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April is National Poetry Month
This article offes a variety of web sites to visit to learn more about poetry and National Poetry Month. Great for families, or for the writer seeking a little inspiration. Do you remember the joy of turning the brightly colored pages while Dr. Suess’ ...

Literature and Women
Much has been written about women and women's issues throughout the ages; by women themselves and about women by men - women's mastery and mystery, their beauty and perceived lack of it and the overblown significance thereof, the ties that bind them ...

Polishing the Mirror
Several years ago, during an interview with Bernie Siegel on precognitive intuition and the role it plays in his life, this distinguished doctor and bestselling author recounted a story about a patient who criticized him for his anger. Siegel responded, ...


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A Time of Self Healing, Hope and Reflection
 
As time wore on, I continued to work with the subluxation. Unbeknownst to me, this was further damaging the spinal cord. After I had surgery to finally repair the dislocation 6 months later, I suffered bad after-effects, including pluerisy and stomach lining destruction from all the medications.
Eventually, they (physicians) realized that I wasn't getting any better. After numerous months of physical therapy, steroidal injections, too many anti-emflammatories, and dozens of doctor's visits, I was finally given an MRI.
The MRI showed that I had a lesion at the C-2 level. Initially, the radiologist had thought that I had suffered from one of two things: either I had a demylenating process such as Multiple Sclerosis, OR I had suffered remote trauma to the spine from an injury.
Immediately following the radiologist's opinion, my worker's compensation dropped me. They naturally assumed that all of my ailments were due to an MS diagnosis of a radiologist's opinion. Within two months following this MRI, I was critical. The same thing that happened to me the day of my shoulder subluxation was happening again. This time, I was totally paralyzed.
Church members and family rallied for me and prayed for me. There I lie, in a cold hospital bed getting Solumedrol pumped into an IV. The next morning, I was sent home in a wheelchair. Unable to walk and barely had use of my arms. I had to continue the IV treatment at home - but would it work? This, along with high doses of Prednisone, Neurontin and multiple other medications...I found myself two days later back in the Emergency Room. This time, I nearly died.I had gone into Steroidal-induced seizures. I felt like a dying roach laying on a cold slab of steel. My legs and arms were shaking and jerking uncontrollably like leaves on a tree. This was definitely not supposed to happen. Had I waited much longer to go in, I may not have made it through the morning. Disgusted, tired and filled full of anger, I wanted to die - until that day. When I saw death staring back at me. Breathing in my face and taunting me. It was at that moment, that I realized the value of life. My children looked up to me in the past. I was always the "strong one." When they needed help, it was I that they turned to. Now, these young preteens were assisting me. I took it


with a grain of salt though. I knew one day I would walk again. And that day was right around the corner.My neurologist told me to "...get used to the wheelchair...this is indefinite..." At first, I believed him, but in my heart, I wanted to challenge those words. I, along with friends and family, continued to pray. To tell you the extremeness of my myelopathic lesion, it is in the exact same spot where Christopher Reeves has his.Through research, I threw myself not only into my writing, but I found a group of people on the web going through similar problems. One gentleman, in retrospect, saved my life. Through emails, he brought me up everytime I was down. He sent me arobic bands that would help me to sustain my muscles as they had already atrophied from the paralysis. Little by little, I physically forced myself to do these exercises. God must've given me the strength, as I began to regain some feeling in my legs. Miraculously, within 4 months, I was walking. Slowly, but surely, I had managed to pull myself from the trenches. Nothing short from a miracle, I am still walking today. After the publication of my inspirational book of poetry, to my physical display of prayer, I am here today - alive and mostly well. Although I do have setbacks here and there. Still have to take medications for the rest of my life. I still have residual times of paralysis and numbness, but nothing that leads me to a wheelchair. I now suffer from heart complications due to the myelopathy, and I was forced to file bankruptcy due to worker's compensation throwing in the towel on my healthcare. But today, I am still in the fight...and this time, I am going to win the battle. In a few months, I will be going to a hearing commission on behalf of injuries sustained on the job. At this time, through the admission of not one, but two highly declarated Neurologists, I am confident that workers' compensation will have to incur the medical care and loss of wages for me. Even with all that I have had to endure, I never lost my faith in God. Perhaps it is He who sustained me through all of it. I suppose the fact that I now walk should be evidence enough. And I thank Him everyday for my endurance, stamina and ability to still be able to communicate on a worldly basis.
Author/Writer of published Inspirational Book of Poetry, "Windows to the Soul," (Ebooks2go.com)She is published in several literary books, websites, and is renowned for her poem, "Tears of Liberty," now residing in Ellis Island as a memorial American Nation as a whole. See more of her articles at www.holisticjunction.com or her personal webpage: http://hometown.aol.com/ladycamelot/LCQuest.html



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al.com

Huntsville Literary Association president embraces love of art, poetry
al.com
By Pat Ammons, The Huntsville Times HUNTSVILLE, Alabama -- Dr. Monita Soni grew up in a home full of books and art, with a mother who painted and a father who held poetry sessions. Her aunt, an English literature teacher, gave a fourth-grade Monita an ...

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Award for Naomi Long Madgett's life's work is poetic justice
Detroit Free Press
Since childhood, she just wanted to write poetry. But forces stronger than her own had greater plans for Madgett. They pointed her to the classroom, prodded her toward publishing and, in the process, lifted her higher than she ever imagined.

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State names Richland native its poet laureate for 2012-14
The Seattle Times
This past week, Kathleen Flenniken, a Richland native and Washington State University alumna, was named Washington's poet laureate for 2012-14. She lives in Seattle with her husband and has three children. By Ty Beaver Kathleen Flenniken's first book ...
Richland native named state's poet laureateBellingham Herald
Washington's New Poet LaureateKUOW NPR

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Collaborations mix poetry, art
The News-Press
Its poet parents didn't quite know what it would become, but they were certain their baby had a lot of potential. Six years later, it's grown into a big healthy creature: strong, tech-savvy and ranging all over Southwest Florida.

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Cookeville poet's work displayed in NYC poster launch later this month
Cookeville Herald Citizen
by Megan Trotter Jeffery McCaleb displays his poem, “Family Tree,” along with those of several other poets who will likewise get to read their work at an event in New York later this month. Herald-Citizen Photo/Ty Kernea Cookeville poet Jeffery McCaleb ...