Rather, the patient ones will be given their recompense with no numerical limitations.

Qur’an (39:10)

Patiently endure whatever afflicts you, for it is of the greatest and most sufficient virtues to possess.

(via zuleikha)

(via rumiandshit)

Just another day…

Initially, I thought tomorrow would be a big day, one of the biggest tests of my life thus far. (six month MRI and the hype made my nerves jump a bit, I won’t front.) Humbly, I’ll admit I was wrong. No one truly knows the biggest day of their lives until they’re right in the midst of it. The biggest day of my life, if I have anything to say about it, won’t be in a hospital hearing a diagnosis or taking any sort of test. I’m hoping tomorrow will be a good day, but it’ll be just another day.

I don’t know when or where our biggest days will be, but that’s the beauty of it all. Not knowing when or where but knowing that one wise hand is writing it all for us. If it’s in a hospital, I pray it’s the day I start my dream job working with children who have suffered far more than I will ever know, being reminded that resilience and purity exist in a world consumed by chronic toxicity. If it’s in a hospital, then I pray it’s the day I bring in a little life into the world (my own little frizzball insha’Allah after meeting and marrying the love of my life of course, wherever he may be. Hey, girl’s gotta dream… it’s my manifesto, okay? ;)

But in all seriousness, the days you realize you’re not invincible, immune to pain or having your will tested… those are big days but they don’t have to be the defining ones. I think they’re the ones that lead to the perfect, defining moments making up our biggest days.

It’s interesting to think about. We spend months and years of our lives preparing for weddings, ceremonies, graduations, and exams but the biggest day of all, the day we stand before God carrying all our baggage, that’s the day we should be preparing a lifetime for. So tomorrow, well tomorrow will come and go and the world will keep spinning madly on. Tomorrow will be just another day and I’m ready. #samidoun

LONDON — Global cancer cases are projected to rise 75 percent by 2030, in part because many other diseases are being stamped out and more developing countries are adopting Western lifestyles linked to cancer, international cancer experts reported.

While population growth and aging explain much of the increase, at least one-fifth of the new cancer cases will likely be due to preventable factors, the researchers predict.

Cancers that are caused by infections, such as cervical cancer and some liver and stomach cancers, are falling. But experts say that decline will be outpaced by a surge in cancers linked to bad diet and exercise habits, smoking and drinking too much alcohol, such as cancers of the lung, colon and breast.

Researchers estimate that by 2030, the number of people affected by cancer in some of the poorest countries will increase by more than 90 percent. Previous health initiatives to save people from dying of infectious diseases such as malaria or AIDS also mean they are living long enough to develop cancer, which is normally associated with aging.

Experts said developing countries should learn from what’s happened in the West to avoid making similar mistakes.

“There’s no need for the lung cancer burden in the West to be transferred to developing countries,” said John Groopman of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore. He was not linked to the study.

He said health officials need to act now to avoid the future crush of cancer cases. “It’s a misconception that nothing can be done,” Groopman said. “If we employed cervical cancer screening and the vaccine (to prevent it), we could eliminate cervical cancer in this century,” he said.

The research was done by scientists at the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France, and the American Cancer Society. Freddie Bray, an IARC researcher who headed the study, described cancer as “a byproduct” of countries having increasededucation, income and longevity. The paper was published Friday in the journal Lancet Oncology.

Bray and colleagues estimated there would be 22.2 million new cancer cases in 184 countries by 2030, based on recent cancer trends and demographic projections from the United Nations. That’s up from an estimated 12.7 million cases in 2008. Bray acknowledged there were some uncertainties in the data, since cancer registries in Africa, Asia and Latin America covered less than 10 percent of the population.

In most developing countries, people are more often struck by infection-caused cancers. But in the future they will be battling not only those cancers, but also ones linked to lifestyle factors such as those of the lung, breast and colon.

Bray predicted current smoking rates in China would mean a spike in lung cancer cases in the next few decades, and he pointed out countries such as Uganda that already are facing a “double whammy” of cancer, both from infections and those cancers usually seen in the West.

Other experts said because cancer is such an expensive disease to treat, poor countries need to focus on prevention.

“Even developed countries can’t afford to pay for some of the newer, targeted cancer treatments,” said Raghib Ali, a cancer expert at Oxford University.

Ali said it might be possible to avoid one-third to one-half of future cancers by persuading people everywhere to eat healthier, quit smoking and exercise. “Unfortunately, these are a lot of the things that people don’t want to do,” he said.

___

Online:

www.lancet.com

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

keep-on-trucking:

You are unique. You do not need to follow other’s example. You can break the mould that other’s placed on you. Break out of the restraints of other people’s expectations, stand up and be different. Be the amazing, awesome person that you were created to be. I’m routing for you!
Peace in your day! K :)

keep-on-trucking:

You are unique. You do not need to follow other’s example. You can break the mould that other’s placed on you. Break out of the restraints of other people’s expectations, stand up and be different. Be the amazing, awesome person that you were created to be. I’m routing for you!

Peace in your day! K :)

amiiira:

A Palestinian child holds a sling shot during clashes between stone throwers and Israeli soldiers in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, near Ramallah, on May 25, 2012 following a protest against the confiscation of Palestinian land to expand the nearby Jewish settlement of Hallamish.  
AFP PHOTO/MUSA AL-SHAER 
High-res

amiiira:

A Palestinian child holds a sling shot during clashes between stone throwers and Israeli soldiers in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, near Ramallah, on May 25, 2012 following a protest against the confiscation of Palestinian land to expand the nearby Jewish settlement of Hallamish.  

AFP PHOTO/MUSA AL-SHAER 

Hind Al Husseini, the reason I decided to become a social worker. 
Following the Deir Yassin Massacre in 1948, a social worker by the name of Hind Al-Husseini took in 50 orphaned children she found wandering the streets of the Old City of Jerusalem. My grandmother and her younger siblings were among them. 
Two weeks later, she opened the Dar Al-Tifil (Home of the Arab child) school which has educated children ever since. She refused to ever refer to the school as an orphanage; it was home to anyone who stepped foot inside. My grandmother and her sisters all graduated from there and went on to become teachers.  
I will always be indebted to Sit Hind for all that she gave and all that she did for others, including my grandmother. I wouldn’t be sitting here writing this if it weren’t for her. God rest her soul. 
This is a picture of Sit Hind with some of the children at the Dar Al Tifil (my grandma is the girl on the right wearing the coat with the buttons.) It’s always a bit surreal to look at my grandmother’s old pictures.  High-res

Hind Al Husseini, the reason I decided to become a social worker. 

Following the Deir Yassin Massacre in 1948, a social worker by the name of Hind Al-Husseini took in 50 orphaned children she found wandering the streets of the Old City of Jerusalem. My grandmother and her younger siblings were among them.

Two weeks later, she opened the Dar Al-Tifil (Home of the Arab child) school which has educated children ever since. She refused to ever refer to the school as an orphanage; it was home to anyone who stepped foot inside. My grandmother and her sisters all graduated from there and went on to become teachers.  

I will always be indebted to Sit Hind for all that she gave and all that she did for others, including my grandmother. I wouldn’t be sitting here writing this if it weren’t for her. God rest her soul. 

This is a picture of Sit Hind with some of the children at the Dar Al Tifil (my grandma is the girl on the right wearing the coat with the buttons.) It’s always a bit surreal to look at my grandmother’s old pictures.