Showing posts with label annual checkup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label annual checkup. Show all posts

Saturday, November 20, 2021

Parties, Celebrations, Annual PSA and Medical Stuff, a Ten Things of Thankful Post

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Here i am again, skidding into Thankful Day rather breathless.  Lots of things haven't gone quite as planned this week, but they worked out perfectly anyway, and i'm thankful.


Last Saturday was an election day.  Nothing big, just a few amendments and a judgeship.  The polls are supposed to open at 7am, so i told Grandpa i'd vote and then head down there for shopping and cleaning.  He was fine with that, although i'd be a bit later than usual and he always wants to be finished with everything yesterday.


About ten minutes before the polls were to open, i pulled into the parking lot at the school and got out to get in what i thought was a line of voters.  It wasn't a line of voters, it was the poll workers.  The school had forgotten to send someone with the key, so they were locked out.


That's how i ended up getting to NOLA earlier than i'd planned, which made Grandpa thankful.  Also, Grandma had a lunch meeting with a friend for the first time in a long time, a very thankful thing.  Wen i was done cleaning, i was thankful to be able to head back home, vote, and i even got to go visit Ms. S that evening because my Sunday was already packed.


Sunday's plan was for me to go to Becca's house as usual, and after the first service at church and Sunday school, i was going to sit with her while her mother sang with the second service choir for one special song that was being done at both services.  Then i'd scoot out for the rest of my day's activities.  


After arriving, Ms. AH told me Becca was still asleep and asked me to let her rest another 45 minutes.  This was fine, i was thankful to take Mr. Cal for a walk and he was thankful to get one.  He got to play with his dog friend Ash.


While we were out, Ms. AH texted me and said she was feeling poorly and did not think she could make it to church at all, so she'd stay home with Becca.  She was sorry i'd come all that way for nothing, but to me it was a thankful thing, Mr. Cal and i had a good time.


After church, it was time for Lee's birthday party.  Red-headed Alec's boy Lee is now four!  It was a Sonic the Hedgehog party, and i'm thankful i got to go and see all of the family.


Once the party was over, i was thankful to go back to the church for the Children's Choir performance of "Table for Five...Thousand!"  They did a wonderful job, the choir is kindergarten to about 5th grade and you could tell they were having a good time.  They fed the audience, the "five thousand," goldfish crackers, which i found funny and appropriate.


Monday morning at 2am, i woke up and knew that i once again have a bladder infection.  Thankfully i now keep the medication that controls symptoms in the house, so i was able to take it right away.  Once i cleaned Carl's apartment, i ran by the doctor's office and left a sample, then went to Ms. PA.  Before i got home, the prescription was ready, i am so thankful for my doctor and the nearby pharmacy.


This past Tuesday was the first part of my annual physical and my appointment to take the twins in for their glamour shots (mammogram).


Interruption for my annual PSA -- get your annual physical and whatever tests your doc tells you to get.  Better safe than sorry!


Thankfully i had arranged to have the day off, so i wasn't in a rush, and my doc and the place where they do the testing is all under one big hospital roof.  Once i was done, i was able to have a nice, long visit with Ms. S.  It's a thankful thing to be able to see her twice a week.


Tuesday evening was our monthly Ladies' Circle meeting.  We had a wonderful time, and the dessert you saw on my Wordless Wednesday picture was the peanut butter/butterscotch rice crispy treats i brought.  Thankfully they are quick and easy to make, just do your regular rice crispy treats adding a bag of butterscotch chips and 1/3 cup peanut butter.


While i was at the meeting i fielded a call from Ms. G, my Wednesday lady.  She wanted to know if i was okay to skip cleaning her house and go volunteer at the other shelter instead.  Of course i was. 


That meant that on Wednesday i went and did the usual shelter stuff, then went out to the one in the next parish(county).  They'd had a bit of a disaster, 135 cats needed care and due to an unfortunate series of events they were down by 3 employees and a couple of volunteers.  It made me thankful to go and help, although at the end of 6 hours i was whipped.


When i got home, i was thankful to lie down for a while, and then i got the phone call from the doctor's office.  How soon could i come back in for more testing?  They needed more mammogram views, and i was thankful to be able to say that i would be in Thursday afternoon.


Ms. S wasn't home when we got there Thursday morning, and the lock box with the house key was gone.  When i called her, she said her husband had taken it to one of his jobs, and we're thankful he thought to leave the key in a hidden place where we could get to it.


The house was not quite as bad a disaster this time as last, even though they'd just had a birthday party for one of the boys, and Sweetie and i were thankful to get it done by noon.


One-thirty pm saw me back at the hospital for the further testing, and i'm thankful the radiologist is being so proactive.  The views and the ultrasound show a small cyst that he's pretty sure is nothing, but in an abundance of caution i'm going to have a biopsy done at the end of the month.


Again, go get your tests, please!


Thursday evening a neighbor called to ask two favors and i was thankful we could do both.  First, she wanted Sweetie to come and change a light bulb for her -- he's tall and she needs a tall person to do it, and he's always glad to go over there and help.  Second, could i start coming once a month to vacuum, sweep and mop the floors, since she broke her toe and just can't keep up with everything since it's not healing right, making her limp.


That's how on Friday i went to morning prayer group, cleaned Ms. GA's house, and then went to see Ms. DJ.  Thankfully i was able to get all of that in, and go back to the pharmacy for another prescription (thanks to all the antibiotics, i now have a yeast infection, too, so i needed more medicine, can you see why i'm so thankful for the modern medical community right about now?) and then back to the cat shelter.


At the regular shelter where i volunteer, we have a new director, and i was thankful to finally meet her.  She's a wonderful person and going to be a great director.


There we have it, folks, another week to remember how good we have it, i know i am thankful as so many of these things could have gone sideways or worse. 



Please write up your own list and link up to Ten Things of Thankful, where Dyanne and her co-hosts always have a warm welcome waiting.   



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Today is:


Absurdity Day -- an internet generated absurd holiday


Africa Industrialization Day -- UN


Air Your Dirty Laundry Day -- internet generated, and be careful with this one!


Beautiful Day -- Fairy Calendar


Clean the Cat Hair Out of the Vacuum Cleaner Day -- internet generated, and always tops on my chore list


Dia de la Soberania Nacional -- Argentina (Sovereignty Day)


Day of Sekhmet and the Purifying Flame -- Ancient Egyptian Calendar (date approximate)


Day of National Sovereignty -- Argentina (commemorates the Battle of Vuelta de Obligado)


Dia da Consciencia Negra -- Brazil (Black Consciousness Day)


Family Volunteer Day -- to get families working together to better their communities and the world  


Globally Organized Hug A Runner Day a/k/a G.O.H.A.R.D


International Games Day @ Your Library -- libraries in many countries are sponsoring a local Games Day, check with yours!


International Survivors of Suicide Loss Day   

     National Survivors of Suicide Day -- US (by Congressional designation since 1999, and now an international movement; remembering those who have lost loved ones to suicide, especially as Thanksgiving and the holidays are coming)


Name Your PC Day -- mine is Ol' Bessy, a/k/a Old Crankypants; sponsored by Wellcat Holidays  


National Adoption Day -- US (encouraging us to find a home for every child; many courts finalize thousands of adoptions of children from foster care on this day each year)    


National Peanut Butter Fudge Day


Praetextatus and Paulina's Day -- Ancient Roman Calendar (Guardians of the Eleusinian Mysteries, pagan activists and devotees who tried to save Roman religions; date approximate)


Revolution Day -- Mexico (traditional)


St. Edmund the Martyr's Day (Patron of kings, torture victims, wolves; East Anglia, England; against plagues)


Surin Elephant Round-Up -- Surin, Thailand (includes elephant football, elephant tugs-of-war, and parades; through Sunday)


Teachers' Day -- Vietnam


Transgender Day of Remembrance -- memorial for those who have been killed because of transphobia


Universal Children's Day -- UN


Zumbi Day -- Brazil (death anniversary of Zumbi dos Palmares, a day of Afro-Brazilian consciousness, as he was a hero and freedom fighter)



Anniversaries Today:


The Princess Elizabeth (now Queen Elizabeth II) marries Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten at Westminster Abbey in London, 1947

The first municipal airport in the US opens, in Tuscon, AZ, 1919



Birthdays Today:


Sabrina Lloyd, 1970

Ming-Na Wen, 1967

Sean Young, 1959

Bo Derek, 1956

Steve Dahl, 1954

Richard Masur, 1948

Duane Allman, 1946

Judy Wooodruff, 1946

Veronica Hamel, 1943

Joe Biden, 1942

Dick Smothers, 1939

Don DeLillo, 1936

Richard Dawson, 1932

Estelle Parsons, 1927

Kaye Ballard, 1926

Robert F. Kennedy, 1925

Nadine Gordimer, 1923

Gene Tierney, 1920

Robert Byrd, 1917

Alistair Cooke, 1908

Chester Gould, 1900

Edwin Hubble, 1889

Karl von Frisch, 1886

Kenesaw Mountain Landis, 1866

Selma Lagerlf, 1858

Sir Wilfred Laurier, 1841

Thomas Chattertn, 1752

Oliver Wolcott, 1726

Susanna Wesley, 1669 (mother of John, Charles, and 17 other children)

Peregrine White, 1620 (born on the Mayflower)

Maximinus, Roman Emperor, 270



Debuting/Premiering Today:


Beatles Antology 1(album release), 1995

The Day After(TV movie), 1983

"A Soldier's Play"(Fuller Pulizer winning play), 1981

"Cabaret"(Musical), 1966

"The Seven Year Itch"(Play), 1952

"The Children's Hour"(Play), 1934

"The Goldbergs"(Radio), 1929

The Sheik(Film, with Rudolph Valentino), 1921

"Das Lied von der Erde/The Song of the Earth"(Mahler symphony), 1911

"The Doctor's Dilemma"(Play), 1906

"Fidelio"(Opera, Beethoven Op. 72), 1805



Today in History:


Bögü, Khan of the Uyghurs, conquers Lo-Yang, capital of the Chinese Empire, 762

Zumbi, the last leader of the Quilombo dos Palmares of Brazil, is executed, 1695

New Jersey becomes the first state to ratify the US Bill of Rights, 1789

Curacao's government forbids slave work on Sunday, 1795

Howard University is founded in Washington, D.C., 1866

US State Department starts requiring photographs for passports, 1914

The first municipally owned airport in US opens, in Tucson Az, 1919

In response to the Soviet Union agreeing to remove its missiles from Cuba, U.S. President John F. Kennedy ends the quarantine of the Caribbean nation, 1962

The SETI Institute is founded, 1984

Microsoft Windows 1.0 is released, 1985

The number of protesters assembled in Prague, Czechoslovakia swells from 200,000 the day before to an estimated half-million, 1989

In England, a fire breaks out in Windsor Castle, badly damaging the castle and causing over £50 million worth of damage, 1992

The first module of the International Space Station, Zarya, is launched, 1998

The Dow Jones Industrial Average reaches its lowest level in eleven years, 2008

NATO agrees to begin handing over Afghanistan's security to the Afghan military, 2010

The UN World Meteorological Organization announces the 2011 greenhouse gasses reached record levels, 2012

A vote of the General Synod of the Church of England approves women to be ordained bishops beginning the next year, 2013

Atlanta's Georgia Dome, once the world's largest covered stadium, is destroyed in a controlled implosion, 2017

The Oxford Dictionary word of the year is "climate emergency," 2019

Saturday, September 28, 2019

So Far, So Good (Ten Things of Thankful, Health Edition)

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About three weeks ago, i went for the first part of my annual check-up.  (Yes, i am one of those strange creatures who actually go get a physical every year, so the doctor can make sure to catch anything serious before it gets out of hand.  If you are not, i encourage you to become one of us.  Your family will thank you.)

The first part is where the techs test and measure and weigh and take enough blood that you wonder how much you have left now.

The second part, which was this week, is when the doctor talks about all of the test results with you and actually looks you over.

Good health is precious, so this week i am thankful for health.  According to the doctor, i am :

still in possession of a working brain (i remember the words he gives me at the beginning of the visit several minutes later after conversation, i can spell simple words backwards, i know what the date is, and i can accurately draw a clock with the hands pointed at 3:00)

at a mere 2% risk of having a heart attack in the next ten years

at a good weight

not at risk for diabetes

keeping my thyroid well regulated

taking my supplements correctly

still within good range on lung function despite the scars from the pneumonia

continuing to have a normal abnormal ECG (my ECG always looks weird to doctors, but since it's the same year after year, it's normal for me)

circulating my blood well into my extremities

able to hear normally, with only a tiny bit of hearing loss at the very upper registers (normal once you get to my age), and see normally (with tiny cataracts that aren't anywhere near ready to come out)

not suffering from anxiety, depression, etc.

looking and behaving and working like i am in generally good health, which i am.

These are all things for which i am thankful and that i am not taking for granted.  (And next up, i need to schedule the twins for their glamor shots, a/k/a have my mammogram.  That will be soon.)


Please write up your own list and link up to Ten Things of Thankful, where Kristi and her co-hosts always have a warm welcome waiting.  




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Today is:

Aloha Festivals Floral Parade -- Oahu, Hawai'i (part of the larger Aloha Festival celebrations this month and next on all the islands, celebrating native Hawai'ian culture)

Cabrillo Festival -- San Diego, CA, US (reenactment of Cabrillo's landing, a Spanish soldier and sailor encampment, Native Kumeyaay demonstrations, dances, crafts, and food)

Czech Statehood Day -- Czech Republic

Drink Beer Day

Eldon Turkey Festival -- Eldon, MO, US (the top producer of turkeys has the top turkey festival in the world)

Everybody's Day Festival -- Thomasville, NC, US (and they do mean there's fun for everybody)


Feast of Hapi and Creation of the Nile -- Ancient Egyptian Calendar (date approximate)

Fish Amnesty Day (same as National Hunting and Fishing Day in the US, because it hurts fish to be caught!)

Fish Tank Floor Show Night -- the Wellcat Holidays people say that your fish keep you entertained all year long, so turn about is fair play, entertain your fish tonight!

Frances Willard Day -- Minnesota

Fukuro Matsuri -- Ikebukuro, Tokyo, Japan (a fun-for-tourists way to learn about Japanese culture, through tomorrow, and the next two weekends)

Geneva Area Grape Jamboree -- Geneva, OH, US (grapes, wine tasting, entertainment, rides, and food; through tomorrow)

Gettysburg Fall Antique Show -- Gettysburg, PA, US

International Rabbit Day -- learn to care for these wonderful pets and promote responsible rabbit ownership   

International Right to Know Day -- FOI Advocates Network, promoting the right of access to information for all people and the benefits of open, transparent, and accountable governments 

Kiwanis Kids' Day -- local clubs sponsor events for kids on the fourth Saturday of September

Menkhet Festival -- Ancient Egyptian Calendar (date approximate)

Michaelmas Eve -- Celtic celebration, bake your bannock bread tonight for eating on St. Michael and All Angel's Day tomorrow; tonight, build a bonfire and dine on roast lamb, and make sure the menfolk protect the horses, for anyone is allowed to "borrow" one for the celebration tomorrow

National Day of Awareness and Unity against Child Pornography -- Philippines

National Good Neighbor Day -- US (begun when Mrs. Becky Mattson from Lakeside, Montana, began campaigning for this National Day in the 1970's; go greet the neighbors, and be a good neighbor yourself!)

National Hunting and Fishing Day -- US   

National Public Lands Day -- US (Helping Hands for America's Lands -- a day to volunteer on America's Public Lands)   

National Strawberry Cream Pie Day

Read a Child a Book You Like Day -- someone started this to get us to remember the books we loved as kids, and share them with children now

Runic Half Month Gyfu begins (gift)

St. Wenceslaus' Day (Patron of brewers; Bohemia; Czech Republic; Moravia; Prague, Czech Republic)

Tales of Kelp-Koli's Second Visit -- Fairy Calendar (through the 30th)

Taste of Morgan Hill -- Morgan Hill, CA, US (fine arts, entertainment, and plenty for the kids to do, too; through tomorrow)

Teacher's Day -- Taiwan (on the traditional Western date of Confucius' birthday, of course)

Tri-State Band Festival -- Luverne, MI, US (high school bands from Minnesota, South Dakota, and Iowa compete in four categories)

Vegetarian Festival -- Phuket, Thailand (lots of purification rituals and a rigid vegetarian/vegan diet are observed for spiritual cleansing and ensuring good luck; through Oct. 7th)




Birthdays Today:

Frankie Jonas, 2000
Hilary Duff, 1987
Gwyneth Paltrow, 1973
Naomi Watts, 1968
Mira Sorvino, 1967
Janeane Garofalo, 1964
Suzanne Whang, 1962
Steve Largent, 1954
Jeffrey Jones, 1947
Ben E. King, 1938
Koko Taylor, 1935
Brigitte Bardot, 1934
Arnold Stang, 1925
Marcello Mastroianni, 1924
William Windom, 1923
Al Capp, 1909
Max Schmeling, 1905
Ed Sullivan, 1901
Kate Douglas Wiggin, 1856
Frances Willard, 1839
Confucius, BC551


Debuting/Premiering Today:

Ed Wood(Film), 1994
"Cosmos: A Personal Voyage"(Documentary series), 1980
"I Heard It Through the Grapevine"(Single release, Gladys Knight), 1967
"Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales"(TV), 1963
"Dr. Kildare"(TV), 1961
"Hazel"(TV), 1961
"Purlie Victorious"(Play), 1961
Radio Times(Magazine, first issue), 1923


Today in History:

Pompey the Great, member of the Triumvirate, is assassinated by order of King Ptolemy of Egypt upon landing in that country, BC48
King/Saint Wenceslas murdered by his brother, 935
William the Conqueror invades England, 1066
Sinking of the Spanish fleet during a hurricane off the coast of Florida, 1528
Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo becomes the first European to reach San Diego Bay, 1542
Publication of "Pilgrim's Progress", 1678
Divorce is legalized in Maryland, 1701
American and French forces begin the siege of Yorktown, 1781
Napoleon Bonaparte, age 16, graduates from the Military Academy of Paris -- 42nd in a class of 51, 1785
Donati's comet becomes the first to be photographed, 1858
Toronto becomes the capital of Ontario, 1867
Sir Alexander Fleming notices a bacteria-killing mould growing in his laboratory, discovering what later became known as penicillin, 1928
Indonesia joins the United Nations, 1950
Mali and Senegal join the United Nations, 1960
SpaceX launches the first ever private spacecraft, the Falcon 1 into orbit, 2008
Research teams from Exeter and Cambridge Universities announce in the journal Nature Genetics their discovery of the DNA controllers that determine at what age women go into menopause, 2015