Megi Kerabu...??????  

Posted by: Nurul in

Mesti angpa smua pelik kan ngan...
Knapa title tu tiba2 megi kerabu....??
Knapa ye....?

Begini ceritanya....
Semalam di kala bulan mengambang, kami berempat pn keluar la untuk melunaskan hutang kepada perut2 yang tengah berkeroncong....
Aku ngan Ain memang dah bajet nk makan megi rebus....
Apabila si pelayan bertanya....
"makan apa..?"
Aku pn terus menjawab....
"megi rebus dua.."

Si pelayan pun terus la masuk ke dalam.....
kai pun terus menunggu makanan yang dipesan tanpa ragu2....
Tetapi agak hairan kerana si pelayan asyik sahaja melihat ke meja kami....
Seperti ada sesuatu yang ingin diperkatakan...
Kami masih lagi sabar menunggu makanan..
Tiba-tiba si pelayan datang...

"Akak. oder megi kerabu kn tadi...?"
Dan kami semua ternganga....
"Megi kerabu...?"


"Dik...kami ode megi rebus la..."

"La...ye ke...? diaorang dh wat pn megi kerabu...tu yang lambat tu..."

Kami hanya menahan ketawa...
"Megi kerabu..?"

What on earth is that...???
Hehe...

Spreading the Awareness....  

Posted by: Nurul in

This is the information that I got from the Internet....So I just copied and pasted it here so that we can share it....If you want to know more, you can just click here to visit the website...

Early detection of breast cancer is key (and the closest thing to prevention we have), because a tumor is a lot easier to treat if you, your doctor, or a mammogram can catch it while it's still small

Screenings are for when you have no symptoms of disease but want to be sure something isn't lurking that you haven't spotted yet, says Peter M. Jokich, MD, director of the Rush Breast Imaging Center at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.

Women who don't have any breast cancer symptoms should consider committing to three kinds of routine screenings:

  1. breast self-exams at home
  2. clinical breast exams and, each year after you turn 40,
  3. mammograms—this is the one that shouldn't be skipped, experts say.
Other breast cancer tests—diagnostic mammograms, ultrasounds, MRIs, and biopsies—are for women with symptoms who, for example, "feel a lump, have redness on the skin of their breast, or have discharge from the nipple," says Dr. Jokich.