two songs – two eras – same kinda girl – and man did my mom love sinatra

I love  Sinatra's version of The Lady is a Tramp." I love the kind of girl and person it  represents. When  I told my daughter that the song I'd recommend for her Debutante dance be that song it puzzled her and everyone else." Why would you choose that one daddy. I'm a tramp?" Well...read and listen more  …

apples to apples, another man’s prostate cancer journey, bill clinton, peyronie’s disease, prostatic acid phosphatase

http://oneprostatejourney.blogspot.com/ i call "shotgun" From "The Decision" On one particular occasion (however it has happened countless times) I had just told a patient that his biopsy showed cancer. I began to lay out an overview of the options and happened to start with surgery. Before I could continue, the patient told me, “My brother has …

the night they drove old dixie down-be sure to read my brother’s comment at the end- i didn’t know that!

Meaning of song The lyrics tell of the last days of the American Civil War and its aftermath. Confederate soldier Virgil Caine "served on the Danville train," the main supply line into the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia. General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia is holding the line at the Siege of Petersburg. …

I found it! Iceberg feinberg it’s all the same to me…could this be true for prostate cancer treatments?

The thing about this picture is that I had to pause and turn around to see it. I park in the visitors part on the third floor of this four floor deck, the top is the fourth. The first floor is for the physicians but its entrance more cumbersome to get to than the visitors and the physicians …

something attributed to Osler and applies to prostate cancer when you have been treated-“the well wear a crown that only the sick can see.”

Something I give to all my patients who are leaning for the surgical removal of the prostate is a part of a chapter from Patrick Walsh’s book on prostate cancer. It has to do with post-prostatectomy incontinence. The beauty of the piece is that Dr. Walsh thoroughly vets the unpredictable nature of this issue. I …