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Ken Fortenberry December 14th, 2006 04:34 PM

OT Blood type
 
The Boston Red Sox are the talk of the Hot Stove League
because they're about to spend over $100 million for a
Japanese pitcher. An interesting sidebar to that story
is the Japanese fascination with blood type. Apparently
asking about someones blood type in Japan is like asking
about someones astrological sign here in the States.
Japanese baseball cards, along with the usual height,
weight, bats, throws etc. also include blood type. The
best baseball players are apparently Type O.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/sp...l/14blood.html

And not the Times:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanes...of_personality

I'm B+ so according to the theory I'm creative, passionate,
optimistic, a flexible individualist and a great cook.

HOLY **** !! Did they ever hit *that* nail on the head !!

;-)

--
Ken Fortenberry

rb608 December 14th, 2006 04:48 PM

OT Blood type
 
Ken Fortenberry wrote:
The best baseball players are apparently Type O.


Sadaharu O? :-)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanes...of_personality


Coincidentally, I'm scheduled to squirt out a pint of A- tonight at the
local middle school bloodmobile. Last time I donated, they had some
sort of two-fer pheresis machine that could extract two units of red
blood cells but replace the fluid. I've done the plasmapheresis thing
before; but it's still weird to have stuff flowing back into your arm
that's a slightly different temperature than what's already there.

Joe F.


BJ Conner December 14th, 2006 09:28 PM

OT Blood type
 
Donating a pint supposedly adds 2 weeks to your life span. Me build up
iron in their bodies. Women don't build up because they get rid of
blood regularly. The iron increases your risk of heat attacks etc.
And you get free cookies.

On Dec 14, 8:48 am, "rb608" wrote:
Ken Fortenberry wrote:
The best baseball players are apparently Type O.Sadaharu O? :-)


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanes...inciden tally, I'm scheduled to squirt out a pint of A- tonight at the

local middle school bloodmobile. Last time I donated, they had some
sort of two-fer pheresis machine that could extract two units of red
blood cells but replace the fluid. I've done the plasmapheresis thing
before; but it's still weird to have stuff flowing back into your arm
that's a slightly different temperature than what's already there.

Joe F.



[email protected] December 14th, 2006 09:55 PM

OT Blood type
 
On 14 Dec 2006 13:28:22 -0800, "BJ Conner"
wrote:

Donating a pint supposedly adds 2 weeks to your life span. Me build up
iron in their bodies. Women don't build up because they get rid of
blood regularly. The iron increases your risk of heat attacks etc.
And you get free cookies.


Well, unless the location and specifics of "donation" somehow figures
into this, Frank ought to be very happy...and damaging himself regularly
until he's 317 or so...

On Dec 14, 8:48 am, "rb608" wrote:
Ken Fortenberry wrote:
The best baseball players are apparently Type O.Sadaharu O? :-)


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanes...inciden tally, I'm scheduled to squirt out a pint of A- tonight at the

local middle school bloodmobile. Last time I donated, they had some
sort of two-fer pheresis machine that could extract two units of red
blood cells but replace the fluid. I've done the plasmapheresis thing
before; but it's still weird to have stuff flowing back into your arm
that's a slightly different temperature than what's already there.

Joe F.


Opus December 14th, 2006 10:00 PM

OT Blood type
 

"BJ Conner" wrote in message
oups.com...
Donating a pint supposedly adds 2 weeks to your life span. Me build up
iron in their bodies. Women don't build up because they get rid of
blood regularly. The iron increases your risk of heat attacks etc.
And you get free cookies.


A former employer of mine has a rare disease where he has to have monthly
blood lettings, because of the iron in is blood. It took a while before the
right doctor figured it out. He would get very weak and pass out. Got to
the point he had to quit work for a while.

His family doctor told him he was drinking too much alcohol. He told the
doctor that he didn't drink. The doc then told him had drank so much over
his lifetime that he had damaged his liver. He then told the doctor that he
had never had a drink in his life. He finally found a doctor at Duke Univ.
who diagnosed he illness and got him straightened out.

Op



daytripper December 14th, 2006 10:44 PM

OT Blood type
 
On Thu, 14 Dec 2006 17:00:26 -0500, "Opus" wrote:


"BJ Conner" wrote in message
roups.com...
Donating a pint supposedly adds 2 weeks to your life span. Me build up
iron in their bodies. Women don't build up because they get rid of
blood regularly. The iron increases your risk of heat attacks etc.
And you get free cookies.


A former employer of mine has a rare disease where he has to have monthly
blood lettings, because of the iron in is blood. It took a while before the
right doctor figured it out. He would get very weak and pass out. Got to
the point he had to quit work for a while.

His family doctor told him he was drinking too much alcohol. He told the
doctor that he didn't drink. The doc then told him had drank so much over
his lifetime that he had damaged his liver. He then told the doctor that he
had never had a drink in his life. He finally found a doctor at Duke Univ.
who diagnosed he illness and got him straightened out.

Op


I bet it was Hemochromatosis.

/daytripper

Wolfgang December 14th, 2006 10:54 PM

OT Blood type
 

daytripper wrote:
On Thu, 14 Dec 2006 17:00:26 -0500, "Opus" wrote:


"BJ Conner" wrote in message
roups.com...
Donating a pint supposedly adds 2 weeks to your life span. Me build up
iron in their bodies. Women don't build up because they get rid of
blood regularly. The iron increases your risk of heat attacks etc.
And you get free cookies.


A former employer of mine has a rare disease where he has to have monthly
blood lettings, because of the iron in is blood. It took a while before the
right doctor figured it out. He would get very weak and pass out. Got to
the point he had to quit work for a while.

His family doctor told him he was drinking too much alcohol. He told the
doctor that he didn't drink. The doc then told him had drank so much over
his lifetime that he had damaged his liver. He then told the doctor that he
had never had a drink in his life. He finally found a doctor at Duke Univ.
who diagnosed he illness and got him straightened out.

Op


I bet it was Hemochromatosis.

/daytripper


Symptoms sound right.....except I'm not so sure about the "rare" part.
My father had it and thus I was warned that I was at high risk. It was
a long time ago, so I don't remember the details, but I carry the
impression that it isn't especially uncommon.

Wolfgang
who, symptom free, supposes that judicious (which is to say liberal)
intake of caffeine and nicotine must have a profound prophylactic
effect. :)


daytripper December 14th, 2006 11:24 PM

OT Blood type
 
On 14 Dec 2006 14:54:48 -0800, "Wolfgang" wrote:


daytripper wrote:
On Thu, 14 Dec 2006 17:00:26 -0500, "Opus" wrote:


"BJ Conner" wrote in message
roups.com...
Donating a pint supposedly adds 2 weeks to your life span. Me build up
iron in their bodies. Women don't build up because they get rid of
blood regularly. The iron increases your risk of heat attacks etc.
And you get free cookies.

A former employer of mine has a rare disease where he has to have monthly
blood lettings, because of the iron in is blood. It took a while before the
right doctor figured it out. He would get very weak and pass out. Got to
the point he had to quit work for a while.

His family doctor told him he was drinking too much alcohol. He told the
doctor that he didn't drink. The doc then told him had drank so much over
his lifetime that he had damaged his liver. He then told the doctor that he
had never had a drink in his life. He finally found a doctor at Duke Univ.
who diagnosed he illness and got him straightened out.

Op


I bet it was Hemochromatosis.

/daytripper


Symptoms sound right.....except I'm not so sure about the "rare" part.
My father had it and thus I was warned that I was at high risk. It was
a long time ago, so I don't remember the details, but I carry the
impression that it isn't especially uncommon.

Wolfgang
who, symptom free, supposes that judicious (which is to say liberal)
intake of caffeine and nicotine must have a profound prophylactic
effect. :)


Agreed, HC is hardly a rare disease. 1 in 200 Caucasians have the genetic
disposition toward developing the disease. But you know how doctors are, they
often elevate a condition as a means of elevating their own import...

/daytripper (message to doctors everywhe we're catching on ;-)

Opus December 15th, 2006 12:46 AM

OT Blood type
 

"daytripper" wrote in message
...

I bet it was Hemochromatosis.

/daytripper


Well, you'd have bet wrong! It's Hemochromatosi.

Op



Opus December 15th, 2006 12:54 AM

OT Blood type
 

"daytripper" wrote in message
...
I bet it was Hemochromatosis.

/daytripper


Symptoms sound right.....except I'm not so sure about the "rare" part.
My father had it and thus I was warned that I was at high risk. It was
a long time ago, so I don't remember the details, but I carry the
impression that it isn't especially uncommon.

Wolfgang
who, symptom free, supposes that judicious (which is to say liberal)
intake of caffeine and nicotine must have a profound prophylactic
effect. :)


Agreed, HC is hardly a rare disease. 1 in 200 Caucasians have the genetic
disposition toward developing the disease. But you know how doctors are,
they
often elevate a condition as a means of elevating their own import...

/daytripper (message to doctors everywhe we're catching on ;-)


I guess what made it so rare was that my boss Charles Wright had to stand on
his head, recite the Star Spangled Banner, and juggle a chainsaw, egg, and
an apple all the while they took his blood!

It was my understanding at the time that it was rare, but it may just have
been that none of us had ever heard of such a thing and just figured the
Charles was just too damn lazy to drive a 10' ground rod with a sledgehammer
into hard as rock red clay?

He really did have to have monthly blood letting though, and I suppose he
still does, if he's still alive. I need to check on the old fella. He was
as good an employer as I have ever had. He must have rehire my drunk ass 10
times.

Op




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