Category Archives: personal blogs
Protected: The weekend
Protected: The home front
Protected: R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Michigan
(A side note~ A funny thing about the migraines is that a song will usually pop into my head. This time it was “We all live in a yellow submarine…a yellow submarine…a yellow submarine…” (Yellow Submarine, The Beatles) Haha. It’s funny now but not so much when I’m lying their like a slug in pain…)
I’m still feeling rather puny and foggy-brained, so I’m not posting any more than this post–
One of the residents of the building has left copies of Muskoka magazine out for the rest of us to enjoy. This particular month’s magazine just has me drooling…
They talk about a couple who lived on Lake Muskoka (that has got to be a Native American name. They inhabited the area before the Europeans took over.) Anyway, this couple had made plans all their life to build their own dream home on the lake and it looks and sounds wonderful.
Michigan itself is a beautiful state. They actually treasured their trees, unlike Indiana, which couldn’t plow them down fast enough…and *still* has not learned the lesson of what has been lost. If you take a look at a real time map, you’re able to spot Indiana without anyone even drawing lines–compared to Ohio and Michigan, we are devoid of trees. There’s a little scrap of land here that must resemble what Indiana once looked like before paved roads and skyscrapers took over–it’s like walking back in time…
…and it’s being threatened with closure (probably some greedy developer wants the land to build more condos…)
Speaking of which, the Muskoka magazine featured an article on a 70-acre (?) spread that once was home to a sanitorium, long since closed. Can you imagine? They once actually cared about mentally ill folks (and the ones with tuberculosis) in a setting that was peaceful and serene…
And now they’ve hired a new head honcho who wants to…wait for it…demolish the buildings and…well, we don’t know what they want to do with the property, because the article just dances around what they’re planning, but where have you ever heard of a $$$ dollars man seeing the value in nature and leaving it undeveloped??
I mean, the properties listed in the back of the magazine are prime real estate–they actually have an island for sale for $13,000,000. Of course, if this is too salty for you, they also have some for the *cough* poor folks in the $3-9 million dollar range…
…so…you can see what is going through this head honcho’s mind without the article even stating the obvious…the property has been left alone since 1994, and they just hired this guy and he immediately wants to tear the buildings down (not really a problem, unless they’re in the way of building something…but since they will cost millions to tear down, there will be money coming in to cover it, n’est pas? (gah, I hope I spelled that right–long time since high school French class )
So…a serene untouched area will be once again devalued for the very natural state that gives it value. Makes complete sense to me. /snark
~~~~
And speaking of serenity for the mentally ill–the state hospital I used to work out was like that, also. Of course, we didn’t have a lake or as many trees on the property, but it was still maintained in a way to give a sense of peace and serenity. It also was self-sufficient back in the day. They had their own bakery, their own farm to grow their food, and I think they may have even had their own butchering, but I’m just guessing at that. That all went away with the reforms of the mental institutions. They threw the baby out with the bathwater. I think it would be so much more gratifying for a patient to help in farming than to sit around all day watching mindless TV.
~~~~
And speaking of things popping into my head–I thought of something that I wrote on a blog many years ago–
It’s the same blog that I had my answer deleted after I said that Hillary Clinton was no “Shirley Chisholm”…
There was a guy that the blog owner liked, so he frequently guest blogged. He was obsessed with the behavioral psychologists, and one in particular really irked him. He was always writing blogs against this guy’s research.
One day, he wrote a blog on how this guy was studying the human will. He asked the question “Why would anyone try to determine if there is a human will?
To which I replied: “Job security??”
🙂
Protected: Close to Home, addition
Close to home
I was listening to the whiners last couple of days–and the talk was about the Obama political ad on the guy who lost his job after Bain Capital took over the company and eventually closed it (?). He lost his job and his wife didn’t want to worry him with finding a breast lump. When they discovered it, she was Stage IV and died after 22 days.
I’ve debated whether to say anything, but decided last night to out with it–
I discovered a couple of lumps in my breast in late June. I’ve had them before, but this was kind of a shock because it’s been over ten years since I’ve had one. The last one, I was in college, and didn’t have insurance then, either, BUT I could afford to get it biopsied. It was benign.
I’m thinking this is benign, too, because it’s movable and soft (they characterize cancerous ones as being hard and immobile). I can’t remember how long it took for the other breast lump to disappear, but I’m thinking six months is how long it took. It’s hard to remember.
Anyway, the whiners are blaming the woman for not seeking treatment earlier…even though she didn’t have health insurance and whatever healthcare she got, it would have to come out of pocket. They obviously didn’t have the money, and she didn’t want to be a burden to them…especially if she were treated and still succumbed to the disease.
I can understand her sentiments by my own situation and seeing my father struggle (he’s now in Indy for a month while they radiate/chemo him to death). My sister is making arrangements for him to go to a nursing home after he is released–he’s clearly not able to take care of himself, but he’s fighting it.
On the other hand, for my situation, even if I had health insurance, I wouldn’t go through chemo or radiation or having my breast removed. I’ve seen too many people die from cancer after going through that misery of throwing up, losing their hair, laying on a couch all day because they have no energy to do anything else…
Like I’ve said before, if it’s my time, I’ll take a trip to the Grand Canyon and die in a place of beauty and spirituality.
[UPDATE: 3.26.18 — This post was written before my awakening. God has provided everything we need to battle cancer and any health ailment. I don’t believe chemo or radiation ever helped someone recover, since chemicals and radiation both destroy the immune system. It’s not that the patient recovered from the artificial treatments, but that they recovered in spite of the treatments.]
Back
(PERSONAL BLOG)
Yesterday was a beautiful sunny day–mild 80s. We’ve had more rain (thank you, thank you, thank you), so everything is turning from brown to green again. So, it was a nice drive to see my Mom.
Again, I wonder at the houses along the way that have overgrown weeds, the houses looking sad, like they’re abandoned. I wonder about the owners and what happened to them…
The corn crop along the highway is indicative of the drought–they’re about knee high with the tassles sticking up (they should be twice that height).
I realize two things as I’m driving: only one bug hit my windshield, and there were no woolly worms crossing the road. This is the time of year when I would normally look like I’m drunk because I’d be swerving all over the road to avoid hitting them–but not a one was seen. This was the warning when they came out with Bt corn, which is bioengineered to destroy the caterpillars that ate the corn crop. With that in mind, it occurred to me that bugs used to plaster the windshield during the summer months here–they no longer do. And others have noticed that the birds are not as plentiful as before–their songs were a pleasant chorus, and now it’s a single bird singing. Silent Spring, anyone? (A side note~~as admirable Rachel Carson’s work was, she still thought that science could cure whatever ills affected nature–something I’ve come to disagree with, as Nature is superior to anything science can cook up.)
I arrive at the nursing home, and my Mom’s color is better than last time. But she still doesn’t remember my name. This is definitely a change from even two months ago. She always knew my name even though she might be confused about other things. She asked what grade my kids were in, and I had to tell her that they were grown and gone several times during my visit. The conversation went around in circles. Usually, she would be able to at least carry on a conversation, but yesterday, she was having more difficulty making sense. My sister brought cupcakes (I stuck to the diet and didn’t eat any) which made Mom happy.
We started to sing “Happy Birthday” to her, and Mom began to cry. We both broke up over that. You have to know my Mom–she was not one for spontaneous displays like that. She wouldn’t give you a hug for no reason, nor was she the type to have cookies out of the oven when you got home from school. I don’t think she knew how to be a mother, as her own mother caused her grief.
The thought struck me how she didn’t really know how to take me—-because I was so different from her. I was more like my Dad.
I started to leave before I knew my sister was coming, and my Mom wanted to walk me to the door (something she hadn’t done previously) and then she did it again when my sister and I were on our way out the door. She didn’t want us to go (and perhaps she wanted to come home with us). Tough day–tears on the way home.
You must be logged in to post a comment.