Rotary International Theme 2023-2024
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THE
ROWEL
Rotary Club of
Durham |
Rotary International President:
Gordon McInally Rotary District
5160 Governor:
Clair RobertsDurham Rotary President: Glenn Pulliam
_____________ Editor: Phil Price Publisher: Jen Liu |
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November 7, 2023
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2023 Calendar for Durham Rotary | |||||||
N o v e m b e r |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |||
5 | 6 |
7 Meeting Tipsy Tuesday at Mulberry Station (Glenn Pulliam) |
8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | |
12 | 13 |
14 Meeting Updates on Formula SAE project from CSU, Chico - Harold Kohler (Jen Liu) |
15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | |
19 | 20 |
21 No Meeting |
22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | |
26 | 27 |
28 No Meeting |
29 | 30 | |||
D e c e m b e r |
1 | 2 | |||||
3 | 4 |
5 No Meeting |
6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | |
10 | 11 |
12 Christmas Party at BCCC |
13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | |
17 | 18 |
19 Meeting TBA (Tom Knowles) |
20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | |
24 | 25 |
26 No Meeting |
27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | |
31 |
|
The
Meeting Opening
This was a social meeting at Mulberry Station. We did not have a traditional meeting
opening. There was no pledge, no song and no invocation. |
FUTURE
MEETINGS: Meetings will
be at the location noted, at 6:00 pm. |
November 14th: Board meeting at 5:00 PM prior to regular meeting at 6:00PM. Updates on Formula SAE project from CSU, Chico - Harold Kohler December 12th: Christmas Party at BCCC. December 19th: Tom Knowles at BCCC January: I assume it will be the 9th, but
I have received no information about meetings after December, except: January 20th: Crab Feed. |
Announcements
There were no announcements, but I will repeat an announcement
from the last Rowel.
The Christmas party has been moved to December 12th. The BCCC had a conflict
with December 5th. They were
double booked.
Introduction
of Visitors
There was no introduction of
visitors, however, Mary Sakuma of the Chico Noon Club (formerly President of
Durham Rotary) was again present. Also,
Jen Liu brought Bruce Burke, M.D., as a guest.
It should be noted that Dave Jessen was able to attend the
meeting.
.
None tonight..
Next Meeting
The next meeting will
be next week, November 14th at 6:00 pm. It will be back at the BCCC.
There will be a Board Meeting at 5:00 pm, prior to the regular meeting.
Membership
Bring guests who you think you can
interest in becoming a member. Think of
business owners or managers to bring. Your
dinner and your guest’s dinner will be paid for by the Club. Also, bring a guest to one of our occasional
social gatherings.
Go to the following Rotary International web site
for information on membership development:
https://my.rotary.org/en/learning-reference/learn-topic/membership
. From this website
there is access to membership development and other related information.
Tonight’s Meeting Program
Tonight’s meeting was a social meeting at Mulberry Station. There was no program. Just pizza and
beer. See below:
The
Rotary Foundation Donations
You can make a
difference in this world by helping people in need. Your gift can do some great
things, from supplying filters that clean people’s drinking water to empowering
local entrepreneurs to grow through business development training.
The Rotary
Foundation will use your gift to fund the life-changing work of Rotary members
who provide sustainable solutions to their communities’ most pressing needs.
But we need help from people like you who will take action and give the gift of
Rotary to make these projects possible.
When every
Rotarian gives every year, no challenge is too great for us to make a
difference. The minimum gift to The Rotary Foundation is $25.00. An
annual $100.00 gift is a sustaining member. Once your donations
accumulate to $1,000 you become a Paul Harris Fellow.
If you have any
questions ask Steve Heithecker.
It is possible to
learn more about The Rotary Foundation on the Rotary web site.
Your gift can be
made online or by sending Jessica Thorpe a check made out to The Rotary
Foundation to Durham Rotary, P.O. Box 383, Durham, California
95958.
Must Be Present to Win Drawing:
Not
tonight
Conclusion
The meeting then closed.
________________________________________________________________
From District 5160
TO: ALL Rotarians and Rotaractors
in District 5160
Hello
MVP Rotarians & Rotaractors!!
Make
sure you have your bases covered and register before November 30 to get the Early Bird Rate of
$280!
Register
NOW for District
5160 Conference - Field of Rotary Dreams
This is your personalized registration link - do
not forward this email
There
is also the option to add the SAC Brew Boat for Friday or the Sacramento Beer
Bike on Saturday (not included in the registration fee).
Kickoff
the 2024 District Conference at the Club Hospitality Night. The Great
Team Tailgate includes food, music, friends and YOU! This event is
included in your registration fee. A cash bar will be available.
Register
NOW for District
5160 Conference - Field of Rotary Dreams
This is your personalized registration link - do
not forward this email
You
won't want to miss this!
GO
TEAM!
Sheryl
Lack
Diablo
View Rotary Club of Walnut Creek
Field
of Rotary Dreams District Conference Chair
____________________________________________________________________________________
From Rotary International
Inside the mind of a writer living with Alzheimer’s
By Greg
O’Brien
I was out for my
evening run, but as so often happens lately, I was not alone. The monsters, all
in my mind, were gaining on me, ready to pounce. I had to sprint, a full-out
panic dash, to avoid capture at sundown, that moment when Alzheimer’s bears
down.
It had begun as a hazy
spring afternoon gave way to dusk on the waterfront in pastoral Brewster on
Cape Cod: a numbing fog that slowly crept in, first in misty sprays that
tingle, then in thick blankets that penetrate the mind and disorient the
senses. It had the smell of a chill wind from a raging North Atlantic storm,
the kind of nor’easter that takes the breath away.
Faster and faster,
beneath the thick canopy of oaks and red maples, the demons were chasing, their
screeching howls emerging from the dense, choking groundcover of honeysuckle
and myrtle. My heart was pounding, the sweat pouring. Alone, I was enveloped in
fear and full paranoia — and the fire in my brain was scorching.
At full gait, I dashed
past Brewster’s community garden with its impenetrable stalks of corn, past a
forest of moss-covered locust trees bent in grim, twisted forms, past the
ancient cemetery of sea captains, dead now for two centuries and more. A blazing
red sun dipped into Cape Cod Bay to be doused like a candle. The demons kept
coming on, but, with every ounce of my will, I beat them home. No doubt they
will return with a vengeance.
As they have.
Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia play tricks on the mind. My life, once
a long-distance run, is now a race for survival. So I
press on against the odds.
My family tree is a
guidepost in this struggle. Alzheimer’s took my maternal grandfather, my
mother, and my paternal uncle, and before my father’s death, he too was
diagnosed with dementia. The disease has now come for me. I’m a member of a
club I never wanted to join.
There are more than 6
million Americans living with Alzheimer’s, and an estimated 55 million people
with dementia worldwide, numbers expected to increase exponentially in years to
come with the growing population of older people. Changes in the brain — the
buildup of amyloid plaques and tau tangles that destroy neurons and lead to
Alzheimer’s — can start in one’s 40s without noticeable symptoms. And this is a
journey that can take 20 to 25 years to run its serpentine course.
I was diagnosed
several years ago with early-onset Alzheimer’s after numerous sports
concussions and a traumatic head injury — a severe bike accident without a
helmet — that doctors said unleashed a monster in the
making. I also carry the strongest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s, the
gene variant ApoE4, which appears to be on both sides of my family. Today, 60
percent of my short-term memory can be gone in seconds. I often don’t recognize
people I’ve known most of my life. I deal with rage, loss of place, loss of
self, loss of smell. I sometimes see things that aren’t there. I misplace
things regularly and seek to withdraw from social activities more and more. Not
long ago, preparing to brush my teeth, my brain told me to reach for my razor
rather than my toothbrush.
My heart said, “No …
bad dog!”
And at times,
privately, I cry the tears of a little boy because at 73, I feel the end looms.
Illustrations by James
Steinberg
On the plus side, I’ve
been blessed with a good IQ and what dementia experts call cognitive or
synaptic reserve. In essence, that’s the brain’s ability to improvise and find
alternate ways, other synapses, when the lights start to dim, says Rudy Tanzi,
the Harvard University and Massachusetts General Hospital Alzheimer’s expert on
the accumulation of beta-amyloid plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, and
inflammation of the brain.
But, despite years of
exercising body and brain, the reserve is draining. Doctors suggest that my
writing, the essence of my physical self, will likely be the last to go. I hope
they are correct. A career journalist, I diligently write everything down on my
laptop — my portable brain — so I don’t forget when, where, and why I’m
supposed to be. I also regularly email and text myself as a backup to remember.
It’s hard to maneuver through Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia without
strategies.
At times, I feel like
an ailing centipede: lots of legs, but they’re slowly falling off. In addition
to Alzheimer’s, I’ve been diagnosed with prostate cancer and deep depression
and anxiety. And two years ago, at New England Baptist Hospital in Boston, I
underwent 10 hours of spine reconstruction surgery as doctors cut through bone,
muscle, and nerves and inserted steel rods, plates, and screws, all to prevent
me from becoming paralyzed.
I’m sustained by
faith, hope, and Irish humor. My late mother, Virginia, the hero of my life —
I’m one of her 10 children — taught me through her heroic battle with
Alzheimer’s how to survive while experts race for a cure. A pity party, she
insisted, is just a party of one.
My mother also taught
me, in her own words, to fix on Service Above Self, the Rotary maxim, which
drives me today. I was the family caregiver on Cape Cod for both my parents,
and thus know all sides of this disease. (Last year in the U.S., unpaid caregivers
— physically and emotionally at risk from the stress of looking after loved
ones — provided people with dementia an estimated 18 billion hours of
care valued at $339.5 billion.) I was at my parents’ bedside when they passed
away, first my dad, then, four months later, my mom. I saw the torch then
passed to me.
Fortunately, I have my
own incredible support system — and I take full advantage of the resources
available at key Alzheimer’s websites, which are critical for all of us who are
fighting dementia. Accurate information is the coin of life. I’ve already mentioned
Tanzi, who, in addition to his academic duties, is the chair of the research
group at the Cure
Alzheimer’s Fund. And then there’s
Lisa Genova, who has a PhD in neuroscience from Harvard and is the author of
five best-selling novels, including Still Alice, which, when made into a movie,
won Julianne Moore a best actress Academy Award for her performance as an accomplished
professor with early-onset Alzheimer’s.
“Your brain is
amazing,” writes Genova in the introduction to her nonfiction book, Remember:
The Science of Memory and the Art of Forgetting. “Every day, it performs
miracles — it sees, hears, tastes, smells, and senses touch. It also feels
pain, pleasure, temperature, stress, and a wide range of
emotions. … Memory allows you to have a sense of who you are and who you’ve
been. If you’ve witnessed someone stripped bare of his or her personal history
by Alzheimer’s disease, you know firsthand how essential memory is to the
experience of being human.”
And, as Genova
acknowledges, “while memory is king, it’s also a bit of a dunce.” That is why
there is a distinct difference between forgetting where you put your car keys
and not knowing what the keys are for — between forgetting where you parked
your car and not knowing you have a car. I know that
difference full well.
One day, several years
ago when I was still driving, I took our trash to the landfill (a polite word
for the town dump). After discarding the trash, I was confused about how to get
home. I thought in the moment that I could call my wife, Mary Catherine, or one
of my kids for a ride. I slowly worked myself into a panic. My bright yellow
four-door Jeep was directly in front of me, but in the moment, my brain
wouldn’t tell me that it was my car. I was rescued by the timely arrival of a
friend who discerned my anxiety and pointed me toward my yellow Jeep.
The demons kept coming
on, but, with every ounce of my will, I beat them home. No doubt they will
return with a vengeance.
Thankfully, there is
optimism on the horizon with ongoing research to slow the pace of this disease
in people with mild cognitive impairment and early stages of Alzheimer’s. There
is also promise in key clinical trials and in brain health. In July, the Food
and Drug Administration approved the use of Leqembi,
created by the pharmaceutical company Biogen and Eisai; the approval marks the
first time the FDA has sanctioned a drug shown to slow the progression of
Alzheimer’s in early stages. The drug works to help clear the amyloid plaque
buildups in the brain that are associated with Alzheimer’s disease and the
destruction of neurons.
The approval is “a ray
of hope for millions of patients who are doing everything they can to enhance
and extend their lives and reduce their families’ burdens,” said George Vradenburg, the chair and co-founder of UsAgainstAlzheimer’s.
“People with early-stage disease now have a weapon to fight Alzheimer’s. Finally we have a drug that can slow the encroachment of
Alzheimer’s into our families’ lives and livelihoods.” (Vradenburg is another
one of my trusted, go-to resources; for information about brain health and
Alzheimer’s resources, check out his organization’s Brain Guide.)
In addition to early
diagnosis and clinical tests, brain health is key to holding Alzheimer’s
symptoms at bay. Tanzi has developed a useful acronym: SHIELD. Get plenty
of sleep, at least seven hours a night. Learn how to handle
stress, which can lead to the creation of more harmful amyloid
plaques. Interact with friends; socialization is the key to
fighting the urge to withdraw. Make time for daily exercise, which
promotes the creation of new brain cells — and to create new synapses between
brain cells, learn new things. Finally, eat a healthy
plant-based diet rich in vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts,
and seeds.
From the start, in his
groundbreaking research, Tanzi focused on amyloid plaques and tau tangles, the
prime markers for Alzheimer’s. He draws the analogy of a raging fire in the
brain (though for some of us, that experience is more than mere analogy). “We
need to put out the fire,” he says, “then save as many trees (neurons) as
possible.”
Which is why, Tanzi
insists, early detection is key. “This is the elephant in the room,” he says.
“Alzheimer’s is not generally diagnosed until the equivalent of congestive
heart failure and needed bypass.” This is wrong, he says, noting that by then
the “fire” in the brain is out of control.
Over the years, I’ve
lost several friends to the all-consuming conflagration that is Alzheimer’s. It
pains me and motivates me. Time is fleeting, and we need to find ways to
generate more funding for care and a cure.
Meanwhile, I’ve tried
to come to terms with my own race for survival. No surprise, I suppose, that,
given my background, I’ve found solace in the words of two great American
writers. It was the poet Robert Frost who wrote: “In three words I can sum up
everything I’ve learned about life. It goes on.”
Ernest Hemingway put
an exclamation point on this: “The world breaks everyone and afterward many are
strong at the broken places.”
Be strong in the
broken places.
A journalist, editor,
and publisher, Greg O’Brien is the author of On Pluto: Inside the Mind of Alzheimer’s, and he and
his family are the subject of the 2021 documentary Have You Heard
About Greg?
This story originally
appeared in the November 2023 issue of Rotary magazine.
Rotary’s Alzheimer’s/Dementia action group
supports and promotes Alzheimer’s and dementia-related projects of all sizes.
The Rotary
International web site is:
www.rotary.org
District 5160 is:
www.rotary5160.org The Durham Rotary
Club site is:
www.durhamrotary.org The Rowel Editor may be contacted at:
pbprice1784@gmail.com The deadline for the Rowel 6:30
am on Wednesdays. The Editor’s photographs published in the Rowel are
available, upon request, in their original file size. Those published were substantially
reduced in file size. |