iamSnooksheisMe...Snook's__SISTA
I’m Snook’s sister...that is all!
Home / Recommended Blogs / archive
We give our dead
To the orchards
And the groves.
We give our dead
To life.
A real
Mother
Dries her tears
Forgets her past 
Dries her tears again
Then SHE ties her sons tie… 

And sends him off to prom;)

A real
Mother
Dries her tears
Forgets her past
Dries her tears again
Then SHE ties her sons tie…

And sends him off to prom;)

zygoma:

ponury:

Louis Theroux - Extreme Love: Dementia
Louis is in Phoenix, Arizona, a city known as America’s “capital of dementia”. He’s here to see how relatives cope as their loved ones slip into a “twilight world of half-remembered reality”. Selinda, who is just 49 and has Alzheimer’s, can’t dial the numbers on a phone to make a call, while Nancy, who is cared for at home by her husband, can’t remember her own name. There are flourishes of personality, but ultimately the partners must endure the gradual loss of their loved ones with patience and love.
(click here to watch)

Dementia is a loss of brain function that occurs with certain diseases. It affects memory, thinking, language, judgment, and behavior.
Most types of dementia are nonreversible (degenerative). Nonreversible means the changes in the brain that are causing the dementia cannot be stopped or turned back. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common type of dementia.
Lewy body disease is a leading cause of dementia in elderly adults. People with this condition have abnormal protein structures in certain areas of the brain.
Dementia also can be due to many small strokes. This is called vascular dementia.
Dementia symptoms include difficulty with many areas of mental function, including:

Language


Memory


Perception


Emotional behavior or personality


Cognitive skills (such as calculation, abstract thinking, or judgment)

Dementia usually first appears as forgetfulness.
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is the stage between normal forgetfulness due to aging and the development of dementia. People with MCI have mild problems with thinking and memory that do not interfere with everyday activities. They are often aware of the forgetfulness. Not everyone with MCI develops dementia.
The early symptoms of dementia can include:

Difficulty performing tasks that take some thought, but that used to come easily, such as balancing a checkbook, playing games (such as bridge), and learning new information or routines


Getting lost on familiar routes


Language problems, such as trouble finding the name of familiar objects


Losing interest in things you previously enjoyed, flat mood


Misplacing items


Personality changes and loss of social skills, which can lead to inappropriate behaviors

As the dementia becomes worse, symptoms are more obvious and interfere with the ability to take care of yourself. The symptoms may include:

Change in sleep patterns, often waking up at night


Difficulty doing basic tasks, such as preparing meals, choosing proper clothing, or driving


Forgetting details about current events


Forgetting events in your own life history, losing awareness of who you are


Having hallucinations, arguments, striking out, and violent behavior


Having delusions, depression, agitation


More difficulty reading or writing


Poor judgment and loss of ability to recognize danger


Using the wrong word, not pronouncing words correctly, speaking in confusing sentences

Withdrawing from social contact
[PubMed source]


…i relate

zygoma:

ponury:

Louis Theroux - Extreme Love: Dementia

Louis is in Phoenix, Arizona, a city known as America’s “capital of dementia”. He’s here to see how relatives cope as their loved ones slip into a “twilight world of half-remembered reality”. Selinda, who is just 49 and has Alzheimer’s, can’t dial the numbers on a phone to make a call, while Nancy, who is cared for at home by her husband, can’t remember her own name. There are flourishes of personality, but ultimately the partners must endure the gradual loss of their loved ones with patience and love.

Dementia is a loss of brain function that occurs with certain diseases. It affects memory, thinking, language, judgment, and behavior.

Most types of dementia are nonreversible (degenerative). Nonreversible means the changes in the brain that are causing the dementia cannot be stopped or turned back. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common type of dementia.

Lewy body disease is a leading cause of dementia in elderly adults. People with this condition have abnormal protein structures in certain areas of the brain.

Dementia also can be due to many small strokes. This is called vascular dementia.

Dementia symptoms include difficulty with many areas of mental function, including:

  • Language

  • Memory

  • Perception

  • Emotional behavior or personality

  • Cognitive skills (such as calculation, abstract thinking, or judgment)

Dementia usually first appears as forgetfulness.

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is the stage between normal forgetfulness due to aging and the development of dementia. People with MCI have mild problems with thinking and memory that do not interfere with everyday activities. They are often aware of the forgetfulness. Not everyone with MCI develops dementia.

The early symptoms of dementia can include:

  • Difficulty performing tasks that take some thought, but that used to come easily, such as balancing a checkbook, playing games (such as bridge), and learning new information or routines

  • Getting lost on familiar routes

  • Language problems, such as trouble finding the name of familiar objects

  • Losing interest in things you previously enjoyed, flat mood

  • Misplacing items

  • Personality changes and loss of social skills, which can lead to inappropriate behaviors

As the dementia becomes worse, symptoms are more obvious and interfere with the ability to take care of yourself. The symptoms may include:

  • Change in sleep patterns, often waking up at night

  • Difficulty doing basic tasks, such as preparing meals, choosing proper clothing, or driving

  • Forgetting details about current events

  • Forgetting events in your own life history, losing awareness of who you are

  • Having hallucinations, arguments, striking out, and violent behavior

  • Having delusions, depression, agitation

  • More difficulty reading or writing

  • Poor judgment and loss of ability to recognize danger

  • Using the wrong word, not pronouncing words correctly, speaking in confusing sentences

  • Withdrawing from social contact

[PubMed source]

…i relate

(via fuckyeahmedicalstuff)

Source : sockshare.com

Somebody touch somebody tell somebody you love somebody!!

I love you
I love you
I love you
I love you

The Music Weather Man, The Pied Piper, It’s Kels!!!
Please know that nothing is more important to us than people’s trust in our ability and our commitment to report fairly and truthfully
Dan Rather

Dear Michael by Kim Fields →

Kim took the words right outta my mouth!!! Claude have mercy!!! I was IN LOVE with Michael!!!

Dear Michael!!!!!!! From the court ways of the projects I would look up at the into the bright lights of the light posts (didn’t see the stars much for some reason) and sing “Dear Michael” by Kim Fields…hoping that you would come and whisk me away…hmmmm. Rest Easy Mike!!! 

My first celebrity crush;)

Dear Michael!!!!!!! From the court ways of the projects I would look up at the into the bright lights of the light posts (didn’t see the stars much for some reason) and sing “Dear Michael” by Kim Fields…hoping that you would come and whisk me away…hmmmm. Rest Easy Mike!!!

My first celebrity crush;)

Are the drivers of Greyhound still as nice as they were in the 1970s?!

Are the drivers of Greyhound still as nice as they were in the 1970s?!

EARTHSEED: THE BOOKS OF THE LIVING By: Lauren Oya Olamina

Here we are-
Energy,
Mass,
Life,
Shaping life,
Mind,
Shaping Mind,
God,
Shaping God,
Consider-
We are born
Not with purpose,
But with potential

Octavia E. Butler

Insurmountable prospects

The most profound writers give US a future… Although its not easy to piece together an uncertain past, there is something prophetic about the visual deafness that comes to our minds when ALL WE CAN MENTALLY TASTE are the words that cresting the pages…if the words are that good… We are certain dream about what lies ahead.