by Sally Chew | May 08, 2008 06:54 AM
Here’s a look at a medical sewing project of mine that I’m sure you’ll find icky and hope you’ll also find cool. After a series of these Frankensteinian surgeries, I’ve accepted my pink-skinned, cancer-prone heritage (and confessed to roasting in baby oil as a teen), but the bandage-free healing process definitely turns heads.
Skin, being on the outside, is both grosser and harder to hide than our other organs when it becomes afflicted. When my own particular bumps come off, it’s sometimes for vanity and sometimes because they are cancerous or are expected to become so. But in none of those situations is there ever any possibility of avoiding the question, “What happened?”
I could answer, swaggering, that I wiped out on my motorcycle, but bumping into my bathroom cabinet is about a million times more likely.


I hate doctors' waiting rooms—the out-of-date magazines, the neutral wall colors, the crowds of sick people—and I've been in a lot of waiting rooms lately. In the last 60 days, I've seen the general practitioner, endocrinologist, weight-loss doctor, dermatologist, and dentist. I've also given blood (twice) and been to several labs.
I did it: I ran an entire half marathon—and beat my goal time! Saturday I joined more than 5,000 other runners on the boardwalk at Coney Island at the start of the
One of my favorite comfort foods is scrambled eggs. I love eggs pretty much any way you can prepare them, but scrambled with toast is what I crave when I’m not feeling well, think I’m not feeling well, or just need to give myself a good dose of food love.
Senator John McCain is trying to explain why
If you’re like me, the only thing more depressing than a cluttered mess at home is the thought of cleaning up the cluttered mess.
I was driving to a town in Colorado a couple of weeks ago and heard a teenage girl in the backseat of the car casually, laughingly accuse her friend of being "bipolar." Aha, I thought, another case of kids appropriating in-the-news health language for insult purposes. A relatively obscure (though horrible) mental illness had entered the hot soup of teen slang, probably via the whole 
When my wife and I bought our farm eight years ago, it seemed out of place for us. Despite growing up in rural Alabama, I know more about Gianni Versace than John Deere. Patti owns horses, but having livestock (or 1,200-pound lawn ornaments) does not make you a farmer. Neither does owning a farm.