Home & Garden42 mins ago
George Best
They're saying his hours are numbered now, bleeding complications means he can't recover.
Such a shame :-(
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.kick3m0n Hope your life is a full and joyous as his.
If it makes you sick, so be it. Enjoy your life now, you don't know what is round the corner.
As for his liver transplant, I'm sure he wouldn't have received it if he wasn't deserving of it. Our genes are what we are. Do we blame our ancestors? If we have an accident are we less deserving of treatment. Because as we all know accidents are preventable.
He was thrust into the type of lifestyle that any of us would struggle to cope with; how arrogant to judge whether someone's life is more worthwhile than anyone else's? He has a disease - not one it is easy to be sympathetic with if you lack the imagination to think it could be you in that position. But still a disease.
oh get off your high horses! he was a drunk etc... if it was your father would you say the same thing? Lets show some compassion.
And before you say anything, yes I know what it is like to have an alcoholic as a father, and yes I know what it is like to lose some close as well . forgiveness will bring you peace
There are some very arrogant and unforgiving people on this thread. George Best did not get his new liver because of who he is and anybody who thinks that does not know anything about medicine and transplants. The anti-rejection drugs have been the problem. As you may know they lower the immune system, which in turn leaves the body open to infection(heard of AIDS?).
How interesting to see that you only get 3 stars if you agree with Gill 05...
Yes, it's a shame that George Best is dying, but I don't have much sympathy for him. I also have a close relative who is an alcoholic, and if they were suffering as Best is now, I'm not sure I would be particularly sympathetic to them either. I would certainly feel it's at least partly self-inflicted. Best had plenty time and money to try and help himself, but he chose not to.
I don't know the man at all, and wouldn't pretend to for a second, but I'm pretty sure he doesn't want anyone to feel sorry for him.
but Artemis you miss the point. An alcoholics life is NOT full and joyous. they are dependant on alcohol and that is an addiction and indeed a curse. This myth perpetuated that drunks are full of joy and good times is a nonsense. When they wake up the next morning with the shakes, or can't remember where they are. When they have people taking advantage of them and having no stability in any relationships...ahh the joy, Id' mad not be be jealous of that life, eh?. It's the alcoholics themselves who perpetuate this myth. far better that than to admit to and face up to the shame, and horror of what their lives have become.
If it had been my alcoholic father? I'd feel the same - I was nearly in that situation, but a heart attack spared everyone the trauma. As I said at the top, I appreciate others will feel differently, but my personal experiences ahve led me to this point. As for peace, I am at peace, I have no need to forgive anyone. My father chose his path, destroyed a family, kept another one a secret, and died young, estranged from all of us. His life, his choice. You can't chose your family, as they say.