Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Quarantine day 131



COVID-19 took this man, my friend SueG's father last week. This picture was taken last Easter when all Don cared about was making it to his 90th birthday. It had been his resolution for the year, and I had recorded it on my phone, reminding him of it every time I saw him. 

He made it. 

He turned 90 in December after Christmas at a small birthday party that I missed because I still had family in town. He ended up in the hospital later that night for a mild heart attack. I joked it was from heartache because I hadn't been at the party. He said it was more likely heartburn from the food served. 

I keep wondering what he would say now about becoming a statistic of this damn virus. 

Holed up in his condo with his wife, he contracted the virus because the home healthcare worker who worked with him weekly didn't wear a mask. I still can't say that sentence without hearing the disbelief in my voice or without wincing. A HOME HEALTHCARE AIDE DIDN'T WEAR A MASK.

Our country is in trouble. 

The day after Don died, less than twenty-four hours later, his wife--SueG's mother--was admitted to the hospital's COVID wing, testing positive for the virus with an underlying condition of pneumonia. Luckily, her body was stronger, and after five days in the hospital, she returned to her home, which a biohazard company had cleaned and disinfected.

The first time I met SueG's parents was on Halloween when they came, as they did every year, to visit their son's pediatric office to see everyone's costumes. SueG, our friend Jyoti, and I had done the same, and we ended up crammed in an office together where Jyoti and I literally had front row seats to a taping of Everybody Loves Raymond

Only it was with SueG's family.

I've never laughed as hard as I did that day, and the laughter has been prevalent every minute I've spent with them since then.

Don was a huge cause of that laughter. 

I only knew Don in his last years, and while everyone has a past, I can only speak to the man I knew for a little over ten years. He was a man who loved his family even when he wasn't able to express it demonstratively. He had a great sense of humor, and he used it-- especially these last two years--slyly. I think I recognized it and him because of the time I spent with my mother, who, like Don, was very limited in her mobility and angry because of it.

I enjoyed listening to Don's stories, and he liked to talk. I learned about his childhood, the jobs he held, and the first time he laid eyes on the woman who would become his wife. They were married sixty-three years, and while their love/hate relationship might have turned heads when they were together, it worked for them, and in the videos his son recorded during quarantine, Don expresses those feeling with heartfelt honesty. 

He was loud and boisterous, more so as he became confined to a chair, propped up as he said "in the corner" at functions and "forgotten." However, he listened to everything around him and butted into conversations as if he didn't understand the context, making people exasperatingly repeat what they'd said so he could slip in his opinion without them putting two and two together and comprehending he'd been eavesdropping. He often confused his grandchildren with his son and daughter, a mistake that once recognized, he'd play to the hilt because it made us laugh. 

His tone was often seventy-five percent angry, and he could argue with the best of them, but when he told a story, his voice was soft, often fading as he lost himself in the memories. Don didn't make excuses for the way he'd lived his life, although once when I spent time with him, just the two of us during a period when his wife was in a rehabilitation center, and Don lived with SueG, he admitted if he had to do it over again, he hoped he'd try to do things differently.

"I wasn't the easiest person to get along with," he told me. "I made a lot of mistakes, but I always thought I was doing the best possible. I suppose I was, seeing as how I was raised." 

I'll miss him. He was a part of my friend and the head of the dynamics that make up her family. Our gatherings won't be the same without his asking what he ordered fifty million times. In his honor, I plan to ask everyone a few times myself...

IF we ever get back to family gatherings.

Please. Please, everyone, wear a mask. If not for yourself, than for people like Don--who'd made his next goal to live to one hundred years old.

"So, I can keep wrecking havoc!"

Sadly, he won't be, and while we never thought he'd make that goal, it would've been nice to see him not succumb because of someone else's ignorance. 

Friday, July 17, 2020

Quarantine birthday, number 2


After quarantining for two weeks, Oleg popped over for the holiday weekend, and in secret, we surprised him with a birthday cake a week early. He turns twenty-one, but we won't be able to celebrate on his big day. He likes cake with nuts--a fan of carrot cake,--but we opted instead for German chocolate.


Tom was in charge of this, and he did a damn fine job. It was delicious.



Oleg was surprised--I think--and we showered him with gifts and the American tradition of getting the first piece and first bite.

Happy 21st, Oleg. Many happy years!

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Quarantine day 124

Yep, while the rest of you are out and about, we are still in quarantine, and that includes my two daughters and husband who only venture out to report to work. Other excursions still include essentials and the occasional take-out.

Okay, the take-out might be more than occasional, but shh...the husband doesn't need to know that.

I envy those continuing on with their summer vacations. I'm enjoying the pictures. We've discussed taking outings, but it's only been half-hearted attempts to maintain what used to be our standard. There are too many variables without the addition of COVID, and so, we stay in place.

I've spent the last two weeks in a depression alongside my eldest daughter, who is probably going on for three weeks. The two of us do talk it over and are very aware of our mental stability. When it really starts to suck us under, she gets in her car and drives, and I put on my suit and get in the pool. So far, we are managing.

A lot of mine stems from knowing my youngest is about to head back to college. Because her major has a small number of students, the plan is to throw them into large lecture halls with masks to spread out. Before the pandemic, we signed a lease for an apartment for a year, so she'll share with two other people who I hope are as safety conscience as we are here at home. Not knowing the truth? Yeah, part of my issues.

Meanwhile, arguing amongst the party lines continues. It's frankly growing old, but I have little hope for an ending where everyone works together. We are officially the laughing stock of other nations, and I'm quoting directly from other nations' citizens. I think it scares them as much as it does me. We are so ripe for more mayhem.

On the bright side, I'm still talking to friends I haven't spoken to in ages. Today I Facetimed with my old neighbor Howard who is 98 years young and living in Texas. He looked great, which made my heart sing, and it was so good to catch up with him and hear his tales. He is still the kindest man I know, and our family loves him dearly.

I've noticed something I never really paid attention to before COVID-- how quickly we deplete certain items. Who knew that Tom and I go through a tube of toothpaste in less than a month. I always thought it took forever for the paste to disappear so that I could switch up the flavor. The same can be said of other personal items as well as paper products. This is all stuff I bought in willy-nilly when on sale so that when we ran out, we went to the supply closet. Now that I'm only purchasing what is needed each week, I'm getting the scoop.

Although the same can't be said for my kids regarding toothpaste, I hold out hope and buy two tubes each month, just in case.

Favorite shows I recommend - Amazon's Step Dave and Netflix's Never Have I Ever. My addition to Instagram is Leslie Jordan at thelesliejordan. I recommend going back to his beginning and starting there. So many great laughs.

Mask wearing is prevalent here now, although there are the one or two yahoos who dare you with their sneers to come at them. So far, those have been white males, not that I'm keeping track. It boils my blood, and I do a lot of muttering behind my mask, but so far, I haven't confronted anyone to trend online. Probably a good thing I only go out once a week or so.

People I know and love are now testing positive. As my SIL said, it would eventually creep closer, and maybe then we'd take it seriously. It breaks my heart to think of how careless we are, and I include myself in that statement. Getting out once a week makes me forget to follow the arrows in the grocery aisles, and it's why I keep a bag of masks in my car. Who knows what is safe anymore?

Sigh.

Putting on my suit and heading to the pool now. Stay safe, everyone!

Monday, July 06, 2020

Vet visit 13456


It seems like the outings I take now besides to the grocery are to our vet. Where we aren't allowed to see the medical professional. At least not at my vet's office. We arrive, sit in our cars, call to announce said arrival, and communicate with a tech who comes to retrieve our pet. Any communication is done through the tech who may or may not be relaying the information. Sometimes I wonder. Because only one tech has taken notes, and yet here I am again returning to an office I usually only see once a year.

This last visit, I was forceful with each person from the appointment gal to the tech. I'm hopeful my tone was discussed with the vet, but I'm not holding my breath. At least neither vet bothered to come outside to speak with me--which is what I would have done at this juncture.

Elliot is still licking his left paw. He is still limping. I've explained numerous times that this isn't normal. If my child were suddenly licking her palms twenty-four/seven, you better believe my pediatrician would've been all over that. Even when ours couldn't diagnose an issue with one of my girls, she kept seeking answers from others.

Her: "You know your child's body and behaviors better than I do."

Yes! Just as I know my dog. Following his yearly physical, where I was told his licking was behavioral, we had the teeth removal. Where they shaved his LEFT leg--the same paw that I specifically questioned the week prior. Of course, now the licking was attributed to his hair growing in, and after a phone call that solved nothing, a sore developed, and back to the vet's office, we went.

Where I once again voiced my concern over the licking of his paw on that very leg! And the limping! And--this is where I believe the drop occurred--a sore that had developed under that same leg in the pit area. I don't think the vet ever examined there. I think the sore ON his leg was checked, but the sore under it? Yeah, there is no way she saw that.

Because a week later, that bad boy sore was oozing green and yellow pus, and I was forced to be taken seriously. Even now, I'm not sure why I didn't demand to speak to the vet. Hell, we could've spoken by phone, and if they ever send out a survey on how well they did during COVID, I would suggest that option for next pandemic. But instead, I spoke forcefully to the tech and may have rolled my eyes behind my sunglasses when she asked questions my vet SHOULD HAVE IN ELLIOT'S COMPUTERIZED CHART.

Which I used to see when I was allowed inside the vet's office.

Off went Elliot with the tech and firm instructions to discuss his condition with the professional I assumed would really lay her hands on my dog (because really, how do we know she is even in the building). I'm not sure Elliot relayed anything. He was miserable and didn't even seem to mind that he was once again back at the red brick building.

Ten minutes later, and a hundred dollars shorter in my wallet, Elliot was back in the car. He had an infection under his leg (no shit) which required more antibiotics, and the vet had given yet another cortisone shot--this one longer acting--to stop his licking. I asked several questions, which she answered in an attempt to appease me without returning back inside, and off we went.

Something tells me we are about to switch veterinarian offices.


Wednesday, July 01, 2020

Six month resolution check

Every two months, I check in to see how I'm doing on my New Year's resolutions. I give myself a score between 1-10 with the hopes that by the end of the year, I'm perfect. 

These six months have in quarantine, so are we really going to count them this year? 

Let's check-in (6 months):

  • Travel (Explore and open myself to new experiences)- Everything I've read regarding travel is: DON'T DO IT. Score: N/A
  • Get into an excellent mental and/or physical place where I don't mind having my picture taken. - Hmm...the word excellent is throwing me off here. I wouldn't say I feel excellent either mentally or physically, and I need a haircut, so... Score: 3
  • Devise a working routine schedule Monday-Friday so that I do it and stick to it - Oh, I have a routine alright. I wake, get coffee, sit, read, work my electronic tropical island, eat, sit, read, work my tropical island. Does this count? I mean, quarantine... Score: 0
  • Finish editing book #1, so Maya can edit and critique it. - Nada Score: 0
  • To drink less coffee and, therefore, less creamer - I'm on a roll on the zero scorings. Score: 0
  • To tackle some old resolutions that haunt me - Okay, that's something I've done. Whew. Score: 10

Total Score: 13 out of 50 and a N/A - Hey, at least I've accomplished something these past two months.