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Still Striving For that Elusive Halo

Still Striving For that Elusive Halo

Category Archives: Health

Slipped Up Already

09 Thursday Feb 2012

Posted by Kirstin in Health

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graves disease

The plan was that I would walk to church on Wednesdays, however, yesterday the service was immediately followed by a trip to the hospital and I knew that I wouldn’t have time to get back to the Rectory and get the car.

During these appointments for my eyes (TED) I see several people get blood taken and generally spend a lot of time walking up and down back stairs  from one area to another – yesterday I was in the hospital for 5 hours, yes you see correctly that is 5 hours.  During one of the trips up the stairs I decided that maybe my resolve hadn’t slipped after all.  On one of the doors at the top of the stairs it said – if you climb the stairs to this point every day in a year you will have climbed a Munro.  Well I wasn’t there for a year but I certainly think I walked at least the equivalent of to All Saints and back.

Heading South and Thinking Mission

02 Thursday Feb 2012

Posted by Kirstin in Health, Mission

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Religion

South of the river that is, I do find it strange how the river Clyde divides not only the city of Glasgow itself but also it’s inhabitants.

Having exhausted all hospitals north of the river today I ventured south to the Southern General for a MRI scan.  While waiting for my appointment I got chatting to the staff and asked why I had ended up at the Southern for the scan when an earlier appointment which had been cancelled was at the Western Infirmary, well it transpires it was because I said I didn’t mind crossing the great divide – the Clyde.  There are those who live on the north of the Clyde that view going to the south-side as, as alien as travelling to Mars.  (I can honestly say that it really doesn’t bother me, maybe because I have lived both sides of the river.)  Any way apparently the waiting list for MRI scans at the hospitals north of the river are longer than those on the south because those who live on the north seem to be reluctant to travel for hospital care, I am sure that part of this is down to limitations of the public transport system when a river and its limited crossings are introduced, however seeing that they speak the same language, still drive on the left, there is no need for inoculations, passports or a visa, I didn’t think that venturing the short distance under the river to its southern shores was particularly adventurous so had raised no objections to going to the Southern and hence had got an earlier appointment than I would have had I said I wouldn’t cross the river.

As I was pushed into the chamber loaded into the torpedo tube; for this time as I had the use of my eyes it not only felt like it (the radiotherapy) but looked like it; I got to thinking.  I had hoped to get a nap, but actually it is very noisy and that wasn’t going to be on the cards, so instead I thought.  For many stepping over the church thresh hold is as alien a journey as a north of Glasgow resident going to the south-side.  It is somewhere they don’t venture and have strange impressions of,  what is more even if they do through the doors they will discover somewhere that has a different culture, uses strange words, has peculiar rituals, and sometimes even requires some kind of pre-existing affiliation.  We like to think that we, that is churches, are welcoming communities doors flung wide open for anyone, I can assure you that the people on the south-side of Glasgow think that they are welcoming to those from the north.  It isn’t about what we think we are about and doing, it is about how others perceive us.

We can have the best possible welcome for those who come through our doors, what we mustn’t forget is those who haven’t yet taking that small step which is a giant leap.  Those who because of things that have been said by those inside the church – clerics and laity alike – have perceptions that the church wouldn’t welcome them, doesn’t want to include them and would even slam the door in their face.  For some out there the church is far more threatening and dangerous than the south-side of Glasgow until we grasp and wrestle with that we will still only be playing with the tip of the mission iceberg.

Radio Blackout

19 Thursday Jan 2012

Posted by Kirstin in Health

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graves disease

The radiotherapy is finished it seems to have made a difference although the doctor says that it wont be until a check-up in a couple of weeks tine before they are prepared to commit themselves.

As a souvenir I got to bring home my mask.  From the expression on the face of the radiography it is obviously not a commonly made request.

The stickers with all the marks on them that they used to line me up had to be removed because of – are you ready for it – contamination control!  Neither of us were very sure as to why the stickers mattered and the mask didn’t.  There was a sticker either side of my head just below each temple and another one down the bridge of my nose, but they are no more.  The black sections are how the mask was attached to the table.

So, dear reader, you too might be wondering why I wanted my mask, well I will tell you.  I am sure it will make a good sermon illustration at some point and I am always on the look out for them as it is easier to pick them up when the opportunity arises than to suddenly try to find something suitable in the week before.

2nd Week

11 Wednesday Jan 2012

Posted by Kirstin in Health

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graves disease, radiotherapy

My trips to get radiotherapy so far this week have passed without incident or comment from me.  I am sure that the swelling has decreased and the fact that others have also commented I am presuming means it isn’t just my wishful thinking.  Also my eyesight seems to be fighting with the changes in my eyes receding back into their sockets and occasional multiple vision and blurriness is back, however it is nowhere near as bad as it once was and I am more confident that my eyes will soon be back to what they were before all this nonsense began.  I am definitely suffering from fatigue which is common with radiotherapy treatment but that will pass.

My one concern, which I will raise with them today, is that I am not someone who gets headaches one a year if I am unfortunate, however I had one last week and have one today.  It could just be down to my eyesight being funny so I am not overly concerned, we will see what they say.

This is the machine that has been zapping me taken yesterday set back and taking its nightly rest, I had the last appointment of the day.

The bench (the very one that I nearly fell off) is raised – once I have been attached to it via my mask – so that my head is level with the disk at the back of the machine.  The machine (the one that I nearly head butted) itself moves forward so that is right over me then is tilted into position with all the number calling (which reminded me of the torpedo tube) first to one side then the other side of my head.

While speaking to one of the staff I was told that there was a clip on youtube of a similar machine in action so I have searched it out for anyone who might be interested here is the link http://youtu.be/PRq6DYg1MFk

3rd Time Lucky

05 Thursday Jan 2012

Posted by Kirstin in Health

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graves disease

And it was, no disasters or even near disasters today, just a little mind trick.

I lay there unable to move as they called out their numbers which in reality are to ensure my face and the rays are lined up.  ’5, 79, distance fine, 19, 34′; for a fleeting second I did wonder if I had been transported into a submarine and was suddenly going to go whizzing down a torpedo tube and about to get very wet, but no, not even a drop of rain.

Day 2

04 Wednesday Jan 2012

Posted by Kirstin in Health

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graves disease

In between Christmas and New Year I had to pop up to the hospital to get my mask made for the radiotherapy treatment to deal with my eyes which have been effected by Graves’ Disease.

In my head I was imagining, okay maybe dreaming, of a glamorous Phantom of the Opera type mask, you know the sort of thing:

I mean if you have got to wear a mask then you, well I, want it to have a bit of glamour.  In reality it is more like a Hannible Lecter mask only it covers my eyes too and is white.

Glamour and comfortable are not the order of the day especially as they clip me onto the table.  ‘Wriggle down a bit’; ‘shifty up a bit’; ‘push yourself into the table’; ‘I know it’s quite tight, we wont be long’; ‘I will try not to pull your hair or trap it’; are the already common phrases that have emerged from the three times on the table so far (one for a simulation).

Once the mask is on sight is no longer an option and you have to rely on sound to know what is happening.  At the simulation they talk you through everything as indeed they did yesterday, but today the visit was far less narrated and maybe as a consequence also quicker.  However again I got a shock at the end not this time nearly falling 4 foot off the bed but nearly knocking myself out on the machine which had silently been moving around – how does something so big move so quietly.  I didn’t realise it was still in position just at my head when they came back in and firstly unclipped my mask from the table.  A quick-moving hand pushed me back down before I clobbered my head, although I do tend to think they were probably more concerned with the machine, after all it is an expensive piece of kit.  It did make me think however that as useful as the simulation was for both me and them, maybe it would have been more useful if it had been repeated with me being able to see as well.

Maybe tomorrow I will manage a visit without any near misses.

Tell Tale Signs

02 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by Kirstin in Health

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graves disease

I thought it was maybe time I posted about my recent illness.  I start the post with a caveat – this is my experience and just because you have something that sounds like a symptom which I have/had doesn’t mean you have thyroid problems or indeed Graves Disease.

About 18 months ago I started to notice that things were getting on top of me a bit.  Still new in post and being busy with two charges rather than one I put it down to the increased workload especially during the evenings.  My sleep was erratic, I was constantly hot, I was irritable, I was showing signs which I put down to the start of the menopause, I had the shakes, my hair was falling out, my bones hurt, my muscles ached, I cried for absolutely no reason whatsoever, had enough water retention to solve a minor drought, and I was constantly hungry and I mean constantly, my nails were breaking and flaking and there were gastric issues but you don’t need to know about them.  Now having just listed all those things you may be wondering why I didn’t do something at that point, well, not everything manifest at the same time these things came and went in varying degrees.

Gradually, however the symptoms became more frequent, more persistent and more annoying.  I also started getting dizzy spells and blurred vision which would clear after a few seconds, what I can only best describe as feelings of morning sickness and I would suddenly be so hot that you would have thought I had taken a trip straight to the fires of hell.  This last symptom set my mind on it all being down to the beginning of the menopause – after all I am approaching that age.

Christmas last year, kind of passed me by I felt as if I was watching someone else rather than living the days myself, over the following months things got worse and worse until I finally admitted to myself I just wasn’t coping but was at a loss as to how to rectify the situation.  I didn’t want to have to go on HRT – I still was thinking menopause – but maybe I should see if there was an alternative, I never got around to doing that, life was busy.

Life was also however getting harder to cope with, eventually some nagging from mother Ruth and Hubby meant I went to the GP, not really knowing what I was going to say to him.  I had phoned while the notion was still fresh in my mind and before I changed it, there is an appointment in 20 mins available if you can make it I was told, so off I set.

I sat in the waiting room thinking this is silly I am just wasting the GP’s time and should just pull myself together and get on with things.  I even said as much to the GP when I got into the consulting room, apologising for taking up an appointment, then promptly bust into tears.  He was great, told me I obviously wasn’t wasting his time and asked me to just tell me all about it; I suppose at this point he didn’t have a clue as to what it might all be about either.  I answered his questions, he consulted his computer and commented that there wasn’t a lot on my notes.  True last time I was at a GP was when I was pregnant.  He took my pulse – 147, took my blood pressure which as always was fine, looked in my eyes (commenting that they were cream rather than white) and said ‘we need some blood’ but I think your thyroid is over active.  I will refer you and we will see what your bloods say for now let’s get you on some beta blockers.

Over the coming weeks I spent a lot of time at the doctors having my blood checked, my pulse checked and generally being fretted over.  The first lot of results confirmed my thyroid was overactive, and also raised concerns over my liver, but despite the beta blockers my pulse still raced and I didn’t feel any better.  Two weeks later I was at the Western for what was to become the first in a series of regular visits to not only this but other hospitals in Glasgow.  I was there for nearly three hours as I was passed from department to department and everyone took measurement, stuck needles in me to take stuff out and put stuff in, asked questions, took photographs and scans and passed me on to the next person, until I was back where I started.  The endocrinologist gave me a couple of leaflets, a letter and prescription request for my GP and said that they would see me next week once all the results had been collated.  I left the hospital with a mixture of relief and confusion.  Relief that something was being done I felt in very good hands (and indeed that has continued to be the case) confused as they couldn’t actually tell me what they would do and how long it would all take to be back to normal.

On my return a week later I was told that I had Graves Disease (named after the person who identified it) an autoimmune condition which often presents itself with an overactive thyroid.  My thyroid was indeed extremely overactive, in fact I was told they hadn’t had a case as bad as mine for over 10 years, I would have to see someone about my heart (pulse still well over 100 despite the beta blockers), my liver and of course my eyes.

Over the following weeks I soldiered on in frustration as things only got worse, my eyesight got gradually more and more blurry and double vision started, my ankles and knees disappeared as my legs turned into tree trunks complete with bark like skin which itched, boy how it itched.  This lumpy, flaky, itchy skin then started to appear on my arms, my back and my face, while my eyes started to puff up and protrude – I didn’t need any joke glasses – I took to hiding behind sunglasses after a young girl commented on my funny face in a shop.  Her mother was embarrassed, I laughed and said yes I do have to her, I think her mother was relieved but she just gave me an small smile and pulled the poor child away.  The sun glasses were soon to become necessary anyway as my eyes had become light-sensitive and watered constantly, probably in an attempt to try to remove the pound of sand that seemed to have been shoved under my eyelids.  Blood tests continued, they tinkered with my medication but still things continued on a downward path, I wasn’t sleeping well (later on my sleep pattern developed into 6 hours sleeping 42 hours awake and I mean wide awake), at times I couldn’t walk my legs just collapsed under me, and I decided that I shouldn’t be driving, but it was Holy Week so I am sorry to say I did.

Easter Sunday saw the last day of driving and also the first day of the worse of my illness.  We went on holiday and I spent the first week in agony, having to be helped up from chairs, into the car and out of the bath.  Poor Hubby must have thought we had been catapulted into some future time when we have to help each other with daily tasks in our dotage.  The itching, for which I had been given steroid cream which proved totally useless, was now such as I would have happily torn off all my skin for the relief.  At this point I would love to give a plug to Johnson’s Camomile Oil Gel which after trying just about everything in front of and behind the counter at Boots was the only thing that gave me any kind of relief – however it appears that they have stopped making it so the recommendation is somewhat useless.  I think this was when both Hubby and I realised just how ill I was.

Returning from holiday to a hospital appointment it became obvious that I couldn’t continue to work.  My medication was upped again passed what the leaflets, folded like origami in their boxes, said was the maximum (but I was told not to worry it wasn’t going to be long-term and might just stabilise things) and went to the GP to ask for a sick note for a couple of weeks.  He gave me one for four weeks saying I could always go back to work before it ended if I felt better.  I spent the first week in bed, if I wanted to leave it I literally had to crawl (thank heaven for en-suites), the second week was slightly better, I walked the couple of 100 yards to the shop for milk but it just about killed me.  I was as weak as a kitten and had no energy at all, I ached, I itched, I coudn’t see, couldn’t sleep and felt as if I was constantly on the verge of being sick.  I became someone who visited hospitals for the medical care rather than to visit others.  I got to know how their systems worked and what a 10am appointment really meant – it doesn’t always mean 10am!  I struggled to even ‘be’.

The GP gave me another sick line and then another, my frustration towards my illness grew.  No they couldn’t do anything else until my thyroid was stable I wanted them to just take it out and be done with the whole nightmare.  They tinkered some more with my medication considered changing it to something else which wasn’t usually used, but were concerned that it might have an adverse effect so decided against it.  Meanwhile my liver got the all clear, as did my heart although my pulse still raced and palpitations had become part of daily life.  I got to see a specialist in autoimmune diseases one of the most helpful half hours of my illness.

After several false starts, which caused a degree of annoyance to me and other doctors I finally got to see someone about my eyes, it was decided that to start with I would be put on a large dose of steroids.  The following week as I travelled to the Western for yet another appointment at the endocrinology department I became aware that the journey wasn’t as tiring or required as much effort as before.  Things had started to improve, symptoms disappeared or lessened – with hindsight I think it was more a case of the speed of slow improvement increasing and becoming more noticeable at that point rasther than a sudden improvement.  A couple of days later I got a phone call to tell me that my bloods were good and my thyroid seemed to be calming down.  Plus as a side effect of the steroids my skin started to improve, although if you were to look at my legs without knowing how bad they had been you would likely disagree.  A corner had been turned, now if only the eyes could see singly and clearly.

Well the new prism glasses help with the double vision bit as I blogged about earlier in the week and we will see about the driving tomorrow.  But even if I need to sort out how I get out and about a return to work is finally on the cards.  I am not at the end yet, but at least the end is in sight and life is almost back to normal.

The Day The World Became One Again

31 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by Kirstin in Health

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graves disease

Yesterday morning I picked up two handbags, went through two front doors, slipped in a single motion two keys into two locks and locked the doors.  So it has been for the last four months, inside or out everything appears to be ark bound in pairs (and yes I know that not all the animals were in 2′s before you point it out to me).  I walked along two pavements which flowed beside two roads, crossed an eight way junction full of pairs of cars and got onto two trains which arrived and departed simultaneously on two of the four sets of rails.  Minding the two gaps, which was slightly tricky as I wasn’t sure if the second gap was a gap or a platform and did a kind of hop skip jump to leave the trains.  I walked along more sets of matching pavements until I arrived at two hospitals – no wonder everyone complains about the parking!

Morven, for that was her name, switched lights on and off, and got me to look at the chart.  I got further down than I had done three weeks ago, but there was still two charts.  She got me to follow two ‘H’s, two pin points of light, two dots, two fingers, two pens, two white markers as she apologised each time I winced with discomfort despite me telling her there was no need.  She passed me two books with two identical stories on their pages and repeated the process.  She told me that I had started trying to compensate and was tilting my head and would now need to stop doing that, also that my brain was ignoring some duplicates which was why I said I was seeing only one or sometimes no dots or lights when she said all the signs pointed to I should be seeing two!  So if I have ignored both of you in recent walks then sorry it is all my brains fault!

She went and came back with two pairs of glasses, apologised for there being no choice.  Then she attached prisms to the clear lenses and got me to put the first pair on.  WOW, I don’t care what they look like I told her!  There was only one, a bit blurry one but only one, only one of her, only one chart, only on big ‘H’, one dot, one light – ‘I’ve got my life back’, I said.  She passed the second set of glasses, I swapped them round in time to see a blurry lump come towards me.  Well there was only one, but I couldn’t read the type in the book, we tried a bigger print, not much better, we went back to lights and dots. ‘One, two, one, two, on top, beside, none, one, two, on top, go back that was clearer, no maybe not’, was my chant as we tried to sort out a prism that would work for reading, but every time we got one dot it meant the prism was such that it caused too much blurriness to read much past a couple of sentences without difficultly and pain.  Eventually we agreed to try with what gave me single vision and see if my eyes adjusted to the blurring.

Then she took me along the single corridor which was single all to its end and got me to look at more dots and dashes and lines, to follow dots, to point at dots to lose the pointer, at least I know known exactly were my brain is over correcting.  Finally to plot my eye movements on a clever little graph, so that next time around we can see how it has improved.

I left one hospital with one pair of glasses in my one handbag and one pair on my face, I saw one ambulance outside the door and walked along one pavement, but, the pavement was moving.  As long as I look straight ahead I see but one, if I look down still see but one but I get a bout of seasickness as the ground moves beneath my feet until there are two, so I stopped looking down.  I easily negotiated the one gap on the one platform, spying it at a distance so as not to get seasick alighting a train, and got back on but one train, crossed but a straightforward 4 way cross-road, visited but one library and returned through but one front door.

I have to wait until the weekend before I try to drive to give my eyes and brain time to re-adjust, and then I have to remember to turn my head no looking out the corner of my eye or two cars will come towards me.  Then if I am happy and comfortable driving, I can drive again, if not I have to give them a phone and they will try again.

I sat down to blog about it, I changed the glasses and arrrggg it was like I had just put the night-time drops in my eyes – they are like vaseline and blind me for 10 mins – I couldn’t see a thing, I sat and concentrated for a bit.  Slowly the fog cleared a little but only a little.  I turned on the light, pulled down the blind, turned off the light, closed one eye and then the other.  Just a blur, a single blur but a blur.  I remembered Morven’s words and tilted my head, I moved back and forth trying to get some kind of focus, it came but went almost as quickly, I tried to do a couple fo things and then gave up deciding I should leave the glasses on rather than abandoned them to the squinting, tilting habit I have adopted without them.  I watched the TV for a bit and got a headache so put on my latest audio book and decided to stare at picture on the wall until it stated to focus, which it didn’t so I abandoned the prisms and decided to do some housework without any glasses on.  Of course two of everything reappeared so I put the good prisms back on and cut the housework in half in one foul swoop, if only it was that easy all the time.

Today it is slightly better, I’ve managed this post with only a couple of breaks, so it has taken me less time than other similar sized blogs of late,  and no headache.  Still lots of blurriness and occasionally two lots of writing until I straighten up my head again.  So it looks like reading will still be difficult for a bit, but at least now it is discomfort rather than pain and one blur rather than two blurs.  Although the looking down is still weird in the extreme, especially on the stairs when looking down to take the first or final step totally confusses my brain.  I have no idea how many steps there are or which of the many feet are mine – for on those odd occassion I have multi rather than just double vision!

On the whole the world is one again, even if a blurred slow one when reading.  Can’t wait to get behind the wheel of ‘Baby’ on Saturday.

Water

11 Thursday Aug 2011

Posted by Kirstin in Health, Kent, The Gallery

≈ 2 Comments

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Photography

Okay I said it might be a while and it isn’t. One of the blogs on my blogroll has recently changed name to Unfinished Symphony but I for one am glad that the pictures continue to appear to cheer my day and weekly there is a gallery picture.
The Gallery is the inspiration of another blog Sticky Fingers when a topic is given each week to inspire or remember a picture you have once taken. Getting the camera out yesterday reminded me that my health problems had taken over to such a degree that I hadn’t sorted out my holiday photographs from April I knew somewhere in there, there would be one on the theme of water (this weeks theme) as we had been living across the road from the beach at Deal so I thought I might just join in.

I did think I would end up with one of the many sea scapes, or indeed my new blog header which is of the River Stour through Casnterbury but then I came across the one that heads this post, it is taken from the fountain grotto at the end of the maze at Leeds Castle, it seemed to hit a chord with how I am currently feeling. It was a cool and tranquil place after the heat of the day outside and the teenagers rushing round the maze, but it was also uncomfortable with only cobbled stoned benches. Water can be both life-giving but also life threatening; it can bring us refreshment but also make us miserable; it can warm our hearts but also chill our skin, for me at least so is this enforced rest.

Beauty from the Very Beginning to the Very End

10 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by Kirstin in Bible, Health, Lent

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

graves disease, Liturgical Seasons, Psalms

After yesterday’s post I thought I should follow my own advice and remember the beauty that surrounds and is within me.

I am starting Lent this year unwell, which is highly unusually for me as my virtually non-existent doctors notes testify.  A collection of niggly things that have been around for a while all decided to appear at once which, along with some nagging, meant that the one trip to the doctor to shut people up has now become a twice weekly trip as medication stabilises and more tests are done.

You may be wondering where the beauty is in a sick body, well despite how old and decrepid this body of mine might get, it is still part of the wonder and beauty of God’s creation.  As one of my favorite psalms, 139, says:

Oh yes, you shaped me first inside, then out; you formed me in my mother’s womb.   I thank you, High God—you’re breathtaking!  Body and soul, I am marvelously made!   I worship in adoration—what a creation!   You know me inside and out, you know every bone in my body; You know exactly how I was made, bit by bit, how I was sculpted from nothing into something.  Like an open book, you watched me grow from conception to birth; all the stages of my life were spread out before you, the days of my life all prepared before I’d even lived one day.

verses 13-16 – The Message

So today I am remembering the beauty of how wonderfully I am made – even when everything isn’t working quite as it should.

The Phone-call

02 Monday Feb 2009

Posted by Kirstin in Family Life, Health

≈ 2 Comments

1:30 am

Hubby and I far away in dreamland when suddenly – it is always suddenly at that time of night – the phone rings!

The house phone sits on Hubby’s side of the bed and it was that one that was doing the ringing, I dunnted him in the ribs and asked if he was going to answer it, a grunt later and the ringing stopped followed by another grunt.

Dead line, he wasn’t too pleased!

Reaching back to replace the phone he dropped it down the back of the bedside table, so now had to grunt some more as he got out of bed to retrieve it, the second it was back on the cradle it rang again.

This time it wasn’t a grunt that followed the silencing of the ringing but a terse ‘Yes’.

 

Meanwhile the other end of the phone-call was going something like this:

‘Ican’t remember the number?’

‘Did you give it to us earlier?’

‘No you already had it?’

‘Okay, here it is.’

Number dialed – no answer!

Instruction issued to try again.

Number dialed – engaged tone!

Number redialed – third time lucky ‘Yes.’

 

The one-sided conversation I heard went something like this.

‘Yes.’

‘Hmmmm, okay.’

‘Southern General?’

Some more humming then;

‘One of us will be there, shortly.’

I was out of bed on Southern General, which is the major hospital on the south-side of Glasgow.

 

Hubby related the other side of the conversation to me as I found some clothes, and looked out the window to see if he had promised the impossible and a thick layer of snow might have preventing anyone from going anywhere, no snow, not even any frost!

So what was the phone-call all about, I hear you asking.

Well daughter had managed to bang her head at work, not just a tap but an almighty bang which, in her words made a sound like Tom and Jerry fighting with frying pans, and had left her speaking gibberish.  Apparently it had taken an hour to convince her that she should go to the hospital, why they didn’t just take her I don’t know, then some 4 and a half hours after the actually accident they had decided that she should either be admitted for 24hrs of observation or could be discharged into my hands (she lives alone), understandably she didn’t want to be admitted hence the phone-call.

This morning she is still tucked up in bed sleeping with the snow lying and Hubby working from home because of it, looks like it was a good job that if she was going to bang her head she did it last night and not later on tonight.

New Regime

29 Wednesday Oct 2008

Posted by Kirstin in Health, Rectory Kitchen

≈ 1 Comment

A while back Hubby got a phone call, it was from his doctor who he had visited over a routine matter but had decided to give him the once over.  He had left feeling quite proud of himself, she had told him that he was fit and healthy is weight, blood pressure and all the other things she had checked where fine.  She also took some blood as part of the routine tests but didn’t expect anything to come back, oh how wrong she was and how his pride had come before a fall.  It transpires that he has ridiculously high cholesterol levels and was put on an immediate diet to try and reduce them before they are to be checked again and see if medication will be necessary.

So over the past months I have been adapting all my recipes, especially the ones he is very fond of omitting the list of banned ingredients and substituting them for the allowed items, with varied success.  Some things taste much the same, some are lacking in something, some just don’t work at all.  We also changed over to some of the cholesterol reducing products and he started taking cod liver oil capsules, did all this do any good, well in a word no!

The Doc says it must be hereditary, so now he is on the pills, but he has to stick to the low fat diet as well.  With being none stop since getting back from holiday I still haven’t managed to get to the shops before it wouldn’t have been an issue but now things are different, if I go to the shops this morning I wont get the visit and other things I need to do before heading off – clergy conference for the next two days – done.   What all this means is, that it is a good job the low fat meatballs were one of the successes and that last time I made them I made extra and froze them so tonight instead of him bringing something in with him that might be on the banned list he can heat them up with spaghetti in less time than it would take him to wait for a take-away!

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May 2012
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