The Snaith School RE Department

453 posts

The Snaith School RE Department

The Snaith School RE Department

@SnaithRe

Katılım Haziran 2021
65 Takip Edilen167 Takipçiler
SandraSixty
SandraSixty@Sandra55·
I’ve run out of perfume so I’m going to treat myself for my birthday Now what shall I buy 😊
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cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
For people who rarely get emotional during movies, what scene or moment genuinely brought you to tears?
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GenTXer2
GenTXer2@GenTXer2·
Out of curiosity: For those who play WORDLE, what is your starting word? My current word is "CLEAR" but thinking of changing.
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The Snaith School RE Department
@JasonMac2022 And I should add I’m UK, so no financial incentive here for docs. Free healthcare. I taken tamoxifen now for 10 years also, and again no charge to me.
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The Snaith School RE Department
@JasonMac2022 The belt and braces approach they told me. Not worth risking even one stray cell. Mine had all gone but I had chemo and radiotherapy and it’s wasn’t pleasant but gave me peace of mind. The very best of luck to your wife
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Radio Times
Radio Times@RadioTimes·
Drop your one-word review of Gavin & Stacey: The Finale...
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The Snaith School RE Department retweetledi
The Snaith School PE
The Snaith School PE@TSS_PE·
Year 9 - 11 Girls. 💖 Who wants to take part next July? Information will be sent home this week. 💕
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Charlotte's Battle Against Glioblastoma (BAG)
I try to tweet about my daughter, Charlotte, so she doesn't get forgotten. She died on the 24th February 2016, almost nine years ago. She was diagnosed with brain cancer on the day of her prom. 'Fortunately', as she quipped, she had no plans. 'We've found something on the brain,' they said, a 'tumour'. That day, in July 2013, our lives - mine, my son's and my husband's - would change forever. Suddenly, we had a file with a glossary of terms to do with cancer and treatment. Words we’d never heard of, such as 'anaplastic astrocytoma', soon rolled off our tongues. Similarly, I became accustomed to naming, by heart, every one of the fifty pills that Charlotte had to take daily. In September 2013, we nearly lost her. However, Charlotte, ever stoic, endured the thirty-two days of radiotherapy that was required to keep her illness at bay. She felt tired and she felt sick. Recently, because of my breast cancer, I had five days of radiotherapy. Mine was localised to my chest; Charlotte's was localised to her brain. She left those sessions tired, battered and bruised, but onwards she went. 2014 was a ‘good year.' Good, of course, only by the standards of not knowing how long one's daughter might be around. Charlotte was stable and it seemed as though her condition, as life threatening as it was, might be managed, as countless other chronic conditions are, by the occasional visit to the hospital. 2014 was the year that Charlotte became herself. For almost her entire life at school Charlotte was plagued by Generalised Anxiety Disorder. This affliction, which had prevented her from getting the bus on her own, was dwarfed by the immediacy of the situation she found herself in; there were, as they say, "bigger fish to fry." And fry them she did. Charlotte wanted to tell the world what it was like to live with a brain tumour. Her YouTube channel did this. From its start, in 2014, to her final appearance, in 2016, Charlotte displayed her courage and stoicism with the utmost candidness and positivity. We have tried our best to continue this by uploading updates regarding Charlotte's BAG, and the work that we do, to Charlotte's channel. 2015 was the worst year. It was the year that all optimism for the future - and we held it dearly - fell apart. It was the year that Charlotte's grade three anaplastic astrocytoma mutated into the deadly and incurable glioblastoma. Despite this, Charlotte continued to document her journey. When she filmed her final video, she could not speak - I spoke for her. It was for World Cancer Day and, as Charlotte suffered to get her words across, she wanted everyone to know that she was still there, suffering but fighting. ‘When I die, you can take it down. No one will ever be interested in a girl with a brain tumour.' Charlotte's last words in regards to the future of her YouTube channel. Fortunately, we didn’t we couldn’t. Charlotte left a legacy for all of us to learn and to watch. She showed the life and the fate of a sufferer of one of the most underfunded types of cancer, brain cancer. She never stood a chance. Below is her first & last video Glioblastoma is a terminal grade four cancer – there is no cure. Watching my daughter deteriorate in her final weeks was nothing other than horrendous.Yet, there are ways to fight this: We at Charlotte's BAG believe that all money should go to world-changing and life-altering research. RT thank you youtube.com/watch?v=4ShO2Q… youtube.com/watch?v=d6LEW5… charlottesbag.com
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