The best way to treat a problem is to know exactly what you are dealing with. Ignoring the first symptoms may mean a prolonged suffering and a certain aggravation of the condition. Many people hope that their problems will pass as the time flies by, but when it comes to our health the untreated problems will only get worse on the passage of time. One in two people suffer from piles and many of them are too ashamed to go to a doctor, talk about their condition and get the right treatment.
Piles symptoms are pretty easy to figure them out. You do not need to have medical studies to notice that something is really wrong with you body. At first you will feel certain itches and even a sort of soreness around your bottom. If you do not treat them when they are in this phase things will start to get nasty and you will feel pain and even have bloodshed when you are at the loo. There can be some sharp pain in your bottoms that will make you feel a lot of discomfort wherever you are.
The point however is to try and treat these symptoms when they are merely a hunch. A doctor will help you find exactly the right solution either a cream or some ointment or even suppositories. This will depend on the development of the condition and on the type of piles that you have developed.
For many religious families, a christening gown is a much-cherished heirloom. Through generation to generation, a family member passes it on down to the next person who has a child and will be christened.
It does seem that for parents, only a few articles of clothing are precious during a child’s first year of life. For example: the first outfit to hold any kind of significance is the going home from the hospital outfit.
In every culture around the world, there are traditions that surround a christening. Yet it is mainly an understood idea to present the baby to your community: be it the church, a tribe or even just your family.
The following is a story about a mother making her daughter a christening gown.
I wanted to do something for my oldest daughter that would be special throughout her life. Just before she was born, I decided I would make her gown that would be worn on the day of her christening.
The pattern I chose known as “The Tree of Life” seemed appropriate since she would begin her spiritual life in the church on that day. I bought loads of white fingering yarn as well as a crochet book that gave me ways to do the lacy confection I had planned. My husband bought for me as a gift a carryall that I could take my work in progress with me anywhere I went. I remember it was a bright green and yellow bag, which would stand open at my feet whenever I set it anywhere I went. It went everywhere with me.
So, the next six saw me busily working on her gown. I knitted and crocheted on the way to work, at home, family parties and even to meetings. During the breaks at work, I would draw up stitch after stitch. Co-workers and family members kept up with the progress by measuring it. As the gown got bigger, I found myself explaining to strangers in coffee houses or passersby in the park about the pattern I had chosen.
I was halfway finished with the gown when I had my daughter, Cara. I brought the gown with me and when she was only three hours old, I measured it up against her, checking on its length. It came home with us and with us for every excursion of our outings including mommy and me massage workshops. The gown was turning into a never going to end labor. Each row took about two hours to complete.
The night before she was to be christened found me putting them final touches on the gown. I placed a frothy lace in front and weaving a light green bow through a perforation centered at the waist. Although the weather was warm, she looked like an angel in the gown I had made for her for so long. I didn’t want her to be so she only wore it for two hours.
After the christening was over, the gown was never “put” away for safekeeping and past down. No, it hung in her closet as a reminder of what it was for. She used it to play dress up when she was three years old. When she was age four, Cara wore it to preschool to play the role of princess. She used it many times since.
What started out on a whim for me unraveled eventually into a wear and tear outfit. Am I mad that this happened? Not all. It was nice just for me to do something for her on my own.
The Communities of Northern Alabama and Southern Tennessee, both share the services of the Huntsville Hospital, which is a very big outfit that is staffed by over six hundred and fifty doctors, over two thousand nurses and a total staff numbering over five thousand.
The Hospital is divided into three sections, with each section specializing and providing different services to its patients. The Huntsville Hospital for women and children provides specialized medical attention and services to women and children. These include and are not limited to pre-natal services, maternity services, gynecological services and pediatric services.
The Madison Medical Park is the Huntsville Hospital’s outpatient facility that is staffed by doctors specializing in different fields. This may include dentists, gynecologists and obstetricians and general practitioners. Here, when you see the doctor, you get referred to the main hospital or you get a prescription and you go home. Here they deal with the everyday medical problems that we have.
Finally, the Hospital in Huntsville also staffs a seventy bed rehabilitation center. Here, people with different problems ranging from alcohol to drug abuse are admitted and they get the help that they need.
The amazing thing about the Hospital is that it is a Not for Profit organization. So you find that this is one of the few places where people go to work because it’s something they want to do from their hearts. Like many hospitals in the United States, Huntsville Hospital is a teaching and training hospital that is affiliated to the University of Alabama – Birmingham School of Medicine and Family Practice, and Residency Program. On completion of their studies, medical students are attached to the hospital to do their residency there. The Hospital also serves as a primary research center for drugs, with around fifty projects that are currently ongoing.