Posted By: peace4uall An amazing man - 07-26-2008 06:40 PM
Hello,
My heart is so saddened today to learn about the death of Randy
Pausch. Many of you may have heard about him, but I checked on him every day. He so inspired me with his strenght, wisdom and positive attitude. He really fought and I believe made some progress on this
stupid cancer stuff. Whenever I feel scared and all alone, I think of him still and he gives me strenth, even now. I am going to buy his book, "the Last lecture" which has a lot more in it than his lecture. This should be a very inspirational book, especially for those of us that have new 'Normals" to get used to.
I am just sad and wanted to share it with someone else that would understand. Sorry to rant on and on.
Enjoy this and every day,
Debbie
Posted By: debandbill Re: An amazing man - 07-26-2008 06:46 PM
I am saddened as well..I know his precious family will miss him.

Tears, Deb
Posted By: Brian Hill Re: An amazing man - 07-26-2008 10:03 PM
If you want to see his lecture that day, it is on TED.com one of my favorite websites. He lived the time he had fully. He did what he could do, did not obsess about the things he could not control, and stayed focused on what was important through his journey. After his terminal diagnosis, he lived very much in the moment, and that lesson alone is something we can all learn from. The book and the lecture are different, and I think they are both worth a look see. Diane Sawyer told me she was doing a special in the next week on his life, and you should all look for it in your area.

Not to change the important subject here, but for those of you that have an appetite for learning. ted.com is the best. As an example, search for a piece call crow vending machine.
Posted By: Markus Re: An amazing man - 07-27-2008 03:47 AM
Excellent web site!
M
Posted By: peace4uall Re: An amazing man - 07-27-2008 07:12 PM
There are some recorded interviews on ABC newsite with both him
and his wife. I lost my first husband to cancer and we both knew it was going to happen for a long time. It is a horrible thing to life with and I had no children at the time. I admire her as much
as him.

Check those out, they are priceless for us to see.
I am just having a hard time with all my sadness for this family.
It is not fair, there just has to be a cure here. I cannot believe
there is no better things for us than there are in this day and age.
Do you trust the pharmaceuitcal people. I think it is being kept from us and it makes me so mad. I know there is quite a bit being kept from us.
If anyone greives for him as I do, feel free to Pm me. I need to talk about it.
Thanks for listening and for the website.
Debbie
Posted By: Brian Hill Re: An amazing man - 07-28-2008 04:39 AM
Everyone is allowed to vent here. But your statement is an urban myth that has no basis in facts. I know too many researchers in the world of cancer. Hundreds of them are working in earnest to find the keys to this disease. Thousands world wide. It is unlikely that with the thousands of honest researchers at institutions all over the country and world working on this problem, that the solution is being kept form us. Do you think there is collusion between our country and researchers in France, the UK, Russia, and elsewhere? This is entirely illogical. When you consider the costs to the government for this disease, the motivation isn't there for this highly unlikely bit of urban myth. To insinuate that these many researchers are keeping us in the dark and not revealing the big picture to us, is to do severe disservice to good people. Please keep those kinds of statements off the boards and confined to your private PM's or elsewhere if you can find someone to believe them.

Has our government lied to us? Lots of times, getting into this God forsaken mess in Iraq, the Gulf of Tonken, the assassination of Diem, Alande, and hundreds more smaller lies. We are living under one of the least transparent administrations in the history of our country. But conspiracy theories about pharma companies withholding a cure for cancer for the benefit of those treating it, is just not plausible, given the world wide involvement that would have to take place. This is the tone and voice of frustration and not logic.
Posted By: margaret_in_ma Re: An amazing man - 07-28-2008 05:37 AM
Thank you, Brian, for this. As a 17-year survivor of Non-Hodgkins lymphoma, a 3-year survivor of borderline ovarian cancer, and a 3-month survivor of SCC of the tongue, I can't tell you how crazy it makes me to hear people say that the cure is being kept from me by dastardly researchers and doctors in the name of greed. I have met some of the most wonderful, compassionate and caring people in, I believe, all the world who would do anything to erase this scourge of cancer from my life. To accuse them of less that that, is outrageous.
Posted By: Markus Re: An amazing man - 07-28-2008 06:14 AM
Debbie,
the unknown is frightening and the mind is ready to fill in blanks with monsters etc. These feelings are not based on reality but on frustration.
If there were miracle cures around it would be known. There is a LOT of hype and many drugs that look good initially can never be given to a human because they are too dangerous. Drug development takes a lot of time and money, so it inconceivable that a miracle drug would not be marketed. A pharmaceutical company just cannot be that stupid. In addition, the basic research is freely available. There is no such thing as pharmaceutical people... these are companies that employ researchers, technicians, secretaries, lawyers, sales people, janitors. etc..... ultimately people just like you and me. It is not a cabal!
Look at it another way, do cancer researcher get cancer? Yes they do (!) and they all of a sudden find themselves in a room with a bunch of other people who look really sick and are also hooked up to cisplatin etc. just like anybody else (with a treatment plan essentially just like anybody else). My professional speciality is DNA structure and repair which is of course related to cancer. This however, did not help me one damn thing (basic research). I had a pretty good idea what was going on during my treatment which made the experience less frightening (i.e. IMRT, chemo etc). Even so SNAFUS happen as was the case with Erbitux. There are also other MO's I know who had H&N cancer and who were treated similarly.

I can appreciate your frustration but there is no conspiracy here.



M




















Posted By: Nelie Re: An amazing man - 07-28-2008 12:25 PM
Nodding in agreement that there is no conspiracy to hide a cure for cancer by the pharamceutical folks. Not that they don't have profit as their basic motive, but a conspiracy like that would just never work for all the reasons Brian mentioned, as well as because the researchers themselves, that the pharma companies rely on, don't have profit as a basic motive-they are genuinely interested in making breakthroughs.

Brian, I love Ted.com! I am planning on using some of the talks on there in online classes I teach this fall. It's an incredible resource.

Nelie
Posted By: Carol Kanga Re: An amazing man - 07-28-2008 03:12 PM
Randy lives on as inspiration for all of us, though I too grieve for his family. He hung in there so much longer than predicted and put every innovation possible to work in his life and to stave off his decline.

Two months ago our family was attending son Gavin's graduation at Carnegie Mellon Univ., and we were incredibly blessed by a huge surprise: Randy arrived, in person, to take the podium and use his day's entire energy to urge us forward in life!! For three glorious, heartfelt minutes, he bestowed a timeless gift upon us. For Mother's Day, Gavin gave me Randy's book, which was distributed on campus.

How lucky we ALL are to have witnessed through every medium, how totally unselfish love transforms our lives.
Posted By: Nelie Re: An amazing man - 07-28-2008 04:30 PM
I couldn't find his talk on the TED.com website (although I would wholeheartedly recommend checking out many of the other talks on that website). But here is another location which has several links where you can hear his talk:

http://www.cmu.edu/uls/journeys/randy-pausch/index.html

I heard that the content of his book is somewhat different and I hope to find a chance to read it in the next couple of months.
Posted By: peace4uall Re: An amazing man - 07-28-2008 05:03 PM
Carol,
Thanks for understanding my grieving about Randy. I am sorry
I mentioned anything else. I just wanted to talk about him and
I was angry that he was gone. My apologies to all others I offended with their wisdom.



Posted By: Brian Hill Re: An amazing man - 07-28-2008 09:43 PM
I don't think that any apologies are necessary, you are hardly the first frustrated person to go to this idea. You unfortunately became the person whose post I chose to answer this urban myth on, that I hear every week. Don't take it personally. And our government, big business interests, and others in power have lied to us in documented ways plenty in the past. It is just that this would require such a large collaboration to hide, that unlike those crooks at Enron, it could not feasibly be done.

We all want someone to blame for the injustices that the world throws at us. It is completely understandable, but not particularly a good thing to propagate and provide a vehicle to continue.
Posted By: chilled_fire Re: An amazing man - 08-29-2008 01:22 PM
Just finished the book Last lecture and it sure was inspiring.
Hats off to Randy's strenght and his fight against the last brick wall of his life !
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