Thanksgiving is just around the corner, but why wait! I want to send a big thank you to Debbie
Jackson, my hardworking co-chair for local enrollment for the American Cancer
Society’s CPS-3 study, and to all of the CPS-3 Champions who helped get 423
people enrolled in this amazing cancer prevention study. Our enrollment sites –
Memorial Health System of East Texas, Power of Pink!, Lufkin Industries, First
Assembly, and the C.  L.  Simon  Recreation  Center 
in Nacogdoches 
– were fantastic.
Thank you to Becca
Chance (along with her powerhouse committee), whose leadership and grace under
pressure – and under thunder and lightning! – resulted in another successful
Cattle Barons Gala. Thank you to Yana Ogletree 
and Lindsey Mott with Memorial Health System of East Texas, who hosted an
amazing 21st annual Power of Pink! luncheon. Since 1990, breast
cancer deaths in the U.S. 
have decreased by 27%. Much of that is due to education about mammograms and
the importance of screening and early detection.
Today is Election Day. I’m thankful for the right to vote! The
most important issue on the ballot today is a constitutional amendment on funding
the state's water plan. Voter turnout is
expected to be light — below 10 percent of all registered voters — because we
just don’t get too excited when actual people aren’t on the ballot. But you
need to go vote for Proposition 6. The proposed amendment would authorize the
Legislature to withdraw $2 billion from the Rainy Day Fund to begin funding the
state’s 50-year water plan. The benefits from a long range planning and
economic prosperity standpoint far outweigh and possible downside. And frankly,
I think it is poetically appropriate to use a rainy day fund for water planning
anyway. Be thankful you can vote, and vote YES on Prop 6. 
Thursday is Salute
to Healthcare, the Lufkin/Angelina County Chamber of Commerce’s awards banquet
to recognize and thank outstanding leaders throughout the healthcare sector for
making Lufkin  and Angelina  County 
Finally, as a cancer
doctor, I deal daily with the highs and lows of cancer – celebration and
victory for many, but bad news and eventual death for others. I’m thankful I
can “be there” for my patients, walking alongside them, no matter which path
they are on. You can, too. Comfort is one of my favorite words. Its Latin roots
paint a picture of coming along side with strength. Each of us needs to be a
source of strength during the holiday season for those around us who are
hurting, needy, and hungry. Join in helping others with Community Food Drive , Angel Tree, or
other efforts with your church or in the community. And be thankful!