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Support Hal Newman’s 250km “Fat Man On Trek to Conquer Cancer” bike ride

Monday, October 19th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesTumour HumourCampaign Watch

Quoting Hal Newman, current managing editor at BigMedicine.ca, former firefighter and paramedic with 3+ decades of experience in emergency services who “reinvented” himself after leaving the streets by becoming a Network Accelerant:

Hal_Newman_cancer_fundraiser_pullout_quote: Text: "I am committed to raising as much money as I can, with $2500 set as the minimum. I am looking for corporate sponsors willing to match the donations made by individual donors. I am hoping to find others who would like to join me on the ride and in the fight against cancer."

If you had to pick someone who would be the least likely to become addicted to road cycling more than 30 km each and every day at speed you need not look any further than me. So, it’s a bit surreal to think that come July 2010, I will be joining thousands of other cyclists riding the 250 km [in two days] from Montreal to Quebec City to raise funds to support the fight against cancer. I’m riding for Abraham, Rose, Mimi, David, Susan, Gil, Mario and many many others who fought cancer right up until their dying breaths. We say the words carefully. Sometimes in a hushed whisper. Sometimes spat out like a foul taste in our mouths. “Cancer” … “The Big CA.” So many family members and friends and colleagues who have waged pitched battles against cancer. Occasionally there are wins—and we celebrate those in grand style although truth be told, once cancer stages a home invasion it never really leaves. Even when it’s gone for good, we all wonder if cancer will find another way to come back into our lives. More often than not there are losses. And we mark those with sorrow and tears and a lasting hatred of a disease that shows no mercy and knows no boundaries. I spent a good chunk of my career as a paramedic/ firefighter. Cancer has become inexorably linked with those who are on the frontlines of emergency services. I’ve gone to the hospital to pick-up a friend/ colleague after his first round of chemo and I’ll always remember his reaction to being able to walk, albeit weakly, out the door under his own power. It was a cold, crisp day and yet he had his window down for the ride home so he could take in the sunshine and the wind. His cancer was beaten back and he’s still a part of our lives. I’m riding for Norm and Don and not enough others who have found a way to beat cancer. Norm Rooker, my brother-of-another-mother, wrote about learning he had bladder cancer . . .

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Continue reading Hal’s stunningly beautiful essay

And…

DONATE, DONATE, DONATE

Then…

Read Irked posts tagged “emergency response”
Read Irked posts tagged “cancer”

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“Total Access” Product Promotion: Irked spotlights The DeafBlind Communicator

Sunday, September 6th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBlind Visionaries, Deaf JamIrked Videos

DBC_in_action_title_graphic

Last week, we told you about HumanWare’s very groovy Trekker Breeze handheld talking GPS for people who are blind and visually impaired. But the company makes MANY cutting-edge, disability-friendly products! Check out these two BBC videos about another one of HumanWare’s groundbreaking devices—The DeafBlind Communicator (DBC), conceived by Washington state’s Office of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, built by the Canadian company HumanWare and perfected with feedback from members of Seattle’s deaf-blind community, consists of a Braille note-taker linked by Bluetooth to a mobile phone:

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“Total Access” Product Promotion: Irked spotlights the Trekker Breeze

Friday, August 28th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBlind VisionariesIrked Videos

Trekker_Breeze_closeup_of_device

The Trekker Breeze, designed and manufactured by the company HumanWare, is a handheld talking GPS for people who are blind/visually impaired that “can be controlled by one hand” and is ”as simple as your TV remote.” It costs $895USD, and here’s what it can do: It verbally announces names of streets, intersections and landmarks (including stores, public services, etc) as you walk. No need to stop passersby to know where you are… simply press a button and Breeze tells you your location on the spot. When you are in a vehicle, Breeze announces all intersections, allowing you to exit when you want. If you get lost, you can easily retrace your steps—simply push a button. You can record the routes when you learn them with sighted people so that you can use them later without assistance, and also save landmarks for later use (i.e. favourite restaurant, friend’s house, bank, park bench, etc).

Two awesome videos…after the jump!

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Brian Segal’s “Braindroppings”

Sunday, June 21st, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsBrian SegalThemesWheelchairman of the Board

Irked recently received the following one-sentence email from the Wisecracker Grandmaster—the ALWAYS funny, and NEVER dull Mr. Brian Segal:

 

“Just a thought I had. If there really is life after death then why can’t dead people get life insurance policies?”

 

Brian Segal is living in the country north of Montréal. He was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis about 18 years ago and, when asked, tells people he is retired (It sounds a lot better than telling people you are on disability insurance). He is happily married, no children, but one very friendly husky cross. He also has the good fortune of living in his own home, not home.

 

Click here for all Irked posts by Brian

 

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“I’ll do the pedalling for all of us!”: A message from Amelia Robinson, longtime friend of Irked Magazine

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009
Filed under: Campaign Watch

 

Hi Friends,

This July some friends and I will be participating in a two-day cycling event called The Ride to Conquer Cancer Click to continue »

“Fragments,” an unputdownable new essay by Brian Segal

Monday, May 25th, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsBrian SegalThemesWheelchairman of the Board

Fragments

by Brian Segal

You had better write it down before your mind locks it up and throws away the key.

Walking down Crescent Street in Montreal at about 3:00 in the morning circa 1971. The colors and slightly mad thoughts of psychedelic drugs Click to continue »

“My Shoes Will Last Forever,” an original essay by Brian Segal

Thursday, April 30th, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsBrian SegalThemesWheelchairman of the Board

My Shoes Will Last Forever

An original essay by Brian Segal

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Campaign Watch: Because Heroes Are Human – The Tema Conter Memorial Trust

Friday, March 20th, 2009
Filed under: Campaign Watch, Irked Videos

“This is my way of doing something for Tema. Although I was unable to help her in any way, this award will ensure her memory lives on.” —Vince Savoia

Excerpted from Tema.ca:

The first people to arrive on the scene, emergency services personnel witness traumatic events with every shift. Yet they continue to perform their essential duty of saving lives—often in the face of unspeakable tragedy. So unspeakable, in fact, that many of these heroic individuals struggle quietly with the physical, psychological and emotional effects of their jobs. The Tema Conter Memorial Trust was established to end the silence and ease the suffering. The charity was founded by Mr. Vince Savoia, an attending paramedic at the murder scene of Ms. Tema Conter in 1988. Upon coping with post-traumatic stress as a result of this horrible episode, Mr. Savoia created the Tema Conter Memorial Trust.

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“A Tomb With A View,” by Brian Segal

Thursday, February 5th, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsBrian SegalThemesWheelchairman of the Board

A TOMB WITH A VIEW (or Things seem to be looking up)

by Brian Segal

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“Surrounded By Time,” an essay about insomnia by Brian Segal

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Filed under: Regular ContributorsBrian SegalThemesStandard Insomniatic FareWheelchairman of the Board

Surrounded By Time

By Brian Segal

I have had problems with insomnia. Perhaps that is not exactly the truth. I used the past tense in the first sentence. My difficulties concerning sleep deprivation were only artificially overcome with a “cocktail” of sleep aids (medications). My sleep may not be “naturally” induced but it sure beats Click to continue »