Group Information
Date Created:
October 30, 2008
Category:
Nonprofits & Volunteering »
AARP
Group Type:
Public

Group Journals (28)

I am working with the Senior Class at Northridge High School in organizing a Blood Drive. It is not part of my job, but I love to volunteer with the students at our school, as well as working with them.   It is going very well and we have already reached our goal, but are still taking volunteers.  Hopefully, none of us will ever need blood, but I can guarantee someone in our families will.  It may be you, or your child, or parent, so give whenever and if you can.  Not only will the students benefit from organizing this event, the feeling of "doing good" but it will also make those students eligible for applying for the SOS (Save our Supply) scholarship.  They will also gain recognition for their accomplishments.  It's a "GOOD THING" for which to gain attention.  Just last night was our Homecoming and I was so proud when the homecoming attendants on the "committee" listed it as one of their involvements.  They are proud of being involved in this effort. 

This is our press release.. "Class of 2010 ... “Rocks the Blood Drive” Tour
Saturday, October 24th is “Make A Difference Day” in Ohio...our own High School Seniors will have their own “Make A Difference Day in Northridge” on Friday, October 23rd.     

Did you know...High School Students account for approximately 15% of all blood collected in our region. 

THE SENIOR CLASS AT NORTHRIDGE HIGH SCHOOL IS PARTICIPATING IN “ROCK THE BLOOD DRIVE” TOUR WITH THE DAYTON COMMUNITY BLOOD BANK BY SPONSORING A BLOOD DRIVE ON FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, FROM 12 NOON TO 4 P.M., ONE DAY BEFORE OHIO'S “MAKE A DIFFERENCE DAY”. 

COMMITTEES FROM THE CLASS OF 2010 ARE BUSY PROMOTING AND PLANNING THIS UPCOMING EVENT. SENIORS DONATING OR WORKING ON THE BLOOD DRIVE WILL BE ELIGIBLE TO APPLY FOR THE SOS (Save our Supply) BLOOD DRIVE SCHOLARSHIP WHICH IS OFFERED TO FIVE STUDENTS FROM AREA SCHOOLS.  RED CORDS AT GRADUATION WILL SIGNIFY THEIR PARTICIPATION IN THIS WORTHY EFFORT.

  SPEAKING TO THE STUDENTS ON THE IMPORTANCE OF DONATING BLOOD WILL BE DAN LASSITER, A YOUNG MAN WHO SURVIVED A CAR ACCIDENT WHICH LEFT HIM IN A COMA FOR 2-1/2 MONTHS.  DAN RECEIVED ABOUT 200 UNITS OF BLOOD AND WILL BE THE GUEST SPEAKER AT AN ASSEMBLY ON WEDNESDAY, OCT. 21ST, SPEAKING TO THE JUNIOR AND SENIOR CLASSES AT NORTHRIDGE.  STUDENTS 16 AND OLDER MAY DONATE WITH PARENTAL PERMISSION.

THE EVENT WILL BE HELD AT NORTHRIDGE HIGH SCHOOL, 2251 TIMBER LANE, DAYTON, OHIO, 
IN THE AUDITORIUM.  ANYONE WISHING TO DONATE BLOOD MAY MAKE AN APPOINTMENT BY CALLING THE HIGH SCHOOL MAIN OFFICE AT 275-7469.”

     It is the age of Obama and some are naive enough to join George Will in saying that his election signals the end of Racism. Although I hope to never use racism as an excuse for my shortcomings and failures, I will not ever join Mr. Will in saying that Mr Jackson(Jessie) and Mr Sharpton(Al) should go sit in a corner and be quiet. There are still too many instances of police profiling and police brutality on a world wide basis. Think of what the so called color blind therory(advanced by conservatives to suit their agenda and not the advancement of people of color) has done to the plight of Blacks in Canada and England. Blacks in Canada are routinely discharged for being disruptive when they complain to surpervisors and cowrkers about discrimination. In England, on my last transcontinental visit, Blacks both of African and West Indian origin were treated as fouth classs citizens. I noted several things. First of all the lack of inclusion of Blacks in the media(both print and screen). Secondly I noted a virtual absence of Black Men in the buisneess district of London.Thirdly I noted that their was not one bookstore owned by people of African descent in London. Finally, I was horified to see on the bilborards, in the train stations pictures of mostly Black Women under the heading of "Gone Missing". Could not wait to get back home and folks this is the so called liberal or tolerant part of Europe. Wonder what it would  be like in Germany or Russia. Well I know that Africans are routinely killed in Russia and no one has ever been brought to justice for that! Well hey yall, over here if whites want to kill Blacks without penalty, they must first put on a police or sherif's uniform. Not to mention that the current head of state in France is a known Anti-Semite who refered to rioting people of African and Arab descent as animals. We have a long devide to overcome and we won't even begin to get there by false celebrations or unrealistic conclusions about where we are as a world in matters of race. Untill we can be more tollerant, the bigots are just as  imprisoned by their additudes as those discriminated against on the basis of color are by their tormentors and opponents.

     It is the age of Obama and some are naive enough to join George Will in saying that his election signals the end of Racism. Although I hope to never use racism as an excuse for my shortcomings and failures, I will not ever join Mr. Will in saying that Mr Jackson(Jessie) and Mr Sharpton(Al) should go sit in a corner and be quiet. There are still too many instances of police profiling and police brutality on a world wide basis. Think of what the so called color blind therory(advanced by conservatives to suit their agenda and not the advancement of people of color) has done to the plight of Blacks in Canada and England. Blacks in Canada are routinely discharged for being disruptive when they complain to surpervisors and cowrkers about discrimination. In England, on my last transcontinental visit, Blacks both of African and West Indian origin were treated as fouth classs citizens. I noted several things. First of all the lack of inclusion of Blacks in the media(both print and screen). Secondly I noted a virtual absence of Black Men in the buisneess district of London.Thirdly I noted that their was not one bookstore owned by people of African descent in London. Finally, I was horified to see on the bilborards, in the train stations pictures of mostly Black Women under the heading of "Gone Missing". Could not wait to get back home and folks this is the so called liberal or tolerant part of Europe. Wonder what it would  be like in Germany or Russia. Well I know that Africans are routinely killed in Russia and no one has ever been brought to justice for that! Well hey yall, over here if whites want to kill Blacks without penalty, they must first put on a police or sherif's uniform. Not to mention that the current head of state in France is a known Anti-Semite who refered to rioting people of African and Arab descent as animals. We have a long devide to overcome and we won't even begin to get there by false celebrations or unrealistic conclusions about where we are as a world in matters of race. Untill we can be more tollerant, the bigots are just as  imprisoned by their additudes as those discriminated against on the basis of color are by their tormentors and opponents.

21 August 2009

 

I’ve been having a lazy day today. Got a little bit of housekeeping, a little bit of reading and a little bit of writing done so it really qualifies as a very lazy day. It’s been days since I’ve actually had some quiet time to myself and it feels funny. We spent three days with my Mom and her wonderful family and then between phone calls and visits with the grandmonkeys and their parents and Jim’s birthday celebrations it’s been a week filled with other people. It felt quiet today.

 

I’ve been picking up a few new stressors since we’ve been back from California. You know how it goes. Even though we weren’t vacationing there was still something very relaxing about living in an environment where I didn’t have the daily reminders of things that concern me. Of course, we can never escape from the sweeping world and country events but when I get crazy about it all I can turn off the news and turn it all back over to the true Master of the Universe. I trust Him to handle it all.

 

For some reason it’s always a little harder to escape the nagging concerns about the people I love most in the world. It doesn’t seem to matter if it’s a little boy with a bad attitude or watching age take a toll on my loved ones, I can usually find something to worry about for at least a little while every day. Fortunately, I don’t usually have to dwell on it for long.

 

I’m trying to remember when I first discovered the fastest cure for the things that make me fret. I really can’t remember because it was a long time ago but it seems that I learned early that I can count on one surefire cure when the little worries start to nag me. All I have to do is take my eyes off myself and focus on someone else’s needs and my little worries fade into the background.

 

I’ve been a volunteer for as long as I can remember. And then I married another volunteer, another big giver. We’ve never had a lot of money to give to the causes and the people who mean the most to us so we both learned to find ways to give of our time and talents. The organizations have changed over the years. The causes are different. But we always give to meet the needs of another human being. And we learned a long time ago that the “giver” always gets a richer reward than the “receiver”.

 

I told you that we’ve decided that it’s time to be grounded here at home again to be closer to the people who need a little more help. But I seem to have more than enough spare time on my hands these days so I’ve been looking for some new ways to spend that time. I remembered a similar time back in the 90s when my girls were old enough to fend for themselves and accomplish some of their schoolwork without me so I was in the same position that I am today. And then I remembered something I did to fill those extra hours.

 

I used to donate platelets on a regular basis. I had been a blood donor for years and I was already on the Marrow Donor Registry when I learned about plateletpheresis (say that fast!). A needle stick doesn’t bother me much but I was a little hesitant the first time I donated platelets because the process involved two needles, one in each arm. I found that the phlebotomists who worked at the Blood Center were excellent shots and I quickly fell into an easy routine of twice monthly donations. So last week when I was twiddling my thumbs I decided that this would be a good time to renew my commitment to the Blood Bank. It was time to start making appointments.

 

If you’ve never donated this life saving component of human blood you might be interested in the process which is called apheresis (see my title for the pronunciation of that word). It takes longer than a whole blood donation but the amount of platelets they can take from one donor is comparable to the platelets in 5 units of whole blood. It is also safer and more effective to transfuse patients with a unit of platelets from a single donor since the chance of rejection is smaller.

 

After reading the educational materials and filling out a questionnaire you get a mini-physical (blood pressure, temperature etc.) to assure that you are healthy. Then you endure the worst part of the entire process as far as I’m concerned, the dreaded finger stick. The tech will assure you that everybody complains about that little dart in the fingertip while he collects a few drops to determine the level of iron in your blood.

 

You move into another room where you take a seat in the most comfortable recliner known to mankind. Gosh, I wish I could buy one of those chairs! The phlebotomist keeps up a nice conversation and always answers my dozen questions while she covers me with a warm blanket and opens all of her sterile, one use equipment. The biggest surprise of the week was when she told me that they no longer use both arms! I could choose which arm I wanted to leave free while she sterilized the other arm and inserted one needle attached to three tubes. The newer method takes my blood through one tube puts it through the centrifuge in the apheresis machine, removes the platelets and then sends the rest of the components back through the second tube. The third tube injects a small amount of anti-coagulant into the same vein.

 

Once the process is started I plug in headphones and settle in to watch a movie on the laptop that is hanging in front of me. I could also use the internet (one handed) or listen to music or just hang out but a movie makes the minutes fly by. Back in the dark ages when I had to keep both arms still I would inevitably get an itch and I had to learn how to scratch using only my imagination. And speaking of imagination I remember one day long ago when the phlebotomist who became a friend suggested his choice for the movie that day. He was pretty sure I’d really enjoy it so when I blindly agreed he plugged in “The Silence of the Lambs” and let me squirm with both arms immobilized!! He had a good laugh about that one.

 

The procedure itself is not really unpleasant; in fact I tell Jim that it reminds me of those nights when I drink one glass of good wine and cuddle up in a quilt on my recliner to watch a movie. I might get a little tingle around my mouth and feel just a little bit buzzed but I’m very relaxed and the time goes quickly. When the movie ends and I’m unhooked from the machine I spend a couple minutes eating cookies and drinking juice then I’m out the door for two weeks. The best part is thinking about and praying for the recipient of those billions of little cells. I wish them recovery, I wish them well.

 

I hope you understand that Jim and I have already been richly rewarded for our acts of service. When I write about our adventures as lifetime volunteers I’m not asking for applause I’m trying to marshal more volunteers. I’m trying to encourage anyone who has a few extra minutes in a day or some underutilized skills to look for a place where you can give them away. I can tell you right now that you will never miss something freely given and you will get so much in return.

 

If you are like me you might get the extra bonus of shaking some of the little worries in your life. We can all find something to fret about but I know that turning my eyes away from the mirror and doing something for someone else will make those worries grow so small that they will almost disappear. When they crop up again I know that I can turn off the news, I can avoid contact with too many negative people and then I can find some way to serve. I know I will always feel better when I give some of myself away.

Out of all the responses I  have received to ASVEI only one person  has responded negatively.  She claims a life of selfless service to others and spirituality but refuses to support  those who purchased her right to choose with their very lives. I wish to thank her for reminding  me of WHY ASVEI exists...those who are not  part of the solution are part of the problem.

Sometimes I wonder if there are any patriots out there...the kind who speak up when they KNOW something is wrong.  I created ASVEI as a response to  a growing wave of companies being willing to sacrifice veterans and their families to the god of  profit. I believe that during tough economic times EVERYONE has to willing to make some sacrifices, and that includes companies as well as  citizens. When I  saw a young kid with a purple heart and two tours of service unable to get even a helpers job in a multi-billion dollar refinery expansion  project, I knew it was time  to speak  up..and  I did.  He now has a job and I now have a mission...to help  other veterans and their families improve their quality of life  through employment.  Will you help?  Please  contact ASVEI at 409-499-9425.  YOU ARE AN AMERICAN PATRIOT..ACT LIKE  IT!

 Yesterday I had to fight my wife's company.   Neither of us liked it, but we both knew it was the right thing to do. The company was  wrong and something had  to be done about it.  As the founder of ASVEI, I can not bow down to fear  when  addressing an issue and my wife knows  that.  She is a good woman and her work at the company allows  her to stand on her own merits.  I was assured by the Human Resources department that she would  not be retaliated against in any way, and  I  presented my grievance to the company and we reached an amiable agreement.  Changes were made and the right thing was done.  However, in our unofficial conversation I did mention to someone in authority that my son is 6' 8"  and weighs  256 lbs., built like a WWF wrestler, and loves his mama more than kids love choclate chip cookies.   I think he got the message...

A good friend just pointed something out to me:  ASVEI has a goal in  2010 of contacting 5000 employers and securing employment for a minimum of 1000 veterans. If we are successful, the return to the veterans community is  approximately  $25,000,000.00 for an  investment of approximately $100,000.00. That is a reward ratio of around $250.00 for each dollar invested in ASVEI.  Is  that a good deal for America's veterans and their families or what?

Today I received a telephone call from Bob Klein from the corporate offices of Harley-Davidson. I believe Bob was sincere when he stated to me that the company did not approve of the treatment received by one young veteran at COWBOY HARLEY-DAVIDSON here in Beaumont, Texas.  For those of you who are not familiar with the story..the facts are simple.  A young veteran returned from the war and was attempting to find employment in the motorcycle industry.  Specifically, he wanted to be a H-D mechanic.  The dealership was approached with the idea of providing the veteran with some "hands-on" training as a mechanic..and the answer was that it was not possible due to the fact that their mechanics were paid by commission and therefore could not slow down to train someone.  Given the prosperity obvious at this particular dealership--that action left a bad taste in several veterans mouths.  The fact that a multi-million dollar a year dealership could not find even a part-time job for an unemployed veteran was particularly distasteful and hard to swallow.  At ASVEI, we support the view that in tough economic times businesses must forego ultimate profits and do the right thing.....even if it means losing a little profit to supply a job.  The fact that it is wartime and the person involved was a vet further complicates the situation.  We did an online survey to which 143 veterans responded.  All but one favored a boycott on H-D products in order to protest the dealership's action and serve notice on other businesses that veterans are demanding fair treatment in recovering from the financial hardships many veterans and their families suffer due to their service to the country. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH...and American businesses must shoulder their fair share  of the economic burden many veterans bear. Bob is forwarding a letter to me in support of ASVEI and ALL VETERANS....and we thank him for his support.  As a final note, another dealership (Japanese) has offered a job....and we thank them for their support.  But  COWBOY-HARLEY..TAKE NOTICE..you are going to lose some sales due to this treatment...so maybe there is justice in this world.

When Major League Baseball teamed up with Louisville Slugger several years ago to start the pink bat program on Mother's Day benefiting Susan G. Komen, I got jealous. Yes jealous. Here I am a breast cancer survivor and a baseball player watching the men swinging the pink painted wood bats. Once again, we women were denied the right to enter professional baseball.

Once again, I had to endure another discrimination as a woman. One that touched the very core of my soul—my own womanhood. How come I told myself that it's not a breast cancer survivor, baseball playing woman? I'm right here. Can't you see me? It should be one of us not one of them on our own day, our own Mother's Day. Breast cancer strikes women out 99% of the time with only a small 1% of diagnoses being men. So in a moment of jealous passion I decided to do something about it.

After all I'm the living, breathing version of their wood-painted pink bat. I am the real live pink bat. So in August 2008 I created myself for the public. I really did become the real live pink bat. A 50-year-old middle-aged, slightly overweight woman who went from the Torture for the Cure to the Race for the Cure in Southern Nevada to become their 2008 athlete survivor of the year decided to take on Major League Baseball by letting the boys of baseball know I exist.

As Brian Ross from Minor League News coined me, I may be mad but I ain't crazy, he was right. I was mad at that moment. And scared too that I would be laughed at by MLB for still wanting a dream that I'm now too old to pursue or so I thought. I designed my own media presentation book and sent 91 of my mini-me booklets to all the MLB teams. Each MLB team was sent 3 books (the White Sox were sent 4 with the extra going to Eddie Einhorn because I was told he supported women in baseball) to the top management. I never asked for anything from all 30 teams. There was no cover or personal letter, just the outside of the envelope addressed to the individual they were sent to.

I never expected to hear from anybody in MLB. I didn't. Not surprised either. My intent was to just stand up for myself, a breast cancer survivor who for 48 years wanted to be a Major League Baseball player.

Now I saw the opportunity to go for my dream by being the Mother's Day MLB real live pink bat. It was the right thing to do. Not just for me but for all women who dared to break from their traditional role as to what society and the men think we should be and that included seeing us for centuries as the weaker sex.

So on November 17, 2008 when a letter came from the Detroit Tigers Minor League Office asking me if I would be interested in coming to their Open Tryout in 2009, I couldn't believe it. I so wanted to hang up that letter for the world to see but after I called Dan Lunetta, the director of the Tigers' Minor League Operations, to let him know I was going to come and I wanted to share his kindness he asked me to keep it personal between us. I did. I could tell the world that the Tigers invited me but the Tiger responsible had to be kept in the background.

Dan never got one of my media books. I didn't send it to him.

I started at the top with Tigers President Dave Dombrowski. It was Dave's single act of kindness that started this real live tryout ball game going. He threw my media book to Dan who then threw me for a curve ball by writing to me. Now here I am tonight on Tuesday, March 10, 2009 writing to the world about how I went to the Tigers Spring Training headquarters in Lakeland, Florida and how on Monday, March 9, 2009 a small band of five baseball brothers and one baseball sister smoked the rest of the infield at this real live Major League Baseball tryout...

Oh yeah. We did.

We took them on and we smoked 'em good.

The journey to get to yesterday ended up involving a lot of people who, once they knew I was really going to that MLB tryout, stepped up to the plate themselves to help me and my husband Ed get there. Louisville Slugger donated pro bats, batting gloves and a new black and pink-trimmed ball bag. New Balance Athletic Shoes sent me a new pair of rubber-cleated baseball shoes, Dr. Saundra Namimatsu donated the physical therapy to get my shoulder into near perfect condition, some of my husband's friends donated to pay for our trip, my Sandvipers teammates couldn't go so they donated their signatures to my batting helmet, and the list goes on. Logoz Shirtz & Promoz even embroidered the baseball bag with my pink batness, cancer quote and tryout date. Righteously cool if you ask me.

Meanwhile I took the time to contact the media both here in Las Vegas and over there in Lakeland Florida including the little leagues and the Central Florida MSBL in Orlando for moral support. I didn't want to go it alone. I needed somebody to lean on once I got to the East Coast. Oh Lord what have I gotten myself into with this real live pink batness of mine. I must be crazy. Surely I was. Who is going to believe me at that tryout that I, at my age, my gender, my size could be taken seriously for a spot on the 40 man roster for any one of the five Tigers' teams from MLB down to their Minor League divisions.

Three hours before Ed and I left for the airport on Friday, March 6th, Rich Musumeci the manager for the Orlando Marlins called me to ask me if I wanted to play baseball on their men's team Sunday as a pre-warm up for Monday's tryout. I was thrilled. Of course I said yes. Then he told me that they changed their team website to breast cancer pink in honor of the real live pink bat. Rich wrote about me on their home page which is still up for now saying that the Marlins are proud of the Detroit Tigers for stepping up to the plate to invite me to come.

I called Brian Ross to tell him that news. He freaked but for a second... then he beamed with delight.

By the time we arrived in Tampa the next morning, Ed and I, we were exhausted. We slept most of the day then called Rich to get directions to the playing field for Sunday. His teammates, he said, were excited and the Orland Black Sox team were okay with me playing for the Marlins against them. The next day when we arrived in Orlando I donned the Marlins jersey. First baseman Josh came over to greet and then started to cry as he told me about a dear friend he lost to ovarian cancer. The real live pink bat is touching lives. He was thrilled to share his story about his friend with me. It meant that much. I hugged him. Then we went to warm up to play ball. Business as usual after an intense moment of emotional loss.

I ended up coaching first base for the team for the whole game.

I never did play an inning until the ninth when Rich asked me if I wanted to bat. No pressure. Take a hack. Yeah right! It was the bottom of the ninth, we were behind two runs with two outs. A man on first and the batter would be the tying run if he or she got on. Clutch time. I faced Larry Hingle, former AAA pitcher for the Houston Astros. No this was not my tryout but it definitely my baptism into the world of professional baseball. A preview of where I was going the next day. Hitting against a left-handed pitcher is tough for a righty. It's murder for a ****. That's what they call us lefties because we tend to hook the ball to right field.

Larry threw the first pitch, an outside fast ball that I managed to get a piece of fouling it off to the third base right where my husband was filming me with my camera. I do sports photography in Vegas aside from my day job. Just missed knocking him out with the baseball as the Black Sox manager whistled a wow she can hit from between his lips. Oops. Sorry honey.

After my new teammates stopped cheering for getting a piece off of Larry, his next pitch was low but across the plate. Another fastball. Just how I like them but really too low to zig it over his head for a center-field line drive. I eked out a solid grounder right back at him which he easily made a fielder's choice to first for the final out of the game. Yes we lost the game but not because I made the last out. The last out just ended the game. We lost the game as a whole team for a whole nine innings of play. It was a team effort from both sides with one team winning and the other team losing.

That's the point I'm trying to get across to Major League Baseball to let me swing the wood-painted pink bat for one inning on Mother's Day. It takes a whole team with a whole nine innings to win or lose a game. One at bat with the real live pink bat is not going to lose the whole game for any one of the 30 MLB teams if one of them would just let me do it. Besides that what if I do hit the baseball and get to first base? What then?

Well the Marlins and the Black Sox went crazy with my grounder. Screaming from both dugouts that I had hit the baseball. You see it's not about that I made the last out. It's about me going to bat for us women, for us breast cancer survivors, for the opportunity of the coming day, and for what the real live pink bat represents—the human side of breast cancer awareness. The personality behind the bat. A name and a face to cold hard side of breast cancer research.

It's not just about donating money which is all good to do but it's about teaming up with that research so that the public sees and feels the human side of it as well. We are not the cancer, we are people dealing with the cancer. After saying our goodbyes, hugs and high fives to my new baseball brothers along with taking their good luck wishes to the tryout, Ed and I left for our hotel home. As we sat on the second floor balcony while we washed my uniform, we both realized just how ready I was to take on the world of Major League Baseball.

Then came the call from Lakeland journalist Chuck Welch. I had contacted him earlier in the week to see if this baseball fanatic from Florida was interested in a real live story about me. He was. We talked for an hour with Chuck letting me know that he was going to write a pre-story before the tryout registration started at 9:00 am and that he would meet us at the stadium to say hi. Can you tell I'm excited? Chuck laughed and said yes. We headed off to bed to dream about our date with a baseball destiny never imagining anything other than I was going to give off the best performance at first base that I could be, run the 60 yard like a track star and swing for the fence at bat. 

They were my goals for the day. This was business, a job interview for the position of being a Major League Baseball player for a one-day contact to swing the pink bat on Mother's Day. My business suit? My uniform. My attaché case? My baseball bag.

Arriving at the stadium the next morning, I was surprised to find myself in a sea of young hopefuls also applying for the same position. Some 250 in all applicants eager to display their baseball skills for one or two spots in pro baseball Major or Minor League. I had my work cut out for me when a strange thing happened. Chuck wished me good luck, hugged me like a man and I told him thanks coach. He liked that. No one noticed I was a woman in uniform. This was too good to be true. I loved it. Although I need to lose another 25 pounds that I'm self-conscious about, I looked like a middle-aged man in a baseball uniform.

I never got that look. You know the one. The one that we women get in baseball that says we "girls" can't play baseball and "are you serious that she wants to play" once over from their roving eyes. It wasn't there. Yay me! I kept my mouth shut, then spoke low and deep when I had to grunt a give me a registration form from within the testosterone crowd. This was just way too good even for me.

After I filled it out handing it to the Tigers staff and getting my 303 assigned number, I left Ed with my equipment near the gate to the training fields we were to use for the day. Heading off to the rear stadium restroom, upon my return trip back I noticed a Channel 9 news van in the parking lot. The newsman gave me a nod from one male to another or so he thought. I nodded back to him in a manly fashion. This just keeps getting better. I had no idea that my life as a real live baseball player was about to be birthed from that nodding moment on.

Back to my husband. I told him about the van in the parking lot and instructed him to give the newsman my pink bat photo media card. Ed's turn to leave now and he did, leaving me to carry all the camera equipment plus my baseball gear. When the Tiger directors announced where we were to go, I carried it all. Well for the moment I was still the baseball guy and nobody carries bags for a guy! So it was all me.

As I walked with the group of infielders to the field on our right, I finally saw Ed heading back my way. He was looking intently for me so I yelled him my way. Did you give the guy my card? Was he here to film their tryout camp? No says Ed. He's not here for the Tigers and their tryout. I was surprised why. Ed then told me that the newsman and a reporter were looking for me. Just me. They read Chuck's article online that morning and came to film me for their news. Ed took me to them quickly.

The tryouts were starting I didn't want to miss out. I came so far and a half a century too. Ed introduced me to Melissa Sogegian, the reporter. They were looking for me but missed me. Bay News 9. They were looking for a woman. Think about it. Even they stereotyped me looking for a womanly baseball player which they did not find. And must to both their surprise, to their delight, they were thrilled to come do a segment about me taking on the boys of baseball. I never asked them to come. They came looking for me.

I shook Melissa's hand and ran to the field. Lining up with the other four first basemen, the directors had us line up by position. There were eventually six of us for first base, two would come later. We were the smallest group standing closest to the infield when a golf cart came our way. The two men in it stopped next to our line. The driver pointed to me then called me out. I started to sweat thinking my manly jig was up but I didn't waiver up my pseudo gender.

After all, they thought I was the old man in the baseball suit. I just played along with it. I had to have some fun at this Major League event.

Yes sir, I said to the gray-haired thick-mustached Tiger suit. He proceeded to tell me that "I know who you are. I know what you do. And we are honored to have you at our tryout." The jig was up. But I never, never expected to hear that, which just came out of that man's mouth.

Glen Ezell. EZ for short. The director of player development for the Tigers and the man who was in charge of the whole darn tryout camp.

I never did remember who the other man was sitting next to him. I was mesmerized by his command and at that moment he was the Major League General and I was his private selection for the day. EZ then pointed to the other players saying they would all be watching as they competed against me. Then he pointed to the crowd behind the fence, friends, family and fans all eager to see us in action. "They're going to be watching you too." Looking back into my face he told me this was business. To keep my mind on my business.

I grabbed my Sandvipers uniform pulling it toward him and saying this was my business suit, I was ready to do my business. He said good girl. My time as a man just ended. Oh darn it was so much fun too. Then I joined the ranks of my baseball troop as we headed to the infield like an army taking to war.

Pickett, Trotta, myself, and Chris. I never did ask the first two what their names were. We stood at first base waiting to start. Looking across the field, the four of us realized we were a small infantry of three men and a woman taking on two huge battalions of Spartan warriors. In all about 100 or so men to 4. Not good odds in a real live war. But we're baseball players. First basemen.

(Note: Actually, it ended up being 72 men and one women total for just the infield. But honestly, it felt like a huge army was loomed before us so I'll leave the writing at that makes it more interesting story content. Overall 250 potentials really showed up with 133 of them being a mix of catchers, 1B, 2B, SS, 3B and OF with the remaining being pitchers.)

(And yes, one really special baseball player Kyle Deadshot too, from Tryoutforacause.com, in his second attempt to make the team. He's a Lakeland local young man with a big heart for helping the homeless. I ran across him on the internet a few weeks before this tryout to find out the experiences of other athletes. Honestly, he really is a deadshot but the fact that he keeps trying makes him a Detroit Tiger in my book and someday I'll mention that in the real live book I'll write. I remember his second base throw to me and thought he looked familiar. Darn wished I would have gone up to him afterwards to tell him good job. I have to meet him someday.)

I told my troops we could take them all. Bring it on. We were ready to do battle.

At that moment we became the fighting Tigers. Those 100 men mean that each one was going to get four grounders, left, front, backhand and a rolling one.

Before Greg and Mr. Puerto Rico showed up to make us a six-man corps at first base, we would each end up taking about 100 hits from the opposing sides. And I meant taking hits. They came at our heads, our feet, some 20 feet over and 50 feet out to each side, wild and wacky they came along with the straight and narrow. We dodged them like bullets when one of us was at the base where we were supposed to receive them. The now mighty six defended their first base territory telling each other we all hoped to make the Tigers team. We deserved it. We were men even me. There was no woman on the field yesterday. Just six men fighting for a spot on a professional baseball team.

And six men who were determined to show up the other infielders with our skills. We did. We gave 'em hell. We smoked them hard. We jumped, we dove, we ate dirt to defend our honor and our base. Every time they shot off a cannon ball our way that went anywhere but to whomever was defending the bag, they made us look good. We intended to keep it that way. We did. With everything we had in our baseball arsenal, the mighty six took on the world and won. We won on the battlefield yesterday.

We six walked off the field with our heads held high that day. But not before I executed some pretty awesome moves myself including a baseball text book perfect one-hopping throw to third base followed by a perfectly executed double play with the short stop throwing my own cannon ball at me from second base and me turning the bag just in time to catch the ball back at first.

My only mistake was that I didn't come off the base fast enough straddling it as I reached for the ball with my glove. EZ caught my footwork error telling me how to take the inside corner for the play so I would avoid getting hurt where I had left my feet at the end of the play. But it was text book alright. Major League text book. No shame in that even with my feet out of place. I got the job done just as it was supposed to be. Heading off to home plate, the mighty six were called up first to swing for the fence.

Batting in the third slot, I told EZ who by now was at the mound with a pitching machine, okay begging him, to adjust the machine for my vertical strike zone. Though I'm 5 feet 8 inches I was still shorter than my three of my own first base comrades. He did. In fact he was very accommodating to my turn at bat making me wait off the plate in a relaxed mode until he was perfectly satisfied with the pitches he wanted me to take. What a commander looking out for his troops.

Talk about respect for his army of men and one woman. I was so nervous facing the gun that I only managed to fire off four solid grounders to the right side. Darn, I can hit line drives 200+ feet but that didn't happen today. They never got to see what I can really do at the plate. But that didn't matter, when my time was over swing for the fence everybody applauded including the crowd of onlookers. I was still thrilled even with my gender cover blown. Hey they gave that to me and I enjoyed toying with their minds about it.

For the rest of the tryout I stayed in the dugout finally meeting Dan Lunetta, getting my photo taken with him and my real live pink bat which I only use for display. It's not made to be hit with. No. Not the Rick Redman Louisville Slugger pink bat. He had that made for me and no way I'm going to destroy it with baseballs. Rick is the vice president corporate communications for Louisville Slugger. He likes the real live pink bat woman.

Dan and I talked, giving each other respect. And even though he personally invited me to come to this tryout he was still surprised that I came all the way from Vegas. I had to. How can I turn down the respect from his letter in the first place. I came for him as well as for me. I came for Dave Dombrowski the big man in Detroit who let Dan know I exist in the first place.

The Tigers management cares about me. And they like the real live pink bat concept. Everybody at the tryout does. I am right about my mission to swing the wood-painted pink bat in a Major League game on Mother's Day. It's a good story for everybody especially during this economic lesson we're all learning by trial, error and greed.

After I left Dan, I met Marilyn his secretary. She's one of my biggest fans now. I love her to pieces. We had a great visit and Ed took our photo together with my now famous PB. After she left to go back to the office, I did a PB video to put on my youtube account for when I get home. It filled the time while we waited for the tryout to end. We just had to stay to the end.

I was not going home without my photo with Major League General Glen "EZ" Ezell. My commander and chief of the day, I wasn't going back to Vegas without thanking him, getting a photo op with the man who commandeered my short-lived Tigers career on the baseball battlefield. It was almost that patriotic for reals being in uniform. I had pride. Tiger pride. Army pride. I'm a baseball player pride. I busted my butt for it all pride. I earned it pride. American baseball pride.

As Ed took our photo, seriously with the PB and then playfully with me showing him how to swing the pink bat, I told EZ that I was proud of how great I played. Yes how great I did, not just good, but great. I did a great job yesterday. I can say that forever about my one day as a real live Detroit Tiger. I told him that I did a great job in spite of my age and gender. He stopped me. Waving his right hand aside high in the air as if to dispel throwing something out behind himself, he told me to put the age and gender aside. He told me I was a real baseball player.

That my age and gender had nothing to do with the fact that I can play real baseball. Looking at his face, straight into his eyes into his soul I knew he mean every word. EZ and everybody who was at that Tigers tryout look past the gender to see who I really am. A real live Detroit Tiger. A real live baseball player. Yesterday, March 9, 2009 I was no longer just a gender in baseball with a dream. I made it to professional baseball as a bonafide baseball player. And no professional contract could afford enough dollars to pay for that man's highest regard for my baseball skills. I came to take on all the infielders.

Yesterday, on March 9, 2009, the mighty six slaughtered them all on the field. We took no prisoners. We showed no mercy. We were a band of baseball brothers. I came to honor them and they gave their respect to their baseball sister by making her one of their own. The few, the proud, the baseball Marines.

Today I came home knowing that I am a professional baseball player. Not a contracted one. I probably won't get any contract from this tryout. I'm too old to play a full season. But a pro just the same.

My Mother's Day mission? Oh yeah that will never end until they let me swing the wood-painted pink bat because that's the right thing for the boys in baseball to do. To let me, a breast cancer survivor baseball-playing professional for the day swing for the fence in a Major League Game for reals. That is doable. And that needs to be done.

It's the right time and it's time to do it once and for all. The public wants it. The players want it. The Tigers showed their support of me pursuing it. Yes that's what needs to be done now. I know I can do it. I'm a Tiger now. I don't have to prove my worth in the baseball arena anymore. I just have to do the pink bat.

Because it's the right thing to do. It's not about Norine but about what her life symbolizes for everybody in this whole country. That's why it's the right thing to do. Honest to God as he's our witness.

Plus we have three bulls and a horse to confirm that baseball sign from heaven. Read on. Remember the news crew come to my tryout? They dropped out of the sky to find me then disappeared the same way before the tryout was over. Then it was our turn to drop in on them...

The Bay News Channel 9 team of Melissa Sogegian and filmman Tony along with Ed and I had a real live baseball adventure. It's a baseball sign all four of us are sure of. There are always baseball signs whenever something good is about to happen in a real live game. Pre-game signs are omens of athletic success.

After the tryout Ed and I headed back to our hotel to change. Got in the car and headed off to find Moe's Southwest Grill. We got lost looking for it. But saw a tremendous brush fire burning in the northside of Lakeland. As a professional photographer I did what I'm trained to do. HEAD FOR THE FIRE! HAVE CAMERA NEWS AT 11. 

As we drove down country road after another trying to get closer, we found an entrance with a beautiful scenic with three bulls and a horse grazing with the fire in the pasture behind them. They didn't even care. I wanted the picture but Ed said we were driving to the end of the road first which we did, turning left to find a deadend some 300 feet later. At the end of the road was the Bay News 9 van and Tony the cameraman.

What are the odds? In the middle of Central Florida. In the middle of nowhere? In the middle of a cow pasture? With us just rambling the countryside with no direction as to where we were going?

I jumped out of the car and yelled... HEY I KNOW YOU! Tony turned around and must to his delightful horror of surprise starting screaming for Melissa because he couldn't believe it was us. We rounded the van, Tony and I, to where Melissa was monitoring her screen. MELISSA! IT'S ME! THE REAL LIVE PINK BAT! She turned and almost fainted then started screaming at me for being there. They didn't finish my tryout and were going to interview me when they were called away from a bomb threat in downtown Lakeland then this brush fire.

So what did we three all do? What every good photographer, journalist and reporter does. We did the interview in front of the brush fire in a cow pasture. No bull from me about this.

IT'S A BASEBALL SIGN I TELL YOU.MY BURNING DESIRE TO SHARE MY STORY. AND MY DETERMINATION TO SHARE A REAL LIVE PINK BAT PUBLIC BRUSH FIRE TO LET ME SWING THE WOOD-PAINTED PINK BAT IN A REAL LIVE MAJOR LEAGUE GAME!

Vegas breast cancer survivor baseball player should swing pink bat on Mother's Day
Cancer can destroy the body but it cannot kill the heart
Dare to dream then do it.

My Mother's Day mission? To let me, a breast cancer survivor baseball-playing almost professional for the day swing for the fence in a Major League Game for reals.

http://www.norinevphotography.com/areallivepinkbat.html Baseball / Cancer Info about Norine V. Rathbone
http://www.youtube.com/areallivepinkbat Sports Videos about Norine V. Rathbone
http://www.minorleaguenews.com Brian Ross / Publisher Editor
http://www.lakelandlocal.com Chuck Welch / Journalist
http://www.baynews9.com Melissa Sogegian Reporter / Sunday March 15, 2009 News Segment

Ed Graney / Sports Columnist / Las Vegas Review Journal / Saturday March 6, 2009 
Gary Arlitz / General Manager / Las Vegas Sandvipers MSBL Southern Nevada (my) Team
Dave Dombrowski / President Major League Baseball Detroit Tigers
Dan Lunetta / Director of Minor League Operations Detroit Tigers
Glen Ezell / Director of Player Development Detroit Tigers
Rick Redman / Vice President Corporate Communications Louisville Slugger
Rich Musumeci / General Manager / Orlando Marlins MSBL Central Florida Team