That's very clever.
Sad for Aims's cousin's partner's sister. What a cruel turn of events.
Buffy ,'The Killer In Me'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
That's very clever.
Sad for Aims's cousin's partner's sister. What a cruel turn of events.
{{Perkins}}
And, God, Aims. That's awful. I'm sorry. I monitor drug safety on breast cancer trials, and I always hate it when I come across a patient so young.
How awful, Aims. So sad and unfair.
Facebook question - if you defriend someone, do your updates still show up in their feed?
I think they stop getting your updates, but they don't get any kind of "you've been dissed" message. From their POV, you've just gone really gray.
From their POV, you've just gone really gray.
Ah, perfect. Thanks.
Facebook requires mutual friending, so if you defriend someone, you're defriended by them as well. But they won't know until one day you show up in their People You May Know.
That's fine - I'm just trimming my flist of all the people in it I don't know.
I have mixed feelings about testing for BRCA gene. Only about 10 percent of breast cancers are caused by gene abnormalities, although gene abnormalities are behind about a quarter of breast cancers in women under 35. I think women of Ashkenazi and African descent and those who have had several female-organ cancers in the family should be counseled to have the test, but I'm afraid widespread testing would give a false sense of security, plus cost a lot. I think the most important thing is drum the message that young women can get breast cancer.
What Ginger said here.
I have mixed feelings about testing for BRCA gene. Only about 10 percent of breast cancers are caused by gene abnormalities, although gene abnormalities are behind about a quarter of breast cancers in women under 35. I think women of Ashkenazi and African descent and those who have had several female-organ cancers in the family should be counseled to have the test, but I'm afraid widespread testing would give a false sense of security, plus cost a lot. I think the most important thing is drum the message that young women can get breast cancer.
ponders and nods
Yeah. I get that. And totally agree. As I said to my mom, "Glad I feel myself up once a month."