Real Men Read

Real Men Read
I have become involved with my step daughters three children again after a seven year hiatus ,there names Kailey who is 13 now and Kenslee and Colton who are seven and eight.Two years ago Colton and Kenslee's father was killed in a car wreck and there mother ,Kimberly moved back to Houston to offer her children a better education.I at the time had no idea all this was going on,except me having dreams at night about Kim and the kids.If it where only one dream OK,but seven dreams over a year and half I could not dismiss.Something tugging in my heart and told me to search them out and I did ,with the help of the kids great grandmother Rachel and yes dreaded Face Book,(its good for somethings).I was able to catch up with Kim and kids and was able to step right in and start helping any way I was able.
There have been many heart wrenching moments,one was them both asking me to come to there Valentines Day party,I accepted and from there lead to "Real Men Read" program .God works in many mysterious ways and this was just one of many .

Newsflash

We´ve seen the future of medicine. The secret to radically improved health care lies at the cellular level, ground zero for disease, where everything is roughly 1,000 times as small as the period at the end of this sentence. Dial out a decade or so, and doctors will wield molecular tools to switch genes on and off, taming
diabetes and obesity, among many ills. Researchers will
harness tiny proteins to ward off any strain of influenza.
Bye-bye bird flu. Precision-guided cancer killers will lay waste to tumors without so much as grazing the surrounding healthy tissue. No more chemotherapy side effects.

From a nano-sewing kit that mends severed nerves to a genetic switch that turns off fat genes, the future of molecular medicine looks bright. And that's no small thing.