

You know, you put more value on every minute … I mean, I always thought I kind of did that.The Late Show with David Letterman (30 October 2002).It was one of those phobias that really didn’t pay off. Well, first of all, let me say that I might have made a tactical error in not going to a physician for 20 years.Answering the question "What led you to stake out the noir Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner genre?", in "My Lunch with Warren Zevon" by David Bowman, (17 March 2000).I wrote like what I'd always read and what was in the movies … I'm sure popular music is supposed to be like this. As quoted in "My Lunch with Warren Zevon" by David Bowman, (17 March 2000).I write songs about things that I'm simultaneously trying to not think about.As quoted in - "My Lunch with Warren Zevon" by David Bowman, at (17 March 2000).But I don't get depressed and I don't get bored. As quoted in "Warren Zevon's Resurrection: How he saved himself from a coward's death" by Paul Nelson, Rolling Stone (19 March 1981).From what I know about alcoholism, I'd say there's nothing romantic, nothing grand, nothing heroic, nothing brave - nothing like that about drinking.In the bestselling tradition of Tuesdays with Morrie, told with humor and heart, and deeply inspiring, Enjoy Every Sandwich distills everything Lee learned about how we find meaning, purpose, and peace in our lives.So much to do, there's plenty on the farm I'll sleep when I'm dead. As Lee and his wife, Kathy, navigated his diagnosis, illness, and treatment, he discovered that he did not fear death, and that even as he was facing his own mortality, he felt more fully alive than ever before. The power of those beliefs was tested in July 2009, when Lee was diagnosed with esophageal cancer.

In his own life, happily married and the proud father of two remarkable children, Lee was similarly committed to living his life fully and gratefully each day. from Enjoy Every SandwichĪs medical director of the famed Preventive Medicine Research Institute, Lee Lipsenthal helped thousands of patients struggling with disease to overcome their fears of pain and death and to embrace a more joyful way of living. I hope it will open the door for you to embrace your humanity, accept uncertainty, and live a life of gratitude. This book is a culmination of what I’ve learned.
