Friday, September 21, 2012

Home At Last

Well my health finally got to the point the I was admitted to the cardiac ward of the Regina General Hospital last Thursday, September 13.  Finally, all the tests were being done.  Finally, things were happening that made me feel better.  But, the news was not great.

Whatever has attacked me this summer has seriously damaged my heart.  It is enlarged, and just not pumping like it should.  There is a function used to measure the hearts efficiency, called the ejection function or ef.  A normal persons ef should be 50 - 70 %.  Mine is at 19%.   I have a leaky valve.  My left ventricle is not pumping well and is out of sync.  

The better news is, is that there is a lot of medical intervention which can improve all of these things.  I am on a long list of drugs to make the heart pump stronger, to reduce the fluid retention, to slow the rate so that it doesn't work as hard.  At some point I think I will have to have a defibrillator put in - which is much the same procedure as a pacemaker - but they are going to monitor me on the drug therapy first to see if there is improvement.

The good news is my arteries and veins are free of any blockage.  Yay, something good.

As for my lungs it looks like they are clearing now that the fluid has been removed from around my heart.  I will have to follow up with the respiratory surgeon but he thinks they will likely clear on there own.  However, my pulmonary function is at half of what it should be so there are issues there too.

In any event I am just tickled to be home and looking forward to getting on with things.  Adjustments have to be made, but that will be possible.  I have a wonderfully supportive family backing me up, as well as terrific friends, and believe me when you get news like this, these are the people you need to have around you.  

Thanks to everybody who visited, sent cards, texted (even if that is not a real word!) phoned and just generally were there for me.  But especially to my daughter who is already too busy with her life and had to put many of those things on hold because I was not well.  Bless you all.

/bye

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Lace Shawl

I am on the last few rows of the latest venture into knitting lace.  I am almost afraid to finish it,  because then it will have to be blocked and I really don't have much experience doing that. 

Yesterday I cleaned out my deep freeze.  Yes, I am that troubled about the blocking thing that I procrastinated by cleaning my deep freeze.  Oh man, I am in big trouble.

Whats next?  Sorting out the office, actually filing all that sh*t that Murray and the taxman think should be kept?  Cleaning out closets? Tidying up the basement? It will have to be something awful, because its been my experience that if I procrastinate doing something fun, others disapprove.  I hate others.

Still it feels good to have the deep freeze cleaned out and organized.  I have been lifting the lid and looking around inside just because I can.  I could buy a frozen pizza and I wouldn't have to eat it within 5 hours of bringing it home as there is a place where it can be kept until I actually want to eat pizza.  I can respond with smug assurance should anyone ask me how many roasting chickens are in my deep freeze.  If asked, I could declare in a clear voice that I do not have any T-bone steaks in the bottom of the deep freeze.  Nor freezer jam from 2004.  Of course, no one will ask until my freezer is a mess again when my responses will be vague and quiet and non committal.

/bye

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

More of the same

I have continued to enjoy "poor" health for the rest of the summer.  Early in August I managed to get hospitalized because the doc wasn't impressed with my follow up x-ray.  They have, after extensive testing, discovered that they do not have a clue what is wrong with me.  

The most recent "specialist" did go so far as to name it.  It is an "ideopathic lung inflamation".  Roughly translated that means "we do not have a clue what is wrong with you".  Health care is much like roulette, I have found, only the wheel turns grindingly slow.  One can only hope that at some point your name will come up and all the tests/procedures they want you to have will be assigned to you.  Until then, I sit here doing nothing to become better - just sitting and waiting for the phone to ring like a high school graduate hoping for an escort.  But, I am not bitter.

I have been thinking a lot about my future.  I dread the day that the remote becomes a complete mystery to me.  It is kind of one now, but I just avoid the buttons that I don't recognize - like aux, and cbl, and amp.  As long as I can remember TV and SAT and PVR I will be ok, but the day will come when they are as outdated as VCR and then I am pretty sure I will be relying on younger generations to turn on my television.  I can remember my mother yelling at Murray and I to "just put it on a channel that gets Another World and leave it A-LONE!"   That will be me.  My children have so much to look forward to.

The garden is dying a natural death - and I am happy with it for the most part.  I had wonderful corn again, the tomatoes are fantastic so far, nothing to complain about with the cucumbers, the potatoes are kind of sparse but ok, carrots look good.  Soon it will be time to pick it all off and then Murray can have at it with the big roto-tiller and those weeds will be plowed under once more.  Next year, things will be different.  I am going to be weed free!

/bye


Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Just a bit of news...

If you are reading this, then you likely were not hit by the DNS malware  plague that was all over the news a couple of days ago.  Since Y2K, I am highly suspect of "the sky is falling" news when it comes to computers.  One day that will come back and bite in the tush but for now I am in my happy place.

I really don't have much to say, other than I have pneumonia.  I woke up at 3:00 am last Weds because I was having trouble breathing.  It took a little while, but I finally decided that I needed to go to the hospital, and got Murray up to take me.  Anyway, end result of bloodwork and xrays was diagnosis of double bilateral pneumonia.  So, I am on antibiotics, staying out of the sun, and resting. 

I was told, in the gentlest way possible, that my Stampin Up supplier will be moving to Stony Plain Alberta in August.  This on top of my illness.  It is a wonder that I am able to function at all!!  I will so miss the stampin up times, but more so I will miss Chris and her family.  Stony Plain has no idea how lucky it is.

I am not able to be out in the garden much, or to mow my lawn, or do any of the outside things I like to do because I am supposedly ill.  So, I am knitting fiendishly on another lace shawl.  For very different reasons, it has been every bit as much fun as the first one was!  However, several of the Knitwits group are working on the same patterns so we are able to commiserate together.  Misery loves company, as they say.

Well, it is getting close to my bedtime - these days I follow a newborns schedule of being awake 1 hour and asleep for the next 4.  Hopefully I will be "cured" soon and able to stay up for a long time, like 2 hours, without having a nap. 

/bye

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

July 1, 2012

I love the July 1 parade.  Whenever possible - all family members come out.  ESPECIALLY Holly and her family.  WITHOUT a doubt one of my VERY FAVORITE FAMILY MEMBERS CERTAINLY WORTH NOTING AND NEVER, EVER FORGETTING.  (trying to assuage hurt feelings.  Hmmm???? Peri-menopause?????? Nope nope, not going there, goodness knows how I would every assuage THAT!).




back l - r Princess Dana, Tyler, Bev Dodd, Brad, George, Kelly; Middle Bonnie and Wade, Front: Owen, Declan, Grampa


Kenzie on CU Float

Brad, Declan, Owen

Declan watching the most interesting thing in the parade

The most interesting thing in the parade

This year was a particularly big crowd, family wise.
/bye

Friday, June 15, 2012

It seems to me...

As everybody knows, I have been around a long time.  Over 60 years.  6 decades.  Long long time. 

Over that time I have noticed that, for the most part, men are terribly busy and terribly important.  Anything men do is always way more important and way busier than what women do.  I have observed first hand a doctor, leaving her clinic early so she can pick up the kids, get the mail, buy the groceries and not disturb her terribly busy husband during his terribly important tennis game.  Many many farm wives can relate horror stories about giving birth during seeding or harvest, or spraying, or preg checking cattle, or...you get the idea.  Everything is way more important if a man does it.

Just take a drive down any of our highways and you will see proof positive that of which I speak.  Dotted along the roadside are these large billboard type signs, some of them solar powered flashing lights, some of them bright orange, with big black letters declaring "MEN WORKING".  Women don't do that.  I guess we just don't feel the need to advertise like that.
/bye

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Corduroy Lawn


I am not sure that I have mentioned it but I love to mow my lawn. I have a state of the art Kub Kadet ride on mower and something about cruising up and down in straight strips making an immediate difference to the look of the lawn is so relaxing to me. There is a beginning, and I can see that there will be an end to the job. So unlike most of the other tasks around the house – i.e. Cooking, cleaning, laundry ad infinitum.

To add to my revery, I have developed a new type of lawn. A corduroy lawn. When one strip is 2 to perhaps as much as 6 inches taller than those on either side of it. Now, I have heard comments like “your mower blades are dull/off balance/need to be set”. But, how can that POSSIBLY be the case. Both my husband and my son are LANDSCAPERS. My son in law has TWO degrees. Of course my mower blades would be set at precisely the height and balance they need to be set at. No, it is done on purpose. This will be the next big craze. You just watch the next great Kate and Wills outdoor gala – they will be on the band wagon with the corduroy lawn too. You should come out and see mine before the lineups get too long. I am such a trendsetter.

My corduroy grass will change the face of summer sport. Echo Ridge, for example, with its pristine expanses of levelly mowed fairways and flat greens. There really is only one word for it. Boring. Bocci ball will become a team sport, much like curling, but this time the two team members will be tramping down the ridges of grass so as to guide the ball closer to the pin. Special stomping shoes will be developed to give the elite Olympic Lawn bowlers better control as they develop the finesse it will take to bowl in corduroy grass.

The owner of Valley Lawn Services thinks that I am taken in by his subterfuge, pretending to pick up his equipment stored on the lot next to mine, or visiting his sister across the street. I know that he is calculating the exact method of creating my corduroy lawn. How tilted is the deck that holds the mower blade? Just how flat is the left front tire? Oh yes, he is ciphering away in the hopes that he will be ready when the great demand happens.

No, no, my corduroy lawn is not the result of everybody being too darn busy to take a look at my sad little mower and fix it so that it mows in level swaths. Rather, it is part of the fantasy leisure world that I live in since my retirement.
/bye


Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Going in circles (or elipses)...


A friend called me last night to ensure that I hadn't dropped off the face of the earth, as my emails were bouncing back to her and I wasn't writing in my blog at all. So, just to clarify, I still circle the sun along with everyone else but have been very busy, and pretty lazy, therefore no blogging. (Also, I have very little to say!). As for my emails...hope my spam is bouncing back as well!!

As long as I am here I will share some excitement I had on Sunday. A bear, a big brown bear, a big brown man-eating bear ran through my back yard! It was just barreling along, so something had spooked it, and fortunately it didn't stop for a snack of hysterical woman and small child (Owen was with me). It headed up into the coulee behind the neighbour's and I haven't seen him since. When I called the now named Ministry of Environment on Monday I was told that bear was also sighted at the Mackie Hill. Later on, I heard that a bear was tracked from Katepwa to this area – but still remains at large. I just hope if there are resident bears they chase the cougars away and not the deer. My garden is coming up so nicely and the dear deer do so enjoy that – I haven't had a freshly picked home grown beet since 2007. Stupid *%*&^!! deer.

We had to order a part from the USA last week and it is being shipped UPS. I hate UPS. First of all, they conveniently give you a tracking number and a website to watch your shipment make its circuitous way through several states, past the Canadian border, into Winnipeg and then Regina where it promptly disappears! There is, conveniently, a toll free number to call to check on your package. Once dialed you get several options, none of which say “to find your package once it gets to Regina press...”. Anyway, knowing full well it will be futile, I press 0 to speak to an agent. Who is located in the Asia Pacific call office.

He doesn't know Regina, much less Fort Qu'Appelle, even less the RM of North Qu'Appelle. He tells me that the package will be delivered between 10:00 – 2:00 to my home. I tell him that UPS will not deliver to the RM. He asks what is an RM. I give a brief educational summation of the various Geo-political designations in the province of Saskatchewan. He asks where is Saskatchewan. I say Canada. He says Canada like it was some kind of multi syllable disease.

This is where the conversation goes distinctly astray and I ask him a few questions like – how can you be customer support if you don't even have any idea where I live, or where my package will be delivered? He assures me that he has resources to help him. I suggest he tap into those resources now. He agrees.

Five minutes on hold and he comes back on to say the drop off station is the Tempo gas station on Broadway street. I tell him the Tempo gas station on Broadway Street has been shut down for several years.

Hmmmm....then he will use his email resources to contact UPS in Regina for the information needed. Could I contact the UPS station in Regina myself?? (I know, dumb question). Of course not. That would be entirely too convenient. UPS prides itself on ALMOST being convenient not on actually BEING convenient. I listen as his keyboard clicks away with his email. He assures me someone will contact me with the information. I ask him if it will be a real person who calls me. He assures me that it will be a real person, who is aware of the urgency of the situation. Knowing full well that this is a lie, I thank him and hang up.

Twenty minutes later my phone rings and it is a recorded message saying that my package will be delivered between 10:00 – 2:00 to my home address. The recorded message cuts out once the useless information has been passed along and I hear dial tone in my ear. I hate UPS.

/bye

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Hey - long time no hear from!

So, what does it take to get a procrastinator like myself to finally write a blog post? When said procrastinator vows that she will work on the income tax papers without stop until they are complete!  That was a stupid vow (so many are) as it means that I will put off starting for as long as possible.  That window of "possible" growing shorter and shorter by the second.


I do have some news to share - since I haven't blogged for so long.  We went on two holidays this winter.  The first was to Cabos with our friends Bonnie and Wade, and Rita and Shawn.  It was wonderful - the resort we stayed at was the Riu Sante Fe and it was beautiful.  We couldn't swim in the ocean due to the undertow, but there were a couple of pools where we could stretch out and relax in the sun.  With a pina colada.  Or two. 



























It was just a beautiful, peaceful, restful place to be.  I just loved it.  That was in January.  A friend of mine went to the same place in February and it was party central with loud, obnoxious, vomiting drunks all over the place.  Timing is everything I guess.

In February we went to Cancun with Holly, Cory and the girls.  What a blast.  Lots of hot sun, fun times in the ocean, never a dull moment.  The resort was kid friendly, which meant noise and activity at all times.  Good thing we were well rested from the first vacation!













Then, I was home for a couple of days - and I retired!  From work!  Forever!  Well actually I have a casual position which may have me back once in a while - some people just don't know when to quit do they.  Then, once I was retired for a couple of days I had my 60th birthday.  What a milestone!  My amazing family threw me a party on the actual day (Friday March 9) when I went over to Holly's for a wonderful meal and some fun times with my little girls, who know how to party hard (just like their parents ha ha on them!).  Then, they also threw me a surprise birthday party the next night - which totally blew me away.  With the help of Bonnie and Wade and Rita and Shawn, Holly, Brad and their crew were able to get me out of the house and to get everything ready so that they could yell SURPRISE when I got home.  It was just great.  Thank you thank you thank you to everyone who helped out and to everyone who came.  I am so happy you did.

Then it was time to actually get down to the grind of being retired.  So far I have spent a weekend making cards, signed up for a retreat to scrapbook, knit a pair of socks, working on a baby blanket (or two), cleaned out my closet of clothes that are too big for me now (yay!) and just generally enjoying life.  Until now.  Tax time.  It all had to end sometime I suppose.  Anyway, hopefully I will be able to just drill down through the huge pile of paperwork to get to the pertinent details for CRA.  Pray for me.

/bye