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nnoRCRiR • conunuED froir s wreak.” Borden’s spiral began several years before her family knew anything was seriously wrong. It wasn’t until Laurie Borden was in her 20s that her mom, Lura Borden! learned her daughter had been vomiting her meals since junior high when a friend commented about her hips. But Laurie Borden was never heavy. “Her worst enemy was herself,” her mother said. “She hated herself.” Her view of herself contradicted everything her mother and others saw: “She was so pretty, an honor student — she had it all.” And she was athletic, playing doubles tennis for Wasson High School. She and her mom played for fun at Portal Park, a block from their home near the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. nign acnievement is common among those with eating disorders. Sufferers are often perfectionists. “They’re people-pleasers,” said Barbara Fleming, a licensed clinical social worker whose practice in Colorado Springs focuses on eating disorders. “They know what everyone around them needs, but they don’t know what they need.” Low self-esteem is a hallmark trait. “One of the characteristic features is quite often this profoundly negative self assessment,” Bunnell said. “It doesn’t jive in any way with what you see in their lives.” Laurie Borden was born in 1966 in Rocky Ford, Colo., the youngest of three children. The family moved to Colorado Springs when she was younger .than 1 year old. Besides tennis, her big interest was aviation, a love passed on from her dad. The family often would go to the airport just to watch planes take off and land. In high school, she was the state winner of the FAA National Aviation Essay Contest. The trophy still sits on a dresser in her bedroom. Borden worked hard at her academic achievements, and salesperson — polite, friendly and very goal-oriented, said Barbara Pollock, who was her boss. She moved up from cashier to manager of the jewelry department, a position she held from 1991 to 1994. As Bordens work responsibility increased, her weight decreased, Pollock said. At one point, she weighed just 89 pounds. She often complained of aches and pains. It was her body turning on itself — a sort of internal cannibalism. She eventually stopped working and went on disability. Bordens disease weighed heavily on her family. “It was a nightmare for everybody,” said her brother Lark Borden. “She would call me by phone, many times every week. I always would say, 'You have to listen to your doctors,’ which she never did.” A six-week inpatient treatment center did not help, nor did counseling. She also spent time in psychiatric facilities, her mother said. Oddly, even when she wasn’t eating, Borden enjoyed organizing meals for families in her church who lost a loved one or were suffering an illness. But with her own family, holiday dinners were usually disastrous. Borden would want to go home even before the meal was finished. When she did gain a little weight, the family didn’t dare Pont Fake it using an altered driver's llc«ns« can c«sf y*u» 90 DAY SUSPENSION 1 OP YOUR UCEN8E Next Tailgate: Oct. 8 just as hard at keeping her illness secret. Like many bulimics, she hid what she was doing, and her weight was normal. After high school, she set off for college in Phoenix. But within a month or so, she came home. Her mother now thinks it was because she couldn’t hide her eating disorder well in a dorm setting, although she used other excuses. She also told her family she had been sexually, abused there, which could have triggered the anorexia. With college out of the picture, Borden worked at Best Products Co., a now-closed catalog-showroom store on North Academy Boulevard, and got an apartment nearby. She was an excellent tell her she looked good. Such simple words would send her backward again. In 1996, Borden moved back home. Early on, she had enough strength to help around the house some, but as she deteriorated, her days were spent watching TV in a recliner or talking on the phone to doctors or church friends. Lura Borden looked after her husband, who suffered from emphysema and heart problems, as well as her daughter. It was rare that any of them left the house, and then only to go for car rides. Harold Borden, a plumber, died in 2001 at 72. And Laurie would still try to cook meals. “She always wanted to fool with food but never wanted to eat it,” said her mom. Laurie Borden appeared near death at his funeral. In a sleeveless dress, she looked skeletal. “She enjoyed the spectacle of being anorexic,” Lark Borden said. “She showed off the state of her body. My father s funeral -if awfiil ” At the same time, though, she would tell her brother she was sorry for what she had done to herself and to the family — sometimes she’d say it a dozen times in a phone conversation. Her biggest regret was the colostomy bag, which her mom recalls her getting around 1997. Years of abusing laxatives — she told her mom that at one point she was taking more than four dozen at a time — shut down her digestive tract, and a portion of her intestines had to be removed. “She was so disgusted by that bag,” said Faye Collacott, who helped care for Borden during the last months of her life. She didn’t want others to see it and would spray room fresheners constandy for fear it smelled. Collacott formed a sisterly bond with Borden, and they’d spend a lot of time talking about life and her disease. But Collacott knew, like others did, that much of what Borden told her was not true. The disease had starved her brain. “I’m not going to call them lies, because it was her reality - because of the disease,” ! Collacott said. “It was controlling her totally, and there was no returning back to mental health.” In advanced stages of the disease, malnutrition causes loss of memory, irrational thoughts or fears, and cognitive impairment. Besides the physical and ; mental deterioration, the disease kept Borden from people her own age. Her best friends and biggest supporters were her mother and older parishioners from Vista Grande Church of God. “The eating disorder is a very jealous and abusive partner,” said Bunnell, the expert from Connecticut. “It requires a lot of devotion in the extent that you have to devote yourself to tending to the anorexia. There’s not a lot of time left over for adult life.” Treatment for anorexia is arduous and expensive and usually not covered by insurance. The average recovery time is four to seven years and can include individual therapy, nutritional therapy, psychiatric medications, family therapy and medical monitoring, Bunnell said. The earlier treatment is sought, the better the chance of recovery. With appropriate care, Bunnell said, 80 percent of patients can recover fully. For Laurie Borden, it was too late. One April day, paramedics were called to the Borden home. She had been in the bathroom three hours, trying to change her colostomy bag. She could no longer walk and was on oxygen. The paramedics urged Lura Borden to get help. A few days later, her daughter was taken by ambulance to Penrose Hospital. She was later transferred to hospice care. Laurie knew shed never come home,” her mother said. Women from her church, her mother and Collacott were constant companions during her seven weeks at the hospice. Collacott would play the song “Angel” by Sarah McLachlan — one of Bordens favorites. About two weeks before she died, Borden ate a slice of cheese pizza, yogurt and a Popsicle — more than anyone had seen her eat in years. She died shortly after noon June 1, just 65 pounds on her 5 foot-8-inch frame. A woman from church was with her, holding her hand. Lura Borden is still sorting through her daughters things. She’s found unopened bills and still-sealed get-well cards from years ago. Her daughter’s birthday is next month, and she suspects it’ll be a difficult day. But she’s also found solace. “In a way it was a relief to know that she’s not hurting,” she said. “I miss her a lot, but she didn’t have any life. It wasn’t a pretty life.” i New ‘smart mouse listens to computer,1 enhances surfing MX 610 offers e-mail notification, retooled scroll wheel, panning buttons Craig Crossman KRTCAMPUS If it could, what would a computer say to a mouse? While the question at first may seem a bit whimsical, that question or something similar was probably what the folks at Logitech must have asked themselves when they decided to construct^the worlds first smart mouse. You see, the typical computer mouse has only a one-way conversation with your computer. It mainly speaks X and Y coordinates so that the computer knows where on the screen to display the mouse cursor. As you continue to move the mouse, it keeps updating the X and Y values so that the computer can place the mouse cursor at the corresponding location. Other items spoken by the mouse are if and when its buttons are pressed, and which button it is if it has more than one of them. And that’s about it. The mouse speaks and the computer listens. But with Logitech’s MX 610 Laser Cordless Mouse, the mouse speaks and listens as well. The MX 610 is a cordless mouse and as with anything cordless, battery life is of primary concern. So to extend that life, the MX 610 “listens” to the computer to see what mode it’s in at any moment. When the computer sleeps, so does the MX 610. When the computer is turned off, so does the MX 610. And when the computer is turned back on, the MX 610 turns itself back on as well. Since all of this happens automatically, there’s no switch for you to forget to turn off and you wind up with a mouse that is able to extend its battery life even more. This automatic on/off feature is very cool and is the first ever to make its way into a mouse. I’d like to see more cordless peripherals use this smart technology to increase their precious battery life. The MX 610’s smarts doesn’t stop there as it also listens to your computer for other important things, like e-mail. When you have e-mail waiting, the computer lets the MX 610 know about it. The MX 610 sports a green e-mail notification light so you can see when new messages arrive. A second blue instant A message light illuminates when you get an instant message. These lights also act as buttons. Pressing either one will cause a corresponding action, running either your e-mail or instant messaging application. These indicators have been designed to be easily deactivated if you so desire. In addition to being smart, the MX 610 has been endowed with other abilities such as being able to communicate even further with its ultra-compact receiver that plugs into any USB port. Logitech designed it to use the newer 2.4 gigahertz Q frequency which gives it up to 5 times greater range than comparable cordless mice that use the older 27 megahertz communications standard. The MX 610 s scroll wheel offers back and forth as well as the newer left and right panning but now pressing tne scroll wheel while scrolling lets you "zoom in and out, making it ideal for viewing digital photographs. You can also control the forward and back buttons in any web browser using the ergonomically placed buttons direcdy to the 4 side of the index finger button. You also have volume and mute controls right next to those. Finally, Logitech has given the MX 610 Smart Mouse the ultimate in tracking with their first-ever performance laser tracking system that was introduced in their MX 1000 model. The MX 610 Laser Cordless Mouse or smart mouse is the next logical step in the evolution of the species. Requires Windows and two AA batteries. $59.99. www.logitech.com Craig Crossman is a national^ newspaper columnist writing about computers and technology. He also hosts a daily national computer radio talk show, “Computer America,” heard on Business TalkRadio — Monday through Friday, 10 p.m.-midnight. micron ^elta _Kappa_ The Omicron Delta Kappa Society is the national leadership honor society for college students, faculty, staff, administrators, and alumni that recognizes and encourages superior scholarship, leadership, and exemplary character. Membership in OAK is a mark of the highest distinction and honor. The Society recognizes achievement in five areas: & Scholarship )i <§ Athletics i 4 Campus/Community Service <S> Journalism T $ Creative Arts Applications can be found in the housing office or online at http://web.sa.sc.edu/odk. Applications due into housing by OCTOBER 3 at 4 PM. 4 4 THjUftAM COCK Nobody covers USC better. True. www.dailygamecock.com «»ZEUS~ Technical Inside Sales Zeus Industrial Products, Inc. is a leader in fluoropolymer extrusion for the medical, aerospace, automotive, analytical, electronics, semiconductor, and environmental industries. We are seeking qualified candidates for the position of Inside Sales Associate for our Sales and Marketing facility located in Orangeburg, SC. Sales Associates perform a wide array of sales M functions including reviewing customer applications, problem solving, account maintenance, and generating new business. Requirements: Bachelors degree preferably in Business, International Business, Biology. Psychology, Packaging Science, Engineering 1-3 years of prior technical sales experience Zeus Industrial Products, Inc. is a growing company offering a competitive compensation and benefits package. Please submit your resume tc: Zeus Industrial Products, Inc., 620 Magnolia St., Orangeburg, SC, 29115. 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