Why God Doesn't Heal Amputees or A Really Good Reason You Need Health Insurance
I'm afraid I have to admit that I stole this line from a thoughtful atheist. The atheist's website is whygodwonthealamputees.com. Check it out if you feel like it. I not sure prayer to a god works, but there certainly are good things to be said about meditation and thinking about whatever problems you might have and then asking for help when it is needed.
The title suggests the futility of certain actions and I would generally agree that planning on winning the lottery to solve your financial woes is a probably not going to work, but getting good legal advise, good medical advice and a trade or skill that pays good money will solve a lot of problems.
I must admit one thing. I have lived for about 10 years longer than I might have because of a hip replacement. The quality of my life has been good and I am anticipating having to get the first replacement replaced eventually if something else doesn't trip me up. Before hip replacement you were most likely bed ridden, uncomfortable and usually didn't last very long because of complications.
I'm thankful for modern medicine and the friends I had while I recovered. I'm glad the surgeon and my care givers made no irreversible mistakes and I'm thankful for insurance that have paid the bills.
And at the end of the day, getting a limb amputated may be difficult but the alternative might be much worse.
The title suggests the futility of certain actions and I would generally agree that planning on winning the lottery to solve your financial woes is a probably not going to work, but getting good legal advise, good medical advice and a trade or skill that pays good money will solve a lot of problems.
I must admit one thing. I have lived for about 10 years longer than I might have because of a hip replacement. The quality of my life has been good and I am anticipating having to get the first replacement replaced eventually if something else doesn't trip me up. Before hip replacement you were most likely bed ridden, uncomfortable and usually didn't last very long because of complications.
I'm thankful for modern medicine and the friends I had while I recovered. I'm glad the surgeon and my care givers made no irreversible mistakes and I'm thankful for insurance that have paid the bills.
And at the end of the day, getting a limb amputated may be difficult but the alternative might be much worse.
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