Wow! There's some real wisdom here! Of course, why should I be surprised? I think we are all a little different and CF is very personal. I have found it easiest to be pretty upfront with people. I do not like being ignorant and so feel it only fair to offer other people the chance to be informed. If it comes up, like seeing me take pills or commenting on a persistent cough or seeing my vest at home, etc. I will tell people I have CF. Some ask for clarification, others do not. I try to tell them as straight as I can, what they want to know. It comes from having been a poster child and having a mother who wrote leaflets about CF. I learned that information was the best defense. I've been hurt by ignorance when people assumed I was just like Alex (from the book and movie about a very sick girl with CF who died at 11). But, covering it up was never the answer, for me. Again that is personal. I've struggled with depression and pessimism at times when my health was out of control and I was losing friends to the disease or relationships were going sour because they couldn't handle the stress of the realities of CF. But, again for me information was everything. Getting out there and finding out the truth. Finding that there were lots of people with CF enjoying marriage, many women having children, adults having interesting and rewarding careers. Some of us who have had to exit the workforce have found hope and meaning in volunteer work, some within the CF community some not. You have to hope and dream and plan, but you also have to be flexible. I read a compilation os essays by a writer with CF in a book called <U>Lisa, the Brief Life of a Writer.</U> One thing that impressed me was that she had a goal of finishing college. It took her 15 years and a number of different ways to do it, but she did and died a couple months later. But, she lived the whole time. There's another great publication out that I take hope and encouragement in and that is the CF Roundtable. It is a newsletter for and by adults with CF. It brings such a wonderful view of the rainbow of possiblities out there. I am enjoying my 5th year of marriage and my daughter just turned 2. I teach violin lessons out of my home and am a seamstress on the side. I hope to go back to school someday to earn a certificate for midwifery. Right now I am helping to put my husband through school for his doctoral degree. Our path, my path has been meandering to say the least. But, we are getting somewhere. I, too, hate to feel a burden. But, I have found just a couple friends who will honor me with sharing their burdens and with whom I can share mine in return. Piper was so wise in her post. I have a friend who is 17 years post liver transplant. If he would respect himself enough to really invest in his life, he would be living fully. But, he is so sure that his body will fail him that he doesn't take his meds or care for his condition. And so, he is less healthy and living less fully that he could have been. He's wasted so much time because he thought he wouldn't be here for it. Just a thought in conclusion: George Washington Carver, a black entrepraneur from the 1800's said this and it's been my motto since I was 12, "It is not how long you live, but what you do while you live."HollyCatheryn