Tuesday, March 31, 2020

FACETIME WITH MY FAMILY

I got to Facetime with my niece and nephew today.  It was great!  They told me all about their day.  They showed me some work they have been working on.  At one point I was just looking at their fireplace and I could hear voices but I could not see any bodies.  My dog Lucky saw their dog Matisse but dogs don't see screens so it was more fun for us than for the dogs. 

The first thing I was asked was how sad I was that Happi died?  I know it is the type of things kids ask and I know they mean well but it took the air out of me.  I miss her every day.  I sometimes go downstairs to get her and forget she isn't here anymore.  I asked them if they were sad about Happi and my niece said she was sad she never got to meet Happi in person.  I am sad about that too.  My nephew was here when my sister-in-law was pregnant with him.  I remember Happi jumping on their bed.  She was a little devil and always wanted to jump on beds.  She loved to run in circles (always to the right or she would tip over!) on a bed like she was on fire!  She would mess up all the sheets and blankets. 

We talked about all sorts of things.  My nephew told me about a project he was working on.  It was way above my pay grade and he is just a little guy.  I wouldn't be surprised if he was one of the guys that forecasts baseball players performance.  Like in that movie Moneyball where he uses statistical data to analyze and place value on the players he picks for the team.  

I had a great time spending time with them over video.  It was like being there.   This week I have video chatted with my sister-in-law in NJ and these guys.  It is fun catching up and seeing what folks are up to.

Women's Month person (last day): Ruth Bader Ginsberg (RBG) is an American lawyer and jurist who is an Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Ginsburg was appointed by President Bill Clinton and took the oath of office on August 10, 1993. She is the second female justice (after Sandra Day O'Connor) of four to be confirmed to the court (along with Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, who are still serving).  Ginsburg became more forceful with her dissents, which were noted by legal observers and in popular culture. She is generally viewed as belonging to the liberal wing of the court. Ginsburg has received attention in American popular culture for her fiery liberal dissents and refusal to step down; she has been dubbed "The Notorious R.B.G." in reference to the late rapper known as "The Notorious B.I.G.". A Lego mini-figurine of Ginsburg is shown within a brief segment of The Lego Movie 2.

Until tomorrow...

Monday, March 30, 2020

NOT A WHOLE LOT HAS CHANGED IN MY DAY

I can't believe March is almost over.  It seemed to go so fast.  Granted I had a lot of things happen but still it seemed to zoom by.

I know a lot of people have had their lives horribly interrupted and things are so different now that they are staying inside the majority of their time.  I hear people talking about going stir crazy.

This shelter-in-place is not much different than my normal life.  I work from home most days so I am home a lot.  I spend a lot of my time speaking to people on the phone, through my computer and on email or text.  Outside of the shelter-in-place, occasionally I go to a clients office for a few hours for a meeting or to do work but I am not part of their team.

Of course I miss running errands and taking Lucky for a walk.  I also need a haircut badly!  My backyard was supposed to be cleared out right before Happi passed on but my gardener's dog got sick and she had to cancel and we never got to reschedule before Covid-19 hit.  Now it looks like a jungle and Lucky will only venture into parts that are not overgrown.  Lucky needs her shots but that will have to wait until the crisis is over.  No vets office is giving shots now; emergency visits only.  But these things will get done in time. 

I am also monitoring my food.  I have a bag of potato chips I am waiting for the right moment to open.  I only have so much bread and once that is gone, well, I may be able to get a neighbor to buy some more or I may not, so I have to ration the baked goods.   I have wraps for when the bread is gone but they are not as good or filling.  Just like I have English muffin-type things for breakfast but once they are gone it will be oatmeal until this ends.  I was going to buy some peanut butter but what cost $9 two weeks ago now cost $23.  I will go without peanut butter. 

Overall, not a lot has changed on the day to day for me.  I get up and work (sometimes in my PJs) and then the day is over.  I am so happy when I get to talk or Facetime with a friend or family member.   I want to hear how their days are in this changing time.

Just a funny picture of Lucy.  She wanted to be the Queen of the Dog Walker's car.  Don't worry the car was stopped.


Women's Month person: Helen Keller was an American author, political activist, and lecturer. She was the first deaf-blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. The story of Keller and her teacher, Anne Sullivan, was made famous by Keller's autobiography, The Story of My Life, and its adaptations for film and stage, The Miracle Worker.

Until tomorrow...

Sunday, March 29, 2020

VACUUMING PART II

I finished the vacuuming of the entire house.  It was such a project.  The house had not been vacuumed for months since Happi didn't like the sound of the vacuum because it hurt her ears.  She would scream when the vacuum ran so I switched to sweeping the floors towards the end of her life.  Shockingly the floors were not as bad as I thought they would be.  I guess sweeping is pretty good at getting up dirt and dog hair.


I have been watching this PBS drama titled the Drake Detective .  I am really enjoying it.

Women's Month person: Rosie the Riveter was the star of a campaign aimed at recruiting female workers for defense industries during World War II, and she became perhaps the most iconic image of working women. American women entered the workforce in unprecedented numbers during the war, as widespread male enlistment left gaping holes in the industrial labor force.

Until tomorrow...

Saturday, March 28, 2020

VACUUMING DAY 1

I finally felt well enough to start doing some cleaning around the house.  The house needed to be vacuumed so badly.  I started upstairs and vacuumed the dining room and living room.  I did the hallway and the kitchen.  Then I was exhausted and called it a day.

I worked on my puzzle a little bit and then cleaned up the kitchen. I have to take things slow.

I think between Happi's last months and then getting pneumonia I exhausted myself.  In Happi's last months she only slept for a few hours before she got up and then a few more hours and she got up.  It went like that all night every night.  Then the decision to put her to sleep was extremely stressful and caused many sleepless nights.  Then I got pneumonia and that was stressful.  Now I feel like I am just exhausted.  I keep falling asleep at 11 am and at 3:30pm.  I guess I need more rest.

Women's Month person: Eleanor Roosevelt was the niece of one U.S. president, Theodore Roosevelt, and married a man who would become another, Franklin D. Roosevelt. Redefining the role of the first lady, she advocated for human and women's rights, held press conferences and penned her own column. After leaving the White House in 1945, Eleanor became chair of the U.N.'s Human Rights Commission. The groundbreaking first lady died in 1962 in New York City.

Until tomorrow...

Friday, March 27, 2020

BEST SANDWICH EVER

My neighbor brought me some tomatoes and now I can have tomatoes on my sandwich.  I decided to make "chickun" salad sandwich.  It was so delicious.  I didn't have any lettuce but I kept a piece of lettuce from my Thai food and put it on my sandwich.



Women's Month person: Billie Holiday was an American jazz singer with a career spanning nearly thirty years. Nicknamed "Lady Day" by her friend and music partner Lester Young, Holiday had a seminal influence on jazz music and pop singing. Her vocal style, strongly inspired by jazz instrumentalists, pioneered a new way of manipulating phrasing and tempo. She was known for her vocal delivery and improvisational skills.


Until tomorrow...

Thursday, March 26, 2020

NEW PUZZLE

I am starting a new puzzle today.  I am excited to do this puzzle.  It has a lot more pieces but they are all regular puzzle pieces and not the weird shaped pieces like the Christmas puzzle.


I got this awesome card from the Veterinarian's office today.  It was a condolence card and inside was a surprise.  I guess when they took Happi away to put her IV in they also made an imprint of her paw print.  It was inside of the card.  It took my breath away when I opened the card.  My baby's paw print.


Women's Month person:  Julia Child was an American cooking teacher, author, and television personality. She is recognized for bringing French cuisine to the American public with her debut cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking, and her subsequent television programs, the most notable of which was The French Chef, which premiered in 1963.


 Until tomorrow...

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

CHRISTMAS PUZZLE

I worked today.  I worked a lot.  But I was on hold for a long time and during that time I worked on my puzzle.  I have been working on this puzzle since December.  There were a few things that sidetracked me: the holidays, trip to Florida, doing my taxes, my sweet dog Happi getting sick and passing, and me getting sick.  Today was the day I finally finished the puzzle.

This is where it was earlier today:

This is it finished:
Now I can start another one since we were just told the shelter-in-place was going to be prolonged until May.  Yippee!

Women's Month person: Jane Goodall is an English primatologist and anthropologist. Considered to be the world's foremost expert on chimpanzees, Goodall is best known for her 60-year study of social and family interactions of wild chimpanzees since she first went to Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania in 1960. She is the founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and the Roots & Shoots programme, and she has worked extensively on conservation and animal welfare issues. She has served on the board of the Nonhuman Rights Project since its founding in 1996. In April 2002, she was named a UN Messenger of Peace. Dr. Goodall is also honorary member of the World Future Council.



Until tomorrow...

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

PUBLIC BROADCASTING SERVICE

I am starting to feel better.  I worked a bit today.  My client had an emergency and I tried to handle it for them.

I also started watching Little Women on PBS.  I found out that I could pay a fee and watch anything on PBS at any time.  It is great.  I can never catch the things I want to watch on PBS.  It isn't like HBO in real time but if a series is on PBS, it will be on the PBS app.  It may not have local programming.  I just always miss things like the three nights of Little Women.  Now I can watch it at my own time.  Especially now when I have lots of time.

Tonight is order food from a restaurant night.  I ordered Thai food to be delivered.  I wanted to support my local restaurants.  I want them to be around when this pandemic is over.

Women's Month person: Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell received a medical degree in 1849, she was the first female to join the Medical Register of the General Medical Council. She practiced as a physician and encouraged other women to pursue careers in medicine until her death in 1910.

Until tomorrow...

Monday, March 23, 2020

STILL TIRED

I am still tired.  My chest still hurts.  My cough seems to be going away.  I started working a bit. 

I made a batch of soup to last the week.  I needed to use the kale that came in my veggie box before it went bad.  It tasted good.

Women's Month person: Susan B. Anthony was an American women's rights activist who played a key role in the women's suffrage movement. Her involvement led to the 19th amendment, which gives women the right to vote.

Until tomorrow...

Sunday, March 22, 2020

NO CORONAVIRUS

Today I got some unexpected news.

I woke up with my plan of having a Frozen Marathon.  Can you have a marathon with two movies?  Anyway, I was going to watch Frozen and Frozen II.  I will admit I watched Frozen when it first came out and hated it.  I was forced to watch Frozen again about a year ago with my foster son and I fell asleep.  I had a very low opinion of the movie but I promised someone I would watch the two movies today so I muscled through.

I actually enjoyed Frozen today.  Maybe enough time had gone by since the movie and music was shoved down our throats.

Frozen II on the other hand, I found a bit confusing.  Maybe it was because I fell asleep in the middle and woke up and had to rewind.  Maybe I need to watch it another time.  I don't know.  5th power.  Huh?!

In the middle of the movies I got the call.  I was surprised since I was told I wouldn't get the call for 3-7 days.  I am negative for Coronavirus.  Now this is going to sound weird but I am scared a bit.  If I had it and it was a mild case, I would have had it and been done with it.  Now I am weaker and my immune system is weaker.  I feel like I have to be even more careful.  The disease is spreading more and I am even more susceptible. I will be not be going outside for now.  Not to the post box, not to take out the trash, not to walk the dog.

Women's Month person: Dolly Parton is an American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, record producer, actress, author, businesswoman, and humanitarian, known primarily for her work in country music.
 Until tomorrow...
 

Saturday, March 21, 2020

TIRED

I am SO tired today.  I stayed in bed all day.  I could not even watch a whole movie without staying awake.

 Women's Month person: Althea Gibson as an American tennis player and professional golfer, and one of the first Black athletes to cross the color line of international tennis. In 1956, she became the first African American to win a Grand Slam title (the French Championships). The following year she won both Wimbledon and the US Nationals (precursor of the US Open), then won both again in 1958, and was voted Female Athlete of the Year by the Associated Press in both years.


Until tomorrow...

Friday, March 20, 2020

RUSHED TO THE ER

This morning I started getting sharp pains in my chest.  My cousin convinced me I should call my doctor.  A few hours later my doctor called me back and said I should immediately go the ER.  I had to get myself ready; pack my bag in case I have to stay.  Get the dogs and bird ready.  Text my emergency people for the pets.  Put on my gloves and mask and call a taxi.

I get to the hospital and I am greeted by a people covered head-to-toe with plastic.  They asked me if I had any of the symptoms on a list.  I had two.  I was told to go to the "hot zone".  It was a cordoned off area in the lobby.  I was the only person there.  I was there about 45 minutes before the next person came to ask me questions about my symptoms.  Then a triage nurse came and took my vitals right there in the lobby.  I was pretty quickly moved to the EKG since I was having chest pains and I atrial tachycardia.  My heart was fine but the tech was a technician student and was oversaw by a doctor.  I was moved to a room.  The halls were empty and it was super creepy how quiet and empty it all was.

They ran an x-ray, blood work and the covid test.  I was told to wait two hours before anyone would come back and give me results.  The covid test was the nasal test.  They stick two really thin q-tip type swabs up your nasal passages (way up) and it burns.  Although ripping the tape off my IV hurt way more.   One of the blood tests had a problem so I had to wait an extra 45 minutes for them to run it over again.  I came prepared with my phone and my Ipad.

After about 4 hours, I was told that everything came out great (whatever that means) and I would be called in 3-7 days with the results of the covid19 test.  I was to finish the antibiotics and quarantine myself until I hear the results.  If I walk across the floor and can't breath or faint, come back to the ER.

I got in a taxi and went home.  I stripped off my clothes and took a shower immediately.

Women's Month person: Diana, Princess of Wales was the first wife of Charles, Prince of Wales, and the mother of Prince William and Prince Harry. Diana's activism and glamour made her an international icon and earned her an enduring popularity as well as an unprecedented public scrutiny, exacerbated by her tumultuous private life.

Until tomorrow...

Thursday, March 19, 2020

DAY 2 SICK

Not only an sheltering-in-place, I am quarantined in my home.  My world keeps getting smaller.  I messaged my doctor this morning to say I feel the same as yesterday.  He wrote back "let's see how you feel tomorrow."

My day consisted of mostly work and TV.  I dealt with Amazon to get my refund for the two packages that never arrived.  I got my refund so I am happy.  Then I wrote some thank you notes and pondered how to mail them.  I stopped the mail man and asked him.  He didn't know because no one quarantined had asked him.  Finally we agreed that I would wash my hands and put on rubber gloves.  Then I would take the mail and put it in a plastic bag and seal it up.  Then I tossed it down the stairs.  He took it with gloves and used a wipe to clean the plastic bag.  In case anyone is interested the CDC states the virus only stays on cardboard for 24 hours.

My friend M stopped by with the rest of my prescriptions and we chatted for a while.  He is great about staying even though he is supposed to be at home working.I had video calls with my brother and father.  Friends texted through the day.

My young neighbor volunteered (once I cornered him) to take out my trash cans.  He used some rubber gloves to move my bins.  I was so happy since I cleared out my fridge and I was worried the stuff was going to smell in a few weeks.

All in all it was a busy day.  A few days ago I put these sheets on my bed and they are cheering me up.  I have had them for years but never used them.  Now was the perfect time:


  Women's Month person: Estee Lauder was the founder of a global cosmetics company.  Known for her marketing acumen, she built a beauty empire – including brands such as Bobbi Brown and Clinique – which eventually made her one of the richest self-made women in the world.

Until tomorrow...

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

YUP, I GOT IT

Well, I knew this was a possibility.  Maybe more of a probability.  I am sick.  I guess the stress of the last few weeks has caught up with me.  Maybe the germs of another person landed on me?  Who knows?   Either way I am sick.

Late last night I waited for the phone call from my doctor's office but no one called.  I actually fell asleep with the phone in my hand.  First thing this morning I called my doctor's office and left a message and he called me back around lunch time.  I explained to him that my chest feels like there is a vise around it or an elephant sitting on it.  I am coughing.  My nose is running.  He said it sounds like a secondary bacterial infection such as pnenomia or it is Covid19.  He did not want me coming anywhere near his office at the hospital.  He said there are no Covid tests and I didn't fit the category for testing.  I have not traveled overseas and I don't have a fever.  The prednisone I take has probably stopped any fever.  I don't get fevers.

The doctor called in some antibiotics and other medicine and said I need to call/email him every day to check in.  I need to stay quarantined.

My friend M very nicely offered to pick up my meds and then we spoke in my doorway for 30 minutes (with a 6 foot distance).

Now I relax and wait and see what happens.  There is nothing I can do about it but relax.

Woman's Month person: Clara Barton was the founder of the Red Cross in 1881. During the American Civil War (1861-65) Clara distributed medical supplies, worked near the front lines and treated both Union and Confederate men. Her work earned her the nickname ‘Angel of the Battlefield’.

 Until tomorrow...

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

SECOND DAY SHELTER-IN-PLACE

Second day of shelter-in-place.  I thought it would be an easy day of work.  No.  Lucky was up all night again.  I called the vet and they said bring her in and leave her here all day.  I could drop her off curbside and did not have to go in. 

They called later and decided to give her an ultrasound on her tummy.  They wanted to make sure she didn't have something twisted up.  She did not just a lot of inflammation in her intestines.  She probably has IBS and this making her miserable.  They changed her meds and I brought her home.

All day my chest has been bothering me.  It feels like a vise is around my chest.  I felt it for days but today is the worst.  I had to take my bra off it hurt so bad. I am also coughing.  I was texting with my cousin and she convinced me to call the doctor's after hours number.  I am waiting for them to call back.  I don't think it is that bad but she is convinced something is wrong.  We shall see what they say.

Women's Month person: Wilma Rudolph was the first black woman to make a major impact on international track and field. She recovered from childhood polio, pneumonia and scarlet fever to win three gold medals at the 1960 Olympic Games, the first American woman to ever do so. Her post-Olympic career included goodwill ambassadorial work for the American government in Africa, as well as campaigning work for the Civil Rights movement.

 Until tomorrow...

Monday, March 16, 2020

SHELTER-IN-PLACE

Well, my area now has a shelter-in-place for three weeks.  We are not supposed to go outside unless it is for a reason.  The only things that are open and working are:

  • Banks
  • gas stations
  • food stores
  • pharmacies (plus prescription delivery)
  • restaurants to do home deliveries/curbside pick-up
  • post office
We will still have:
  • water
  • sewage
  • garbage pickup
  • mail delivery
  • transit (people sitting at a distance)
  • ability to walk outside, walk dogs
We just can't go to work unless your job is a necessity.  All other businesses are closed down and everyone needs to stay inside.

 I have been doing this for weeks now with a few short trips to the supermarket, post office, bank and pharmacy.  I have plenty to eat and drink and to keep me busy for the next three weeks.

Women’s Month person: Florence Nightingale worked with a team of nurses improving. The unsanitary conditions at a British base hospital, reducing the death count by two-thirds during the Crimean War.  Her writings sparked worldwide health care reform. In 1860 she established St. Thomas’ Hospital and the Nightingale Training School for Nurses. She died August 13, 1910, in London.



Until tomorrow...

Sunday, March 15, 2020

TIDBITS FROM THE LAST FEW DAYS

Here are some interesting tidbits from the last few days:

I was in a little grocery store this morning at 7 am after getting gasoline.  The store had only about 25 people in it.  The food was still in the boxes with the plastic wrap.  The employees were stacking the food on the shelves.  The people were just ripping the plastic off the boxes and taking the food out of the boxes to buy.  It was a bit chaotic.  I joined in to get what I needed.  I got it all but soy milk and bread.  Oh well.

There was a fight at a supermarket in my town.  I didn't witness it but I saw a video.  The lack of supplies was to blame.  I don't know what they were fighting over but I am sure it was toilet paper.

If you haven't seen the hamster showing the COVID19 rules, you have to.  Here is the link.  It is in a John Oliver segment.   Go to minute 11:35 to see the hamster or just watch the whole show.  That hamster is hysterical.

Then of course there is Gloria Gaynor singing I will Survive.

Isn't that great!  That is all I have today. 

Women's Month person: Gloria Gayner was born Gloria Fowles in Newark, New Jersey.  She is an American singer, best known for the disco era hits "I Will Survive", "Never Can Say Goodbye","Let Me Know (I Have a Right)", and "I Am What I Am".  In January 2020, she won her second Grammy Award in her career, 40 years after her first (for I Will Survive), for her roots gospel album Testimony.

Until tomorrow...

Saturday, March 14, 2020

POST-HAPPI DAY

Well, Lucky ate food yesterday so the day started out good.  She gobbled down her food and her medicine.  It is the first time she has eaten in days.  I guess she has turned the corner on her gastrointestinal issue.

Today she pooped for the first time and it was normal.  I know that sounds gross but after a week of not normal poop (what I called chocolate pudding type poop) this was a relief.  I am sure it was more of a relief for her more than me.

I am having a hard time today.  I had moments of crying and moments of remembering good times.  I miss Happi and this house is so very quiet.  I spent months taking care of Happi every couple of hours and now I feel like I have a huge void in my day.  I have so much time that I was spending taking care of her or worrying about her. 

I am sequestered so I only took Lucky for a walk in our empty neighborhood.   I did some more clean up in my bedroom.  Happi had spent her last months in my bedroom except to eat.  I could not vacuum in my bedroom because the sound of the vacuum hurt her ears so I am anxious to give my room a good vacuum.  I am washing my bedding and putting some new bedding I have had for many years but never used because it is white and didn't want to use it with two dogs climbing around on it.  Now is the time to use it.

I am making a list of things I have to do to keep busy.  It is too easy to get stuck binge watching TV shows and movies.  Meanwhile my house stays a mess from this last week when I didn't have time to clean things up.

I went to get my prescription (the last one I will go get in person) and I was shocked how the person behind me in line kept infringing on my space.  Forget six feet distance!  I was lucky she gave me one foot.  I kept moving away from her and she kept moving closer.  I was just about to say something when I was called to the counter.  People!  Leave room between you and the person near you.  Social Distancing means don't come up on people.  You should be the length of your arm and their arm at the very least. 

Until tomorrow...

Friday, March 13, 2020

HAPPI PASSED ON



At 6:00 pm tonight Happi departed this world.  Happi was 15-1/2 years old and she lived an amazing life.  The doctor called her a Miracle Dog after all she lived through.  She slipped peacefully into sleep and then she was gone.  I am hoping she is off in doggie heaven playing with the other dogs; running and smiling again.   I will miss my love, my protector, my friend.  She and I have been through so much together.  She loved it when I told her The Story of Happi.  Here is The Story of Happi:

Once upon a time there was a dog named Happi. Happi was born on an island called Palau in the middle of the ocean.  She was a street dog and she didn't live with a family but she was fed on people's porches.  One day she was running in the street when she was hit by a car.  A visiting microbiologist saved her life by operating on her.  Then a few days later Dr Jen arrived from the Human Society RAVS program and she did the surgery the correct way by taking the whole shoulder off.  Dr Jen spay her so she could not have any puppies.  Then Dr. Jen didn't want to leave her in Palau (they still eat dog there) so she put Happi on 3-days of plane rides to get to the USA.  While Dr. Jen was in Palau, my dog Taiko passed away.  I was so very sad and Dr. Jen was sad she could not be there for me.  When she arrived back in the USA, she called to tell me about Happi!  She asked if I would take her for a few hours.  Of course Happi never went back.  She dove in that dog bed and didn't want to get out.

Unfortunately Happi had heartworm.  It took two shots in the heart to kill the heartworm and I was told that she would have a shortened life because of the injections. 

Happi was a happy, smiling dog.  She loved to run in the park.  She greeted all the other dogs and people.  Years later I got Lucky because I thought Happi needed a sister.  At first they didn't get along too well.  Each tried to bully the other but then they settled in.

During a domestic violence incident, Happi was my protector.  She would come and stand by me but was never violent or had to growl.  You just knew she was my protector. 

Two years ago Happi and I were in a car accident.  The man hit my car and Happi was very shaken up.  She was wearing a seat belt and was not hurt but there was no getting her in a car again without her screaming.  I took her to get checked after the accident and thank goodness I did.  She had a tumor.  They rushed to remove it and it was not cancerous.  It was a bleeding tumor that would have eventually killed her.  That man saved her life.  Now you see why the doctor calls her the Miracle Dog.  She has escaped death three times. 

Happi has not had the best experience with cars.  I can see why she didn't want to get in them in the end of her days.  Cars brought her nothing but pain.

In the end Happi was cared for and loved until her dying breath.  I see her now running and playing  in a field with other dogs as she should be.

Thursday, March 12, 2020

PHISHING PHONE CALL

I had the craziest thing happen.  While I was at the vet's with Lucky, I got a phone call from the electric and gas company.  At least that is what the caller ID said.  I was checking out from the vet's office so I really wasn't paying attention too closely.  I answered and there was a recording saying that my electricity and gas would be turned off because my payment didn't arrive.  I immediately hung up, not because I thought anything but because Lucky came out from the backroom at that moment and she is always a ball of energy. 

We walked to the car with me stressing.  Did I pay the bill?  Was my electricity and gas going to be shut off?  They don't turn your electricity and gas off after missing one bill so why would they be calling me? 

I got in the car and googled the electricity and gas phone number and called them.  I first checked my balance and that seemed okay.  Then I checked my contact information and my cellphone number is not even listed.  Then I spoke to a customer service person and sure enough, everything was good.  It was a phishing phone call.  They wanted me to think it was the electricity and gas company and give them my credit card number.  That is something I would never do.

I got home and my electric and gas were on and working fine.  Why is it these types of things always happen when you are at your most stressed out?  It is like the phishers have a sense of when you can't focus on them phishing you. 

Poor Lucky is still not feeling well.  The vet wants me to try some of Happi's medicine on her to see if that gives her some comfort.  I just want it to make her sleep! 

Women's Month person: Katherine Graham, was the first female publisher of a major American newspaper after she took the helm of the Washington Post Company in 1963 after the death of her husband (while being a mother to 4 children).  She the first female CEO of a Fortune 500 company after taking the company public in 1972. In 1971, she oversaw the publication of the Pentagon Papers and coverage of the Watergate scandal that toppled President Nixon.

 Until tomorrow...

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

CRYING DOG

This day was going along fine until around lunch time when Lucky began crying.  She didn't want to eat, play with her toys, lay down, sit on my lap or go outside.  She just wanted to stand near me and cry.  I called the doctor and he had me go the office and get Lucky a shot for nausea.  Since then she has been better.  No crying.  She still is not eating but no crying.  I will take it.

The problem with dog crying is that you have no idea why they are crying.  You want to make it stop because the dog is in pain/anxious/upset but you have no idea why they are crying.  If only they could talk. 

Right now she is sound asleep.  I hope she stays that way all night.

Women's Month person:  Coco Chanel was born Gabrielle Bonheur "Coco" Chanel.  Coco was a French fashion designer and businesswoman. The founder and namesake of the Chanel brand, she was credited in the post-World War I era with liberating women from the constraints of the "corseted silhouette" and popularizing a sporty, casual chic as the feminine standard of style.

 Until tomorrow...

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

A NIGHT IN THE DOGGIE ER

Last night didn't end after I wrote my post.  At 11pm Lucky started crying and running around the house.  She would not stop no matter what I did.  She would not eat cookies or get into bed.  She wanted to go outside and eat these sticky leaves (weeds) that grow outside.  She would not go down the stairs without me going with her.  Then she started vomiting. 

At 2 am she had now vomited 5 times and had been crying for 3 hours.  I was afraid something really bad was happening.  Plus I could not sleep.  I drove her to the ER vet.  They x-rayed her stomach and gave her some anti-nausea meds.  We got home and she climbed in my bed (something she is not regularly allowed to do) and went to sleep.

When we woke up, I called her regular doctor because she once again would not eat and I could not get her to take the meds the doctor had given her yesterday.  The doctor wanted to see her so we went into their office.  They ran blood work and gave her a different medicine.  She had this same thing 4 months ago and that medicine worked really well.  So we are going to try it again.

I brought her home and she took a nap.  She has been low key today but I got the new meds into her and I smelt her passing some gas so that is a step in the right direction. 

Women's Month person: Frida Kahlo was a Mexican painter known for her many portraits, self-portraits, and works inspired by the nature and artifacts of Mexico. She employed a naïve folk art style to explore questions of identity, postcolonialism, gender, class, and race in Mexican society.


Until tomorrow...

Monday, March 9, 2020

TWO DOGS SICK

Happi has an infection on her tummy.  Last week when she fell on the floor when I was not home and got her head caught under a piece of furniture, she scrapped her tummy.  The scrape got infected.  The cut on her foot I kept from getting infected by putting one of my nephew's old baby socks on it and taping it around her leg.  Anyway, I took her to the vet today and got some antibiotic medicine. 

While I was there, I had the vet look at Lucky too.  Lucky has serious gas.  She has had this before and once again she has to take some medicine to break up the gas and them take probiotics.  The poor dog just doesn't pass gas.  Happi does not have that issue! 

That was my afternoon.  My morning was running my last errands.  The Whole Foods was completely wiped out!  The shelves were empty.  It looked like the apocalypse.  I got my few things with my Whole Foods gift card and went to Safeway to get the rest. 

Years ago my transponder for the tolls died.  It just stopped working.  Since in my area you don't need the transponder to have it work, I never followed through to get it fixed.  Last week I finally contacted the company and told them it broke.  Today I got the new transponder.  Now I can use it for other things like parking at the airport.

Women's Month person:  Mother Theresa was a Roman Catholic nun who lived in India for most of her life. In 1950 she founded the Missionaries of Charity which attracted many sisters who took vows of chastity, poverty, obedience and free service to the poorest of the poor. She was praised and criticized on various counts, such as for her views on abortion and contraception, and was criticized for poor conditions in her houses for the dying.

 Until tomorrow...

Sunday, March 8, 2020

LUCKILY I LOVE MY HOME

Well, the notification came out today.  People who are immune-compromised should stay away from public areas where there are 50 or more people and this includes public transportation.  They should stay home as much as possible and work from home if possible.  There you go.  I am staying home after tomorrow.  I have to do one more run to go to the bank and Whole Foods (I will go early when it is empty) and then I begin sheltering in place.  I have a prescription to pick up in a few days and I spoke to the pharmacy about getting an extra 30 days prescription.

Today I ran a few errands I needed to do: library, food store and pharmacy.  I had to return my DVDs and I wanted to find out about the bookclub at the library.  I found out there is a bookclub at the library and I was going to try it out but all activities and events at the library have been cancelled.  Actually almost all activities and events in my area have been cancelled or postponed.  All sports events, and concerts are cancelled.  Some schools, universities are doing online classes.  I wanted to the movie Onward this weekend but decided it was not a good idea.  At the pharmacy people on the wait line were standing feet apart.  This is not the way it normally is.  Usually I am fighting for my personal space.

Luckily, I like my home and I have tons to do here.  Fingers crossed I don't get sick.

Women's Month Person:  Anne Frank was a German-born Dutch-Jewish diarist.  She gained fame posthumously with the publication of The Diary of a Young Girl, in which she documents her life in hiding from 1942 to 1944, during the German occupation of the Netherlands in World War II.


Until tomorrow...

Saturday, March 7, 2020

SHIP MUSEUM

I went on another road trip today.  I was undecided on whether I should go or not with the coronavirus situation.  I was going to an area that has more cases than where I live.  But in the end I decided to go and not go to a busy area.

I picked up my foster kid and we went to a ship museum.  It was really cool.  There were cannons and bells and model ships.  There was a submarine control room you could go into.  Then we went to see a real ship from World War II.  We lucked out that two men who worked on that ship were visiting the ship.  We got to speak to them and their wives.  We walked around the ship and saw the galley and the sleeping quarters.  There were bunks that had 4 layers of beds.  I don't think I could sleep with three people above me on a ship that was moving in a storm.  Just thinking about it gives me shivers.  The galley was so small I could not believe they fed 64 men and 12 officers in that room.  I never did figure out where the men ate their food. I saw the officer dining room but no other dining area.  It was very interesting to visit and hear the stories from the actual military men.

Women's Month person: Sojourner Truth, born Isabella [Belle] Baumfree, was an American abolitionist and women's rights activist. Truth was born into slavery but escaped with her infant daughter to freedom in 1826. After going to court to recover her son in 1828, she became the first black woman to win such a case against a white man.

 Until tomorrow...

Friday, March 6, 2020

RICE SOUP

I made an amazing rice soup today.  It was Swiss Chard and Rice Soup.  It is the most delicious soup I have made in a long time.  Plus it was very easy to make.  Literally I chopped celery and carrots.  I put the ingredients in the pot with rice and then put the kale in at the end.  Soup was made. 

Women's Month personMargaret  Thatcher was Britain's first female Prime Minister from 1979 to 1990.  A Soviet journalist dubbed her "The Iron Lady", a nickname that became associated with her uncompromising politics and leadership style.

 Until tomorrow...

Thursday, March 5, 2020

BACK CLASS

Today was my second back class.  I was ready to do a good job at the class.  I got there and my back was killing me before we started.  I couldn't do everything we were supposed to but I did what I could.  I think I have gone backward.  My back is hurting me again.  I don't know what I did this time but maybe it wasn't a "thing" just living.

I am going to do the steps the teacher taught me and what I know from when I hurt my back 30 years ago.  Slow and steady is the way to heal.

Women's Month person:  Gloria Steinem was a journalist who got a job at the New York Playboy Club in 1963.  She set out to expose the exploitative working conditions and sexual demands placed on women workers in an article, A Bunny’s Tale, in Playboy magazine.  She became one of the most influential figures in feminist history.


Until tomorrow...

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

CORONAVIRUS FLYERING

I was up and in the shower at 5:30 am.  I made a commitment to help the community and I wanted to keep that commitment.  I was afraid to leave Happi but in my sleep (or non-sleep) I came up with an idea of how to pen her in an area of the room so she won't walk around and subsequently fall.  I got up and got the dogs fed and let them out.  Then I put Happi in her bed and put the baby gate a foot and half from the bed.  Therefore she was penned in between the bed, gate, wall and my bed.  I put the water in the "pen" and off I went.  The only thing I forgot to do was put the camera on before the scheduled "on" time so I could not see how she did for the first hour.  But she seemed okay when I got home so that is a win.

I was down in the city handing out informational flyers from the city health department about the coronavirus.  It gives people the low down on how to keep from getting it.  The basics: wash your hands, cover your cough, get a flu shot, and stay home if you are sick.  I handed out flyers for almost two hours.  I found it fun and most people were appreciative.  I was near a small homeless encampment and during a slow time I went over and explained it all to them.  I mostly discussed the first two items: washing your hands and covering your cough.  Most of the folks were interested and asked great questions.  The people going to work asked some questions too and some I could answer but a bunch I could not answer.  Even though I explained that I was a volunteer, I was still asked questions like I was a staff person with the Health Department. I wish I could do it again this week but I have other stuff planned during the times to volunteer.


Women's Month woman: Amy Tan is a writer and her first novel, The Joy Luck Club, won international acclaim. Besides writing, Tan plays in a rock 'n roll band called The Rock Bottom Remainders with several other famous writers, including Stephen King and Scott Turow.

 Until tomorrow...

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

FINALLY I GOT TO VOTE

Today was going along swimmingly, as they say, and I was working on a hard project.  Late in the afternoon I still had not taken my ballot down to drop in the ballot box.  I took both dogs outside and headed down the 10 blocks to vote.  I met some neighbors and stopped to chat for a few minutes.

Then I started walking again and thought I should check to see Happi is okay.  I get these feelings sometimes.  You know like a feeling that something is going to happen.  I get feelings that I should get off the road when I am driving.  I get feelings that someone is going to call and then they call.  Anyway, I got a feeling that I should check my camera for Happi.

I checked the camera and Happi was on the ground in the middle on my bedroom.  She could not get up and it looked like she had been there for a number of minutes.  There was no public transport so I had to hoof it home.  When I got home I saw on the camera, Happi had been on the ground more than 10 minutes.  She went to get a drink and to poop and she fell.  Her front leg is so weak that she could not get up.  She was on the floor trying to get up for many minutes when she pushed her head under a piece of heavy furniture and got her head stuck.  When I walked in her head was stuck and she was screaming.  There was poop and blood on the floor and Happi had been rolling around in it.  It was not a pretty scene.  I first got her head unstuck and then I put her in the shower to rinse her off.  Then I cleaned up the floor and put her in a fresh bed.

I texted a few neighbors to see if anyone was heading down to vote and if they could take my ballot.  Then I rang my young neighbors to see if they were going out and if they could take it.  One of the guys said he was going for a walk later and he would take it.  I am pretty sure that was a lie but he was very sweet to help me out.  They were very concerned about Happi.  So I got to vote after all.

Women's Month person of the day:  Amelia Earhart, the first woman aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean.  Imagine flying a small open air airplane across the Atlantic Ocean.  To me that is so scary.  I think she was so brave!



Until tomorrow...

Monday, March 2, 2020

IT LOOKED LIKE A MASSACRE

First let's get to Women's Month:

Oprah: Oprah Winfrey is my second pick.  Oprah is so cool everyone knows her by her first name.  Oprah started her life in meager beginnings.  She was sexually assaulted as a child.  She rose to fame despite all these things.  Oprah has tried to better society.


Tonight I went out to dinner at my favorite restaurant with my friends.  We sat and talked and laughed.  It was fun.  I had great food.  We were gone for almost 3 hours.  When I left the house, Happi was sound a sleep in her bed.  I gave her her usual drugs and she was out.

When I got home, it looked like a crime scene.  I could not find Happi at first.  I looked in her bed, under the bed, all around my room.  I found her crumbled up by the back door on the floor.  There was blood on the floor by the door, on the way to the door and by her bed.  The baby sock I taped to her foot was nowhere to be scene.  Lucky's bed was moved across the room.  The space heater was moved.  I have no idea what happened in that room.  It really looked like a war zone.

I picked up the pee pads and cleaned up her pee and blood.  The poor baby was shaking and chattering her teeth.  I put her back in her bed and per her to sleep.  She seemed to be scared.  It was dark and she could not find her way.  I need to think about leaving her alone in the dark.

Until tomorrow...

Sunday, March 1, 2020

WOMEN'S MONTH

Yes, March is Women's Month.  A whole month to hear about strong women.  I am going to see if I can come up with 31 strong, smart, independent, and classy women and post their information.  A little female history lesson.

My first pick is: Rosa Parks. The United States Congress has called her "the first lady of civil rights" and "the mother of the freedom movement". She is best know for her role in the Montgomery bus boycott.  She refused to relinquish her seat on a bus in the "colored section" when the "whites only" section was full.  She has always been a role model for me.  


I am supposed to be doing my tax prep but I have found various things to do instead.  I sorted the paperwork for my foster kid, did laundry, organized my bills and worked on my puzzle.  I have to work on my tax prep because my appointment with my tax person is Friday.  

Until tomorrow...