Posts Tagged ‘Steve’

Buy Acomplia Without Prescription

// June 7th, 2008 // No Comments » // tagged: > > > >

Below are my favorite 47 photos from the whole 2500+ photos we all took on our trip to Alaska :)  

If you want to view all 200+ that I posted online -- click here for the flickr collection Buy Acomplia Without Prescription, .  


(click on the picture to go to the next slide!)

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My husband and I are dating

// September 19th, 2005 // 2 Comments » // tagged: >

At least that's what it feels like anyway. We talk to each other on the phone every night - "Whaddya do today?", "I love you", "I miss you", "See you on Friday" -- and we see each other a lot on the weekends. Since May, Steve has been out of town with work every single week except two. :yell: So for almost five months - we've seen each other on weekends - and maximum one day during the week. He travels all over the U.S. to the hospitals HCA owns - some they already own, some they are getting ready to take over - and "assimilates" them into the massive HCA network (computer network, that is). Resistance is Futile is his teams motto, I think. Many times, a team from HCA shows up en masse at a hospital they are getting ready to take over and each team goes to its area to prepare them for the changes. Finance, HR, Tech - everyone gets attention ;) Other times, they go individually to the hospitals and spend a week getting their network moved over to HCA. They have MAJOR security protocols - and so each hospital is required to upgrade their network hardware (firewalls, routers, etc) to HCA's standard before they are allowed to connect to the network. Steve goes in and determines what they need to upgrade - and then comes back a few weeks later and gets them all hooked up. (I'm sure he'd love how I just simplified his job ... lol) Sometimes its a pleasant thing - hospitals love getting the latest and greatest technologies and programs for their physicians - and sometimes it's less pleasant. Anyway -- all that to say -- Steve's been on the road for five months now. It stinks. :( We've done this already. We long distance dated before we were married for a year and a half. It was hard then and we weren't even married yet. I remember hating airports when we were dating - they were a place of goodbyes. Being married - and yet spending most of our time apart - is not fun. He's tired - and who wouldn't be? I'm tired - and get a bit lonely sometimes. We live out in the country - in a house that we both love - but I loved it more when my husband was home with me out in the country every day - when we were both doing the driving to and from the city. I miss our time together. Talking on the phone just isn't the same - and sleeping alone got old about 4 3/4 months ago. The only upside to this is that we get to keep all the airmiles and points for hotels, cars, etc. That counts for something, right? (at least that's what we tell ourselves ... lol) Now all we have to do is figure out when we can go on vacation ... together. :headache: Wednesday is my birthday ... and guess where Steve is? Arizona. All week. Yeah - I'm an adult - birthdays aren't a huge huge deal - but I still wish he was here for it. :bday: So, yeah - it feels like I'm dating my husband. We talk on the phone every night - and see each other on weekends. I see some light at the end of the tunnel - supposedly the traveling is going to slow down week after next. I'll believe it when I see my husband for more than one day a week.

HCA’s timely response to Katrina

// September 8th, 2005 // No Comments » // tagged: >

My husband, Steve, works for HCA (he is one of their geeks) and spends at least 3 days a week traveling all over the country to the different hospitals they own or are about to take over. He has kept me updated on HCA's evacuation efforts post-Katrina - and yesterday a company-wide email was sent with details about their response and action after the hurricane. It is nice to read something good - they really stepped up and got things done, and not only for their own hospitals - but they helped another hospital evacuate as well.
Realizing that New Orleans could be flooded for weeks, HCA organized a fleet of 20 helicopters from as far away as Chicago. Crews were positioned in cities such as Baton Rouge, Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola, Fla., so they could reach New Orleans quickly after the storm ... The [Tulane University Hospital and Clinic] evacuation included close to 200 patients and over 1,200 employees and staff. HCA offered the 20 helicopters to assist with the evacuation of nearby Charity Hospital's two facilities, as well as University Medical Center, which are not affiliated with HCA. As many as 50 Charity Hospital patients, some severely ill and on ventilators, have already been evacuated by HCA
Kudos to HCA for being prepared and getting the job done ... (I've posted the full press release in the extended entry - it's an interesting article.) Full Press Release from HCA HCA COMPLETES AIRLIFT EVACUATION AT TULANE UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL AND CLINIC; ASSISTS NEARBY HOSPITALS Privately-contracted helicopters move patients and staff at hospitals crippled by Hurricane Katrina Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 2, 2005 - HCA (NYSE: HCA) Twenty helicopters hired by Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) have completed the evacuation of patients and staff from Tulane University Hospital and Clinic, which began four days ago following Hurricane Katrina. The evacuation included close to 200 patients and over 1,200 employees and staff. HCA leadership, coordinating with Gov. Blanco's office, has offered the 20 helicopters at its expense to assist with the evacuation of nearby Charity Hospital's two facilities, as well as University Medical Center, which are not affiliated with HCA. As many as 50 Charity Hospital patients, some severely ill and on ventilators, have already been evacuated by HCA. The evacuation process has consisted of a constant airlift using privately-contracted Blackhawk helicopters, Medi-vacs, passenger helicopters, and, with cooperation from government authorities, Chinook military aircraft. With each arrival, the helicopters dropped 750 pounds of food, water and medical supplies, filling the choppers with people for their return runs to the New Orleans airport, where buses wait ready to transport healthy individuals to shelter locations in Lafayette. Now the buses are taking people to HCA's Lakeview Hospital in Covington. Some patients have been transferred to hospitals in the area, and, in an effort to alleviate the local burden, others were transported to HCA facilities in Texas and Florida. HCA has dozens of staff on the ground in New Orleans coordinating evacuation and relief efforts. Many have been in place since Katrina hit. Others, flown in on private aircraft from other HCA hospital locations, have arrived to support nursing and supply efforts in the area. Another 170 nurses are on stand-by through "All About Staffing", HCA's internally-run temporary nurse staffing organization. As the Tulane operation begins to wind down, the 20 helicopters the company had hired to assist in evacuating patients and staff are being maintained at HCA's expense to assist with the evacuations from Charity's two hospitals. Blackhawk helicopters will be used by HCA to provide food, water, and medical supplies for Charity Hospital's patients and staff. Some 150 employees from Chalmette were taken to an HCA-managed makeshift shelter in Lafayette. "This situation demands we all do everything we can to help one another. We have use of these services, so it only makes sense that we keep these helicopters under contract in the air and provide help to other hospitals as best we can," said Jack O. Bovender, Jr., Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of HCA. Earlier this week, HCA announced $2 million in cash donations, half of which would go to the American Red Cross for relief efforts, the other half to HCA's Hope Fund, to assist HCA personnel who have lost homes and belongings in the disaster. The company has pledged to maintain all 3,800 employees in the area on full salary indefinitely, and to arrange for them to find employment with other HCA facilities. Three other HCA hospitals in the region have been affected by the storm: all patients and staff from Lakeside Hospital in Metairie, Louisiana were evacuated earlier in the week; operations remain intact at both Garden Park Medical Center, in Gulfport, Mississippi and and Lakeview Regional Medical Center, where evacuated patients and employees from Tulane are now being sent. HCA is the nation's leading provider of healthcare services, composed of locally managed facilities that include approximately 190 hospitals and 90 outpatient surgery centers in 23 states, England and Switzerland. At its founding in 1968, Nashville-based HCA was one of the nation's first hospital companies. # # # All references to "Company" and "HCA" as used throughout this document refer to HCA Inc. and its affiliates Media Contact: Ed Fishbough(615) 344-2810 Jeff Prescott (615) 344-5708

Got this in the mail today …

// June 2nd, 2005 // 1 Comment » // tagged: >

Four and a half years after starting this process -- Steve's greencard gets the final approval. I can't even begin to tell you how much this means to have this journey over with (for the next 10+ years anyway!) :hug: He is already going to be in Memphis next week on business - so while he is there he's going to the INS office and getting his new greencard and the nice stamp in his British passport that says he's a lawful permanent resident of the United States of America! :bigthumb:

I said yes 4 years ago

// July 4th, 2004 // 4 Comments » // tagged: >

Four years ago today, I was in D.C. visiting Steve. We'd been long-distance dating for over a year, although we had known each other for at least 4 years (3 1/2 of which he was still living in England). The constant leaving each other at airports thing was getting harder and harder. We had been talking about getting married and all that would mean. Me leaving a job in surgery that I loved in order to move to D.C. (9 hours away from my family). Was he committed to living in the states permanently (because while I like visiting England, I would never want to live there)? Would we try to move closer to my family eventually? Were we ready to go through the horrendous INS greencard process? (After Steve finally got his greencard, I remember telling a friend that I didn't see how people who DIDN'T love each other tremendously could ever make it through the INS process. These people who supposedly get married just to get the greencard ... they must be on crack thinking it's an easy thing. It's a very long process and WHY would you put yourself through that if it wasn't for someone that you loved with every fiber of your being? ) Back to the 4th of July, 2000. We had planned to spend the 4th in downtown D.C., tour some museums, and then stick around for the spectacular fireworks display. So, July 4th, 2000, we hopped on the subway and went downtown early in the day. Steve was being particularly attentive to his backpack - never letting it out of his sight the whole day. That night, we went to the Lincoln Memorial to claim our spot on the steps to warch the fireworks. (The entire stretch from the Lincoln Memorial past the reflecting pool to the Washington Monument was PACKED with people). The fireworks started around 9:30 and lasted for almost a full hour. They have some of the best fireworks - really beautiful ones that just go up one right after another - there's no break. Everyone should go see the fireworks there at least once! The finale started, everyones faces are lit up by the fireworks in the sky, and as the last one goes up, Steve has moved down in front of me and asks me to marry him. I said yes ... :heartbeat: The mass of people around us saw him proposing ... and cheered for us! (And now my English husband has something to celebrate on July 4th!)

I had a package delivered today

// April 16th, 2004 // 2 Comments » // tagged: > >

I arrived at work today, and found a box on my desk delivered by UPS. I have the best husband ever. :heartbeat: Look what he got me:
It's Galaxy Chocolate. The. Yummiest. Chocolate. In. The. World. He had them shipped from England. Sigh. It's a wonderful thing when your husband knows exactly what will put a smile on your face. :cloud9: (On an unrelated note ... I took this picture with my phone! Pretty good quality, isn't it? I love everything about my Treo 600! I've had it for about 2 months now and I have to say its the best pda/phone/camera/everything I've ever used or seen. It basically does everything you'd ever need. :thumbsup: I especially love that I got $400 off in rebates!!)

Chip Butties

// February 5th, 2004 // 4 Comments » // tagged: > >

Anyone else out there know what a chip buttie is? If not ... let me tell you about it. It's a weekly meal at our house. I remember the first time my husband made them for me. We were dating and I was over at his place and he asked if I wanted a chip buttie. I was like -- suuuuure! I'll try it. (For those of you who don't know ... my husband is English. Apparently chip butties are a common thing there). First ... you make french fries. And for Steve, they have to be made from scratch french fries. So we peel our potatoes, cut them with our Pampered Chef Crinkle Cutter and then pop them into our deep fryer. Takes about 8 minutes and the nice hot french fries are ready. Next step .... take your bread of choice (regular bread, sub sandwich bread, etc) and slather with butter or if you're Steve, London Pub Sauce (we literally have atleast 8 bottles of this in the cupboard at all times. Steve puts it on everything.). Then you put the french fries inside the bread. That's a chip buttie. I know it doesn't sound all that appetizing ... but surprisingly enough ... it does taste pretty good. Steve laughs at me beacuse my chip butties are always put together so precisely with all my french fries lined up in a neat row on the bread -- whereas he just shoves them in. The "butties" don't stop here. Steve also likes Bacon Butties (yes, you've got it -- bacon inside of bread slathered with London Pub Sauce). Basically he likes Anything Butties. If we're having fish, beans and cauliflower .... it all ends up in a sandwich. It's kind of bizarre. I'm one of those people who eats everything one at a time. I eat all my fish. Then I eat the beans. Then I eat the cauliflower. The only foods I mix up on a regular basis are corn and beans. I got that habit from my grandfather -- they taste much better mixed together :) Still trying to decide what to give your loved one for Valentines Day? I have the answer .... a VD Card! I've found some really interesting blogs here lately ... check them out: Dooce SimpleBits LoobyLu BrainSluice In Passing

Three Years Ago …..

// December 2nd, 2003 // 4 Comments » // tagged:

Three years ago, on December 2, 2000, Steve and I were married! :heartbeat: Happy Three Year Anniversary to Us! :hug:

2 Year Wedding Anniversary! Wow!!

// December 2nd, 2002 // 1 Comment » // tagged:

Thanksgiving was nice this year - we had our meal down at my brother's house with all of my family and all of Glenda's (my sister-in-law) family too. It makes it easier for them - doing both families all together - and we all get along, so it's a nice day. My pumpkin roll was yummy ... as was a really delicious pineapple casserole that Glenda's sister did. I keep forgetting to email her for that recipe! Happy 2-year Anniversary to me! Steve and I have been married two years now - wow! I can't believe how fast the past two years have flown by! We spent the weekend at a nice hotel in downtown Chattanooga -- great room on the top floor and we were within walking distance of everything. We saw 'Die Another Day' on Friday Night -- Halle Berry is a great bond girl! I've heard rumors that there will be a JINX spin-off ... I think she could do it! I loved her in the movie. If you haven't seen it - skip to the next paragraph (spoilers): It was very strange seeing James Bond tortured over the opening music. You never really see Bond having weaknesses. I think part of the James Bond allure is that he almost always has the upper hand and outsmarts the bad guys -- I didn't really enjoy or want to see him being tortured. It was a pretty good movie though. Saw 'Twelve Monkeys' for the first time the other day - how weird is that movie?! I was sitting there after it was over thinking that the TV station must have forgotten to air the last 5 minutes of the movie - there's no way it just ended like that. Strange strange strange. Then I had all these dreams about how it should have ended. I guess the movie did what it intended to do then -- make you think. Who knows?! Not my fav Brad Pitt movie though. Also saw 'Oceans Eleven' again this weekend - my parents had the DVD and we watched it with them. Love that movie. On a health note, I started the new 'PATCH' yesterday - to replace the Pill. I have felt kinda icky all day - I think my body is probably just adjusting to the new dosage. It's kinda of cool though - I'm wearing the patch on my upper arm - next week I'm going to try my back. You can wear it pretty much anywhere except your chest. Now if only they could make it CLEAR - that would be cool ! I'm sure that's in the works :)