don't forget some cheese and crackers
Giles ,'Selfless'
Spike's Bitches 43: Who am I kidding? I love to brag.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Not that anyone really cares, but apparently, Lipstick Jungle is not cancelled
Not that anyone really cares, but apparently, Lipstick Jungle is not cancelled
Well, Craig Ferguson will be happy.
can they uncancel some shows I like?
:: starts to prepare long list of cool shows ::
This is me giving you the hairy eyeball, omnis, you smartass.
ION Yet another reason why I need to win the lottery: I just received an Oxford University Press catalog in the mail, and if one had the money, it would be so easy to blow thousands of dollars on Books.
Oh, WindSparrow - book catalogs are evil. Step away from them carefully, and then go to the nearest used books store.
At least, that's what I do.
The last three to four months have been insanely rough.
S went in to the hospital on September 1st. Two days later, she went into respiratory distress due to severe pulmonary edema, and was intubated and placed on a ventilator. Her chest films from that period were very white and cloudy. She was suffering from multiple infections that her body was in no condition to fight off all at once, including one in her brain. She was on the ventilator for almost two weeks before her lungs cleared up and she could breath on her own.
After she came off the ventilator, she was utterly delirious for almost three weeks, due to a combination of hepatic encephalopathy from her liver problems, the infection in her brain, and her reaction to the massive cocktail of drugs she'd been fed. I cannot even begin to imagine how people care for loved ones with severe dementia, as those three weeks almost did me in.
Just as she seemed to be recovering from the delirium, the infection in her brain flared up in her right hemisphere. She began manifesting symptoms very similar to a stroke; she lost all sensation and coordination in her left arm and leg, and the left side of her face fell. She also began having fairly frequent seizures on the left side of her face.
Many MRIs, EEGs and two lumbar punctures later, the neurologist and infectious disease specialist were stumped, and recommended a brain biopsy. The only thing that stopped a brain biopsy was the neurosurgeon pointing out that it was unlikely a biopsy would show anything that would cause them to change the course of treatment she was already on, and came with a very high risk of catastrophic complications, including brain hemorrhage and death.
She slowly recovered from that ordeal enough to be re-listed with the transplant center and released from the hospital. She's come such a long way, and made such an incredible recovery.
But she's definitely come back a little different. I feel like she'll eventually make a complete recovery, but she's not there yet. She's able to walk pretty well, but she hasn't remastered it yet. She's considerably slower at processing things than she was before, and she's kind of blind on her left side. She's not actually blind -- she can see out of that side just fine if she closes her right eye, but she has no peripheral vision on her left side, and even things right in front of her face can "disappear" on her if they are on her left at all.
One of my students just addressed me as "H-Dawg."
t edit: x-posty with Sean
It's good to hear the updates, Sean. Hope for a smooth transition.
What H-Dawg said.