Making Progress. Kinda. I Mean, In Comparison...
It was just over two weeks ago that I was informed that my services were no longer required, desired or wanted at my job. 14 days plus a few hours.
For the first time in those two weeks, I have left Pond Central. Okay, yes, it was to go pick up my mail so I didn't even leave the building, but I was actually outside of my home. At 315am, practically no chance to bump into other people there.
I'm having lunch with Ph.Duck and D.Nurse on Thursday, so I've got to get my outside on, and fast. I need to pick up my packages from Ex-Job... I didn't think it'd be so hard to go back... I want my stuff, but my brain is really rebelling against it. "Go back to a place that flat out told you they didn't want you anymore? Are you mad?"
You don't have to answer that.
I also need to get a haircut. It's about time, the last one was Easter 2018, I'm pretty sure. Everything is ridiculously shaggy, except where it's knotted or matted together on the right side of my head... that's the side I sleep on. Barbers, man your shavers!
4
One foot in front of the other, indeed. Or one flap of the wings at a time, pick your metaphor.
Posted by: GreyDuck at March 21, 2019 09:22 PM (rKFiU)
5
To heck with them. They have treated you badly, and dusting off your sandals is appropriate and freeing. You are no longer a minion in a not so nice place. Good.
But you also need to rescue your stuff from their smallminded yet nefarious hands.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at March 22, 2019 09:58 AM (sF8WE)
6
The other thing is that, since you are now unemployed and since you have health problems, your county and city probably have people whose job is to help you out and give you good advice. Also there are NGOs and charities who want to help you with all your legit problems.
The sleep situation, for example -- I imagine somebody can tell you how to set up your mattress for easier egress, and maybe even help you do it. There are tricks with slanty mattress setup, grab bars, all that good stuff. Even if you/others have to set up your bed in another room, that is okay.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at March 22, 2019 10:15 AM (sF8WE)
7
Also a chance to make progress on the clean-up. Set small goals, easy steps to accomplish, and allow yourself to get caught up in the flow of progress.
Posted by: Mauser at March 23, 2019 07:01 PM (Ix1l6)
Yes, I Know That's The Point, But Still...
Look, I get that this sort of music is supposed to be catchy. I don't know if Momoland is an Idol team like AKB40 or whatever, or if they're just a K-Pop act, and I'm not entirely sure I care. What I do care about is that "catchy" doesn't quite go far enough to define "Boom Boom".
Seriously. Weaponized catchy. The followup, "Bbam", isn't quite as good, but hell, that's like saying Godfather II isn't as good as The Godfather. It's not, but nobody cares because II is still pretty damn good.
I hope for their next track they move into less onomatopoeia for explosions as a concept.
Enjoy all this while you wait for the the Australian F1 writeup, won't you?
1
My favorite version of the BAAM video is with the little girl. Not only is she awesome, it's clear that the big girls adore her as much as the audience does.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at March 17, 2019 10:19 AM (tgyIO)
2
Goodness gracious, what a lovely way to start a Sunday.
I'm deeply amused by the surge in popularity of K-Pop. It's as if Japan said, "That's it, we have perfected pop music" and South Korea went, "Hold my cue sheet."
Posted by: GreyDuck at March 17, 2019 10:49 AM (rKFiU)
The first race of a new year is always interesting. Not just because Australia's circuit is rather radically different from most other on the calendar, but because hey! We've got F1 again! And nobody really knows what's in line for the year. Preseason testing didn't tell us anything we didn't already suspect (Mercedes and Ferrari are fast. Williams is not.), but you can never quite trusttesting results. SO the first qualifying session is where we finally get to see what's what... and here's the provisional grid for the 2019 Australian Grand Prix:
Pos
Driver
Car
Q1
Q2
Q3
1
LewisHamilton
Mercedes
1:22.043
1:21.014
1:20.486
2
ValtteriBottas
Mercedes
1:22.367
1:21.193
1:20.598
3
SebastianVettel
Ferrari
1:22.885
1:21.912
1:21.190
4
DH Verstappen
Red Bull Racing
1:22.876
1:21.678
1:21.320
5
Charles AMX30
Ferrari
1:22.017
1:21.739
1:21.442
6
Lettuce Grosjean
Haas Ferrari
1:22.959
1:21.870
1:21.826
7
DP Magnussen
Haas Ferrari
1:22.519
1:22.221
1:22.099
8
Lando Calrissian
McLaren Renault
1:22.702
1:22.423
1:22.304
9
KimiRäikkönen
Alfa Romeo
1:22.966
1:22.349
1:22.314
10
SergioPerez
Racing Point
1:22.908
1:22.532
1:22.781
11
NicoHulkenberg
Renault
1:22.540
1:22.562
12
Smiley Ricciardo
Renault
1:22.921
1:22.570
13
Mitch Albon
Scuderia Toro Rosso
1:22.757
1:22.636
14
Tony Snazzy
Alfa Romeo
1:22.431
1:22.714
15
DaniilKvyat
Scuderia Toro Rosso
1:22.511
1:22.774
16
Veruca Stroll
Racing Point
1:23.017
17
PierreGasly
Red Bull Racing
1:23.020
18
CarlosSainz
McLaren Renault
1:23.084
19
Nipsy Russell
Williams Mercedes
1:24.360
20
Idiot Kubica
Williams Mercedes
1:26.067
People honestly believed that the field had actually began to catch Mercedes. I mean, just look at those Q1 numbers: the first 15 cars were covered by less than a half-second, and the top 18 by less than one second. Now THAT'd be a season! Instead, everything changed when Merc kicked in their "party mode" and the cars became just that much faster.
Notable performances? No question but that rookie F1 driver Lando Calrissian stole the show, dragging his McLaren into Q3. The kid's like, 12 years old, but he can drive. At the other end of hte spectrum we find... Williams. Oy, what a disaster this is shaping up to be for the legendary house that Frank built. They missed part of pre-season testing because htey couldn't pass the mandatory crash testing, they had to redesign part of the car because the old parts might not have passed scruitineering... all this from a team that has over 800 people working for them, including some of England's best engineers. And even they get it all wrong sometimes.
Race is in a few hours, F1U! sometime thereafter... in some format. See ya then!
Charlie Whiting 1952 - 2019
Just before the start of the 2019 season, the Formula 1 world has suffered a terrible loss. On Thursday, Race Director Charlie Whiting passed away from a pulmonary embolism. He was 66.
Whiting was the go-to guy for any team complaints during a race, but he also oversaw everything on the tech side of the sport. A new track could not be certified as a Grade 1 (suitable for F1) circuit without his final approval. His was the call to stop a race, or to resume racing, during weather incidents. In many ways, he did not just know the rulebook, he wrote it. He was a tireless crusader for car and driver safety, presiding over the addition of both the HANS device and the new HALO system. The combination of him and Sid Watkins did much to keep drivers alive and in one piece.
Despite such power in the sport, all reports say that he was very much just a guy who loved Formula 1. However, he very rarely gave interviews so the fans didn't really know him. Look, this is the sort of person he was: he loved the "Fake Charlie Whiting" twitter account. It was a very gentle satire of the subject, but really made fun of the sport more than anything else. In fact, he liked the account so much, he met the person behind it many times and had many e-mail exchanges with him. I have a hard time seeing, say, Jean Todt, do the same.
As far as what this means for the race weekend, and the upcoming season as a whole, former V8 Supercars deputy race director Michael Masi will be filling in this weekend. I expect to see similar substitutions through the season unless they name a replacement right away. I have no idea who Whiting's second-in-command was, or even if there WAS such a person: in the 20 years he was Race Director for F1, he presided over more than 400 race weekends.
His loss leaves a huge hole in the sport, one that won't be easily filled. We here at F1Update! extend our condolences to his family, friends, and the F1 world in general.
Endings And Beginnings
Last Tuesday was by all appearances just another day. Same assignment for the day, same system difficulties we've had for weeks, same lack of neighbors around my desk... really, that last one wasn't much of a problem. After clocking in and checking my e-mail (chair massages are on thursday!) I got right to work, popping lifesavers as I went. It's a new habit, I guess.
After a good 90 minutes, I came up for air, stretched, swore as my saddlesores screamed, then checked e-mail again. Hm. E-mail from the boss, inviting me to a meeting in 15 minutes in the forward training room. Okay, just click on "accept" and... huh? No accept? It wasn't sent via outlook, but personal from the boss to me. Well, isn't that interesting? I sat and thought for a moment... perhaps it's going to be training on a new work type. We have been struggling for claims of late, after all. I leaned back, mulled it over in my mind, then sat up, pulled my cellphone out of the filing cabinet, followed by my car keys and my glasses. To anybody looking at me, it just appeared I was going on break as I headed to the meeting.
I found seven or eight other people in there, as well as the boss herself. Oh dear... she's not a trainer. She talked for a few minutes about... nothing, really, I guess, and then said the magic words: "we've made the decision to terminate your employment with us."
Declining claim counts and a new processing system were cited as reasons. Then the various managers, supervisors, and assistants walked in carrying boxes and bags... the contents of our desks. I was mildly amused that while almost everybody else was being handed their stuff in shopping bags, my desk needed a large box and a large bag. Well, when you've lived in a place for nearly four years, that kinda happens. They helped me get my stuff to my car... when you're using canes, your ability to carry boxes is kinda truncated... wished me luck, and I was unemployed again.
I drove directly home, looked around, and decided to take a nap... and that was probably the last coherent thought I've had. The past week has been spent doing (or not doing) things as it strikes me. There are things I could/should be doing, but nah. To me, it's clear that for whatever reason, losing this job has hit me harder than losing the Duck U Bookstore job. I haven't left Pond Central since I got home that day, so about a week. I've got packages waiting for me back at the office, things I couldn't have redirected, so plenty of reason to go out, but no.
Guess this is good news for the F1 fans left in my readership... I'll have time to follow the sport again. First race of the season is this weekend after all... Australia. I'm unsure if this is a good trade or not.
Time will tell... about a lot of things, actually.
1
I am so sorry to hear that. Just keep punching, man.
Posted by: Ed Hering at March 12, 2019 02:14 PM (/cXdK)
2
Ouch. Sorry to hear that. Hang in there, you'll find another job. Though given your mobility issues, it may also be worth considering disability. I can certainly understand if you don't want to go that route though.
Posted by: StargazerA5 at March 12, 2019 04:00 PM (5/EyS)
3
*sigh* just cut and paste https://imgur.com/gallery/82WhXSO in the address bar
Posted by: Ed Hering at March 12, 2019 05:25 PM (/cXdK)
4
On the one hand, the job was kind of destroying you. On the other... aw, hellfire.
May whatever sentience watches over us guide you to a better, more invigorating gig.
Posted by: GreyDuck at March 12, 2019 08:45 PM (rKFiU)
5
Honestly, in the long run I think you'll be better off, they were working you to death. It sounded like only one step above debt collecting.
But stop moping and pick up your packages! It's YOUR stuff. And opening boxes is fun. And the last thing you want is then tossed or sent back.
Posted by: Mauser at March 12, 2019 09:41 PM (Ix1l6)
6
May your next job be a million times better, and your days twice as bright.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at March 13, 2019 06:28 AM (2yngH)
7
Well, suck. Sorry to hear this, but I agree with Mauser and GreyDuck. The working hours and conditions stunk.
This explains much about why insurance companies are so difficult to deal with when making claims; I doubt any adjuster feels particularly generous under those circumstances.
8
God bless and keep you. We have not enough otakus...
Posted by: The Old Man at March 13, 2019 11:34 AM (duGaw)
9
Good chance to recharge and get your life back together. That place was running you -way- over the recommended duty cycle, and not paying you the kind of money to make that worth it.
I dunno that I'm spending my spare time productively (there's a bunch of gacha games in there...) but havin' enough fun is important. Once you've got your feet back under ya, let us know what you're having fun with!
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at March 15, 2019 02:14 AM (v29Tn)
A Question Answered... By Anime!
For most of the nearly four years I've worked at my present job, there has been a constant face in the evenings/night shifts... the head of the cleaning crew. They usually show up around 8pm, empty garbage cans, clean bathrooms, vacuum, that sort of thing, y'know? I've made it a point to smile and nod, or wave, or something, to the guy in charge, because hell, he's cleaning up our mess. Without him, I suspect the office would look like Pond Central before the "condemned" sign went up in no time at all.
However, in one of those "I don't know X, and by now I'm afraid to ask" moments, I don't know his name. He told me a few years ago, yes, but he has a very thick Slav/Eastern European/Something accent, and it just got by me. I mean, it's not a big deal, it's not like we talk or anything... a nod, a wave, that's about it. And, to be honest, I'm just about the only person there who does even that much. There's always a few people in a business setting you don't want to piss off: the office manager, the head of the cafeteria, and the head of housekeeping all leap to mind... Anyway. Tonight. It is 8pm, and I've been the only person in the entire building since about 6pm... I had a couple of hours to make up. Anyway, because I was sick and tired of headphones, I had hooked up my mp3 player to a couple of cheap external speakers and was rocking out whilst doing claims. Mr Head Of Housekeeping was a couple rows over, using a push-brush to clean up a spill before he brought out the real vacuum, and something wonderful happened.
He started singing along. "It was a song my grandfather sang." I'm still not entirely sure where he's from originally, but he knows Katushya... and his first name is Alexander. I'm not sure how I didn't get that the first time around. What the hell, let's do another Russian song!
I first heard this maybe four or five years ago (edit: SIX! Saturday Night Tuneage XVIII, would you believe?), I didn't know what I just heard then, I'm still not sure now, but damn it's fun anyway!
1
Random memory: when one of the custodians, who had formerly worked in our Admin building, was training a newbie, I overheard her say*, "You'll like working in this building; people in THIS building actually say hello to you unlike some other buildings on campus."
(*I come in EARLY, which is often when the custodians are working)
It made me kind of sad (but kind of proud of my department).
One should be friendly to the custodial staff. Not just because they're the ones who keep the place from being an utter pit (I am grateful I do not have to clean the bathrooms in my building) but also because they are fellow humans. (And you can benefit from it: our current custodian had done some small favors for me he didn't have to do, perhaps because I have short conversations with him when I see him in the hall).
Posted by: fillyjonk at March 02, 2019 09:21 AM (+MBAo)
2
Girls Und Panzer, the gift that keeps on giving.
Posted by: GreyDuck at March 02, 2019 12:35 PM (rKFiU)
That's A Long Time
I can't believe I haven't written anything in The Pond for 12 days. That never happens. So anyway. The weather has continued to be crappy, but nowhere near as bad at it was... only one ice/freezing rain event, for example. Every day's forecast has been the same: flurries/light snow early, then drying during the day, then more snow/drizzle overnight. Which really doesn't sound too awful, until you realize that it's just making sidewalks and parking lots into minefields, all set to Bouncing Betty your cane...
*ahem* Work continues to be a royal PITA. My numbers continue to drop, while my new boss has had to deal with me during the my worst stretch of health-related problems in years. They've been very patient, even not throwing a fit when I walk through the door at 1130am. Well, if they want to fire me, they've got plenty of documentation for violating attendance rules. So that's "helped" matters immensely... maybe I'm imagining it, but I don't think so.
And then... then there's the Health Department. I'm still having to keep them happy with cleanup procedures around Pond Central. This actually is the biggest stressor in my life right now, to the point where I was awake until nearly 5am this past Sunday/Monday to finish cleaning up/off/whatever the couch area in the living room. It's right behind my computer chair, so it's a convenient place to put stuff. That's been done since Day 1 at Pond Central, it's just that this time it hadn't been cleaned up in a few years. At least they approved the photographs, so that's step three of that process completed.
Between the weather, work, and the WCHD, I've developed a nervous tic, a twitching of my head to the right, as if trying to get hair out of my face... which is certainly where it came from: it's been 9 months since my last haircut.
None of this is fun anymore... at least, not what I call fun. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go get ready for work in the morning. Because what else do I do?
Watching Excellent People Do Their Jobs Excellently
Lighting Designers know that there is a God and He loves us, because there are Pink Floyd concerts to light.
"So, Mr Lighting Designer... my concept for the lights on Run Like Hell is throw as many instruments as you want into the arena and just live it up."
"I think I can work with that."
Seriously, though... whoever thought up the "projection screen with lights around it" idea had better have gotten a raise that day.
1
The ring of spots around the arena doing that wave motion effect, I could watch that for HOURS, never mind the rest of it. Wowza.
Posted by: GreyDuck at February 14, 2019 09:30 PM (rKFiU)
2
I could probably write a whole essay on the change and evolution of the original Pink Floyd vs later performances. The lighting here is amazing indeed, but the music itself... I'll stick with the Pulse or Echoes recordings.
Posted by: David at February 14, 2019 11:40 PM (JMkaQ)
3
Know what gets me? Around about the 1:45 mark on Run Like Hell, the lights around The Circle aren't really illuminating anything. They're just nodding to each other. Left-right-left-right...
I saw that and immediately started looking for other easter eggs in the lighting rig...
Posted by: Wonderduck at February 15, 2019 05:20 AM (PzbzM)
4
"We're gonna need a lot of Vari-Lights."
"How many?"
"All of them."
Posted by: Mauser at February 21, 2019 09:52 PM (Ix1l6)
5
Mauser, I suspect I can narrow down the first time and place that was ever said.
September 26, 1981. The day AFTER Genesis began their "Abacab" world tour in Barcalounger Spain, but the day before the second concert.
While it's not from either of those shows, let's go back to the wonderful time of 1981, and watch a lighting crew in action.
"Some of them are airplane landing lights." Cue me falling over from laughter.
Posted by: Wonderduck at February 21, 2019 10:50 PM (PzbzM)
6
I worked for a guy once whose claim to fame was installing lighting at Studio 54. One of his other installations was in a hotel in Mexico where he installed rectangular car headlamps in the stair risers. Apparently if you run 10 of them in series, it's fine to hook them up to the mains. At least in Mexico....
Posted by: Mauser at February 22, 2019 09:09 PM (Ix1l6)
7
Eighty aircraft landing lights. Oh how things changed in later years, eh? I sort of wonder who in the band really pushed for the Vari-Lite deal, or if that was a Tony Smith thing.
Also: It's weird to see the Genesis trio when they were big-ish but not post-Invisible-Touch big. Total dorks, all three of 'em.
Posted by: GreyDuck at February 23, 2019 04:54 PM (rKFiU)
The Story So Far.
In Minnesota, they have a saying... "there's only three good uses for ice: fishing, hockey, and whiskey." They know better than to go out in a ice storm, which we had a few days ago, or when it's -35 at noon, which we had a few days ago, or the other ice storm, which I came home early to avoid driving during "rush hour."
And then as a personal "Screw You Wonderduck", I got to work the next day... and it began raining. DELUGE-level raining. Well, that's unfortunate, but nothing to worry about. After all, the temps aren't supposed to begin falling until after midnight or so. Lo and behold, the weather nabobs had gotten it wrong again. I left work wearing just the zippered fleece sweatshirt... and it had probably gone down 20 degrees in a couple of hours, AND the wind was gusting around 30 - 40 mph. I make it to my car despite the little frozen waves on the parking lot surface. I unlocked the car, pulled on the door handle, and...
....nothing. Frozen dead shut. I tried another one, frozen shut and the door handle came off in my hand. A few of my coworkers stopped to help, ended up losing two more door handles in the process. I called a taxi. That's why I didn't get home until well after 11pm, it took quite a while for the taxi to arrive... as you can imagine. Took a taxi in the next morning, when it was like 5 degrees above zero, and the driver actually helped me get into the SUV. Because canes and ice don't mix, boys and girls. At work, my car was sitting in the parking lot, absorbing whatever radiant heat was coming from Our Pal The Sun ("There is only one God, He is the Sun God. Ra! Ra! Ra!") and hopefully melting whatever ice was holding the doors shut. Around 3pm, I checked, and it opened right up! Yay.
Finished up my work around 9pm or so, gathered up my stuff, trudged in the "How fscking cold is it" temperature, unlocked me car, and the door was frozen shut. I trudged back to the office, sat down in the break room, got another taxi from that place I used earlier in the day, they showed up around 11pm. And then, once we make it to Pond Central, the driver gets out of the van and helps me out (big ice patch). "Do you want help the rest of the way sir?" "Sure. Or you can get back inside the van where it's warm and watch me... that way, I won't die alone." He laughed, and got me through the Khumbu Icefall. Yeah, these guys are getting my business from now on.
I chat with Ph.Duck, he'll come out and pick me up for a run to get the unlocked car Saturday morning... at which time I wake up and discover that I am feverish, headachy, very very tired, etc. So he got it taken care of for me, while I stayed sick Sunday and Monday... and, really, today too. I didn't get in until 1130am, fever is gone, but now there's signs of a cough building.
It's been one thing after another after another after another for weeks now, and I'm quite stressed. I'm still functioning, which impresses the hell out of me, because I think I should be hiding under my bed. Tomorrow is another day.
1
We had a year like that. Actually, almost two years, from about November 2015 through Harvey (August 2017), which coincided with our younger son's last (knock on wood) really bad stomach bug. One (rough) pregnancy and subsequent birth, five surgeries, three or four hospitalizations (including one that landed our infant in the PCU for nearly a week), I don't remember how many ER visits (a couple dozen at least, ranging from what turned out to be "just" an ear infection to a daycare-induced fractured femur that got CPS called on us), and between the four of us, we were seeing probably twenty specialists. Add in the usual colds and other bugs that little kids and their caretakers get, and we literally did not go one week without someone in the family being sick or injured (Will kicked things off with a severe back injury) for nearly two years. Some weeks, we didn't even go one day without a medical appointment of some kind, planned or unplanned. Plus, our oldest was really struggling (did you know that parents of autistic children report higher stress levels than even parents of children with a terminal diagnosis?), and we had to make significant changes in his intervention and schooling. It was not fun dealing with all that while also fighting depression and getting almost every bug the kids were getting. As soon as I'd picked myself up from one setback, the next came - and sometimes the next didn't wait for the current one to finish. I felt I could never catch my breath. Joshua 1:9 was on my lips continually. ("Have not I commanded thee? Be strong and of a good courage. Be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed, for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest.")
But it did pass. And this too will pass. Eventually. Best wishes, and let us know if there's something we can do for you, even if it's just sending you a show you want to watch through Amazon or whatever.
Posted by: Kathryn at February 13, 2019 06:19 AM (rWZ8Y)
2
Merciful heavens, this winter's had it out for you. Hoping the worst is well behind you now!
Posted by: GreyDuck at February 13, 2019 08:43 AM (rKFiU)
3
Oh. It's not your job that's cruel and unusual, it's your life. Yeah. As the rednecks in my family would say, dayum.
Posted by: Ubu at February 13, 2019 10:04 AM (SlLGE)
4
Y'know, in retrospect, perhaps that blood transfusion from Brickmuppet was a bad idea...
-j
Posted by: J Greely at February 13, 2019 01:52 PM (tgyIO)
5
I had a case of the frozen doorlocks myself last week. Unfortunately none of my fixes would be applicable in your situation.
Equally bad though was being damn near out of gas and having the gas cap door frozen shut while at the gas station.
Posted by: Mauser at February 13, 2019 07:11 PM (Ix1l6)
6
Hope things improve soon, health, weather, work, and everything else-wise. That doesn't sound fun.
Two thirds of my cow-orkers are heading off from Sydney summer to New York winter to attend a conference next week. The weather there isn't anything like in the Midwest, but I'm still glad I elected to stay behind and look after things. It basically never freezes here in Sydney and I like it that way.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at February 14, 2019 10:31 PM (2yngH)
Alive. Nominally Functional.
Details will follow if I can get them written in my free time. Because there's quite nothing like getting home from work around 11pm for a few days straight.
Of Work And Weather And Wonderduck Too
Even for the way 2019 has been going thus far, the past week deserves special notice. To start with, it began to snow Sunday afternoon. And it didn't stop until mid-morning on Monday. The weather nabobs suggested we got five or more inches... and I'd agree, if you go with the "or more" part.
Amusingly, Pond Central's parking lot was in horrible condition... there was some evidence that a plowtruck had come through, but may not have had its blade down... but the Duckmobile was almost totally clear of snow. No question about going to work, probably could have made it... or maybe not. Weather nabobs were later saying that Duckford's squadron of snow removal equipment had been badly surprised by the intensity of the snowfall and even major roads had yet to be attended to. Soon enough, I came to the decision to not risk it and just call in. Apparently, many people did the same and the office was kinda empty.
Tuesday was chilly, with the forecast calling for record low temps overnight through Thursday. We'll see. Got in the Duckmobile, started it up, got my stuff in place (two canes make walking easier, but they're clumsy as hell to put away), and the RPMs slowly died to zero. Hm. To be fair, it had been cold-soaking for three days... or maybe it needed oil. Either way, it started on the second try and kept running. Sounded a little rough, but when it's cold it always does. By the time I made it to work, everything seemed fine. Crossed fingers. The day at work was... it left something to be desired. The claims weren't great, but worst of all was my chair. It was causing me quite a bit of pain... pain that had nothing to do with my leg injury.
See, once it became obvious that I couldn't sleep in my bed, I took up sleepytime residence in a once-comfy wing chair in the living room. For just a few days short of a month, my days would be spent sitting at work, then coming home and sitting in front of my computer, then sleeping in a chair, then repeat. I don't know that I've got saddlesores on the back of my legs right where they meet my duckbutt, but there's something back there that'll do until the real thing comes along. Indeed, that's part of the reason I haven't been blogging much... it's hard to sit at my desk without those hurtin' bad. The good news is now that I've returned to sleeping lying down, they're starting to not hurt as much. Anyway....
...leaving work on Tuesday night was something of a shock. Yes, I know it's going to be cold soon, but I didn't expect there to have been so fast a change in temps. When I got to work, it was rather comfortable. Leaving work? Cold, approaching zero in a hurry. In a surprise manuever however, The Powers That Be at work acknowledged that it was going to be stupidcold the next couple of days, and gave us permission to work from home. Well! Cool. It'll make the morning commute faster, that's for sure.
Wednesday morning my internet connection was dead. On the plus side, it wasn't just me but a large portion of southeast Duckford, as part of the fiber optic backbone had just up and died, probably from hypothermia. While it would come back, it wouldn't be until 8pm or so. So now, instead of working from home, I had to take PTO for the second time that week... and, as it turned out, I didn't have enough to cover both days. I'm literally not getting paid for one of them. Wednesday was cold, with a high of -13F. Thursday was worse. The low for Thursday was -37F, the coldest Duckford had ever been, period. Go outside? Me? Man, screw that noise. I had an internet hookup, I could do work!
Friday morning, it turned out that, indeed, it was still assfugly cold (-9F at 9am). I hobbled my way to the car, got in, cranked it up, and... coughsputtersputter. Tried again... putting it in gear helped not at all. Right. Oil it was, then. I started her up one more time, hit the gas in reverse, and popped out of my snow-covered spot. At which point, she died. Okay, at least I can access the front of the car now. I then proceeded to put a quart of oil (all I had) into the car... with bare hands... when it was nine degrees below zero. By the time I had everything buttoned back up, I couldn't feel my fingers... I later found out that the wind chill was -20 at the time. Started her up one more time, and... presto! Quieter running, no stalling, problem "solved", at least for the time being. And it's supposed to be warmer on Monday, so I can drop some more oil in without my hands turning black.
By the way... unexpected problem has cropped up with my canes: they're metal. Even just driving to work gets them nearly too cold to touch. Which, considering their job and everything, is unfortunate.
1
I think it's fair to say that it sounds like an epically bad week. On the other hand, it sounds like it was hugely better than the last month or so. I think I can speak for all of the loyal pond scum when I hope you have some actual good weeks coming.
Posted by: David at February 02, 2019 11:04 PM (JMkaQ)
Perhaps The Easiest Question To Answer Ever
Over at The Atomic Fungus, a small amount of griping can be seen regarding the rock band Queen. Fungus Prime is wondering just when this group of... moderately okay reputation became such a thing that they now are considered legendary. The song that causes such angst in the Fungal Vale is, of course, Bohemian Rhapsody, which lends its name to a well-regarded movie about Queen and Freddy Mercury. "Why have they suddenly became such icons?" is the refrain. Here's the thing: it wasn't sudden, but the exact starting point of this popularity can be traced to a very specific date and time:
July 13, 1985, 641pm London time.
It was Queen's performance at the Live Aid concert that turned them from a band of "that's nice" to the hottest thing on the planet. Some 33 years ago, give or take, I had pulled a comfy chair up in front of the TV, hooked a audio recorder up the the headphone jack, and diligently set about recording as much audio from the concerts as I could. I don't know what happened to those cassettes. I don't even remember if I caught Queen's set. But I know it now, and if any one thing can be said to make a band popular, this would be the poster child.
A tight band full of talented musicians playing nigh-on perfectly, led by the consummate showman who has 72000 people in Wembley Stadium and millions more watching across the world eating out of the palm of his hand. After that performance, oft called the greatest single live performance of all time, the question isn't how they became what they are, it's how come they didn't become bigger?
I don't know how much fandom I had for Queen before the show, but I appreciated them a lot more afterwards, and to this day Radio GaGa is on my short list of favorite songs.
Oh, and that Wayne's World thing didn't hurt them, either.
...and I'm glad you're feeling good enough to post again!
Posted by: Ed Hering at January 28, 2019 08:57 AM (/cXdK)
4
I got my musical listening start from my brother's collection of LPs. Queen, All That Jazz, and News of the World are among the albums I remember being in that box, and that spent a lot of time spinning on the desk at my elbow piping tunes through my headphones while I did high school homework. I remember the Live Aid phenomenon, but those three LP's were already wearing out by that time.
I have an SD card of music in my phone, and another SD card with a lot more in my car. Both of those have Bohemian Rhapsody, Killer Queen, Who Wants to Live Forever, and The Show Must Go On on them. The Show Must Go On gets me in the feels every time, I don't know if it's the last song Freddie did, but it's among the last, and written with his upcoming death in mind. He really poured emotion all over the performance I have.
Posted by: David at January 28, 2019 11:12 AM (A/T0R)
5
I recall hearing Queen on the radio as a kid in the 70s: the only song of theirs I remember is We Are the Champions--I probably heard one or two more but don't remember. Champions got decent if not regular airtime. I don't recall hearing Bohemian Rhapsody back then, but I might have. I do recall starting to hear it on the radio maybe 10-15 years ago, so the idea that it's an overnight sensation this year is a bit of a surprise to me.
Posted by: Rick C at January 28, 2019 06:30 PM (Iwkd4)
Fighting. Losing?
I'm tired, I hurt, I'm panicking, I'm depressed.
And I'm whining. That's all I seem to do around here these days... remember those wacky good times of "Next Week: More Zombies"? Yeah, fun stuff. Now I'm at the point where I have a new 12" memory foam mattress that feels like heaven but that I'm afraid to sleep in. Anybody here ever fast for more than a day or two? Back when I first hurt my leg, such things as "standing up" caused enough pain that it was common for me to say "I'm hungry... but not so hungry that I'm going to inflict that on myself."
Since the day I went to the hospital, so effectively the entire month of January, I have had four or five meals. Now, we're not talking lavish buffets or 10-course dinners served on platinum tableware, no. A bowl of soup. A few forkfuls of macaroni salad. A sandwich. That sort of thing. So, back to my original question: anybody here ever fast for more than a couple of days? Because there's a neat trick the digestive system plays when you do... you get epic bouts of the stuff pepto bismol is designed to slow (or stop).. And it occurs with little to no warning... wacky, huh?!?!
1
Dieting is good, but you can't heal if you don't eat.
At the very minimum keep some multivitamins and water next to your bed.
I've been in this situation, and the acid reflux issue is a real nightmare.
Do the physical therapy!
They generally give you papers with basic PT moves. It helps. Not doing them doesn't. I have experience with both.
Amazon does deliver groceries I've used them when immobile.
Alas, life is an unsolicited product much like junk mail so no refunds are possible.
Get well soon.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at January 21, 2019 09:29 PM (gxCG3)
2
Re: acid reflux. last time this happened to me I found this very soothing. Chew an antacid with a mouthful of water until completely dissolved and swallow slowly. Works better on an acid-ravaged throat than just an antacid alone or sucking on one.
Posted by: Mauser at January 21, 2019 11:14 PM (Ix1l6)
3
Oh, yikes, man. I wish I had practical advice or something. All I can say is, keep on keeping on as best you can.
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 22, 2019 08:38 AM (rKFiU)
4
I'm sorry, buddy. I hope you find a path out soon. Would you care for a book recommendation? His Majesty's Dragon - fantasy about the Napoleonic Wars if everyone had dragons as well as ships. Pretty good. The author does a good job (imo) of translating naval warfare to dragonback.
Posted by: Kathryn at January 22, 2019 07:14 PM (iQ8GR)
5
Kathryn, I like the concept. Sadly, and I mean SADLY, I almost never read anymore. My eyesight is such that focussing on a book requires long arms or a pair of magnifying specs. And who has the time anymore?
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 22, 2019 09:23 PM (PzbzM)
6
I got better glasses when I realized I wasn't reading as much as I used to. You probably could use reading glasses at work. Do they have a vision plan?
Posted by: Mauser at January 22, 2019 09:48 PM (Ix1l6)
7
Oh, bummer. I don't know if that audio book is good, but maybe that's an option.
As for the time, I have a demanding job and two kids and still read about 200 books a year. It's a combination of reading scary fast and just really loving to read. I read while eating, exercising, cleaning the house, cooking, drying my hair, etc. - after nearly 35 years of practice, I can combine reading with any activity that leaves one hand and one eye free. (I did burn the garlic toast yesterday, though. Twice. Alas!)
Posted by: Kathryn at January 23, 2019 06:37 AM (dnKOD)
8
Every time I think my life sucks, I read about yours. Doesn't cheer me up, by any means, but it helps with perspective.
Posted by: Ubu at January 24, 2019 01:06 PM (SlLGE)
9
I had to sleep while sitting when that happened.
Posted by: Pete at January 28, 2019 09:50 AM (LZ7Bg)
So What The Hell, Wonderduck?
I don't know if that's been thought by any of readers but were the circumstances reversed, I know I would be. I'll be honest: it's painfully embarrassing.
You may remember that I was taken to the hospital on New Year's Eve after not being able to remove myself from my bed for over a day. What you don't know is that a week later, it happened again. I thought my damaged leg was feeling better and decided to actually sleep in a bed. Bad idea. Once again, I called 911, once again the CVFD EMTs came out... except this time they were accompanied by the Fire Chief. He read me the riot act, then said that he'd be contacting the apartment complex and "other agencies." See, they believed my apartment to be a fire hazard... probably because of the piles of amazon boxes blocking the entry hallway, dining room and the front half of the living room.
Yeah. Remember back when I was fired from the Duck U Bookstore? Around about that time I began to lean more and more on Amazon for just about everything but food... Prime Pantry was a thing at the time, but it wasn't much of one. For a while I managed to keep the boxes under control, and then the winter came, your truly became a recluse, and snow and cold conspired to keep me that way. Then came the depression, after which very little of anything got accomplished. And the boxes kept a'comin'. I got a job, and I continued to not take boxes to the dumpster... not laziness, but simply because I physically couldn't.
See, I'm kinda overweight. That TLC show My 600 Pound Life doesn't have me on speed dial or anything, but I'm a lot closer to that than I am to 250 lbs. And the boxes kept coming... more slowly now that I could have many of them sent to my work address, but still they came. And I was either too stupid or too prideful to ask for help.
And then last thurday I get an e-mail from the complex manager: she and "other agencies" would be entering my apartment on Friday. I asked her to keep me informed, and left it at that... I had a job to do. The appointed time came and went, and around 3pm I took my lunchbreak and checked e-mail.
The very first one was from the County Health Department, informing me that my apartment was condemned as being unfit for human life in the condition it was currently in. The second was from the Apartment Complex manager, asking me to contact her ASAP. She had tried to prevent my place from being condemned, but failed... government workers don't exactly have a lot of leeway in their rules, after all. To be allowed to live in my own place again, all of the boxes had to be gone. She then gave me the number of one of her employees at the complex, someone who'd be able to help. I quickly called him, we agreed to meet at 11am Saturday, and we'd get to work. Along the way, I also touched base with the people from the County, then had a talk with my supervisor. "Take as much time as you need, Wonderduck." So then I left and ran back to Pond Central to grab some clothes and find a hotel.
Saturday rolled around, and the guy I hired showed up. We'll call him Beast, because what I expected to take four or five hours and maybe two days... took 2.5 hours. He had the easy job, though... I had to clean the kitchen sink. I'm pretty sure I killed off an emerging intelligent lifeform.
Monday rolled around. The powers that be congregated in my apartment, were pleased with the results, and took down the sign saying "CONDEMNED. THE PERSON WHO LIVES HERE IS A SLOB." And then said that I'm really just on probation... there will be irregular (but scheduled) visits to make sure progress is progressing.
There's a few other things I'm leaving out, but suffice to say that when you combine them all... well, I can't imagine being more humiliated than I am. Oh, and depressed. Whee.
1
I guess setting the damn things on fire in situ was not an option you were given?
Posted by: Pixy Misa at January 17, 2019 05:08 AM (2yngH)
2
Yikes. Well, your domicile has been given a reboot of sorts. Hooray for getting assistance and support from key people in the process. Hell of an experience though.
May things only improve from here!
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 17, 2019 08:37 AM (rKFiU)
3
Oh gads. The precipitating factor to get me to pull the trigger on buying a small house (I had to get a loan from a family member, and deplete all my savings) was a warning from the apartment complex manager that I, and I quote, "Owned too many books and they presented a fire hazard." At that time I had three, seven-foot-tall bookcases, filled. Two smaller bookcases in my bedroom, filled. Some books on a shelf in my closet (If they didn't intend for the shelf to be used, why did they install it?). One (1) book out on my nightstand. Zero (0) books on the floor.
The manager oh-so-helpfully offered to rent me a storage unit....which they just happened to manage as well.
I said no thanks. They said fine, but they'd keep coming back to check on my place. I moved out that fall.
They lost a quiet resident who never complained and who paid on time. I've never looked back. I probably own close to twice as many books now.
But yes, I can 100% sympathize on how humiliating it feels to "get in trouble with management"
Posted by: fillyjonk at January 17, 2019 03:12 PM (o5UlT)
On the Amazon front, every once in a while I have to declare a "box week", in which my recycling bin will contain nothing but broken-down cardboard. This disappoints the people who search the bins at 4am for cans and bottles, but I make sure to leave them a neatly-bagged collection the following week.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at January 17, 2019 06:56 PM (LGSd2)
5
As long as it was only boxes you lost, sounds like a good thing.
Friend of mine in Canada had a similar problem with a fire marshall, only the stuff they wanted him to get rid of were rare fanzines from the 1930's on.
Posted by: Mauser at January 17, 2019 08:59 PM (Ix1l6)
6
Well, I'm glad it's nothing more serious. BTW, I don't remember if I mentioned that, but I started sleeping on the floor recently. It's much better for my back than any bed.
Posted by: Pete at January 18, 2019 04:54 PM (LZ7Bg)
7
God bless, amigo. Glad to hear you've gotten good with TPTB. Your fans are in need of your wit and wisdom.
Posted by: The Old Man at January 18, 2019 08:28 PM (duGaw)
Posted by: Mauser at January 12, 2019 11:36 PM (Ix1l6)
5
For the sake of preventing wild mass guessing getting out of hand: I've been in touch with Wonderduck and he is not currently deprived of life, liberty, or the pursuit of happiness. Nothing, as yet, has caught on fire.
Posted by: Ben at January 13, 2019 01:37 PM (4TRZx)
6
Well, that takes all the fun out of it!
But seriously, take care Wonderduck.
Posted by: Ubu at January 14, 2019 03:57 PM (SlLGE)
All Right. You Win. There. You Happy Now?
I'm sleeping in the no-longer-comfy chair. When I wake up in the morning, my feet hurt from swelling, and I've got what must be something like a bedsore on the back of my left leg... right where it sits on the end of the seat.
Getting out of the chair requires effort and pain... but at least I can do it. Shower, get ready for work...
...and then I have to face the NINE STAIRS OF DOOM. I have to go one-by-one, basically dragging my right foot off the front of the step until it falls to the step below. I then follow up with a normal stride with my left foot. Rinse, repeat. The best I've done was when I was surrounded by EMTs. This morning, it took about 10 minutes.
Get into the car, drive to work (not as easy as you might think... foot doesn't move without causing the muscle to twinge), get out of the car. Keep cursing to a minimum.
Walk the kilometer from the far end of the parking lot to the door. At least I have two canes now, that makes it a little more stable. Realize that your lunch break is seven minutes getting up and walking to the break room, 15 minutes hating life, then another seven minutes going back.
Finish up work. Trek to the car. Drag self into car, don't care about amount of swearing. Turn the key in the ignition. "Grunt. Grunt. Grunt. Grunt. Vrooom." The battery seems to be unhappy... and all the presets are gone on my radio. FSCK.
Drive home, apply brakes to turn into apartment complex, feel shoe fall off right foot, because why not? Take forever parking nose-out in case of battery failure. Walk up the stairs (much easier), get into Pond Central, and begin unwrapping my new memoryfoam mattress.
Realize new memory foam mattress is toying with me, refusing to unwrap from the first level wrap without tearing the second level and, I assume, exploding like a comfy jack-in-the-box. Give up for the night, come to the computer, realize there are only two cans of soda left in the house... and I can't exactly go shopping.
Any wonder why for a quarter I'd break down and sob for the rest of the night?
1
The amount of trouble you're having sure sounds like it should be pretty easy to get your doctor to sign the paperwork for you to get at least a temporary handicap placard so you can park closer to the office, assuming there's sufficient handicapped spots.
Posted by: Rick C at January 09, 2019 12:03 AM (Iwkd4)
2
Ugh. When I slipped a disc a few years ago I at least had the luxury of calling in and saying I'd be working from home for a couple of weeks. None of that sounds like fun.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at January 09, 2019 09:08 AM (2yngH)
3
Hello! I've nearly completed reading your entire military history category.
I just wanted to comment on an old article of yours:
An Unfortunate Encounter - Your encounter with the vet in the supermarket.
My grandfather was the same way until the day he died. He served as a navigator on a B-29, and was getting ready for the invasion of Japan by the time, they basically told him the chance of survival was low. It's one of those things you played out in your What If...? article, if not for the atomic bombings I might not be here!
Anyway, he disowned one of his kids (my uncle) for a while after they bought a Toyota in the 90's, he just couldn't get over the "Jap" car. I was young then and didn't understand, but looking back, he basically was mad at anything German or Japanese most of his life.
Posted by: Paul G at January 09, 2019 11:40 AM (rpBhg)
4
@PaulG, thank you, you made this old duck happy for a second. I hope you were entertained. I assume you've wandered over from Reddit, probably r/warshipporn?
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 09, 2019 10:09 PM (PzbzM)
5
To be honest I'm not sure. I was over on bosamar.com reading about the Battle of Samar and I'm sure I got into some rabbit hole of links which then lead me here, but it could have been warshipporn too!
Posted by: Paul G at January 10, 2019 02:01 PM (wDu+n)
Update
Things are not well over here. Health is okay, so I've got that going for me. I just don't like much of anything else. Details when I can bring myself to enter them.
In The Grand Scheme Of Things, It Could Have Been Worse.
So I went to bed Sunday morning around about 3am. Woke up around 9am, still tired from the awful week that had just passed, so I just rolled over and went back to sleep. And by "rolled over", I mean carefully positioning every nanometer of my body so as not to trigger the Big Pain Jolt from the leg.
At 2pm I woke up again, stretched, and mentally clicked "run exit program" in my head. Step 1: get legs over the side of the bed. This is not as easy as you might expect: the muscle that hurts the most will scream at any stretching, and the simple act of trying to lower my feet to the floor is enough to make it bad. Step 2: get myself into the correct position... as close to the bedtable as possible. Step 3: try to stand up using my legs while also shoving myself vertical with my hand on the bedtable. If everything works, I'll end up out of bed, standing and ready to start the day.
Step 3 failed. The muscle in my leg refused to give me the "tug" it usually provided. Instead it just screamed and screamed. Okay, that happened on Saturday too. I'll just give it another couple of hours, take a nap, try again then. It failed then, too... and hurt even worse.
And then I became concerned. I've never had THAT happen before... not even when my left leg hurt. I gave it another try a few hours later, no go. Day turned to night, Sunday turned to Monday, and there I was, unable to get out of bed. As the night went on, my mind kept bringing out weird music requests.
I had no idea there was an album version of one of my favorite songs about radio... being trapped in bed has its advantages!
In fact, he wasn't when this song was released.
Yes, really. It was a weird night.
Eventually, the sun came up, 9am came and went, and I called the apartment complex to send someone to Pond Central to unlock the door. I then called 911. I explained the problem, the dispatch operator said "they're on their way", and sure enough 10 minutes later there were two members of the CVFD EMT squad in my bedroom, trying to figure out just what the hell is going on. Eventually, the two EMTs, Thor and Hercules, grabbed my upper arms and pulled. Voila. I'm on my feet. Didn't even hurt.
Put some clothes on, got into the ambulance, and away we went to the nearest hospital... where it turned out they needed to put me in triage. I looked at Thor and said "Amateur hour started early?" He shook his head... since the weekend just before Christmas, it's been serious accident, gunshot victim, car crash. He'd never seen it so bad before, and with a smile said "hell, you're practically a lunch break." Laughter ensued.
Once in the ER, and lemme tell ya, their ambulance was kitted out with some of the neatest gewgaws I'd ever seen... including a motorized lift system for the gurney. All they had to do was put the wheels in lock position, click a bar underneath my head into a track, and press a button. Voila, into the back of the ambulance I went. At the hospital, it was the reverse. SO cool.
Anyway, once in the ER, they took me right to a room instead of staging me in the hallway. On one hand, yay instant service! On the other hand, oh... what happened to the patient that WAS in there that they'd expected to STILL be in there? Happy New Years!
Nurses came in, did nursey things, doctor came in, shook my hand, doctor left. X-rays and Ultrasounds were ordered and given, the results came back negative on both... no fractures in the upper leg, no thrown off blood clot blocking things. And then came the words I was longing to hear: would you like some water?
Hm, lemme see... I was trapped in my bed for 30 hours, I've been here for four more hours, and in all that time, I haven't had ANYTHING to drink. Yes please, some water would be pleasant.
It was lukewarm and in a styrofoam cup. And dear god, it was the most wonderful thing I'd ever tasted. And then it was empty, and I was sad because they didn't offer me a second one... until they came in with a painkiller! More perfect water AND hydrocodone? This day might actually be shaping up to something!
I was discharged, and Ph.Duck and RN.Duck gave me a lift home... and even though their car is bigger than the Duckmobile, getting into and out of it was sheer agony. Because I was in the passenger seat, which is the reverse of what I'm used to, and the door sill is substantially higher in their car than mine. Particularly getting out, when my right foot slipped off the top of the sill and out the door, I actually screamed as the pain hit me. Some profanities as well, which I almost NEVER do in public.
Once I made it inside (going up the stairs is MUCH easier than going down), I began looking at new mattresses online. I clearly need more altitude on the box spring and mattress on the floor that I do now. And before you ask, bedframes stand no chance in hell around me.
So now it's nearly midnight and 2019. Happy New Year, everybody!
...and now I get to figure out if I can sleep in a chair or not.
Edit: since I appear to be a self-centered jerk, please allow me to thank Brickmuppet a few minutes later than I should have. Having such friends as these is luxury beyond measure. And that includes all the Pond Scum as well. Yes, you. You too. Yeah, even you, ya big galoot.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at January 01, 2019 08:58 AM (2yngH)
3
I hope things get better soon. Not a good way to start the year. But you knew that.
Posted by: Ed Hering at January 01, 2019 11:19 AM (/cXdK)
4
Pixy, I'm sorry, I thought I had said, but looking back I see it never was mentioned.
I have a groin muscle that is either strained or torn. As there's no real way to differentiate without them actually opening me up or doing laproscopic surgery on me, we don't know exactly. But we don't need to... the repair routine is essentially the same. Which is: rest, heat, and don't overstress it.
So no marathons for me anytime soon.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 01, 2019 05:35 PM (PzbzM)
5
May the recovery be swift and as painless as possible.
And for Pete's sake (somewhere in Texas an old man just sneezed and doesn't know why) I hope 2019 gets only better for you from here.
Posted by: GreyDuck at January 01, 2019 09:06 PM (rKFiU)
6
"Eventually, the sun came up, 9am came and went, and I called the
apartment complex to send someone to Pond Central to unlock the door. I
then called 911."
For future reference, most apartment complexes these days have something called a Knox Box that the police and ambulance have access to that contains a master key. Hopefully you won't need to do this again, but if you do, don't wait--call 911 first. (If you search for "knox box" you can see what they look like. Lots of stores have them, too.)
Glad you managed to get looked at and it wasn't something worse.
Posted by: Rick C at January 01, 2019 11:49 PM (Iwkd4)
7
Wonderduck, good to hear. I mean, of the various things it could be, that is one of the least worst.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at January 02, 2019 12:46 AM (2yngH)
8
@6, RickC... With all due respect, Rick, I had already waited over NINE HOURS to make the first call from the time I had made the decision. I don't think an extra... let me check... 82 seconds made the difference between me getting out of bed and... me getting out of bed?
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 02, 2019 10:54 AM (PzbzM)
9
No need to be salty. I was more thinking of "what happens if you have a problem at 3AM".
I hope your 2019 is better than your 2018.
Posted by: Rick C at January 02, 2019 11:31 AM (Q/JG2)
10
RickC, you may be relatively new here, because REALLY long-time readers remember when I used to post this basic post every year.
Believe me, I don't need to be told to call 911.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 03, 2019 01:49 PM (PzbzM)
Psychology Of Pain
There are times that I envy the majority of humanity. Creativity, inventiveness, the ability to fabulate, these are all part of the Human race as a whole, but most people can't really do them. I have some small ability at tale-telling, and an active (some might say OVER-active) imagination. Which is why I'm writing this at some short time after 10pm on Saturday.
I have just gotten out of bed.
It all started last night... er... this morning. I shut my computer down at about 230am... and then spent the next two and a half hours convincing myself that standing up wasn't going to hurt much. See, my leg injury is pretty rotten... right in the groin muscle on the right side. ANY movement of the leg tends to hurt. Standing up, though... that muscle does a lot of the work. So I sat here in front of my computer, raging at myself for not standing up. Pain 1, Wonderduck 0. Eventually I did get to my feet and went to bed... which hurt. That whole "muscle" thing, y'know?
Around about 2pm today, I woke up. I gently maneuvered myself into position to exit my bed... took a half-hour, since I was trying to limit the pain... and spent the next two hours raging at myself for not being able to get out of bed. I could FEEL that muscle twinging every time I rocked forward. Pain 2, Wonderduck 0. Defeated, I went back to sleep, hoping to succeed next time. I'd better, I was getting awfully thirsty.
Around about 9pm, I woke up again, threw myself into the standing up position, screw the pain, and hurled myself to my feet. Pain 2, Wonderduck 1.
Shower felt good, brushing my tooth felt fantastic, and I just decapitated a 2l bottle of Mountain Dew. Tastes good, man.
1
Pain sucks. Here's hoping whatever's damaged gets well, or at least better, at some point.
Posted by: jabrwok at December 30, 2018 04:13 AM (wKZS0)
2
Yep.
I had surgery for an umbilical hernia about ten years ago. That's really fun, because sitting up uses the very stomach muscles that have been cut open, so it's like having been stabbed. What I learned is to try to find a way of moving that doesn't use that muscle, which in the case of sitting up, meant putting my arms behind me and pushing myself up, instead of pulling with stomach muscles. Also, sometimes direct pressure on the injured muscle can help block the pain. Maybe in your case, if you have a crutch available, you could pull yourself up on it using your arms and left leg?
Posted by: Rick C at December 30, 2018 03:13 PM (Iwkd4)
3
Bad news... I just noticed a text from Wonderduck indicating he was in the hospital. It was sent 6 hrs prior to this comment.
I know nothing more and be advised that my info is 6 hrs out of date.
Posted by: brickmuppet at December 31, 2018 04:45 PM (gxCG3)
Posted by: Mauser at December 31, 2018 05:19 PM (Ix1l6)
5
Good luck and a rapid return to health, Wonderduck. My prayers are with you.
Posted by: StargazerA5 at December 31, 2018 06:39 PM (TWAZc)
6
Good luck, Wonderduck. May you heal fast, may the doctors not chew you out too much for letting it go that long, and may your claims be swiftly approved.
Posted by: David at December 31, 2018 07:09 PM (JMkaQ)