My 10-Year Journey After Kidney Transplant

  My 10-Year Journey After Kidney Transplant: The Hidden Secret of Staying Healthy I have successfully completed ten years of my journey after a kidney transplant, and I am grateful to say that I am living comfortably without major complications. I do not suffer from blood pressure problems, diabetes, or kidney function issues at present. Many people ask what the hidden secret behind this stable and healthy life is. The truth is simple but powerful: consistent discipline, strict adherence to medical advice, and a balanced lifestyle. There is no magic — only regular habits followed sincerely every day. The first and most important secret is that I take my medicines exactly as prescribed by my doctor. I never skip a dose, never delay it, and never adjust it on my own. Medication after a kidney transplant is not optional — it is life-supporting. These medicines protect the transplanted kidney and maintain balance in the body. I follow the timetable strictly. Even when I travel or feel...

stuck in love

 We Are Stuck: An Unconventional Quarantine Love Story

        Neil Kramer (NK) and Sophia Lansky (SL)


        SL: How do you feel when you put your ex-wife and your mother in your apartment?


        Nagorno-Karabakh: Most of our battles were about space.  We only have two rooms, so I tried a lot in the bathtub and spent time outside.


        SL: I said, I can get a room and you'll rest in the lounge.


        NK: I thought it would last a month, not two years.  However, we almost became dependent on each other's patience.


        For a few minutes, I'd come around three in the morning and we were hugging each other.


        The main question for my comrades is what happened to you and Sophia?  Are you together, is it true that you two are getting married again?  At the end of the day, we will never marry again.  Can we say we are right?  [laughing] I don't advise you now.


        SL: No, we are not.


        NK: I think we're exchanging extremes in a way.  Some of them became a little serious in our married life, but it did not affect the kinship between us.


        SL: I don't see you as a partner.  I think of you as my family, not my half.


        NK: I hope you're open in the long run.


        SL: Yes, probably.


        NK: So, what will happen to this relationship?


        SL: We only have each other.  I usually feel that you will always find a place in my circle.  Assuming I win the jackpot, I'll give you the money.  I won't leave you when you're sick.


        NK: I mean, what do you take away from this experience as we move in different directions?


        SL: There were a lot of frightening struggles and a lot of feelings.  Just like life.  I also thought I would erase your kindness.  Anyway, that's how I cherish you.


        NK: I think the funny thing about the last few years is that no one else has.  For example, even though we live in New York City, millions of cities…


        SL: For the past two years, New York has been a city of three.  Also, I don't want to go through this experience without you.


        Short love story: "Not good enough,


        not skinny enough"

        Rest, then a little cute

        My other half is wearing an expensive ventilator runner.  “Near Goh,” he said, uncomfortable, - we are lying on the bed.  Her shaky inner breathing was making me nervous.  For now, he's just calling me "progressive rest time".  When I saw the beast in his face, I remembered the pain he caused for my comfort.  So when he provokes me in broad daylight, I try to respond more gently ("Always walk in front of me while climbing? It's okay!").  The device is designed to help us relax, but the real change is the newfound conscious comfort.  - Melissa Gregg


        It's never too late to love yourself

        For most of my life, I hope I'll never do what I had to do, or didn't get enough skin.  It amazes those who know that I am a strong and positive woman, a generous mentor and a mother of two.  Unfortunately the fourth stage of the pancreatic disease - the end of depression - made me feel so proud, I attacked the evil body growing or something.  I get bored, and I get it because I usually do.  No matter how long I live, I cherish my flawed ideals.  Sarah Walkman


        All the answers

        The fourth-grade teacher said, "Your kids don't have to bring Valentine's, but if they do, they'll ask for one for each student."  “Do you want to waste class energy on this?”  A parent answered the phone, and a long email chain jumped out at the adults.  I am not interested in drawing, I look at my work and the strength of my three children.  Yet, for a long time, my youngest daughter, Shiloh, wrote to her classmates at night: words of condolence, praise, and companionship—the language parents neglect to use.  I want to answer all the questions, "Time has been spent sharing expressions of kindness."  - Jessica Keith


        Winter's sun

        We work in the coldest sunshine of the year, and in February rare 67-degree temperatures dipped our shoes into the shallow grass.  "He brought this environment," I thought.  I found "Annie" that was announced to my father.  Behind her stand Susan, her promoters and other advertising partners.  I am one of four children who exclusively share my father's phone.  I was with my family and my parents, laughing at our party and thinking, "I can't wait to call my dad and tell him who I saw."  Then there are the amazing memories of why we got together.  After that, I left my dirty shoes on.  - Abby Alton Schwartz


        Love Is 13 Minutes of Madness for Season 2 of Season 2

        People in love don't think about the details of Season 2's best moments.

        Love Is 13 Minutes of Madness for Season 2 of Season 2


        This link is an external site that adheres to reasonably open rules.


        Worship value: a mental strategy inspired by the pandemic

        For a long time, Debbie Montgomery Johnson didn't tell anyone that a man had seduced her over a million dollars and that she had kissed a man with whom she confessed she was in love, whatever.


        "It shouldn't have happened to me," the businessman and former Air Force official told AFP from his Florida home, a model for those slowly deceived by those who watch the internet and believe in it.


        However, large numbers of people have been duped by scandals known as "emotional deception", and their numbers skyrocketed during the Covid-19 pandemic when lockdowns began finding online prison cures for individuals.


        The US Federal Trade Commission says the sensational sentiment reached $547 million in 2021 after consumers reacted to the Sentinel network scandal.  This is a significant increase of about 80% over the previous year.


        These numbers limit vertical patterns in the first year of an epidemic.  FTC participants have lost $1.3 billion to the scam in recent years, mostly extortion rate holders.


        However, the FTC notes that this is only indicative of the bigger picture, as most bugs have not been reported to date.


        Tim McGuinness, the founder of Citizens Against Relationship Fraud (SCARS), says the numbers come in light of "all intent to use the internet as a tool of isolation, frustration and electoral professionalism".


        - Coronavirus offers new strategies -


        The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has warned that the shutdown resulted in a Covid test positive and scams directed at mental content fraud have been dropped.


        The Male Vigilance Society told Silent Victim No More that Covid may have given reason to "rescue" his alleged lover.


        "Coronavirus helps scammers," he wrote.


        Eventually, he looked up and found the photos you sent him — but only after spending $400,000 on visa fees and other emergency expenses.


        Story feature


        With the development of caution - aiding in online gatherings and discussions and, surprisingly, a new novel from "Tinder Hustlers" on Netflix - many are succumbing to the spread of deception instead of entering a wounded heart.


        The more Montgomery Johnson, now in his 60s, learned about the scale of the problem, and how it started two years later, in 2010, the next person used to make him feel like "family."


        He has spoken widely, written a book called The Woman Behind the Smile, and joined the leading organization SCARS, which has reached nearly 7,000,000 victims since 2015.


        "I'm looking for a civilian," she said, adding that she had been involved in online dating after the death of her other husband.


        Donating money is not normal, he said, but it "makes my heart swell".


        "He's the mastermind," said McGuinness, who survived an emotional breakdown.  Collaboration "will continue as a normal discussion, and then, in fact, they will use a fairly specific approach to begin preparations."


        Many scammers in West Africa will deal with fake personalities, often saying they work abroad, travel a lot of work in the military - giving immediate reasons why they can't meet face to face.


        After a personal call, they demanded a bank transfer of cash in exchange for a boarding pass, visa fee, medical fee or any other emergency - a guarantee that they would still pay when they were finally reunited.


        At the time, the web was an area with little costs and big returns, but scammers often work in groups, now looking for everything from Instagram to online games like Words with Friends.


        “You can start a conversation with someone, and there are scammers out there,” McGuinness said.


        - No physical talk -


        Another change is that more young people are holding on to it, with the Federal Trade Commission reporting that the number of Americans aged 18 to 29 increased more than 10 times between 2017 and 2021.


        The rise of digital currency is filled with scandals with false assumptions, but gift certificates and unavailable bank transfers are more common.


        McGuinness said people in their 20s and 30s were "often cheated and paid less", while more experienced people "were cheated more, but they weren't used to it."


        Victims often remain silent about their dispute for fear of investigation and judgment.


        In the years following the confusion, Montgomery Johnson knew more people who made relatively false statements, "but no one was talking."


        “My heart suddenly changed and I no longer had to focus on myself,” he said.  "That's all I can do... scream and live. Voice."

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