These are two blossoms from my Paulownia tree. I always knew that they were blue. I did not know that they had such gorgeous pale-yellow interiors.
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Wednesday we were back to clear skies and warm temperatures. My goal for the day is to clean up three beds, have a spa or two and a nap in the semi-shade of the garden in midday. I felt so wonderfully relieved to see Sheba so happy. Her energy and joy are fully back; she was running around and very excited about feeling better.
I’m back to ‘normal’ as well, thriving on solitude. I’m back to once a month with Dr. S., I’m feeling stable in terms of my speech, and I haven’t had a seizure for a few weeks. I shot myself up with Tezspire in the morning, and then I read for a while to pass time until it was time to walk with our friends. We hadn’t walked with them for over a week.
When Dr. S. was talking, she said as part of her answer to a question that I’d asked, “Your [nervous] system is telling you to keep to yourself, that people are dangerous, and that makes sense given your upbringing.” I felt she was giving me permission to be alone and to want to be alone.
When I talked to Dwight afterwards, he explained the delay in his visit. The battery of his electric bike is toast and a new one costs $1,500! But as we talked, I felt very, very good about wanting him to visit. Yes, my nervous system wants me to be solitary, but I will always treasure the visits of everyone who comes to visit.
We had a short walk with our friends. I didn’t want Sheba to overdo things, but the change in her is miraculous. I think she’d been ill for quite a while because now she is prancing along the trails, often ahead of me, sometimes with me. For the past quite a while, she has lagged behind us, but no more and I am thrilled to have her ‘back.’
When we got home from our walk, I cleaned the barbeque it’s now ready for Summer. And then I did nothing all through the day until 16:00, when I watered the front beds and fruit trees. During the day, I took a nap in the sunshine. The house is cold without a fire, so I have a spa first thing in the morning to warm up. And then, after lunch, I often have a nap in the sunshine to get warm. Yesterday, that short sleepless nap tired me out so much, I came in and got into bed for a real nap.
At 15:00, Kevin and Shelly dropped by. They are former neighbours who now regularly leave the island completely between October and April. They spent this past Winter in Central America. It was great to see them. They liked my yard and really enjoyed touring the garden to know more about many of the plants. They went ape shit over the Laburnum.
When they left, Her Highness and I went for our afternoon walk, and our evening was the usual.
•
Last night I took my first walkabout after dinner. It’s something I like to do in the cooler part of daylight fading. And, as I say whenever I talk about Pinecone Park, I feel very proud of what I’ve done. I feel attached to them. I chose each one, and I care for each one. I don’t use a sprinkler; I water each plant according to its need.
And it’s because of that care that I am so fulfilled by the yard. The biggest reason that I have a garden that is lush and beautiful is that I am a diligent waterer.
I took the ‘thou shalt not kill’ to heart at an early age. I catch and release anything unwelcome comes into the house. All through the long burning season, I shake every piece of wood by tapping it on my chopping block. I do it to free anything attached to it, off it. I try to not kill things. I have a low-impact rating in worm land.
It seems consistent to be responsible waterer. Water is my partner-creator of Pinecone Park.
•
About those long things about my thoughts that I post. I feel I need to explain myself. Every time I try to speak, when I hurt myself because I grotesquely over-react to sudden noise or movement, when I seize, I’m angry that my broken nervous system is due to the negligence of many people.
My so-called breakdown wasn’t a moment, a week, not even a month, or a year, it’s been ten years so far. It goes on! And I’ve been seeing Dr. S. from the beginning. My symptoms and my therapy make me think a lot about me.
This has been a life-shattering experience. Functioning with very limited speech capacity is challenging. And to know that it’s due to the negligence of adults makes me furious.
I feel trapped in consciousness of my early history and the current consequences of that history. My therapy and my symptoms are constant reminders of that fucking history.


























































