I’ve had a considerable amount of radiation exposure the last year.
The radiation treatment I received right after my diagnosis was every day for three weeks. That’s a pretty short time frame, but my radiation was very intense and localized: my upper spine and ribcage, and one particular spot on my ribs: the source point for the pain that caused me to seek help originally.
I’ve also had an MRI, several CT scans, the PET scan, 2-3 chest x-rays, something called a Long Bone x-ray. Plus a flock of dental x-rays last spring before I started on Zometa, my bone-strengthening drug.
I’m confident my docs wouldn’t have ordered the scans and x-rays without good cause. What they needed to learn was important enough to my treatment that the risk of added exposure was mitigated. I accept all this as necessary; I don’t question their decisions. But every once in a while I see something that gives me pause, that creates a new perspective.
Marie Curie's laboratory papers are still so radioactive that they're kept in lead-lined boxes.
Researchers who consult them must agree to work at their own risk.
Her research papers have to be 100 years old, or older, and they're still dangerously radioactive. Hmmm.
Unrelated note: In fourth or fifth grade, I read a little biography about Marie Curie. Discovered radioactivity, blah, blah. What impressed me was that she was so obsessed with her research, she often forgot to eat. I was dumbstruck -- I had no frame of reference for such odd behavior.
2 comments:
I have never understood people who "forget" to eat. NEVER!! And I promise to tell you if I ever notice that you are glowing or anything.....
Thanks, M. I've given up on bronzers - they just turn me orange - so if you see me glowing, it's probably not a good thing. ;D
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