My FIL and MIL are both motorcycle maniacs and have taken my little nephews (ages 7 & 8) on rides around the neighborhood. The boys wore helmets, and I know it was just around the neighborhood, but I don't think children should be allowed to ride motorcycles at all. I think there should be an age minimum of like 16 to be able to even ride one.
I completely disagree with this. The younger you teach a boy to respect a piece of machinery, the better. The crazies out there think they are invincible. Teach a kid to respect that it is something that can hurt you if you are not careful, let them learn on dirt, let it be second nature. That is muuuch better than a wise ass 16 year old on a bike for the first time who thinks he knows everything.
Edit : or girl!!! Didn't mean to sound sexist.
Nope octopus. I can't even keep track of how many families my husband and brother have had to tell that their little kid has died or is permanently, life-alteringly injured due to ATV and motorcycle accidents.
There is a reason that we don't allow 11 year olds to drive cars. We don't allow them to execute legally-binding contracts. And we don't allow them to be tried as adults for crimes they commit.
It is because the brains of 8, 10, 12, 14 year old kids are fundamentally different than adult brains. Even the "smartest" kids don't always fully understand that their actions have real world consequences. Research has shown time and again that even though parents tell their elementary-middle school (and even many high school) kids, they don't really comprehend that the special effects they see actors pull off in movies defy physics/laws of gravity, and that they will not be able to do the same tricks on their bikes/atv. They are much more susceptible to peer pressure to attempt things that they may otherwise never try. They see characters spring back to life for the 999th time in their favorite video game after sustaining life-ending injuries and don't fully understand the finality of death.
Those cases get to my family members who treat them. They come home and talk about how the parents are usually good parents, who bought expensive toys for their kids because "that is just how it is around here," "I grew up riding ATVs/motorcycles and nothing happened to me," and "but he had gone out riding lots before and nothing had ever happened."
Again, kids are not adults. Kids don't grasp that a hard dirt hill that was super fun to ride the other day when it hadn't rained in a month is totally different 2 days after a gully washer, causing the kid to get halfway up the hill, the ATV to pull off the soft ground and then fall backwards and crush the kid to death (that happened two weeks ago). Adults understand that terrain constantly changes from life experience and know that even the same path is not always going to act the same two rides in a row. Kids just don't have enough experiences to process those complex calculations that most of us take for granted when we get behind the wheel.
Kids on motorcycles or ATVs is fucking stupid. My husband grew up doing all that stuff as a way of life in his small, rural town, and medical school and his experiences in the children's ER completely changed his mind as to the "value" of allowing kids who we don't allow to make any other life-altering decisions (get tried as adults for crimes, vote, enter into contracts, decide whether or not to attend school, etc.) get behind the wheel of a gas-powered vehicle that can and does kill hundreds of kids every year and seriously injure thousands more...
Parents always say, "I wish I had known..." There just isn't enough publicity about how fundamentally stupid it is to allow your child/young teenager to play on ATVs/small motorcycles.
TL;dr: Kids driving gas-powered vehicles is super fucking dumb. It doesn't teach responsibility. It teaches false confidence. I am at a loss for words that anyone could think differently--even though I have to hear the stories from my husband routinely about devastated parents who clearly didn't get the memo. That sounds harsh--and maybe it is too harsh. But those kids died/were horribly injured unnecessarily. And that royally grinds my gears.
True. I can't believe it's not required in SC. Nevermind, sure I can. SC is super behind on everything.
Not required in AZ or FL either. Stoooopid. I've seen too many accidents to think motorcycles are safe. It's not how you drive as a motorcyclist, it's the cars around you. Not a fan.
I think it is just as tacky to attack a woman for throwing her own shower as it is for the woman throwing it. Especially if you were lucky to have someone spend the time to throw you a shower to then sit back and judge the fuck out of another less fortunate woman who just wants to experience the same thing you did.
#stillbitteratneverhavingababyshower
Amjoy will throw you one. But we will call it "happy hour". Oks??
I grew up in an environment similar to your husband. We lived in the country and my step-brother, who was 13 years older than me, had a 3 wheeler. Remember those...the ones that are now illegal because they were so dangerous? We would ride that thing all over, and I'm sure he rolled it many times (we never had any accidents when I was on it). Even when I moved to the burbs and away from that lifestyle, it never seemed abnormal to me. Obviously I would never let my kid do that, but sometimes it's hard to think of things I did as a kid as really dangerous and crazy. It was just normal to me. I'm sure I would have a different opinion if I did get hurt or knew someone that did. I know we were lucky.
But I'm curious, do you have the same opinion about little kids riding horses? Something about that seems even more dangerous, and I started riding at 6. Not only do you have an unpredictable kid, you put that kid on an animal that is much larger and harder to control, no matter how "bomb proof" the horse is. I did some pretty stupid stuff as a kid on horses I had no business being on. I was lucky and only got tossed a few times.
Here's a good one...so you have the right, in some states, to ride without a helmet on a motorcycle...those states should institute a clause saying if you crash and are brain dead, the health care system does not have to care for you. Because you're dumb. #halfkidding #butwouldsaveusmoney
I love more Instagram and FB friends... But I don't love finding out people's real names. I've created identities for you all in my head and some of you are bursting my bubble.
Who has disappointed you?
Oh, I don't want point out specific people in case they like their real identities hidden on this board... But I might picture someone as say a Sarah and their real name is Britney....
#sosilly
ETA - I know a lot of people picture my screen name as something Hawaiian so I'm sure I fall in the same category
I was thinking this, too. I'll call out @jgslr, I thought she was totes going to have red hair and she does not... I know she's not Lucille Ball, but I've spent so much time associating people with their avatars.
@NRyan55 and @rsigler -- I am not talking about adults who make the choice for their own life as to what "experiences" are worth the risks inherent in participating in that experience.
I am only talking about parents who give a child the tools to kill/injure themselves, not understanding that kids just inherently don't have the ability to rationally run a similar risk/benefit analysis for each ride, regardless of how many times you try to "teach" them to be safe.
True. I can't believe it's not required in SC. Nevermind, sure I can. SC is super behind on everything.
It might not be because SC is behind, necessarily. Michigan just got rid of its helmet law. My dad is stoked, and we guilt him about it every time we see him riding without one on.
I can't imagine a state having the law then getting rid of it! What is your dad's reason for not wanting to wear one?
I KNOW! The state elected a pretty conservative governor who is on a mission to repeal any unnecessary laws. This was quite a shock to a lot of people. TBH, I'm not sure why my dad doesn't/won't wear one. Especially since he won't let anyone ride with him without one. He's an old hippie that wants to do whatever he wants -- and that's fine, up until the point where you're being as asshat.
This may be wildly unpopular, but I'm not sure. And maybe it's more of a FFTC. I could never be a SAHM because I'm too worried about what would happen to us if something did happen to DH. Like if he was killed, was in a serious accident, or got cancer/some other illness.
In my mind, me having a job is some sort of added stability that we (I) have. Some money would still be coming in, I wouldn't have to scramble to find a job or get LO into daycare, and we would have health insurance still.
Although I don't think DH and I would ever get divorced, I've thought about how I need to make sure I have an income in case LO and I need to get our own place and I need to support us. Obviously DH would help out, but I would still need a job and my own health insurance.
I am in no way taking a dig at SAHMs, or saying working moms are better off. My family has had some very unfortunate things happen to them and it has really opened my eyes to how quickly things can go south if you aren't prepared for them.
I'm a SAHM and have totally considered what I would do if suddenly widowed. This is why we have a savings account and life insurance. Sure it's morbid, but I'd rather be practical than find myself stuck in a terrible situation.
If there are a floppity billion signs indicating that, a half-mile ahead, the lane is going to end, and you purposely drive to the very end of the lane and then put on your turn signal and expect to whip into my lane, I will not allow you to cut ahead of me. Nope.
On the other hand, if you slow down 50 or 100 feet before the lane ends and put on your turn signal and wait patiently, I will come to a dead-ass halt and graciously wave you ahead of me.
I tried to phrase this as a UO, but it may be more of a FFFC.
But I'm curious, do you have the same opinion about little kids riding horses? Something about that seems even more dangerous, and I started riding at 6. Not only do you have an unpredictable kid, you put that kid on an animal that is much larger and harder to control, no matter how "bomb proof" the horse is. I did some pretty stupid stuff as a kid on horses I had no business being on. I was lucky and only got tossed a few times.
I think it's different, or it should be different. There is a safe way to allow children to ride horses. You can start by making sure they wear ASTM approved helmets. You can start out doing leadline, then letting them ride on their own in an arena. I would never allow my child to ride unsupervised, on a horse I didn't know well, without the help of a professional, and not on the trail alone. I doubt many little kids are going to want to ride an ATV in circles around their parents at 5 mph, and that is the equivalent of how kids should start out on a horse at a young age.
I think it is just as tacky to attack a woman for throwing her own shower as it is for the woman throwing it. Especially if you were lucky to have someone spend the time to throw you a shower to then sit back and judge the fuck out of another less fortunate woman who just wants to experience the same thing you did.
#stillbitteratneverhavingababyshower
I will throw you a baby shower!!!
I was just going to say this! I'll help!! Me too!!
Funny, I just watched a clip this morning of a bicyclist getting hit by a turning car. In his British accent he yelled "Fuck Off!" and ended up on the hood and slid right on his feet. BRILLIANT!!!
but really, though, bicyclists have it bad because people get annoyed by them but they have a right to be on the road and unfortunately (at least around here) there are not designated bike lanes. I think bike lanes should become a thing in the US.
Yes! I live very close to a city so I think I am a pretty aware driver--of everyone: pedestrians, cyclists, motorcycles.
BUT I would not ride my bike to work because I feel like there are two many idiots looking at their cell phones while driving.
I have made a conscious decision that I don't text/email and drive. I'm only in the car for about 30 mins/day so I try not to even talk on my phone.
Edit: I took that on a bit of a tangent from your comment but obviously cell phones are a huge culprit of distracted driving.
Second edit: Two? No. Too many idiots.
Married my love 8-25-12
TTC #1 September 2012. BFP 2-2-13. DS born 10-16-13.
TTC #2 in December 2014. BFP 12-31-14. Expecting a September baby!
I love more Instagram and FB friends... But I don't love finding out people's real names. I've created identities for you all in my head and some of you are bursting my bubble.
Who has disappointed you?
Oh, I don't want point out specific people in case they like their real identities hidden on this board... But I might picture someone as say a Sarah and their real name is Britney....
#sosilly
ETA - I know a lot of people picture my screen name as something Hawaiian so I'm sure I fall in the same category
I was thinking this, too. I'll call out @jgslr, I thought she was totes going to have red hair and she does not... I know she's not Lucille Ball, but I've spent so much time associating people with their avatars.
I DO have red hair, but this kid is seriously cramping my style and I become a brunette again once my color fades out or bc it's slicked back so dd won't pull chunks of hair out! Sorry to disappoint guise. . Lol 2nd pic is me dressed as Lucille ball on Halloween and dh was Desi. Dh always calls me his Lucy.
See, now, you post enough photos of yourself that I knew you didn't look anything like your avatar.
Anyone disappointed that I'm not actually a pink flower?
I'm not gonna lie, I'm a little sad that @Lee81 isn't really a Simpson's character.
Oh poop. Now I have to go back and read all of this so I know who told @PinkDahLia44 I am not a Simpson's character. Lies! And I was totally hoping to get some work done today. Unless there is someone who is excellent at recapping and would sum it up for me ;;)
I'm not gonna lie, I'm a little sad that @Lee81 isn't really a Simpson's character.
Oh poop. Now I have to go back and read all of this so I know who told @PinkDahLia44 I am not a Simpson's character. Lies! And I was totally hoping to get some work done today. Unless there is someone who is excellent at recapping and would sum it up for me ;;)
@Lee81, you killed the dream when you posted the pics of your wedding
You will be forgiven if you will g2g with me and @missgpsu next time I am near PA.
I'm not gonna lie, I'm a little sad that @Lee81 isn't really a Simpson's character.
Oh poop. Now I have to go back and read all of this so I know who told @PinkDahLia44 I am not a Simpson's character. Lies! And I was totally hoping to get some work done today. Unless there is someone who is excellent at recapping and would sum it up for me ;;)
@Lee81, you killed the dream when you posted the pics of your wedding
You will be forgiven if you will g2g with me and @missgpsu next time I am near PA.
Salt Lake City is in the top 20 for the best/friendliest cities for bicycles in the country and everyone still sucks. You know what really grinds my gears?! When they are waiting at a red light and they won't put their freaking feet on the ground. They play this stupid balancing game and almost fall into traffic a million times! Put your feet down at lights. Please. Also don't be dumb.
K, s/o of "motorcycles are unsafe" discussion (but really nothing to do with motorcycles being unsafe):
I think it's just as irresponsible to ignore your health. Personal anecdote (which we all know means FACT): My father had a heart attack in his 30s. He lived another 30 years overweight and with high cholesterol and then had another heart attack which killed him. So even though my father never stepped foot on a motorcycle (with or without a helmet) or jumped out of a plane or drove way too fast and recklessly on the highway, my son still never gets to meet his namesake.
Ok, this is one example, but there are SO MANY OTHERS I come across everyday, which I can't list here because HIPPA and I just get mad when people ignore their health. Exercise and take care of yourselves, people!!!
And to the many patients at work who tell me they "don't have diabetes and don't need insulin," just because you do not check your blood sugar or take medicine does not mean the disease doesn't exist.
Edit bc I used an extraneous comma and it was killing me.
If you have a family member who is very ill and a the surgeon tells you that they are going to die whether they do surgery or not, I think it is selfish and inhumane to insist they have surgery anyway.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
If you have a family member who is very ill and a the surgeon tells you that they are going to die whether they do surgery or not, I think it is selfish and inhumane to insist they have surgery anyway.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
This is the sort of thing that you can't really make a blanket statement about. There are SO MANY different scenarios.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
True but I think it's so sad that people die cut open on a table amongst strangers when they could have been in he presence of loved ones instead.
If you have a family member who is very ill and a the surgeon tells you that they are going to die whether they do surgery or not, I think it is selfish and inhumane to insist they have surgery anyway.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
This is the sort of thing that you can't really make a blanket statement about. There are SO MANY different scenarios.
Agreed. Surgery itself can be palliative even if not curative.
If you have a family member who is very ill and a the surgeon tells you that they are going to die whether they do surgery or not, I think it is selfish and inhumane to insist they have surgery anyway.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
This is the sort of thing that you can't really make a blanket statement about. There are SO MANY different scenarios.
My FIL and MIL are both motorcycle maniacs and have taken my little nephews (ages 7 & 8) on rides around the neighborhood. The boys wore helmets, and I know it was just around the neighborhood, but I don't think children should be allowed to ride motorcycles at all. I think there should be an age minimum of like 16 to be able to even ride one.
I completely disagree with this. The younger you teach a boy to respect a piece of machinery, the better. The crazies out there think they are invincible. Teach a kid to respect that it is something that can hurt you if you are not careful, let them learn on dirt, let it be second nature. That is muuuch better than a wise ass 16 year old on a bike for the first time who thinks he knows everything.
Edit : or girl!!! Didn't mean to sound sexist.
Disagree with this. Maybe if you'd seen a kid die on the operating table after his head was split open and he was life-flighted in from the countryside where he was "learning" to ride, you'd feel differently.
Also, no amount of training or learning can account for the driver of the car that just didn't see you on the motorcycle.
If you have a family member who is very ill and a the surgeon tells you that they are going to die whether they do surgery or not, I think it is selfish and inhumane to insist they have surgery anyway.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
This is the sort of thing that you can't really make a blanket statement about. There are SO MANY different scenarios.
Agreed. Surgery itself can be palliative even if not curative.
Hum, this sounds like we could start talking about the cost of this...and if it truely is only going to give them another few months, why do it? #tooexpensive Quality of life, quantity of life, etc.
I get that we want our loved ones to be here longer and WE want to be here longer, but at some point, cost effectiveness needs to be included in our decisions, lest we continue to broke this country's healthcare system. I realize this was more about selfishness, but cost is important. #damnhealthcarebusinessmakingmerational
To clarify I am talking about when the individual is likely not going to make it another day or even 12 hours.
Obviously if someone has cancer that's untreatable and they do surgery to debulk tumors for palliative reasons that is totally different.
I assume you are a medical professional. It is easy for us to think clearly about medical decision-making because it is our job and we know the consequences, etc. But in general, you can't make blanket statements like this. Just because you wouldn't want to die that way doesn't mean you can dictate how others do. Have to respect patient autonomy. You have to remember you are dealing with soneones mother, father, brother, etc. I've seen people go to surgery who were absolutely going to die without it, probably die with it. Patient and family knew and they wanted to give her a shot in hell. What if it was your child? Would you give them a shot? In addition, if the surgeon is even willing to take the person to surgery then there is probably a smidge of hope of some kind. Some surgeons will say the patient is too unstable and call it then.
If you have a family member who is very ill and a the surgeon tells you that they are going to die whether they do surgery or not, I think it is selfish and inhumane to insist they have surgery anyway.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
This is the sort of thing that you can't really make a blanket statement about. There are SO MANY different scenarios.
Agreed. Surgery itself can be palliative even if not curative.
Hum, this sounds like we could start talking about the cost of this...and if it truely is only going to give them another few months, why do it? #tooexpensive Quality of life, quantity of life, etc.
I get that we want our loved ones to be here longer and WE want to be here longer, but at some point, cost effectiveness needs to be included in our decisions, lest we continue to broke this country's healthcare system. I realize this was more about selfishness, but cost is important. #damnhealthcarebusinessmakingmerational
------- eta: stuck in quote box damn mobile ------- @Amjoy25 are palliative surgeries not typically covered by ins? We see palliative surgeries all the time but I admit being bedside, billing/finances/insurance behind that kind of ish isn't my forte... Just beginning to wrap my head around if all.
To clarify I am talking about when the individual is likely not going to make it another day or even 12 hours.
Obviously if someone has cancer that's untreatable and they do surgery to debulk tumors for palliative reasons that is totally different.
I assume you are a medical professional. It is easy for us to think clearly about medical decision-making because it is our job and we know the consequences, etc. But in general, you can't make blanket statements like this. Just because you wouldn't want to die that way doesn't mean you can dictate how others do. Have to respect patient autonomy. You have to remember you are dealing with soneones mother, father, brother, etc. I've seen people go to surgery who were absolutely going to die without it, probably die with it. Patient and family knew and they wanted to give her a shot in hell. What if it was your child? Would you give them a shot? In addition, if the surgeon is even willing to take the person to surgery then there is probably a smidge of hope of some kind. Some surgeons will say the patient is too unstable and call it then.
To the bolded: The problem arises when it's not the patient's decision. It's the family member doing something that may even be going against the pt's expressed, written wishes. When an MPOA makes a decision for the family member, it can go against the pt's written wishes and still be perfectly legal.
If you have a family member who is very ill and a the surgeon tells you that they are going to die whether they do surgery or not, I think it is selfish and inhumane to insist they have surgery anyway.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
This is the sort of thing that you can't really make a blanket statement about. There are SO MANY different scenarios.
Agreed. Surgery itself can be palliative even if not curative.
Hum, this sounds like we could start talking about the cost of this...and if it truely is only going to give them another few months, why do it? #tooexpensive Quality of life, quantity of life, etc.
I get that we want our loved ones to be here longer and WE want to be here longer, but at some point, cost effectiveness needs to be included in our decisions, lest we continue to broke this country's healthcare system. I realize this was more about selfishness, but cost is important. #damnhealthcarebusinessmakingmerational
I'm with you 100%, we spend an exorbitant amt of $ in last year of life, proably with little benefit and much harm/suffering. However, what you speak of is also called "rationing medical care". Some family members won't understand that letting grandma go in peace without medical interventions is what's best for her or the system, Cost is rarely discussed because of the "ration" word.
To clarify I am talking about when the individual is likely not going to make it another day or even 12 hours.
Obviously if someone has cancer that's untreatable and they do surgery to debulk tumors for palliative reasons that is totally different.
I assume you are a medical professional. It is easy for us to think clearly about medical decision-making because it is our job and we know the consequences, etc. But in general, you can't make blanket statements like this. Just because you wouldn't want to die that way doesn't mean you can dictate how others do. Have to respect patient autonomy. You have to remember you are dealing with soneones mother, father, brother, etc. I've seen people go to surgery who were absolutely going to die without it, probably die with it. Patient and family knew and they wanted to give her a shot in hell. What if it was your child? Would you give them a shot? In addition, if the surgeon is even willing to take the person to surgery then there is probably a smidge of hope of some kind. Some surgeons will say the patient is too unstable and call it then.
To the bolded: The problem arises when it's not the patient's decision. It's the family member doing something that may even be going against the pt's expressed, written wishes. When an MPOA makes a decision for the family member, it can go against the pt's written wishes and still be perfectly legal.
I've never seen this happen, I'm sorry if you have. If there are written prior wishes from the patient, you'd be hard-pressed to find a surgeon that would operate because a family member told them to. You can't force a surgeon to operate.
To clarify I am talking about when the individual is likely not going to make it another day or even 12 hours.
Obviously if someone has cancer that's untreatable and they do surgery to debulk tumors for palliative reasons that is totally different.
I assume you are a medical professional. It is easy for us to think clearly about medical decision-making because it is our job and we know the consequences, etc. But in general, you can't make blanket statements like this. Just because you wouldn't want to die that way doesn't mean you can dictate how others do. Have to respect patient autonomy. You have to remember you are dealing with soneones mother, father, brother, etc. I've seen people go to surgery who were absolutely going to die without it, probably die with it. Patient and family knew and they wanted to give her a shot in hell. What if it was your child? Would you give them a shot? In addition, if the surgeon is even willing to take the person to surgery then there is probably a smidge of hope of some kind. Some surgeons will say the patient is too unstable and call it then.
To the bolded: The problem arises when it's not the patient's decision. It's the family member doing something that may even be going against the pt's expressed, written wishes. When an MPOA makes a decision for the family member, it can go against the pt's written wishes and still be perfectly legal.
---------------------- Eta stuck in quote box again even though I tried very hard not to be! Damnit mobile. ---------------------
I actually cared for a pt last week whose family did this. Typically, I am vehemently opposed to disobeying the patients wishes (esp when they can no longer speak and advocate for themselves) but in that particular situation, dealing with a very aggressive and rare type of leukemia, I can't say I disagreed with the family's decision. Most importantly, when the last stitch effort by heme onc/pulmonology was unsuccessful everyone was respectful and realistic and it was a beautiful end of life process to be a part of and the patient was able to live out their own will.
Medicine is so tricky. It's difficult to make blanket statements because much of medicine and the human body processes can be a gray area.
If you have a family member who is very ill and a the surgeon tells you that they are going to die whether they do surgery or not, I think it is selfish and inhumane to insist they have surgery anyway.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
This is the sort of thing that you can't really make a blanket statement about. There are SO MANY different scenarios.
Agreed. Surgery itself can be palliative even if not curative.
Hum, this sounds like we could start talking about the cost of this...and if it truely is only going to give them another few months, why do it? #tooexpensive Quality of life, quantity of life, etc.
I get that we want our loved ones to be here longer and WE want to be here longer, but at some point, cost effectiveness needs to be included in our decisions, lest we continue to broke this country's healthcare system. I realize this was more about selfishness, but cost is important. #damnhealthcarebusinessmakingmerational
------- eta: stuck in quote box damn mobile -------
@Amjoy25 are palliative surgeries not typically covered by ins? We see palliative surgeries all the time but I admit being bedside, billing/finances/insurance behind that kind of ish isn't my forte... Just beginning to wrap my head around if all.
I'm sure it is, but that doesn't mean it doesn't weigh on our healthcare system. I mean, you still have surgical costs, hospital costs, rehab, aftercare, home health, etc. Just because insurance will pay for it, doesn't make it right.
For example, women get mammograms every damn year after 40...is this necessary? No. Just because insurance will pay for it does not make it right. Granted, there are those at higher risk for breast cancer that absolutely should have imaging once a year, but others, no.
Another for example, oncologists are notorious for doing surgeries because they get paid a butt ton to do so. My husband's great aunt was just diagnosed with pancreatic cancer...she has cancer in her liver & stomach...they are doing a surgical procedure to remove all the cancers. This is just wrong IMO. She's 90 lbs and prob will not make it out of surgery. So wrong.
Re: UO
Nope octopus. I can't even keep track of how many families my husband and brother have had to tell that their little kid has died or is permanently, life-alteringly injured due to ATV and motorcycle accidents.
There is a reason that we don't allow 11 year olds to drive cars. We don't allow them to execute legally-binding contracts. And we don't allow them to be tried as adults for crimes they commit.
It is because the brains of 8, 10, 12, 14 year old kids are fundamentally different than adult brains. Even the "smartest" kids don't always fully understand that their actions have real world consequences. Research has shown time and again that even though parents tell their elementary-middle school (and even many high school) kids, they don't really comprehend that the special effects they see actors pull off in movies defy physics/laws of gravity, and that they will not be able to do the same tricks on their bikes/atv. They are much more susceptible to peer pressure to attempt things that they may otherwise never try. They see characters spring back to life for the 999th time in their favorite video game after sustaining life-ending injuries and don't fully understand the finality of death.
Those cases get to my family members who treat them. They come home and talk about how the parents are usually good parents, who bought expensive toys for their kids because "that is just how it is around here," "I grew up riding ATVs/motorcycles and nothing happened to me," and "but he had gone out riding lots before and nothing had ever happened."
Again, kids are not adults. Kids don't grasp that a hard dirt hill that was super fun to ride the other day when it hadn't rained in a month is totally different 2 days after a gully washer, causing the kid to get halfway up the hill, the ATV to pull off the soft ground and then fall backwards and crush the kid to death (that happened two weeks ago). Adults understand that terrain constantly changes from life experience and know that even the same path is not always going to act the same two rides in a row. Kids just don't have enough experiences to process those complex calculations that most of us take for granted when we get behind the wheel.
Kids on motorcycles or ATVs is fucking stupid. My husband grew up doing all that stuff as a way of life in his small, rural town, and medical school and his experiences in the children's ER completely changed his mind as to the "value" of allowing kids who we don't allow to make any other life-altering decisions (get tried as adults for crimes, vote, enter into contracts, decide whether or not to attend school, etc.) get behind the wheel of a gas-powered vehicle that can and does kill hundreds of kids every year and seriously injure thousands more...
Parents always say, "I wish I had known..." There just isn't enough publicity about how fundamentally stupid it is to allow your child/young teenager to play on ATVs/small motorcycles.
https://www.mayoclinic.org/medical-professionals/clinical-updates/trauma/all-terrain-vehicles-too-much-for-kids-handle
TL;dr: Kids driving gas-powered vehicles is super fucking dumb. It doesn't teach responsibility. It teaches false confidence. I am at a loss for words that anyone could think differently--even though I have to hear the stories from my husband routinely about devastated parents who clearly didn't get the memo. That sounds harsh--and maybe it is too harsh. But those kids died/were horribly injured unnecessarily. And that royally grinds my gears.
Not required in AZ or FL either. Stoooopid. I've seen too many accidents to think motorcycles are safe. It's not how you drive as a motorcyclist, it's the cars around you. Not a fan.
Amjoy will throw you one. But we will call it "happy hour". Oks??
LO then (2 days) and now (1 year)
My DH is totes a giant, English-speaking dog.
I am only talking about parents who give a child the tools to kill/injure themselves, not understanding that kids just inherently don't have the ability to rationally run a similar risk/benefit analysis for each ride, regardless of how many times you try to "teach" them to be safe.
I'm a SAHM and have totally considered what I would do if suddenly widowed. This is why we have a savings account and life insurance. Sure it's morbid, but I'd rather be practical than find myself stuck in a terrible situation.
On the other hand, if you slow down 50 or 100 feet before the lane ends and put on your turn signal and wait patiently, I will come to a dead-ass halt and graciously wave you ahead of me.
I tried to phrase this as a UO, but it may be more of a FFFC.
Me too!!
Anyone disappointed that I'm not actually a pink flower?
#pullsoutallthegoodresearch
You will be forgiven if you will g2g with me and @missgpsu next time I am near PA.
You will be forgiven if you will g2g with me and @missgpsu next time I am near PA.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Put your feet down at lights. Please. Also don't be dumb.
I think it's just as irresponsible to ignore your health. Personal anecdote (which we all know means FACT): My father had a heart attack in his 30s. He lived another 30 years overweight and with high cholesterol and then had another heart attack which killed him. So even though my father never stepped foot on a motorcycle (with or without a helmet) or jumped out of a plane or drove way too fast and recklessly on the highway, my son still never gets to meet his namesake.
Ok, this is one example, but there are SO MANY OTHERS I come across everyday, which I can't list here because HIPPA and I just get mad when people ignore their health. Exercise and take care of yourselves, people!!!
And to the many patients at work who tell me they "don't have diabetes and don't need insulin," just because you do not check your blood sugar or take medicine does not mean the disease doesn't exist.
Edit bc I used an extraneous comma and it was killing me.
I know it must be a heartbreaking decision but trust me you want them to pass with you, not with us.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
True but I think it's so sad that people die cut open on a table amongst strangers when they could have been in he presence of loved ones instead.
Eta: stuck in box
#2 due 12.23.17
Obviously if someone has cancer that's untreatable and they do surgery to debulk tumors for palliative reasons that is totally different.
Also, no amount of training or learning can account for the driver of the car that just didn't see you on the motorcycle.
I get that we want our loved ones to be here longer and WE want to be here longer, but at some point, cost effectiveness needs to be included in our decisions, lest we continue to broke this country's healthcare system. I realize this was more about selfishness, but cost is important. #damnhealthcarebusinessmakingmerational
I assume you are a medical professional. It is easy for us to think clearly about medical decision-making because it is our job and we know the consequences, etc. But in general, you can't make blanket statements like this. Just because you wouldn't want to die that way doesn't mean you can dictate how others do. Have to respect patient autonomy. You have to remember you are dealing with soneones mother, father, brother, etc. I've seen people go to surgery who were absolutely going to die without it, probably die with it. Patient and family knew and they wanted to give her a shot in hell. What if it was your child? Would you give them a shot? In addition, if the surgeon is even willing to take the person to surgery then there is probably a smidge of hope of some kind. Some surgeons will say the patient is too unstable and call it then.
Hum, this sounds like we could start talking about the cost of this...and if it truely is only going to give them another few months, why do it? #tooexpensive Quality of life, quantity of life, etc.
I get that we want our loved ones to be here longer and WE want to be here longer, but at some point, cost effectiveness needs to be included in our decisions, lest we continue to broke this country's healthcare system. I realize this was more about selfishness, but cost is important. #damnhealthcarebusinessmakingmerational
------- eta: stuck in quote box damn mobile -------
@Amjoy25 are palliative surgeries not typically covered by ins? We see palliative surgeries all the time but I admit being bedside, billing/finances/insurance behind that kind of ish isn't my forte... Just beginning to wrap my head around if all.
I'm with you 100%, we spend an exorbitant amt of $ in last year of life, proably with little benefit and much harm/suffering. However, what you speak of is also called "rationing medical care". Some family members won't understand that letting grandma go in peace without medical interventions is what's best for her or the system, Cost is rarely discussed because of the "ration" word.
I've never seen this happen, I'm sorry if you have. If there are written prior wishes from the patient, you'd be hard-pressed to find a surgeon that would operate because a family member told them to. You can't force a surgeon to operate.
----------------------
Eta stuck in quote box again even though I tried very hard not to be! Damnit mobile.
---------------------
I actually cared for a pt last week whose family did this. Typically, I am vehemently opposed to disobeying the patients wishes (esp when they can no longer speak and advocate for themselves) but in that particular situation, dealing with a very aggressive and rare type of leukemia, I can't say I disagreed with the family's decision. Most importantly, when the last stitch effort by heme onc/pulmonology was unsuccessful everyone was respectful and realistic and it was a beautiful end of life process to be a part of and the patient was able to live out their own will.
Medicine is so tricky. It's difficult to make blanket statements because much of medicine and the human body processes can be a gray area.
For example, women get mammograms every damn year after 40...is this necessary? No. Just because insurance will pay for it does not make it right. Granted, there are those at higher risk for breast cancer that absolutely should have imaging once a year, but others, no.
Another for example, oncologists are notorious for doing surgeries because they get paid a butt ton to do so. My husband's great aunt was just diagnosed with pancreatic cancer...she has cancer in her liver & stomach...they are doing a surgical procedure to remove all the cancers. This is just wrong IMO. She's 90 lbs and prob will not make it out of surgery. So wrong.