A Gift

Getting back on the horse.

Or, the keyboard. Whatever.

Aiming for regular posts. Post ICU, post hospital. Back in the mountains. Near home.

Lots of life altering. Walking with a walker. Being pushed in a wheelchair. Having Joe, Mary, the grandkids coming to visit me.

One observation from the ICU/hospital experience. I registered in the emergency room. Infantilization began. Questions, lie down. EKG stickers on. Numbers. O2 80, How do you feel? Clothes off, hospital gown. CT scan. Back to the worried room.

A tussle over what to do right now. My agency slipped away and I became a patient with breathing issues. Infectious disease specialists take a day to identify streptococcal pneumonia. In and out of awareness in the dim lights of the ICU. Targeted antibiotics hit.

Gradual turn from death toward life. I missed most of the turn, only catching up to it in my hospital room, one step down from the ICU.

I’m grateful to so many whose kindness and expertise saw me through. A gift, this life, and it can be taken from us so fast.

A Confusion

How to say something hard.

911. “Not getting enough oxygen.” First 911 call. Flurry of uniforms. Stickers. EKG. o2 sats. Low. Firefighter lead: “Nothing physically wrong. Faulty o2 concentrators.”

“Oh.” Mutual. No need for an ambulance ride. They didn’t want to go, neither did I.

Mistake. Down the hill four hours later. Head down, breathing hard. Arjan driving.

E.R. Wheeled in, registered. Exam room. Folks rushing about. This wire, that wire. Confusing. Various things stuck in my face. Resistance. No. I don’t want that. You need it. Felt claustrophobic.

After that I don’t remember much. Woke up in the ICU. Ah, alive. The beautiful Gina cared for me. Kind, quick, confident.

So weak. Hands fluttering. Still hard to breathe. Disoriented. Extra people. That dog. Strange.  A place between.

Step down room. New nurses, more needles. lV’s set. A fog in my mind, the room, my bed. Alone, on a pier of existence distant from home.

Later, a return to the mountains strapped in a wheelchair, head drooping. The Life Care Center of Evergreen. Room 103. Physical therapy, occupational therapy.

Question? What comes next? Joe. Rich. Mary. My team. My job. Work hard on strength, balance. Eat. Rest.

Placid. Neither up nor down. Excited nor anxious. Naps, brief reveries. Seeing maybe a different path. Or a new version of an old path.

 

 

 

 

Wrong Direction

Petscan results: significant disease progression. After my first actinium dose in April. Wrong direction. Not sure where this leaves me. Actinium has an excellent record of killing cancer cells. Why I’m in the trial. Not in this body.

Disappointing. More when I know more.

 

 

Quiet Days

A slow day. As Saturdays can be. Moderate temperature, slight breeze, sun. I like quiet days. Especially after the excitement of my self-engaged head gashing.

This Sunday, and most of the next week, has similar possibilities. Only out of house: Tuesday 9 am CT scan and Friday’s 11:30 suture removal.

Beginning to have serious conversations about my future on Shadow Mountain. My goal? Stay right here. There are various ways to get there, not sure what makes the most sense yet.

 

Oh. George. Orwell. Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission which proposes that the separation of church and state is “…a legal error…” (W.P. June 26, 2026)

Look on his works, ye mighty, and despair.

Mary’s Work

Tara suggested I write down what Mary’s been doing as a way to assess what I might need in the future. That’s what this is. It’s also a thank you to Mary for all she’s done.

  1. Here 24/7.
  2. Makes coffee. Heats (if needed) breakfast entree. Makes toast. Plates fruit. On tray. Brings all downstairs. Retrieves trays, returns upstairs.
  3. Similarly for lunch and dinner.
  4. Often lets Shadow in and out.
  5. Gets mail/packages
  6. Walks and exercises with me
  7. Attends medical appointments (not as driver)
  8. Companionship during the day.

Without her I do all this myself. A lot. She’s helped me past a tough time.

Mary. If you think of other things, please tell me.

 

Through the Looking Glass

Day three post fall and gash. Wound gets cleaned today. Not sure how I’d do it by myself. Maybe Ginny.

Reverberations. Can I handle myself alone? Just me and my life alert medallion? I think so, but some doubt now. Don’t like that.

Melissa provides a cushion I needed and still need. Mary, too, but she’s leaving late July, going back to winter in Melbourne. Tara and Arjean will be here right after until late August. After that, back to the old ways.

Investigating.

Flash flood. Bear Creek, Evergreen and Kittredge. Wednesday night. There are state installed flash flood warning signs in Kittredge: climb to higher ground. Took out private bridges, sent logs rushing downstream, flooded basements. Hwy. 74 closed overnight.

Like Minnesota the West has weather that can kill you, too. Flash floods. Wildfire.

Texas to require bible reading in public schools. Trump’s inaptly named Religious Liberty Commission plans to work against the separation of Church and State. Vance compares himself to Nixon. Iran and U.S. trade strikes after peace document signed.

We have fallen through the looking glass. Red-pilled and angry.

Shameless

Chose not to go down the hill for a CT scan of my head. To check for a brain bleed. Too many scans of late. No problematics. Could have been otherwise.  An emotional rather than a rational decision.

Surrounded by love. Ruth held me in her lap, holding a towel against my gash. Bled profusely as head wounds do. Mary and David helped me (lifted me) to my feet. Ruth and Mary called my clinic which got me in right away. 10 minutes from home.

Wound cleaned, hair around it clipped. Waited until Anna, a p.a. came in. She did a thorough exam for neurological effects. Head wound = possible brain bleed.

The lidocaine would feel like “stinging bees,” she said. Ha, I thought. I know what they feel like from my beekeeping years.  Pretty close, except for one which exceeded expectations. Mary says she, Ruth, and David watched Anna work. At the back of my head and numbed. I waited. No real pain afterward. Later the other parts of my body that hit the tile hard declared themselves. Achy. Some low level pain.

I crawled into bed and went to sleep.

More appreciative now of my Life Alert medallion which would have come to my aid had I been alone.

Old age can be tough. Keep yourself in shape.

Looking forward to three medical intervention free days.

I see Vance trying to rehabilitate Nixon! The deep state took him down. Yeah, right. If by deep state you mean: independent journalism (ironically the Washington Post of yesteryear), the FBI, Congress, and the courts.

Shameless. All of them. Enemies of truth, justice, and the American way. Villains of Superman Comic equivalence.

Quiet summer days. What I want.

 

Vulnerable

Ouch. Fell over. Hit my head. Much blood. Six stitches. Mary, Ruth, and David helped me. Second fall in a month. Not a great pattern.

Vulnerable. Feeling old, hapless. Wondering about living as I have been. A major question for me. Damn it.

More as the news rolls in.

Two Days for One

Bone scan day. First, radioactive tracer. Wait one hour. Place me on a metal slab. Whir a tracer sensitive plate around my body. Check for doneness.

Marilyn Saltzman today. 9 am pickup. Down to Swedish. Kate stayed in it many times including her last. Not my favorite place.

Tomorrow, Petscan.

Nights here continue cool. Several Mule Deer yearlings visit. It’s summertime in the mountains.

I notice a distinct decline in mental clarity as evening approaches. Pretty certain it’s the abiraterone. A nasty drug. Except, of course, for its cancer suppression.

Our guy, Dopy, and his little friend, Sleazy, have tried many times to tell us what Iran has agreed to. Only the Iranians contradict them. Team America.

 

Wednesday. 6/24/2026

Bone scan yesterday. 3 hour wait after injection of tracer. Marilyn took us all the way back to Conifer while we waited. Above and beyond.

Bone scan tech one of the kindest folks I’ve encountered on this road. Makes a big difference.

Weary. Again. All these appointments. Asking for rides. Always high stakes. Takes the stuffing right out of me. Today. Petscan. Littleton. Again. Third this year.

Ruth’s coming up today with David. She’s two weeks out from her ulna shortening surgery. First a splint, now four weeks in a cast. Will be good to see her.

Weather beautiful. Colorado blue skies. Temps in low 70’s. Rocky Mountain high.

 

One More Reason to Dance

The Summer Solstice. Sol Invictus, the all-conquering sun. Put Sweden and the Solstice in your browser to see naked blond people dancing around huge bonfires. The growing season, whose beginning we celebrated at Beltane, has come to its midway point. The energy giving power of the sun available during longer days. Corn in Iowa well beyond knee high even in June.

We need this maximum sun for agricultural crops, flower gardens, trees and grasses. Photosynthesis is Sol loving us as only a nuclear fusion reaction can. Vividly. With all its fullness.

Yet. All these positives granted and celebrated, I find one more cause to dance. The Summer Solstice marks the end of the triumph of the light begun on the longest night, last Winter’s Solstice. From this point forward darkness will grow, the nights will become longer until at the Vernal Equinox, the nights will be longer than the days. This is the beginning of the triumph of darkness. I love those cold, dark nights of Midwinter. I look forward to a blazing fire, snow falling, Black Mountain turning white.

Mary has a mission. Using her librarian’s fundamental need to impose order, she’s going through each room, sector, and cabinet rearranging, culling, making sure each item has a place. Expiration dates runout? Toss. Smell rancid. Trash it. She’s filled bag after bag, all headed to the landfill in Park County, This work energizes her, makes her smile.

I’m going through anoter of trial related imaging this week and next. Feeling stronger, stamina an issue. Better than before!