I wanted to offer a challenge to my fellow pedicab drivers. You can think of it as the ultimate karma ride and you don't even have to turn a single pedal stroke. What is it? I want to challenge you all to donate a pint of blood, plasma or donate platelets.
I started out donating whole blood when I was in my late 20's to my local blood center, the Central California Blood Center. I was first motivate to donate because a family friend was diagnosed with leukemia at the age of 6. After donating over 6 gallons (yes, 6 gallons) of whole blood over the years (I have met others who have surpassed 6 gallons) I was told about Platelet Apheresis, the process of donating platelets.
Well, it has been several years since my first apheresis donation. And there is one question that I am asked most often, and that is how much do I get paid. Well folks, I don't get paid. I give of myself freely and in return I receive the occasional free t-shirt, or a coupon to Baskin Robbins Ice Cream. I even have a few plastic displays that proclaim just how much of this (blood) or that (platelets) I have donated over the years.
So, once again I challenge all my fellow pedicab drivers, to donate whole blood, plasma or platelets. When you donate you give the "gift of life." If you are willing to take up this challenge you should consider registering with the National Marrow Donor Program. Here is one more interesting fact for those that aren't aware, "only 5 percent of the eligible population of blood donors actually gives blood."
What I'd like to find out is, how many of those that donate regularly ride a pedicab?
Cross posted over at Macdonald's Animal Farm.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
A challenge for my fellow pedicabbers
Posted by
M A F
at
11:12 PM
Labels: apheresis, Baskin Robbins, blood, bone marrow, donate, karma, pedicabbing, plasma, platelets, What pedicabbies do
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3 comments:
I donate blood since my age of 18, not for money, for free to help other!
Then a long time I can't donate because of living in Asia.
Now in this time, after I start again to donate - same problems: if I'm f.e. in Marroc for bicycling in the "malaria-season", I can't donate for some time, if I have a medical check with any possibility of a infection it is not allowed to donate for protection of the receiver.
In future I like always donate, if this is possible.
Why many young and healthy people don't donate???
Always the same: I don't need blood, to lazy, why I'm, no time, I can't see blood ...
Please, don't think like this!
Try donate blood (for free)! It's no pain at all, before you get a doctor check, your blood will be tested - you know about your health!
After the donation(in Germany, Red Cross) you get soft drinks, mineral water, coffee and same small food, you rest together with other and, believe me, inside you feel very happy because with your half liter blood you help other to live!
If you have your own family/ child or a bad experience, maybe you change your thinking ...
Why not now??? Please go and donate blood!!!
Thanks,
jan
Thanks for the post. I have donated blood for most of my life and have never really kept track of how much. The hospital always knew that if they were short or needed O-pos I was there. Just always what I felt.
What a great challenge, MAF! I've never given blood because I've been told I can't. I had Hepatitis A when I was about 8 or 9 years old. I thought that the limit was age 11, but I've gotten conflicting information. I've always figured I was better off not donating than taking a risk. Your post has made me rethink that. Thanks!
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