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April 26, 2024 34 mins
Un diagnóstico de cáncer de seno, una boda que se llevaría a cabo, un agradecimiento enorme a la comunidad de Tampa y lo más importante, mensajes en tiempo real por las redes sociales. Así es como puedo comenzar a describir el nuevo libro de Patsy Sánchez llamado You Made Me Brave. En este episodio te llevamos de la mano a conocer la historia de Patsy y cómo mensajes de sus amistades en Facebook la inspiraron a encontrar 10 regalos de vida tras una batalla contra el cáncer de seno. 
Si deseas comprar el libro You Made Me Brave encuentras el enlace de Amazon aquí. 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
A diagnosis of breast cancer, awedding that would take place a huge thanks
to the community of Tampa Bay and, most importantly, real- time messages
on social networks. So, Ican begin to describe the new book by
patriotic Sanchez called u Main Me briefpatsy a powerful, courageous woman who has
an unshakeable faith. I hope thistalk with her inspires you and fills you

(00:22):
with hope. We begin to knowwhat local entrepreneurs do, conversations with community
leaders Connect Tampa only by Ihard gredierI Paty how nice to have you here
with us. I know you forso long and I remember specifically when you
had this diagnosis and you went throughthis whole situation. But wow see this

(00:44):
book that is already a reality.First welcome, how good that you accompany
us and very enchanted sari It isalways a pleasure to talk to you,
how good or how good, andespecially because this is a part of your
life extremely I say well private,but at the same time, something that
you have decided to bring to publiclight, to make known everything that you
went through in this process, tofind out that you were diagnosed with breast

(01:08):
cancer and you have written as ifit were a true diary. That'
s the approach you' re givinghim, tell us about this book,
Mira. The book is so manythings. It' s a diary that
talks about the bad, the good, the everyday. It is a thanks
to life, to a celebration oflife, because this year I am celebrating

(01:29):
precisely ten years of being cancer-free is a thank you to the Community,
of a community that supported me andthat accompanied me throughout this year twenty
- fourteen with positive and encouraging messages. And it' s a love novel,
because my husband and I just gotengaged and we were about to get

(01:52):
married. When I was diagnosed,wow, patsy I can' t believe
it' s been ten years sinceyou were diagnosed. Wow. Credible as
time goes by. Likewise, andlet me tell you that writing the book,
although it was a goal that Ihad always had, from that moment
on, is a process, becausedifficult, not because you have to relive

(02:15):
everything that happened in the two thousandand fourteen. Obviously, in hard things,
very hard things, because there's uncertainty when you get a diagnosis
like that about whether you' regoing to live or not. Sure and
then if you can imagine that concept. I mean, we all know that
well, it' s going tobe a day where we' re not

(02:36):
going to be in this world anymore. But it' s very difficult.
It' s very difficult when youthink a good one, it still doesn
' t touch me or we thinkit doesn' t touch us and it
gives you a diagnosis, so itcan have terrible consequences. But it was
a very cathartic process. Also berbecause through writing I, while writing on
the Internet, on social media,because it was feeling that I focused on

(03:06):
something else, I focused on others, even sharing these stories that I hoped
could motivate or inspire someone else.It took away the focus of what they
were doing to me, what washappening to me, and I changed it
and channeled it and it did somethingpositive and that helped me a lot.

(03:27):
When you realize that you wanted totranslate into a book just this whole journey
you had and at some point Ihave to ask you, that is,
because you were in the middle ofplanning a wedding. So tell us first
how it is that he is bornthis desire to write. I believe that
it was precisely immediately because I hadto find a way to communicate to you

(03:49):
in the Community that you had afairly visible position in the Community, not
just because of my work, butbecause of everything I was doing inside I
was involved in Community organisations, andthen I had to find a way to
tell everyone what was happening to me, because it is something even though not
everyone chooses that. There are peoplewho want to leave it very private,

(04:13):
who try to hide. Come on, they put on a wig, they
try to converge, and they're all valid. All of everyone'
s answers to how to cope withtheir illness are valid. In my case,
I did want to do the publicthing I was going to be bald
and the truth is that wigs likeI didn' t like them and I
said well, you have to findout and I said I' m going

(04:35):
to make everyone sit down. Atthe same time, they seemed to me
the easiest, fastest way to getout already with such negative news, go
so hard that I was going throughthat and I chose social media to make
it clear. People, family,friends, closest, because it was through
a call but or to see thempersonally, but what the community thing is

(04:59):
and I did it all in onestroke. I already said this I'
m going to pass it once andthen I went to social media and I
said I was, I was justdiagnosed and I was going through this and
I told them to learn their belts, because here we go. Here we
go and I' m going tobe sharing with everyone what' s happening
to me, because for me itwas a way of already telling you to

(05:25):
take off that anxiety a little bit, channel that anxiety and those fears that
you have of what' s goingon, of what can happen and turn
it into something that can give youenergy, that can give you, that
drives you and not let you fallinto that black hole that you can not

(05:46):
fall into thinking about what' sgoing to happen, but change it and
make it all positive. Positive,Positive, certainly yes and in fact,
the cover of the book is yourimage with one of these little clothes that
you put on, that is,the beautiful blankets different colors that always combined
them. I remember well, whenyou went through all this and how it
was that you decided, because puttingthat image of you on the cover too

(06:09):
and well, because I reflect thatcover, it reflects a lot of things.
I mean, in your eyes yousee a smile and a calmness.
I don' t know if youhave the same impression. It is a
calm and vasopsa, but at thesame time saris behind every smile, every
patient, behind every look, howevercalm it looks. There are a number
of feelings there that you have noidea, no, and then I wanted

(06:35):
to convey that. I wanted totransmit then, of course this, these
baths that I put on my head, these scoundrels, but they were scarves
that I turned into hair. ThenI' d say one day, I
' d wear a yellow one,and I' m a blonde, I
' ll wear a red one,and I' m a red hair.
And let me tell you that oneof the things I talk about in my

(06:56):
book is precisely humor. The humor, the power of humor and allowing you
to laugh at yourself laughing at what' s happening to you looking for some
humor in things that are not pleasantat all. Then there were ten,
ten I call them gifts of life, among them this humor. That'

(07:16):
s why I mention it to younow that in the end, when,
as the years go by and thenin the process of writing the book I
realize that there are ten gifts oflife sari that were for me. I
credit them for being able to overcomethe disease, for being able to heal
my survival and cancer quickly and well. And these ten life gifts include a

(07:46):
few little things that we talked aboutand I can tell you a little bit
more about them. Yeah, forso many. They include love, which
we started by talking about the bookbeing a love novel, because it was
ending well, we were having awedding and that wedding had to stop for
me to be able to take mytime, a year to recover and do

(08:09):
all my treatments. But what happensthat I was in love and then,
then there is that love, thatlove, not that romance, and then
the love of the family, mychildren, my mother and my brother,
all the friendships and a whole community, the community of Tampa Bey and then
a cybernetic comfort that came to liftme up. And that love is very

(08:35):
important. I tell anyone who's in a situation, whether it'
s a disease or depression or whatever, to let themselves love truth and to
let themselves love because that' sa reality. That is, when there
are certain hormones that call it thehormones of happiness, which are oxytona,
dopine, domapine, endorphins, andthose, those hormones are floating there in

(08:56):
your body, the more in love, you are with your partner, your
family and the more love you receivefrom life, from the nature of the
world. Or whatever, because we' re floating through your body and they
make you have, that is,you' re left with depression, anxiety,
they make you sleep better, havebetter appetite, recover better, that

(09:18):
is, in a series of documentedbenefits in love. Yes, it'
s very important. The human connectionis another. That connection that I tell
you, that I write in thebook of all these people who daily sought
and told me. I' mcrazy about what you write tomorrow and the
day after, because I' mfollowing you, because I' m praying

(09:41):
for you how I know. Allthis gives you an incredible boost. And
I think this is important to emphasizebecause sometimes we think about social media that
you' d come back. Itwasn' t amazing. The love and
affection and support that I received bycyber media in the cyber world, by
the media so it was amazing.Then I never in life. I mean,

(10:03):
I, yeah, I have alot of faith. I' m
a person who believes in God,but I admit it' s so important.
I never believed as much for mylife as at that time I had
two little children and well, faithfor me was very important and for the
rest of people, whatever, ifyou believe be God, in God,

(10:24):
if you believe in the Universe,the universe, but clinging to something greater
than one, you understand me tomake a connection. So, I think
it' s important to believe inyourself. Sometimes I say you have to
be your own hero. You understandme one. Yes, of course,
doctors are very important. I hadvery good doctors, very good medical care,

(10:45):
but you have to be strong byyourself and you have to get your
own super Booman Superman captain from yourselfto deal with these situations you have to
believe in yourself and be willing toreceive and believe that you are going to
sound very positive. That' swhat I think these battles are won by

(11:07):
getting very positive into them. Andthat' s super important. And gratitude.
We speak of gratitude for the Community, gratitude for everything. I became
a beast in recognizing that all lifeis a miracle. Albert Einstein said life
or you think you' re oneof two people, one who thinks everything

(11:28):
is a miracle, the other whothinks nothing is a miracle. And I
' m in the middle of whateverything is a miracle, because it seems
to me to be the most positiveway to live and that' s super
important. Happiness. It is importantto pursue your happiness, what makes you
happy I for myself was to talkto people I made myself, for example,

(11:52):
when I was in the infusion room, I had been told don'
t talk to anyone, because thatplace is so sad and everyone has such
a sad story and you' regoing to sink into that sadness. You
better go sit in your chair.Bring a book, bring the hedfons,
you listen to music and I saiday, but how sad. No,

(12:13):
no, and knowing you, no, no, no, I said no.
No. I' m going tobe friends here with everyone, because
right now these people are the oneswho have the most in common with me.
These people are going through the samething as me, the same worries,
the same fears, the same anxiety, all the same hopes and I
say these people are mine, they' re my club people. Right now,

(12:37):
this is my club, this ismy club right now, this is
my group, this is my peopleand me, my friends. Well,
before I left the last one,with the last infusion, they gave me
books, they gave me hats,they gave me things and I gave them
and I made them to her andthey are in my book there are accounts
of these people that were important tome and because we went through the same

(13:01):
thing and we went through it together, the most important laughs. The humor
mentioned it Sari I look at inthe book there are songs that if mombos
number five, yes, how doI know I am from the eighties then
songs from the eighties. That's where I got into the book because
they came in handy with the storyI was telling so much. I gave

(13:22):
names to a lot of things,with cancer. I never got in,
because I got the original respects almostwhen I was finishing, I say ay
cancer. Yeah. You' renot my boss, you' re not
my boss. I like that.Yes, we say in this world of
survivors. But while I was goingthrough it, I was quiet, I
was mocking everything else of my baldnessand all the things that were happening to

(13:46):
me. But Mira there was abook my husband gave me that' s
called Jess Collin and on one ofthe pages he said put nicknames on the
difficulties of your life, put nameson it. We say nicknames. And
I said, uh how interesting tomake it familiar, to take off arresting

(14:07):
him a little bit that weight andthen I said well, I' m
gonna do that. Then I startedand not just to the problems, but
the things I had to deal withevery day. So, my doctors have
names, they have nicknames. Mydoctor, the oncologist, is Michel La
Comes, because that' s theone he' s investigating, the one
he' s strategist, the oneI' m given, you know the
one who has the strategy of howI was going to survive my ten years

(14:31):
and then beyond and what do Iand my doctor, my plastic surgeon,
become my batman. He' sthe same and he' s Nick Batman.
I tell my batman and he Ithrow the light on that one when
you need help and he comes andcomes to my request for help. And
so humor is super important. Andthen focus on other things, focus on

(14:56):
that, that' s why Igave you the answer right now about why
the book, because it gave methe chance. I also looked in the
media, the television, to followme through and we had to ask permission
in the clinic and in the differentplaces where I had treatment and doing radiation
and well, the chemotherapy to comeand follow me and we pulled pieces that

(15:20):
were put on the news to helpwomen who were going through the same thing,
to enter with a little less fearknowing what was going to happen,
to see another person who was goingthrough the same thing, who are not
alone and so on. And thelast two little things out of the ten

(15:41):
that I tell you the ten orten gifts of life is what has no
choice leaving it behind, that is, and getting it out of it,
which also has to do with thiscatharsis thing that for me I wrote poetry
during that past time. Yeah,look at that, poetry for me is
a superhero who comes to rescue meevery time I need it and when everything

(16:02):
is happy, I don' twrite our guess. The muse like this
vera. She' s sick ofit, like eating a plate. So
it' s super art and whateverI want to sleep well, so is
my muse when everything is quiet hereand everything is happy. But when things
aren' t right, boob andshe' s in her super Woman costume
to the rescue and it helps mea lot, it helps me a lot

(16:26):
then, but and this may bewhatever it is for everyone it' s
something different the one who wants towalk, the one who wants to paint,
the one who likes to read whateverit is, but it' s
looking for a way to get theanxieties out of the inside. And that
because you have, that' simportant to be able to heal, you
have to be as positive as possible. And that' s very important.

(16:48):
And the last thing is never giveup. Of course, life is very
important. In life you have tolive it as it comes, with its
bad things, with its good things, but never, never give up,
never give up. That' swrong. So you divided this as if
it were ten chapters, all thesepoints that you just mentioned patsy you know
no, because this was a reflection. Okay now, at the end of

(17:11):
writing the book. When I startwriting and it' s a clear diary,
then that time is written chronologically,starting in January, that' s
when I was diagnosed, and endingin December, that' s when I
received the last operation. And itseemed super to me that it all happened
like this, that it started inJanuary and ended in December, because it

(17:33):
gave me the sari idea that Iwas catching it like that in a year.
You' re stuck here. I' m going to make you a
very nice wrap and I' mgoing to leave you here with cancer.
I don' t want to seeyou any more exactly. And then,
nothing is a diary. Then ofcourse, it' s not every day
or everything I wrote. I alsodidn' t have to search through Facebook

(17:57):
and these anecdotes, these stories,and I got out of there what I
was finding. I didn' tfind it all or put it all in,
because then it was an image bookof not three hundred pages, but
thousands, but what makes it differentand unique, because I know that there
are many books that of people whohave gone through cancer, because as it

(18:18):
is such a cathartic process, becausemany people tend to write and write clearly
about what happened, about treatment,about the things that happened, about their
minds, about the things that helpedthem. I wanted to do something,
do that a little bit of it, but something different. Then I said
how I involve all this support thatI received. Then, of course through
the book you were that there isthe writing what happened to me that day,

(18:44):
the part of the diary, whatI wrote the day I don'
t know May two of the twothousand fourteen and then all the messages of
the people. How they responded tothat particular writing, whether in pain,
or in sadness, or in joy, or in everyday things. Because another
thing that comes out of the book, which is very important, is that

(19:10):
cancer doesn' t give you alittle pause button that you can ping and
say good. I' m goingto take a pausita here because I have
to heal, because I have todedicate this year to rehabilitate, to heal.
No, no, no, youhave to do this the same time

(19:30):
she' s still a mom,she' s still your wife, she
' s still a mother, daughter, she' s a daughter, yes
sister, a person with a job, with a professional responsibility, the leader
in the voluntary community here and there, in that organization, in that project,
she has to do everything she wasdoing that you never stopped the truth.
You never used all the treatments atall, and we all saw you

(19:55):
here doing all those activities. Exactlyyes, I think I took the I
don' t know a week ofsurgery well, and then I was there
and I remember the first day Iwent back to the office and I said
my God, how I came backwith this baldness these people in my office.
It' s gonna give you something, because it' s a shock,
it' s a big shock andI' m worried about the other

(20:17):
people in my office. I saidI have to go over here because when
I go I don' t knowhow they' re going to feel and
I feel sorry for them for it, because I was happy with my baldness
out there, but I felt sorryfor them, but not for security.
I' m back to work.And that' s important, important because
trying to establish a normality. It' s something that the patient who goes

(20:41):
through cancer is looking for because suddenlyyou have to do so many things that
are new, all the treatments,all these things that have to happen.
And you want a little bit ofnormality and what a better normality than looking
for a nomination at home, withyour family, with your routines and then

(21:02):
at work with your friends, withthe community. I kept doing my events
and doing my job with my studentsand well, all the things I did
before, and that helped me alot. Tell us about the end,
when you managed to capture all theseexperiences and acquire all the comments you wanted

(21:23):
to use when you finished, whathappened to your mind, good patsy imagine
having achieved. I used to sayhow I make this book. In addition,
before, what moved me a lotwas that I had already done a
book of poetry with my mom inSpanish and had learned a lot about how
to publish a book and how todo it. And then I said well,

(21:47):
I already have all this, Iknow how to do it. No,
and then, when you know inthe end, I don' t
know. It was clear that Iwas satisfied to see it already in the
pages of this book, to beable to touch it. But it is
something very much also that I learneda lot because I already tell you these

(22:07):
ten of these ten gifts of lifethat even Sari. After that, I
started to do more research about cancerand otis patients and found research that has
been written by precisely cancer researchers andI realize that the gifts of life that
I discover in the process of writingmy books are equal or if not very

(22:32):
similar, there should be another onea park that I don' t mention
so much, but I do viceversa, that I do mention and they
don' t. But I findin these researches that were made of patients
that even patients that their own percentof being able to survive the cancer was

(22:55):
very low. It is the studyof this one that I mention to you
and these Persians stayed, as theysay, impressed with that patients and did
very well. And when the interviewsdid a little study and the study came
out these things that I tell youlove, connections, not giving up gratitude.

(23:17):
I would have been grateful to recognizesomething, to have faith in humor.
Well, all these things go outand I say well, here'
s something I mean and it gaveme a lot of validity to all this
stuff that I pulled out of myown experiences. This was my tools I

(23:40):
had. We each have tools tobe able to cope and overcome the things
that happen to us in negative life, and these were all my tools.
And when I compare them to thesethat have been discussed in this, I
see that they are very similar.That gave me a lot of satisfaction.
But more than anything, it's to think. The satisfaction of thinking

(24:00):
that this book, you can inspirewomen who are going through these women that
sometimes you know how we do,we' re momstres. We are professionals
and we leave our health one side. That can wait. This thing I
' m feeling is nothing. Igo to the doctor, then I talk
like that, months go by andthen it gets complicated. The thing looks

(24:21):
at me I was invited to speakto a group of professional women, I
made a presentation about cancer and Iremember that at the end came a lady,
a woman and good came the personwho had asked me to speak and
gave me an anonymous note. Andthe anonymous note said you are, a

(24:42):
miracle you are. The messenger ofGod was what he said, because thanks
to YOU, I now have thecourage to face what I have been hiding
for months that she had found amass in the WOWs, but he was
so afraid that he had not looked. I hadn' t finished reading that

(25:03):
note thinking what a shame that Ican' t talk to this person one
by one because she had decided towrite the note anonymously. I hadn'
t had time to put it inmy wallet. When I see a woman
coming up to me and telling meI' m the one who wrote you
the note and I want to,I want to introduce myself and well,

(25:26):
that' s where we start talking. This lady promised me at the end
of the conversation to stay in touchwith me that she would go to the
doctor. That' s how hewent to the doctor. Unfortunately, I
think a year later he passed away. So this story ends in a negative
way, but think of all thepeople who did and were like this in

(25:48):
a presentation, read a book,listened to someone they had a friend or
a friend, a person in theirfamily, because this can be a man
or woman who it is, andthanks to that person, thanks to that
message, thanks to that exhortation,they went to the doctor, discovered that
they had something and they cared forand lived and survived. There are so

(26:10):
many and so many stories like this, unfortunately, there are those that do
not do it in time. Butit is there that it is important to
get out of these messages coming intothe world, because sometimes we devote so
much to our lives, whether theyare personal professionals, to this, to
our children, to our Community andothers that we neglect a little bit and

(26:33):
it is so important to have ourhealth, because without it we can do
nothing completely. And it' sgood that you share that experience with that
person who approached you, because Ibelieve that, as you well mention,
nothing else is convenient with telling itthe truth in this opportunity to be able
to talk to your book. Weare giving a person hope, but also
this motivation for them to continue seekingthe best for their health. And you

(26:56):
' re absolutely right. Sometimes welive in a world so busy that we
forget the truth to put it firston this occasion. It' s been
ten years since you survived all this. You feel good, you have this
chance to write this book. Butwhat is your message to women and men,
because we also know that this typeof cancer affects men? What is
your message to the general public abouthaving that importance for their health? Yeah,

(27:25):
I think, besides everything I've told you, I think we
should do a better job of takingcare of our health. I mean,
I say it' s like abus and you have to be the driver.
You can' t give him yourhealth bus. Let' s say

(27:45):
that not to someone else. Youhave to be the one behind the wheel
and report whatever little thing you noticeand then you do have to face a
family disease with everything that' sgoing on today. Doctors have these supports
where you get in and there's all your tests and your tests and

(28:08):
all that, and there are peoplewho are afraid of it, who don
' t know how they learn,learn how to have access to all that
Don' t give it all tothe doctor. You understand me not only
at all to the clinic, butto get soaked in what' s going
on, what medications they' retaking, what procedures they' re suggesting,

(28:33):
ask for other opinions, and ifnecessary. I think that' s
very important, because sometimes we leaveit all to medicine and the doctor,
and it' s the doctor whoruns this guagua, but not the person
who has the most interest to getout of that problem, of this disease
is each one not known in English, like the self- advocating. True,

(28:55):
it is known in English. Theterm I don' t remember in
Spanish, but yes very well,patsy can tell us where we can get
this book and, well, tobe able to share a little more and
see, it has some other planafter this edition, because you know what
it looks like. This is,this is a smart voice starts psychic and
says it gets bigger and you thinkabout other things and well, we'

(29:19):
ll see where it stops. Fornow the book is on Amazon. It
' s called uman me pre issary. He was number one in the
new pitches for a whole cool week. Yes, yes, yes, happiness
and clarity for a new author.I think people who write books, they

(29:41):
' re super famous, well,they write, they sell thousands of books
and they' re in it theyget all kinds of recognition and maybe it
' s nothing anymore, but forone it' s amazing. You don
' t see that they' renumber one, like c tell me wow,
what a cool one and then theycan find it there. There are
several versions. There' s theone with the soft cover, that'

(30:06):
s a black- and- whiteversion. There' s another hour I
just threw, which is in colorsand it' s a wonder. I
' m in love with that bookbecause all the photos, of course,
have a lot of photos of whatwas going on, that is, I
don' t only transport you tothe two thousand fourteen with all the anecdotes
and all the support of the communityand everything that he evoked in our community,

(30:27):
but also with photos. And thecolor pictures are divine. And then
there' s one that' salready carded. I' m writing it
in Spanish, Impressance in English andnow I' m engaged in because several
people have told me ay, butI speak in Spanish. Then, of
course the English book, the commentsof the people in the community, I

(30:48):
left them just as I did becauseI didn' t want them to lose
the saria essence. For me itwas so important, because there are very
jolly, very funny things, veryour, very cultures, they don'
t translate well. I wanted itto be for me to say so many
sayings. I' m very goodat it and mine do, of course
I did, because I didn't want people who don' t speak

(31:10):
Spanish to stay blank. But whatis community comments, I left them all
in their pure essence. I didn' t want to steal that feeling,
that feeling behind each other. So, that part I' m going to
leave the same in the Spanish book. But all my stuff, all my
anecdotes all year round all the newspaperentries if I' m going to translate
them into Spanish, so that's what' s next the book and

(31:33):
I think I' m going tocall him you made me strong, which
seems to me to be the mostloyal tradition to Umami prase. So that
' s what' s coming.Ah pal perfect, perfect, good that
you are telling us that you haveplans for this translation as well. Or,
well, you' re actually kindof rewriting it too because I know
you and I know how you saidall the sayings and all that, the

(31:53):
truth is, they don' ttranslate well. Many times no, no,
I know he' s giving youyour special touch. That' s
right, so I' m happyabout it. I hope it' s
a book just like they inspired meto listen to me all that year,
throughout that year, I hope thisbook is also of inspiration and motivation,

(32:16):
not just for people who are goingthrough a disease. I will make here
the important and the last message thatI will leave you with, and that
is, that we are going throughsomething difficult or we should not live grateful,
because every day that everything is okay, it is a good day to

(32:37):
live grateful for all the good thathappens to us, for all the good
that we have every day. Forme it was one of the things that
I get out of this whole experience. If I tell you I was from
one of these people you know thatin English you say to snow the roses.
I was one of these people thatif he looks at the sun,

(32:59):
the bet of the po, thesorce goes down every day, The sun
goes out every day. And thereare people who say low, but I
don' t. I see hownice the sunrise? Look how cute the
birdie is? Look how nice theslack? I mean, I needed to
go through something like that to wakeup and realize that life is a wonder.
But I' ve always recognized him, I' ve always lived my

(33:20):
life. It has been in apositive way, in a way focusing on
all the wonderful things that it isto live. But I hope the book
conveys that as well as how niceto live. Thankful for everything, how
good it is to give us lifeand not have to go through something,
something so sad or something ugly torealize that life is wonderful. Excellent words.

(33:44):
Good of you, Patty, tojoin us and give us this information
also at the end of this interview. You can look in the description so
that you have the direct link thereif you want to make this purchase.
And a mai my pr the patsySanchez also daughter of Tampa oay certainly funny
and you know what I love you. I love you so much.
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