Jump Rhythm®

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Jump Rhythm®

Jump Rhythm®

@JumpRhythm

Creating artistic work out of primal human behavior 🎭Multiple-Emmy Award winning Chicago-based performing & teaching company

Chicago, IL Katılım Haziran 2010
288 Takip Edilen298 Takipçiler
Rick Steves
Rick Steves@RickSteves·
Thanks for all the support since I first told you about my prostate cancer diagnosis. I promised you an update when I shared this news back in August — and I’m happy to say that I’m home now after successful surgery and a night in the hospital. (Packing light for my homecoming, I left my prostate there.) Since I was first diagnosed, I’ve thought of cancer as the latest adventure in a lifetime of travels — and like always, I’m excited to share a trip report with you. My journey began with a blood draw to screen for prostate cancer. I was told that, at my age, a PSA score of 4 or greater would be considered “abnormal.” So, when I got the shocking news that I had a PSA score of 55, it was like I’d been thrown into a new land fraught with mystery and uncertainty. Suddenly swept away from my general practitioner and into the world of oncology, I needed to make important decisions about things I knew nothing of… and I barely spoke the language. In my case, I had options (basically non-surgical treatments or just cut it out). Caring people with strong opinions and lessons from experience weighed in as if in a debate tournament, competing in the interest of my health. Psychologically, I was inclined to embrace the “ectomy” route — cut it out. And in my case (where the cancer is, how it’s acting, and my willingness to deal with — or live with — the side effects), it seemed surgery was my best option. After talking with my doctor and carefully considering each treatment strategy, I chose to undergo a robotic radical prostatectomy. On the big morning, my alarm rings at 4:30 a.m.… and the day for surgery is finally here — certainly a high point on this journey’s itinerary: Drive through a sleepy world, check in, strip down… gown up. A moment of prayer with my surgeon and Shelley (my angel caregiver through the physical and emotional white water of this ride). Then, careen gracefully down the hallway on a gurney (feeling kind of melodramatic to actually live the POV of so many movie scenes) and enter the operating room — which is reassuringly filled with an awe-inspiring mix of masked-up experts, technology, sterility, and humanity. I give myself over to the crew that now holds my very future in their hands. The ventilation mask lowers… take three… deep… breaths… and… I wake up feeling great, chatty, and making jokes I think are clever… clearly on some serious medicine. Thankfully, my doctor has a good report: Surgery went well, there was no sign of any spread, and the cancer seems to have been embedded deep in my prostate, which is now at the lab. Before the surgery, I had two visions of my cancerous prostate: a small apple with an invisible rot at its core and an old dandelion with missing spores. My wish was the apple, and that’s what I got. But we won’t really know how “it went” until the lab reports are in. And that’s when I hope to hear the words “cancer-free.” But for now, I’m still in the next stage of this trip: “the road to recovery.” Buckling myself gingerly into the passenger seat, I was overcome with thankfulness: that I live in a corner of the world where hospitals aren’t being bombed or flooded... that I have access to a brilliant @UWMedicine surgeon and the best tech anywhere at Seattle’s @FredHutch Cancer Center... that I am surrounded by the love and support of so many…and receiving quality care in a major medical crisis with no concerns about crippling costs (which for a citizen of any great nation should be a civil liberty). Yes, I am thankful. On my first day back home (when not napping), I read through cards and social media comments from caring people sharing experiences and cheering me on. All those good vibes, warm thoughts, and fervent prayers — while intangible — took on a kind of tangibility as they collectively worked to fill my sails with hope and strength to finish this journey successfully. Thank you. It wasn’t so long ago that people called cancer “the C word,” or if they called it by name, they did so in a whisper. As anyone who gets cancer learns, it permeates all corners of our society, and it’s nothing to be ashamed of or to hide — and when it comes to older men, it seems being tested for prostate cancer (a simple blood test you can request from your GP) is a smart idea. As for me, the next step is to get my catheter taken out — after which I’ll be steep on the incontinence learning curve. Then, I’ll get the lab reports. (I’ll be sure to keep you posted.) In the meantime, I’m making a point to celebrate the vibrancy that fills my world... to give thanks for everything that works well in my body... and to meditate on how communities, technologies, and livable environments that we enjoy are not accidental — they happen when good people care and do good things. I’m looking forward to many more years of happy travels — and, of course, I’ll be sure to bring you along! —Rick
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Jump Rhythm®
Jump Rhythm®@JumpRhythm·
Jump Rhythm takes Portland! Join us for a one-night only engagement of Fortitude and Gentleness and a Standing Down Straight workshop. - mailchi.mp/jumprhythm/jum…
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Jump Rhythm®
Jump Rhythm®@JumpRhythm·
Yes, Jump Rhythm® is in FINLAND!! We need your help to see our performers through! Give $10 right now to help them out. We need every penny! Click buy.stripe.com/5kA4gE01OadI4N… to donate now! Thank you!
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Jump Rhythm®
Jump Rhythm®@JumpRhythm·
TICKETS: fortitudeandgentleness.bpt.me Fortitude & Gentleness | @alifeinthearts. OPENS FRIDAY. Mary Jo says, "[…] loved this two-person tour-de-force; this literary play-musical-dance performance invites us to figure out how to engage with the world without burning up in our rage.”
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Jump Rhythm®
Jump Rhythm®@JumpRhythm·
Taking Billy's fabulous play to NYC and we'd like to pay all artists. To do that appropriately, we'll need your spare shekels. Any amount will help as it all adds up, right? Please donate now! Thank you! fundly.com/giving-tuesday… #fundly via @Fundly
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Jump Rhythm®
Jump Rhythm®@JumpRhythm·
In NYC July 14th, 15th, & 16th. Tickets @ fortitudeandgentleness.bpt.me FORTITUDE and GENTLENESS by Billy Siegenfeld A play about a rehearsal for a play with snatches of song, some bursts of dance, crazed rants about life, and 2 or 3 appeals to the moon and Jane Austen...
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Dog Lovers
Dog Lovers@DogLovers03·
Needs a beautiful name 😍🥹
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Jump Rhythm®@JumpRhythm·
IT'S GIVING TUESDAY. Please consider donating. With your help we can tour, present workshops, and publish. With gratitude!
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