LOVE REMEDIES A MULTITUDE OF WRONGS
February, as you know, brings in Valentine’s Day. A holiday where many of us scramble to make sure those close to us KNOW we love them! After all – Love is a many-splendored thing. While Love for our family and friends is the most important, I think it’s also essential to express my heartfelt desire for helping people find a home where their heart is.Â
My favorite love description is: Love is patient, Love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, and it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, trusts, always hopes, and always perseveres. I could go on with all kinds of examples like â “Love Your Neighbor as Yourself,” even go all business-like and say “ how much we love your referrals” and more.
But, the point is we do love helping people sell and buy real estate. And those people say we are good at it!
Please know that my team and I are eager to help anyone you know wanting to make a move. So much so that we are willing to make an offer that your referrals will LOVE â AND â the Kids at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles will love too.
Your referrals help the kids!
Go Serve Big!!! Investing In Our Southern Californian Kids
If you or a friend are thinking about selling, make sure to choose a real estate company you can trust! A real estate company with experience, proven results and a give-back philosophy!
AND REMEMBER… Your referrals help the Kids…
We are on a mission to raise $25,000 for CHLA. We do this by donating a portion of our income from homes we sell. As you know, Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles does great work in helping kids fight through and survive nasty life-threatening diseases like cancer, Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, leukemia and others. They also lead the way in helping kids come back from spinal cord injuries as well as early diagnosis of autism. Last year alone, Children’s helped over 1,000,000 kids right here in Los Angeles. BUT, Children’s relies on sponsorships and donations to provide their elite level of care, and to keep families’ expenses to a minimum. So YOUR REFERRALS REALLY DO HELP THE KIDS…
Who do you know considering buying or selling a home you could refer to my real estate sales team?
Not only will they benefit from our award-winning service, but you can rest assured we are also donating to a very worthy cause.
Go Serve Big!!! Investing in the Children of Los Angeles.
A Real Estate Company that Gives Back!
Childrenâs Hospital LA leads the way in serving kids one patient at a time.
We are still boldly on a mission to raise $25,000 for the Childrenâs Hospital of Los Angeles, and we are making progress! We do this by donating to them a portion of our income from homes we sell. As you know, CHLA does AMAZING work in helping kids fight through and survive nasty diseases like cancer, Non-Hodgkinâs lymphoma, leukemia, and others. They also lead the way in many other fields.
They can provide this care and keep patient costs to a minimum due to donations and sponsorships. We are proud to support the Childrenâs Hospital of Los Angeles!
As in the attached story, Childrenâs Hospital of Los Angeles provides the best pediatric medical care available anywhere in the country. To do that, CHLA needs donations to continue its leading-edge care. We proudly donate a portion of our income from real estate sales to CHLA to help them continue serving the needs of those who most need it in our Los Angeles!
Who do you know considering buying or selling a home you could refer to our real estate sales team? Not only will they benefit from our award-winning real estate service, but a very worthy cause will also benefit as well. To refer anyone considering buying or selling a home just give me a call or pass on my number. 213-880-9910.
Thank you in advance for your referrals!
You and your referrals mean more than ever to my team and me. As we move forward thru this winter, please know we are extremely thankful for you and you being a special part of our business.
Go Serve Big!!! — Corey Chambers
EntarÂŽ Real Estate and Investment Technologies!
P.S. I copied and pasted the story below from the CHLA website. It better tells the story of the work they are doing.
MAKING A DIFFERENCE
As a leading charitable hospital, CHLA depends on sponsorships and donations to continue its leading-edge service. We proudly donate a portion of our income from real estate sales to CHLA to help them continue serving the needs of those who most need it in Los Angeles!
A real estate company with experience, proven results and a give-back philosophy!
Over the years of helping many families sell their homes and/or buy another, we have met some wonderful, loving, caring people. People like you! So your referrals can rest assured that, not only will they get the award-winning service we are known for and the guarantee to back it up, but that a solid portion of the income we receive will go toward helping the kids.
Refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move:
You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info online or forward the link to someone you know considering a move.
Of course you can always call me direct as well at 213-880-9910
Why I support ChildrenĘźs Hospital Los Angeles
I grew up right here in the Greater Los Angeles Area, born in Los Angeles County at St. Francis Hospital. I remember when I first heard about a young person close to our family suffering from a serious disease and getting treated for that at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles. It was then that I began to pay closer attention to the work they do at that hospital. Since then, I have learned that it is a collection of hard-working health care professionals, most making their home right here in the Los Angeles area, all coming together for a common cause. That cause is to help young people overcome unfortunate health issues that life sometimes throws our way. Being a Los Angeles Area California native, I take pride in supporting in a way that I can do the good work these people do at Childrenâs. My team rallies around our annual goal of raising money and donating portions of our income to help Childrenâs in their quest to heal young people when they need healing. My team and I are committed to providing outstanding results for buyers and sellers referred to us by our past clients. I have discovered that Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles shares a similar commitment to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations, we are happy to contribute and proud to support them.
Sincerely,
Corey Chambers
Lifesaving Brain Surgery Rescues Buddy From a Rare Encephalitis
A neurological disease called Rasmussenâs encephalitis terrorized the 3-year-old with nonstop epileptic seizures. The only hope was a hemispherectomy, in which doctors disconnect the two halves of the brain so one cannot disturb the other.
By Jeff Weinstock
âHow can I say yes to someone asking me if I am OK with them cutting my kidâs head open and taking part of his brain out?â Paul asks, emotion clenching his voice. âI didnât know how to be OK with that.â
But what other option was there? His son, nicknamed Buddy, had been besieged for months by the effects of Rasmussenâs encephalitis, a rare brain disorder that causes inflammation in one half, or hemisphere, of the brain, triggering epileptic seizures that can devastate mental and physical function.
The disease, which generally strikes young children, ravaged the left side of Buddyâs brain. Since its onset in June 2022, when Buddy was 3, the number of seizures would rise and fall, staved off by a pile of medications. But now they were coming virtually uninterruptedâover 150 a dayâa potentially fatal condition called status epilepticus that forced Buddy to be admitted to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles with a breathing tube.
âOut of an hour, he was spending 40 minutes either having seizures or recovering from seizures,â CHLA neurologist Latanya Agurs, MD, says, âand he would spend the entire day receiving emergency doses of medications, just to seize over and over again.â
The one effective treatment for Rasmussenâs encephalitis is surgical, but the graphic nature of the procedure, called a hemispherectomy, unnerved Paul and Kristen, Buddyâs mother. Doctors cut away nerve fibers bridging the two halves of the brain so that epilepsy signals cannot travel acrossâfrom the side stricken with encephalitis to the healthy side. Removing those connections neutralizes the seizures.
If the surgery workedâas it does 90% of the timeâBuddyâs brain would still experience electrical activity that would be picked by an EEG, but he would not feel it, nor could the seizures do him any more harm. In effect, they would be firing blanks.
âIf you put an EEG on a person whoâs had a disconnection,â Dr. Agurs says, âthat EEGâs going to look like heâs having seizures, but I shouldnât see the patient have any clinical manifestation of them. Theyâre not spreading from one side of the brain to the other.
âZero seizures is the operationâs goal,â she says. âAlive and zero seizures. Thatâs the gold standard.â
When the brain turns on itself
As rare as Rasmussenâs encephalitis isâestimated at 2 cases for every 10 million peopleâDr. Agurs, an epileptologist at CHLAâs Neurological Institute, had seen it several times by the time she received Buddyâs case. âI have three or four patients who have it currently,â she says.
âThereâs a lot of encephalitis,â she explains. âRasmussenâs falls into the category of autoimmune encephalitis. Something triggers your cellsâ antibodies to attack its own brain, and you canât always find the reason why.â
Plus, thereâs no stopping it. Agurs says one of the indicators for Rasmussenâs encephalitis is progressive atrophy of the brain, which was visible on Buddyâs imaging.
âYou get two MRIs three months apart and youâre thinking, âWhy is the brain smaller?â It had already happened. Heâd had some brain shrinkage already.â
He exhibited the telltale motor deficits of brain degeneration, which are typically experienced on the opposite side of where the seizures occur. So it was with Buddy. The strength in his right leg declined to where he could no longer stand upright.
âHe was stumbling everywhere,â Kristen says. âHe couldnât hold his balance.â
His language ability worsened as well. Independent of the encephalitis, Buddy suffered from autism, limiting his speech to one-word sentences, which now came out in a slurred slow motion.
CHLA neurosurgeon Jason Chu, MD, MSc, says Rasmussenâs encephalitis needs to be acted upon early before it erodes so much of a childâs brain that the brainâs growth is stunted and may even regress. Importantly, a central trait of a young childâs brain is its neuroplasticityâa limberness that allows the brain to adapt to a new weakness and gradually autocorrect, as the healthy areas take on the work of the injured part.
âAs we get older, our brain starts to solidify in very specific areas,â Dr. Chu says. âBut in younger patients, the good side can actually pick up a lot of the functions from the diseased side.â
Disabling the pathways
Disconnecting the brainâs two hemispheres, however, has âtrade-offs,â Dr. Chu says. He explained to the family that the procedure would bear significant physical and mental impairments, and a need for extensive therapy to restore those areas. One consequence of the procedure that could not be recovered would be the loss of his right field of vision, opposite where the nerve fibers would be cut.
âThatâs a very difficult conversation to have and can be very scary for families,â Dr. Chu says. âBut weâre talking about an operation that has a really high chance of curing the epilepsyânever having a seizure again for the rest of your life.â
Kristen quickly gave her approval for the surgery, looking toward the recovery. âLetâs get it over with so we can work on the deficits post-op,â she recalls thinking. âI want to get my son back.â
But she shared Paulâs fears. âItâs brain surgery. What if they donât cut enough? What if they cut too much? What if they cut in the wrong spot, and what if my son doesnât come out of it?â
Meanwhile, Paul read up on Rasmussenâs encephalitis. He overcame his reluctance after he learned what âa monsterâ the disease is, he says. âI still have Google tabs open right now on my laptop from back when I was looking up the condition. I didnât want to feel selfish. I didnât want to be the reason he didnât get better.â
The experience of their doctors reassured them both, the result of working in a Level 4 epilepsy center, the highest designation of expertise awarded to a hospital. âThey sat us down and said, âThis is not the first time weâve seen this,ââ Kristen says. âDr. Chu was like, âI just did this surgery not too long ago. Youâre the third patient to come into the PICU with Rasmussenâs encephalitis.ââ
The hemispherectomy was performed Oct. 7, 2022. Scheduled for 12 hours, it went 13âa surgeonâs dozen. Dr. Chu and his team removed all the connections between the two halves of Buddyâs brain, preventing the left side from transmitting seizures over to the right.
âIf you leave anything connected, seizures will still get across and you will have wasted your time,â Dr. Agurs says.
Paul describes the outcome succinctly: âThey went in and cut my kidâs brain in half and saved his life.â
An unexpected gesture
For the first weeks after the procedure, Buddy did not talk, nor could he move the right half of his body. But Dr. Chu had warned of this outcome beforehand and said the deficits would not last.
âHe gave us the rundown,â Kristen says. ââThis is what you need to expect coming out of surgery. Itâs going to take him a while to get back up, but just be there for him, continue doing what youâre doing, and heâll be OK.ââ
So it was, as after a month Buddyâs speech returned. âNot full sentences, but he was saying his one-word phrases again,â Kristen says.
Fifteen months since, Buddyâs progress is dramatic. As was hoped, the plasticity of his young brain has worked in his favor, the right side seeming to absorb what had been the tasks of the leftâand in Dr. Agursâ view, at a much higher level.
âAfter doing his assessment, we assumed that his language has moved itself over,â she says. âSeeing him in clinic now, I think his language and his ability to communicate have gotten vastly better since his surgery. Heâs much more verbal than he was.â
And certainly more blunt. âA couple of days ago,â Kristen says, âhe was watching TV and I went to play with him, and he says, âHey, I canât see.â So heâs speaking clearly now.â
Physically, Buddy has also adapted. A natural righty, he has learned to be left-handed. He limps and wears leg braces, but they donât conceal his recovery. Asked if heâs walking, Kristen goes one better: âHeâs running.â
Dr. Agurs and Dr. Chu marvel at his improvement, having watched Buddy march around the clinic in October. âHe couldnât even stand on his own last year when he was having seizures,â she says. âA lot of things recover really well after a hemispherectomy, especially when youâre under the age of 6.â
The most important post-op finding, of course, was the immediate and complete elimination of Buddyâs seizures. The doctors donât expect them to return. But Kristen canât keep from reacting to the smallest sudden gesture.
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âAs happy and hopeful as I am, I always have that doubt in the back of my mind,â she says. âThat feeling never goes away. Say he twitches in his sleep or does any little movement, I still flinch. Iâm day to day, and I donât think thatâll ever change.â
There was one unexpected gesture that brought not anxiety, but instead astonishment and joy. One day while on a drive, Paul told his son that he loved him, and Buddy answered back with a complete sentence he had never said before: âI love you.â
âI donât know why he said it back,â Paul says. âMaybe he just felt safe and comfortable.â
When Dr. Agurs heard about it later, it moved her to tears.
âI always feel so bad for Paul,â she says, noting Paulâs regret over initially delaying the surgery. âHe always says, âI shouldnât have waited.â I told him, âItâs OK. We got it done, right? We got it done.ââ
How You Can Help
Refer your friends, neighbors, associates, or family members considering making a move: www.ReferralsHelpKids.com or call Corey at 213-880-9910
Copyright Š This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Broker, DRE 01889449; We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.