View allAll Photos Tagged hernia

i won't catch a hernia

will this do, marky mark ?

san rafael ca august 2020

it's fckn hilARious i put this guy up today... think it was during the Woodward fire. i swear that toll troll fire in Napa started right after i put this up, so this is on me guys. also the power going out. also this heat wave that's not gonna fuck off for a week? two weeks? what about that as of Friday you go to jail for being homeless. & this whole authoritarianism with its ass hanging allllll the way out. this is pure ass. & my a sstring broke!

fuck!

Since I discovered that I had a hiatus hernia, years ago, there are certain things I cannot have. Over the years I've got used to it, but there are one or two things that I really do still miss.

 

I don't mind no alcohol and can cook with it if I'm careful. I've got used to drinking black coffee, as white coffee is on the "no no" list. I hate chewing gum, so would never miss it.

 

I have to be careful with tomatoes, just not too many and only ripe ones, but can eat ripe cherry tomatoes.

 

The one thing I do miss even after 15 years plus is Coco-Cola, fizzy drinks are definitely on that wretched "no no list."

 

So when Graham was offered two cans of Coco-Cola yesterday by a friend I was dark green with envy and am having a bad day trying not to open the last can, just for a tiny taste ... If I do, it'll hurt. I just have to remember that!!

 

www.flickr.com/groups/2016_one_photo_each_day/

 

Thank you for your favourites. :O)

After nearly a month of building, close to ten thousand pieces and two and a half hernias trying to lift it, Sucellus is officially finished!

She measures in at 125 studs long (137 if you include the antennae),46 studs tall, 24 studs wide and weighs around 30 LBS. That makes it the biggest SHIP I have ever built and it's the longest I've ever spent on a single MOC.

 

Now for some fantastically futuristic storytelling!

In the year 2140, Earth's temperature has climbed to unlivable heights. These temperatures have made it impossible to grow crops and going outside for a walk would kill you in five minutes flat. To solve both of these problems, NASA launched Sucellus, the first of many agriculture ships into orbit around the sun. The curved side of the ship faces the sun and can house millions of crops of varied species it has large ventilation fans to expel excess heat and an extremely thick hull to protect the crops and crewmen from the dangerous radiation.

 

The flat side of the ship solves the other problem on Earth. This side houses hundreds of thousands of civilians. Each home has a breathtaking galaxy view and all the fresh fruits and veggies you can eat. This side is facing away from the sun so most of the radiation is blocked.

Within the next twenty years, at least fifty of these ships will orbit the sun. Some will be modified to carry livestock, factories, and even recreational facilities. Thus creating a home away from home.

 

The End?

 

That's the idea anyway. I just want to take a second to thank everyone involved in SHIPtember for getting me off my ass and building again. Everyone from the organizers to the people crazy enough to build a SHIP in a month. With all the amazing WIPs being posted, it really motivated me to build to the best of my abilities and for that I thank you all!

 

After nearly a month of building, close to ten thousand pieces and two and a half hernias trying to lift it, Sucellus is officially finished!

She measures in at 125 studs long (137 if you include the antennae),46 studs tall, 24 studs wide and weighs around 30 LBS. That makes it the biggest SHIP I have ever built and it's the longest I've ever spent on a single MOC.

 

Now for some fantastically futuristic storytelling!

In the year 2140, Earth's temperature has climbed to unlivable heights. These temperatures have made it impossible to grow crops and going outside for a walk would kill you in five minutes flat. To solve both of these problems, NASA launched Sucellus, the first of many agriculture ships into orbit around the sun. The curved side of the ship faces the sun and can house millions of crops of varied species it has large ventilation fans to expel excess heat and an extremely thick hull to protect the crops and crewmen from the dangerous radiation.

 

The flat side of the ship solves the other problem on Earth. This side houses hundreds of thousands of civilians. Each home has a breathtaking galaxy view and all the fresh fruits and veggies you can eat. This side is facing away from the sun so most of the radiation is blocked.

Within the next twenty years, at least fifty of these ships will orbit the sun. Some will be modified to carry livestock, factories, and even recreational facilities. Thus creating a home away from home.

 

The End?

 

That's the idea anyway. I just want to take a second to thank everyone involved in SHIPtember for getting me off my ass and building again. Everyone from the organizers to the people crazy enough to build a SHIP in a month. With all the amazing WIPs being posted, it really motivated me to build to the best of my abilities and for that I thank you all!

 

Busting out at the seams !

my thanks for your well wishes my dear friends...

the surgery went well just over two hours under a general ...

four days on ,a seven inch scar above my navel....many drugs and a few nights of discomfort...

im at last getting there....

 

hope this finds you all well......

 

much love and thanks

andrew...xx

 

(for those of you that did not know)

it was umbilical inguinal open hernia surgery...complete with polyester mesh...xx

Very rustic.

No TV, no internet, showers built for a very small pygmy.

Not very important to Lila and I since were out all day sight seeing.

No elevators, so you have to hire a buss boy to schlepp your bags to your room. Unless you want to grow a king size hernia.

 

My health issues are receding into the past. I have been sleeping very well ever since we started the vacation.

I have decided to decline the sleep apnea machine because it's way too invasive for me and reminds me of being on life support. I won't wear that mask!

Everything else on me seems to be working OK, so I guess I needed that vacation.

After his successful operation performed on 8/17/07 to repair a diaphragmatic hernia.

He's all better now and looking forwarded to investigating his Christmas stocking.

Then after I got back from Taiwan, I spent two days sitting up on the 3rd floor prepping this post - my spinal hernia didn't like it and I woke up the following morning with the most pain I've ever felt in my entire life - I thought last time was bad but this was just horrible to the point where I was biting my pillow and screaming into it. I eventually started to punch the walls too. I had no idea how I was going to get through the pain. None of the painkillers I had worked either and the TENS (electrical therapy) unit did nothing.

 

Wifey took me to the hospital to get an epidural injection in the spine to alleviate the pain and I layed in bed for a week. The pain was so bad I could not sit at all and if it wasn't for the washlet we had at home, I could not even wipe my botty properly.

 

Laying in bed for a week not being able to do anything has you thinking a lot about stuff - and studying too about my condition - Sciatica - pain that runs down the Sciatic Nerve which is caused by a bulging or herniated disc.

 

I want to share my knowledge about the condition with others so will write up a different post on the subject.

 

I would like to thank the folks who have been sending me messages of encouragement and also thought that I would mention that during the same period, I continued to get messages from others who complained about how I "let the Culture Japan brand die" by working on Smart Doll and failing to update the site.

 

In life there will always be folks out there who don't understand so don't waste time explaining yourself because people who support you don't need to hear it - and people who hate you won't want to listen anyway.

 

View more at www.dannychoo.com/en/post/27315/A+Week+in+Tokyo+201509.html

This one is specially for Wim Zilver. Wim lies at this moment in a hospital with a hernia.

Please support him by watching his stream, www.flickr.com/photos/16209124@N00/ ,and send him a message.

 

From PeterJ ©

View On Black

 

After nearly a month of building, close to ten thousand pieces and two and a half hernias trying to lift it, Sucellus is officially finished!

She measures in at 125 studs long (137 if you include the antennae),46 studs tall, 24 studs wide and weighs around 30 LBS. That makes it the biggest SHIP I have ever built and it's the longest I've ever spent on a single MOC.

 

Now for some fantastically futuristic storytelling!

In the year 2140, Earth's temperature has climbed to unlivable heights. These temperatures have made it impossible to grow crops and going outside for a walk would kill you in five minutes flat. To solve both of these problems, NASA launched Sucellus, the first of many agriculture ships into orbit around the sun. The curved side of the ship faces the sun and can house millions of crops of varied species it has large ventilation fans to expel excess heat and an extremely thick hull to protect the crops and crewmen from the dangerous radiation.

 

The flat side of the ship solves the other problem on Earth. This side houses hundreds of thousands of civilians. Each home has a breathtaking galaxy view and all the fresh fruits and veggies you can eat. This side is facing away from the sun so most of the radiation is blocked.

Within the next twenty years, at least fifty of these ships will orbit the sun. Some will be modified to carry livestock, factories, and even recreational facilities. Thus creating a home away from home.

 

The End?

 

That's the idea anyway. I just want to take a second to thank everyone involved in SHIPtember for getting me off my ass and building again. Everyone from the organizers to the people crazy enough to build a SHIP in a month. With all the amazing WIPs being posted, it really motivated me to build to the best of my abilities and for that I thank you all!

 

I know him as "John". He knows me as Dr. Archer. He is 60. I haven't seen him in about 6 years and the time has worn him poorly. He sits, slouched, unshaven, plastic sandals and nails uncut. He can't reach them. He has a hernia, needs a colonoscopy for bleeding from his bottom. Mostly though he says he doesn't know if its worth it because he doesn't want to live. I ask if he wants to die. No. And he doesn't want to live. He isn't living. Everyday is the same monotony for him and his wife and the cat. They live at the Holiday Motel.

 

I reel back to 1971 when my family took the trip to California and the dream of the west was born in me. We traveled in the Ford station wagon from Corpus Christi to San Francisco. My brother and I sat facing each other in the back of the wagon, the jump seats the station wagons had back then. He was 11. I was 7. My sisters, ten years older and a year a part from each other in the middle seat. My brother sang "I don't want a pickle, I just want to ride my motorsickle" endlessly. He sang more when I begged him to stop. He and I watched to the black blotches of rubber lobbing off behind the car in Arizona, asphalt griddle, wondering what those black things were...and then the tire blew. Basically melted off the steel belted radials.

 

Every night we pulled in to a travel lodge of some sort, mostly like the Holiday Motel. Had to have a pool so that my mom could pour our pent adrenaline into the absorbing, diluting water. Otherwise it would be chaos. Plus it was a million tire-melting degrees. These hotels were clean, full of families on vacations. The rooms were crisp sheets, fake wood paneled, and a working ice machine. My sister taught me to swim on that trip and, like all my siblings, I took to the water well after the initial terror of having my head under water.

 

We made our way along the California coast. My brother drank in the waves. He became a surfer on that trip even though he did not touch a board. There is a picture of him and me looking at the rip tide going out at sunset at Surfside, CA near Huntington Beach. I remember it. We were out there alone, seeing the sun fall in to western water for the first time and he looked at me and said: I am coming back. I will live here. And he did.

 

We made it to San Francisco and China Town. We discovered Chinese plums, which my brother and I ate literal quart bags of. They were incredibly sour and yummy. We each got little wooden boxes with secret panels to slide to reveal a wooden lever to open the box. Had that until I lost it in college. I was afraid my mom really was going to trade me in for a nice Chinese boy like she had been saying for years. I was able to tell her I was afraid of that and she told me she never would do that and that she loved me more than anything. I felt better again right away. It was a great, crazy, classic American road trip.

 

I looked up and John was tearing up. We had sat in silence for a minute or so. Coming to see me was a really big deal for him that day. Just getting out of there, away from the microwave and the pop tarts and the single burner and the ridiculous maid service that keeps the room filthy. He said it felt good just to move a little. I made sure to schedule all his tests one at a time, and made sure he had more appointments. I teared up too. I put my hand on his arm and told him I was glad he came back for a visit and I looked forward to seeing him next week.

 

Bend, OR, 2010. Nikon D700, natural light

Worth Ranch from the point at the top of hernia hill

Male Great Blue Heron (Ardea hernias) bringing home a new stick for the upcoming mating season's nest. Found at Viera Wetlands.

 

After nearly a month of building, close to ten thousand pieces and two and a half hernias trying to lift it, Sucellus is officially finished!

She measures in at 125 studs long (137 if you include the antennae),46 studs tall, 24 studs wide and weighs around 30 LBS. That makes it the biggest SHIP I have ever built and it's the longest I've ever spent on a single MOC.

 

Now for some fantastically futuristic storytelling!

In the year 2140, Earth's temperature has climbed to unlivable heights. These temperatures have made it impossible to grow crops and going outside for a walk would kill you in five minutes flat. To solve both of these problems, NASA launched Sucellus, the first of many agriculture ships into orbit around the sun. The curved side of the ship faces the sun and can house millions of crops of varied species it has large ventilation fans to expel excess heat and an extremely thick hull to protect the crops and crewmen from the dangerous radiation.

 

The flat side of the ship solves the other problem on Earth. This side houses hundreds of thousands of civilians. Each home has a breathtaking galaxy view and all the fresh fruits and veggies you can eat. This side is facing away from the sun so most of the radiation is blocked.

Within the next twenty years, at least fifty of these ships will orbit the sun. Some will be modified to carry livestock, factories, and even recreational facilities. Thus creating a home away from home.

 

The End?

 

That's the idea anyway. I just want to take a second to thank everyone involved in SHIPtember for getting me off my ass and building again. Everyone from the organizers to the people crazy enough to build a SHIP in a month. With all the amazing WIPs being posted, it really motivated me to build to the best of my abilities and for that I thank you all!

 

Techniek (bewerking):Tijdens mijn revalidatie na mijn hernia ok moet ik veel wandelen. Elke dag loop ik langs een stuk riet bij de molens van Kinderdijk waar je deze en andere vogels volop kan horen!

canon 7D + canon300mmF4Lis+1.4 canon extender

1/1250sec F5,6 iso400

afstand naar object 7.6m

uit de hand

Flinke crop ong. 25% van origineel

  

© 2011 Wimzilver

Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my permission.

 

Please view LARGE!

Well little Norman had his castration & hernia repair done yesterday and he is now sporting a very fetching cone! But he is not impressed one bit!

Juno, a 4 month old kelpie, was run over and developed a diaphragmatic hernia. We performed surgery to repair the hernia. Most of her liver had herniated into her chest. Quite a critical surgery. Thankfully she recovered brilliantly from the surgery.

copyright 2017 Chris Hall

 

Thanks for all the previous comments and group invitations. Please don't feel obligated to comment here.

 

Please be advised that our images are fully protected by US Copyright Law. The images may not be downloaded for personal, commercial or educational use, copied to blogs, personal websites, used as wallpaper, screensavers, or be deeplinked, etc. With NO Exceptions. If you would like to use an image, you MUST contact us to obtain written permission. Acknowledging the source of the copyrighted material does not substitute for obtaining written permission.

 

If you would like to use one of our images for commercial use or if you find a picture that you would like for framing, please contact us at chrishall713@gmail.com for services we have available

Ovvero.

Visto che le ernie non mi permettono

di portare pesi

nè di camminare a lungo

non mi resta che fotografare tutti gli angoli di casa...

e quindi cazzeggiare :-)

 

p.s.

no fotosciòp

è il vero colore che vedo al tramonto :-)

   

Second hernia surgery done. End of my extended holiday from work less than eight weeks away. At that point I will be editing the above photo in Aviary and using the Orientation tool to rotate it 180° but, until then I will continue to purchase lottery tickets, be thankful for having been given this wonderful period of the 'good life' and secretly hope that the doctor has f***ed up again! Ha! HBW

Whenever there is a Live Demo in the operating room (as in they do the surgery in the operating room on the 3rd floor and the view is transferred to our Auditorium in the 8th Floor), the Director of the Hospital always wants me to take pictures of the Guest Doctor performing the surgery and straight away print the pictures to be given as presents.

 

This time, I'm using Canon 7D with the 18-135mm kit lens the hospital just bought. Usually I used Sony point and shot.

 

Pretty hard to take pictures with doctors body blocking the view. I only got the light from the Surgical Lamp pointing from above and the room light.

 

In this image, I tweaked the White Balance using 2500K (as suggested by Joe McNally's Hot Shoes Diaries).

 

By the way, I choose this one to print and give to the guest doctor. :)

 

Comments are welcome.

This sign is part of a bark medicine stall in Cameroon, giving treatment for chlamydia, hemorrhoids, jaundice, typhoid, fibromes, hepatitis. poison de nuite, couches de nuite, couche de nuit, bad teeth, ver de femme, weak sex, faibless sexuelles, demon graison vaginal, obesity, hernia, tension, m.s.t, etc

Cameroon like other West African Countries has an amazing amount of cool and interesting painted signs and urban art.

It was a night of little sleep.

Restlessness.

The boy went back to the ER at 11:30 p.m.

He was home 3 hours later with a cauterized throat.

But peace knowing that he was ok.

 

My anxiety was then with me.

Calls were made to the doctor.

Tears were shed.

A surgery scheduled for Tuesday.

 

Work helped to keep my mind off medical issues.

Helped me remember that everything was going to be ok.

 

Still, I couldn't shake the tired eyes.

Really tired eyes today.

 

Now You

52 of You - Color

14/52

Update 28 March 2009

 

Ollie was only with me for a few months but he stole my heart. This morning I helped him cross the bridge. He is no longer in pain but my heart is breaking.

 

You have your angel wings now sweet boy!

 

Original Post 8 March 2009

 

Here is sweet baby Ollie! He is such a little character. His spirit is holding up well but his little body is not. His inoperable perineal hernia has gotten much larger and his seizures are more frequent and more severe.

 

I will keep him happy for as long as I can. When I brought him home from the shelter in November I knew it would be one day at a time. He doesn't feel sorry for himself and I won't feel sorry for him either. He just wants to be happy! I will just enjoy him and take care of him one day at a time!

 

We could all take lessons from this little fellow. This strong little spirit stays happy and mobile with the following afflictions:

 

Cryptorchid

BSD (Alopecia X)

Perineal Hernia

Severe Muscle Wasting

Cataracts

Dental Decay

Arthritic Legs

 

For those that want to see what the perineal hernia looks like here is a guest pass to a private photo on my Flickr site:

flickr.com/gp/donnitamae/vgB0x6

 

IMG_2223 8x10

 

donnitamae.wordpress.com/2009/03/28/ollie-has-angel-wings/

Ileostomy hernia and some sort of lump removed . Painful but going well

 

Lump most likely scar tissue from the three previous surgeries . It's been checked out

Do you ever sit down and start drawing without anything in particular in mind?

You just keep on doodling along, and you get the feeling you should just quit. But, instead you just keep building on your bad beginning and it all just gets weirder and more disturbing? Then you realize what you have done, and think it would be best to tear it up maybe burn it, but most definitely never show it to anyone else... let alone upload it to flickr.

(Voluminous left external inguinal hernia freak thing.)

ink and colored pencils on bristol board 6" x 9"

 

Thanks Mike

   

An umbilical hernia is a serious medical condition that may result in a painful strangulated hernia if not treated.Log on herniaonline.com/

 

"... tomorrow, I'll order a coke, on a tall glass, and a large straw..."

Common Hawkers caught in the act!! We were watching males hunting(we thought) when 1 dived into the reeds and dragged out a female - this happened next!! Sorry it's old stuff but we have been constrained by op's (me hernia and Heidi dog cruciate No2). Now I'm less pre-occupied will try to be more active (still old stuff for now!!).

The Hernia Center of Southern California is home to Dr. David Albin and Dr. Michael Albin, sports hernia surgeons that have performed over 12,000 hernia surgeries. Log on herniaonline.com/

 

Worlds Apart One Heart 2011 Medical Clinic in Carigara, Leyte, Philippines

Abdominal Surgery Specialists, a part of the Nicholson Clinic, is led by Dr. Nick Nicholson, one of the most experienced laparoscopic surgeons in the country. Dr. Nicholson has performed over 10,000 minimally invasive procedures and instructs surgeons around the world on behalf of Johnson & Johnson and W.L. Gore & Associates. Call us today (844) 724-6287 or visit: www.abdominalsurgeryspecialists.com/

A hiatus hernia or hiatal hernia is the protrusion (or herniation) of the upper part of the stomach into the thorax through a tear or weakness in the diaphragm.Knowing about Hernia with @ docturs.com/dd/pg/groups/17578/hiatus-hernia/

 

The Hernia Center of Southern California is the premier provider of reliable and expertly performed inguinalhernia surgeries.Log on herniaonline.com/

 

The type of hernia repair technique used can significantly affect the hernia surgery recovery time. Patients tend to recover quicker from a laparoscopic hernia repair as opposed to an open hernia repair.Log on herniaonline.com/

 

Similar to the UK Grey Heron - Myakka State Park

How to Get Rid Of Hiatal Hernia There is the bead condition that becomes the indication of hiatal hernia. If you get the symptoms such as heartburn feeling, it can be the indication that you get the hiatal hernia. You should know about this condition and need to find the best way of how to get

 

www.howgetrid.net/how-to-get-rid-of-hiatal-hernia/

my hernia belly button...it's kinda cute...

An average of 20% of babies are born with an umbilical hernia. Usually, the umbilical hernia will heal on its own soon after birth.Log on herniaonline.com/

 

According to the National Center for Health Statistics, inguinal hernias account for 75% of abdominal wall hernias. Log on herniaonline.com/

 

The Hernia Center of Southern California is a team of skilled and experienced surgeons that is dedicated to providing you with the best Workers' Comp hernia surgery available. Log on herniaonline.com/

 

Opaque watercolors. Not sure if it's finished. I had hernia surgery 05/31. Haven't been able to do much but draw, read & watch tv during recovery. This is the first time I've been able to sit long enough at the computer to scan & upload these images.

An inguinal hernia is a serious medical condition that requires immediate medical attention.Log on herniaonline.com/

 

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