Playing Around

Daily writing prompt
Do you play in your daily life? What says “playtime” to you?

I try to play a little every day, and some days I need a lot. I have way too many projects waiting for me to do because ‘Playtime’ usually means sorting through my fabrics. Planning a quilt. This fall, I made curtains for my living room. I have two more windows I need to cover for that room to be finished. Now, that project has morphed from playtime into a to-do list item.

Something you enjoy doing that is simple and takes very little brain power, like working on a jigsaw puzzle. Playing solitaire (with cards). Watching ridiculous movies. Reading a book. Writing light-hearted Blog Posts. Meeting with my teenage granddaughter on ZOOM. Brushing my 75-pound lap dog.
<– Her baby picture. Awww!

What feels like playtime to you?

Staying Positive in a Negative World

I have had my share of health issues the past two years, and I am so sick of doctors and clinics. My issues are not new, but they are becoming extremely annoying, and my normally good attitude has gone on vacation. I can feel my rebellious side growing, and I am already neglecting exercise and eating too many carb-rich foods. I know I need to take better care of myself, but the scary thing is, I don’t want to. That’s right – meet the brat having a tantrum.

I’m an adult, so I don’t throw myself to the ground and beat it with my fists, screaming. That does not mean I don’t need to. Everyone needs to release the pressures of anxiety, overwhelming circumstances, and grief. Some people run a couple of miles or work out. Others write letters to editors or their congressmen. I am a scrubber. I also will rant out a blog post now and then.

How do YOU throw a tantrum?

Daily writing prompt
What are your biggest challenges?

Farewell 2023

You began wonderfully; I woke up in my own bed, in my own house. Long story that belongs in 2022. The aftermath of all that we are still dealing with to this day. I am grateful that it was not worse. Enough about that.

In May I would be 65 years old. I was unprepared for the onslot of health insurance and medical institutes pestering me. My email inbox would have 50+ emails regarding Medicare. It is kind of spooky that the entire U.S.A. knows you are turning sixty-five. There must be a list somewhere.

Your winter was cold and long. The snow piled up – inches into feet, then yards. Before it could melt, another winter storm advisory was issued, and we were stuck at home for a few days. Again. Over and over.

Spring finally arrived around Memorial Day, and the first hot summer day was in July. In August, I finally thawed out from the winter of 2022, only to arrive home from our anniversary trip in September (Cabo San Lucas) to freezing temperatures. I was not happy about that.

Of course, by the end of this year, I was not happy about much. Things went south when I entered Phase I of the dental plan. We (the dental office and I) discovered that the temp dentures were too huge once my jaw’s swelling and healing progressed. At the end of July, my surgeon gave me the thumbs up to go into Phase II – the permanent dentures that would snap into place with the implants that were placed in my jaw. After 3 sets of dentures – the third time is not always the charm; BTW, none of them fit my mouth or even worked together.

The only reason I can think of for this is that no one had any impressions of my mouth when I had teeth. How could this be? I was always biting into that goop to send to the lab to make my partials and crowns. We are talking about YEARS of dental impressions, photos, and scans of my jaw. I have been crowned more times than all the Winsors in England. And yet, not one of those models that depict my original tooth structure and bite is to be found. 

I have spent the last 9 months without the ability to chew. And yes, you CAN get tired of ice cream, milkshakes, and smoothies. So, I will be starting Phase II over again with a specialist whose office is a 2-hour drive each way from our house. This faraway land is called “Modesto,” and it is the land of specialists. My Endo is also there. I think the main reason hubby and I put up with this is that there are no specialists closer. And – Costco is there.

I just realized that if I’m snowed in, I can still have teleappointments with my Endo. Not so with a denture specialist. I may have to go another half a year of hiding my face behind masks. These weird situations like this jaw thing keep cropping up. Things that I never heard about anyone ever having to deal with before. If you read this blog occasionally, you know what I am talking about.

Then, just last night, after my shower, I noticed something on my scalp.
“Oh, please be a tick,” I muttered. I finally had 3 mirrors arranged to take a good look at the something on top of my head. I recognized the thing. It was not a tick. It was the same brown spot that had happened before, in a different place on my head that was cancer. Sigh.

Not going to make the mistake I did last time. I waited while it grew larger. I listened to my doctor tell me it was probably not serious, but we will watch it. By the time I had a biopsy, it was a large mass and a good-sized hole in my head when it got removed. To close the wound, the surgeon cut my scalp open with a huge ‘L’ shape that surrounded the hole, then he and his assistant proceeded to install stitches that would pull my scalp over the wound. by this time, the local anesthetic was wearing off, and I got to experience this reconstructive surgery without anesthetic. Do you know how many nerves are in the skin over your scalp?
Because I refuse to have another lobotomy, I will get a referral for a dermatologist ASAP.

I betcha there is a great Dermatologist- in Modesto.

Goodbye and good riddance, 2023.
Welcome, 2024!

TTFN