Where I stand

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I’d like to say I have time to walk down each path, to follow you to your place and “set for a spell.”  The reality is that I don’t even have enough hours in a day to keep up with my e-mail.  For the next two months, work will consume more days than are allotted for my job. For the next month, Christmas preparations will consume more time and brainpower than I have available.

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My life is full and so is my schedule. I am happy and busy, but there is little time to stop and reflect, to think, to write.

DSCN2311  Rose hips

 

I’m practicing thankfulness and attempting to practice mindfulness.

 

W is for…

Count your blessings, name them one by one…

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I’m using Thursday posts to focus on thankfulness — and instead of counting blessings, I’m challenging myself to come up with them alphabetically.  (You can find the rest of the posts in this series here.)

I suspect some of you thought I’d given up on finishing the alphabetized list of counting my blessings. I promise you that I am committed to finishing this exercise! However, as cliché as it may be — and yes, it is indeed a  cliché — it is also true: I’ve been really busy.  Frankly, I’m going to be really busy through the month of January. After that, I hope to breathe and blog a bit more. (Okay, so I’m still breathing… but not so much blogging. There are over 200 unread posts in my Feedly reader again. *sigh*)  But back to business here…

Welcome to week!

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WWW is for the world wide web (that is what it stands for, isn’t it?) and boy, howdy! am I ever grateful for the internet world of friendship and blogging.  Because of blogging, I have met some wonderful people in person and many, many more digitally. I have quite a list in my head of folks I hope to meet “in real life” someday.

Back in April when my computer hard drive froze (just stopped driving, not even my computer guru friends could fix it) I “lost” nearly 18 months worth of photographs. The devastation wasn’t nearly as bad as I originally feared because I had shared so many pictures here with all of you.  Those photographs were saved from digital disappearance — yet another blessing from blogging. Without you, dear Reader, I probably wouldn’t bother with a blog.

W is most definitely for all the wonderful women in my life.  Tonight is my monthly Book Group dinner and discussion, and knowing us, there will be laughter and tears. 

W is also for work. I am grateful for a job that both fits my skills and challenges me.  And that is where I am headed now. I’ll catch up with you as soon as I can!

What are you thankful for this week? 

Reflecting on last weekend

My little P&S camera arrived safely at my house on this afternoon — O happy day!
To celebrate, here are the “best of” pics from last weekend.

Above the clouds

Above the clouds

DSCN0288  airplane sunset

Sunset from the plane — one of two benefits for the plane being 3 hours late (the other was my free glass of Merlot)

One of the other residents offered Dad the use of this patriotic "campaign" hat, so I snapped a photo.

One of the other residents offered Dad the use of this patriotic “campaign” hat, so I snapped a photo.

[Click on any pic to embiggen]

Back-lit Saguaro

Back-lit Saguaro

I drove this road each morning: speed limit 25mph for good reason! It is residential, with twists and turns much like a roller coaster after the large initial drop.

I drove this road each morning: speed limit 25mph for good reason! It is residential, with twists and turns much like a roller coaster after the large initial drop.

Saturday evening softened light

Saturday evening softened light

Grandpa Jim & Karen

DSCN0312, vertically cropped to 4x6Happy to be out on an adventure — I pushed his wheelchair down the long driveway (walking backward where it was steep) then across the road and up a steep driveway to get to one of the other houses in his facility. The caregivers there were surprised and pleased to see him. Everyone was surprised that I was able to manage the hills/wheelchair/dad/myself all on my own.  He’s a big guy and I won’t say it was easy, but he had the difficult job of holding his feet up enough to not drag when we were traveling faster than a snail’s pace. We stopped many times to give him a break. Next time, we’ll need to figure out some sort of sling to hold up his legs and feet.  He can’t use the foot pegs that most people use on wheelchairs; his legs are so long that his knees end up in the air in a painful position. Normally this is not an issue — he shuffles his feet along to assist in propelling the wheelchair, which works well indoors or on smooth pavement, but it is very difficult on uneven surfaces.

taken at Catalina State Park

taken at Catalina State Park

Catalina Foothills

Catalina Foothills

Saguaro provides a home for the birds

Saguaro provides a home for the birds

Sunday evening sky

Sunday evening sky

Breezy Sunday Sunset

Breezy Sunday Sunset

Friday 5: About Parkinson’s Disease

Five things I learned this past weekend about Parkinson’s Disease:

  1. Caffeine consumption appears to be protective against Parkinson’s disease. The more coffee you drink, the greater decrease in risk of PD.
    Score for me! Pass the coffee pot, please!
  2. Sleep problems are a feature of the disease. My dad suffers from insomnia on a regular basis and –probably related — drowsiness in the daytime (he fell asleep constantly during lunch on Sunday — yet woke up enough to snitch my last bite of dessert when I left the table to refill my water glass).
  3. While I knew that dementia often accompanies PD in the later stages, I didn’t know until this week that a person with PD has two to six times the risk of dementia compared to the general population.
  4. Not too surprisingly, there are issues with mood difficulties in people who have PD, especially when the PD is combined with dementia. The top 3 mood difficulties are depression, apathy and anxiety.  (My dad is often vexed in the middle of the night, so I am grateful that he can take anti-anxiety medication.) And seriously, wouldn’t you be depressed if you were dealing with PD?
  5. Some of Dad’s behavioral issues that the family has been made aware of recently might be related to the disease or his medications — or, I can continue to believe that with age and dementia, the filters fall away and behaviors & thoughts from earlier in life come back to roost.  Nevermind the mixed metaphors, just guard your dessert plate, the kitchen counter, and the garbage can. 

TWT: Visiting my dad

Grandpa Jim and Jake

Grandpa with his first grandson (my oldest son, named for him) in October 1991

You probably know that I just got back from another trip to see my dad in Arizona.  He’s definitely slowly going downhill these days.  Once upon a time — just over 22 years ago — he stood tall at 6’2.5″.  (This picture is also proof that once upon a time — just over 22 years ago — my oldest son was a bit pudgy! You’d never believe it by looking at him now.)

Yes, I am a P.K. (preacher’s kid). Yes, he baptized my 2 oldest sons, although this photo was not taken on that particular day.

But 22 years have passed. On Sunday afternoon, I was pushing a wheelchair for my dad instead of a stroller for my son. Dad can maneuver about by himself but it is with tiny steps on the floor and tiny rolls of the wheel under his hands. I don’t want to take away his independence but I also don’t want to wear him out, so I had to balance his desire to do it all on his own with my desire to not let him wear himself out. He has advancing Parkinson’s Disease and is still in denial about what he can and can’t do. For instance, he can’t get out of bed on his own… but he still tries, especially at night when he becomes confused more easily. Some of this behavior is due to the dementia and some of it is due to stubbornness. The staff puts an alarm under the bed pad, which goes off when he starts to maneuver his way off the bed. It gives them enough warning to come running before he falls. While I was there this past weekend, he didn’t want me to think that he was incapable of anything, so he transferred himself onto the toilet. He announced that he was going to use the bathroom with such nonchalance that I was fooled; he knew he wasn’t supposed to do it, but he was determined. It was a delicate situation: I was trying to give him privacy and trust… but also questioning him. Eventually, he admitted that he had done something against the rules. This was after he wore himself out trying to get back off the toilet. He could not stand up and was in great danger of falling. He refused to push his call button so I went in search of help.
I won’t go into details, but in the end he was appropriately chided but also given due respect — and we all let him think that I didn’t really know what was going on. Dignity is important to everyone.

One of the other residents offered Dad the use of this patriotic "campaign" hat, so I snapped a photo.

Dignity is important… even if you are wearing a silly plastic hat.

I know that he sometimes feels that he is a prisoner because he has voiced it as such. Yes, he is a prisoner of PD in his own body, but he also feels stuck in one place — a very nice place. In the past, I have tried to get him to agree to getting in the car and going for a drive but he declined the offer. Almost 2 years ago, he was in a transport van coming back from an appointment at the clinic when another vehicle rammed into the side of the van. It broke his wheelchair and banged him up pretty badly (like most older folks, he bruises easily). After that, he refused to ride in a vehicle. The nurse and sometimes even the doctor come to see him instead. But with time and PD dementia, he let that detail slip from memory and suggested that I take him for a drive to see the sights around Tucson, entirely forgetting that the safest (and quite nearly the only) way to move him from one position to another is with a Hoyer sling. So instead, I got permission from the staff (who all thought I was underestimating the difficulty) and took Dad for a walk down the long hilly driveway, across the road, and up the steep driveway of the other two houses that make up his assisted living facility complex. He questioned my ability the whole way over to the other houses but clearly I impressed him because he didn’t question me on the way back! The caregivers across the road were surprised and pleased to see him. (Dad couldn’t remember being there before, but I was assured that this was not his first visit. Score again for dementia.)  I suspect this was the highlight of the weekend for my dad, being out and about on a lovely day.

Grandpa Jim & Karen

What he probably won’t remember is that at lunch on Sunday, when I got up to refill my water glass, he snitched a piece of zucchini bread off my plate.  I’d heard from his caregivers that this has been a problem, that he had been doing this to other residents. I had also seen him eyeing things on the kitchen counter (leftover pie, for instance) with full intent to snag them when no one was looking, so I wasn’t really surprised to see my plate empty when I returned to the table.  I’d baked a loaf of zucchini bread at home and brought it as a gift for him. It was not a big deal that he took a piece of bread off my plate, but I was pretty sure that he would deny it if I “called him on it.” He had dropped it onto his own plate where it nearly blended in with his own food. (And yes, he had a large slice of his own zucchini bread!)

Lord, when I am old and in a care facility, please don’t let me steal food from other people, the countertop, or the garbage can!    [Yes, he does that, too.]

Me and my dad, May 2008

Me and my dad, May 2008

It was just 5-1/2 years ago that he drove himself around the perimeter of the contiguous United States. He spent 30 days in total, driving alone — which scared all of us — and had a wonderful time visiting family and friends in Washington State, Idaho, Wisconsin, Virginia, and Florida before returning to Arizona.  The picture here was taken in May of 2008 at my home in Virginia.

 

**Edited to include pictures from my trip after my camera arrived in the mail from Thrifty Car Rental company. It was well-worth the $24.75 to have it shipped to me!**

A Circle of Friends, and the Good Shepherd

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This photograph is one that I took while on a retreat with women from my church. For me, it represents the solidarity, love, and focus of people who come together and support one another.

What do we really want in life? Experts have said that our great desire is to be known — not as we might present ourselves, all dressed up and looking good for the world — but known for who we really are in the depths of our hearts, minds, and souls.

The following is from a little paperback book, a devotion on the Psalms (possibly especially about Psalm 23). I am sorry that I do not have the pertinent information about who wrote it, when, and all of the details needed to look it up.  I’m trying to chase that down, but right now I am in Arizona visiting my dad and this is on my mind again today:

It’s a terrible thing to be unknown.  We live in fear that we will never be known enough-that others will never know who we really are, what our dreams are and where our thoughts are taking us.  Yet we have nothing to fear.  God knows every one of His sheep by name.

He’s aware of each personality and peculiarity:There are the little ones that have to be carried, the cripples that can’t keep up, the nursing ewes that won’t be hurried, the old sheep that can barely get along.  There are the bellwethers that always want to be out front, the bullies that butt and push to get their way, the timid ones (the sheepish) that are afraid to follow, the black sheep that are always the exception.  There are those who graze their way into lostness and others more deliberately on the lam.  The Good Shepherd knows us all.

 

The Sovereign Lord comes with power

                        And his arm rules for him…..

            He tends his flock like a shepherd:

                        He gathers his lambs in his arms

            And carries them close to his heart;

                        He gently leads those that have young.

                                                             -Isaiah 40:10 -11

 

 

 

V is for…

Count your blessings, name them one by one…

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I’m using Thursday posts to focus on thankfulness — and instead of counting blessings, I’m challenging myself to come up with them alphabetically.  (You can find the rest of the posts in this series here.)

I’m barely getting this one in “under the wire” — at the 11th hour and then some! — but here it is…

Welcome to week!

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V is for Vacation.  Oh, yes, I am thankful for vacations. Aren’t you?

Montana vacation destination

Montana vacation destination

DSCN2335I hadn’t planned to be absent from blogging, but as cliché  as it seems, I’ve been really busy. Work comes to mind as the biggest consumer of the time I formerly referred to as “free time.”  I’m still wrapping my brain around the fact that I have a regular job after 22 years as a SAHM. Admittedly, some of my time has been spent doing fun things with different groups of ladies:  a scrapbooking day (10 hours of nearly non-stop work on my Europe album), a beading & card-making weekend, a women’s retreat with some ladies from church at a beautifully remote and scenic spot in Montana,  and a fabulous weekend of sewing and quilting.  That all represents 4 out of the past 5 weekends. I know I am blessed. This is a great season in my life!

Morning in Montana Oct. 20, 2013

Morning in Montana
Oct. 20, 2013

Then there was the weekend of  mysterious illness (possibly exhaustion) over the only two days I had nothing scheduled on the calendar. I had planned to catch up on blogging (reading & writing); instead, I napped for much of those two days and slept like a log at night. (Do logs sleep? Let’s just pretend that they do.)  

This weekend I am venturing off to yet another vacation spot: visiting my dad in Arizona.  It won’t be all fun-and-games — I’m going alone and he is in an assisted living facility. As I wrote in September, this trip is about seeing him again before his health declines even more.  I am thankful for the addition of my small income from work that allows me to go for a visit.
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V is also for Veteran.  This coming Monday is Veterans’ Day here in the United States. My younger brother is a Marine veteran of the Gulf War. He has taught his sons great respect for other veterans and I’m sure they will be doing something of service on that day. I am thankful for the many sacrifices that our veterans have made. We owe them much more than we will ever know.

What are you thankful for this week?