Fallen Heros

Many people remember a fallen soldier as a person in uniform. Sometimes that soldier is the four legged friend who saved your life by being a bomb-sniffing dog and finding the IED and warns you about it before it explodes. This is a sad but beautiful picture of pure respect for 2 fallen heroes.

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MARGARET HELEN SMITH WILSON DAY – Proclamation from the office of the Mayor of Covington, KY

 

Today, Mum would have been 85 years old had she lived.  The Mayor of the City of Covington has issued a PROCLAMATION that today be declared ‘MARGARET WILSON  DAY’ in Covington. 

Mum worked in the Mayor’s office for over 10 years AFTER she retired from being a chef and getting her G.E.D. of which she was most proud. She worked part time up until she became ill in July of 2011.  

I wish she were alive to see this, she would be most proud indeed but now that ‘she has her wings’ I’m sure she is aware of it and is giving her cheeky grin. 

I’m proud of you Mum, now and always. I miss your presence but rejoice in your new life.  You were and always will be MY BEST FRIEND. 

Sandra Kay

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In case you cannot read what’s on the Proclamation, here is the text:

 

WHEREAS: Margaret Helen Wilson (Smith) born on Feb. 3, 1927 in Clarksville, IN and left this world on Jan. 12, 2012; and

 

WHEREAS:                    Margaret had 5 brothers and 1 sister and she was raised during the Great Depression into a poor family so she really knew how to do without which made her a very frugal and honest person.  If she owed someone a penny, she made sure they got it.  Loving, devoted mother, Integrity & honesty is a good way to sum up her whole life.

 

WHEREAS:                    Margaret always wanted to be a wife, mother and homemaker. Her first joy was cooking. When she was 20, she married Rual A Wilson of Somerset, Ky and helped him run his small grocery store in Indiana. They had one child, Sandra Kay in 1947.  She was divorced in 1949.

 

WHEREAS:                    Margaret only had a 10th grade education at the time but did secure a job at the Army Ammunition Plant in Jeffersonville, IN.  Afterwards, she decided she wanted to make cooking her life’s work. She worked for many different private homes throughout her life and eventually became a chef. She honed her skills through years of watching others and much tireless practice until she became a master.

 

WHEREAS:                    Margaret & Sandra moved from IN to Louisville in 1959. Margaret lived and worked there until 1992 when she finally retired and decided to move to Northern Kentucky to live with daughter Sandra and they finally ended up in Villa Hills.

 

WHEREAS:                    She was not idle very long after moving to No KY. She immediately enrolled in C.A.C. and got her GED of which she was very, very proud. She passed with a very high score. She worked part time for various places while getting job skills: Behringer-Crawford Museum; Head Start of No KY; Campbell County Juvenile Court and St. Vincent DePaul in Crescent Springs. Eventually, she was hired as a permanent part time employee in the Mayor’s Office in Covington where she worked for over 10 years until illness forced her into ‘retiring’ for the 2nd time at the age of 84.

 

WHEREAS:                    Margaret ALWAYS had a smile for everyone and a wonderful sense of play and humor. She was very well liked by her coworkers and friends. She was ‘colorful’, cheeky and optimistic everyday of her life, even if she was sick or down. She loved to cook for everyone and it gave her great pleasure to share many wonderful concoctions with coworkers. She also loved to talk about the Bible with anyone who was interested. Many of her coworkers could share funny stories about Margaret and how she touched their lives. She is survived by her daughter Sandra of Villa Hills, KY

 

NOW THEREFORE,       I, Chuck Scheper, Mayor of the City of Covington, Kenton County, Kentucky, by virtue of the authority vested in me and on behalf of its Council do hereby proclaim Friday, February 3rd, 2012 as

 

“MARGARET WILSON DAY”

 

                                      in the City of Covington and we extend our deepest condolences to Margaret’s family and friends.

 

 

 


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We risked death to become parents: Il Divo singer Sébastien Izambard and his wife Renee tell of the traumatic births of their children

By Chrissy Iley

Last updated at 1:05 AM on 18th September 2011

The day before I meet Sébastien Izambard, I watch him sing with the rest of Il Divo to a packed London Coliseum.

 The three other members of the opera group, who have sold more than 26 million albums worldwide, joke and flirt and have underwear thrown at them by an audience of near-hysterical women.

 Sébastien, 38, devotes a song to his wife Renee and gives thanks for becoming a father. There is a hush on stage as he says how much it means to him because he ‘almost lost all of them’.

Proud parents: Despite problems conceiving and during the pregnancy which could have even led to death, Il Divo singer Sebsastien Izambard and his wife Renne now have three 'amazing' children

Indeed, Renee suffered not just one but two difficult pregnancies, battling a host of health problems. The first culminated in their elder children, twins Luca and Rose, now four, being born three months prematurely by emergency caesarean. For weeks it was not known whether the tiny babies would survive. And during her second labour, with their son Jude, now two, Renee came close to death herself.

 When we meet in a London restaurant near their home, Sébastien rarely lets go of his wife’s hand. Renee, a vibrant 33-year-old Australian, worked as a publicist for Il Divo’s record company (the band was created by Simon Cowell, and they are signed to his label Syco) when they met seven years ago.

 Both wanted to start a family as soon as possible – but soon found there were obstacles. ‘I have polycystic ovary syndrome, where fluid-filled cysts develop in the ovaries meaning you don’t produce a lot of eggs,’ says Renee. ‘And Seb .  .  .’

 ‘And I have slow-swimming sperm,’ he says with unabashed honesty.

Renee continues: ‘So I had fertility treatment for six months, taking daily tablets and having injections of hormone-stimulating drugs.’

 In 2005, Renee discovered she was pregnant. ‘We were so excited,’ she says. ‘Then, two days before Il Divo were set to perform at Wembley Arena, I lost the baby. It was devastating.’

 At Renee’s insistence, Sébastien went on stage as planned. ‘I wanted to cry the whole show. It was difficult to put on a bright face in front of the crowd. I wanted to go and hide myself but I was so exposed,’ he says.

 So when Renee became pregnant again with twins four years ago, the couple were ecstatic. But she soon realised, once again, that something was terribly wrong. ‘It started with awful headaches and I was diagnosed with a condition called pre-eclampsia, which is basically dangerously high blood pressure,’ she says.

Cute: Twins Luca and Rose weighed just 3lbs each at birth, which took place just 24 weeks into the pregnancy after Renee was diagnosed with pre-eclampsia

Renee fell ill while the couple were visiting Sébastien’s family in France, and, deemed unfit to travel by doctors, remained there for the rest of the pregnancy. ‘I was hospitalised at 17 weeks and spent seven weeks there until the babies were born. I was in a British hospital in France but I got too sick and they didn’t have a specialised neo-natal unit. I ended up outside Paris in Port-Royal-des-Champs maternity hospital.’

 Sébastien says: ‘It was very difficult. My wife is number one in my life and we had a tour in Japan. I said to the guys [Carlos Marín, Urs Bühler and David Miller], ‘‘I can’t do it.’’ They were not very understanding but I can’t blame them. We had to cancel the tour. Eventually they understood. All of a sudden “we” were pregnant and having difficulties. I thought I was losing my wife and children.’

 ‘I wanted to cry the whole show. It was difficult to put on a bright face in front of the crowd. I wanted to go and hide myself but I was so exposed.’

 Pre-eclampsia affects up to ten per cent of first-time pregnancies, with severe cases (about two in every 100) requiring hospitalisation. It is the most common reason for death in pregnant women. The cause is still not known, and the majority of cases occur in the third trimester.

 In the early stages, the condition is symptomless and detectable only by regular checks on the mother’s blood pressure and urine. At its worst, it can cause damage to the liver, kidneys, lungs and heart.

 Treatment of severe pre-eclampsia is a balancing act – continuing the pregnancy can lead to life-threatening complications for the mother, so induced labour or an emergency caesarean is usually necessary. Yet born too early, the baby may not survive.

 ‘My blood pressure was rising and I developed a pulmonary oedema, which is fluid on your lungs, so I was put into intensive care,’ says Renee. ‘It was terrifying as it was difficult to breathe.’

 Clive Spence-Jones, consultant gynaecologist and obstetrician at London’s Whittington Hospital, explains: ‘Fluid in the capillaries in the lungs leaks into the spaces normally filled with air, and patients become very short of breath.’

 Renee says: ‘Every bit of fight in me said one more day – the aim was to get me to 27 weeks, which would give the babies a real chance. It’s quite difficult to describe the feeling – you feel horrible, and towards the end I didn’t feel anything. I looked at Seb coming in every day and he was exhausted. I could see the stress it was putting him through.’

 Eventually, Renee was put on a ventilator to assist her breathing. At 24 weeks, doctors decided they could wait no longer.

 ‘I woke in the middle of the night and felt I couldn’t breathe, but I thought maybe it was the babies pushing on me. I waited a bit longer, gasping as I couldn’t breathe. They took my blood pressure in the morning and the doctor raced in and said, “We’ve got to get the babies out now.” I asked if we could keep them in a little bit longer, just one more day. But the doctor said, “You will not be alive tomorrow.” ’

 Luca and Rose each weighed about 3lb at birth. ‘They looked like little sparrows,’ says Renee. ‘I felt guilty that I couldn’t keep them in longer.

 There they were with tubes to help them breathe, all that machinery, all those beeps. And it was because I couldn’t keep them in.’

 Sébastien says: ‘After four days we could hold them, but with all the cables you had to be careful.’

 The babies were in hospital for just over six weeks and, despite a number of infections, when they came home they weighed a healthy 5lb. ‘We were so happy, but after that experience we weren’t planning to have another baby,’ says Sébastien. ‘I did not want Renee to go through that again. I had almost lost her and I couldn’t take that risk.’

Worldwide appeal: Sébastien, second right, with his Il Divo bandmates

So it came as a shock when Renee discovered she was pregnant two years later. ‘Initially it was a panic for both of us because we were unsure how the pregnancy would go,’ she says.

 There is a 40 per cent chance of pre-eclampsia recurring if the mother suffered from it during a previous pregnancy. This time, though, Renee’s blood pressure remained normal. Instead, she developed an unrelated but equally distressing condition known as hyperemesis, or severe vomiting during pregnancy.

 ‘It wasn’t just for the first three months,’ recalls Renee. ‘It was constant, up to 40 to 50 times a day until I would vomit blood. I was suffering from malnutrition and dehydration. So I was hospitalised again.’

 Hyperemesis is more common in multiple pregnancies and in those where there is an abnormality with the placenta. Sébastien says: ‘They thought she might have an ulcer. She tried every medication. She was fainting almost all the time.’

 Renee continues: ‘I was put on a drip to rehydrate me. Perhaps I was sick because I had a deep fear of getting pre-eclampsia again. Again they don’t know what causes this. The hospital food [at Queen Charlotte Hospital, West London] was fantastic but I still couldn’t eat anything.’

 ‘The doctor said: “We’ve got to get the babies out now.” I asked if we could keep them in a little bit longer, just one more day. But the doctor said, “You will not be alive tomorrow.”‘

 This time, Renee carried the baby to full term but during labour she suffered placental abruption. The condition, which affects one in 200 pregnancies, occurs when, for reasons unknown, the placenta separates from the womb lining before birth. This can cause life-threatening bleeding and it is one of the most common causes of stillbirth.

 ‘After a day and a half of labour her waters broke, then the midwife pressed a buzzer and we had ten people coming into the room,’ says Sébastien. ‘The baby’s heart had stopped beating completely. Renee was in an oxygen mask. They took us straight to theatre. When Jude came out, he didn’t breathe. I said to Renee, “He’s OK,” even though I knew he was not OK.’

 Renee says: ‘Seb was holding me down because I was shaking so much. And because of the sheet they put up, you couldn’t really see Jude when they took him out, but there was silence in the room, which is horrendous. Seb kept saying he was OK but I knew something was wrong.’

 Sébastien says: ‘Then we heard him cry. It came from deep in his lungs.’

‘It was the most overwhelming rlief,’ says Renee. ‘You are in this silent room. They are stitching me back together. I am paralysed from the chest down [from the epidural, an anaesthetic injected into the spine to ease labour pain]. You can’t get up and see. You are waiting for that first breath, and when it came it was the best I have ever felt.’

 Jude weighed almost 9lb, three times the size of the twins. ‘We had a very happy, smiley baby,’ says Sébastien. ‘To see your loved one going through all of this has been extremely difficult. Renee, all I can say is I’m really proud of you.’

 Tears are streaming from his eyes. ‘It’s been very difficult but it pulled us closer together. We have risked death to be parents.’

 Would they do it again? They aren’t sure. Renee says: ‘I think we’re programmed to forget the trauma of childbirth, otherwise women would never do it more than once. After the horror of my pregnancies, we have these amazing babies.’

http://www.everymothercounts.org. Wicked Game, by Il Divo (Syco), is out on November 28.

Article by Daily Mail

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That Look

Of all the ‘looks’ that Carlos has during his performances with Il Divo, this is one of my favorites…… when he looks down.  WOW!!!!!

Don’t ask me why, it just is.

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Oh My My

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The Importance of Lipstick


“Your 30th birthday is an important landmark. You are now ready, after ten years of dicking around with your personal style, to select a signature lipstick. This is the lipstick that will get you through thick and thin. When you are screaming for mercy during childbirth, this is the lipstick that will be smeared across your face. When you kiss the corpses of your dead parents, this is the color that will stain their cheeks. This is the lipstick that will flow into the fine lines and wrinkles around your mouth as the death rattle grips your throat. Choosing this lipstick is a momentous task. In order to complete it, you need to be slightly drunk.” (Eccentric Glamour, Simon Doonan)

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RIP… Amy Winehouse

I really hate to see a young life wasted and talent quieted too soon. These before and after photos say it all and make you want to cry:

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HOW DO YOU DECIDE WHO TO MARRY? (written by kids)

HOW WOULD YOU MAKE A MARRIAGE WORK? 


Tell your wife that she looks pretty, even if she looks
 like a dump truck.   -- Ricky , age 10


PRICELESS!
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A PAINTED BATHROOM FLOOR!!!

Tenth floor of a hi-rise building......... 
IMAGINE YOU ARE AT A PARTY .. 


AND THEN YOU HAVE TO VISIT THE BATHROOM.... 

You open the door.... 
NOW, REMEMBER THE FLOOR IS JUST A PAINTED FLOOR ! 


IT TAKES YOUR BREATH AWAY...... 
DOESN'T IT? 


Would this mess up your mind??? Would you 
Be able to walk into this bathroom???
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Joke

 

A man and a woman who have never met before find themselves in the same sleeping carriage of a train. After the initial embarrassment, they both manage to get to sleep; the woman on the top bunk, the man on the lower. In the middle of the night the woman leans over and says, “I’m sorry to bother you but I’m awfully cold and I was wondering if you could possibly pass me another blanket.” The man leans out and, with a glint in his eye, says, “I’ve got a better idea… let’s pretend we’re married.” “Why not?” giggles the woman. “Good,” he replies. “Get your own blanket.”

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