Wednesday’s Theme Music

Mood: Humpnotized

I was gently serenaded awake by the dulcet tones of a cat upchucking somewhere nearby. Investigating, I found it was Tucker heaving up kibble and a hairball. Fortunately, I had an exercise towel down. It was for foot and leg exercises to cope with my ankle injury, based on recommendations from my sister, a physical therapist. Tucker and Papi had staked out the green towel as the new ideal napping spot in the house. That’s where Tucker was sleeping when I went to bed. Apparently, he slept there until he awoke and puked.

That’s how my Wednesday, June 19, 2024 began. Hope yours was better. I raise my coffee cup to Juneteenth and my fellow Americans who celebrate it for all the right reasons.

Spring’s hold is weakening in Ashlandia. Sprummer has burst back onto the scene. It is a beautiful blue skied morning. Sunshine baths runners, bikers, grooming cats, and everything else under the sky. 61 F, today’s high will bounce into the low 90s. With this abrupt weather shift will come high winds.

After the puke check, I squirmed back into bed, and then tumbled with dreams and thoughts. The thoughts went down a parental aisle. Dad in the hospital. Mom was there in April. The two are divorced, with new partners. They actually divorced over fifty years ago. Dad has been with his ‘new wife’ for 35 years, his third marriage. Mom has been with her beau since 2009. Family whispers say that she’s been married seven times. Mom has a secretive gene so vetting information is a challenge.

Mom professes to constant pain. She complains frequently and often about her existence, frequently demanding her daughters’ attention, repeatedly regaling all of us with tales hospital visits, doctor appointments, and health details. Going backwards, appendicities, and before that, a perforated appendix put her in the hospital. Her pacemaker was replaced. COVID hospitalization, spinal stenosis, swollen foot (but not edema, she tells me, although she had sixteen lymph nodes removed during foot surgery), and of course, fifteen years ago, the disastrous fall down the steps. She sleeps with a mask on to help with her breathing because of emphysema. Hardly able to walk, she insists on tottering around the house to clean it, though to most eyes, it’s immaculate. She takes dozens of medications, vitamins, minerals, and supplements.

Dad tells me from his hospital bed, “I’m fine,” with a chuckle. “They have a hundred doctors helping me. They want to put me on dialysis but at my age, they worry about whether I’d survive the procedure.” He’s been stented over ten years ago. Uses a wheelchair and a cane. Has oxygen at home, which he insists that he doesn’t use. Only his wife is there to help him.

Mom always complains about her beau. He can’t hear, she says, and I’ve witnessed the truth of the 94-year-old man’s hearing issues. “He’s forgetful,” she angrily hisses. “I always have to tell him things and make him lists.”

Dad’s wife laughs about Dad and his idiosyncrasies. He never says a harsh word about her.

What a difference their worlds are.

Today’s song choice by Les Neurons is a little ditty called “Twilight Zone (When the Bullet Hits the Bone)” by Golden Earring from 1982. A song inspired by an adventure spy novel, it’s presence in my morning mental music stream (Trademark split) is all on me. See, I was feeding the cats and somehow ended up singing, “You will come to know when the kibble hits the bowl.” That’s a variation of Twilight’s chorus, “You will come to know when the bullet hits the bone.”

Stay positive, be strong, and Vote Blue for 2024. Coffee has stolen into my body. Here is the music video. Cheers

3 thoughts on “Wednesday’s Theme Music

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  1. I’m going to borrow that kibble hits the bowl line. Corky is almost deaf, but still hears singing fairly well. That’ll be fun to sing to her, even though she’s a doggy!

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  2. Hi Michael. I am not sure if this helps or if you heard it before, but it was the advice my surgeon gave me and Ron separately the first time I was put into a wheelchair for extended times. To Ron he warned him my world was about to shrink. I was young and used to mobility which had been getting more restricted and now my world would now be the four walls of our home as I would need Ron and others to even leave the house. This was the beginning of the computer age, with the first of the AOL chat rooms that finally helped us through. The middle 1990s. He warned Ron that the smallest things were going to seem huge to me … because that was all I had now, all I could deal with, all I interacted with. He was correct, I devoured newspapers / watched TV and when Ron came home unloaded an entire day’s worth of injustice and stuff on a worn out man. He counseled Ron on how to handle that.

    Then he talked to me and read me a riot act that basically said the world did not start nor stop with me. Ron and I had something great (this was in 1996 and from a military surgeon) and he did not want anything to harm it. Ron was not the cause of this and he was not the villain nor the hero, but a person with his own needs and wants. If I wanted to keep our love I would learn to deal with my disability while remembering what he said about Ron.

    I don’t know if parts of this might be helpful to you but when one’s world constricts the smaller things seem to take on very large importance. Far more than they did before. I wish the best for your family. Hugs. Scottie

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