Recent Comments

I think your underselling your skill. Timing as they say is everything. Recognition of the right timing is called wisdom which is what I would say you have.

For Octo, Before having those resources Sanghani first had to create, plan, seed and sell his vision to those PEs. those are all great skills. Managing a growing company with institutional investors is also no joke. (Personally I hate PE investors because of all the reporting that's involved.) Then even with the resources of PEs Sanghani was leading the company to its exit.

I think the word "consistent" is what's wrong. Everyone is different. Some have more skills than others and some just have dumb luck. But selling any company for a billion+ takes mad skills.

Good luck with everything. A-fib is not as serious as some conditions, but it is still serious. And a major area of unmet need as far as pharmaceuticals are concerned.

I figured the low minutes had to do with stamina/durability issues and if he's built like a lamppost, that would make sense.

Hopefully we can get some mass to stick to him. My BiL had to eat 3500-4000 calories/day in college to get UP to 145...and that probably had more to do with the transmission he was holding at weigh-ins.

if your genetics suck, it does not matter.

friend of mine was in great shape...avid snow skier...died of massive heart attack at age 56

his dad...head of ROTC at Miss State (and former fighter pilot) also in great shape...died at age 56 of a massive heart attack

glad you made it!

my challenge is not as threatening...A-fib and SVT...had my second ablation March 26 (first was in 2015). fingers crossed this takes care of it

Thats way worse than me, but I only have two issues in my family, type 1 diabetes which is unlikely for me to develop at my age and prostate cancer, which based on my families history I will get around 80 and die of it 20 years later.

Having said that, I had an issue with burning (like a tore a hemriod) with not blood so I got scheduled for a colonoscopy ~1 year earlier than typical (age 43.9 instead of 45). I woke up and was rushed to the ER due to my heart rate dropping below 40 while under. Then I get the ekg, heart looks amazing, so still looking for why I went into A-fib. Sleep apnea study here i come!

I was something like 46 or 47 when I had my cardiac arrest. Full code, V-fib and V-tach, 12% survival rate (according to the AHA website at the time when I looked up what I had). 100% blockage in 2 coronary arteries and 60% blockage in the third*. You can eat healthier than most, exercise more than probably 90% or 95% of the people your age, not be obese, not have diabetes ... and if your genetics suck, it does not matter. Thankfully, a physician witnessed it happen while I was - ironically enough - out walking/exercising. CPR started rapidly. Eventually, I was brought back.

Make sure you do your regular check ups and if you have a family history of something, make sure to watch it closely. My dad died at 49 from a heart attack and I thought I was fine as I was fit. Not so, as it turned out.

* Note, there are only 2 main coronary arteries, so 1 of the 3 he was telling me about had to be a branch vessel.

Carrico closes out the shutout in the Commonwealth Clash

Man, 39 is way too young. I just hit 46, and the last 4 years or so have been a wave of "gone too soon" events. each one gives me more anxiety thinking about hidden issues I might have that could leave my boys without a dad.

No idea how this stadium is supposed to host the ACC Championship this year. There is no where near enough seating.

Wahoos fan seating is really odd. They basically have no seating behind either dugout all the way to the concourse. Forces alot of spectators down the line but still pretty far up from field.

5-0 on Yaeger bases loaded ground ball. Wahoos make a couple great defensive plays to prevent it getting blown open.

Ladies up 4-0 in 3rd. All small ball and Wahoo mistakes

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