AA Gill has cancer...

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I already have plans of what I might do, or might not, who knows, it's just a plan. I wouldn't indulge myself with travel or spending, I mean you may as well get on with that now, the aim would be to leave some kind of useful legacy, not to think of myself, not to leave any bitterness and not to care too much about my possessions. My trouble is it's a time consuming thing to do, hard to start and perhaps the wrong time to start it, so I reserve the right to just cark it without ever starting it, well finishing it, I suppose I have started it.
 

SteCenturion

I am your Father
I would sell everything of value that is mine, bikes, guitars & related paraphernalia & try to get something like it's value, otherwise everything would go for buttons on ebay. Leave it all to my partner & child.

Reminds me, I must sit down & make a record of what I have & it's value on the lap top & instructions on how to sell it, just in case.

When my Dad was diagnosed he was given 6 months & lasted just over 4 months, we had to withdraw most of his savings & spread it around or he wouldn't have got any help from the Social. Dad was self employed & you really don't have to have a lot of money for this to happen.
 

winjim

Straddle the line, discord and rhyme
I have a reasonably significant genetics project I've been working on with my wife, so I'd like to get some work done on that before I go.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
I'm in Lagos this week so Naija is on my mind and I think I'd do something charitable like pay to bring back that poor Nigerian astronaut who is stuck in the ISS.
 

mustang1

Legendary Member
Location
London, UK
When I go to a funeral, people say the guy retired and passed away just a couple of years later, so sad, etc. They continue and tell me how life is a rat race and how we run after money too much and don't donthe things we really want until it's too late.

Then on Monday morning they're back at work. It's difficult to break habits and get out of the system. Some time ago I told my wife I will only work 4 days per week. She was having none of it. Then someone in her family gave up work to try other things and she was all up in admiration. It's a crazy world, the system we live in.
 
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[QUOTE 4564586, member: 45"]Doctors are helpfully open in these situations. It's all about information, and they will give you as much as you ask for. The truth is that they really don't have a timer so can't give you a date.[/QUOTE]
Paul - it can go the other way.
Me - yes, it can.
Paul - no it doesn't
 
[QUOTE 4564701, member: 45"]Me -it can go the other way.
You -yes it can. Doctors can be dishonest.
Me -that's really not my experience, nor is it ethical.[/QUOTE]
Ah, well there you go.

I didn't mean dishonest, I meant "err on the side of over estimating" And from what I read, even that subconscious - they tend to want the best possible outcome for their patients, so when they say six months, they think it's the truth.

From the Guardian article linked above.

"Overall, doctors’ predictions were correct to within one week in 25% of cases, correct to within two weeks in 43%, and correct to within four weeks in 61%. The study found that doctors tended to overestimate survival."
 
OP
OP
GrumpyGregry

GrumpyGregry

Here for rides.
When I go to a funeral, people say the guy retired and passed away just a couple of years later, so sad, etc. They continue and tell me how life is a rat race and how we run after money too much and don't donthe things we really want until it's too late.

Then on Monday morning they're back at work. It's difficult to break habits and get out of the system. Some time ago I told my wife I will only work 4 days per week. She was having none of it. Then someone inner family gave up work to try other things and she was all up in adoration. It's a crazy world, the system we live in.
TLH would happily ,et me work four days a week. My employer won't hear of it. I'm going for working four days a week on average.
 
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