Saturday, 24 September 2011

Life giving juice

Anyone who knows me at surface level knows I'm into helping people in some way. Anyone who knows me below surface level knows I'm into donating what I have readily available to someone who doesn't. As I'm still a poor uni student, that means being a regular blood donor and being on the mone marrow donor registry. I have precious and healthy cells rocking inside of me, continuously being produced and thrown away. I have an abundance of them while a tonne of people don't. I'm aware not everyone shares a similar opinion, but I feel selfish keeping everything to myself. If you consider blood as you do money- you work for it, gain it, store it and then say goodbye to it by spending it, its sort of simplified. I feel it is my duty and an honour to help those in need. If a little old lady dropped her groceries, the good thing to do would be to pick them up. If the same little old lady dropped her groceries because she was so fatigued due to having a low red blood cell count, I'd stick out my arm in an instant (while picking the groceries up with my other arm).

Now, unfortunately hip young peeps my age don't get so see the effects of donated blood. It really is unfortunate, because that life giving juice does amazing work. I've seen many blood transfusions as a nursing student. It has literally given life back to people! I fondly remember a young man with a young family suffering from leukaemia. Many blood transfusions replaced the cells destroyed by cancer and kept him alive to be with his family. I wish you could see the good it does. Until you do, trust me, it's amazing. Doctors can't save people without blood.

What does this have to do with Nepal? Valid question I hear you ask. Two risks posed to me in Nepal (however minor) are Malaria and Rabies. If I do not have the Rabies vaccine, I cannot donate blood for 12months upon returning from my trip. I am up for around $350 to vaccinate myself against a disease that I am highly unlikely to contract. I can't stand the thought of knowing over a 12 months period, I could make 4 donations and take part in saving 12 lives. The comparison between $350 and an individuals life is incomparable! So, more needles it is.

I'm not into shoving this sort of thing down people's throats, but there are so many excuses as to why people don't give blood. Some are valid, definately, others not. I give knowing that there is a chance either my mum, aunty or brother will need blood at some point in their lives. That's a statistic. Until then I know I have helped someone elses mum, aunty or brother.

I'm going to let this daggy teenage guy do some of the talking for me. He sums it up real well.

http://www.donateblood.com.au/videos/i-do-blood

So today I have exactly 100 days until I leave for Nepal, and I can't imagine sharing anything more important than blood donation on my most pertinent countdown point. Im sticking my arm out in just under a fortnight and would be more than happy to have a blood buddy with me. Who knows, maybe we could have a free milkshake afterwards!

xx

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