Loading the Elevenlabs Text to Speech AudioNative Player...
  • Columns,  One Thing or Another,  One Thing or Another Podcast

    One Thing or Another: An Economy to Die For


    By Mark McNease

    It’s always One Thing or Another… a lighthearted look at aging, life, and the absurdities of it all.

    Have a grandparent to spare? Now’s your chance to volunteer one in sacrifice to the economy. All positions available!

    Who needs old people, really? What do they do besides eat, talk about how hard it is to get old, drive RVs across the country, and bother people with questions about the simplest techie things? Think of all the good use they could be put to as frontline workers in the apocalypse.

    That’s the thinking in certain conservative circles these days. The Lieutenant Governor of Texas, Dan Patrick, started the doomsday ball rolling when he said he’d be willing to work to save the economy for his grandchildren. I wasn’t aware he hadn’t worked before, or that he wasn’t getting paid while he sat around saying these things, but that’s another matter. The idea caught fire, especially among wealthy pundits and Republicans who have never been, and will never be, essential workers … like grocery store clerks, nurses, police officers, and baristas. Something tells me they know they won’t actually have to risk their lives for their grandchildren, but it sounds heroic. Things that sound heroic but have no chance of happening are favorites with men who fancy themselves soldiers, having avoided any real wars. It’s cool to say you’ll take a bullet, especially for future generations, when the gun’s empty.

  • Being Well,  Columns

    Being Well with LGBTSr: The Stats On Statins

    Being Well is a regular feature at LGBTSr highlighting health and wellness.

    I never wanted to be that older adult with a pillbox that has the weekdays on it, and inside, several medications to be taken at mealtime, before mealtime, at bedtime, or some combination of them all. But here I am, 61 and on a statin for elevated cholesterol, something I’d been cautioned about for years but never treated for. So what are statins? And are they safe?

    What are statins

    Statins, also known as HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, are a class of lipid-lowering medications that reduce illness and mortality in those who are at high risk of cardiovascular disease. They are the most common cholesterol-lowering drugs. (Wikipedia) 

    Statins are often prescribed by doctors to help lower cholesterol levels in the blood. By lowering the levels, they help prevent heart attacks and stroke. Studies show that, in certain people, statins reduce the risk of heart attack, stroke, and even death from heart disease by about 25% to 35%.

  • Book Reviews,  Columns

    Book Review: Bodies and Barriers: Queer Activists on Health, edited by Adrian Shanker, foreword by Rachel L. Levine, MD, afterword by Kate Kendell

    By Terri Schlichenmeyer
    The Bookworm Sez

    “Bodies and Barriers: Queer Activists on Health,” edited by Adrian Shanker, foreword by Rachel L. Levine, MD, afterword by Kate Kendell
    c.2020, PM Press $20.00 / higher in Canada 208 pages

    You woke up this morning feeling pretty good.

    That was quite a relief: in these frightening, uncertain times, every day of wellness is a bonus – especially when you consider that healthcare for a gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, or queer patient can be different than what straight people require. Too bad healthcare providers don’t always know that. But read “Bodies and Barriers,” edited by Adrian Shanker, and you’ll feel more empowered to tell them.

  • Columns,  Savvy Senior

    The Savvy Senior: How Medicare is Covering Coronavirus


    By Jim Miller

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    Is Medicare covering testing for the coronavirus? My husband and I are very nervous about this virus and would like to find out if or when we should get tested, and how Medicare manages it.

    Nervous Nelly

    Dear Nelly,

    Yes! Medicare is indeed covering the cost of testing for the coronavirus, or COVID-19. But be aware that getting a test isn’t as simple as going to your local pharmacy or doctor’s office and asking for one. Here’s a breakdown of what Medicare is covering, along with how to get tested if you think you may have symptoms.

  • A Wealth of Health,  Cathy's Wealth of Health,  Columns

    Cathy’s Wealth of Health: Our Eyes Are a Window to Liver Health

    By Cathy McNease, Herbalist


    Traditional Chinese Medicine has given us a way to physically view how healthy or unhealthy is our liver via the eyes.  So much information is provided to me as a practitioner by simply observing my patient’s eyes. The tongue is used in Chinese Medicine for diagnosis. The sides of the tongue tell you about liver health…pale=blood deficiency; red=heat; purple=stagnation. If your eyes are still in good condition, but you observe one of these colors on your tongue, start now to remedy the imbalance in your liver and protect your precious sense of vision. One of the beauties of tongue reading is that it empowers us to prevent diseases before they strike.

    Here are some of the most important messages seen in the eyes, followed by some simple remedies:

    RED EYES show heat, inflammation, or irritation.

    DRY EYES show lack of body fluids, deficiency of blood or too much heat.

  • Columns,  One Thing or Another,  One Thing or Another Podcast

    One Thing or Another: Panic in Aisle 9

    By Mark McNease

    It’s always One Thing or Another… a lighthearted look at aging, life, and the absurdities of it all.

    This one’s for posterity, since the terms ‘coronavirus’ and ‘covid-19’ will hopefully be behind us in a few months.

    Who needs that much toilet paper, seriously? I can understand a couple of 12-packs, but an entire shopping cart? Are these people planning on being housebound for the next month? And what do they expect the rest of us to do—the ones who don’t think filling our garage with paper products is the best use of resources at a time of national crisis?

    I’m not one to take a pandemic lightly. Not only am I at the age most ripe for paying the steep price of negligence, but I care about my friends, neighbors and co-workers. A good Corona beer joke seemed acceptable a couple of weeks ago, now, not at all. I’ve always been one to admit what I don’t know, and I don’t know, as most of us do not, how this will play out. Will we see a surge in people running to the emergency rooms, overwhelming our healthcare infrastructure and exhausting our healthcare workers? Will fatalities begin to pile up, expanding exponentially as this novel virus spreads like a silent, gaseous killer among the population?

  • Columns,  Savvy Senior

    The Savvy Senior: How to Prevent the Silent Epidemic of Kidney Disease

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    Do kidney problems run in families? My mother died from kidney failure 10 years ago at age 74 but didn’t know she had a kidney problem until it was too late.

    Just Turned 60 

    Dear 60,

    Anyone who has a family history of kidney disease, or who has high blood pressure or diabetes is at increased risk and needs to have their kidneys tested.

    According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, around 37 million U.S adults have chronic kidney disease (when the kidneys can’t properly do their job of cleaning toxins and wastes from the blood), and millions more are at risk of developing it, yet most people don’t realize it. That’s because kidney disease develops very slowly over many years before any symptoms arise. But left untreated, the disease can eventually require people to spend hours hooked up to a dialysis machine or get a kidney transplant. Even mild kidney problems can double a person’s risk of heart attack and stroke, as well as cause anemia and bone disease.

  • Columns,  Lee Lynch

    Lee Lynch’s Amazon Trail: Mick’s Potato Fertilizer

    Photo by Sue Hardesty

    The Amazon Trail: Mick’s Potato Fertilizer
    By Lee Lynch

    When I asked for advice about growing potatoes, our friend Mary wrote, “Here is what Mick does: blood meal, green sand, or wood ash, bone meal, a handful of each above item for each potato you plant, mix in wheel barrel with dirt and some peat moss, and steer poop. Love M&M.”

    Or, said Mick, who grows blue and other exotic potatoes, we can just buy an organic fertilizer. Whew. I found the prospect of mixing manure with soil a bit unappetizing. Which is why, last year, when a neighbor gave us her handmade wooden raised bed, I put off loading it at all and used it only as a support for plastic planters and grow bags. Not exactly best practice.

  • Columns,  LGBTSR,  Savvy Senior

    The Savvy Senior: Important Legal Documents All Seniors Should Have

    By Jim Miller

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    What kinds of legal documents do I need to prepare to help my family after I’m gone? I would like to get my affairs in order but could use some help.   

    Almost 75

    Dear Almost,

    All adults – especially seniors – should have at least four essential legal documents to protect yourself and your family. These documents will make sure your wishes regarding your estate are legal and clear and will help minimize any conflicts and confusion with your family and your health care providers if you become seriously ill or when you die. Here are the key documents you need, along with some tips to help you create them.

  • Book Reviews,  Books,  Columns

    Book Review: Under the Rainbow, by Celia Laskey


    By Terri Schlichenmeyer
    The Bookworm Sez

    “Under the Rainbow” by Celia Laskey
    c.2020, Riverhead Books
    $27.00 / higher in Canada 288 pages

    It’s worth a try.

    You never know what’s going to happen when a new endeavor begins. You only know what it’ll cost: time, money, effort, and a lot of patience for a great unknown. This experiment could end well, or it could end very badly but either way, as in the new novel “Under the Rainbow” by Celia Laskey, it’s worth a try.

    It was a scientific fact: Big Burr, Kansas, was the most homophobic place in the U.S.

  • Columns,  Dave Hughes,  LGBTSR,  reitre

    25 Great US Cities and Towns for LGBT Retirees

    By Dave Hughes, RetireFabulously.com

    This article is an excerpt from Dave Hughes’ new book, The Quest for Retirement Utopia: How to Find the Retirement Spot That’s Right for You.

    When it comes to choosing a place to live during retirement, LGBT people want the same things that everyone else wants – safety, reasonable prices, agreeable climate, cultural and recreational amenities, and good healthcare.

    However, LGBT people have a few additional factors to consider. Those include how tolerant an area is, the presence of a gay community, and healthcare providers that are welcoming towards LGBT people. Sadly, instances where LGBT patients are treated poorly and same-sex partners are denied visitation rights or decision-making rights in hospitals and nursing homes are still all too common.

  • Columns,  Savvy Senior

    The Savvy Senior: 2020 Census Offers Temporary Jobs Ideally Suited for Retirees


    By Jim Miller

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    The U.S. Census Bureau is in the process of recruiting thousands of workers for temporary jobs to help collect valuable data for the 2020 Census, and retirees are ideal candidates. Can you write a column to get the word out? Thanks for your help!

    Census Recruiter                                                                      

    Dear Recruiter,

    I’m happy to oblige, and I agree. This once-a-decade job opportunity is a great fit for retirees that have some free time on their hands who wouldn’t mind earning some extra income while helping the community.