Footstomper, where are you?
We miss you and hope you are doing well.
Hugs
Jojo
Comments
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Footstomper!!!!!Jan4you said:Hi JoJo!
Didn't know he wasHi JoJo!
Didn't know he was MIA. Swear I saw a post he responded too not long ago...hmm
Well Footstomper..know we care!
Jan
I'm stompin my foot, wondering where you got off to.
Hugs, love & prayers,
Donna~
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Awww, you sweeties!angec said:He was online yesterday,
He was online yesterday, Jojo, Hugs!
I'm just sitting in Maryland, waiting for something to happen. I've been on Nivomalab for six weeks now and nothing to report, which I suppose is the best news possible. The only side effects I seem to have are an all body rash and a little fatigue, both of which I can easily live with. I'll be having a scan after another 6 weeks or so.
I've been watching a movie called the Ecstacy of Wilko Johnson (probably best known in the USA as the silent executioner in Game of Thrones, he was also a guitarist and songwriter in a 1970's R&B band called Dr Feelgood. He comes from a very harsh place called Canvey island which as both a tourist destination and a centre for Oil refineries,the New Jersey of England. He is not only an artist, and a poet, but he is also an expert in Norse and Old English.)
In 2013 he was diagnosed with Prostate Cancer, told that it was inoperable and refused Chemo because it might only extend his life for a few months. So he went on a final Goodbye tour. On being told that he was dying he suddenly felt the ecstacy of being alive. Sound familiar?
He was touring the world still with a passion for being alive now. When he got back to England he was playing a gig when an oncologist freind of his came backstage and asked him why he wasnt dead. He got him into a hospital and dicovered that the tumour was operable but that the surgery itself had a high chance of mortality. Wilko decided that if he was going to die he might as well die under the knife.
The whole documentary is incredibly moving and very very funny. I recommend it Wilko's dignity, humour, and attitude is spellbinding throughout.
Oh, I'm really touched by your care. This site is like a family. The brothers and sisters of the lumpy offal.
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IFootstomper said:Awww, you sweeties!
I'm just sitting in Maryland, waiting for something to happen. I've been on Nivomalab for six weeks now and nothing to report, which I suppose is the best news possible. The only side effects I seem to have are an all body rash and a little fatigue, both of which I can easily live with. I'll be having a scan after another 6 weeks or so.
I've been watching a movie called the Ecstacy of Wilko Johnson (probably best known in the USA as the silent executioner in Game of Thrones, he was also a guitarist and songwriter in a 1970's R&B band called Dr Feelgood. He comes from a very harsh place called Canvey island which as both a tourist destination and a centre for Oil refineries,the New Jersey of England. He is not only an artist, and a poet, but he is also an expert in Norse and Old English.)
In 2013 he was diagnosed with Prostate Cancer, told that it was inoperable and refused Chemo because it might only extend his life for a few months. So he went on a final Goodbye tour. On being told that he was dying he suddenly felt the ecstacy of being alive. Sound familiar?
He was touring the world still with a passion for being alive now. When he got back to England he was playing a gig when an oncologist freind of his came backstage and asked him why he wasnt dead. He got him into a hospital and dicovered that the tumour was operable but that the surgery itself had a high chance of mortality. Wilko decided that if he was going to die he might as well die under the knife.
The whole documentary is incredibly moving and very very funny. I recommend it Wilko's dignity, humour, and attitude is spellbinding throughout.
Oh, I'm really touched by your care. This site is like a family. The brothers and sisters of the lumpy offal.
I love nothing to report!! With all you have been through, that is the best news ever!
That movie sounds interesting. I wonder if that is available on Canadian Netflix....I will have to check.
Even though others reported sightings of you Stomps, I must have missed these said sightings. I felt a void in the atmosphere.
Glad all is well!
Hugs
Jojo
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So happy!!Jojo61 said:I
I love nothing to report!! With all you have been through, that is the best news ever!
That movie sounds interesting. I wonder if that is available on Canadian Netflix....I will have to check.
Even though others reported sightings of you Stomps, I must have missed these said sightings. I felt a void in the atmosphere.
Glad all is well!
Hugs
Jojo
Glad to hear you've just been busy watching movies. Sounds like a good one too, I'll have to see if I can find it.
Praying that rash clears soon.
Donna~
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Glad you are OK. Your humorFootstomper said:Awww, you sweeties!
I'm just sitting in Maryland, waiting for something to happen. I've been on Nivomalab for six weeks now and nothing to report, which I suppose is the best news possible. The only side effects I seem to have are an all body rash and a little fatigue, both of which I can easily live with. I'll be having a scan after another 6 weeks or so.
I've been watching a movie called the Ecstacy of Wilko Johnson (probably best known in the USA as the silent executioner in Game of Thrones, he was also a guitarist and songwriter in a 1970's R&B band called Dr Feelgood. He comes from a very harsh place called Canvey island which as both a tourist destination and a centre for Oil refineries,the New Jersey of England. He is not only an artist, and a poet, but he is also an expert in Norse and Old English.)
In 2013 he was diagnosed with Prostate Cancer, told that it was inoperable and refused Chemo because it might only extend his life for a few months. So he went on a final Goodbye tour. On being told that he was dying he suddenly felt the ecstacy of being alive. Sound familiar?
He was touring the world still with a passion for being alive now. When he got back to England he was playing a gig when an oncologist freind of his came backstage and asked him why he wasnt dead. He got him into a hospital and dicovered that the tumour was operable but that the surgery itself had a high chance of mortality. Wilko decided that if he was going to die he might as well die under the knife.
The whole documentary is incredibly moving and very very funny. I recommend it Wilko's dignity, humour, and attitude is spellbinding throughout.
Oh, I'm really touched by your care. This site is like a family. The brothers and sisters of the lumpy offal.
Glad you are OK. Your humor is a bright spot here.
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HappyFootstomper said:Awww, you sweeties!
I'm just sitting in Maryland, waiting for something to happen. I've been on Nivomalab for six weeks now and nothing to report, which I suppose is the best news possible. The only side effects I seem to have are an all body rash and a little fatigue, both of which I can easily live with. I'll be having a scan after another 6 weeks or so.
I've been watching a movie called the Ecstacy of Wilko Johnson (probably best known in the USA as the silent executioner in Game of Thrones, he was also a guitarist and songwriter in a 1970's R&B band called Dr Feelgood. He comes from a very harsh place called Canvey island which as both a tourist destination and a centre for Oil refineries,the New Jersey of England. He is not only an artist, and a poet, but he is also an expert in Norse and Old English.)
In 2013 he was diagnosed with Prostate Cancer, told that it was inoperable and refused Chemo because it might only extend his life for a few months. So he went on a final Goodbye tour. On being told that he was dying he suddenly felt the ecstacy of being alive. Sound familiar?
He was touring the world still with a passion for being alive now. When he got back to England he was playing a gig when an oncologist freind of his came backstage and asked him why he wasnt dead. He got him into a hospital and dicovered that the tumour was operable but that the surgery itself had a high chance of mortality. Wilko decided that if he was going to die he might as well die under the knife.
The whole documentary is incredibly moving and very very funny. I recommend it Wilko's dignity, humour, and attitude is spellbinding throughout.
Oh, I'm really touched by your care. This site is like a family. The brothers and sisters of the lumpy offal.
Glad you are okay, and I am going to look for that movie it sounds interesting.
Mark
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