monday
Monday was the calm before the storm. I spent the day being careful not to do too much because today is going to be hard on me. I’ve to go to Nanaimo to fetch the gutters for the woodshed, then I get sushi for lunch (YAY!) before coming home, and tomorrow is a group dog walk that always tires me out, and then I have my appointment with Dr. Dorscheid.
But it was a beautiful day to nap in the sunshine, and to enjoy a long, leisurely spa. I am just so happy. I feel it all the time. The blossoms, the birdsong, the sunshine on my skin; everywhere I look I see something that thrills this man who kissed his Lilac tree because it has blooms for the first time.
When we went to walk the Elder Cedar trail, I hear shouts ahead of us and I didn’t like what I heard because for me, the Elder Cedar grove/park is a sanctuary. So, as I walked and heard more shrieks, I got into a rather foul frame of mind, but when I came upon the source, Olive, 11, and Oscar, 7, I was immediately smitten. We talked for about 5 minutes—their mom and grandma were there—and then Sheba and I went on our way.
I love kids. No matter what age, I love them (but not the rare nasty ones). Kids and animals, they’re the loveable ones. Oh, and speaking of loveable, Grayson is coming today. He’ll be putting up the gutters, and I’ll be quietly mentally rhapsodizing over his warm open personality and his magnificent frame. Yes, I’m writing to you form the shallow end.
As the day wound down, I was eager for dinner, a good movie and bed. I love going to bed. I’m a highly trained professional sleeper. I go right to sleep and then am dead until 5:00 am.
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Pete and Ali are neighbours who have been exceptionally kind and generous with me. Pete reinforced the foundation of my deck and removed all the rotten parts and built some new parts. I gave them a dinner and three nights in a lodge on Quadra Island to thank them. We get along very, very comfortably.
Two weeks ago, Pete asked me to make a cake for Ali’s birthday party that’s happening this Friday. I was more than willing to make a cake. I’m going to make it on Thursday. Last night, I got an email with instructions on accessing the property, the code for the gate, and parking instructions.
It suddenly hit me, when I read the email, how many people are going, and it hit me: there’s no way that I’m going to this party. I’m going to make the cake on Thursday, and I’m going to give it to them Thursday night. And I’m going to tell them then, that I can’t go to the party. I can’t be with that many people. I can’t be with that many strangers.
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I love having the spa again. I love being warm all over. I spent a lot of my time at the Tyrells sitting against the vent where the hot air heated the room. I particularly love it when it’s cool outside, so I like having a spa in the morning. Plus, it’s silent in the morning at six when the sun is coming up.
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Yesterday afternoon when we were coming home from our Elder Cedar trail, when I turned into the driveway, I had a little emotional shiver. I see that view every time I come home, but yesterday it was like seeing it for the first time. It gives me chills to live in a log home.
Don Tyrell and his friends built a cabin together on Hollyburn ridge. It was named Ski Heil. (Can you imagine that today?) Don left his photo albums from his youth and young adulthood in the bookshelves of our basement with books they’d inherited and never read. I loved looking at the photos. One was a diary with photos that he put together while he was recovering from a broken leg.
I reckon I liked the cabin photos so much for the same reason I liked the ‘fort’, a former chicken cook, in the playground across the street. They were safety houses to me. I always dreamed about them, and now I live in one, and last night, seeing it in Springtime with my plantings all around gave me a major thrill.
tuesday
Tuesday was a normal day for a normal person, but it was a spectacularly busy day for me because I spend so many days doing next to nothing.
Sheba and I boarded the 7:00 am ferry to go to Nanaimo. We went directly to Home Depot and picked up the gutters I bought. (I bought too many.) From there we went to Thrifty Foods for sushi to bring home for my lunch. But on the way home, we stopped at Life Labs, and I got my blood work done for Dr. Dorscheid. I am going back this morning for more tests, and henceforth I am going once a month.
It took forever at the lab, but once out, it was time to go to the vet’s to pick up more of Sheba’s prednisone. We start her on 10 mgs/day today and we watch for any signs of foot trouble. If there’s none, she’ll continue with 10 mgs indefinitely.
Then, finally, we were home for lunch. I fed the brood and then sat down to enjoy my delicious sushi lunch. Grayson arrived as I was about to start, and he got down to work right away. Just as I was beginning to worry about how much I’m spending on his services, I got my income tax return of $1,600. End of worry!
Grayson left at 4:30, and I got into the spa immediately. Oh, how good it felt to get into the wonderful hot water, rest my head on the edge and close my eyes. It was too busy a day for me. I had a dinner I bought at Thrifty Foods, flopped onto the chaise and watched things on YouTube in the evening.
The gardens are looking stunning. I’ve a couple of holes to fill—that’ll happen once things settle down—but the whole yard is looking great. I am, however, going to move the apple trees in the backyard, to the front yard where they will get far more sun.
I’m. still feeling very happy about everything, I’ve stuck to my no-sweets diet, and Grayson is making Pinecone Park look like a Provincial Park. I’m going to pay him to clean up the forest where we harvested the trees to thank the forest for my small fortune in wood for the next couple of winters.
wednesday
Another sunny day. We’ve had naught but sunshine for over two weeks. I’ll be watering today as there’s no rain in sight until next Monday. But the big event of the day will be Zooming with Dr. Dorscheid, my pulmonologist. But first, a dog walk, and another visit to Life Labs.