It’s just not right that this disease has been known for so many years, yet doctors still drag their feet diagnosing it and getting people into remission.
Why is it that we have to suffer so much, so long, and still there are so many deaths from Cushing’s or related to Cushing’s symptoms?
I know far too many people, good people, who suffered for many years from this disease that doctors said they didn’t have. Then they died. It’s time this stopped!
Speaking of death – what a cheery blog post this is turning out to be. NOT!  Unfortunately, this seems to be one of the realities of Cushing’s.
Blue and Yellow â we have those colors on ribbons, websites, T-shirts, Cushingâs Awareness Challenge logos and even cars.
This is the yellow PT cruiser I had rented for the Columbus, OH meeting in 2007. Â I didn’t ask for yellow. Â That’s just what the rental company gave me. Â Somehow, they knew.
This meeting is the one when we all met at Hoggyâs for dinner although some of us travelers stayed at this hotel.
Iâm the one in yellow and blue.
Later in 2007, I bought my own truly Cushie Car. Â I even managed to get a butterfly on the tags.
So, where did all this blue and yellow come from, anyway? Â The answer is so easy and without any thought that it will amaze you!
In July of 2000, I was talking with my dear friend Alice, who ran a wonderful menopause site, Power Surge.  We wondering why there werenât many support groups online (OR off!) for Cushingâs and I wondered if I could start one myself and we decided that maybe I could.
I didnât know much about HTML (yet!) but I knew a little from what Alice had taught me and I used on my music studio site.  I didnât want to put as much work <COUGH!> into the Cushingâs site as I had on the music studio site so I used a now defunct  WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) web editor called Microsoft FrontPage.
One of their standard templates was â you guessed it! â blue and yellow.
TaDa! Â Instant Cushie color scheme forever. Â Turns out that the HTML that this software churned out was really awful and had to be entirely redone as the site grew. Â But the colors stuck.
Now, in this day of mobile web browsers and people going online on their cellphones, the website is being redone yet again. Â But the colors are still, and always, blue and yellow.
It’s just not right that this disease has been known for so many years, yet doctors still drag their feet diagnosing it and getting people into remission.
Why is it that we have to suffer so much, so long, and still there are so many deaths from Cushing’s or related to Cushing’s symptoms?
I know far too many people, good people, who suffered for many years from this disease that doctors said they didn’t have. Then they died. It’s time this stopped!
Speaking of death – what a cheery blog post this is turning out to be. NOT!  Unfortunately, this seems to be one of the realities of Cushing’s.  Just last week we learned of another Cushie who died. đ
Blue and Yellow â we have those colors on ribbons, websites, T-shirts, Cushingâs Awareness Challenge logos and even cars.
This is the yellow PT cruiser I had rented for the Columbus, OH meeting in 2007. Â I didn’t ask for yellow. Â That’s just what the rental company gave me. Â Somehow, they knew.
This meeting is the one when we all met at Hoggyâs for dinner although some of us travelers stayed at this hotel.
Iâm the one in yellow and blue.
Later in 2007, I bought my own truly Cushie Car. Â I even managed to get a butterfly on the tags.
So, where did all this blue and yellow come from, anyway? Â The answer is so easy and without any thought that it will amaze you!
In July of 2000, I was talking with my dear friend Alice, who ran a wonderful menopause site, Power Surge.  We wondering why there werenât many support groups online (OR off!) for Cushingâs and I wondered if I could start one myself and we decided that maybe I could.
I didnât know much about HTML (yet!) but I knew a little from what Alice had taught me and I used on my music studio site.  I didnât want to put as much work <COUGH!> into the Cushingâs site as I had on the music studio site so I used a now defunct  WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) web editor called Microsoft FrontPage.
One of their standard templates was â you guessed it! â blue and yellow.
TaDa! Â Instant Cushie color scheme forever. Â Turns out that the HTML that this software churned out was really awful and had to be entirely redone as the site grew. Â But the colors stuck.
Now, in this day of mobile web browsers and people going online on their cellphones, the website is being redone yet again. Â But the colors are still, and always, blue and yellow.
It’s just not right that this disease has been known for so many years, yet doctors still drag their feet diagnosing it and getting people into remission.
Why is it that we have to suffer so much, so long, and still there are so many deaths from Cushing’s or related to Cushing’s symptoms?
I know far too many people, good people, who suffered for many years from this disease that doctors said they didn’t have. Then they died. It’s time this stopped!
Speaking of death – what a cheery blog post this is turning out to be. NOT!  Unfortunately, this seems to be one of the realities of Cushing’s.
Tomorrow will be cheerier – watch for it!
This year, April 21 is also Easter which gives us hope for tomorrow and the future.
Blue and Yellow â we have those colors on ribbons, websites, T-shirts, Cushingâs Awareness Challenge logos and even cars.
This is the yellow PT cruiser I had rented for the Columbus, OH meeting in 2007. Â I didn’t ask for yellow. Â That’s just what the rental company gave me. Â Somehow, they knew.
This meeting is the one when we all met at Hoggyâs for dinner although some of us travelers stayed at this hotel.
Iâm the one in yellow and blue.
Later in 2007, I bought my own truly Cushie Car. Â I even managed to get a butterfly on the tags.
So, where did all this blue and yellow come from, anyway? Â The answer is so easy and without any thought that it will amaze you!
In July of 2000, I was talking with my dear friend Alice, who ran a wonderful menopause site, Power Surge.  We wondered why there werenât many support groups online (OR off!) for Cushingâs and I wondered if I could start one myself and we decided that maybe I could.
I didnât know much about HTML (yet!) but I knew a little from what Alice had taught me and I used on my music studio site.  I didnât want to put as much work <COUGH!> into the Cushingâs site as I had on the music studio site so I used a now-defunct  WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) web editor called Microsoft FrontPage.
One of their standard templates was â you guessed it! â blue and yellow.
TaDa! Â Instant Cushie color scheme forever. Â Turns out that the HTML that this software churned out was really awful and had to be entirely redone as the site grew. Â But the colors stuck.
Now, in this day of mobile web browsers and people going online on their cellphones, the website is being redone yet again. Â But the colors are still, and always, blue and yellow.
It’s just not right that this disease has been known for so many years, yet doctors still drag their feet diagnosing it and getting people into remission.
Why is it that we have to suffer so much, so long, and still there are so many deaths from Cushing’s or related to Cushing’s symptoms?
I know far too many people, good people, who suffered for many years from this disease that doctors said they didn’t have. Then they died. It’s time this stopped!
Speaking of death – what a cheery blog post this is turning out to be. NOT!  Unfortunately, this seems to be one of the realities of Cushing’s.
Blue and Yellow â we have those colors on ribbons, websites, T-shirts, Cushingâs Awareness Challenge logos and even cars.
This is the yellow PT cruiser I had rented for the Columbus, OH meeting in 2007. Â I didn’t ask for yellow. Â That’s just what the rental company gave me. Â Somehow, they knew.
This meeting is the one when we all met at Hoggyâs for dinner although some of us travelers stayed at this hotel.
Iâm the one in yellow and blue.
Later in 2007, I bought my own truly Cushie Car. Â I even managed to get a butterfly on the tags.
So, where did all this blue and yellow come from, anyway? Â The answer is so easy and without any thought that it will amaze you!
In July of 2000, I was talking with my dear friend Alice, who ran a wonderful menopause site, Power Surge.  We wondered why there werenât many support groups online (OR off!) for Cushingâs and I wondered if I could start one myself and we decided that maybe I could.
I didnât know much about HTML (yet!) but I knew a little from what Alice had taught me and I used on my music studio site.  I didnât want to put as much work <COUGH!> into the Cushingâs site as I had on the music studio site so I used a now-defunct  WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) web editor called Microsoft FrontPage.
One of their standard templates was â you guessed it! â blue and yellow.
TaDa! Â Instant Cushie color scheme forever. Â Turns out that the HTML that this software churned out was really awful and had to be entirely redone as the site grew. Â But the colors stuck.
Now, in this day of mobile web browsers and people going online on their cellphones, the website is being redone yet again. Â But the colors are still, and always, blue and yellow.
It’s just not right that this disease has been known for so many years, yet doctors still drag their feet diagnosing it and getting people into remission.
Why is it that we have to suffer so much, so long, and still there are so many deaths from Cushing’s or related to Cushing’s symptoms?
I know far too many people, good people, who suffered for many years from this disease that doctors said they didn’t have. Then they died. It’s time this stopped!
Speaking of death – what a cheery blog post this is turning out to be. NOT!  Unfortunately, this seems to be one of the realities of Cushing’s.
Blue and Yellow â we have those colors on ribbons, websites, T-shirts, Cushingâs Awareness Challenge logos and even cars.
This is the yellow PT cruiser I had rented for the Columbus, OH meeting in 2007. Â I didn’t ask for yellow. Â That’s just what the rental company gave me. Â Somehow, they knew.
This meeting is the one when we all met at Hoggyâs for dinner although some of us travelers stayed at this hotel.
Iâm the one in yellow and blue.
Later in 2007, I bought my own truly Cushie Car. Â I even managed to get a butterfly on the tags.
So, where did all this blue and yellow come from, anyway? Â The answer is so easy and without any thought that it will amaze you!
In July of 2000, I was talking with my dear friend Alice, who ran a wonderful menopause site, Power Surge.  We wondering why there werenât many support groups online (OR off!) for Cushingâs and I wondered if I could start one myself and we decided that maybe I could.
I didnât know much about HTML (yet!) but I knew a little from what Alice had taught me and I used on my music studio site.  I didnât want to put as much work <COUGH!> into the Cushingâs site as I had on the music studio site so I used a now defunct  WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) web editor called Microsoft FrontPage.
One of their standard templates was â you guessed it! â blue and yellow.
TaDa! Â Instant Cushie color scheme forever. Â Turns out that the HTML that this software churned out was really awful and had to be entirely redone as the site grew. Â But the colors stuck.
Now, in this day of mobile web browsers and people going online on their cellphones, the website is being redone yet again. Â But the colors are still, and always, blue and yellow.