Your attitude is like a box of crayons that color your world. Constantly color your picture gray, and your picture will always be bleak. Try adding some bright colors to the picture by including humor, and your picture begins to lighten up. -Allen Klein
I loved working with this week's theme, BRIGHT, which I'm sure is no surprise to my friends. I've always been attracted to colors, the brighter the better - no neutrals or pastels for this girl! And since I was still feeling 'not fine' this week, it was good to be on the lookout for things that brightened my days. The quote I chose really hit home with me - good advice, and I needed to hear it, and follow it - this week.
I didn't get out much again this week - poor Crockett only got a few good walks, although we did play a lot of fetch on the deck - so all of my photos are from inside the house or inside the neighborhood. I'm ready to get back to normal, and thankfully, I'm headed that direction now. I ventured out to the doctor on Tuesday and then got to go back on Wednesday to have labs done. I learned that I had had the flu, and that I should get used to my friend Mr. Cough as he will be with me for a few more weeks. Ugh.
I had to laugh when I went to the doctor. Since I didn't have an appointment, I got worked in, so I was cognizant of the need to be on time. So of course there were issues, even with my advance planning and best intentions. First, Crockett didn't get the 'mom's in a hurry' memo, and I didn't allow for the extra time to open and shut the garage door manually (our opener has been broken for a few weeks) and I forgot that the bridge to Tiki is being repaired, so it's one lane with a stop light. Red, of course. Thankfully it's a short bridge! As I went over the causeway to Galveston Island, I neglected to notice that the train bridge was down, which would have indicated that my planned route was going to be blocked by a train. Oblivious to the impending delay, I turned left only to be stopped by what was one of the longest and slowest trains I've ever seen! So I u-turned and tried another path, which sadly was also blocked by the same train. Oh, the agony! Finally I found a clear path and was only late by five minutes, but I still felt bad. As in most places across the country, clinics and ERs are full of flu-sufferers. If you haven't had a flu shot (I got one in the fall), get one now!
We had more crazy weather across the country this week. And oh, those mudslides in California! Those were horrific and I feel so bad for those affected. More ice and snow for the northeast and the middle of the country, and even down here in Texas we had more days below freezing. On the day the cold front came in, we had a beautiful bright sunset and I could watch the front move in. The north wind has blown so much water out of the bay that almost all of the oyster beds have been visible. The water level is probably 3 or 4 feet below normal! It's due to snow again next week - if it does, that will be only the third time that it has snowed three times in one season here, and the last time it happened, I was in high school! Here's hoping that wherever you are, you're safe and protected from the elements.
I had rallied enough by Friday to make it to my massage appointment, which got cancelled last
week when both Trish (my massage therapist, who is FANTASTIC) and I were
sick. Trish knew exactly what to do to make me feel better. I am so
grateful to have a good massage therapist right here on Tiki! I should
have taken a photo of Trish, as appointments with her are definitely
bright spots in my life! Since I was feeling almost human again, Rex and I went to see Darkest Hour - such a great movie! Gary Oldman was a convincing Churchill, and the whole cast was excellent. Worth a watch!
My weekend has been full of basketball and football, with my teams winning sometimes....I'm sad to report that I haven't worked up the energy to finish taking down Christmas (so I still have that brightness around me!) but that has got to happen!! I may need to pretend it's not a three day weekend... Oh - the other fun thing this weekend - we started watching The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel on Amazon. Fun and funny! But I can't let the remaining Santas get addicted to it or I will never get them back in the closet!
Best to you this week - keep looking for the bright spots and add them yourself if needed!
Jan
Content used on this week's page: 2018 Day2Day Book and Themes by FOREVER; Font: KG Call Me Maybe
Showing posts with label Flu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flu. Show all posts
15 January 2018
08 January 2018
Recovering and Preparing
Winter is a season of recovery and preparation. - Paul Theroux
It's only my second week of blogging, and already I'm breaking the rules. So what else is new? You may remember that I told you my first Day2Day week of photos would be on the theme of NEW, but since we had winter last week, I opted to use WINTER for my theme instead. I'll hit NEW later this month...
As I was looking for a good quote about winter, I kept coming back to this one about recovery and preparation, as I've been trying to recover from my post-Christmas cold all week. I think it's time for a doctor visit, as recovery is eluding me. Rex and I are both hacking like ex-smokers and it is beyond annoying. So I'm preparing to be well now - enough with the tissues and hot water/lemon/honey drinks. It figures I would decide to go 'Dry January' just when a few hot toddies would have come in really handy.
In the good news category - we are with heat now!! Only a month later, both the upstairs and downstairs heaters are fully functional. The gas man came this week and our propane tank is full, so I figure that means we've had our cold snap for the year. Now to find a place for the three new space heaters we bought...
I absolutely cannot complain about our 'winter' down here though, especially given the week that much of the country has experienced. If you are digging out of loads of snow or staying colder than you'd like to, you have my sympathy! Stay warm and dry and hunker down and enjoy some good winter soups and stews. As I'm writing this late on Sunday night, we are experiencing a fierce thunderstorm! It's crazy - pouring rain, howling wind, and it's 66 degrees out. Crockett was asleep on the floor upstairs with me when he jumped up and started barking like crazy (in the middle of the storm). I finally went downstairs with him, only to find that the back door had blown open. Guess we hadn't closed the storm lock properly! Thanks, Crockett!
Since I've been feeling under the weather, I haven't even tried to revive any exercise programs for the new year, and I've barely even walked. I hate to start out behind! So far, I have managed my Dry January (even though we ate at a cool brew pub on Saturday night!) and I've stuck to my 10-12 hour eating window. Have you heard about that one? Limit your eating hours to 8 or 10 or 12 hours - so if you wake up at 8, eat breakfast, and your other meals/snacks as usual, but then don't eat anything after 8 PM. If you know me well, you know that I'm not an early riser and eating dinner after 8 PM is a regular occurrence around here, so this one is a bit of a stretch. So far, so good. And it's keeping me away from the midnight candy snack! What are you working on this year?
We did rally enough this weekend to start the monumental task of putting away Christmas decorations. Time for true confessions - this year was the first year I've even decorated for Christmas since 2013 or so. Just call me Scrooge, but since we've either been away every year or (worst of all) home alone, just the two of us, like last year, it just hasn't seemed worth the effort. But since everyone came here for the holidays, I was under orders to pull out all of the stops! Don't get me wrong - I loved having my Santas and my Snow Village out, and trees lighted and decorated, but I truly hate taking it all down. Like my friend Dana says - it takes all of the sparkle out of your house. And it's work!
So far we've put the most of the Santas (except the ones I just noticed in my upstairs windows...) and Snow Village away, and replaced all of the top of the kitchen cabinet holiday decor with the usual beach decor. Now to attack the snowmen and trees and miscellaneous holiday detritus, and to find where I hid all of the things that normally adorn the horizontal spaces in our house. My challenge this year will be to work around the full size baby crib that now lives in our Christmas/guest room closet. I'm not sure there will be room for the fully decorated fake tree that usually resides there! First world problems, I know!
Thinking about Christmas decorations (or lack thereof) reminds me of my mom and my grandmother. Neither of them ever let a house go undecorated for Christmas, I can assure you! Not only did they drag out and decorate trees (and since they were both widows for 20+ years, that was no easy feat!) but they also made original flower arrangements for every room every year. I am lucky enough to have a few of their special Christmas ornaments but I surely did not inherit their floral design talents. I'll stick with Santas and Snow Village and trees and call it festive!
Do you have a Snow Village or any other village that you set up each year? I'd love to hear about yours! I had three separate Village areas this year - the Main Street, from fire station to police station, with a bank, movie theater, TV station, bowling alley, pizza parlour, corner drugstore, chocolate shop, and gas station in between; the suburbs, with five houses, the library, church, hospital, McDonald's, and brew pub (new addition this year), along with the village tree and a snowy creek and sledding hill; and the beach, with a surf shop and the Lost Shaker of Salt bar (also new this year). I do love setting up the villages and watching the lights come on every evening.
Time to wrap it up so that I can get things packed away safe and sound for next year. Make it a fabulous week!
Jan
Content used on this week's page: 2018 Day2Day Book and Themes by FOREVER; Font: KG Call Me Maybe
It's only my second week of blogging, and already I'm breaking the rules. So what else is new? You may remember that I told you my first Day2Day week of photos would be on the theme of NEW, but since we had winter last week, I opted to use WINTER for my theme instead. I'll hit NEW later this month...
As I was looking for a good quote about winter, I kept coming back to this one about recovery and preparation, as I've been trying to recover from my post-Christmas cold all week. I think it's time for a doctor visit, as recovery is eluding me. Rex and I are both hacking like ex-smokers and it is beyond annoying. So I'm preparing to be well now - enough with the tissues and hot water/lemon/honey drinks. It figures I would decide to go 'Dry January' just when a few hot toddies would have come in really handy.
In the good news category - we are with heat now!! Only a month later, both the upstairs and downstairs heaters are fully functional. The gas man came this week and our propane tank is full, so I figure that means we've had our cold snap for the year. Now to find a place for the three new space heaters we bought...
I absolutely cannot complain about our 'winter' down here though, especially given the week that much of the country has experienced. If you are digging out of loads of snow or staying colder than you'd like to, you have my sympathy! Stay warm and dry and hunker down and enjoy some good winter soups and stews. As I'm writing this late on Sunday night, we are experiencing a fierce thunderstorm! It's crazy - pouring rain, howling wind, and it's 66 degrees out. Crockett was asleep on the floor upstairs with me when he jumped up and started barking like crazy (in the middle of the storm). I finally went downstairs with him, only to find that the back door had blown open. Guess we hadn't closed the storm lock properly! Thanks, Crockett!
Since I've been feeling under the weather, I haven't even tried to revive any exercise programs for the new year, and I've barely even walked. I hate to start out behind! So far, I have managed my Dry January (even though we ate at a cool brew pub on Saturday night!) and I've stuck to my 10-12 hour eating window. Have you heard about that one? Limit your eating hours to 8 or 10 or 12 hours - so if you wake up at 8, eat breakfast, and your other meals/snacks as usual, but then don't eat anything after 8 PM. If you know me well, you know that I'm not an early riser and eating dinner after 8 PM is a regular occurrence around here, so this one is a bit of a stretch. So far, so good. And it's keeping me away from the midnight candy snack! What are you working on this year?
We did rally enough this weekend to start the monumental task of putting away Christmas decorations. Time for true confessions - this year was the first year I've even decorated for Christmas since 2013 or so. Just call me Scrooge, but since we've either been away every year or (worst of all) home alone, just the two of us, like last year, it just hasn't seemed worth the effort. But since everyone came here for the holidays, I was under orders to pull out all of the stops! Don't get me wrong - I loved having my Santas and my Snow Village out, and trees lighted and decorated, but I truly hate taking it all down. Like my friend Dana says - it takes all of the sparkle out of your house. And it's work!
So far we've put the most of the Santas (except the ones I just noticed in my upstairs windows...) and Snow Village away, and replaced all of the top of the kitchen cabinet holiday decor with the usual beach decor. Now to attack the snowmen and trees and miscellaneous holiday detritus, and to find where I hid all of the things that normally adorn the horizontal spaces in our house. My challenge this year will be to work around the full size baby crib that now lives in our Christmas/guest room closet. I'm not sure there will be room for the fully decorated fake tree that usually resides there! First world problems, I know!
Thinking about Christmas decorations (or lack thereof) reminds me of my mom and my grandmother. Neither of them ever let a house go undecorated for Christmas, I can assure you! Not only did they drag out and decorate trees (and since they were both widows for 20+ years, that was no easy feat!) but they also made original flower arrangements for every room every year. I am lucky enough to have a few of their special Christmas ornaments but I surely did not inherit their floral design talents. I'll stick with Santas and Snow Village and trees and call it festive!
Do you have a Snow Village or any other village that you set up each year? I'd love to hear about yours! I had three separate Village areas this year - the Main Street, from fire station to police station, with a bank, movie theater, TV station, bowling alley, pizza parlour, corner drugstore, chocolate shop, and gas station in between; the suburbs, with five houses, the library, church, hospital, McDonald's, and brew pub (new addition this year), along with the village tree and a snowy creek and sledding hill; and the beach, with a surf shop and the Lost Shaker of Salt bar (also new this year). I do love setting up the villages and watching the lights come on every evening.
Time to wrap it up so that I can get things packed away safe and sound for next year. Make it a fabulous week!
Jan
Content used on this week's page: 2018 Day2Day Book and Themes by FOREVER; Font: KG Call Me Maybe
Labels:
Christmas,
Crockett,
Dry January,
Flu,
Snow Village,
Weather
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