A Story That Crossed an Ocean and Half a Decade

NY Times Article

Wow… this story definitely crossed several genres of walls for me.  A story of a US soldier who coincidentally picked up a drawing and a picture of a Japanese baby girl that transcended time to reunite them fifty+ years later.  That baby girl grew up not knowing her father at all but upon being reunited with the picture, she saw her father’s unspoken and unknown side:  that her father had adored her and carried her picture to his dying field.

War has never been pretty.  World War II was never an exception.  If anything, it seemed to bring that point out even more sharply with two big powers.  Iwo Jima was such a small island and losing several tens of thousands of soldiers seemed so tiny of a reason.  Yet, what this story was able to do was to make this war so much more personal for these 3 people involved.

I fought back a load of tears as I read this story.  Having allergies actually was a positive thing for once as it helped cover up the tears and the runny nose.  This story also softened my heart about wars because it showed that there’s always a personal side to something so tragic and terrible.

Please donate time on your PS3 and PC to help find cure!

I have lost my uncles, aunts, and grandparents, not to mention friends, to cancer.  Liver cancer, lung cancer, stomach cancer, you name it.  I’ve even lost my cousin to Leukemia.  That’s why I searched for ways to help in whatever I can do.

Enter Stanford University.  A professor there started studying the ways proteins change and become new molecules, also known as “folding”.  By studying and knowing how proteins fold, a cure for cancer can be found.  I have my PS3 and my 2 PCs doing this whenver I am not using them.  So yes, you do pay a bit extra for electricity usage but for a 200W PC, that equates to about $20/month extra!  If you have the new PS3 Slim, it only uses about $10/month of electricity!

By helping and contributing, I feel like Morpheus from Matrix…

“Now consider the alternative. What if I am right? What if the prophecy is true? What if tomorrow the war could be over? Isn’t that worth fighting for? Isn’t that worth dying for?”

Don’t you want to feel like you’ve done all you can?  So as to not have regrets?!  I sure do.  I want to know that I’ve done all I can in help fighting cancer.  Let’s make cancer history…  If you need help setting this up and running it, please ask and I’d be ecstatic to help!