CRAZY TOWN WAITING ROOM - TESTS coming up? All Stages Welcome.
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Italy, the cornbread stuffing sounds fabulous, as long as it's made without milk products and eggs. And as long as you heat some of it in a dish rather than in the body of the turkey. Quinoa pilaf sounds delicious. Could the vegans contribute something of their own? I have a couple of vegetarian nieces, and over the years they've either cooked a quick egg or heated up one of those vegetarian patties, and then eaten the side dishes with the rest of us.
I'm allowed to bring the Friday night lasagna and will do one with a meat sauce and another that's vegetarian. And am making rolls for the main event. I might see if I can find a recipe that uses saffron, just for fun. Or cardamon.
Wozzek sounds very cool, QMC. Please do report back!
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I will. Opera tonight--don't let me forget!
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no eggs, no dairy, no butter, no gluten, no meat. Granddaughter no. 2 breaks out in hives if she gets touched with butter or cheese on our hands, it is so tough. My son even had her get hives when he just rinsed his hands after eating cheese and he didn't use soap. I'm going to just do the corn bread stuffing, without eggs or dairy, in its own pan with the vegetables mixed in. It's the best I can come up with to cater to all the above listed allergies without cooking two separate meals. It may be a lot to take on after breast cancer treatment this year, but the spider in my brain says what if you aren't able to do it next year? I hate this disease.
But I am open to any suggestions. I don't want to add Indian dishes, which I love, because the smells will overwhelm the turkey roasting smell.
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T- doesn't corn bread have flour/gluten in it? Or is there a gluten free variety out there? Your dinner sounds like a challenge, but I know you'll put a great spread on. This year and for many years to come.
Rainny- oh yes please! Saffron I don't have, but cardamom I do! And always looking for a place to put it. That is to say, the spice is talking to me but I'm not always creative enough to use it! Maybe in some punkin oat muffins a friend shared a recipe of? Please pics of homemade rolls, whatever you use?
Enjoying a nearly perfect fall day here. Crisp as an apple, no clouds, no wind.
Looking forward to opening my Crazytown Sunday paper tomorro, going right to the arts section for the theatre review!
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oh dear, almost done with my post and it evaporated~~
now can I remember what I wanted to say?
Wowsa on cooking for the collection of food allergies, sort of think I will stick with my group as I only need to avoid the nuts!
Rainny, well I lived in Mann for years, then headed for a job to Minneapolis, returned and ended up in Boerum Hill, State St, till the Fire department decided to visit, they did put out the fire though~~ then bought a newly converted coop in Prospect Park west. Neighborhood was sort of funky as it was changing ethnically from Jewish to Black and then to Korean, then little white lady shows up and that was another story. Finally headed across the river to NJ and have stayed here for wow, 30 years?
Just back from a holiday bazaar at the Sons of Norway lodge, did my best to support them by buying some salmon, some jam and a new warm hat!
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Rainny, wow, that was a lot of stairs - I hope you counted it in your exercise for the day! I hope your son got good reports from his teachers. I never thought of holding a bake sale type fund raiser during conferences...might have to think that over.
Queenie, my opera experience is limited to Don Giovanni and Aida.
Italychick, your ideas sound good to me. We did a Tofurkey one year for my niece, who is a vegetarian. I wouldn't recommend it, it was way too salty. I was disappointed, because otherwise it was pretty good, for a tofu substitute. It had a wild rice stuffing inside of it.
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Iris- I hate when that happens! I never seem to get the same words back!
Rainny- you did it again. The mere mention of bread. I haven't made a yeast loaf for Donkey's Years. And I forgot whole wheat is exceptionally hard to knead. And me, practically pec-less (and perhaps feckless too). It's on its first rise. That is, if it rises at all. I worked up a sweat though. Then picked some salad for my dinner later. Better than continuing to lie in bed listening to the birds. If it turns out, I'll post a pic later. Maybe some fresh warm bread with butter and honey and some high- nosed tea!
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Katy, I wonder if kneading bread would be good physical therapy? I make rolls about once a year, and always forget in between times how much work kneading is.
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ok, the bread sounds great and do wish I could smell it. That and the salad would go well with my in the oven turkey meat loaf and baked sweet tater
tired now so need a glass of wine
I think between both of us we have a big meal although not veggetarian
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Katy, I'm going to try making a corn bread using gluten free oat flour in place of the regular flour. And put real corn in there too. The trick will be getting it to hold together with no eggs. Working on that part
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Iris- you and I often have meals we could and should share. I wish we lived closer. I thought of you yesterday because our Furry Friends visit was in a small beach town. I reckoned I'd done well to get through a hard week and treated myself to the king of fish and chips- made with halibut. It's very pricey, but divine. The season here is only a few days a year. I had a child's portion and a local micro brew. I hardly EVER drink beer, but I was feeling hoppy.
Cubbie- YES!!! I'm thinking it might be "medically necessary" to make bread or rolls several times a week! I really worked those pecs! I haven't been able to quilt any of my pieces since surgery last year. I can piece, but can't quilt. If I start making bread I bet I could soon quilt!
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Italy - my nephew has a dairy allergy and we've always had a mostly dairy free Thanksgiving. Earth Balance is a lifesaver and it tastes good too - I use it on toast, etc and you can bake with it
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Katy, confess to loving a good fish and chips, think I must have a bit of old England in me
and a local brew? divine, I am not a big beer drinker but when traveling I do like to try local brews, after all it is supporting local business~~
bread, oh so love bread and home made .....I will start to swoon soon just thinking on it
oh by the way, not sure if anyone here posts on Facebook, there was a huge bruha yesterday as an administrator kick off a male breast cancer survivor as they said it had suddenly been changed to a woman only support board. Mano, big fuss, me I chose to follow the man, not sure if anyone ever met him as his name was Ambroise and he had to be the absolutely sweetest man alive, and fighting a late stage breast cancer
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pennysgal good to know about the earth balance. I'm going to pick some up
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Cubbie: Don Giovanni and Aida will do for now.
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I was totally lost during Aida. Still not sure what was going on!
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Aughhh! Brain spiders! I just got spider traps for the hobo spiders taking over my basement...want to stuff one in your ear and see if that helps?
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LittleBlue, if it works for ItalyChick, I'm stuffing traps in both ears. The bonus is that I wouldn't be able to hear when I'm with my relatives over the holidays.
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Sorry for the length of this post. but I'd not seen this thread in nearly two days!
Cubbie, glad to hear you have a new, University hospital team. I agree that the word “mucinous" should indeed make one hopeful.
Tomboy, what a terrible thing to have gone through so young! As to my friend, I went to see her yesterday and she's quite a bit better. She lit up when I walked in, asked after Bob & Gordy, and was frustrated that they're not letting her move her broken leg. The fracture is at the greater trochanter, impossible to splint, period. (One thing I hadn't known is that she's had osteoporosis, not just osteopenia, for at least five years). She's still wearing the nose-hose, as she puts it, but at a steady 6L instead of the hi-volume they'd originally thought she'd need. But her doctors are adamant that if she were to survive open reduction/internal fixation, she would likely be not only on a vent but also be tube-fed as well, indefinitely and perhaps permanently. She nixed that. To clarify the surrounding circumstances: she never did ring for assistance getting to the bathroom, just figured she could do it herself and got out of bed....in her little hospital-issued traction slipper-socks. Her family will not allow her to be moved back to the Barr Pavilion (short-term rehab), but rather--when she's ready--to the Clare's hospice floor in its assisted-living unit. If she lives past 6 months--and now they say she might--she will be moved into an assisted-living studio apt. with lots of supervision. There's no way she can go back home--it's just too complicated, given that her son's true home (and career) is now out in Silverlake and her husband keeps such long hours in his practice (almost as long as does my DH). Right now, she's comfortable--getting all the pain meds she's requesting--but still has a urinary catheter. It will be weeks if not months before she will be allowed to bear weight, probably only on her intact leg and tethered to an aide as she lacks the upper-body strength to use a non-wheeled walker. As a concession to her circumstances, NWM took her off the carb-controlled diet and is letting her order whatever she wants--on her tray last night I saw a half-eaten turkey sandwich and a triple-chocolate-mousse parfait. Her appetite was never robust to begin with--which probably contributed to osteoporosis, and she never consumed dairy because she had to cook for a genetically-lactose-intolerant (Cantonese) husband and son (she's not Asian herself).
Queen, hope “Wozzeck" is good. The only operas I've ever seen were “Carmen" and “Madam Butterfly" (plus “Der Freischütz," and that one only because I was in its chorus when in college). Of course, I've seen myriad clips from other familiar operas, plus most of G&S' operettas several times over. And the last time I was at the Lyric was back in March for its incredible production of “Carousel:" produced more as an opera than as a R&H musical. Steven Pasquale was an amazing Billy Bigelow--much better than either John Raitt or Gordon MacRae. Until I saw “Carousel," I didn't even know he could sing--I was hooked on “Do No Harm," the short-lived series he was in based on “Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde" with a genetic and psychiatric twist. (It co-starred “Hamilton"s Lin-Manuel Miranda, BTW). Meanwhile, will probably be going to see the Goodman's “A Christmas Carol" again, since my voice teacher's son is Tiny Tim again this year.
Rain & Iris, I grew up in Brooklyn. Until high school, we lived in Brownsville (on the same block on which rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard was born decades later); the summer before 10th grade (back then, jr. high included 9th grade), moved half a mile--and it seemed half a world--away to East Flatbush. I left when DH (from Bellerose) & I got married 3 weeks after graduating from Brooklyn College and immediately moved to Seattle for our postgrad educations. (The secret for a 44-yrs-and-counting marriage? Put 3000 miles between you and your parents--no “going home to Mother"). When I tell millennials I'm from Brooklyn, they get this reverent look and go “wow..." until I tell them I'm not from the hip, but rather the hip-hop part of the borough. I do get a kick out of watching Mike Yard do “Nightly Show" segments from East New York--perhaps the only part of Brooklyn rougher than B'ville.
After my rad tx yesterday (15th of 16!) and before heading down to visit my friend, I hit Pastoral in Andersonville to shop for another friend's annual “Sunday Before Thanksgiving" potluck brunch (he supplies a stew and Eli's cheesecake, we bring whatever else) tomorrow. Doing cheese & charcuterie: bought duck prosciutto, jamon Serrano, pâté de campagne, mini-salamis (wild boar, black truffle), and some interesting MN cheeses, as well as a couple of bottles of Domaine Dupeuble Beaujolais Nouveau. DH came home from Binny's with two each of Georges DuBoeuf, Bouchard Aine, and Joseph Drouhin (the ol' standbys). Got three of Ch. Camden the other night at the Paris Club tasting. We cracked one of the Dupeuble last night and agreed that while delicious, it tastes far too “serious" to pass as a Nouveau. Will bring a couple of different BNs and a Mumm's Cuvee Napa tomorrow (and since parking on my pal's Uptown block is always next to impossible, will Uber it up & back).
Today was a lazy day. Woke up to nearly no snow on the ground, but before we could get ready to drive to Barnes & Noble for our annual shopping spree the lake-effect stuff came down fast, furious and WET (heart-attack snow). DH managed to scrape it off the stairs & deck and I will salt. It didn't stick to the warmer pavement. He walked to B'way Cellars and brought back quiche, salad & biscuits & gravy. Had a half-portion of each and am still stuffed five hours later. He's at Mass now, so we can go to B&N tomorrow morning. (Not driving today).
Finally, medically-speaking, my RO saw me yesterday. He is pleased that my axillary seroma has remained stable; and is confident my breast seroma will not get much bigger (if at all) and will not need aspirating. But he agrees it could take a year or more to resorb. Still no skin irritation or texture changes, but says I will probably see a bit more reddening before things start to resolve a week or so from now. (I was given the chance to take my last tx tomorrow rather than Mon., but I opted to take the full weekend off and say sayonara on Mon. instead). He also looked at the little tan splotch on my left breast and thinks it's either a freckle or a mole. On the off-chance it might be dysplastic (unlikely because it's never had any sun exposure), he said to take a selfie and compare it weekly; if I notice any changes I should call him and he'll give me a Derm referral. Told my FP and he says it sounds like a plan. Today I woke up with an earache but no fever or other symptoms--probably the fluid built up from my mold allergies earlier this week, or even barometric changes from the low-pressure front moving through.
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Sandy - excuse me for jumping in, but I'm rabid on the topic of skin cancer. And not the chocolate kind that Katy had. I've had 6 basal cell skin cancers so I go for a full body scan every 6 months. The lovely derm doc always finds keretosis (actinic or seborrheic) and is able to successfully freeze those suckers so they don't grow & change - usually 12-15 each time. Every couple of years she has to biopsy one. I really wouldn't wait to go see a derm doc. A quick freeze and you're done, or at least you have the spot well documented.
And since I'm here, Queen - all I can remember about Wozzeck is "blud, blud". Saw the new production of Phantom this week. Wonderful voices and the sets were awesome. Houston Grand Opera is doing Carousel as an opera production in the spring and I really want to see it, but i think I'll be out of town.
Proud - I'm not on Facebook but I went to a Metastatic BC convention once and the most inspirational speaker of the entire weekend was a lovely man who was a Marine and developed BC. Too bad this fellow was ostracized. I imagine it's hard enough just being stuck in the female world of BC treatment.
OK Katy - as temporary mayor - thanks for letting me add my 2 cents.
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MinusTwo: yes, that was rather a vividly integral part of the opera. (left feeling like I should be frantically washing my hands, caught in a nightmare)
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Minus, about 25 yrs. ago I had a compound nevus removed from my temple, and it turned out to be benign. Ditto for a skin tag on my eyelid.Had my moles mapped too, and there weren’t very many of them. Still don’t have many. This one is so light that I noticed it only after changing my bedroom lightbulbs to LEDs--for all I know it might have been there all along. But since I do have seborrhea anyway I might as well get it checked out after Christmas.
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Katy, love your bread picture! How'd it turn out? I make bread every week or two during the cooler months, because DH grew up in a family where bread was on the table every single meal. He can go through a prodigious amount. Early in our marriage he brought home a loaf of Wonder Bread, so I started baking in an effort to forestall that happening ever again! Lately I've been experimenting with oatmeal breads and breads that use buttermilk. They're kind of dense but very good flavor. I often go with half whole wheat, half bread flour. I used to do all my kneading by hand, but now I mostly use the Kitchen Aid's dough hook, which does an excellent job, and finish it off by hand. The other recipe I love is Jim Leahy's No-Knead bread. About as simple as they come.
Proud, I know exactly where you lived! I've hopscotched those same neighborhoods: was in Park Slope for nearly a decade, then moved to Fort Greene. We looked at co-ops in both Boerum Hill and on Eastern Parkway. Your turkey meat loaf sounds wonderful! I made shepherd's pie last night, but it wasn't my best effort. Sometimes it clicks, and sometimes it doesn't. The menfolk shoveled it in anyway. They do that.
Cubbie, DH's school report was fine. He has a mild learning disability, now pretty much under control, which has left him with a formidable work ethic. These days I don't worry too much; he's at a first-rate school where he gets very good grades, and he should have some great choices when it comes time to apply to college. For the record, I am not a tiger mom. Though he once, in that context, called me a feral house cat. Moi?
ChiSandy, glad your friend is a little better. It does sound like a miserable situation. I hope this reprieve gives her the chance to regain her emotional equilibrium and perhaps find some peace. Brownsville and East Flatbush--wow. My DH knows a musician, also Jewish, who grew up in East New York. I do get impatient with all of the Brooklyn worship (though not with what it has done to the value of our co-op!). We saw Iolanthe last weekend, as a kind of grandmother-grandson bonding experience. The music has been floating through my head all week.
I love G&S but also have seen many productions at the Met. When I was younger I used to go standing room; those tickets for the whole week would go on sale Saturday morning. Before dawn, two elderly ladies would set up shop somewhere underground, in a tunnel that led to the parking garage at Lincoln Center. You'd have to find them, and they'd give you a cardboard ticket with a number and tell you to come back at 9:00 AM. Then you'd go off to a diner for breakfast. As everyone returned, you'd get on line in the order of your ticket number. The box office opened at 10:00, and the ladies would set up their chairs at the head of the line. As you passed them, you'd return your ticket to them with a dollar. Tickets were about $25, I think, and if you were early enough, you'd be in the standing room section that was just behind the orchestra. I saw some sold-out productions that way, and I remember once leaving the apartment before dawn, just as snow was starting to fall, to see a matinee of The Magic Flute. It turned into a major blizzard, and many of the seats were empty. We stood through the overture, and then the usher nodded at us, and we slipped down into the orchestra seats. Getting home afterwards was a challenge, since many of the subway lines had shut down, but it was worth it!
Happy Sunday to all of you crazies!
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morning folks, well looks sort of cloudy out this morning, decided to pass on the gym today, if I do it every day then the dang body is actually not so happy
did some thinking last night and while I would love to ignore the dang spinal stenosis shit, I feel a tingling in my left hand and sure it is related so gonna now decide when to go to the spine doc to discuss the shots. Has to be done and I do have to remember that what I read online on sites is all the horrible stuff and have to remember that I am lucky to live in an area of the country with a ton of great docs and hospitals. So after the holiday, I will call and get the move on it. creeps me but got to do
Minus and others on the skin cancer, I did my first ever skin check when I hit 65, they did one biopsy and since I have a ton of freckles and moles, each time I go, she seems to find something to check out although nothing more than a typical cells but it is a good check
My pal Mcgee just got out of the hospital and is in rehab on her hip surgery, dang but she is also like Sandy's pal, McGee has now managed to get past her 3rd cancer and now the dang hip, 78 and fighting her way back to the tennie court!
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Good Morning Crazies!
I am up in Sonoma, still in bed in my hotel room, drinking the coffee hubby brought me...and I feel happy and relaxed. Every time I come here in the fall, I am reminded that it is my favorite season in wine country: not because of harvest and all of that (I enjoy wine, but honestly, the older I get the less alcohol appeals...) but because the changing colors of the vines, along with the tree fall colors, are so beautiful. We timed this trip perfectly: all the vines are blazing orange and the countryside is gorgeous.
but mostly I am relaxed because I had a good day yesterday (well, other than the Cal/Stanford game, but we won't talk about that. Besides, I fell asleep and missed at least half of it).
The day started out in a lovely way: hubby and I had coffee at the local Sonoma Plaza hangout with Sula and her hubby! It was so fun to meet one of the crazies, and she is every bit as articulate and thoughtful as her posts here would lead you to believe. and her hubby loves octopuses, so you know he's a good guy :-) Thanks, Sula, for taking time from a busy day to help us feel a part of town life in your beautiful town!. Getting over my shyness enough to meet a sister crazy in real life was an inspiration: I am going to figure out how I can make my CT themed virtual and real sedar a reality. However, I will confess that timing may prevent it from being this April. Suddenly my schedule is booked solid with travel between February and June. How did that happen? Mostly fun stuff, (just invited to a conference in Mexico City, a visit to the SoCal campus my daughter teaches at, Washington DC. Well ok, DC in Feb: not so fun, unless I can include a side trip to NYC to visit my son and a few more crazies....) but keep posted. I am determined to do something at some point.....it was nice to come a bit more out of my octo sea cave....
Then, most of the day was spent visiting with my father. As I think I've mentioned, he has dementia and other health issues one might expect in a 91 year old, and is living in an assisted living/memory care facility outside of Sonoma, where he and stepmom have lived since his retirement about 20 years ago (she grew up in this area). Stepmom is still in their house and doing fine (she is a lot younger than he is) but taking care of him at home was just too much for her, and there wasn't room for live in care, so with encouragement from his girls, she moved him into the facility about six months ago. I think it is much better for him AND for her, but he hasn't been very happy there. And, unfortunately, I've not been up to see him in quite some time, because well, chemo and bc. So, I was dreading the visit: would he spend all the time telling me he needed to escape and that I needed to help him? (that was the theme of my last visit). However, either he was just in a good mood generally or he is adjusting, because this visit went well. He told us several times how pretty the place is, and seemed generally happy, and certainly happy to see hubby and me.
We sat in the lovely garden and talked a lot. Dementia is so interesting: a lot of what he says makes no sense: for example, he had long stories about how he is just finishing medical school: has taken all the tests, but still needs to get his clinical hours in and isn't sure how he will do that in the home he is in.....then he started telling us about how the 'girls' who run the facility keep borrowing his car and crashing it, which is why he can't drive (apparently they have crashed five of his cars this year and were out joy driving the sixth as we talked!) . But then: he will be extremely lucid, and about the strangest things: he was drinking a non-alcoholic beer and pointed to the label and started telling me about how one of the first things FDR did when he because President was sign a bill into law that made near beer legal and not outlawed alcohol (while prohibition was still happening): ok, I confess I thought he was rambling but hubby looked it up and my father was absolutely right about all of it! FDR signed the bill in March 1933, two months after becoming President.
When it got cool in the afternoon, we went inside and watched part of the UCLA/Utah game. My father is a UCLA alum and has always been a big football fan and we were interested to note that he still can follow the game quite well: he was tracking the downs, even called a few likely plays. So, he did seem to get some genuine enjoyment out of it.
So, all in all, a very good visit. The only down point came when he told one of the staff, quite happily, that I was 'going to take him out for a fancy dinner' that night. Um no, well actually, that wasn't on the agenda: we had promised to take my step mom out and I was worried that wouldn't go well if he came along (he tends to get more agitated when she is there and I just wasn't sure I was ready to do an evening outing with her along). So, I left feeling guilty, for not taking him out and mostly for not being able to visit more often. Discussed it with stepmom over dinner and we decided we'd take him out for a nice lunch (there are certainly a lot of nice restaurants for a fancy lunch in Sonoma) on our next visit, as long as hubby was along to help if he got a bit combative, which he has in the past when he has been unhappy. He does do better during the day than in the evening. And now that chemo is done, it won't be as long before I make the drive up to Sonoma again. So Sula, hope we get a chance to hang out for Saturday morning coffee before too long!
Well, morning has come to the beautiful Sonoma Valley. Time to get out of bed, stop by and say good bye to Stepmom, and hit the road back to the Great Central Valley. Another big day today: going car shopping on our way home! Buying a new car for my rads journey! I've been wanting a new one forever, and the driving I will be doing during rads is just the excuse I need. Yeah, using the c card to convince hubby I need a new car. No guilt about that, I deserve it (and the credit union is offering great deals right now...).
I hope all are enjoying the weekend. Thanks for letting me be the one who is rambling today.
Hugs,
Octogirl
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Octo.. I so enjoyed your post.. What fun to of met Sula..!! Also good to catch up with your Dad again..Have fun picking your new car..of course you deserve it :-)
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Octo- your post brought so many feelings to the surface. First, so glad you stepped out of your Octo cave and met Sula. I am delighted for both of you that you were able to cement your bond into something even more real. I wish I could have gotten that magic carpet going. My father was in a memory card facility, actually several, in the last couple of years of his life. He was also married to someone much younger, but alas, we did not (his 4 children, one has died since) have friendly communication, especially towards the end. She actually put him in the first home without telling any of us. When he didn't respond to birthday cards or messages we got worried and asked a family friend to intervene. At the final facility, I drove to SoCal and stayed with my bestie for six weeks and my Dad and I and Jack had many pleasant and kind of mystical visits similar to what you describe. Jack was very good with him and calmed him. That's when and why I decided to become a therapy dog team.
Iris- I am so sorry to hear your back problems may be traveling to your arm. You are being very brave. I know you have done so much to help yourself. It must be so frustrating.
ChiSandy- I'm glad your friend is a bit better. Such a difficult time for all. I hope as you come to the end of rads soon you feel some relief from what must seem pressure from all angles.
Queen- waiting anxiously for the Vice Mayor's official review! How was it?
Rainny- I feel so silly. I actually have a kitchenaid with a dough hook. Doh! Hook! Next time. I got quite sore last night from the kneading and had the burning sensation of months back. Had to resort to extra break through pain meds. So I'll try that next time for sure. The buttermilk bread sounds really tasty. I used about 1/4 cake flour to lighten my loaves (so to speak) but they were still pretty dense. I elected to just do natural loaf shapes (probably out of laziness regarding pan washing) so they turned out misshapen but delicious.
They kind of look like baked turkey breasts!
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Yep i came to play, waiting 4 a pizza
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Iris, glad to hear McGee has moved on to rehab for her hip surgery. What a lady, if anybody can get back out on the tennis court, it's her!
Octo, that's awesome that you and Sula got together. I had some similar experiences with my aunt as you had with your father - she was not oriented very well about what was happening in the present around her, but she remembered details from the 1930s quite accurately. It must have something to do with long term memory, and when those memories were formed. Have fun car shopping!
Katy, I never knew you could use cake flour to lighten your bread. I have a recipe for homemade bread, but it does make quite a dense bread. It's the sort of bread you would eat with butter, or with jelly, not something you would use to make a sandwich.
Blondie, pizza = yum!
Tomorrow I should get a call from the university about the recommendation from the tumor board. I'm finding it difficult to know what the right thing is to do, given my combination of relatively young age, oncotype of 15, and micromet. Sometimes I feel like I don't quite fit in the guidelines, and making the right decision is so important. I hope the tumor board can help.
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Cubbie- I hope you get that call tomorrow and your path (no pun intended) is revealed. I'll be thinking of you. Until I hear from you. Check your pocket.
Blondie! 🙋 Welcome! Beppy and Tomboy love you so! I'm sorry it's quiet here today. Did you get your pizza? Or do you want we should send you one through our Crazytown pneumatic tube! It tastes really good,has no calories, but does have some amazing medicinal qualities!
Night Crazies! Hope everyone had good sleep and a good week.
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