Life has no guarantees. No one ever promises we'll sail easily through life, fall into the lap of a loving family, find the love of our lives, land a good and stable job, and have the perfect number of children, houses, cars, and toys. That brings me to health. No guarantees here either. No one ever predicted I would get cancer. But I did. And while maybe it's a blessing I had no advance warning, the future would certainly be much more clear if it came with absolutes. It sure would be nice -- even now, 36 years into my life -- to hear the words: you will absolutely never get cancer -- again.
As soon as Joey hopped in the car after school today, he looked at his little brother and announced, "If you have two frogs and one more comes along, then you have three."
Joey is in kindergarten, and he is learning math -- specifically, he's learning to add. That's it. Adding, and nothing more. I know this because I followed his frog announcement with, "What if you have two frogs and you take one away?"
"That won't happen," Joey declared.
"Why?" I asked.
"It just won't," he assured me.
For Joey, life has absolutes. He is absolutely certain there is nothing more to the frog equation than what he knows on this very day. Fortunately for him, the mechanics of math -- and of life -- will unfold slowly. And it won't be a shock when he learns frogs can actually be taken away. I just hope he isn't blindsided by all the other unpredictabilities that await him. I guess that's why he has parents -- to prepare him for the uncertain events of the world.
Joey loves math. I'm glad. Because in the craziness of life, he can fall back on the comfort of numbers -- where there actually are a few absolutes. After all, if you have two frogs and one more comes along, then you have three. There's no way around that one.


Smoking is not an easy habit to break, and of the many methods tried, only a handful seem to work. Of the methods that do seem to work -- nicotine-replacement products; bupropion drugs; counseling; classes; calling a helpline or talking to a health professional -- younger smokers between the ages of 16 and 24 years who smoke and try to quit only use one of the recommended methods of help by talking to a professional. Because of this, younger smokers are less likely to be successful in quitting, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
I woke yesterday morning to voices on the Today Show telling me that the use of hair dye is linked to incidences of lymphoma -- 







