- Goldberg (2001). Another thing they never taught you in grad school: How to organize a scientific meeting
- Corpas (2008). Ten Simple Rules for Organizing a Scientific Meeting.
- IAPSS. How to organize a conference step by step manual (pdf)
- Rivlin (1995). Guide to organizing an international scientific conference (Google Book)
- Brett (2009). How to run a meeting
- What is the best way to start a meeting?
- Beare. Useful English phrases for participating in a business meeting. Phrases for performing well in busines meetings.
- EnglishClub. Meetings in English
- Reinhart (2013). Giving an introduction speech
- Reeves. How to close a meeting
- Robert (1876): Robert's Rules of Order for fair and orderly meetings & conventions
Disclaimer: This blog site is intended solely for sharing of information. Comments are warmly welcome, but I make no warranties regarding the quality, content, completeness, suitability, adequacy, sequence, or accuracy of the information.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
How to organizing a scientific meeting
How to organizing a scientific meeting
Friday, February 28, 2014
Unconventional view of type 2 diabetes causation proposed
Unconventional view of type 2 diabetes causation proposed
Source: MedicalPress
At 85, Nobel laureate James D. Watson, the co-discoverer of the double-helix structure of DNA, continues to advance intriguing scientific ideas. His latest, a hypothesis on the causation of type 2 diabetes, is to appear 7 pm Thursday US time in the online pages of The Lancet, the prestigious British medical journal.
Watson's hypothesis suggests that diabetes, dementias, cardiovascular disease, and some cancers are linked to a failure to generate sufficient biological oxidants, called reactive oxygen species (ROS). Watson also argues the case for a better understanding of the role of exercise in helping to remedy this deficiency. ...
Source: MedicalPress
At 85, Nobel laureate James D. Watson, the co-discoverer of the double-helix structure of DNA, continues to advance intriguing scientific ideas. His latest, a hypothesis on the causation of type 2 diabetes, is to appear 7 pm Thursday US time in the online pages of The Lancet, the prestigious British medical journal.
Watson's hypothesis suggests that diabetes, dementias, cardiovascular disease, and some cancers are linked to a failure to generate sufficient biological oxidants, called reactive oxygen species (ROS). Watson also argues the case for a better understanding of the role of exercise in helping to remedy this deficiency. ...
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Tips - EndNote
EndNote
Tutorial
Entering and Editing Reference
- When entering initials instead of full names, be sure to type a period (.) or a space between initials:
Fisher, J.O.
O Fisher - When entering corporate authors, put a comma (,) after the name:
U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Apple Computer Inc.,
Bibliographic Styles (Output Style)
- EndNote Reference Style Files
- Wiley-Blackwell Author Services
- Reference Style Files by EndNote has a lot of files but some are out-of-date. For example, Diabetes Care style file was published on 8/17/2006 (accessed on 01/06/2012).
- I created an EndNote output style file for Diabetes Care (file name: Diabetes_Care_YC.ens date: 10/01/2012)
- How to set Hanging Indent
- Helps of Endnote about "Hanging indent" options is not so helpful. The options (from a dropdown) is hidden in the right-low corner after you go through the menu "Edit - > Output Styles -> Bibliography -> Layout". It can be missed easily. The options include: None, All Paragraphs, First Paragraph Only, Second Paragraph Only, and All Paragraphs but the First.
- If you are creating a numbered bibliography, you need insert a tab after the bibliography number to have the references line up correctly. (You need use "Insert Field" of a dropdown in the up-right corner to insert a tab)
- In the MS Word, the Tab size (even the hanging indent) can be changed by select all the bibliography and slide the ticks of ruler.
- How to change line space of your bibliography (I hate to say that this is not a logic/intuitive way)
- In EndNote (please don't be confused the 'Cite While You Write' in MS Word), go to Tools>Cite While You Write>Format Bibliography, then the EndNote will open a Window 'Configure Bibliography' of MS Word, click 'Layout' tab, you can change the line spacing there.
- Or, in the MS Word document, select the 'Endnote' tab, clicking the small arrow at the corner of the 'Bibliography' block, then click 'Layout' tab. It may take minutes to active it, then you change the bibliography format there.
- The solution provided by the EndNote website is not so clear.
- Special Formatting Characters for Templates:
- o Ctrl+Alt+Space (non-breaking space or from the Insert field list): linking adjacent text, e.g. Edition◊ed.
- | (vertical bar): forcing separation, e.g. Author. ·"Title."·Journal Volume|.Issue|·(Year)|:· Pages|
- `xxx`(on the same key as the tilde (~)):forcing EndNote to interpret a word between them as just text and not as a field name, e.g. (Editor) vs. (`Editor`)
- ^ (caret): the lable before the pages should appear in plural or singular form depending on the number of pages, e.g. p^pp◊Pages.
- How to Get Endnote to Abbreviate Journal Names: Journal Term List.
- How to reset EndNote Web library
- More FAQs of The University of Toledo
- When convert the X9 library into 20 library, if you lost files, try: The proper process for recovering library files
Friday, November 15, 2013
Need more statins or not
Need More Statins or Not
2013 ACC/AHA Guideline on the Treatment of Blood Cholesterol to Reduce Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Risk in Adults
Don’t Give More Patients Statins
Source: NYT by John Abramson and Rita Redberg
"ON Tuesday, the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology issued new cholesterol guidelines that essentially declared, in one fell swoop, that millions of healthy Americans should immediately start taking pills — namely statins — for undefined health “benefits.” " ...
New ACC/AHA/NHLBI Guidance on Lifestyle for CVD Prevention
Source: Medscape by Shelley Wood
ACC-AHA cardiovascular prevention guidelines drop cholesterol treatment goals
Source: Cardiology News Digital Network by Elizabeth Mechcatie
Risk Calculator for Cholesterol Appears Flawed
Source: NYT by Gina Kolata
"Last week, the nation’s leading heart organizations released a sweeping new set of guidelines for lowering cholesterol, along with an online calculator meant to help doctors assess risks and treatment options. But, in a major embarrassment to the health groups, the calculator appears to greatly overestimate risk, so much so that it could mistakenly suggest that millions more people are candidates for statin drugs." ...
2013 ACC/AHA Guideline on the Treatment of Blood Cholesterol to Reduce Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Risk in Adults
Don’t Give More Patients Statins
Source: NYT by John Abramson and Rita Redberg
"ON Tuesday, the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology issued new cholesterol guidelines that essentially declared, in one fell swoop, that millions of healthy Americans should immediately start taking pills — namely statins — for undefined health “benefits.” " ...
New ACC/AHA/NHLBI Guidance on Lifestyle for CVD Prevention
Source: Medscape by Shelley Wood
ACC-AHA cardiovascular prevention guidelines drop cholesterol treatment goals
Source: Cardiology News Digital Network by Elizabeth Mechcatie
Risk Calculator for Cholesterol Appears Flawed
Source: NYT by Gina Kolata
"Last week, the nation’s leading heart organizations released a sweeping new set of guidelines for lowering cholesterol, along with an online calculator meant to help doctors assess risks and treatment options. But, in a major embarrassment to the health groups, the calculator appears to greatly overestimate risk, so much so that it could mistakenly suggest that millions more people are candidates for statin drugs." ...
Friday, September 20, 2013
Speaking Stata of the Stata Journal
Speaking Stata of the Stata Journal
Blog: Stata Tips of The Stata Journal and Others
Blog: Stata Tips of The Stata Journal and Others
This column of the Stata Journal is focusing on how to improve your fluency in Stata
- Loops, again and again [20(4)]
- Is a variable constant?
- More ways for rowwise
- Concatenating values over observations
- Some simple devices to ease the spaghetti problem
- The last day of the month
- How best to generate indicator or dummy variables
- Seven steps for vexatious string variables
- From rounding to binning
- Logarithmic binning and labeling
- Tables as lists: The groups command
- Letter values as selected quantiles
- Shading zones on time series and other plots
- Multiple bar charts in table form
- Truth, falsity, indication, and negation
- A set of utilities for managing missing values
- Species of origin [15(2)]
- Design plots for graphical summary of a response given factors
- Self and others
- Trimming to taste
- Creating and varying box plots: Correction
- Matrices as look-up tables
- Axis practice, or what goes where on a graph
- Transforming the time axis
- Output to order
- Fun and fluency with functions
- Compared with ...
- MMXI and all that: Handling Roman numerals within Stata
- Graphing subsets
- The limits of sample skewness and kurtosis
- findname: Finding variables
- statsby [subsets, total]: The statsby strategy
- graph twoway: Paired, parallel, or profile plots for changes, correlations, and other comparisons
- graph box: Creating and varying box plots; Creating and varying box plots: Correction
- qsbayesi, qsbayes: I. J. Good and quasi–Bayes smoothing of categorical frequencies
- egen, rowsort, rowranks: Rowwise
- distinct: Distinct observations
- corrci, corrcii: Correlation with confidence, or Fisher's z revisited
- labmask, seqvar: Between tables and graphs
- Spineplots and their kin
- egen, by: Counting groups, especially panels
- stem, scatter, stemplot: Turning over a new leaf
- egen, by: Identifying spells
- count: Making it count
- In praise of trigonometric predictors
- cycleplot, sliceplot: Graphs for all seasons
- Time of day
- Smoothing in various directions
- qplot, displot: The protean quantile plot
- Density probability plots
- modeldiag: Graphing model diagnostics
- Graphing agreement and disagreement
- Graphing categorical and compositional data
- Graphing distributions
- matrix list, list, tabdisp, tabcount, groups: Problems with tables, Part II
- tabulate, table, tabstat, tabdisp, list: Problems with tables, Part I
- for, foreach, forvalues, levels: Problems with lists
- egen, foreach, forvalues, reshape: On structure and shape: the case of multiple responses
- egen: On getting functions to do the work
- On numbers and strings
- foreach, forvalues, for: How to face lists with fortitude
- _n, _N: How to move step by: step
- How to repeat yourself without going mad [2001;1:(1)]
Monday, September 09, 2013
Measures of effect size in Stata 13
Measures of Effect Size in Stata 13
Soruce: the Stata Blog
"Today I want to talk about effect sizes such as Cohen’s d, Hedges’s g, Glass’s Δ, η2, and ω2. Effects sizes concern rescaling parameter estimates to make them easier to interpret, especially in terms of practical significance.
Many researchers in psychology and education advocate reporting of effect sizes, professional organizations such as the American Psychological Association (APA) and the American Educational Research Association (AERA) strongly recommend their reporting, and professional journals such as the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied and Educational and Psychological Measurement require that they be reported.
Anyway, today I want to show you
What effect sizes are.
How to calculate effect sizes and their confidence intervals in Stata.
How to calculate bootstrap confidence intervals for those effect sizes.
How to use Stata’s effect-size calculator.
...". Read full text here
Soruce: the Stata Blog
"Today I want to talk about effect sizes such as Cohen’s d, Hedges’s g, Glass’s Δ, η2, and ω2. Effects sizes concern rescaling parameter estimates to make them easier to interpret, especially in terms of practical significance.
Many researchers in psychology and education advocate reporting of effect sizes, professional organizations such as the American Psychological Association (APA) and the American Educational Research Association (AERA) strongly recommend their reporting, and professional journals such as the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied and Educational and Psychological Measurement require that they be reported.
Anyway, today I want to show you
What effect sizes are.
How to calculate effect sizes and their confidence intervals in Stata.
How to calculate bootstrap confidence intervals for those effect sizes.
How to use Stata’s effect-size calculator.
...". Read full text here
Tuesday, August 06, 2013
11 Tips to Cut Your Cholesterol Fast
True
11 Tips to Cut Your Cholesterol Fast
Source: WebMD By Laura J. Martin, MD
1. Set a target.
2. Consider medication.
3. Get moving.
4. Avoid saturated fat.
5. Eat more fiber.
6. Go fish.
7. Drink up.
8. Drink green.
9. Eat nuts.
10. Switch spreads.
11. Don't smoke.
Full text here.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Debating obesity the disease
Debating obesity the disease
Source: MedScape
Follow the Money?
Fat Equals Sick: Is This About the Money?
Getting Paid for Treating Obesity, Now That It's a Disease
AMA: Diagnosis by Majority
Is It an Addiction? Can Obesity Be an Addiction?
Also Weighing in on the Disease Debate Obesity: It's a Risk! It's a Symptom! It's a Disease!
Obesity as a Disease? 'It's Academic'
News Behind the Perspectives AMA Declares Obesity a Disease
Obesity Disease Classification Will Help With Treatment, Docs Say
Source: MedScape
Follow the Money?
Fat Equals Sick: Is This About the Money?
Getting Paid for Treating Obesity, Now That It's a Disease
AMA: Diagnosis by Majority
Is It an Addiction? Can Obesity Be an Addiction?
Also Weighing in on the Disease Debate Obesity: It's a Risk! It's a Symptom! It's a Disease!
Obesity as a Disease? 'It's Academic'
News Behind the Perspectives AMA Declares Obesity a Disease
Obesity Disease Classification Will Help With Treatment, Docs Say
Thursday, July 11, 2013
How to turn on/off and diagnose the ANC (active noise cancellation) system of 2013 Honda Pilot
How to turn off/on the ANC (active noise cancellation) system of 2013 Honda Pilot
This is a similar approach for Acura
- Turn the ignition switch on the I (radio) position.
- Turn the radio on and check it operates normally, and turn the radio off.
- Press and hold the preset buttons #1, #6, and volumn (VOL) push button at the same time.
- when you see 'DIAG' appears on the display, you can release the buttons
- Press the #1 preset button, you see 'ANC ON' on the display.
- Press the #1 preset button again to turn the ANC OFF and hear a humming/booming noise coming from the speakers for about 1 minutes.
- You can press the #1 button repeatedly for ON and OFF, but the humming/booming noise will not come up repeatedly except repeating step 1, 3-6 again.
This is a similar approach for Acura
Wednesday, July 03, 2013
Data visulization - a tutorial
Data visulization - a tutorial
Source: Tyler Rinker's blog
Source: Tyler Rinker's blog
This is a nice video about how to visualize your data more effectively.
Monday, July 01, 2013
How to test proportionality assumption in survival analysis using SAS
How
to test proportionality assumption in survival analysis using SAS
What’s New of PROC PHREG of SAS 9.2 (pdf)
There are
several approaches to test proportionality assumption in survival analysis:
- Graphical Approach is to plot Log–Log survival
function by researched major predictor. If the two line is parallel
without cross each other, the assumption is considering confirmed.
PROC LIFETEST DATA=ONE; METHOD=KM PLOTS=(S,LLS);
TIME SURVTIME*EVENT(0);
STRATA RISK0;
RUN;
PROC PHREG DATA=ONE;
MODEL SURVTIME*EVENT(0)=RISK1 AGE SEX;
BASELINE OUT=LLSOUT LOGLOGS=LOGLOGS;
RUN;
PROC GPLOT DATA=LLSOUT;
PLOT LOGLOGS*SURVTIME=RISK1;
RUN;
TIME SURVTIME*EVENT(0);
STRATA RISK0;
RUN;
PROC PHREG DATA=ONE;
MODEL SURVTIME*EVENT(0)=RISK1 AGE SEX;
BASELINE OUT=LLSOUT LOGLOGS=LOGLOGS;
RUN;
PROC GPLOT DATA=LLSOUT;
PLOT LOGLOGS*SURVTIME=RISK1;
RUN;
- Or, you can include an interaction term of a
predictor and follow up time in the model. If this interaction term is not
significant, there is no violation of assumption. For example:
PROC PHREG DATA=ONE;
MODEL SURVTIME*EVENT(0)=RISK1 TIMEX;
TIMEX=RISK1*(LOG(SURVTIME)-LOG(average followup time));
* someone also uses simple forms: TIMEX=RISK1*LOG(SURVTIME);
* or even: TIMEX=RISK1*SURVTIME; (not good enough);
PROPORTIONALITY_TEST: TIMEX;
RUN;
TIMEX=RISK1*(LOG(SURVTIME)-LOG(average followup time));
* someone also uses simple forms: TIMEX=RISK1*LOG(SURVTIME);
* or even: TIMEX=RISK1*SURVTIME; (not good enough);
PROPORTIONALITY_TEST: TIMEX;
RUN;
- Possibly, the easiest and powerful approach after
SAS 9.2 is to use ASSESS statement, for example:
ODS GRAPHICS ON;
PROC PHREG DATA=ONE;
MODEL SURVTIME*EVENT(0)=RISK1;
ASSESS PH/resample;
RUN;
ASSESS PH/resample;
RUN;
ODS GRAPHICS OFF;
Thursday, June 27, 2013
American Medical Association declared obesity a “disease.”
American Medical Association declared obesity a “disease.”
"RESOLVED, That our American Medical Association recognize obesity as a disease state with 24 multiple pathophysiological aspects requiring a range of interventions to advance obesity 25 treatment and prevention. (New HOD Policy - Resolution 420)" - 06/16/2013
"RESOLVED, That our American Medical Association recognize obesity as a disease state with 24 multiple pathophysiological aspects requiring a range of interventions to advance obesity 25 treatment and prevention. (New HOD Policy - Resolution 420)" - 06/16/2013
- New York Times (2013). A.M.A. Recognizes Obesity as a Disease
- Time.com (2013). The Best Cure for Obesity? Personal Responsibility.
- Boston.com (2013). Has obesity been mislabeled as a disease? Why doctors don’t mind.
- Bays (2013). Obesity, adiposity, and dyslipidemia: A consensus statement from the National Lipid Association.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Risk prediction and model comparison
Risk prediction and model comparison
The potential approaches of prediction and comparison:
The potential approaches of prediction and comparison:
- Relative risk/hazard ratio/odds ratio, P-value.
- Sensitivity/specificity
- Area under ROC (receiver operating characteristics) curve (AUC)/Harrell's c statistic
- Somers' D (Kendall's Tau): the mathmatic conversion of Somers'D and c statistic are: [c statistic = D/2+0.5] or [D = (c - 0.5) x 2]. (SAS: PROC FREQ)
- NRI (net reclassification improvement)
- IDI (integrated discrimination improvement).
- K-fold cross-validation - Wikipedia
- ...
- Pencina (2011). Extensions of net reclassification improvement calculations to measure usefulness of new biomarkers (Comment).
- Pencina (2013). Understanding increments in model performance metrics.
- Pencina (2008). Evaluating the added predictive ability of a new marker: From area under the ROC curve to reclassification and beyond.
- Measuring the Accuracy of Prediction Models - An International Symposium (2008): IDI, NRI and different c statistics (pdf)
- Hilden (2013). A note on the evaluation of novel biomarkers: do not rely on integrated discrimination improvement and net reclassification index.
- Liu (2012). Evaluating a New Risk Marker’s Predictive Contribution in Survival
- Mühlenbruch (2013). Assessing improvement in disease prediction using net reclassification improvement: impact of risk cut-offs and number of risk categories (Commentary).
- Cassell (2007). Don't be loopy: re-Sampling and simulation the SAS way (pdf).
- Kerr (2011). Evaluating the incremental value of new biomarkers with integrated discrimination improvement.
- Pepe Lab has some homemade software for biomarker/risk evaluation using Stata, SAS, R, SPSS, and even FORTRAN.
- Stata: to install 'Risk Prediction Package' (predcurve and incrisk), in a Stata session type: ".net from http://labs.fhcrc.org/pepe/stata/" and follow the instruction.To update the risk_prediction package at a later time, in Stata type: ".adoupdate risk_prediction, update".
- UCR posted SAS, Stata, and R codes for NRI & IDI on the website.
- Stata: How can I get a Somers' D after logistic regression in Stata?
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Multicollinearity Issue
Multicollinearity Issue
Multicollinearity happens when two or more predictor/independent variables/regressors are highly correlated. I have been discussed about this issue many times by colleagues and journal reviewers. Paul Allison has a blog of some rules of thumb: When Can You Safely Ignore Multicollinearity? Wikipedia also has a article about this issue. It's true this is issue theoretically, but based on my experience in public health of chronic diseases, if the selection of predictors based on the logic/knowledge behind the model but not dump everything in one model, this should not be an issue.
Multicollinearity happens when two or more predictor/independent variables/regressors are highly correlated. I have been discussed about this issue many times by colleagues and journal reviewers. Paul Allison has a blog of some rules of thumb: When Can You Safely Ignore Multicollinearity? Wikipedia also has a article about this issue. It's true this is issue theoretically, but based on my experience in public health of chronic diseases, if the selection of predictors based on the logic/knowledge behind the model but not dump everything in one model, this should not be an issue.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Do We Really Need Zero-Inflated Models?
Do We Really Need Zero-Inflated Models?
Source: Statistical Horizon blog by Paul Allison
"... Of course, there are certainly situations where a zero-inflated model makes sense from the point of view of theory or common sense. For example, if the dependent variable is number of children ever born to a sample of 50-year-old women, it is reasonable to suppose that some women are biologically sterile. For these women, no variation on the predictor variables (whatever they might be) could change the expected number of children.
So next time you’re thinking about fitting a zero-inflated regression model, first consider whether a conventional negative binomial model might be good enough. Having a lot of zeros doesn’t necessarily mean that you need a zero-inflated model."
Read full text here
This question has haunted me for a while, thank Dr. Allison answered this question in such a layman-kind way. I like his book "Survival Analysis Using SAS: A Practical Guide" much; I don't have his book "Logistic Regression Using SAS: Theory and Application". Hope this logistic regression related book is in the same style.
More Blog on Statistical Horizon Blog
Source: Statistical Horizon blog by Paul Allison
"... Of course, there are certainly situations where a zero-inflated model makes sense from the point of view of theory or common sense. For example, if the dependent variable is number of children ever born to a sample of 50-year-old women, it is reasonable to suppose that some women are biologically sterile. For these women, no variation on the predictor variables (whatever they might be) could change the expected number of children.
So next time you’re thinking about fitting a zero-inflated regression model, first consider whether a conventional negative binomial model might be good enough. Having a lot of zeros doesn’t necessarily mean that you need a zero-inflated model."
Read full text here
This question has haunted me for a while, thank Dr. Allison answered this question in such a layman-kind way. I like his book "Survival Analysis Using SAS: A Practical Guide" much; I don't have his book "Logistic Regression Using SAS: Theory and Application". Hope this logistic regression related book is in the same style.
More Blog on Statistical Horizon Blog
Friday, May 31, 2013
My favorite quotes of Magic School Bus
My favorite quotes of Magic School Bus (1994-1998)
It was my happy time watching Magic School Bus with my kids around 2000. The series is informative and educative, and the last but the best is a mindset of exploring and innovation. There are several quotes I don't want to forget.
It was my happy time watching Magic School Bus with my kids around 2000. The series is informative and educative, and the last but the best is a mindset of exploring and innovation. There are several quotes I don't want to forget.
- Ms. Frizzle, "Take chances, make mistakes, get messy."
- Ms. Frizzle, "Never say 'never.'"
Diease or not disease, a diabetic question
Diease or not disease, a diabetic question
Last a few days, I read two diabetic related articles, which both are not my cup of tea; but I am really appreciating their thoughts and contrast.
- The Lie That's Killing Us: Pre-Diabetes (Riva Greenberg) on Huffpost defines the Type 2 diabetes as a diesase into four stages, which includes pre-diabetes as the stage 1.
- No Such Thing As Type 2 Diabetes? (Alice G. Walton) on Forbes is on the another side. The original article is published on Lancet (Is type 2 diabetes a category error? by Edwin AM Gale)
Friday, May 24, 2013
Dance with my father - Luther Vandross
Dance With My Father, In Memory of My Fathers
Back when I was a child, before life removed all the innocence
My father would lift me high and dance with my mother and me and then
Spin me around ‘til I fell asleep
Then up the stairs he would carry me
And I knew for sure I was loved
If I could get another chance, another walk, another dance with him
I’d play a song that would never, ever end
How I’d love, love, love
To dance with my father again
When I and my mother would disagree
To get my way, I would run from her to him
He’d make me laugh just to comfort me
Then finally make me do just what my mama said
Later that night when I was asleep
He left a dollar under my sheet
Never dreamed that he would be gone from me
If I could steal one final glance, one final step, one final dance with him
I’d play a song that would never, ever end
‘Cause I’d love, love, love
To dance with my father again
Sometimes I’d listen outside her door
And I’d hear how my mother cried for him
I pray for her even more than me
I pray for her even more than me
I know I’m praying for much too much
But could you send back the only man she loved
I know you don’t do it usually
But dear Lord she’s dying
To dance with my father again
Every night I fall asleep and this is all I ever dream
"Dance With My Father"
Back when I was a child, before life removed all the innocence
My father would lift me high and dance with my mother and me and then
Spin me around ‘til I fell asleep
Then up the stairs he would carry me
And I knew for sure I was loved
If I could get another chance, another walk, another dance with him
I’d play a song that would never, ever end
How I’d love, love, love
To dance with my father again
When I and my mother would disagree
To get my way, I would run from her to him
He’d make me laugh just to comfort me
Then finally make me do just what my mama said
Later that night when I was asleep
He left a dollar under my sheet
Never dreamed that he would be gone from me
If I could steal one final glance, one final step, one final dance with him
I’d play a song that would never, ever end
‘Cause I’d love, love, love
To dance with my father again
Sometimes I’d listen outside her door
And I’d hear how my mother cried for him
I pray for her even more than me
I pray for her even more than me
I know I’m praying for much too much
But could you send back the only man she loved
I know you don’t do it usually
But dear Lord she’s dying
To dance with my father again
Every night I fall asleep and this is all I ever dream
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