Photoremedy Photo of the Year: 2012 First Cut

We are preparing for our second annual photoremedy.me Photo of the Year contest, and we need your input before we narrow the list down to the top 10-12 photographs that will be featured in our year end vote.

The video slide show featured above offers the first cut of the photos that we feel are worthy of being the 2012 Photoremedy.me Photo of the Year. Our readers are encouraged to view the video above (remember to click on the sprocket and select HD) and to then comment on their favorite photos from this list.  Please make note of the watermarked extensions featured on each slide, such as – ab or – h4, and then refer to the extension when registering your comments at the bottom of this blog post in the ‘Leave a Reply’ box. If you are one of my Facebook friends, you can also register comments on my Facebook page.

We’ll take comments up until noon on 12/21/12. After the comment period ends, 10-12 final photos will be featured here on photoremedy.me, along with a voting mechanism. We’ll also give a little background on each photo. Thank you in advance for your help in narrowing down the list.

An Irish Wedding

As I put this post together, I’m happy to report that I am on the mend. I’m still struggling with typing and working at the computer, but that was expected.

aWedding-24 (1 of 1)

Since I knew it may difficult to continue posting for a while, I put together a slide show video before my surgery that features another one the highlights of our Ireland trip this past summer – Dustin and Joann’s beautiful wedding in the North Cork countryside of Southern Ireland.

Ballyvolane House - County Cork,

Ballyvolane House – County Cork,

We were so fortunate to join the families–we have been friends with Dustin’s family for decades now–for a wonderful two-day stay at an authentic classical Georgian home built in 1728. The Ballyvolane House was then modified in 1848 in Italianate style.

Ballyvolane House turned out to be an incredible place for a wedding and all of the events and meals that were part of the stay there. Let me know what you think when you see the video. To view the photoremedy video slide show below in high definition, just click the play button. Hover over the video, then click on the sprocket icon to the left of the clock and select 1080p HD.

Special thanks to the lovely Noriana Kennedy, who was so kind as to perform Dustin and Joann’s wedding music and who has allowed us to use a couple of her songs in our Ireland slide show videos. If you would like to read more about Noriana, or buy her music, you can visit her website at http://norianakennedy.com/home.cfm.

As Dustin and Joann head into their first Christmas together as spouses, I thought it would be appropriate to share one of my favorite short Irish blessings with them and their families.

May joy and peace surround you,
Contentment latch your door,
And happiness be with you now,
And bless you evermore.

Photoart by Greg

Photoart by Greg

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Ballyvolane House

Ballyvolane House

Off the Table

Warning: This post contains pictures that may be disturbing to some people

Normally, I might offer the above warning in one of my failed attempts at humor. I was thinking if I was trying to be funny, I might attach the warning to something like a photo of me walking around the house without my shirt on. But that isn’t the case; there are a couple of photos below that might not be for the faint of heart. It is a sincere warning.

I am including some photos of my surgery in this blog post because I promised a few people I would do so, and because it might help communicate how beneficial photoremedy (using photography to move your mind from an over focus on ailments) has been for me in helping combat my health issues. The idea I’m trying to communicate is that if photoremedy can help someone who is willing to go through what I did this week, then perhaps maybe it can help you, or a family member, or a friend.

I was awake for nearly all of the approximately 200 minute procedure, but I was not able to see just how involved the surgery was. For those considering neurostimulators, do not let the photo below scare you. They gave me really good meds.  There was little to no pain involved and you need to be awake to help them best direct the placement of the electrodes. As those who know me might expect, I even thought I had some of my best stand up lines going while they were doing this.  The key word is “thought.”

All photos courtesy of Matt Mundus, St. Jude Medical – Neurostimulation

The electrodes are readily apparent in the x-ray photos

I am a long ways from a final determination of how much elevation I will get from having two neurostimulators implanted under the skin on my backside and 32 electrodes running up and down my spine, but here’s my initial read on how the surgery went.

The two implants are already producing encouraging results. The severe pain I have lived with for some time in my right arm and left leg has certainly declined. My toes–which more often than not have felt like a UFC fighter stomped on them before smashing them with a super sized sledgehammer–have been completely free of pain ever since the surgery. The toe pain was a result of nerve damage I suffered when I broke a vertebrae and wore away a disc or two in my lower back. Two major lumber surgeries did not result in any major pain level reduction or increase in the function of my left leg. It did, however, leave me with titanium screws and rods.

Scar tissue and small nerve roots in some locations are preventing (currently) significant impact in a couple of key areas. I will have more device programming sessions, so we’ll work on changing that. I’ve been told the neurostimulators will likely not lesson the psoriatic arthritis impact, so I will likely need to continue with treatment I have employed in the past. There is also some question about restoring the dexterity in my right hand, and it is still killing me to type for more than a few minutes at a time. I put together this post, for example, bit by bit.

The “stab wounds” in the back are quite painful, but that should pass. When it takes (as the doctor’s told me) “hundreds of stitches” to anchor everything in place and close up the incisions, one shouldn’t expect to run a marathon the next day.

All in all, I’m extremely encouraged at this early juncture. Plus, the 23 pounds I’ve lost since the week before Thanksgiving will also help put a bigger bounce in my step! I’m supposed to be extremely inactive for 6-12 weeks, so I’ll have to lay off beer and chips if I want to lose any more weight. Since I tend to prefer a red wine here and a vodka there, the beer should be relatively easy to avoid. But, darn it, I love my chips!

I hope to get back to pursuing more photoremedy and posting pictures soon, but I will try to occasionally update readers on my “cyborg” progress. So many people have been so kind with prayers and well wishes – thank you all. I am so thankful for such a caring family and so many fabulous friends.

I am also incredibly thankful for the team of skilled health care professionals–doctors, nurses, technicians, physical therapists, and others–who have worked so hard at helping me win this battle.

Our blessings are many, and life is good!

Under the Knife Again

By Greg W. Gilstrap

The primary mission of this blog has always been related to encouraging individuals fighting significant health challenges to consider taking up hobbies or practices — like photography — that produce joy and elevate one’s spirit while moving their minds away from their ailments. Along the way, photoremedy.me has created opportunities to share the fruits/photos of what can be created when one exercises this, for lack of a better term, alternative medicine approach.

I captured this gull as he floated above Ireland’s River Shannon.

I’ve always known that photoremedy alone was not the only answer to my struggles with what I am now told is “failed back syndrome.” I’ve had two brutal surgical efforts to rebuild my lower back following a broken vertebrae. Both of those efforts failed to produce meaningful results, and are now complicated by significant psoriatic arthritis and four degenerated discs in my neck. Lying in bed, sitting, and standing all tend to rapidly elevate pain levels; so, I spend most of my day changing positions and fidgeting like I did back in grade school. That’s a lot of fidgeting. Just ask my Facebook friend, and former Randolph Elementary School principal, Mr. Walters. Yes, Mr. Walters rightfully introduced me to his paddle on more than one occasion.

This combination of conditions has left me rather unbalanced, as I have lost significant motor skills in both my left leg and right arm.

In an attempt to reduce pain levels and fight declining functionality, I will head back to the surgeon’s table this week for a four-to-five hour surgery in which a two-surgeon-led medical team will implant two neurostimulators that will deliver 32 electrodes to both my lumbar and cervical spine. The new ‘gear’ is intended to sharply reduce pain and restore significant functionality. I’ll need to limit movement for six-to-eight weeks, but I hope to be able to blog again soon. I’ll keep y’all posted on my progress.

St. Jude Medical photos

My son, Will, says I will be a “cyborg” when we add the new electrical elements to all of the titanium I already have in my back. If it kicks my recovery into full swing, then he can call me anything he wants.

Personally, I am rather fond of “Iron Man.”

Chicken, Waffles, Birthdays, and Sacred Prayers

William and Andrew Gilstrap at Lo-Lo’s Chicken and Waffles

November 16, 2012

Our oldest son, Andrew, celebrates his 28th birthday today. We had a great family kick-off to his ‘birthday week’ last weekend at the sinfully delicious Lo-Lo’s Chicken and Waffles in Scottsdale.

It would have been a perfect day had Andrew’s lovely wife Katie been able to make it, but she’s a nurse and duty called. The rest of our gang was there–Mary, Will, Amanda & Stephen, Andrew and Emmett–so it took a while to get a booth big enough for all of us. It was worth the wait. I found Larry ‘Lo-Lo’ White’s soul food combinations unique, yet familiar. That is probably because, in my case, “You can take the boy away from his butter and chicken grease upbringing, but you can’t take the butter and fried chicken away from the boy!

As good as the food was, the company was even better. Mary and I later remarked how lucky we are to have great kids (although all are now adults). And, just as importantly, we feel so blessed to experience great kids having great kids.

Andrew is in his last semester of graduate school at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. As has been the case with Mary and all of our children, Andrew has been incredibly helpful as I have struggled to regain my health. He is a frequent contributor and editor for this blog; and continues to encourage me to seek healing through photography. Happy birthday, Andrew! Here’s our prayer for you on this special day.

 

Capturing Costas at Cronkite

By Andrew Gilstrap

Perhaps you don’t watch the MLB Network or NBC’s Sunday Night Football Coverage. If you don’t, then you’re probably not familiar with a certain sports anchor’s latest work. But certainly you recognize the name: Bob Costas. Surely you do. And I’ll bet you caught him at some point this summer anchoring the most recent Olympic Games in London.

To be honest, I haven’t seen a whole lot of Costas since NBC stopped airing NBA games. However, I was impressed to see my school, the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University, got the broadcast legend to visit the campus last week.

I went to the top floor of the Cronkite building last Monday evening to snap pictures of Costas’ visit to the Cronkite NewsWatch newsroom. And then the 23-time Emmy winner was back in the building Tuesday morning for a one hour question-and-answer session with Dr. Joseph Russomanno, a Cronkite school professor (who also happens to be my Media Law teacher this semester). Later on Tuesday, there was a special luncheon where Costas accepted the 2012 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism.

I was not able to attend the luncheon, but I used his other two appearances on campus to try dozens of different shots of him with my Canon camera. I even walked by him in the bathroom as he was either washing his hands or splashing his face right before he went ‘on stage’ for the Q-and-A session on Tuesday. I had a perfect chance to either pester him or introduce myself, but, knowing that he was expected in our First Amendment Forum, I smiled nervously and left him alone.

With all that I look forward to doing in sports, this is a guy to look up to (even though he’s not all that tall, as I found out when I was in his presence). I’m surprised how youthful this broadcast icon still looks. It was also refreshing to hear his commitment to objective, non-sensational journalism. Too bad he’s doesn’t do anything with basketball at the moment, because that’s where I’d see more of his work.

Take a look below at a slideshow of some of my captures (with minimal edits) of Costas’ trip to the Cronkite school.

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