She buzzes ears and rests on ankles.
Sitting. Wait. She again alights.
And fears not death, in her quest for blood.
Category Archives: journaling
These last few days, more than a week.
I am in a writing world, largely motionless. No inspiration here. Instead, I have been occupying myself with little things.
Dishes, and floors and weeds.
My sister and nephew are coming on Friday. With a little daily work, the home can present well.
And, while I knock out each task, I re-arrange my thoughts.
Some more.
How to complete the book? What is stopping me, now?
These last few days, more than a week, I am outward looking. I have turned to re-arranging my physical world, and it’s a lesson on my latest state.
Every so often, two or three times per year, these last couple. My strength rebounds. And I tackle things I could only dream of, the week before.
In the yard, I am installing a garden, designed to feed me vegetables through summer. In Tempe, the challenge is the extreme heat, typically in the 117-119 Farenheits range, at peak. I am only planting warm-weather crops, with which I have enjoyed success in previous years.
Swiss chard is surprisingly stout under the summer sun. I have them, twice paired, with collard greens and hollyhocks, in one grouping.
In two others, I am planting okra, together with cantaloups, cucumbers and three squashes. Zucchini, acorn, and kabocha.
Since the vines typically wither by July on their own, they will hang out, this year, under a lady-finger shade.
I still intend to pick up a yam and a sweet potato from the grocery store. Cut some pieces, to sprout new vines, while eating the rest.
But, I’m unsure about something.
Is this latest bit of ambition temporary? Or, can I make it permanent? I decided last week to tackle the disorganization and dirt surrounding me. Get the dirt out of the house, and organize the it in the yard.
I broke it down to simple tasks, like watering, and digging. Watering is an easy, daily activity. Digging depends on energy, So I bounce between the couch and the garden, throughout the day.
Dig, then lay down. Then dig some more, followed by another rest.
Thank goodness, these past ten years, for all the done-digging. Keeping it loose and easy.
Well, the shovel-work and planting is now largely finished, until fall. Next, I can vacuum and sweep and mop. Tomorrow through Friday.
The strategy is working, but, will it remain stable when I go back to writing? Can I do all three, in some measure, each day? Can I write, and still find the mental energy to also take care of my surroundings?
Although I am dealing with muscles at low strength, this challenge seems more mental, than anything.
It should be doable.
Brief but frequent.
Forays in the garden.
Swiss chard, collard greens, and hollyhock.
Seeds in damp soil, warmed by the sun.
Okra waits for morning.
Pennies
Evidently, Congress can’t admit they are worth less.
But, software could force them into the irrelevancy of retirement.
The key would be.
Don’t ever think pennies.
Dollar-cost-average them from the total price.
Half the purchases get a break on one
or two cents.
Round the final price to the nearest nickel.
Every receipt shows what happened.
The other half pays a penny or two, extra.
This time.
And the next, on average, they get the break.
No one brings home copper when buying food.
Voluntary merchants re-design point-of-sale purchases to eliminate the penny.
It follows.
Congress doesn’t have to lead.
What comes first?
In bycicle?
The ‘i’ or the ‘y’?
It must be the ‘i’.
Bicycle.
That looks better. I just need to remember.
It’s the same ‘b-i’ as bi-annual, or bi-sexual, or bi-headed. Because there are two wheels.
Why do I mess it up so consistently?
I blame my great-grandfather. My mom’s, dad’s, dad.
He changed Bykowski to Byke. My mother’s maiden name.
A family name. Damn it!
I know how to spell the family name.
But every time I try to spell ‘bicycle’, my brain inserts the ‘y’ before the ‘i’.
Will I ever get it right without thinking about it?
Thoughts of Carrots Bubbling
Can’t take my mind off my crockpot creation.
Gastronomic patience. Expecting to cook and cool.
And eat. Glued to the scent of a recipe.
Sensation. Enjoyment in a word.
Yesterday. Thanksgiving’s trip.
Concluded family matters.
Babcia treading kitchen linoleum.
In darkness. Her skidding slippers sounded.
Lonely. And her cookbook collection. Rearranged.
My thoughts. A new library of culinary habits.
Never tried once until soup.
Think. Thank. Thunk.
On the long flight home.
A lentil. Craving purposed my mind.
Why not? Stew it over while writing.
Half past morning. My favorite shop of coffee.
Googled ingredients. For a better batch than one.
Found leaving home.
In a crumbling copy. Laurel’s Kitchen.
Sadly for something. Thinner than thick.
Supposing.
Dinner was a bowl of this.
Would I return?
Again. Until. Full.
What is life?
I want to share something. But, I’m going through one of these myotonic-dystrophy episodes, where exertion brings on pain and.
Moving is exertion. The days go by, and everything I write seems to suck.
My difficulty writing is part of my MD experience. The highs, and lows, roughly follow my symptoms through the months.
So, this evening, I vaporized Sour Diesel.
Cannabis overcomes the inertia built into my symptom-cycle.
And Sour Diesel begs for music.
I fell asleep to Kaya. Bob Marley’s ode to marijuana and rain.
My windows and doors are open. A storm approaches from California. Sometime tomorrow, we should have our first rain since November.
We are overcast with winter warmth. My two cats, and the neighbor’s, are playing tag in the wind.
Throughout the yard and house.
I woke to the question.
Black Uhuru asks.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X75h7gts31M
Something about this song speaks to me.
The experience of life is framed by contrasting interpretations.
The positive and the negative are both constants.
The choice is where to focus.
With disability insurance restored, health-insurance pays for a wheel chair.
I’m happy. Although these last few days have been unproductive, in a writing sense, several good things happened this week.
Yesterday, I cashed the check from my disability insurer. Cigna has decided to honor my policy, after reviewing my functional capacity evaluation.
There was no explanation from them. No correspondence. Just a check, arriving in the mail, the night-before-last. All the money they owed, since December. (Here is my last post on this saga.)
Even with high-confidence in my case, I carried a low-grade anxiety into this new-year. I guess that’s natural when no in-come matches my out-go. Now, I can dismiss that emotion.
For some reason, I anticipated a letter explaining why they chose to make my life difficult. But, nothing says, we’re sorry, like a check. I suppose I could call them, to confirm that this will now be honored for the life of the policy. I don’t want another, bad, surprise from them, next year, or next month.
I also got fitted for my wheel-chair. Health-insurance will pay for most of it. The features on my model will be determined by another type of functional evaluation. Insurance requires justifications for costs.
I had a couple of choices, between manufacturers. One is Chinese-built for American overlords. The other is American-made for Swedish overlords. I chose the Swedish model. It was recommended as more reliable, with more apparent-thought behind the engineering.
The Chinese-American model left motors, and other moving parts, exposed. The Swedish-American model has those things largely hidden inside of casings. Both chairs share the capability of changing postures and heights. For instance, the seat can rise, so that I can work at my kitchen counter.
The Swedish-seat lifts directly from the base, on a metal rod. The Chinese-seat lifts with a scissors-jack.
One looked like it was designed by experienced engineers. The other resembled a lab-project by engineering students.
Some of the capabilities of the chair might be non-functional, depending on what insurance is willing to pay. A fully-featured electric-chair could cost something on the order of $22,000. A less-abled model could be as low as $16,000. I should have new mobility, in roughly a month.
My motivation for it has more to-do with leaving the house, than living within one. In-home, I still can cope. But, leaving the house intimidates me now, on most days. I don’t have confidence that my strength will hold up for these trips. Mostly, I shop for groceries, or stop at a coffee shop.
I’ll get around by bus. Between buses, light-rail, and my chair, I can begin enjoying some public spaces again. I’m anticipating the opportunity, just to visit a place like Mill Avenue, on a nice day. Right now, I don’t do this anymore. My life is mostly spent at home, with brief trips to break the day into logical pieces.
And, this past Monday, I met with a doctor I have never met, because social security is still making a decision on whether I am disabled, or not. I didn’t choose this doctor. I received a letter instructing me to see him, at 9:30 AM.
I offered them my functional capacity evaluation. They declined. Instead, they had me meet with a doctor, who interviewed me, while performing the most-cursory of physical-evaluations. I think his task is to determine whether my story makes sense.
He has my diagnosis, and my doctors’ notes. But, a lot has changed in the last year.
The doctor collects fees from SSI, to determine if my condition is truly disabling. The entire visit took place in about a half-hour. Although I could see the necessity for some type of verification, SSI’s procedures seemed lacking in credibility.
The low-point of the visit was when the doctor took apart his pen, and asked me to put it back together. This was the ‘dexterity test’. He told me to pretend I didn’t see him take it apart.
I wondered whether seeing the pen being broken-down helps my dexterity. I have been taking pens apart since the second or third grade. Visualizing, how a pen should be assembled, is more of a cognitive test.
But, I didn’t argue. SSI needed the results before they can rule me disabled. And, somehow, assembling a pen speaks to my ability to earn a living, or not, programming computers. At least, the doctor seems to think so.
These events served to occupy some of my attention. The better-part of this week, dictated by insurance.
Good thing, too. I’m fighting my way through an inspiration-drought. I blame some of this on my condition. But, if I didn’t have these moments to anticipate, this week would have left me less to say.
Tempe February
=== 6:52 PM ===
XB Ooh. I just snagged the writing table.
I love its suitability.
I’m surprised I am here this late. But, only as I would have expected this day-to-play. After a couple of blah-days, I could feel an energy, even as I lay in bed, this morning. Perfect-days often beckon, in this manner.
And yes, I was achy. But, not active achy.
Past achy. On its way out.
And I was mindful again of food. I squeezed a lemon into water. Drank that, as my morning quench.
Then I picked some tomatoes from the garden.
These were planted in late September. They matured into December, setting lots of heavy, green fruit. And there it stayed, waiting for the days, to warm enough for red.
A few started turning in late January.
But, in a Tempe-February, spring is very apparent. Weeds and peach blossoms. In another month, we’ll be in full citrus-bloom.
And the tomatoes know it. There’s a bunch of big red fruits on those eighteen plants. Six cherry, six Champion, six Celebrity. Every day I eat as many as I want.
Wen Ling kept asking me why I planted eighteen?
Because. Every day I eat as many as I want. Three, four, even five, big ones. And another half-dozen cherries, as snacks.
This is the perfect time of year. I can keep the windows and doors open, with temps so pleasant. And when I get hungry, I just stroll into the back yard, through weeds, and look for the reddest ones.
A little sea-salt. Yum.
And, dessert is blood-orange. Studied, then picked.
I need to eat dinner. But, this reminds me.
Last night, I followed-up, what I wrote in my journal, about where-to-eat-dinner, by eating-dinner at Chillie’s. Is that what I imagine I wrote?
I had the flatbread, a holographic-image of my hunger. And a beer.
Home before ten.
Bed before two. Just after one.
I thought I had cleared, my belching, before sleep.
But there was this one, final, statement on-dinner.
It haunted my morning.
It startled me. I was choking.
I was awake. And, I was aware.
I was choking.
I have been here before. Believe me.
It’s annoying, when it happens, now.
So I recognized the presence-of-mind I was in. Gradually, when these things happen.
Usually, after a food-combination, not conducive-to-sleep.
I am calmer, with each, stupid, incident.
Today, this morning, just before five.
I had the presence of mind to pray, to Meta-Mind.
For calm.
I sat.
Up, in bed. Eyes closed.
Strange and true.
My inability-to-inhale contained a calm.
I just had to wait this out.
I just needed to meditate on the experience.
Breathing will resume…. Any minute, now.
My fault.
Eating breaded-goodness, with beer, before dreams.
