Inchie: Thurs 6th-Fri 7th July 2023

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I could not get much done, having to rush in between the tremendous amount of LIBERTY-GLOBAL who own Virgin Media, and black-outs. Usually losing my work through not being able to save it as the LIBERTY-GLOBAL who claim:

Liberty Global is a world leader in converged broadband, video and mobile communications and an active investor in cutting-edge infrastructure, content and technology ventures. We play a vital role in society with our fibre-based and 5G network investments. Providing over 86 million fixed and mobile connections and rolling out the next generation of products and services while readying our networks for 10 Gbps and beyond.

I’ve corrected the grammar mistakes on this statement on Liberty-Globals E-Mail and statement of perfection
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I’ve felt lucky this Thursday if LIBERTY-GLOBAL let me get half an hour of continuous blogging done! I’ve no idea if some of these photos were from Thursday for certain, but I think they were. It was all a mess, that had me in an angry, frustrated state of mind! Doing my health no good at all this unreliability & lack of help from the LIBERTY-GLOBAL Oligarchs.
Still, I wouldn’t want LIBERTY-GLOBALs $26 million salaried Mike Fries to worry about me, or his pathetic imitation Internet Providing Service farce. He must have enough on his plate with number-crunching, figure-shuffling, smoke and mirrors, and financial manipulations on his mind. Bless him!
All the same, he’s a good-looking brute, is he not?

Definitely Thursdays this one above. Hehe!

No, this might be last Thursday…

I give up, Must have lost this Thursday’s photos in the battle against Liberty-Globals blackouts?

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The colour of the urine in the night bag was a disappointment.
The Carer Chris and Training Chap) confirmed it was a number 7 on the NHS Grade Card. The highest! Oh, Heckithump!

Stroke of luck when I switched on the computer. I found some photos that I had missed on the SD card. Tsk! Here they are;

All of a sudden, I remembered taking these after I looked at them. The bottom field was the one above I took mid-morning through the balcony doors and windows. The grass does not look very green; we could do with more rain.

The afternoon’s clouds
This one was a delight for me. I could see tentacles, an animal’s head & shoulders, a ghost and a tea mug.

I could almost taste this again when I looked at it.
Last night’s late nosh. It was a can of chunky vegetable soup, some concentrated Borscht added. Vegan sausages, and some of the crispy potato chunks; I did those in the air-fryer.
Flavour Rating: 8.2/10!

Back to what few I’ve taken this morning, not a lot.
Why, you ask, I’ll tell yers…

REPEATEDLY!
The Swine!

The right foot toes and ankle are definitely not so bothering me today. They still catch me out occasionally
I believe the Doctor at the
Got it spot on, when he told me that any pain relief would take a day or two. He was right, too!

The ankle ulcer and swelling are taking their time to die down.
The toes were much improved. Oddly, around the ankle, top of the foot it is swelling up there still. But overall, I’m pleased with how it’s going, (I Hope I don’t regret saying that later, Hehe!

High sunshine out now
I can see the puffer clouds have faces in a couple of them.

Time to get some nosh before the internet goes down again. Oh, no, I’ve got the food order to do for next week yet,
I’ll do it now before I forget to…
If that is, the Liberty-Global Oligarchs let me…
No, it’s down yet again!

I made a mess of this photo?
But no mess with the fodder.
Taste Rating: 8.3/10!

Washed the pots, and turned on the TV to watch ‘Heartbeat’.
But I didn’t; the evening carers arrived. Chris and the new lad.
I missed the Heartbeat programme in this sneak shot of Carer Chris. Hehehe! As he was putting on the night pouch to for me.
drops, medications, and then after the regulation of five minutes, the drops were administered.
I’d like to point out that the NHS have stopped issuing Peptac medicine, now.


They are using.
Gaviscon Advanced. Apparently, it’s cheaper to buy than the Peptac. But… the aniseed flavouring they use in this one, is overpowering the tastebuds! Urgh!

Another day of being ruled by
a pathetic internet connection.
REPEATEDLY!

Inchie: Wednesday 5th July 2023-NHS Call in Centre Visited

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Another escape from the flat…
But only to the hospital at that…
Not much time for any chitchat,
 Dr’s with students, so each a pedantocrat,

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The night catheter pouch colour was better today!
Nice morning, a little windy.

Telly on to watch the news. Of course, I didn’t; I began to get the things ready for the trip out to the medical thingamabob.

Glad to see the treats on the carer’s table had been nibbled at…


Last check of the painful right foot and leg ulcer.
I have a range feeling that this visit will come out well. It’s probably EQ talking to me with one of his forecasts?
At least, I hope it is, cause he’s usually right.

I thought I’d got all I needed for the visit, (checked the status of the windows, balcony, taps (faucets), & stove. Looked again in the three-wheeled walker bag to see I had everything needed, and set off to catch the bus to the Centre.
Out, in the lift (elevator) and down to the ground floor. Going through into the link passage to inform Meridian about my imminent departure; got through the swipe door into the tunnel, and realised I’d forgotten something. Turned back through the door… and realised that either or maybe both of them had removed the memory of what it was I was going back up to the flat to fetch!
As I stood there musing and failing to recall what it was, the Domestic lady Denise came through on her way to do the flat for me. A good time to tell her I would not be there, Hehe!
No signs of any recollection, so I had to ensure to catch the bus on time. I called at the Meridian office to tell them I will not be back for the 12:00hrs medications, and if they keep me in, I’ll let them know, or, when I return.
Caught the bus alright. I planned it all out – I should know better that I am capable of making arrangements that work.
Still, I did think at the time how clever I was to work out where to get off the bus, to make it far less distance for me to walk to the UCC building. However…
I misjudged the distance by about five bus stops, half a mile. I got off the bus, with the help of passengers at the bus stop’s help, and then I realised my . I did feel like a fool!

Hell of a trek to get to the traffic island. To make things worse, as I approached the bend in the road, there were pavements blocked off, road and pavement works and men spraying words of instruction for the location of telephone wires, gas, etc. Having to go on the roadway to get by was sometimes a little hairy. Little did I know what lay further ahead for me!

Bath Street was blocked off for traffic and pedestrians. So I had to rely on my memory, to work out another route to get to the Canal Street roundabout. From there, I could see the NHS building (I thought I would). Relying on my memory is not a good scenario nowadays! However, my attention to road safety deteriorated, as I came across some wildflowers at the end of another block of student flats being erected building site. The advertising hoarding said; Now being built – available in 2024, 1210 new student flats. Singles doubles and multiple occupation apartments. One to six students per residence or per flat?

Anyway, these flowers were beautiful. During my hobble, I stopped many times to look at nature’s plants forcing their way out through wasteland, cement, concrete and paving slabs, but these were special to me. Why? I’ll tell yers…
None of the other plants or flowers had bees or wasps near them; these red beauties were snided with them. The same happened with those near the bus depot, which had been demolished and even more student flats were being built there, and the waste area near the island site. I wonder why?

I accidentally took a snap of the shadow of my bulging torso and the trolley. I was about to try and take a photo of some beetle or other that lay there on the pavement, with people walking by, and seemed unconcerned? I took its picture.
On Thursday, I got more information about these, and why it was alive but not moving. .Carer Richard, always a font of knowledge, told me they were ‘May Beetles’. The males are born, (May to July) and set about breeding, but only once, then they settle down and die. And I complain about things.
The poor little beggars!

Lower Parliament Street
I had to corrs over to the right of this photo, as they are building more student flats. (Yes, I know!) Then when I got to the Nottingham Ice Centre. They were building more flats again, a massive block with no details available, and the old bus station has also been earmarked for new student flats.
I got to the point where I was sure I’d be able to see the NHS building – But No! The land was now a wasteland, and I could not see through to the building further in the plot.
I stopped a chap and explained that with all the roadworks near the London Road island, I could see barriers and limited asses, and wondered if there is another way in for pedestrians. The chap told me, “I’m not from here myself” However, he whipped out his mobile and did a search on something and found out that if I went to the left, first right and right again, I should come to the building I needed, casual mentioning to help me follow the route, that it was next to some student flats being built. I thanked him profusely and hobbled off with my 3-wheeled walker on the agreed route. I was longer than I thought it would be, by the time I got there, the feet and toes were well aching.

I wearily got inside, and up to the receptionist. Who, along with all the doctors, had student training with them. Logged in and sat down in one of the few unoccupied seats as instructed.
Within minutes, I was called to an assessment office, DR and student within. The chap in charge was pleasant. Took my details and told me to go back to a seat and someone from the surgeries would call me; it may be a two to three hours wait. No matter what I thought, I’ll do my crossword book… then I remembered what I’d forgotten to take with me! Tsk!

I was fighting not to fall asleep, because all the people called in while I was waiting, I hadn’t heard s single name they called out.
A female came after about an hour and a half, and when she I did my usual of tipping my head to point the better of ears at them. She smiled and took me through to a room with a doctor and a student inside.
The chap was also pleasant and went into detail about my ailments. falls, and the causes, which he assumed was the big fall I had last Friday. They gave me a prescription for some antibiotics, warning me that they will start working, but not on the pain for a day or two, as they are extra strong, and assured me they would start to ease things for me.

He got a wheelchair, and the student pushed me to the X-ray room for a check to see if any of the three brown toes had been broken. None had. I was student-pushed back in the wheelchair (catching my wound on the edge of a doorway) to the first room, and we had a few words, which for some reason I cannot recall or even guess at, now I’m typing this.

A contented Inchie makes his way to the chemist to have his prescription filled. Unaware of what will happen, en route!

At the end of the access road, it was blocked off to pedestrians where the new Student Flats are being built. So this meant a marathon diversion for him and Willie, his Three-Wheeled-Walker. Up London Road…Where the uneven-broken pavement nearly had Willie and Inchie over a couple of times.

To the traffic lights, over the road and down Station Street, which was ever taking him further away from his targeted Boot’s Chemist!
The old shopping centre was now demolished in Auf Weidersehen style. A walk through gay to the left of the picture led me through to where Woolworths once was, on Chapel Bar.
Every closed-down shop, and there are dozens of them, had several rough sleepers, asking for cash. I felt uncomfortable about this, as I know of some people who make a living doing this, then go home in the morning – one of them is sadly in my family! He makes a lot of dosh, even more now; he’d moved to London to do it and lives in a hotel or youth hostel when not scrounging. His baby face helps him, I think.

Maid Marion Way. More flats were being started for 500 being built! Next to one with 240 already built.
Down to the Slab Square, a once restful, peaceful, pleasant pacifistic, phlegmatic place, of contentment..
It’s not so busy nowadays, with all the murders, muggings, gang fights, Escooters, yobboes and closed shops.
Although the mortgage needed to use coffee shops still do a roaring trade. The unemployed use them a lot.
King Street, or is it Queen Street?
With the regulation, food delivery cyclist is driving up the one-way (Down) street. Traffic on Upper Parliament Street is busy.
I got up on Upper Parliament Street, feeling a tad drained. Made my way to the nearly bankrupt Victoria Centre, and the Boots Chemist shop appears when I got inside to be getting ready for closing when I got in. Big gaps on the shelves. Getting the prescription made up,. (It will save a carer having to fetch it, and as I was in town anyway.)

As I left the store, I thought I’d nip in the Poundland Store to see if they had some of the Worcester sauce chip thingies in stock. They did, but only two packets left, so I got them.
Over the road and to the number 40 bus stop.
To my delight, Carer Chris tapped my shoulder. He was on his way into work, and helped me on and off the bus, so that was nice and welcome. He also kept steadying me each time I was thrown around as the bus braked, went over speed humps or around corners. I told him about how well the visit to the NHS centre had gone. Tired, early, in pain, yes!
But feeling much better all around. For getting out again, and meeting someone I could talk to on the home trip. Nice!

Chris shot off to get to work. I poddled in and up to the flat.
I think the first thing I did was empty the catheter bag again, put the kettle on, and took one of the 4-a-day Antiseptic tablets. No, that’s not right, erm… antibiotic tablet.

Penicillin, it said on the box. Then decided that sleep would be a grand idea, so after the Carer calls, I’ll try to nod off until the 22:00hrs Carer calls to medicate and put the night pouch on for me… then enjoy some proper sleep. That’s the plan, anyway!

Then I took a close look at the inflammation on the ankle and toes, I was pleased, not with the pain, but the swelling going down already? Can’t be that quick? After one capsule? I may not be seeing so well, but I can check this photo in the morning.
Mind you, the good Doctor did tell me they would have no effect on the pain for 48 hours. So, no complaints, I have, after all, been doing some walking this week.
I bet it’ll be easier in the morning, or, tomorrow night.

Now, I’d better get a meal made up.

What a feast! Of course, with the hobbling most of the day, I suppose I’m going to be hungrier than normal?
Flavour Rating: 8.8/10.

I nodded of while trying to watch ‘Heartbeat’ yet again!
Woken by Carer Chris calling, around 22:00hrs.
He seemed as pleased as I was at the meeting up earlier.
He soon got the eye drops in. Then the medicationing. Followed by the eye drops were done.
As Chris was filling in the paperwork, he moved the curtain, and I saw the sunset. I mentioned that I would have liked to have photographed the lovely-looking sun on its way down, but was just too tired to. He grabbed the camera and took these shots from the balcony for me.
A nice wide shot.
Then a glorious close-up for me.
He then attached the night bag to ,
and said his farewells. Bless him!.

I later found this sign of Nottingham traffic chaos, up the road from the flat, on Mapperley Plains Woodborough Road.
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Just thought you might like to know it’s not only where you live.
Hahaha!

Feet up – kip!

Whorra Day!

Have You Ever Had Surgery – Yep, a few times

SURGERIES

Not Necessarily In Oder.
But I did my bestest

CRUSHED THUMB

GC Young BrookAt about 6 years of age, I had my right thumb crushed. They did a good job on it. Even now, I’m 78, and I can still see the scars where they unmangled it and stitched it back on!
Oddly, the thumbnail has grown a good three times the thickness of the other one on the left hand.

The surgery went well enough. Worth mentioning, though, was the at the Barium-Meal before the operation. They did not issue me with any crystals… I got home and spent five hours stuck on the toilet, with a concrete-like coloured torpedo Half-in-half-out… before eventually the ‘clunk’ and splash, as it evacuated, along with a pint or so of blood. I rang 999, back I poddled to the QMC A&E and had to have 24 stitches in my posterior. I remember that well enough! Haha! Thus, poor bled, and still do bleed daily; for the next up to know, for forty years! Hey-Ho!

Nottingham City Hospital, Morris Ward. After a lot of visiting and kerfuffles, changes of dates, and so many tests… the day came for me. I had the angiogram, and they said tomorrow we go in your chest and fit you up with a new mechanical ticker. Great!
Afterwards,  I was taken into the ICU. Attached to various tubes, drips and drains, it took a couple of confusing, muddled days until the drugs wore off. Then back to the Morris Ward, for they said, three or four (it turned out to be two) days so as to keep an eye on how things were. The next day, they explained that they needed the bed, and they had phoned Brother-in-Law Pete; he is going to pick me up at 04:00hrs the next day to take me home. I bet is going to be in a good mood when he arrives! Haha! I later discovered that the breast bone had not congealed properly, and the Reflux Valve may sometimes stick open or closed. If it bothers you or causes problems, let your Doctor know about it, who can then refer you back to the Nottingham City Cardiac team. Thank you, I said.

Not an operation as such, just a long test & I was given the result of the aforementioned examination. Little knowing it would take five visits to the Mary Potter Clinic to get to the root of the problem. So, off to the first test, A nerve biopsy; the removal of a small piece of nerve for examination. Through a small incision, a sample of a nerve is removed and examined.
A few weeks later, off for the Nerve-ultrasounding test. Which allows physicians to directly view nerve damage. Different diseases affect nerves in characteristic ways, some of which can be seen with ultrasound. This was getting my attention!
As I recall, I had monitor pads on all my peripheral areas, one on each toe, and three under each foot. The hands and fingers could hardly be seen; there were so many all over them.
The two ladies, nice and plump attractive medics, were just my cup of tea… Sorry, I went a bit off track there.
Half an hour later, I was summoned back into the test room, to get the results of all the examinations. This was the initial explanation I received: “Your nerve ends, called; nobody can do anything to relieve the situation; we cannot yet repair nerve ends. So you must prepare yourself as best you can for when the time comes that you lose all control of your extremities movements, Mr Chambers. They handed me a leaflet about coping and the dangers that can make things worse. “Degenerative nerve deaths affect many of your body’s activities, such as balance, movement, talking, breathing, and heart function. (Dead right!) Many of these diseases are genetic. Sometimes the cause is a medical condition such as alcoholism, a tumour, or a stroke. Other causes may include toxins, chemicals, and viruses. Any questions?
For a second or two, I was speechless. But still appreciated their straight, no namby-pamby nonsense, explanation. I think I thanked them for giving it to me straight.


No direct operation or surgery as such, but a side effect brought about some surgery to remove poison from my quickly acquired ankle ulcers. Now, are yer wondering? I’ll explain…
The hospital gave me Clopidogrel on arrival at the ward. Not knowing until much later, that I had an allergy to it, that somehow had poisoned my blood? As soon as I started to come around a little, days later, they sent me to a theatre to have the blood cleansed. All tubes, lit panels, noisy machines and many surgeons, possibly some students, were amongst them, and the IV sent me almost immediately into oblivion.
Back to the ward, where I was told (this always happens to me), we need the bed urgently, so we are sending you to a Nottingham City Council home for four weeks. You’ll be picked up in about ten minutes. Then it got farcical…
Two ambulance gals came in, started throwing my bits into a bag, and before I knew it, I was pulling up at The Oaks Residential Care Home. What an experience that was. I thought at least I know I’ll end up somewhere like this in a few years, so I’ll see how things go – which was not well for the six weeks I stayed. I hardly had any clothes with me, but as a Carer told me, “You are not allowed out anyway!” By Sister arranged to bring me some clothes from the flat, bless her. When I gave a Carer my first bag of laundry, all it had was a towel, two t-shirts and a pair of trews. It came back without the trews and towel… but ~I did get a bonus of a lady’s bra and knickers! Every time something disappeared, never to be seen again! Mind you, since I could no longer do the laundry at the flat, it’s been happening for the past year or so, here). One male tenant ran at a female with a knife, I was asked to make a statement for the police – but in the end, it was masked over and not needed. For three different days, I did not get fed a meal. In one day, I got two!
I lost count of the times I asked someone to get a newspaper for me from the shop just outside the car park of the place. I never got one. On a few days, the same man and women would be sat near each other in the dining area, and swear, cursing and threatening each other violently. By the time the catering staff were shooing us all away so they could clear up and get home before Coronation Street (or whatever) started; these two argumentative snapping at each other couples were sat in the communal lounge laughing and joking?
I then (and now) fear my coming transference to a home.

After my lifelong dream of owning a shop, had left me broke, in debt, and out of work, with the Customs & Excise chasing me for an imaginary debt; I managed to get a job as an industrial cleaner, at Carters Pop factory in Kegworth. I had a hell of a drive to and from work and a heavy, arduous list of duties. Emptying the bins of bottles and other rubbish on the three production lines. If any of the tunnels, labellers or conveyors needed cleaning, I got the job, because I was the only one who could climb into them, I was them a thin little thing.
The place, although newish, was not connected to the sewers, so we had a constant flow of slurry tankers that had to be connected to the storage silos, to remove the mammoth amount of pop we were throwing away every day. Guess who fell for that job every single time one of the five-a-day tankers rolled in?
We had a massive baler, for the recycling; each bale weighed, on average, one and a half tons!

Another joy of the job. As was the compactor, and emptying the twenty-two industrial bins into it, climbing in to free strapped items… But the money was good!
Anyway, I was lifting one of the domestic size bins to tip into the compactor, when I got the hernia! This would be five years after starting there, my first time off. I went off to the Queens Medical Centre, which kept me in and did the operation the next morning. After the operation, I woke up in Mens Surgical, Ward 19, on floor C. The surgeon came to see me with his entourage of students and had a message and a half to tell me! Truly stunning! The most gob-stopping news was he said they went in with a camera and laser to tackle the tear… through poor Little Inchie, the smallest willie in the UK! How he got things through still amazes me. Then, once in and looking around, he saw the cancer growth, as he said: “It could not have been a more opportune timing; we had all the tools inside you, that could deal with the growth straight away, Mr Chambers!” I think that was my last bit of luck in life! I thanked him in earnest!
He then told me of a Royal visitor who was coming in today.

Later in the day, a young student nurse, on her own, came to take the drainage tube out of Little Inchie. She was nervous, and her hands were trembling. I tried to put her at ease, a pleasant smile in encouragement… then…
All hell let loose in the ward!
After a gut-wrenching scream was let out by a woman, she shouted out. “Look, it’s Lady Di!” Everyone able to do so, rushed to the window to have a look. I found out later that they were letting her in through a fire door with armed guards around, and straight up the ward above mine. Charles had brought his own chefs with him as well, and had several nurses and a Sister with him all the time; the ward was cleared of all other patients, of course, while he had his shoulder looked at after an accident fox hunting… Hehehe!
The young nurse obviously wanted to rush to the window with all the others, and Indicated with the movement of my head, ‘Go on then…’ I regret doing that!

Cause as she shot off, she caught the drainage tube, which shot out of Little Inchie and sprayed blood up high and all over the bed, and me as it fell back down on!
The Sister was livid with me! She thought that I’d been toying with the tube, and she gave me a phlegm-spitting mouthful!
I said nowt, so the nervous trainee nurse didn’t cop for it. The two nurses that came in a rush to sort out the bedclothes and replace them, almost knocked me out of the bed twice, elbowed me in the face, and knocked my glasses off of the cabinet, doing it. It seems my name was mud from then on!
I dare not tell them the pain I was in!

(Nothing serious, but it sounds good, dunnit? Hehe!)
After my being made redundant along with so many others from Carters before the new owners arrived, finding work was so difficult. I did agency work for a year or so, but they would pay us short, and it’d be a devil of a job getting what they owed you.
I took a job as a Static Security Guard.
The first event
happened at a precision metalwork plant in Draycott. I was doing an external spot patrol, around 01:30hrs. No workers anywhere that night. So I was a smidgeon put out when I thought I saw a body on the floor on Avenue Three, near the laboratory Zinc door. No lighting on that avenue, but I’d got my maglight torch out, and I bravely approached whatever it was… Dang, dang, dang… Dang!
It soon became obvious from the outline that it was a man, possibly trying to hide in the corner. A gulp from within, and I radioed in to inform control and then the police of the situation, keeping the man in sight. I kept in the shadows and moved closer. The man would not have seen me if the police had not approached with their sirens going! This after I suggested a silent approach to their operator when I called them! Humph!
It was then that I felt the bullet hit my knee, which proved he was a bad shot, cause as I always did in the dark, I held the torch as far away from my body as I could. If anyone is armed, they would aim at the torchlight. Then I had to rush to the gate to admit the officers and tell them the scenario. When we got back to Avenue Three, the man seemed like he was in the same area, more or less, that he’d fired from?  
I got to him before the officers, and became obvious by the smell and carrier bag on the floor, that he had been glue sniffing! He was arrested as the ambulance arrived. I knew it wasn’t a high calibre weapon, cause phutted more than banged. The .22 bullet had not even gone all the way into my knee, and I pulled it out myself. Anyway, the old chap was not charged in the end. I was okay with that, cause he had to go on the course to help him kick the habit. Hope it worked for him.

‘C’s’ Haulage on Rose Street the next time a year or so later.
A two-guard assignment on nights, cause they had suffered so many break-ins. Barry and me. Baz as he was known to us. Well, ‘Boozed-Up Baz’, but not in his earshot. A big lad. Har-har!
We’d both had our RTs. As I started the patrol, leaving  Baz in the gatehouse, he radioed, “Golf Charlie, receiving?”
“Golf Charlie, clear, Bravo Echo, send”. He informed me that the hangar two alarm was activating, and he’d called the police, our control and the client. “He’d locked the gates; call me if anything is found untoward!” I got the door code from my notebook and approached with severe caution. The alarm was silent and rang only at the client’s home and site gatehouse.
It was obvious that someone had been inside, from another entry point. I called Baz. “India Oscar Sierra”. A group of youngsters; five or six of them, broke cover and made a dash to the window they’d got in through. As the last one was climbing out, I heard a noise behind me and felt something on my right arm, another intruder I’d not seen, I thought he’s thrown one of the bolts laying about at me, and the chase around the lorries and shelving commenced. He was too quick for me.
Meanwhile, the police and client had arrived (thankfully), and the search commenced in an orderly fashion, Baz still at the gate to bar any exit. None of the youths was seen again, but we did see where they had stacked some large oil or petrol cans up to climb over the fencing. I think the police caught one of them later when the police dog handler arrived.
I was feeling a little smug at how we’d handled that, and I made a brew of tea for Baz and me. Then some blood he did see… it was coming from me! That was when we realised the bolt thrown at me was a gunshot. It had gone right through the uniform, my arm and out again! No pain until I saw it! The excitement of the pursuit, I suppose.
I’ve still got the scar, and have told varying stories of my bravery and heroism over the years. Hehe!
 In fact, I only needed four stitches, and was let go home, back at work the next shift.
Sorry folks, there was no heroism at all!

I waited two years after the optician told me that I had cataracts and Saccades in my right eye, and cataracts (less severe), and in the left one.
Then got a series of tests done over the next year to see if I can go on the waiting list. The last one was a Refraction Test, and I’d got on the list at last! A further year on, and they notified me on a Friday, that the cataract operation was to be done on the following Thursday, but
I had to take a Carer with me. That hurt the wallet more than the operation did me!
I had to sign a declaration that knew there was a 30% less chance of success but wish to continue. Which I did, naturally.
It failed. Hard to believe, I know!
Going in for two appointments next week. Not aware of which eye, yet. But they did tell the Doctor and sent me a copy. The eye underneath the new lens has a crack in it. So they have to laser it off again, put one stitch in the eye, let it heal, and then remove it, and then put another lens on. Could take a while, methinks.
Unless they are going to sort out the Glaucoma or Cataracts in the left eye? Confusing, innit?

No doubt I’ve missed one or so off.
The memory isn’t so good, you know…
The older the event the better the chance of recalling it.

Does my metal ticker run on Nicad?
Why am I a proletariat, not a chad?
Why are my ailments myriad?
Why my body stops me from going skyclad?
Why have I got a swollen gonad?
Yet failure I’m good at, begad!
I could
script a jeremiad…
If I could afford a pen and pad!

TTFN

What are your daily habits? – My Daily Habits are…

Stir back into imitation life. Remove the night catheter bag from the day one.

Check on the state of the bloated legs. They tend to change daily; one day, the left is gigantic, and the next, it can often be the left one that hogs all the stored fluid.

Work out what time and day it is. (This information is usually gone off into the ether within minutes.

To the wet room for the medicationalisationing: Check the fungal lesion, and check for bleeding – Put olive oil in the earholes – eye drops in the cataracted right eye, eyedrops in the same eye, then some in left eye. Next, check that needs any ointment to be applied. Then check on the ever-changing Warfarin dosages.

Remove the ankle ulcer pad, and clean up any seepages; if so, put a new pad on.

Then to tackle the painful task of using the .

Then the high-risk, due to the s habit of bringing on an involuntary . Which has had me over on many occasions. Shaving the next job. Which I’m afraid that often causes the odd nick or two.

Decoking the hearing aids and checking the batteries have to be done. It’s easier when I remember to put the olive oil in beforehand… which is not very often.

Check with , to make sure that in the event of my remembering, I’ve got another hospital or clinic appointment; and have booked a lift there and back.

Consult the medical log to make sure I’m got them right. I should do this first, but always seem to forget all about it until after.  This fault is helped along by

Go around not forgetting either or checking the boll-weevil traps, in case any need emptying and replacing. I’ve got an interesting intriguing infestation.

By now, it’s generally time for my late breakfast. Occasionally, I have the one mug of Glengettie tea allowed me per day, by the kind doctors at the , and some biscuits with them. Not with the doctors, the mug of tea.

The carer makes their third call of the day… which I greatly appreciate, although the dwindling bank account and manager do not agree with me.

Notwithstanding any trips, falls or tumbles, that’s me up until around noon, daily.

By then I’m on the wain and am unsure what happens then.

Loosely, this is true, but, I’m beginning to resign myself to it now. Hehehe!

Anyone wishing to adopt a 77-year-old mind-wandering chap, I’m here as long as you are a female! Hahaha!

Owt for laugh, even the truth!

TTFNski!

INCHIE: Thursday 29th June 2023 – Liberty-Global Virgin Media Dimouts Galore!

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There’s a lot that life has been launching at me lately.
Medically, financially, and socially, guilt, & self-hatred, which is undoubtedly one of the worst, along with the unwarranted
depression and hatred of my ailments. But the Master-Pisser-Offerer, without question, is:
My recently acquired inability to absorb facts, figures, numbers, dates, and names and my chronically-bad memory are worsened by oligarchs & the company they bought and destroyed; for some obviously underhand ulterior motive, ‘s constant, every day several times going offline, is the killer! I already struggle to see what I’m doing and writing with, , and , naturally &
Don’t help me either. I’ve got to get this out of my system, even if s, Mr Fries, the $26 million salaried boss, sues me. I’ve not got enough money to live on, so it will mean prison for me… which could mean me getting the medical attention I need quicker? No ridiculously increased heating and lighting bills, cost of food price rises, rent going up, insurance going up… He might be doing me a favour by suing me for telling what I believe to be the truth.  
I really love doing this rubbish of a blog. But it’s getting harder and harder. Losing work on it diurnally, when Liberty-Global repeatedly, fail to maintain even an imitation of the good service.
I’ve only just started writing this Thursday’s blog at 15:00hrs on Friday. And as for getting Fridays done… well…
(I’ve been out to see the Bank Manager! I know!) Carer Kara went with me and took control, bless her cotton socks. A treasure she is, I’d be lost without her help. (She’s still not keen on adopting me as a grandfather, though… I don’t blame her! Hehehe!)
I’ll tell you about it in the next blog. I hope.
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Just look at this above… One High Norm, and three Hyper One Lows. Considering my life is a mess at the moment, I’m well pleased with these returns!

The attached night pouch was darker than of late. But only just inside the ‘Drink More Fluid’ area of the NHS scorecard by a little.

The regulation need of the arose, so off to the wet room, using two sticks this time. I’m a smidge worried in case the left leg collapses again. But it didn’t… had I just taken , or mayhap alone, I can’t help but feel the leg would have gone on me again. Hehehe!

My heart warmed when I got inside the wet room, and noticed I’d scrubbed of the “Do Not Flush” I’d written on W.C. the water tank. Tickled pink at knowing the tank would refill without me having to lug all the water from the kitchen to get it refilled. Thanks to Deana for ringing the maintenance for me about it.
The right leg where I dropped the soda bottle on my ankle and toe, was still tender, but not as bad as I thought it might be.
(It got a lot worse with doing all the walking on Friday, to get to the bank, and sort it out tomorrow!)The red marks under both arms had returned, but I had some of the ointment left that I used up. The usual procedure of was performed, without any further .

Another Blue-Hue to the morning’s view!

Tea & bikkies time, then got the computer going…
Please do not let Mr Fries, from know about this, cause I know he’ll be worried sick about the company he spent s $23 billion to buy, not working, and will feel so depressed and ashamed. Huh!
.
Money-Mad Twerp! (Jealousy, methinks? Hahaha!)
Yes, it’s only my jealousy, you know! Haha!
I lost couldn’t of the time it went down. Certainly the most by far from in any one day. They outshone their own usual incapabilities today. 

I knuckled down to the regular pattern for hours and hours then.

❶ Starting with creating some artwork or blog input…
Going down...
❸ Washing pots, eye drops in, Medicationalisations, second eye drops in, going to get another bottle of spring water, taking photos of the sky from the kitchen window, in any order…
coming back on…
❺ Trying to remember where I was and what I’d done – to enable me to redo the world lost because it couldn’t be saved due to going down. Repeat, Repeat, Repeat, Repeat! Repeat, Repeat!

Here are the sky photographs from the day

 

I was so frustrated, more than s Fries will ever be. But of course, nothing must come between the oligarch’s desperate addiction to profit, even if only on paper.

Carer Chris arrived for the next to last call of the day. I was sat in the £300, second-hand, musty, Haemorrhoid Harold Testing, cringingly beige, crumb-covered, not-working, rickety recliner, where I’d fallen asleep. Through mental fatigue, frustration, and fighting off my hatred for the uninterested . Until rang out, and Chris entered.
He was kind enough to tend to me without my getting up from the £300, second-hand, c1968, charity shop-bought, eyesore-horrendously grungy coloured, Harold Haemorrhoid-testing, easily-fallout-able from, unfit-for-use, not working, recliner.
He did the eye drops first, then the medications, and then the second drops. Kind of him; I think he understood how done-in I was.

THE DREAM!

I reckon I nodding-off again within seconds of the lad leaving.
Into a marvellous dream that I did not want to leave.

It made me want to cry on my sleeve…
Nothing happened to make me sad or grieve…
Suzanne my first love, came into view…
I shan’t say what we got up to!

The door chimes chimed out. It was Carer Chris on the last call of the day. Again, the lad let me stay in the recliner while medicating and eye-dropping me.

Getting back to sleep was not so easy this time. The concerns about the visit to the bank in the morning, and getting things ready, harrassed my tormented mind.
The bliss of sleep was just about to return. The eyelids were drooping, the mind going blank. Then I suddenly realised I’d not had a meal! So I got up and made one, a feast really!

Followed by some wonderful vegan ice cream!

Evening all… Have a good day!

INCHIE: Wednesday 28th June 2023


I love this one; just look at the dates. Hehe! 

I burst into life with a jolt, inane muttering coming from my mouth; I must have been in the middle of a dream? I detached the night bag from .
Decent-coloured urine this morning.
The need to use the arose, and so did I from the c1966. charity shop bought, second-hand, wincingly grotty, beige coloured, not working, crumb-covered from the nocturnal nibblings, itch-making, uncomfortable, virus breeding, easy-to-fall-out-of, recliner, caught my balance, grabbed , and off to the wet room. The evacuation session was completely different this time. in complete charge. Messy!

A stand-up job. Bleeding aplenty from various departments during the washing-up, of my magnificent, muscular, firm, women-attracting body. Where from? I’ll tell yers: Teeth and gums, nose, chin, neck, head and of course the regulars, , and poor old . Oh, naturally from the inserted tube.
The took me half as long again as the flipping wash & brush-up did.
Ten minutes on the computer, and…
And, these oligarchs, heroic internet blockers who claim this: “Liberty Global is a world leader in converged broadband, video and mobile communications and an active investor in cutting-edge infrastructure, content and technology ventures” – Financially they may be, but the service is crap!

Within five hours it had been down nine times! (And more followed!) By the end of the day, the smoke & mirrors money fanatics had failed me no less than 22 times!  I really must say, My hatred for them grows!

I tried for ages to get a hold of neighbour Josie, to give her some coffees and a pink G&T. I sensed she was in, but it took me six tries… which was something to do each time that $26 million salaried boss Herr Fries led and owned companies internet failed, again and again!

Domestic Denise called. Shocked at the state of my leg. I think she mentioned it to Carer Kara, who called in quickly to check on my leg wound. Creamed it for me. I’m worried about going in the taxi tomorrow to the Bank meeting, it is painful, and my wearing trousers are bound to hurt more. Poor thing, Hehe!

Laundry returned.

Something else to do while the Liberty-Global internet is down.
I made a brew and had two cookies… oh, three!

While a carer was here, ILC (Independent Living Coordinator) Generaloberstess, Ice skating champion, florist and Warden Julie came in. I’m not certain what took place but think it was about ordering a lift with for 21 July for the EENT Hospital. Kara spoke but, I didn’t catch it all; bad timing with my old ear wax crackling again.

Back on the computer…

Ad an early meal, just a small one.
Sarnies, tomatoes and beetroot. Nice!

Not sure why or when I took this one.
From the computer desk through the balcony.

Carer Chris did the last two calls. Asked him not to put the night bag on, I’ll do it, cause going into the kitchen to make a meal with tube and bag to carry along with a walking stick, is too risky in my state. Mind you, there is always the chance of , , or maybe even a kicking off when I bend, so there is no winning either way. Hehe!

Well, fancy that, I’ve not had two meals in a day for a year or so. I good sign, mayhap; or not?

Then, washed the pots and…
took a shot of the end car park as it was beginning to darken a little. We can’t have had much rain lately; the mudslide from Woodthorpe Grange Park was noticeable by its absence!

Waking up to the flashing light from the TV screen, which did the cataract no good.
I went to check the kitchen and wet room for anything left on or off that shouldn’t be.
The amazing blue hue of the night.

Good Night!

INCHIE: Monday 26th June 2023

Other than on Clinic & hospital days of course

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Another testing day. The new ailment, the left side of the rib cage, comes and goes, but, always pains me when I stand up, sit down, twist the torso, bend down or stretch out, up or down. Cough, sneeze or any sharp intake of breaths. It’s pot-luck at all other times. However, contrariwise, the good news, nay… the great news, is that the left leg hasn’t failed me once today (22:00hrs). So, the first day in five, that I have been tumble-less! Furthermore, for the first time in many months of daily agony from , she has calmed down tremendously!
Only one from the right leg…  Talking about legs,
The left one has shrunk a lot this morning. Neither , or the lesions have squirted anything!
And another thing, no cuts shaving! Of course, the fact that I didn’t have a shave might have influenced that. Hehe!
REPEATEDLY
It was down that often; it was 17:00hrs before I made a start on this blog!.
So, a quicky today, folks.

07:25hrs: I was still asleep when Carer Richard arrived, and was unsure of all that happened. Other than he took off the night pouch, issued the drops, then the medications, followed by the second drops: I hope I didn’t miss summat important what he said.

As I gingerly rose from the for once comforting rest of the £300, second-hand, musty, Haemorrhoid Harold Testing, cringingly beige, crumb-covered, not-working, rickety recline, caught my balance and responded to call to the , on my way out en route to the wet room…
I managed to catch my foot on , dropped , and gave myself a nasty as per, right on the ingrowing toenail.
I smiled and carried on to the .

Well, that was a no-go, literally. Rock Solid! No movement at all! As usual on these occasions, I had a go at the crossword book, put on the reading glasses and managed easily enough to read the clues and get some answers. However, I realised I’d been in there for far too long, and nothing but the odd bit of wind was still evacuated. I gave up! I’ve still not been and passed!

Back to the main room.
A smidgeon of guilt arose when I saw the contents of the waste bin near the recliner.
Noticed that the legs had deflated a good bit; nice!

Also, the marks on the chest were clearing up.
It’s worrying all this good luck, you know!

I got the computer on, but not the Oligarchs’ internet.

I did work on the Ode, then titivated some graphics I was working on yesterday for an hour or so. Mr Fries must have made a mistake; the internet came back on! Some poor bugger will get the blame for this!

It stayed on for ten minutes or so.

I rushed to finish the Sunday blog, but it was no good.
Fancy That!

The carer arrived, and usual tending-toos were carried out. We Had a laugh for a minute or two. A bit of mutual leg-pulling.

No internet again, so I took photos of the sky.
Surely someone can see what I did in these clouds.
Highly Pareidoliaiable.

The Smoke & Mirror mob, (someone who draws attention away from often embarrassing or unpleasant figures or issues, usually for self-gain), is, if nothing, consistent.  Three minutes after the connection returned…

I then got back on the word listings for the odes.
A mistake this was… after two hours, the Carer Chris called, and after he’d done me, I went back on the work listing using Excel and CorelDraw… for another hour!

Got the internet back on. An hour later…

Good Heavens, it came back on minutes later!

And stayed dedicated to finishing the Sunday blog. And stayed on while did it!
Heads will probably roll for this!.
I made a start on this blog…

Well-miffed! I decided to have a nibble and made a pot of cheesy instant potatoes.
I live a life of luxury!

Did some work on CorelDraw.
Internet back on, I took the opportunity to change the Asda order I’d done. Well, I realised that they were going to charge me £4.50 for delivery of it. It seems they have changed the cheapest delivery pass, the one I have, and used to cover Mon, Tue, Wed & Thurs, and removed the Monday option. So I changed the date to Tuesday. Shame, cause I’ve still not got any bread. Hehehe!

Evening Carer Chris arrived in a bit of a hurry, bless him. He got me seen to, but left the night pouch to me, as I asked him to, so I’m not cooking at 02:00hrs with the added danger of the night bag carrying and the long tube tripping over.

I noticed the wonderful evening sky had gone brown and took this snap of it. Bootiful, I thought!

Got some potatoes in the oven cooking, I was going to have some faux sausages, but not without bread. I’ll have a look and see what I’ve got in the cupboard and fridge.

I fell asleep and burnt them!


TTFN

INCHIE: Saturday 24th June 2023

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Got the blog done up to here, then after a few hours got the Friday blog caught up with and posted that was when the most annoyingly regular routines began. They are still with me now, eight hours later.

I’ll be brief, miss a lot off, cause I’ve got to get sat down for sleep early, cause I can sense now, it’s going to be a battle with Sweet Morpheus and the pains. Concentration was shot. Sorry.

and

Feeling Poor;y Period for many hours.

Carers called as per usual.

Only around four times!

Early meal – Very Nice.

More leg dancing from .
had to rest again.

Left leg fatter, Peripheral Pete’s right leg felt properly weary from the jerking & dancing. If that’s the right word.

Suddenly went all overcast, the sun battling through.
Had to take this shot above.

But when closing the window after shooting it, a leg dance started, and I banged my foot on the radiator and started the darned split papules oozed liquid.
.
Right ankle.

.
Late burst of sunshine, flooding into the kitchen.

Gorgeous!

TTFN

INCHIE: Friday 23rd June 2023 – WC Water Tank Mended!!!

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Today held such promise as well. On waking, my EQ informed me that it was going to be a mixed day – Whatever that means? No question, deep anticipation, tergiversation, and an irritating doubtfulness of today’s upcoming events, were rumbling about in my head this morning.
Despite a positive belief that the WC water tank and tap will get repaired. It’s just the other unknown new bafflements, problems and concerns that always arise. Every single day, although not so bad at the weekends as a rule. But this is a Friday – famously known for having to make appointments and get lifts, with no help available until Monday. Anyway…

At 06:20hrs, I rose from the depths of my c1964, £300, second-hand, musty, Haemorrhoid Harold Testing, cringingly beige, crumb-covered, not-working, renowned for its encouraging somnipathy, rickety recliner. To see the
The night pouch had a little more content, but according to Carer Chris, rated on the NHS card as being on level 6. Not good! However, having three tumbles in three days and giving the bladder and other areas a bit of bashing is not surprising.
I hastily removed the night pouch, put it to one side, then raised my gruesomely overweight body from the chair and made for the wet room. To do a stand-up wash…  but first, there came an urgent, very urgent feeling to use the . And what a session that was! had given in the battle for supremacy, and was in full control. I swear the water in the bowl bubbled for two minutes after receiving the three massive torpedoes in short order! This may need more than two buckets of water fetching to refill the non-working water tank… and it did need extra. The first flush and one torpedo stubbornly refused to dive. I used two buckets at hand for refilling the bowl, before it disappeared, but streaks remained on the porcelain I had to clean up. Then fetched more water for the next visit. Then realised the plumber was coming today, so may not need them with any luck for the next sitting. Hehe!
Next, I started the . Tackling the shaving first was the most challenging, to avoid all the cuts from yesterday, and avoiding any more. Well, that went okay! Just one tiny nick. My spirits rose!  Washed my feet in a bowl while having a body wash. That was not so good. I caught the tube on , which made me jump, and pulled it again! had lowered my spirits a smidge! Getting the protective pants on afterwards, and lowered them some more!
However, I did get the pants on without catching the valve tab or tearing the pants at all.
Medications now, other than the.
Germoloid applications to the rear end. I think that the falls had caused the excessive bleeding from . No need for the corticosteroid cream today. No bleeding from the Inchies fungal lesion. Which was amazing, considering I’d just pulled at the tubing stuck in him!
Spirits crept back up an iota! Getting dressed only involved putting on the thin dressing gown for the moment.

Getting the slippers on in the other room, was nothing short of farcical. The now thin right leg went in pretty easily. But the bloated left leg and foot were a different story. It must have taken me eight or nine to get the foot in without hurting it. Funny really! The white toe ends seemed more prominent?

Checked around to see if I’d left nothing on or running, and off to the kitchenette, to get the kettle on for a brew of Glengettie. Took this snap of the morning view.

Carer Chris arrived, as I just noticed I’d left the urine night bag on the trolley, and was emptying it. It seemed to be a two-tone colour now? Hehehe!

Chris got the first eye drops in and had a look over my body as he applied the Phorpain Gel to my area. He did a good job with it too.
Dished out the medications and did the second eyedrops.
Then told me of the 6 bruises around my body, presumably from the falls. He then took a photo of all of them.

Starting with the head…
The arm, I think, might have been during Deana’s visit fall.
Not sure where this one was from…
The back, I think
This one w

as Pareidoliaiable.
I see a mouth and chin?
Must be the back near the top of the PPs?
Chris moved down to the left leg…
Then right leg
I do try to avoid these tumbles, but as the
The doctor said years ago, when I was diagnosed
with There is
nothing we can do for dying Neurotransmitters.

I believe the base cause of the falls is PN.
The Water Geysers and ulcers, something else.
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We had a laugh about things, and off he shot on his rounds.
I go the computer on to update the Thursday bog. As you see here, I didn’t get far!
I was working on CorelDraw to start the Health check graphic, and the intercom flashed. It was the Nottingham City Homes maintenance plumber, I let him in and a minute later, he was coming in and came to me at the computer. I took the chance to remind him of the tap not running as well as the tank not filling. He already knew, so Deana must have told them when she phoned for me, bless her.
He got on with the job for half an hour or so and then came to me.
It was a bad photo, but I took it after he had to empty everything from the airing cupboard to access the tanks. Loved the way he used the raised toilet seat from the wet room to get up high enough. Hehe!
Nice chap. He showed me a broken part when the inside had come free. He’s called his base, and someone was coming out with a new spare part. He was going down to wait in his van for their arrival. I insisted he takes a can of pop of his choice to drink while he was waiting.

Virgin Media had come back on again. So I pressed on regardless with the Thursday blog updating.
Many mistakes, some I’m bound to have missed in my haste as the afternoon approached already.

The young man returned with the part and got on with fitting it for me.
I took a peep at the pile of things from the airing cupboard, clothes, soaps, covers, towels etc.
And found some lavender soap that I bought for Sister Jane years and years ago, I thought I’d lost it. Hehehe!
The man came to say, I’d got water from the tap and into the tank. But I must be aware that it will never be strong either. And why, but I can’t remember that bit.
He showed me in the wet room what he meant. If it stays like that, I’ll be happy enough. Thanked him, and off he went. I rang Deana to tell and thank her, but it was on the answerphone, I think.

Strewth, the days have gone quickly again! Back to blogging. Well, that was the plan. It came back on a few minutes later. At last, I got it finished? – But No!

Carer Sam arrived with a new young girl to do the meds and eyes for me. I had them laughing with my tales of woe. Haha! Finger in the corner of the closed eye for three minutes. Back on the computer blogging. For five minutes.

I used the time to check on the hot water supply – it was cold! Did I mention how lucky a person I am yet?

Carer Kara rushed in. Bless her cotton socks! She rang the TSB bank, and eventually, after a right performance again, logging in, Kara got to talk to a human, someone from the West Bridgford branch, the only one left in Nottingham.
Not only did she make an appointment for me, but will come with me as the bank had asked her to (I hope). She ordered a taxi for the day, too. She had to rush off but made sure I’d got the appointment correct in the Google calendar first. Now I do feel like a lucky person! To have help like this is Grrreat!.

Finally, I got the blog done and posted to WordPress. Phew, what a struggle that all was!
A lot of photos to go on today (As you can see), but I got them uploaded and doctored quick enough. Then realised I’d missed putting this photograph from earlier on.
Can’t have been any rain today, judging by the reduced size of the mudslide?
Oddly, the legs have stayed the same today, left lofty, right reduced in size. Ah, I wonder if this has anything to do with the left overfluided leg, suddenly losing all sensations of touch?
Carer Chris made his last call of the day. He’s got four days of now, I think… or did he say three… or two… He got the eye drops in and then issued the medications. Rubbed some Phorpain Gel into (Nice!) Then, it was time for the drops in. I asked him not to put the night bag on yet, and I’ve not made a meal. Assuring him I’ll be able to remember to put it on. (Cough, cough!)

Going to get something to eat now. Hopefully, I’ll be back in the morning, to catch up.

It’s getting late, and the legs weaker, the eyes worse, and the weariness creeping in.

I caught the last moments of the sunset. Took a wide shot and then a close-up one. Not my best of efforts, but being late, I had been got at by a vicious.

A really tasty meal tonight. As I said yesterday, the taste buds are returning online. I’m glad to say. I’ve had some terrible-tasting meals of late.
Flavour-Rating: 9.2/10.
Put the pots in soak. It is definitely safer regarding the left leg crumpling risk, using two walking sticks… but to carry anything at the same time is impossible – and you can almost guarantee that the going dead – neurotransmission failure will come just when I am carrying something.

ignored my over-tiredness and plea for sleep for ages. Then I realised I’d not put the night bag on yet! So, I did!

Back down in the £300, second-hand, c1968, charity shop-bought, eyesorely-horrendously, grungy coloured, Harold Haemorrhoid-testing, easily-falloutable from, unfit-for-use, not working, recliner

Nodded straight off, and into a dream about the Skegness beach. I’d lost someone or thing, & was panicking, frantically searching the sands, and asking everyone if they had seen what or whoever it was, but the short dream terminated abruptly, when I woke with a jump, thinking I heard an ice cream van chimes similar to my door chime.
I felt the need to check, even if it had sounded, by the time I fumbled out of the recliner, got the sticks and my balance, the call would have ended. Still, I hobbled on to check for any missed calls; there were none. I wonder if in the dream… ice cream…?

I turned to go back, and the night view through the window made me get the Kodak to take a shot or two of the amazingly blue nightshade.
A close-up shot revealed that the sun was just seeable.
So the so-called dream must have been a short one. That is, if I had one at all? Looking closely at the second picture, I wondered what the squiggly lines are on the left? Likely some additions.

Auf Wiedersehen, Mon amis & до побачення