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Holy Water Couldn't Save My Husband. MAHA Wouldn't Have Either.
Holy Water Couldn't Save My Husband. MAHA Wouldn't Have Either.

New York Times

time11 hours ago

  • Health
  • New York Times

Holy Water Couldn't Save My Husband. MAHA Wouldn't Have Either.

On a sunny spring morning in 2006, while my husband, Mike, was showering, I secretly sprinkled his bath towel with holy water I had gotten from a friend who had used holy water from the same source on her husband. Her husband went on to survive his cancer, so I happily accepted the plastic container filled with water from a sacred site in Europe. It couldn't hurt, right? Watching Mike dry himself off, I tapped into my childhood Catholicism and faith in a benevolent God as I pictured the magic water covering him with a protective layer. I never told Mike I did this. And I still feel guilty that I did. Neither of us went to church; we were agnostics. He would have been very annoyed. He didn't believe in magic. But we were six months into multiple brain surgeries and complications stemming from what was described to us as a benign tumor that had nonetheless taken over his midbrain. Thanks to hours on the internet, I had tried to Nancy Drew my way to the cause of his tumor, which devolved into my dabbling in conspiracy theories, and now I was out of options. That was the last morning Mike would ever shower in our home. It was the last time he would see our 1-year-old boy wake up in his crib. When Mike received his craniopharyngioma diagnosis in October 2005, he was given a 95 percent survival rate at five years out, but he was dead nine months later. He spent many of those months hospitalized, undergoing radiation therapy, blind, with no short-term memory and unable to care for himself, enduring over a dozen brain surgeries and other procedures. I watched the disappearance of light from his eyes as this once brilliantly funny man looked up at me from his hospital bed each morning, kind but emotionally flat, unsure if I was arriving for the first time that day or if I was just returning from the bathroom. I have a picture in a small album that shows Mike in the hospital holding our son, looking down at him quizzically but unaffected, as though the baby were a strange rock or a loaf of bread. The doctors surely tired of my asking, 'When will he be back to normal?' and 'When will this be over?' There is nothing quite like feeling you have no agency to affect your circumstances. Up until then, my efficacy had always paid off. I got all A's, was editor of my public high school newspaper and landed a free ride to an Ivy League school for my Ph.D. Lots of agency. But I could not outorganize, outresearch, outcharm or outwork a tumor. So I turned to magic. It wasn't just the holy water. I started keeping a little heart-shaped healing stone in my pocket for luck and brought him fresh berries from home each day. I read about the anti-inflammatory properties of berries online, so I fed them to Mike and pictured the berries shrinking the golf-ball-size tumor in the middle of his head. I started praying again for the first time since middle school. You find yourself bargaining in those moments. 'I'll never ask for anything again if you just get Mike better.' Well, he didn't. So I guess I can keep asking God for things. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Chandigarh: Paneer found spurious, trader to face action, says health department
Chandigarh: Paneer found spurious, trader to face action, says health department

Hindustan Times

time15 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Chandigarh: Paneer found spurious, trader to face action, says health department

A week after the food safety administration of the health department seized 450-kg paneer from a shop in house number 714/2 of Bapu Dham Colony, Sector 26, lab reports have confirmed that the samples were unsafe and substandard. Following the test results, the department disposed of the seized paneer at the Municipal Corporation's waste disposal plant. The paneer was seized during a surprise raid at 7 am on June 11 which was stored in the shop as well as a vehicle parked outside the premises. The department has stated that appropriate action will be taken against the shop owner under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006. The department warned that anyone found selling or using substandard or unsafe paneer would face strict action. The department urged the residents to make purchases only from licensed and authentic sources carrying FSSAI licence. The residents have also been urged to report any suspected adulteration or quality issues to the department of food safety at Government Multi-Specialty Hospital, Sector 16, Chandigarh, or lodge complaints through the FSSAI Grievance Portal at

Gennaro Gattuso seeks ‘family' ethos in bid to avoid World Cup unthinkable
Gennaro Gattuso seeks ‘family' ethos in bid to avoid World Cup unthinkable

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Gennaro Gattuso seeks ‘family' ethos in bid to avoid World Cup unthinkable

Gennaro Gattuso said all the things he was expected to say at his first appearance as Italy manager. He talked about the need to restore enthusiasm to an Azzurri side whose morale has been dented by recent setbacks, as well as that sense of shared purpose that bonded him to teammates in the World Cup-winning side of 2006. The word he kept coming back to was 'family', insisting: 'That's the most important thing, more than tactics or formations.' His is not a vision of paternalistic authority but of a group close enough to speak hard truths to each other's faces. Advertisement Related: 'A symbol of Italian football': Azzurri appoint Gennaro Gattuso as head coach 'In moments of difficulty, when you feel alone and don't hear the voice of your teammate, those are the 90 minutes that feel never-ending,' said Gattuso. 'This is what we need to change. We need to help each other, we need to say those things that maybe you don't want to hear, because that's the only way you grow.' They will have no shortage of material. Italy's men's team are at an all-time low. Having failed to qualify for consecutive World Cups, their attempts to reach next summer's tournament are in jeopardy after a 3-0 thrashing by Norway in their opening game of Group I. That result led the Italian football federation (FIGC) to sack Luciano Spalletti as manager, though he persuaded them to allow him one more game. The idea was to leave on a more positive note, and perhaps that was achieved in a 2-0 win over Moldova, though the pre-game conference at which he in effect confirmed his own termination made for an awkward occasion. Advertisement How had it come to this? Spalletti's Italy were a disappointment at the Euros last summer, putting up a feeble defence of their 2021 triumph as they scraped out of their group with a 98th-minute equaliser against Croatia before losing meekly to Switzerland. The manager had been dealt a tough hand, replacing Roberto Mancini midway through qualifying. It was easy to argue he deserved time to implement his vision after steering Napoli to their first Serie A title in 33 years. But what was the point in continuing, if the federation's faith in him was always this fragile? Gattuso's appointment raises more questions about their approach. The FIGC's president, Gabriele Gravina, confirmed on Thursday that they had approached Claudio Ranieri first. That would have been a popular choice – a man with a reputation for rescuing teams in times of emergency, fresh from one last miracle with his boyhood team, Roma. But Ranieri already has a new job, moving upstairs as a senior adviser for the Giallorossi. As he explained it this week: 'I respect the national team, but I belong to Roma.' Gravina sought to portray it not as a rejection but merely a respectful conversation with the club's ownership. Advertisement Whatever the truths of that story, it is a hard pivot from Ranieri – who made Leicester champions and has written countless brilliant chapters in his almost 40 years of management – to Gattuso, who has not yet left such a mark on any of the nine clubs he has led since 2013. There are always different ways to tell a story. Is Gattuso, 47, a man who has repeatedly fallen short of his clubs' objectives – failing to reach the Champions League with Milan and Napoli, finishing third in Croatia with Hajduk Split and not even lasting a full season with Valencia and Marseille in between? Or is he, as his former Italy teammate Gigi Buffon – head of delegation for the Azzurri at Euro 2024 and seemingly moving into a more prominent role for the federation – argued on Thursday, a person who has shown courage to go to different countries and take on different challenges, continuing to grow and to evolve? Defending his own work, Gattuso pointed out his Milan and Napoli sides each missed the top four by one point, and that his Hajduk team this season were in with a shot at their first league title in 19 years going into the final weekend. Advertisement All of which can be well and true, but in his new job there will be no grey area: only success or failure. For Italy to miss a third consecutive World Cup ought to be unthinkable, but the lopsided nature of their defeat by Norway, who have played two more games and won both, means even a perfect record from here on may only land them back into the playoffs from which they have failed to progress in each of the past two cycles. If the goal were only to make Italy a family again, Gattuso would have every chance of success. His presence at the podium alongside Buffon felt like a homecoming, albeit an understated one, the heroes of 2006 given their opportunity to lead. Journalists prefaced questions not with deferential honorifics but instead a familiar 'ciao Rino'. In the end, though, the requirements of this job remain the same as they always were. Gattuso needs to win, starting with his first game, at home to Estonia in September. This family is sick of losing. He will hear hard truths soon enough, and from more people than he may care to, if he cannot make it stop.

T.J. Oshie retires from NHL after 16 remarkable seasons
T.J. Oshie retires from NHL after 16 remarkable seasons

Time of India

time09-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

T.J. Oshie retires from NHL after 16 remarkable seasons

Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads International Acclaim Off-Ice Impact Legacy and Farewell T.J. Oshie, one of the NHL 's most dynamic and beloved forwards, has officially announced his retirement after a distinguished 16-season career. The 38-year-old leaves the game as a Stanley Cup champion , Olympic hero, and a role model both on and off the played 1,010 regular-season games, amassing 302 goals and 393 assists for a total of 695 points. He also contributed 69 points (34 goals, 35 assists) in 106 playoff games, highlighted by his instrumental role in the Washington Capitals ' 2018 Stanley Cup victory—the franchise's first. Drafted 24th overall by the St. Louis Blues in 2005, Oshie spent seven seasons with the Blues before joining the Capitals in 2015, where he became a cornerstone of the team's international legacy was cemented at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, where he scored four times in six shootout attempts against Russia, including the game-winner, earning him national acclaim. He also represented the United States at three IIHF World Championships and the 2006 World Junior Championship, winning bronze in his on-ice achievements, Oshie is recognized for his charitable work, particularly in Alzheimer's awareness, honoring his late father, Tim Oshie. He has supported the Alzheimer's Association's The Longest Day Campaign and donates proceeds from his company, Warroad Hockey Co., to Alzheimer's research and youth hockey is one of just 404 NHL players to reach the 1,000-game milestone. He ranks third in NHL history for both shootout goals (49) and game-deciding shootout goals (21). In his retirement statement, Oshie thanked his teams, coaches, fans, and family, stating, 'Your energy and passion made every game memorable, and it was an honour to play in front of you.'Oshie will reside in McLean, Virginia, with his wife Lauren and their four children, leaving behind a legacy of excellence, leadership, and heart.

Blinkit's food licence suspended in Pune's Balewadi for regulatory violations: Report
Blinkit's food licence suspended in Pune's Balewadi for regulatory violations: Report

Time of India

time09-06-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Blinkit's food licence suspended in Pune's Balewadi for regulatory violations: Report

Maharashtra's Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has suspended the food business licence of Blinkit 's dark store in Pune's Balewadi area. According to a report by Economic Times, the FDA conducted an investigation on June 5 and found that the dark store was operating without the required approvals from the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI). Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Operated by M/s Energy Darkstore Services near Mitcon College, the facility was found storing and selling food items without obtaining the mandatory licence under Section 31(1) of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006. The licence will remain suspended until proper authorisation is secured. As per the report, officials also cited multiple food safety violations at the site. The inspection report flagged issues such as food placed directly on the floor, lack of pest control certification, workers without protective gear, dusty storage racks, and a cold storage unit missing a calibration certificate. This action is part of a broader crackdown by authorities on quick commerce 'dark stores' amid rising concerns about food hygiene and safety. License of Zepto's Dharavi facility suspended Earlier this month, Maharashtra's FDA cancelled the food business licence of Zepto's Dharavi facility after an inspection revealed multiple hygiene and food safety norms violations. The inspection uncovered fungal growth on some food items, storage near stagnant water, unclean and wet floors, and cold storage units that failed to maintain the necessary temperature. Officials also found expired food products that were not separated from fresh stock. 'The inspection at the Dharavi location revealed poor hygiene and unsafe food storage conditions,' said FDA officials. Following these findings, Assistant Commissioner of Food, Anupamaa Balasaheb Patil, ordered the cancellation of the facility's licence under Section 32(3) of the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006.

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