Ramalama Ding Dongs with Magic Friends

k.hunter30

New Member
We got a Golden... i've only ever had goldens actually... this is my 3rd...

they're so unbelievably people friendly and loving... especially the males... our last one, Max... he would p.e.e. EVERYWHERE whenever he met someone knew... he just got so excited...


sooo gross... but it was Maxi... it was what he did, he just loved people so much... he'd p.e.e. on them...

:o
*thinks back to your excitement over the NBA*
So THAT'S where you get it...
*borrows the lysol from Jenny*
 

PotteryGal

Active Member
hmmm... I may....
*checks folders*


EDIT: It's small, but it's all I have on this computer.
picture.php

Awwwww! So cute - even being stubborn. :animwink:
 

k.hunter30

New Member
No water park this time, but Fort Wilderness has a smaller pool near the cabins, so we'll be visiting that a few times. Three of our TS meals are character ones: Chef Mickey's for dinner, Crystal Palace for bfast, and Princess Breakfast in Norway. We're going to Boma Sunday evening. :slurp::slurp:
Plus trips to Trail's End, Coral Reef, and Beaches n Cream.
Ooo! I'll definitely think of you on Sunday! :slurp: I'll be so jealous! If you're there after sunset, they have a night-viewing of the animals at AKL in which they give you night-vision goggles. Kinda neat! Eat some white bean hummus for me, okay? That's one of my favorites!
 

maggiegrace1

Well-Known Member
This is so sad..

I never knew this could happen..now I do.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24982210

Boy’s death highlights a hidden danger: Dry drowning

10-year-old died more than an hour after getting out of swimming pool


By Mike Celizic

TODAYShow.com contributor
updated 9:58 a.m. ET, Thurs., June. 5, 2008

The tragic death of a South Carolina 10-year-old more than an hour after he had gone swimming has focused a spotlight on the little-known phenomenon called “dry drowning” — and warning signs that every parent should be aware of.
“I’ve never known a child could walk around, talk, speak and their lungs be filled with water,” Cassandra Jackson told NBC News in a story broadcast Thursday on TODAY.
On Sunday, Jackson had taken her son, Johnny, to a pool near their home in Goose Creek, S.C. It was the first time he’d ever gone swimming — and, tragically, it would be his last.


At some point during his swim, Johnny got some water in his lungs. He didn’t show any immediate signs of respiratory distress, but the boy had an accident in the pool and soiled himself. Still, Johnny, his sister and their mother walked home together.
“We physically walked home. He walked with me,” Jackson said, still trying to understand how her son could have died. “I bathed him, and he told me that he was sleepy.”
Spongy material
Later, she went into his room to check on him. “I walked over to the bed, and his face was literally covered with this spongy white material,” she said. “And I screamed.”
A family friend, Christine Meekins, was visiting and went to see what was wrong. “I pulled his arm and said, ‘Johnny! Johnny!’ ” Meekins told NBC. “There was no response. I opened one of his eyes and I just knew inside my heart that it was something really bad.”
Johnny was rushed to a local hospital, but it was too late. Johnny had drowned, long after he got out of the swimming pool.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, some 3,600 people drowned in 2005, the most recent year for which there are statistics. Some 10 to 15 percent of those deaths was classified as “dry drowning,” which can occur up to 24 hours after a small amount of water gets into the lungs. In children, that can happen during a bath.


Dr. Daniel Rauch, a pediatrician from New York University Langone Medical Center, told TODAY’s Meredith Vieira that there are warning signs that every parent should be aware of. Johnny Jackson exhibited some of them, but unless a parent knows what to look for, they are easily overlooked or misinterpreted.
The three important signs, he said, are difficulty breathing, extreme tiredness and changes in behavior. All are the result of reduced oxygen flow to the brain.
Johnny had two of those signs — he was very tired when he got home, and he had had the accident in the pool. But like most parents, Cassandra Jackson had no idea this could be related to water in his lungs.
Delayed reaction
Rauch said that the phenomenon of dry drowning is not completely understood. But medical researchers say that in some people, a small amount of inhaled water can have a delayed-reaction effect.
“It can take a while for the process to occur and to set in and cause difficulties,” Rauch said. “Because it is a lung process, difficulty breathing is the first sign that you would be worried about.”
The second sign is extreme fatigue, which isn’t always easy to spot. “It’s very difficult to tell when your child is abnormally tired versus normal tired after a hot day and running around in the pool,” Rauch said. “The job of the lungs is to get oxygen into the blood and your brain needs oxygen to keep working, so when your brain isn’t getting oxygen, it can start doing funny things. One of them is becoming excessively tired, losing consciousness and the inability to be aroused appropriately.”
Finally, there are changes in behavior, Rauch said — another tough call when dealing with very small children, whose moods and behavior can change from one minute to the next.
“Another response of the brain to not getting oxygen is to do different things,” Rauch explained, saying parents should be concerned “if your child’s abnormally cranky, abnormally combative — any dramatic change from their normal pattern.”
He admitted, “It is very difficult to pick this up sometimes.” But spotting the warning signs and getting a suspected victim to an emergency room can save a life, he added.
Victims of dry drowning are treated by having a breathing tube inserted so that oxygen can be supplied under pressure to the lungs. “Then we just wait for the lung to heal itself,” he said.
But for Cassandra Jackson, it’s knowledge gained too late. She and Meekins sat in her home, looking at pictures of the bright and happy son who was no more.
“He was very loving, full of life,” the grieving mother said. “That was my little man.”
 

k.hunter30

New Member
I saw that^^ on the Today show this morning. I still don't know if I fully understand it, but how scary. 10-15% of drowning deaths is a surprising number... How very, very sad...
 

PotteryGal

Active Member
Extremely scary. The no.1 death of autistic children is drowning - but to think it can happen well after being in water...:eek:...we are going to see if Joel wants to go to the pool, but I must admit I'm nervous about it.
I'll be back later. :wave:
 

Kelsybelle

Active Member
That is absolutley terrifying! That poor, poor little boy and his family! My heart just breaks for them! As a Mom to a 21 month old (my first) this was important for me to see. We live on the beach (literally) and my little girl loves the water! Thank you for posting that as I didn't see the Today show or the news this morning!
 

maggiegrace1

Well-Known Member
Extremely scary. The no.1 death of autistic children is drowning - but to think it can happen well after being in water...:eek:...we are going to see if Joel wants to go to the pool, but I must admit I'm nervous about it.
I'll be back later. :wave:
Scares me also...

((Hugs Jenny))

Have a great trip..Love you!
That is absolutley terrifying! That poor, poor little boy and his family! My heart just breaks for them! As a Mom to a 21 month old (my first) this was important for me to see. We live on the beach (literally) and my little girl loves the water! Thank you for posting that as I didn't see the Today show or the news this morning!
Very terrifying!..:(

You are welcome..I saw it and wanted to share..:wave:
 

wdwmomof3

Well-Known Member
Hi Dana,

I just watched that video and I must say that I have never heard of that either. It's almost hard to believe, so sad. We have a pool and I always watch everything I can to learn as much as I can about pool safety, so thanks for bringing this to my attention.
 

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