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| A walking path in my backyard |
Since October, I've
been in the hospital 6 times. That's a lot for me and takes a toll on my body
physically and mentally. I also need to miss appointments and ABLE
because it takes so long for me to recover after a big stay like that. Despite
what I wrote, a little more than 3 weeks ago I ended up finding out I had a bad
case of double pneumonia. I guess I knew the first day that I went in, but soon
my oxygen went down to the low 70s even on 5 L of oxygen and I couldn’t
maintain it. After that, they had to slowly sedate me to keep me comfortable
because I was having high anxiety, trouble sleeping and difficulty maintaining
breathing. I was sedated for approximately 4 days.
In the beginning, they gave me 3 Bronchoscopy’s, a CT scan,
x-ray and tried 9 separate IV antibiotics until they found a combination of 3
that finally worked. Also, my lungs needed to relax and heal. They also had to
monitor me better, so they put me on one of their ventilators. I was even
trying to fight their vent (meaning it was giving me 20 breaths per minute, and
I was bringing it to 25. They were amazed that I had that much diaphragm
control, especially while being sedated, but I guess I do!)
From the start, it was just baby steps, 1 foot in front of the
other (or should I say, one wheel?) Also, since coming home, I’ve been sleeping
a lot; something I don’t do enough of. I realize that when my body says
“sleep,” it usually means that I need to rest and sleep whenever I can. By
resting, accepting help from friends and family, and gradual actions to
recover, I have the best plan in place to a speedy recovery. There were signs
and symptoms that went on right before, that I now realize to be something to
watch out for before things get too extreme.
If you’re reading this and live outside of Minnesota,
throughout the summer, Canadian wildfire smoke significantly affected the
state. The worst air quality was recorded in late July and early August. Some
of them were issued for multiple days at a time. I couldn’t go outside when the
air was bad because of my asthma and the fact that I’m on a vent. I have
trouble enough as it is. Not being able to get out of the house is hard enough
but when it is more than a week it becomes depressing.
This past spring I started the process of applying for a new
wheelchair. I’m eligible for a new one every 5 years and I’ve had mine for 7
years. It’s a long and daunting process, sometimes taking over a year for
insurance to cover everything I need. First, I had to have my Dr. write a
prescription. Then, I underwent a wheelchair evaluation with a physical
therapist aside my medical equipment supplier. Finally, I selected which chair
I wanted along with what I needed it to do.
I ordered it to recline, tilt, legs to raise, change drives
(making it speed up or slow down, elevate, and other things my wheelchair now
can do and more.) Insurance approved everything so far, except for the seat
elevation portion. That’s what allows me to raise my chair up and down. It’s
easier for people working to reach my height. I appealed it, but I’m just
waiting for their decision.
Labor Day weekend my boyfriend Jay visited me from
Jacksonville, Florida. We met through my blog. After his C7/C8 to T4 spinal
cord injury happened in 2019, he was searching for everything related to SCI’s,
and that’s when he came across my blog. He made a comment on one of my posts, I
responded, and then less than a year later, we fell in love and have been
together since 2020. We met in person for the first time, Labor Day weekend.
He’s coming on Thanksgiving and Christmas too!
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| Jay and I in my backyard |
According to Wikipedia “The Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia) is an art museum located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. Home to more than 100,000 works of art representing 5,000 years of world history, Mia is one of the largest art museums in the United States. Its permanent collection spans about 5,000 years and represents the world's diverse culture across six continents. The museum has five curatorial areas: Arts of Global Africa, Global Contemporary Art, Asian Art, European Art, and Arts of the Americas.”
I had so much fun! The last time I was at a museum was for a grade school field trip, and I don’t remember any of it. My nurse and I went, just to do something fun besides going outside, out to eat, to the mall etc. There are 3 floors, and we barely made it through one floor, the 2nd. My favorite painting was (1 of 4) in Vincent van Gogh’s series Olive Trees. This is a photo of me between Claude Monet’s Grainstack (looking at the photo, on the left) and my favorite painting.Here are 2 of my poems:
Expansive Roots
My limbs are rough, full of brown bark
despite not moving by themselves
they may falter in times of trouble
as my presence in the world matters
While my cracks show in harsh winds
delving deep into their structure and use
in my trunk’s importance in this world
proving I matter in the ecosystem
My roots are an expansive link
embedded in the dirt of Mother Earth
where I feed my self-worth within times
when I’m strongly supported by my presence
I am connected to neighboring life forces
stemming out reaching for provision up top
engaging with my family of surrounding trees
to construct a forest of my ancestries
With every breath I stretch into the clouds
as my experiences in life are deeply felt
although I have a few tangles to work out
with each year adorned with a new ring
My protection is my bark and layers
covering me so you can’t see
any of my tragedy or loss I’ve endured
that comes with being a dead treeThe city groans as it chokes on dust
exhaling gray, drifting smoke
hazy skies and air-quality alerts
obscuring the sun, covering towns
Like a curtain dropping from the sky
Canadian wildfires pollute Minnesota air,
strangling every tree in sight
spreading freely through dense conifers
A silent hold upon the once crisp atmosphere,
outdoors is forbidden for weeks
difficult to contain, as health is strained
harder for asthmatics to breathe
Embers sweep into drought-stricken fields
delicate lungs copiously cough,
hushing children’s play through the disorder,
as orange flames leave farmers at a loss




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