Dibbons
Well-Known Member
- Local time
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- Joined
- Nov 29, 2014
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- Location
- La Paz, B.C.S., Mexico
Really? No life is better than old life? I disagree.
I like a beer or 12.There is a little bit of truth that "Beer drinkers live longer?" Being beer "In light moderation" is a natural blood thinner. Thus easier on the heart. The problem? Is the "Light moderation?" It turns out they mean "LIGHT" And my other vice needs can't seem to understand sometimes?

You and I have a lot in common with working conditions especially the asbestos. While I didn't ever smoke tobacco i have been welding 40 plus years.The Black Sabbath song “Die Young”. Great song.
Ronnie James Dio on vocals.
He died young of cancer.
There’s many videos of him on YouTube singing the song, while he was visibly sick with the cancer that killed him. He really pounds out the part “so live for today, tomorrow may never come. Die young.”
I worked in the oil patch for years, breathed in enough asbestos that I probably can’t be cremated. Absorbed so many toxic chemicals that I would sweat them out. Smoked for twenty years. I was young, invincible. We all were.
Now at sixty I’m scared. I don’t want to die young. But if I do I’m gonna try and go out with dignity. That’s the only part of this that I still have control over.
You and I have a lot in common with working conditions especially the asbestos. While I didn't ever smoke tobacco i have been welding 40 plus years.
If I woke up tomorrow and discovered I had some asbestos related diseases, it wouldn't be a surprise
But figure this one out, my wife never was exposed to anything except the lousy air where she grew up. She never did the things we did as youngsters like playing with mercury or washing greasy hands with leaded gasoline, laster on years working in industrial environments with no PPE
And yet she's the one whose body has a incurable cancer.
What I think your maybe forgetting is how you live and were you live, you breath cleaner air, eat a lot of what you hunt, grow and you work hard
My opinion is you keep doing what you do and don't worry as your going to be dancing at your grandchildren weddings and than some
Great to hear from you as well.Great to hear from you Steve, I was thinking of you folks just the other day and was about to PM to see how you are making out. Our wives are quite similar in their lives, as well.
My wife was the straight arrow of her family. Never smoked, drank, or did anything that would expose her to toxic stuff. She worked her entire career of 35+ years in front line health care, exposed to body fluids and tissues, but not cancer stuff. At 55 in 2017 she was diagnosed with stage three cancer. So far they appear to have cleaned it up, but it still looms over her and our heads like an axe.
But here’s an interesting thing to look up: in the seventies a Russian nuclear satellite crashed up here, covered the entire area with pepper sized flakes of radioactive debris. Cosmos 954. You can google it, it was a huge deal.
I’ll never forget it. Anyway, when I was young everyone died of heart disease or accident. Now everyone dies of cancer.
While I generally agree with you, I’d invite you to come with me and visit with my father-in-law with Alzheimer’s. The one place he did not want to end up. Or my friend with ALS, who spent the last 5 years of her life (48) flat in a bed unable to move, talk, or eat.Really? No life is better than old life? I disagree.