SimonJoshep
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Posts posted by SimonJoshep
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My father is a diabetic patient and his doctor suggested him to exercise daily specially jogging in park or any good relaxing environment. Recently my father diagnosed with plantar fasciitis problem and simple running shoes is creating pain while jogging. We asked for doctor, he recommended to buy orthopedic shoes for plantar fasciitis that have specially created for diabetic patients that have orthotic insoles with good cushioning support.
I am looking for suggestions from where I can buy this type shoes or which one is good for him. -
I think in younger ages children pick the language as compared to older one, but I also believe that if you determined something then at least you achieve it.
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Hi, Welcome to forum dear!
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Welcome to have you on board! :)
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Welcome to the forum!! :)
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Welcome to forum dear! I hope you will get all the information you are looking for. :)
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Welcome to the forum. We are also happy to have you. :)
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Welcome to the forum dear. You are on right place. :)
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Welcome to the forum!
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got it
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Hello dear! welcome to the forum!! :)
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That's great, Thanks for sharing the result. :)
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This is popular with people from my church: The Jesus Storybook Bible (link is to Westminster Bookstore).
ETA I see that it was already mentioned. :-)
Nice thanks for sharing it. For which age bracket these stories are for?
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I believe if you discuss the problems which you are facing then the level of anxiety and depression goes down. So always address issues with your friends or family members to get the solution.
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The best massage therapist you will find on Phuket, and they are much cheaper as compare to other countries.
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Spaghetti and eggs. I cook spaghetti noodles (Or plunge leftover spaghetti into boiling water for a minute to reheat), toss it into a frying pan that has some melted butter, then beat some eggs (I usually do two per adult serving and one per kid serving) and toss in with the spaghetti. Cook until eggs are done, and sprinkle parmesan on top if I'm feeling fancy. Other wise just salt and pepper and eat.
It's our standard 'just got home from a trip or a long day' meal because we always have eggs and spaghetti noodles in the house.
It sounds gross but it's really good. My daughter throws in some frozen peas at the end and has been known to add diced ham and stuff but I'm a purist.
Thanks for sharing such a recipe. Although how was the taste of it.
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I used small mostly and which is handy and easy for me to carry.
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Yep, we have used them several times. That's how I manage to see dd at all. :-)
In addition to carrying on something **small** that will stow under your seat (a purse or *small* backpack/laptop case), you can purchase ($) a full size carry-on or a checked bag at the time you book your flights, so it's not that you *can't* take luggage. (If you add luggage later, after buying your ticket, the price per item ($$) goes up, and even more ($$$) if you decide to check something last minute at the airport.)
The biggest changes for us were 1) no assigned seats unless you buy them, 2) no food or bev service at all, and 3) the seats don't recline at all.
That said, I'm sending four family members on Spirit for my dd's wedding weekend half a continent away. I purchased a checked bag for each (due to tux rentals and formal gowns) and an assigned seat so they could all sit together, and it was still $150 cheaper per person than the nearest competitor.
hth!
Thanks for sharing your personal experience dear. I will try it soon for my next visit. :)
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If the store dealer agrees to exchange it, then it would be best for you. I have exchanged my Ipad, and they do it with any issue.
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Yes, my nephew had gone with same situation last year because of chlorine, and his skin always reacts badly to it. So we avoid him to swim in the highly chlorinated pool.
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Octavia Butler is on my list for later this year, for sure: I've read a number of her novels over the years, but plan to re-read/pre-read a bunch of them for our Dystopian Lit class. Right now, I'm stalled in the vanilla-flavored feminist dystopias of the 70s and 80s. I've found these to be rather hit-and-miss, but I am currently enjoying the second of Suzette Haden Elgin's Native Tongue series, The Judas Rose. It's about a future where women (in the 80s) were stripped of their adult rights and made permanent second-class citizens. It's also about a group of linguist families that facilitate human interaction with alien species by interfacing with aliens from birth, thus becoming native speakers of alien languages, something no other under humans can do. I studied psycholinguistics in my past, so it's interesting to me from that POV, as well as the dystopian/feminist aspect.
I'm also reading Cane River, by Lalita Tademy - a fascinating exploration of the author's ancestresses, beginning with a mulatto slave in Louisiana and continuing to the author's own mother. It's a fictionalized account of 4 generations of women, very fascinating, well-researched and well-written. Reminds me a bit of Homegoing, but less brutal/gritty, and real, in the sense that the author is imagining the stories of the women who she has extensively researched and has many photos, documents, etc. about.
I just finished Drown by Junot Diaz. His stories are largely autobiographical, about his family, his childhood in the Dominican Republic, his move to New Jersey and his teen years there. This is the second book of his stories I've read - I read This Is How You Lose Her several years ago, which is about his "character" Yunior's adult life and relationships with women. In both cases the stories are brutal, gritty, but just stellarly written. One of the purposes of reading is to live lives utterly foreign to your own, and this writer gives me the opportunity to inhabit a reality that is - thankfully - quite foreign to my own experience. I like how his stories embrace a shifting cast of interrelated characters, and how some of them take alternate points of view on similar events. These stories aren't for the faint-hearted, and they are rather depressing, but broadening, too.
Also finished this week: Vonnegut's Sirens of Titan, which I didn't much care for, Neil Gaiman's Stardust, which I loved, and Jim Butcher's Storm Front, a mildly entertaining story about a wizard detective I read because dd did.
Thanks for the detailed reply. Its worth it.
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That is the beauty of Facebook. I have moved, not that much, but enough, and others have moved and without it my past as a married woman would be a black hole, because I would never keep up with people snail mail.
I second him, That Facebook has their own policy related to managing people and their relation.
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Thanks for sharing this deal here.
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I always park my car in Garage, but the problem is that I have two vehicles and when whether is not so good then one of my cars suffers.
Need Orthopedic Shoes for Father
in The Chat Board
Posted
Yes its helpful I also found orthofeet.com for the shoes that I want and other suggestion are helpful as well but I guess I must visit a store with Father to buy orthopedic shoes so that salesperson can guide us more well rather then we just offer it online and don't get the product we actually want.
Thanks to all for valuable suggestion