Well, it's just good to know that when the chips are down and things look grim you'll feed off the girl who loves you to save your own ass!

Xander ,'Chosen'


Natter 72: We Were Unprepared for This  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


-t - May 19, 2014 2:46:09 pm PDT #28093 of 30000
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

JFC today was a Monday and a half. Was locked out of my computer for half an hour first thing in the morning, then had a good hour and a half of working before it was time for an hour long meeting followed by a half hour drive to a four-hour meeting (which did feed me lunch BUT STILL) then a half-hour back so I could try to cram everything that absolutely had to get done today into 20 minutes. Failed at that, of course, stayed an extra 45 minutes. But the kicker is, the one thing I really desperately needed to do today, once I got it done, I got a call from my "internal customer" telling me I am doing it wrong and apparently have been for the 6 months I've had the account (I was actually trained a year ago and have been doing it the same way and there has been no whisper that anything should be different, so I tend to think she is full of shit, but there's no way this isn't a huge PITA). Argh.


Connie Neil - May 19, 2014 3:06:52 pm PDT #28094 of 30000
brillig

I feel like I'm tempting the universe, but yesterday our "son" replaced a sensor on the Jeep, which has been reported in the past to be a cause of the engine stopping at low RPM. Today Hubby drove it around for 2 hours with no problems. All I need to do now is get the far-expired Taurus home without an issue, and I can swap over to my new car.


shrift - May 19, 2014 3:41:33 pm PDT #28095 of 30000
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

Fingers crossed, Connie.

I was there is DH and kids, but in the mountains and volcano areas. They certainly have a variety.

Cool! We'll be going there, too.

Vaccination soreness is beginning to set in.


msbelle - May 19, 2014 3:50:05 pm PDT #28096 of 30000
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

Old people stubbornly living alone and getting depressed is such common thing, how can more people not see it happening in others to recognize it in themselves.

OLD FOLKS COMMUNITY HOUSING is like my favorite thing ever. I really really do not understand why more people do not do it. Pool money even and hire a full-time aide.


Jesse - May 19, 2014 3:54:43 pm PDT #28097 of 30000
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

OLD FOLKS COMMUNITY HOUSING is like my favorite thing ever. I really really do not understand why more people do not do it.

I've finally realized some of the part of it I don't get is having lived in the same place for 30+ years.


Steph L. - May 19, 2014 4:18:11 pm PDT #28098 of 30000
I look more rad than Lutheranism

OLD FOLKS COMMUNITY HOUSING is like my favorite thing ever. I really really do not understand why more people do not do it. Pool money even and hire a full-time aide.

Seriously. My stepdad's mother is a widow (her husband died after not getting his pneumonia treated because he is stubborn [and also dead, so you do the math]), my dad is single but in his 70s, and Tim's dad is a widower. Both Tim's dad and my dad (who, coincidentally, have the same first name) are easygoing guys who could really use someone to tell them what to do. My stepdad's mom is, more or less, the ideal dictator of a small island nation. THEY SHOULD ALL LIVE TOGETHER! Win-win-win.


Amy - May 19, 2014 4:28:51 pm PDT #28099 of 30000
Because books.

Stephen's dad is so much like that. Once Stephen's mom died, he just sort of deflated. He doesn't go to church anymore -- he never goes anywhere but the grocery store or the doctor's office. Even when we were still up there, he used to chafe at sitting down to dinner all together sometimes. It makes me so sad for him, because there's so much he could be enjoying about his remaining years, and he's just not.


msbelle - May 19, 2014 4:41:36 pm PDT #28100 of 30000
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

My dad's parents moved into independent senior living when they were still active and in their early 70s. It was awesome, for them and us. My mom's mom did not move into assisted living until in her early 90s and she was still pretty independent. Thank goodness there were people she connected with, she had a group to play cards with every night. She lived there 5+ more years.

I know not everyone is financially in a place where they can move into the facilities of their choice, but the longer people wait to even downsize it just get s harder and harder and gives them less time to establish relationships in a new place.


sarameg - May 19, 2014 5:38:07 pm PDT #28101 of 30000

I really hope my neighborhood ends up being this. Life things happen, so who knows, but a number of us who call each other friend are kinda inclined to never move again. And really, we could always put up a ramp at one end and run a walkway across the entire row of porches....

Today was better than last monday, but that's not saying much. Getting a meeting at 3 called at 1 is rarely auspicious. And I have 4 hrs of meetings tomorrow. Anf I have 2 miniprojects to finish this week. Somehow.


Laura - May 19, 2014 5:46:12 pm PDT #28102 of 30000
Our wings are not tired.

If more people discussed the senior issues before they were there it might help, although it may still be tough to recognize you are there.

Cool! We'll be going there, too.

We climbed Cotopaxi. It was the most amazing experience. Each of us made it do a different altitude. As in could not manage to go one step further. The kids went the furthest. Me next and DH behind us. We told the kids they could go all the way to the steaming rim knowing full well that would never happen. Kids raised in Florida are not going to get over 19,000 feet in one day.