No, this isn't going to be about me *****ing about work, weather, inflation, or anything like that.
I got some shocking news about 2 classmates.
One dead at 55, the other fighting a losing battle against brain cancer at 53.
I know a lot of the members here are older than me (I'll be 55 in October). You guys and gals have dealt with this one way or another. I've dealt with it with my parents, my brother to suicide (he was 20 years older than me, but we were close), and I had a good friend/classmate die to substance abuse.
Everyone's parents die, my brother I processed over the years, and my friend I knew it was going to sooner than later.
But these 2 people....
The classmate that died was 55. He worked his *** off to get where he did. He started out as an EMT, then got a PhD and was also a NP. He had his own urgent care clinic. This guy was smart. The other day he wasn't feeling right at work. Called 911, while wheeling him the the ambulance he passed.
The other classmate went to beauty school. Somewhere along the way she decided to do something else and got a medical certification. Again, a smart gal. Only child, took care of her parents, both gone now. Never married, no kids. Had a motorcycle, lived life on her terms.
Beginning of August she's getting terrible migraines, which she never had. Gets checked out. Brain tumor. Found out yesterday that its a glioblastoma. I doubt my friend will see Christmas, let alone 54.
I'll pray for the soul of my dead classmate, and I'll pray for my sick classmate.
I'm not special or by any means looking for sympathy. But I would say this is a wake up call to my own mortality.
It's one thing when you read about strangers dying/being terminal.
It's another when you see it happen to peers you've known for 40+ years.
I got some shocking news about 2 classmates.
One dead at 55, the other fighting a losing battle against brain cancer at 53.
I know a lot of the members here are older than me (I'll be 55 in October). You guys and gals have dealt with this one way or another. I've dealt with it with my parents, my brother to suicide (he was 20 years older than me, but we were close), and I had a good friend/classmate die to substance abuse.
Everyone's parents die, my brother I processed over the years, and my friend I knew it was going to sooner than later.
But these 2 people....
The classmate that died was 55. He worked his *** off to get where he did. He started out as an EMT, then got a PhD and was also a NP. He had his own urgent care clinic. This guy was smart. The other day he wasn't feeling right at work. Called 911, while wheeling him the the ambulance he passed.
The other classmate went to beauty school. Somewhere along the way she decided to do something else and got a medical certification. Again, a smart gal. Only child, took care of her parents, both gone now. Never married, no kids. Had a motorcycle, lived life on her terms.
Beginning of August she's getting terrible migraines, which she never had. Gets checked out. Brain tumor. Found out yesterday that its a glioblastoma. I doubt my friend will see Christmas, let alone 54.
I'll pray for the soul of my dead classmate, and I'll pray for my sick classmate.
I'm not special or by any means looking for sympathy. But I would say this is a wake up call to my own mortality.
It's one thing when you read about strangers dying/being terminal.
It's another when you see it happen to peers you've known for 40+ years.
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