Well hello family, and happy New Year. This is my first post of the New Year. It’s January 22, 2016, and I have been down
for about 10 days now. I got, what I
hope, is my yearly case of Bronchitis. I
have talked, at nauseam, I am quite sure about my many cases of
bronchitis. Sorry folks, those are just
the facts, kind of like my hair is brown, I am married to Jay, and at least
once a year, since the age of 6, I get bronchitis. I have talked to you about this in Blood in the Water, The family secret, and The healing power of music.
This case we caught early.
I am lucky enough to have a doctor who I can call and say, “I’ve got it
again,” and they will call in meds for me.
They have seen me have it enough, and I have had it enough to diagnose
myself. I know what meds work for me and
what don’t. You know you are sick when
you WANT to rub Vicks on yourself!
It does not take much for me to get it, and I am always in a
preventative phase. I monitor my
allergies and try to take meds if I am sniffling too much or I am
congested. I know that my sinuses
dripping on my vocal cords, will cause a sore throat and it is all downhill
from there. I have seen me go to bed
fine and wake up with a full blown case of Bronchitis. It was kind of like that this time.
Jay and I don’t have a lot of money. There are weeks where I have to ration out
the wash powder and the milk. We get by,
and do what we can, where we can. This
year we did not have the $500 to $600, plus the tank rental fee, to fill up the
propane tank, that runs both the heater and the stove. This caused great upset in the family, a few
months ago when I first came to understand this, but all is well now. I am blessed with warm clothes, 2 space
heaters, and many blankets. The children
have sweaters and I am always covering them up, checking ears and paws to see
if they are cold. Lots of people have
done a lots more with a lot less.
Every day I worry that I will run out of gas to cook with,
but the stove is still going. Should it
run out I have a grill, and a camp stove. I also could gather fire wood and cook
outside. I am not opposed to such as our
ancestors have done that for millennia.
Hell that is still done in many parts of the world today. Jay promises that he will not let it come to
that. He says when the gas runs out, he
will rig up a 5 gallon refillable Propane bottle to our lines, and we will have
gas that way. I trust him, he has not
let me down yet.
Now I am not trying
to tell you a sob story to get y’all to set me up a Go Fund me account, or for
somebody to lend us the money to fill up the tank. No even if we borrowed the money, and there
is nobody to borrow it from, we, I don’t think, would be able to pay it
back. What a rich person might spend on
a dress or shoes, would take us several years to pay back. Just the facts of the working poor people, I
am just trying to tell it like it is. We
will find a solution to our own problems, and I am sure there are layers of
lessons the Gods are teaching us here. I
keep thinking of JK Rowling’s writing her first book in the café’s, because she
didn’t have any heat either. Maybe it
will help to get my creative juices flowing.
So we have been saving the running of the heater for our
freezing nights, and days when I just can’t get warm. I think it has been on a handful of times
since it started getting cold. Hell we
had the AC on Christmas Eve! We had our
first night of freezing the other night, in fear of the pipes freezing, I
convinced Jay to turn on the heater, although he said the ones that always
freeze are the ones outside. Pipes were
fine the next morning, but we were not.
Both of us woke up with sore throats. My guess is when we turned on the heater, it
blew out all that dust and that’s what did it.
Jay is fine, he is always fine, a day or so later my coughing
started.
I got meds, but still did not feel all that bad, and I went
on and did my usual things, just 10 times slower, which is greatly annoying to
me. Despite not feeling that bad, I
probably should have gone to bed and stayed there, but guilt eats at me. I constantly hear the voice of those who
said/ say they loved me, now mixed with my own, call me fat, lazy, crazy, and
useless in my head. I know since I don’t
“carry my own weight” by bringing home a pay check, I have to work as hard as I
can, as much as I can, pushing through pain, depression, and anything else that
might try to block what I have to do.
Jay has never, and would never say such things to me, and in truth it
has gotten better over the years. But it
still does not seem fair to me, for Jay to work all day long, and have to come
home and tend to house, make dinner, and wash clothes. Yes there are days when I can’t, and I have
to ask, but it is not something I like.
So I get sick and then a few days later Jay starts this
project that we have been planning for a while.
We had a hole in our floor in the living room, don’t start me in on why
you should never ever buy a trailer. We
decided instead of ripping out all the floor, we would lay ¾” plywood over the
top and polyurethane over the top of it.
It looks really nice. So much
better than trying to mop a floor that had broken and missing peal and stick
tiles over it. I have 7 dogs sharing our
home and a goat that thinks she’s a dog.
Pee is simply a fact of life in my house people. You just can’t mop that out of particle board.
Since Jay and I got together, some 13 years ago now, we will
celebrate our 12th year of marriage in March, Gods willing, I have
helped him with every project. When we
built the porch, I helped him carry the 16ft pressure treated posts, learned to
use a nail gun, and dug holes (sometimes with a soup spoon) and help add
concrete to them. When we built
Bridget’s house, I helped him raise the walls, and then held them in place
while he shot it with the nail gun.
Other then paint, which I do mainly by myself, since he hates to paint,
I have helped him with every project he has ever done in this house. From nailing, ripping out floor, putting in
pipe, re-running water lines, putting in electricity to somewhere, and cutting
insulation. I am a good helper. I try to
think two steps ahead of him, as to what he will need, even if it is just
something cold to drink.
For the first time, this week, I watched him do a project on
his own. I watched him struggle with
heavy boards, in and out of the front door.
It broke my heart that all I could do was sit at the kitchen table and
watch. Not make him dinner (although I
did help with that one night and spent the next few days in bed after that) not
bring him something to drink, nothing, all I could do was watch this beautiful
man try to make our lives a little better.
Not only did he do that, but he cooked for me, tended me, and fussed at
me to put socks on, go back to bed and encouraged me to sleep all day. I was overcome with love for him and immense
gratitude.
This has been on my heart for days to write this to you, but
I have had no strength to do so. Finally
today the Polyurethane is dry and I have my desk back to write you from. We have rearranged the living room, now
instead of looking at the goat barn, at Kay’s house, and who is coming down the
drive. I am looking down the hill, to
Jay’s gun range, what is left of the old circle, and the now blocked path, down
to the creek, and the other 11 acres beyond that. I see lots of trees, some that have fallen
down and need to be cut, but Kevin stole our chain saw, you know the one that
never did work right. Joke was on
him. And I see a little Ms. Bridget, who
is rubbing her horn on the dead Dog Fennel plants, and standing in the
sunshine. Wonder if this view will
inspire me the way the other does. You
know when we first moved out here, we had this area I am looking at, oh about a
40 x 80 section, fenced off for the dogs.
But as those of you who own Dachshunds know, there is no such thing as
Dachshund proof fencing. No matter how
we patched or what we did, they kept getting out. Finally we gave up and just tore it all
down.
I love it here, I never want to leave, my only regret is
that I cannot be buried here. But I
promise you I will haunt it! I just hope
it never changes, and remains forested forever with these huge pines and
oaks. Some people look at it and see
money and I see an eco-system.
This round of sickness reminded me so much of when I had
bronchitis right before I graduated High School, which I talked about in The healing power of music. I have been working on a project where I was
taking all my old CD’s, copying onto my computer, and then transferring them to
my tablet and / or Jay’s phone. Apparently
I have 16 Jimmy Buffet albums. For days,
this is all I could do. It brought back
lots of memories. I cried when I heard
Keith Whitley sing, thinking of how we lost him too soon. I still remember where I was when I heard he
was dead. For some of my generation they
lamented the loss of Kurt Cobain, for me it was Keith Whitley.
When I got to some of my country classics and my soul music,
I thought about my Dad. When I would get
sick, I would sleep on the couch, with my little vaporizer and Mom would tend
me. Dad would come in drunk as Cooter
Brown, and he would teach me about music.
He would play Tanya Tuckers TNT album. The album folded out and on the inside was
this picture of her in bright red body suit.
Then he would pull out his Barbara Mandrel albums. Mom despised her, something about she was in
a car wreck and sued the family of the man who hit her, even though he died and
she was rich. Then Dad would pick up his
Barbara Streisand albums and look at them longingly. He would say, “I love her, but I hate her
politics.” She is a liberal Democrat, Daddy
is a died in the wool conservative Republican.
He would inevitable put the record down and not play it. He would talk about The Temps and The Tops
and said he used to argue with Uncle Andy over who was better. He taught me to love soul music and really
all music, no matter the ethnicity.
My mom loves music too, but with her it was only Rock and
Roll and Pop; Elton John, The Beatles, Paul McCartney, Wings, Joe Stampley and
The Uniques, and James Taylor. I had to
fight her to able to listen to country music.
“Why do you want to listen to people sing threw their nose?!” she would say. We would be riding along in the car and she
would ask me who was playing. Then she
would snap her fingers and say, “You ought to know it when it starts!” But with Dad, he taught me, the world was my
musical oyster.
Something else has happened in the last few weeks that I
want to share with you. A friend of mine
in middle school I have talked in Friends,
named Stacy, lost her baby brother Sammy to suicide. Now those of you who are
following along, know I have struggled with suicidal tendencies throughout my
life. But the shock of what this has
done to someone so dear to me, and her family, has made me see what damage I
would do to my family should I chose to do this. Also watching Jay struggle this week with
those heavy boards has made me realize, if I should leave him, there would be
no one to help him with projects. He
would have to struggle to tend to this house, this farm, and these kids, by
himself. I just can’t do that to
him. It’s not fair. I feel this round of Bronchitis might have
just cured me of this tendency.
As much as I hem and
I haw that I don’t do enough around this house, cause I can still look around
and see cobwebs and a toilet I need to attack with a toothbrush. I realize this week just how much I do do,
that I have always done, and how much more I have started doing since I got on
my new meds. How much I grieved, not
being able to type or even having the energy to pick up pen and paper and write
to you. I still have so many stories
left to tell you. I have to tell you about
The Brett Incident, and going to USL,
and lots of other stories and I have to finish my books. I really realized this week how much y’all
would miss me, and how much I would miss this life. What the dead always tell me is how much they
miss being alive. How frustrating it
would be to me, to be on the other side and not be able to bring Jay a glass of
tea when he his hot, or find his hammer when he has lost it again. How sad indeed.
Ilsa
Ah Isla, my dear sweet friend, who I have never been able to be close to in time or space, I love your writing, but like so many people, (you know one!) I just don't have enough time or energy to do as much reading as I want to do! I know about bronchitis for sure. Jerry has had it and been off from work since Friday. The pay will be sorely missed and needed, but as you, we will manage. I also had it every year until I quit smoking for many years, then in 2010, after smoking again for 3 years again, I ended up in hospital. Anyway, I know how it makes you feel. I am doing all I can, and also fighting allergies, but thank the universal ways, I don't have it.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I hope to find more time to read more of your blog because it is So interesting and I Love reading a good book! You are a writer my dear, just not published yet I guess. Love you, and I mean that!