August Timely Topics-school, sports, and sickness

In August we don’t have holidays to be busy with, but the start of the school year keeps families busy. Besides school, sports bring us together, which also brings illness together. I review these in this post.

updated August 1, 2025

August is a strange month. It’s the only month without a major holiday in the United States. Although the temperatures still feel hot and muggy, by the end of the month, students and teachers are back in school and college for the “fall” semester. (Of course, if you are south of the equator, your experience may look quite different.)

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Back to school, back to books

The main goal of school is education and reading is vital; books are the basic building blocks. That’s why Dolly Parton gives books away- read why here.

Inspiring Dreams: Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library

Dolly Parton, inspired by a childhood story and personal struggles, established Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, providing free books to children. Her own experience led to the song “Coat of Many Colors,” conveying the value of love over material possessions. Through this initiative, she aims to nurture children’s dreams through the joy of reading.

Keep reading

How much do you know about medicine?

Speaking of school, there are always tests. Here’s one for you. Find out how much you know about medicine by taking this quiz that I wrote especially for blog readers.

Friday Night Lights

Along with school comes sports. Although some go on year-round, many are tied to the school year, and football starts first in most places.

Even folks who don’t have a tie to a particular school adopt their local school’s team and follow faithfully. Fifty-plus years after my first football game as a college freshman, I still follow my team, the University of Oklahoma Sooners.

“Play like a champion today”

The OU Sooners football program has won 7 national championships and 7 players have received Heisman trophies. More importantly, the team never fails to show their fans exciting, hard-fought games. Even when they lose, they do so with plays that keep us guessing what’s going to happen next and wondering how such talented athletes can end up with the losing…

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Sore Throats and Sneezing

Although we think of colds and flu as winter illnesses, doctors start seeing patients with respiratory symptoms soon after school starts.

Places where people spend time together, like classrooms and dormitories, are prime places for people to share the viruses and bacteria that cause strep throat, colds, influenza, and COVID-19.

But there are steps we can take to lower the risk of exposure and illness. Check out the info in this post.

Head into the flu season with these 6 tips

We should all take influenza and COVID-19 seriously; consider my suggestions, talk to your personal doctor, keep up with recommendations from your local public health professionals, and do your part to keep your family and community well.

Keep reading

Exploring the HEART of health

As the season changes, ask yourself these questions about changes you might want or need to make in your life.

  1. What one activity can I start or improve to nurture my wellbeing?
  2. How is social media helping or hindering my growth as a person?
  3. What new or improved skill will make my life easier or more productive?

I’d love for you to follow this blog. I share information and inspiration to help you transform challenges into opportunities for learning and growth.

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Dr. Aletha

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myReader Rewards club- photo of woman on a bench reading a book

My Reader Rewards Club is a great way to earn free books and Bibles for yourself, friends, and family! Your journey to earning free faith-based products starts HERE.
(When you sign up through these links, I can earn free books too.)

As a member, you’ll have access to inspiring literature, Bibles, special promotional offers, and much more. Earning points is easy—you’ll receive 25 points just for signing up!

Watercress Words Bookstore

Bookshop.org is an online bookstore that financially supports local, independent bookstores.

We believe bookstores are essential to a healthy culture and they are dedicated to the common good.

Bookshop.org donates a portion of every sale to independent bookstores.

ADMISSIONS-a brain surgeon’s memoir- a review

Besides his long career in England, he regularly traveled to Nepal and Ukraine to teach and assist in surgeries, both simple and complicated. Those national surgeons were grateful to receive this advanced education not available in their own countries. Mr. Marsh hints that he derives his greatest career satisfaction from working with the professionals and the patients in his adopted countries and ending that association is perhaps harder than leaving practice in his own country.

Admissions: Life as a Brain Surgeon

By Henry Marsh

Admissions is the memoir of Henry Thomas Marsh CBE FRCS, a retired British neurosurgeon (I understand surgeons in Great Britain are usually addressed as Mister instead of Doctor.)   Mr. Marsh shares his thoughts and feelings as he reminisces over his distinguished 40-year career of performing intricate lifesaving brain surgeries.

Don’t let the subtitle, Life as a Brain Surgeon, deter you from reading it. Although he narrates details of surgeries he has performed, he refrains from “gory” descriptions (although as a physician I may not be the best judge). He explains enough of the anatomy and technique to be interesting and informative, but not so complicated to bore the lay reader.

The true gems in his narrative are not the anatomical details of the patients’ conditions but how those conditions affect their lives. In his “Life as a Brain Surgeon”, Mr. Marsh routinely treated life-threatening conditions, like brain hemorrhages, as well as potentially disabling ones- tumors that destroy the optic nerve, causing permanent blindness.

All too frequently he faced a dilemma-is the patient better off with or without surgery? In either case, his decision will have permanent life-changing implications for the patient and family, a task he holds seriously.

Mr. March wrote about some of his many patients and surgeries in another book, Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death, and Brain Surgery.

Besides his long career in England, he regularly traveled to Nepal and Ukraine to teach and assist in surgeries, both simple and complicated. Those national surgeons were grateful to receive this advanced education not available in their own countries. Mr. Marsh hints that he derives his greatest career satisfaction from working with the professionals and the patients in his adopted countries and ending that association is perhaps harder than leaving practice in his own country.

I don’t know for how much longer I will feel able to be of use here, or whether I will return, but it seems I am still wanted.

Anticipating his retirement, Mr. Marsh buys a run-down lakeside cottage where he hopes to “cope with retirement”, pursuing his hobby of woodworking. But before he can do that, he needs to spend considerable time and energy renovating it, a task proving more involved than he anticipated.

His narrative moves back and forth from his hospital in London, his cottage in Oxford, and trips to Nepal and Ukraine as he wraps up his work there and says goodbye to the surgeons who are now friends as well as colleagues.

Mr. Marsh also reminisces about his childhood and parents, his schooling, two marriages, and his children.  And after a lengthy career of helping others cheat death, he ponders how his own will happen.

As we lie dying, many of us will keep a little fragment of hope alive in a corner of our minds, and only near the very end do we finally turn our face to the wall and give up the ghost.

I think Mr. Marsh wrote his memoir more for himself than for others, but I am glad he shares it. Reading his candid reflection on a life far different from ours is entertaining yet deeply thought-provoking. Perhaps reading his book will spur us to look similarly at our “life as a…..” and be pleased with what we see.

“Thank you NetGalley and publisher for sending this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.”

Professional Reader 25 Book Reviews

And Finally: Matters of Life and Death

Mr. Marsh continues his narrative with a look at his post-retirement life which unfortunately has been marred by the onset of a serious illness. As mentioned in my review of Admissions, he has pondered the end of life and wondered how he would face it; in And Finally, he answers that question.

I’ve just finished reading it so please follow Watercress Words so you will know when I publish my review of And Finally: Matters of Life and Death.

Hear from Dr. Marsh himself in this short interview.

exploring the HEART of health

I appreciate Dr. Marsh’s work and his willingness to share his experiences, wisdom, and insights. Although we practiced on opposite sides of the ocean in vastly different health systems, I can identify with his thoughts and feelings, and like him am learning to “cope with retirement” after a medical career.

Thanks for reading.

Dr. Aletha

Do you know that a neurosurgeon once ran for president of the United States? I wrote about him in this post.