“Not in Assisted Living (Yet): Dispatches from the Edge of Independence!

Welcome to my World---Woman, widow, senior citizen seeking to live out my days with a sense of whimsy as I search for inner peace and friendships. Jeez, that sounds like a profile on a dating app and I have zero interest in them, having lost my soul mate of 42 years. Life was good until it wasn't when my husband had a massive stroke and I spent the next 12 1/2 years as his caregiver. This blog has documented the pain and heartache of loss, my dark humor, my sweetest memories and, yes, even my pity parties and finally, moving past it all. And now I’m ready for a new start, in a new location---a continuum care campus in West Michigan, U.S.A. Some people say I have a quirky sense of humor that shows up from time to time in this blog. Others say I make some keen observations about life and growing older. Stick around, read a while. I'm sure we'll have things in common. Your comments are welcome and encouraged. Jean
Showing posts with label 23andMe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 23andMe. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

My 23andMe DNA Test Results and Other Junk


I’ve got so many projects started that I’m beginning to question what’s going on inside my head. I have a baby sweater in the works, two books part way read, an oil painting in the early stages and I’ve spent time working in my walk-in closet where I’ve barely made a dent---my goal is to try every single thing on, then be ruthless about the piles I sort the items to. I’ve also got some blog entries and a few poems in rough drafts. And then there’s the joyful day I spent poking around the 23andMe website looking at my DNA test results. I’ve got more Neanderthal gene “variants” than 70% of the 23andMe customers…oh, my! 23andMe has a forum for people to compare tests, ask questions and generally play around like people do on forums. I love forums and I found a thread about having a lot of Neanderthal genes where people were joking around about how they have to trim the hair on their toes or put Band-Aids on their knuckles from dragging them around. One woman confessed that once a month she wants to tear her husband’s arms off and suck the marrow out of his bones and now she knows why. All jokes aside, Neanderthal variants supposedly come into play with allergies and infertility issues which has my name written all over them.

Since my husband died six years ago this month, January’s have sent me into a woe-is-me, I’m a lonely widow’s tail spin. But I’m not depressed this year and I don’t feel lonely although I’m beginning to wonder if I’m subconsciously trying too hard to keep the boogieman at bay and that explains why I’m hopping from one project/task to another. Or maybe I just jumped into the deep end of the New Year’s Resolution pool and got myself overwhelmed like a kid in a candy store who can’t make up his mind what to buy with his birthday money. 

The baby sweater is easy to figure out. Both my niece’s need a bigger sweater for their gramma drawers at their cottages and I needed an excuse to evict the dog from the La-Z-Boy in the living room where he sits a hundred times more often than I do. I spend way too much time in the kitchen playing on the computer and I wanted to change that. I’ve been on a writing binge to beat all binges lately but I’m not creating any particularly interesting. I mean who really cares that I wrote about dumping a whole box of oatmeal all over the floor and I actually considered putting it back in the box to cook later? In case anyone DOES care, I did a quick calculation on how long it had been since my cleaner was at the house and I decided no amount of microwave heat was hot enough to kill twenty-five days of floor germs and there was no way I could have gotten the oatmeal back in the box under the ten second Oreo rule.

My 23andMe DNA test for health risks came back with no gene markers showing for the 54 health issues and diseases they tested for including Alzheimer’s, Macular Degeneration, breast cancer, Celiac Disease, Parkinson’s and a bunch of stuff I've never heard of and was written using a medical jargon I didn’t understand. I’d study that vocabulary and the links they provided if the 54 tests had shown some variants, but I’m happy not to have to take on that homework. On the fun side is trying to figure out how a little spit in a tube could tell them that I’m likely to consume more caffeine than the average duck in the gene pool, that I don’t sleep deep, am likely to tolerate lactose, am genetically predisposed to weigh more than average and I move around in my sleep…ALL TRUE! 

Even funnier is the fact that the test report included 27 silly but accurate traits. For example: I don’t have dimples but have “attached” shaped earlobes. They told me what hair texture I have, my toe length ratio, my finger length ratio, my eye color, the fact that I likely am not able to match a musical pitch, that I was born with lots of hair, that I don’t like cilantro and mosquitos love me, and that I prefer sweet over salty. The weirdest trait listed is they said I have dry, flaky earwax instead of wet earwax. “…the same genetic variant in the ABCC11 gene that determines the dry earwax type is also linked to lower levels of body odor.” Who knew! Isn’t that crazy. Reading my DNA results was all fun and games, considering I didn’t have any health risks on the 54 diseases and conditions pages. I was slightly worried about having the genetic marker for Alzheimer’s but I can quit wondering if my brain cells will run out of its hour glass long before I die. Yippie-Yi-Yo!

A few days before getting my test results I saw the movie, My Sister’s Keeper and if you read the book you’ll know it’s about a couple who had a daughter with leukemia who conceived another baby whose embryo was specifically picked to be a perfect donor match to her older sister. This was a fiction story that brings up the moral issue of editing human embryos but last November a Chinese scientist claimed he just did that with two babies. Until I got my DNA results back I didn’t realize how gene specific that could actually get. These babies in embryo form had their genes edited to “disable CCR5, a gene involved in allowing HIV to invade cells, which is how a virus infects a host.” Right or wrong a brave new world of medical possibilities is upon us. ©

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Birds Singing in the Forest: Inspiration for 2019


Searching for inspiration to spark a New Year’s blog post I came across these words stitched on fabric: “Use all the talents God gave you for the forest would be very quiet if only the best bird sang.” Being a person who drags around a lot of guilt for wasting time and my minor league talents, those words struck a chord. I’m good at hiding my voice in the shower because it isn’t as good as someone else’s. I’m not talking about actual singing talent, of course. I left that aspiration back in high school before years of asthma and old age came into play. Now I have trouble singing anything that doesn’t hurt my ears and send the dog off to another room. I’m talking about what I perceive as my God given talents and how I take them for granted. And don’t we all? Please tell me I’m not the only one. So instead of New Year’s Resolutions I’m cataloging my talents and vowing to appreciate and use them more in 2019.

1) I’m good at organizing things whether it’s a basket full of nuts, screws and washers or a complicated family genealogy book or---back in the day---flowers for a country club wedding with 500 guests. I can see the big picture and making sense out of all the snippets that feed into it. So how do I plan to put this talent to work in 2019? I'm starting with a walk-in closet I can barely walk into anymore. It needs a major purging of things I’ve been holding onto because my weight bounces all over the place. I’m afraid to let go of things that are too big or too small and please tell me why I’m holding on to worn out things that fit! It’s not like I don’t have the money to buy new clothing. Ohmygod, I wanted to write some New Year’s Resolutions that didn’t include the classic weight related ones and the first thing I put down on my bullet point list took me right to that place!

2) Painting. I’ve struggled with low self-esteem issues for years when it comes to not having enough talent to be another John Singer Sargent, portrait artist extraordinaire. But I do have some talent. So maybe it’s time for me to join the realm of backup singers, so to speak, who approaches art for the shear fun of dabbling. Maybe it’s time to change the style I’ve been working towards since my teens and go for something that frees what talent I do have to go where it’s never been before…abstract, funky, sideways...anywhere but in an upward trajectory towards a discipline I’ll never achieve.

3) Handcrafts: knitting, quilting and sewing. I still knit and still enjoy it and I definitely have/had a talent for sewing. I took tailoring classes back in college and actually made men's lined suit jackets that looked every bit as good as any you’d find in high end stores. I was a great seamstress but I lost my interest in sewing somewhere in the '80s when free time was harder to come by and we played dress-up less and less often. In the past decade I tried to revive my once-love of sewing by taking a class on quilting but I was bored quilting using a sewing machine. I’ve since made a couple of quilts entirely by hand, which was akin to meditation that I loved doing, but I’m losing my finger dexterity so I’ve hesitated taking on another quilt project. For 2019 I hope to find a couple of handcraft projects that inspires me. And if I don’t I’ll know by the end of the year that it’s time to cut my losses and run from my past successes.

4) I have a talent for long range planning, if you want to call it a talent. Some would call it a boring way to live but it’s served me well and it’s a skill that I couldn’t shake if I wanted to, having been raised by depression era parents who both knew what it was like suffer hardships. With that in mind, I took the DNA health test from 23andMe and the results should be coming the first part of January. I read somewhere that only 10% of the population wants to know if they have the gene markers for the health conditions the test reveals including Alzheimer’s. But isn’t knowing just an extension of gathering facts for long range planning? I might regret the decision because once you look at the test results you can’t un-see them and they say it affects you in ways that you can’t predict. For me, I think if I have the marker for Alzheimer’s I’d either obsess with estate planning or want to cram as much fun stuff into my life as I could while I can still remember doing it, which begs the question why don’t I do that now without knowing my health future? I could get hit by bus tomorrow---well except for the fact that there isn’t any bus service here in the suburbs where I generally roam. But you get the point. 

“Use all the talents God gave you for the forest would be very quiet if only the best bird sang.” Henry Van Dyke, an American author, educator and friend of President Woodrow Wilson is credited for writing those words. And for 2019 I hope to use that sentiment to keep my voice strong doing the things I have some talent for doing...and that includes being one of the birds that sings in the Blog Forest. ©

This entry was published a day earlier than my usual schedule so I could wish you all a Happy New Year! See you again on Saturday.