Thursday, July 25, 2019

Took a self guided tour of many of the Ohio, Ashtabula County covered bridges with the Cairns, close friends. The day could not have been more beautiful with blue skies and mid 70s temperature. We stopped for lunch at the Jefferson Diner, home of the "Wimpy Burger".

Finished up the day by driving around Geneva-on-the-Lake and passed by the Perry Nuclear Plant.

Netcher Road Covered Bridge
Caine Road Bridge


Benetka Road Bridge
Side view of State Rd. Bridge
State Road Covered Bridge



Longest Covered Bridge in US

Shortest Covered Bridge in US


Sunday, July 21, 2019

2017
I received a phone call from the senior center informing me that my mother would no longer be able to use the Senior bus that picked members up at their homes for special events and field trips. She had wandered away from the group and solicited a ride from a complete stranger. Fortunately it was a kind stranger who drove her safely home. She had no memory of the event.

I contacted assisted living facilities in the area and was surprised to find how many there were and selected one that was specifically designed for Alzheimer patients. We selected Maplewood of Twinsburg. I wanted a place that was beautiful and had programs that would stimulate her mind. The close proximity to our Twinsburg home was a bonus. It was expensive, but with her monthly pension, social security, and long term insurance we could handle it. 

The next time she had bladder surgery planned, we made arrangements for her to go directly from the hospital to her new home. I was pleasantly surprised how accepting of the change she was. She actually seemed relieved not to have to struggle anymore with finances, the mess of her home, and the loneliness of her life with old friend after friend dying or not remembering her. 

Her cancer advanced rapidly that last year, but she remarkably kept cheerful up to the very end. My one consolation is that our relationship was the best it had been in many years during her final months and she was happy.
Mother's Day 2017
2015
These past four years have been very difficult, beginning with my husband's massive cardiac arrest on New Year's Eve. He was life flighted from Twinsburg to Cleveland Clinic main hospital and put on life support. They lowered his body temperature to 85 degrees and placed him in a coma for one week. Even though he had been technically "dead" for over ten minutes, he still had active brain activity. He was quite talkative after they revived him from the coma. He underwent triple bypass surgery, his second since his first bypass at thirty-nine at the old Mount Sinai hospital in Cleveland.

At seventy years of age it took him twice as long to recover and we decided not to wait any longer on finding a vacation home in Florida. Thanks to the Cairns, who have been friends of ours for more than half a lifetime, we purchased a manufactured home in Plant City in the same retirement community they were spending winters. We became active with morning water aerobics, book discussion club, bridge, Wednesday dinner group, and a weekly prayer group.

2016
My mother's mental and physical conditons were deteriorating rapidly and doctor's were concerned that she would not survive radical surgery. She had bladder and lung cancer. Her hoarding was out of control and her dementia had intensified to the point that she fought anyone who disagreed with her. She paid a married couple $350 a day to drive her around on shopping excursions and do small chores around the house. Every room in the condo was loaded with clothing and papers. My mother had purchased gifts and greeting cards for friends and family, but could not part with them. So they were never given to their intended recipients. Such is the hold that hoarding can have on a person.

I sought help from the local police, senior center, and county agency for the aging, but until she was at a risk to herself or others I could do nothing about it. It was a heartbreaking time for me. Most of my mother's medical procedures were as an out patient, but the one time she required extensive hospitalization my husband and I cleaned up as much as we could. Within three months the condo had returned to an even worse condition.







Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Be careful about free medical advice

A friend of mine thought she was being very helpful about recommending an OTC sleep aid that worked for her. Since I rarely sleep through the night anymore, I purchased a bottle and tried it out.

I followed the instructions very precisely, making sure that I allowed myself at least eight hours of down time during the night. Unfortunately my days were spent in a fog and more depression than I've ever experienced before. I even pondered thoughts of ending it all.

Warning! If you experiment with self medication, even with "natural" or OTC stuff, be sure to let family members know what you are doing. Give them a chance to see if there is a change in your personality or physical activity.


Monday, September 7, 2015

This is what dirt poor really looks like, Hillary

I wonder how many Americans feel that they are living through an apocalypse? This video shows how a middle aged couple dealt with losing everything in the 2008 economic crash.


I think this shows the resilience of the American Spirit. Many of us are just two or three paychecks away from poverty.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Six Blind Men and the Elephant

There's a fairy tale about six blind men describing an elephant. Each man touches only one part of the elephant and describes what he believes the elephant looks like by what he felt. Each man disagrees with the others and they argue and argue without coming to any agreement. Each believes that his description of the elephant is the only right one.

Government leaders and factions throughout the world refuse to listen to one another, believing that they and only they are right. When persuasion fails they often resort to deadly force to annihilate any opposition.

Friday, January 10, 2014

My Experience with Income Inequality

I donate $500 to $600 monthly. Not bragging here, just putting the facts up front. By the way, my annual income places me in the lower middle class. I'm barely over $50,000 a year.

I like being able to chose where some of my donations go, so when I hear that 92 million Americans are outside of the labor force I begin to worry quite a bit. I don't have any tax shelters. Most of my income goes to pay for my housing, food, medical, and charitable donations.

Even though I've had minor cost of living increases over the past five years, more money is withheld each month than I received five years ago. I repeat - I actually receive less money today than I did five years ago.

When the federal government starts talking about increasing minimum wages to $15/hr. and extending unemployment indefinitely I begin to worry a bit. I'm hoping they're talking about getting this money from wealthy liberals, but I doubt it.