Friday, February 6, 2026

Dinner Out

Thursday morning dawned with clear skies, so we’re back to chilly morning temperatures, but it’s predicted to be 14° this afternoon and that means we’ll probably walk this afternoon at Drumbeg again. It is just so, so beautiful there, and it’s such a treat to be so warm in Winter.

Her Highness and I took our morning walk together just before 9:00 am. We walked the Ricki Ave. trail that’s a good walk for both of us, and then we came home to the heat and for my Zoom call with STAMMA on telephone accessibility—a session aligned with the work Aidan, and I are doing with SPACE.

When that was done, it was lunchtime for everyone, and then I worked on the posts for the new SPACE blog, and I sent them to Aidan. And then Her Highness and I went to Elder Cedar to walk the trail there on a beautiful and warm Winter afternoon. And then we came back to chill together until dinner time for the pets, after which I left for The Surf to meet Kris, Steve and Nancy for dinner.

Dinner was a blast and because we ate early (17:30), I was home again at 19:30 and I enjoyed a bit of time together with the pets by the fire until it was bedtime.

Today is bright, sunny and warm, but tomorrow the rains return. I’m more than okay with that because we’ll soon be half-way through February and there’s been no snow so far. What a miracle! I’m doing no SPACE work today. We’ll walk soon with our friends, and I’ll read today. I’m wanting a day to myself.

Can you believe that the Orange Blowhole offered NYC the money the government promised but which he has been withholding for a mega tunnel project IF they agreed to change the names of Penn Station and the Washington-Dulles Airport to Trump Station and Airport. What a fucking baby buffoon!

I’m looking forward to watching the opening ceremonies of the Olympics this afternoon. I reckon there’ll be booing when the Americans enter the stadium. I hope there is. 
















Thursday, February 5, 2026

A Beautiful Day for a Walk in the Park


Wednesday dawned sunny and warm, but until the sun shone on the treetops, I was busy at my computer doing my SPACE homework and loving every second of it. Then, just past 9:00, we went to meet our friends to walk out dogs. They walked further than Her Highness and I did because I wanted to get home to receive my Tezspire when it arrived. I must sign for it and immediately refrigerate it when it arrives.

Our walk was a delight because of the brilliant weather. Everyone’s spirits were high, including the dogs, and the air was rich with the healing fragrances of the forest. My God, I love walking in the forest. City people have no idea how incredibly sensual, healthy and uplifting forest walking is, and I get to do it every day at least twice.

Aidan wrote me a kind note of appreciation yesterday. It thrilled me. I have struggled with feelings of poor self-worth all my life, so when someone values me, it really makes me feel great. And he sent more work for me to do that I’ll do today after he and I join a STAMMA Zoom conference entitled Ending the Phone Call Nightmares. Could there be a more interesting and relevant conference for us?

My Tezspire arrived and the driver was a lovely guy. Everything is so routine now. They always take my packaging from the previous month when they deliver a new needle, and the unpacking and repacking are routine to me now. And once processed and after lunch was served to the four-leggers, I went to Drumbeg Park because it was so Spring-like.


Buds on my Daffodils.

It was 13° — my Apple watch measures the temperature and posts it on my clock dial. How handy is that? — sunny and still. There was no wind and the sea was flat calm. Kids were playing with no coats on. I had my coat on, but I kept it open. However, regardless of the beauty of the day, there was hardly anyone there. I was able to let Sheba off the leash as we walked even though we were in a provincial park.

My foot is getting worse. It’s been five months since Jennifer sent in a requisition for a cortisone shot for me, and still no word. That’s fine, I’m happy to be patient, but I worry about how long the relief I get from the shot will last, because I will want another shot and that will mean at least another five months waiting. A month from now, I’m going to see Jennifer to get some prescription renewals, and I’m going to ask her about the cortisone efficacy over time and depending on what she says. I may ask her to send in a new requisition every X months—the length of time that the drug works—to reduce my waiting time.

In the evening, I wrote three short essays: one about neurogenic stuttering, another about shame in the stuttering community, and the last one on the telephone relay service. SPACE is going to launch a blog, and so Aidan wanted some content. I’m sure he’s asked many of us working with him, and so it should make an impression on those who check it out. The challenge will be maintaining good copy, but I’m confident that we can do it.

It was nice to spend an evening not watching a movie, and tonight will me sans cinema as well because I am going to The Surf to eat with Kris, Steve and Nancy. I’ll also be working on re-writes of the essays. I’m really looking forward to that work!








I love opals!








Wednesday, February 4, 2026

❤️ SPACE!

Tuesday was dry! It was wonderful to be able to walk without worrying about rain. And it’s so warm, walking Her Highness is a treat.

I was reluctant to leave home through the day because my Tezspire is due today, but it often comes a day early. So, I after our walk, I read a while and napped before my meeting with Aidan at 14:00. And what a meeting it was! I am practically in love with Aidan. He is so dedicated to helping us stutterers, and he is smart and very articulate, and he is often sending me lovely messages of gratitude for my contributions. He and SPACE have given me such a wonderful sense of fulfilment, pride and joy.

Then Her Highness and I went walking late in the afternoon when I was certain that Fedex wasn’t coming with my Tezspire today. We took a short walk in Rollo Park and then we went to Nester’s so that I could get more fresh fruit and veggies for another batch of curried rice salad. I make mountains of it. 

I’ve become a massive fan of brown rice. I’d put a load of it on in my rice cooker before leaving for our walk and shop, and when I came home and opened the door, the smell of the rice cooking smelt quite like popcorn at a movie theatre. It is such a wonderfully pleasant smell. I’ll never go back to white rice.

I have a ton of homework to do today for SPACE, and I could not be happier to have something to occupy my mind that is practical and that helps Aidan. The Tezspire will come today, so I must stay home and I’ll have my homework to do while I await its arrival.

It’s still amazingly mild outside, and we’re getting sunshine for the coming four days, and then the rains return. But better than mild temperatures and no rain is the fact that there’s still no snow predicted. This is often the coldest month of our year, so the risk for snow is high. But so far, so, so good!

I noticed that I have jobs the need attention in my garden. Sheesh, everything is budding like mad and I didn’t so some essential pruning, so I will do some during this good weather. But not today; today is a SPACE day.

















Tuesday, February 3, 2026

More of Same

Monday morning was a wet one, but wonderfully mild. We met our friends to walk in light rain, and then Her Highness and I went into the village to get some groceries and to pick up a prescription. Then we came home so Sheba could rest and I could putter until lunch. 

I Zoomed with Steve who left last night for New Zealand and Australia for a month. He turns 70 today, and as he does every time he enters a new decade, he goes off to an exotic location. On his 60th, he went to Easter Island and on his 50th, we went to South Africa together.

In the afternoon, I did work for SPACE. Aidan wanted me to develop some text for the project I’ve been hired to be part of, drawing the ideas from a STAMMA questionnaire about bad communication experiences experienced by stutterers. I’m proud and happy to be working on fixing problems that people who stutter have. 

A great many people who stutter (PWS) are ‘covert’ stutterers. Covert stutterers can pass as fluent speakers. They avoid words that cause them problems to achieve fluency. Being covert is not possible for me. I, and all severe stutterers, cannot hide our disfluency and it’s us who have the worst problems with AI generated voices and impatient clerks and customer service people.

Our afternoon walk was short because there was still light rain, but we’d had a good long morning walk. And then our we both enjoyed our regular evening routing together.

Today is warm and wet again. We’ll walk, I’ll Zoom with Aidan, I’ll read and tonight will be like every other Winter evening. It looks like the coming three days will be bright and dry for a change. We’re in for some good walking weather.