Kookaburra (song)
The Kookaburra song (aka Kookaburra Sits in the Old Gum Tree after the first line of text) is the most popular children's songin Australia. The text alludes to a known species in Australia, the Kookaburra (Jägerliest, also "Kookaburra"), which sounds through its peculiar reputation, as if he were laughing.
The Australian children learn these cannon in the kindergartens and primary schools.
Text and music were in the early 1930s by the Australian music teacher Marion Sinclair (* 1896 [1], † February 15, 1988 [2]) composed. She released the song as a contribution to a competition of Victoria - Girl Guides in 1934. [3] For the first time in 1934 as part of a large Jamboree of Scouts near Melbourne listed, in the 20th century, the song was popular throughout the world. [4]
An Australian judge ruled on February 4, 2010 that the flute melody in the song Down Under the Australian band Men at Work,a plagiarism of Kookaburra Sits in the Old Gum Tree is thus abandoning the Australian Music Publishers Larrikin, owner of thecopyright, right. [2 ] [5] [6]
so I made it home to the family, with the bags but the dry ice and my research material MISSED THE FLIGHT.
I hope they arrive in the next hours or 1000s and really life saving material wasted. DAM red tape and the obstactles of life, I TRIED SO HARD TO GET THIS MATERIAL HOME, well if I die soon from the lung mets, you can say it was the government guy at frankfurt airport that had me offloaded from the flight like a bloody terrorist.
So the frozen vials rrived defrosted alas, I refrozen and accept the loss of efficacy, we simply do our best. God dishes out the challenges and the wonders of this existence.
The kids and wife being exceptionally wonderful.
I am doing my enemas, I have made my gcmaf yogurt and the cultures went off so well.
I am getting ready to start salinomycin on monday, and the week after in combo with chemo.
Now my colitis is settling down nicely.
I hit 1.4 ketone bodies yesterday as well, so back into my super strict ketogenic life style.
I also did my morning exercises in the sun down the park, listening to the birds, it was great in the sun. I let my family sleep, blisfully.
now I am coughing too much, so I got a nebuliser and focused treatment on the lungs mets.
I did all the scans on Friday the mri with primovist and the ct with contrast that the australian surgeons insisted be done here, the good news when I dropped them off friday I saw prof morris, we talked briefly, he was very concerned about cea 1200 199 1200,I was going to look over all the scans, and I reminded him about the incredible treatments we had put into the liver met ie keytruda, avastin, ndv and gcmaf and chemo. I asked again about the immunological analysis.
I am praying, still feeling some tensions with wife, but on the whole she is really really helping a lot, as much as she can. we might clean the fridge tomorrow, as my iv live in a mould infested fridge, but heck I have some cancer cells, as I say I do my very very best and love this time with the kids.
we walked the city for hours, around the rocks and the opera house, we enjoyerd dinner at pancakes at the rocks, I was a very good ketogenic boy. later we had drinks and coffees, hot chocolates at a classy hotel with a fire and piano bar. on the way home we drove through the red light areas, the kids were amazed. my 10 year old asked for the birds and the bees talk, I smiled, was silent and thoughts the drive home enough, his most interesting observation, was the man with breasts whereing a bra without a top and the very colourful crowd they witnessed from the troopy. our amazing car.
I give my wife and kids love, energy and time.
these moments, as all the most precious of my existence.
I feel incredibly confident, dont worry my friends.
now I am channelling my energy into this really focused survival bid, she if you email me, dont be surprised at a very delayed response, all energy is getting this body and soul ready for surgery.
Wishing my friends and readers all the sincerest prayers for our healing, love and joy!!!
I absolutely feel my miracle is just starting!
As with the image of coffin covered in red tape and red lights areas, well with Gods wisdom we flex and bend the rules, not breaky any and find a way to live and heal in this very greedy and needy society. we also visted the apple shop, and looked over the newest phone, that the kids drooled over. I said earn the money and you can buy it, but I save my funds for survival.
these papers on current thinking of peritoneal disease very interesting, same old issues, ok different cancer, but the failure I discussed weeks ago is not considering the wonders of the immunological nature of the peritoneum, so far my peritoneum is clear again.
FROM THE EMAIL - ok but very similar issues with colorectal cancer.
n recent years, a new form of IP therapy has emerged for patients with ovarian carcinoma: intraoperative hyperthermic IP chemotherapy (HIPEC). Many investigators are now evaluating and conducting critical discussions of the role and the rationale for this delivery technique, which requires intraoperative perfusion machines, elaborate logistics, and a high degree of organizational effort. It is still unknown whether HIPEC is associated with an improved survival that would justify the effort involved, but there are several potential advantages that make it a promising therapeutic option as part of a multimodality treatment:
• A high volume of chemotherapy can be delivered, and a homogenous distribution can be achieved. This is often not practical in conventional IP therapy, because of abdominal distension and pain, but it is feasible in HIPEC, since the patient is under anesthesia.
• There is no interval between cytoreduction and chemotherapy. The cytotoxic therapy is applied at the time of minimal disease manifestation, and there are no adhesions that might alter the distribution of the drug.
• Hyperthermia has a pharmacokinetic benefit. Several studies have convincingly shown that hyperthermia can increase both the tumor penetration of cisplatin[33] as well as the DNA crosslinking.[34]
• High concentrations of chemotherapy can be achieved in the intraperitoneal compartment with low systemic exposure—in a single intraoperative treatment.
- See more at: http://www.cancernetwork.com/oncology-journal/intraoperative-hyperthermic-intraperitoneal-chemotherapy-patients-advanced-ovarian-cancer?GUID=668B0207-1037-4290-8085-4F4A51E8FDE5&XGUID=&rememberme=1&ts=24092015#sthash.m0dHZBAh.dpufBiologically, ovarian cancer behaves in a unique way. After undergoing an epithelial-mesenchymal transition, cancer cells simply detach from the main tumor bulk and are carried by the physiologic peritoneal circulation throughout the peritoneal cavity, either as single cells or as multicellular spheroids—something one could call “passive” metastasis.[11] The cells do not undergo several steps of intravasation and extravasation to form metastases as in hematologically spreading tumor types. In fact, ovarian cancer cells seem to selectively invade the mesothelium of the peritoneal surface, forming micrometastases that are adequately supplied solely by means of diffusion until they reach a size of 1 mm2.[12,13] Consequently, because of the lack of vascularization, it is likely that neither micrometastases nor free-floating cancer cells can be addressed adequately by either surgery or systemic chemotherapy. Intraperitoneal (IP) treatment modalities attempt to close this therapeutic gap. - See more at: http://www.cancernetwork.com/oncology-journal/intraoperative-hyperthermic-intraperitoneal-chemotherapy-patients-advanced-ovarian-cancer?GUID=668B0207-1037-4290-8085-4F4A51E8FDE5&XGUID=&rememberme=1&ts=24092015#sthash.m0dHZBAh.dpuf