VSG Maintenance Group
Recent Posts
on 10/23/24 10:44 am
"I love them, but I don't have to set myself on fire to keep them warm."
I love this!
No rain here in the longest, either---fall tree color change options are: dull green, puke yellow, brown, maybe a sprinkling of burnt orange, or dead and on the ground.
Love-love my Fiesta-ware! I've over 140 pieces and stopped collecting after realizing there was no place left in the cabinets to add 12 fruit cups I was considering, And, that since there is no end to the variety of set pieces in the collection line I will never be able to have it all.....
DH is pathetic when sick, and, while I excel at doing for needs, I am a wretched excuse for vasts amount of bed sided sympathetic hand holding; it is a good thing he is not often sick.
Liz, I so get your preference to stay in control. I think its an instinct we as young people develop when we are dealing with adults who are anything but in control. Kudos to you for building a beautiful life and raising a beautiful family. It's so powerful to change the script we were given as kids.
I do so appreciate my brother stepping up. There's a long history of him doing quite the opposite. But he is there now, and that's what we will focus on. If he wasn't, there would need to be different solutions. There may still need to be. Years ago, the plan was my brother and sister in law were going to move in, and my parents would sign the deed to the house to them. With the hoarding and other issues, there is no way for them to effectively move in. But one thing for sure, I will not ever be moving in, even though they may wi**** In this new stage, I am again taking stock of what I can and cannot do, what I owe them, what do I owe myself, what can I live with and still consider myself a good person... I love them, but I don't have to set myself on fire to keep them warm.
DH had his Mohs surgery this morning. The surgeon was able to get clean margins on the first cut. DH has 3 layers of stitches, two layers are dissolvable and one layer he will need removed next week. Hopefully the scarring on his pretty face will be minimal.
It hasn't rained here for 38 days. Crazy, after the monsoon we had in June and a good part of July. All these bright sunny days have been lovely, but some rain would be good for our trees and shrubs before going dormant this winter.
I'm going to do a little bit of paperwork, and then see what DH would like for dinner. I'll give him the night off from cooking. :)
That vertigo issue sounds awful. Hope your DH is feeling better, and can some effective interventions.
Definitely ask for prescription. It's very easy to explain why you used the compounding pharamacy: supply issues. Let her know you've lost successfully, but now that the supply issues have lessened, you'd be more comfortable with a prescription from a traditional source.
154.8. I was so hoping to see 153's or even 152's this week when I was at 154.1 about a week ago. I have no idea why the numbers mean so dang much to me except that I had mini goals in mind, 152 is 40 lbs. down! The next goal after that is 145, normal BMI!
I had to pick DH up at work last night at around midnight. He had a vertigo episode and was puking his guts out and could hardly move. Thankfully someone on his crew came into the bathroom while he was there and helped him out. The vertigo episodes are becoming more frequent lately and that concerns me. He is also one that doesn't do well when sick.
DSD and fiancé will get in late tonight. They are driving from Denver where fiancé just finished a med school rotation.
Worked on the scrapbook supply sorting and pricing last night, more of that to do today. Ordered DS2 some of his birthday and Christmas gifts. He likes Fiestaware and lost half of what they had in the breakup. Kind of expensive dinnerware but so his "aesthetic " with the bright colors. I also got him a gift certificate to his favorite "upscale " pizza place in Madison. I never thought of pizza places as being upscale, but I guess Madison has one!
Need to prepare for woman's Bible study that I am leading tomorrow. Such a great group of ladies! I especially like that we are a multigenerational group, with members in their 20's to 80's, some new to the faith and some seasoned!
I was surprised that my doctor was in support of me taking the compound when I told him this summer. He had been willing to prescribe the brand name stuff but then we found out it wasn't covered. He said he had a lot of patients taking the compound either because of cost or availability.
I hope it starts to work for you again. But maybe your head is overruling it because of the thought that you can't maintain a normal BMI?
Liz 5'3" HW: 219 SW: 185 GW: 125 LW: 113 Desired maintenance range: 120-125 CW: 119ish
on 10/23/24 8:08 am
Hey all. Sorry for not posting, I've been busy and feeling a little overwhelmed! My weight is up again this week. It's like the shots shut off and I'm my old self again. I do think this sudden change in how the meds feel is curious that it has coincided with switching to a different pharmacy. But it also coincides with reaching a normal BMI, which I mentioned I never seem to be able to maintain. Argh. I have felt in the past like they have stopped working, but not like this. I'm ravenous for bad food. My next prescription is now a day delayed with Fed Ex issues. I need to look up what they say about it showing up warm. I'm thinking about asking my doctor to do a prescription for the real stuff, but that would require explaining I was on compound. And I wouldn't be explaining it to my doctor, I would be explaining it to her temporary replacement as mine is out on maternity leave. None of it is insurmountable, but all of it feels like the equivalent of rocks in my shoes as I walk the path.
I have a board meeting today, I have to make calls to see about an error on my alarm system after they swapped out my internet antenna on the roof for the new tower that should have had zero effect on the alarm system, and I need to walk Kirby.
Anyway, take care all!
DD, that's excellent news that your dad is improving without surgery or some other invasive medical work that requires a long recovery. You're also fortunate that your brother and sister-in-law are able to care for your folks at this time. As I've said several times, the 12 years I cared for my mom were the most stressful of my life.
Yesterday I had lunch with my banker who's currently caring for her aging father, stepmother, mother, father-in-law and mother-in-law. That's FIVE old folks she's caring for and arranging care for! They're either in the hospital, a nursing home, intensive post-surgical physical therapy, wheelchair-bound, or at home with caregivers. They suffer from a variety of old-age ailments like dementia, broken hips, knee surgery recovery, debilitating arthritis. And most of them sound like they're stubborn as mules.
My DF and I are working very hard right now to create a "forever home" (and of course we know we can't guarantee we'll be there forever) to minimize the potential dangers to our well-being like going up and down stairs. It's odd to me that so many of us can't imagine the need to prepare ourselves for being truly elderly and what that era will mean to our lives and our families.
It seems that we humans just aren't very well engineered to confront this last phase of life. But then most of us weren't sufficiently prepared for puberty, marriage, adulting, mid-life crises, menopause, or retirement either. Perhaps this whole thing called life needs to be redesigned. I just wish we could get a little wiser about a lot of things a little earlier.
ANN 5'5", AGE 74, HW 235.6 (BMI 39.2), SW 216, GW 150, CW 132, BMI 22
POUNDS LOST: Pre-op -20, M1 -10, M2 -11, M3 -10, M4 -10, M5 -7, M6 -5, M7 -6, M8 -4, M9 -4,
NEXT 10 MOS. -12, TOTAL -100 LBS.