Venturist.info
is available for sale
About Venturist.info
Former domain of a website that hosted a platform talking about cryonicists with support and advocacy, for the preservation of dead bodies.
Exclusively on Odys Marketplace
$3,870
What's included:
Domain name Venturist.info
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The Society for Venturism 2012 Campaign:
[Kim Suozzi before her diagnosis]
A Chance to Finish Life
During her Senior Year in college, Kim Suozzi had been maintaining excellent grades even while experiencing as she phrased it, “odd headaches.” This didn’t worry her so much, she stayed focused on school- until one day while traveling to school she had a seizure that lasted 30 minutes and caused disassociation from her right arm and difficulty speaking. She ended up at her local hospital that same day where a large mass was seen in her brain.In March 2011, two months before she was set to graduate, at age 21, Kim Suozzi was told that she had a highly aggressive form of brain cancer and that she had 14 month to 2 years to live. While her peers were finishing their degrees and pursuing job leads she was thrown into a world of seeking medical opinions, treatments and searching for some hope she could beat the Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) tumor. She didn’t have time to go back to classes after her diagnosis, none-the-less, in the Spring of 2011 Truman State University invited Kim to walk with her peers across the stage at graduation.After graduation instead of job searches, Kim searched treatment options for fighting GBM. Her entire tumor was removed by Washington University’s Teaching Hospital. Unfortunately despite a clean MRI after surgery, pathology indicated the tumor was a highly aggressive form that would come back. A second opinion from a top pathologist at M.D. Anderson revealed devastating news, the diagnosis was an even more aggressive subtype of GBM that had been originally thought and she was given even less time to live. After her surgery she started on endless rounds of radiation and chemo. Even during the treatments she didn’t give up on having a career some day, she was able to maintain a job assisting with cognitive neuroscience research in an EEG lab at the University of Missouri.Nearly a year of cancer treatments passed and in April of 2012 Kim found out that instead of conquering her brain tumor with some of the best doctors and researchers in the world, the tumor had returned and was growing, the experts were shrinking the time she had left even further. Through her persistence and research she was able to enroll in a clinical trial at Dana-Faber but sadly after responding well initially, the tumor began to grow again. She is currently taking radiation rounds at Duke University to, as she puts it, “buy a few months of time.” She is progressively loosing function on her right side, can’t use her hand or arm and is already walking with a limp. Her tumor will cut off her air and kill her before it gets to her brain and "who she is" that is one thing she felt helped her odds with cryonics. Already her speech is affected. After the tumor was discovered that day on her way to school she has lived with fighting cancer, a year and a half. Currently she has been told she has 3-6 months left, and she is still trying to find ways to beat it while at the same time trying to wrap her brain around accepting that she is dying at such a young age.On June 10th 2012 Kim posted an article on Reddit titled, “Today is my 23rd birthday and probably my last. Anything awesome I should try before I die?” In just a few weeks the article had 1697 comments with everything from beautiful places to travel to suggestions to max-out her credit cards on luxury items. A cryonicist saw her article and commented that maybe she would want to look into cryonics.Kim had taken a Cognitive Science class during her time studying Neuro Science at Truman State. When she read the comment about cryonics under her article on Reddit she remembered a book she’d read in Cog Sci her Sophomore Year, Ray Kurzweil’s “Age of Spiritual Machines.” She’d enjoyed it so much she picked up another book of his, “The Singularity is Near.” She said, “I had always planned on establishing cryopreservation plans through life insurance, I was caught off guard when I was suddenly diagnosed during my last month and a half of college.” So when she read that comment on Reddit, Kim knew about cryonics and started to look into the current cryonics organizations and the level of science in the field.