For those who avoid FB: I'm putting the finishing touches up on my two year degree, and going to ODU in the fall for my four year degree in the fall. Decided once I steamrolled a math in the fall (Thanks to some prodding/debate with LD) to skip the medical stuff and do what I've always wanted to do, which is work in a library full time. That means I need to grab a BS, and then a master's in library science.
YES. Librarians are awesome, and I applaud this decision. Not to mention that by the time you get your master's you'll be middle-aged, so you'll fit right in! *runs*
And now a complete change of tone: My grandfather's heart stopped yesterday. He was walking out of the apartment he shares with my grandmother (who has late-stage Parkinson's) and he just collapsed. By some miracle (and I don't use that word lightly) a neighbor who is a semi-retired doctor saw it happen and performed CPR. By
another miracle, my aunt was staying with them for the weekend and was on hand to call 911. By a third miracle, the CPR
revived him, and he came back with relatively good vital signs. That happens....rarely. This also happened to be the weekend my sister and I were visiting our mother for a short family reunion, so literally the entire family was in town when usually only one of us is within a hundred miles.
He still hasn't woken up, but he will,pending another incident (they still don't know what caused it,except that it wasn't a heart attack). Every time the sedatives get low he tries to sit up and pull tubes out. That's exactly what he always does in a hospital, so I know that whatever brain damage he might have suffered left his personality behind. Hopefully they're going to be able to wean him off the sedatives today and we'll be able to see what kind of condition he's in.
It's seriously amazing that he's alive at all, though. My grandfather is 83 and has not exactly practiced healthy living. He's been a practicing alcoholic since his early teens, he smokes, he ignores doctors' advice in general, he's got one kidney and it doesn't work very well, he's got the stress of being primary caregiver to a Parkinson's patient, after all that his heart finally gives out, and all it takes is a round of CPR and he's (metaphorically) right back on his feet. To say he's got the constitution of a goat would be an insult. It's more comparable to a Galapagos turtle, or maybe the United States.