Know Your Balls

Well, I’m switching gears today (now that Earth Day is over) from saving the planet to saving your balls, or those of someone you love!

I was invited to share this important message regarding men’s health with my readers and am happy to oblige. I normally don’t encourage guys to “rearrange the furniture” but, am making an exception in this case.

April is Testicular Cancer Awareness Month and Tommy John underwear  wants to help educate people about prevention & detection of this disease. They’re a relatively new company revolutionizing men’s underwear; believing that improvements were long overdue. It’s stated this way on their website:

A man’s under layers shouldn’t be stuck in the past.
Or anywhere else.

Funny right? Speaking of the website, you should stop by and check it out; they put a humorous spin on a mundane subject, in a very creative way!

Click here to read more about the company (or if you just want to see some guys in their skivvies!)  Tommy John underwear


If you’d like to help spread the message, here’s the deal:

Instagram Giveaway:  To enter, you must share one of these testicular cancer info cards on Instagram using #KnowYourBalls, and tag someone who could benefit from the knowledge. Follow @TommyJohnWear and @TesticularCancerFoundation for a chance to win a $25 credit for some 

.

 

For more information from the Testicular Cancer Foundation &
Tommy John underwear or to help spread the message 
click here.


Earth Day – 2016

Earth Day


Happy Earth Day!

Let’s commit to educating ourselves (and our children) on all the ways we can preserve & protect our precious planet.


If we don’t change our ways NOW, there won’t be a LATER!

Here are 25 Easy Ways to Help Save The Planet


Blogging From A to Z Challenge – S

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Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free… ~ Emma Lazarus


Blogging From A to Z Challenge – S

 “S” is for statue; for this post it’s the Statue of Liberty. 

Lady Liberty was a gift from the people of France and dedicated on October 28, 1886. She was designed by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, a French sculptor, and made of copper. The statue represents Libertas, the Roman goddess, who bears a torch and a tabula ansata (a tablet evoking the law) upon which is inscribed the date of the American Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776. A broken chain lies at her feet. The statue is an icon of freedom and of the United States, and was a welcoming sight to immigrants arriving from abroad. (Courtesy: Wikipedia)


I took the photo above on a trip to the “Big Apple” with my daughter. As I stood there looking up at Miss Liberty, I could only imagine what the immigrants felt when they entered New York Harbor and saw her. They were coming to America to begin a new and better life. She represented the hopes and dreams of some twelve million people who passed through Ellis Island and continues that esteemed purpose to this day.

For more information click this link.