Am I supposed to know which blood type I have? And those of my family members? Maybe it only matters if you have a rare type. Am I the only one in the dark on this? If I were concerned more than just curious, I would search google rather than attempt a survey of my 2 readers who I will probably just ask by phone next time we talk.
Why isn't this on our insurance cards?
In the midst of divorce, now, more than ever, my children look to me. "They look to me to see how merciful and generous I am in good times. They look to me to see how strong and faithful I am in bad times. They watch, they listen, and they model. Years from now I want my children to remember a childhood lived well, with a mother who was loving, consistent, devoted, funny, disciplined, playful, and totally present and emotionally available."(Kristin Armstrong)
Nope - you're not the only one. I was told my blood type once and promptly forgot. I'm not sure why the information is necessary but I do have the nagging feeling that this is something I should know.
ReplyDeleteI can't even count the number of times I've been told my blood type throughout the years, and yet, it completely escapes me.
ReplyDeleteI also "promtly" forget seconds later.
But I often feel that it will probably come in handy at the worst time LOL