I became a Big Brother. At the time, I led a very fun and largely self-indulgent life. I was single, I was doing well in my showbiz career, my parents were well and independent, and I had money in the bank. Heck, I even drove a convertible!

Thankfully, something inside me said I needed to give back in gratitude for the good fortune that I was living. In showbiz, the conventional way of giving back was to join a charity that the community supported and fund-raise. It was noble, but it also was sort of self-serving because it gave you the opportunity to interact and network within the community. Also, it was political and I really wanted to avoid that.

I had always loved and wanted kids, so I chose the Big Brother organization as my way of giving back. It would be a one-on-one interaction with a child and there would be minimal group activities and even less adult encounters. I went through a three-month interview process, dare I say interrogation, during which time I attended training sessions, was fingerprinted and “verified,” had one-on-one sessions with a social worker, and was finally “approved.”

My expectation was to be matched with a little boy and we’d go to the park and play ball, sort of like I did with my own dad when I was little. Instead, I was matched with a little girl. Sadly, this doesn’t happen much anymore due to legal fears, though the need is still present for girls without fathers to have a father figure in their lives. Thank you, lawyers and the politically correct!

My “little” didn’t like to play ball. In fact, she didn’t like to do much. She didn’t even like to go to the movies or get an ice cream. She was difficult. She had her reasons. “Our” social worker said I could ask for a change, however encouraged me to keep on trying to connect. I chose to stay. In time, we found things we enjoyed doing together.

I stayed “matched” with this “little” for the next decade, during which time I got married and had my first boy. I also got the best possible training to become a parent! I learned how to relate to a kid who didn’t share my interests. I learned how NOT to make it all about me. I got as much or more than I gave, pure and simple.

My “little” is now a successful middle-school teacher in her thirties and we’re still in touch.

When my boys were growing up, I was stunned to discover how they did not share my love of sports. My experience as a Big Brother was invaluable in showing me the way to love them in spite of our differences. They are NOT me was the bottom-line lesson I got.

I think this is the perfect example of helping the world, one person at a time. My “little” and me we went through many difficult phases that I later encountered with my own boys. I was prepared. How wonderful!

How can you and your children “Repair the World?”

Here are just a few ideas, in no particular order:

  • Become a Big Brother or Big Sister.
  • Volunteer at Thanksgiving at a shelter for the homeless. Go together with your children and help serve the Thanksgiving dinner.
  • Befriend an alone elderly person at a local senior living facility. Together or separately, volunteer to read to one senior, or to a group. Make it a weekly or monthly habit.
  • Organize your own singing group to entertain at a senior center or assisted living facility.
  • Visit ANYONE that is alone at a hospital. Regularly.
  • Read to the blind. My son and I read on a small local radio station where we literally read the newspaper to the blind listeners that this station catered to. Boy, was that a sobering experience for both of us.
  • Write to a soldier abroad. They are lonely and many do not have great support at home.

The list of things YOU can do to “Repair the World” is endless. Please do this for yourself and your family. You will feel amazing and you will reap rewards you cannot possibly anticipate. Let me know what you do and how it “pays off” for you, please!

Scan and Archive Family Photos

ORIGINAL 1940 ANTIQUE PHOTO

© Photographer Carla F. Castagno | Dreamstime.com


 
 
Family photos are a real treasure, but unfortunately, they are vulnerable to storage conditions and handling. Those precious nuggets that engender wonderful memories can fade, tear, become soiled, or even crumble away.

Luckily, with today’s digital photos, you can preserve your photos easily on your computer or some other digital storage device. But what do you do with the delicate black and white or sepia photos that are stashed away in long lost photo albums, or the shoeboxes full of snapshots that you took before cameras went digital?

You convert them, of course! Scanning them and creating digital images is one of the best ways to catalog and organize your photos, but it can be time consuming.

Here are some tips to help you through this process:

  1. Look for a trusted service that will do the scanning for you. Vendors who specialize in this area will be able to convert your pictures much quicker than you could with your own home scanner, and their services are affordable, too. Two to check out are www.scanmyphotos.com or www.scancafe.com.
  2. Take time to sort through the photos you want to convert. Eliminate duplicates, blurry images, and any photos that aren’t meaningful. If you don’t recognize the people in the photo or don’t remember where or why you took the picture, you probably don’t need to keep it or pay to have it scanned.
  3. For extra security, store your digital images in multiple places, such as your computer hard drive, an online photo service (Picasa, Flickr, iPhoto), DVDs, zip drives, or an external hard drive.
  4. Devise an organizing system and create folders to store images. For instance, you could organize by date, event, or person. Be consistent!
  5. When you download your latest digital images from your camera, take a few minutes to delete those that are blurry or repetitive. If you took several pictures of the same subject to ensure a good shot, you should delete those that aren’t up to snuff.

 

25 Moms to Follow on Twitter

It’s a mom’s world online. Moms are sharing, inspiring, connecting, educating and entertaining their friends, fans and followers. More importantly, they are developing relationships and doing business in 140 characters or less. They are having actual conversations in which they laugh with and encourage one another. Imagine that! Pretty much the same thing you find moms doing at the soccer field or grocery store – supporting one another.

Want to join them? Check out some of my favorite Mom-focused Tweeters.

Here they are, 25 Moms to Follow on Twitter:

 

1. Busy Working Mama

@BusyWorkingMama Aleksandra Nearing

Blogger, Worker, Mom, Chef, Runner, Sushi-aholic, Gardner, Online Shop-aholic, Lotion and Potion Junkie. CPA by Day.

 

2. Complicated Mama

@ComplicatedMama Corine Ingrassia

Lifestyle Blogger. Shopping addict. Social Media Geek. Speaker. Owner of Complicated Media, LLC. Co-Founder @LaunchingMom

  [Read more...]