
I seethed with resentment. Was it not enough that she was doing SO much of the contact with the outside world? Could I not be a forgetful twit on my own now and then? Then I found, she ‘forgot’ to mention that I was the one who had decided what we should tell him to put him off for a while and Linda who volunteered to write it up.
“Why did you SAY it like that!” I tried not to plead/demand. “I would have looked SMART then.”

'When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone,' it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less.'How to explain that the only thing you know is what people expect you won’t remember. People expect you to remember two days ago when you said, “I really want to do X”, but now I have no idea why they keep mentioning X and looking pointedly at me. “I didn’t burn it down!” I tell them just in case I did.
'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make words mean so many different things.'
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master - that's all.'
Alice was too much puzzled to say anything; so after a minute Humpty Dumpty began again. 'They've a temper, some of them - particularly verbs: they're the proudest - adjectives you can do anything with, but not verbs (though the looking glass)…
But today, I decided, as I had no home care, that I was going to do the laundry, so I sorted the laundry. Cheryl and Linda were going to go shopping for food (Cheryl was there to give Linda new ideas), and other errands. I offered to drive the car for them; much laughter (this happens EVERY time I try to be helpful). I used my special indoor wheelchair and did the laundry,


By the time Linda and Cheryl came home I was dragging myself and the Gatorade bottles to the fridge, followed by putting away the soda cans and putting more selection in the fridge.
They suggested I come to the study so I did an invoice I had been forgetting for two weeks (post it note on my screen to remember!), and did the last of the paperwork for Booth-Gardner, and Xeroxed with the computer (many pages) and Linda took it to the post. It is now up to them to schedule the visits. We finished our side of everything, now just wait for the date to go to Seattle. By this time, I did not know what the word, “hot dog” meant, or “earring” or “living room.” Brain go bye bye (hope it had a fun trip!). I had the shakes very badly from the exertions.
Linda wanted to know, as she put me to bed, why I did it, and I said I felt as this was my last day on earth. And that we had been having so many miscommunications and so much friction that I wanted to do what I could to make our place a place she WANTED to come home to. A place clean, a place where the chores were done and she could relax. A place without guilt or frustration. I wanted to do as many ‘little things’ as I humanly could because…..sometimes little things mean big things. She was crying and so was I. From the shakes and spasms from my muscles which had done things they hadn’t done in a long time (Another problem with memory issues, you last remember being able to move a chair easily, so you move it! Turns out the ‘last remember’ was over two years ago), and thus I was going to pay and pay. I told her, it didn’t seem that I would be able to do the cooking tonight,

Linda got up from bed and hugged me and told me that was the BEST news.

So sometimes, I guess, it is taking a moment out of myself, and deciding that I would do something no one would expect: every horrid and unfinished chore I could think of. And I think people are happier around here.

Here is the unbought wishlist (I know, greedy little thing aren’t I, and unsubtle to boot!), which ranges from 1 cent up!). I would like to point out that Jill Shalvis’ book, Instant Attraction, is now out, that is Linda’s favorite author! Linda has to deal with me 24/7, word salad, emotional liability, dementia, and try to be cheerful while she sees how much I have declined since last week or a few days ago. To sit and read this book makes her happy and it is delivered to her door.

Thank you to everyone who has sent gifts recently (most of which are probably waiting to be picked up in four days, yes, the Cabin Fever of Island Isolation will be over. I was not voted off the island, no matter how much I tried, darn it!

Sugar Princess manga (suitable for any youth nine and up), the classic fun fluff, where girl sees a double axle on TV and then on her first skating she tries and DOES one. She is scouted by scruffy guy to be doubles partner of this totally dishy high schooler (whose last partner was his sister, tragic story). Of course, he reluctantly comes around, only to have the greedy son of the ice rink owner (now hospitalized) here to turn the ice rink in the parking lot. Volume one ends with our heroine HAVING to place in the top 10 in the upcoming competition or the Rink closes! I am looking forward to volume 2, that and Vol. 2 of Hayate X Blade (ME! Looking FORWARD to things?


WE bought Moonlight and the Shelves ourselves (we are putting them up now, so I can have certain important cards and other gifts I can see from my bed on days I can’t get out of bed), also a shelf for putting on a small stack of manga and DVD’s to play on the computer, Manga like Agent Luna, and Invisible (avoid this one, a giant TEASE, and a sleezy boyfriend). I can’t wait for After School Nightmare, winner of the Eisner Award (like the Pulizer or Booker), about our intersex heroine, and masks, pretending and how we have to expose ourselves to find friendship and love. The Scooper Plate (both of them) is now one of the main dishes I eat from, as from a pre-cut steak dinner, to Mexican Chicken, it makes it possible with my adapted utensils to feed myself, as my other adaptive plate was too large, for someone in the EARLY stages. I use it at least once a day on average. I don’t even think about it, and how easy it has made my life, that’s a great gift. The Stickers and Postcards are part of the project and a little go out in every bundle we send, it also cuts down on my time scouting on line for stickers and allows me time to….well, do glorious and foolish things like wash the dishes. (In a twisted version of pride, I wanted you to know I am wearing the SAME style/cut/images on my panties/underwear as this anime girl while I type this - yup: cherries)

Macha Macha the lesbian manga is WAY too embarrassing to talk about because it is like reading graphic novel to find out that someone has been filming you while you were having foreplay and sex. Let us say that there is an aspect of realism far beyond what I was expecting (hey? What? This isn't foreplay...I'm ill, see the bandages..and she was..um..nursing me)


The Books of postcards (She TRIED to be Good, …) are so good, the postcards bring immediately the image of different people. But so few postcards and so many fallen and tawdy women…..oops I mean so many people! I recommend We Were There the Manga for anyone, well anyone female and any romantic male. Winner of a famous Japanese Award for Manga, it just gets revved up when it stops and Linda, Cheryl and I (we all read and enjoyed it!), must languish until someone gifts up with volume 2 (on the current wishlist, hint, hint!). The romances have been a refuge for Linda who not only is facing her own disability and the doctor appointments for that but also they give her a mini-vacation,

And while this might be the last day but it was a good day, some hugs,

For Florastor, when I had the big BANG as I think of whatever happened a few days ago, all blood to my intestines seems to have stopped, right now, if I did not have Florastor, a prosthetic pro-biotic, I would have no way of absorbing nutrients (the dietician and VIHA nurse ARE coming!). If you bought this for me, you are literally keeping me conscious and functioning. That’s pretty cool.
And while you may think that a list of gifts from the wishlist and a list of chores I did is a pretty boring post; it is actually the best of days. No major stopping of breathing, no stress or grief crying (the amount of TP we go through is AMAZING), none of watching me struggle for every breath, labouring, for HOURS. Or moaning in pain, or in dementia, time lost to me, where they have to protect me and stop me from accidentally hurting myself (like trying to get up and practice fencing).

Next thing you know I might be smiling.

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