I am broke. I don't have more than a couple days worth of food and I don't get my next disability check for two weeks. I feel like shit. My (soon-to-be-ex) wife has spent much of the last two days telling me how awful and evil I am and how much my children hate me.
Yes, I know I'm whining. I don't fucking care.
I want to die.
Second Act
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
We, The People
A lot of people seem to have forgotten something about Us. You know, the capital letter Us, as in:
"We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for t...
"We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for t...
he United States of America."
We are a commonwealth, as that term was used at the time. We don't stand in opposition to our government, we all share rights and responsibilities, with respect to our government and with respect to each other.
I say it's time we remembered we all stand together or we all sink alone.
We are a commonwealth, as that term was used at the time. We don't stand in opposition to our government, we all share rights and responsibilities, with respect to our government and with respect to each other.
I say it's time we remembered we all stand together or we all sink alone.
Labels:
Commonwealth,
Courage,
Life,
Peace,
Politics,
Vote,
We the People
Monday, August 27, 2012
Do Not Buy Toshiba Products
I have a Toshiba Satellite C655 laptop. The Toshiba proprietary software often prevents me from being able to to close those annoying floating pop-up ads one encounters on the net. If, like me, you believe that your computer should not be hamstrung to prevent you from avoiding or shutting down these assholes then you should not buy their products.
The company that is currently preventing me from using my computer to read the news is a company called Vizu. Vizu's corporate address and phoe number is 185 Berry Street, Suite 5200, San Francisco, CA 94107, Phone: 415.362.8498. Go ahead, give them a call. I'm sure they'd love to hear from you how much consumers love their product. Vizu is a Nielsen company. Their media contact is Julia Monti, Nielsen - 646-654-4412 - Julia.monti@nielsen.com. Give here a call or drop her a line, too. She'd love to hear from you.
The company that is currently preventing me from using my computer to read the news is a company called Vizu. Vizu's corporate address and phoe number is 185 Berry Street, Suite 5200, San Francisco, CA 94107, Phone: 415.362.8498. Go ahead, give them a call. I'm sure they'd love to hear from you how much consumers love their product. Vizu is a Nielsen company. Their media contact is Julia Monti, Nielsen - 646-654-4412 - Julia.monti@nielsen.com. Give here a call or drop her a line, too. She'd love to hear from you.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Still Ticking
I collected another stent on Thursday. That makes 8 total, so far. Then on Friday, I had an ablation in my heart's upper chamber. Nobody really told me everything that was involved with that. I assumed it was a lot like the ventricular catheterization angioplasty. I was wrong.
A cath takes about 45 minutes, give or take, absent complications. The ablation procedure is more like 4-6 hours. I was in the lab for 5.5 hours. Second, they knock you pretty far down, anasthesia-wise for an angiogram. Not so with the ablation. I got a lot of lidocaine (a numbing agent) in the entrance points: they poke a hole in your right and left femoral artery and insert the catheter. However, they can't give you much sedation or it masks the arrhythmia. So I was concious and in a good amount of pain for the entire procedure.
In an angiogram or similar procedure, they close off the artery with a stitch, so you are up and around alot faster. With the ablation, they just lean on the two wholes they've poked in your very, very upper thighs until the hole they punched in your femoral artery forms a clot. In my case, that was another 30 minutes. Then, because you don't want to throw that clot or cause the hole to re-open (you can bleed to death very quickly if you start bleeding out the femoral artery), you have to spend another 6 hours lying flat. By flat, I mean almost completely. They do let you elevate your head about 30 degrees.
Once the small amount of versed and sometimes phentynal they give you wears off, you are in pain. A lot of pain. My nurse kept me waiting about 90 minutes before she gave me my first dose of pain medication. I lay there, actually wanting to die, I was in so much pain. Finally, she comes in and asks me if I want a pain pill or a shot of morphine. I said "Yes." It took her a second to figure out I wanted both. By that time, a couple of other patients had heard me moaning and crying and come in to see what was wrong. One of them actually called the charge nurse on my behalf.
So. Now I have dead heart on the bottom and dead heart on top. And yet my body keeps on going. I take that as a sign that there is more instore for me. I just wish I knew what my second act was. And all the cardiac issues are getting rather old. I wish those would either kill me or go away. Selah.
A cath takes about 45 minutes, give or take, absent complications. The ablation procedure is more like 4-6 hours. I was in the lab for 5.5 hours. Second, they knock you pretty far down, anasthesia-wise for an angiogram. Not so with the ablation. I got a lot of lidocaine (a numbing agent) in the entrance points: they poke a hole in your right and left femoral artery and insert the catheter. However, they can't give you much sedation or it masks the arrhythmia. So I was concious and in a good amount of pain for the entire procedure.
In an angiogram or similar procedure, they close off the artery with a stitch, so you are up and around alot faster. With the ablation, they just lean on the two wholes they've poked in your very, very upper thighs until the hole they punched in your femoral artery forms a clot. In my case, that was another 30 minutes. Then, because you don't want to throw that clot or cause the hole to re-open (you can bleed to death very quickly if you start bleeding out the femoral artery), you have to spend another 6 hours lying flat. By flat, I mean almost completely. They do let you elevate your head about 30 degrees.
Once the small amount of versed and sometimes phentynal they give you wears off, you are in pain. A lot of pain. My nurse kept me waiting about 90 minutes before she gave me my first dose of pain medication. I lay there, actually wanting to die, I was in so much pain. Finally, she comes in and asks me if I want a pain pill or a shot of morphine. I said "Yes." It took her a second to figure out I wanted both. By that time, a couple of other patients had heard me moaning and crying and come in to see what was wrong. One of them actually called the charge nurse on my behalf.
So. Now I have dead heart on the bottom and dead heart on top. And yet my body keeps on going. I take that as a sign that there is more instore for me. I just wish I knew what my second act was. And all the cardiac issues are getting rather old. I wish those would either kill me or go away. Selah.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Okay, Now I Have Seen It All
Okay, so now the new thing in tattoos is anal ink. Her mother must be soooo proud.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
I'm Scared
Last month I went to the cardiologist and one of the routine things we did was to check thee history on my defibrillator. I have an implantable cardioverter defiblrillator, or AICD, to give me a jumpstart incase my heart goes gonzo. It's something a lot of people who have congestive heart failure get as a prophylactic measure.
But, anyway, to get back to why I am scared. Last month, we checked the history of the AICD and discovered that there was a dramatic increase in cases of ventricular tachycardia (V-tach or VT). Well, my cardio doc was concerned enough that he wanted me back in a month to get a new echocardiogram (ECG), re-check the AICD, and talk to the electrophysiologist.
It is not comforting when a doctor tells you he isn't sure what is going on, or if there is a problem. Not comforting at all. Now, I have to get two separate catheterization procedures on my heart. Within the next week. Not that there's anything to worry about yet.
I would be able to find a way to make peace with the news that I was getting worse. I would do cartwheels if I was told I was getting better. But the doctors don't know.
And I'm scared.
But, anyway, to get back to why I am scared. Last month, we checked the history of the AICD and discovered that there was a dramatic increase in cases of ventricular tachycardia (V-tach or VT). Well, my cardio doc was concerned enough that he wanted me back in a month to get a new echocardiogram (ECG), re-check the AICD, and talk to the electrophysiologist.
It is not comforting when a doctor tells you he isn't sure what is going on, or if there is a problem. Not comforting at all. Now, I have to get two separate catheterization procedures on my heart. Within the next week. Not that there's anything to worry about yet.
I would be able to find a way to make peace with the news that I was getting worse. I would do cartwheels if I was told I was getting better. But the doctors don't know.
And I'm scared.
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Yes, I Really Was That Big an Asshole
I don't spend a lot of time thinking about the events leading up to my marriage ending. But I have been thinking of it more these last few weeks. It had me feeling (and acting) depressed and introspective but I didn't know exactly why.
I realized that I had not felt at peace for a long time. Among the many compliants I had about living with my wife and kids, one thing I never felt there was like a stranger, an interloper. Happy or unhappy, from day to day I had a place I knew I would be each night, with food on the table, the isolation of the basement to retire to. I may not have been happy, but I was at peace.
I think if you were to ask Wife, there would have been times when she was convinced that we were on the verge of disaster. I remember her acting, and I have since learned she was not misrepresenting herself, like we had a moral and legal obligation to start packing and give up the house the first time we had a late mortgage payment.
Over the years, she became far more comfortable with the fact of being in debt and being overextended, but she has still not accepted it emotionally. But, there is more here than merely my failure to live within my means and her disapproval of it even as she enjoyed the fruits of our overspending. What I stole from my wife is much more valuable than money or dignity or even happiness. I stole the last bit of her sense of peace.
You see, my wife was born in an atmosphere where she was regularly assured, through action and routine, that she was safe. I was raised in the same community. My own experience was a little different because my family had neither the wealth, the connections, or the bloodline of the Gilded Cage (the name I have for the suburb on the North Shore of Lake Michigan, a collection of suburbs where nearly everybody has lots and lots of money, land, or stock. But Wife was the real deal.
For some reason, Wife continued to have that sense of peace with me until the very end. She wavered in the last 10 years, but hey, when push came to shove, she was on my side. And because she was on my side, things would turn out fine.
I stomped all over that sense of peace, of being loved and protected, sheltered. I stomped all over it with other women. I stomped all over it by managing to sabotage my career at every opportunity. She will never not worry about money, or her mental health, or the mental health of her kids. Hell, she'll worry about me. I don't know if she will ever open herself up to a man again.
I killed off her sense of peace and mine. I knew it as I was doing it. I didn't want it, I kept telling myself. And yet, I did little or nothing to stop it.
This is a complicated thing. But it's kind of at the center of the shitstorm, if you know what I mean. It isn't going to be particularly fun for me. It will be incredibly boring to some, self-indulgent shit to others. But I gotta get over this hill before I can see what lies beyond it. We're gonna be her for a little while.
I realized that I had not felt at peace for a long time. Among the many compliants I had about living with my wife and kids, one thing I never felt there was like a stranger, an interloper. Happy or unhappy, from day to day I had a place I knew I would be each night, with food on the table, the isolation of the basement to retire to. I may not have been happy, but I was at peace.
I think if you were to ask Wife, there would have been times when she was convinced that we were on the verge of disaster. I remember her acting, and I have since learned she was not misrepresenting herself, like we had a moral and legal obligation to start packing and give up the house the first time we had a late mortgage payment.
Over the years, she became far more comfortable with the fact of being in debt and being overextended, but she has still not accepted it emotionally. But, there is more here than merely my failure to live within my means and her disapproval of it even as she enjoyed the fruits of our overspending. What I stole from my wife is much more valuable than money or dignity or even happiness. I stole the last bit of her sense of peace.
You see, my wife was born in an atmosphere where she was regularly assured, through action and routine, that she was safe. I was raised in the same community. My own experience was a little different because my family had neither the wealth, the connections, or the bloodline of the Gilded Cage (the name I have for the suburb on the North Shore of Lake Michigan, a collection of suburbs where nearly everybody has lots and lots of money, land, or stock. But Wife was the real deal.
For some reason, Wife continued to have that sense of peace with me until the very end. She wavered in the last 10 years, but hey, when push came to shove, she was on my side. And because she was on my side, things would turn out fine.
I stomped all over that sense of peace, of being loved and protected, sheltered. I stomped all over it with other women. I stomped all over it by managing to sabotage my career at every opportunity. She will never not worry about money, or her mental health, or the mental health of her kids. Hell, she'll worry about me. I don't know if she will ever open herself up to a man again.
I killed off her sense of peace and mine. I knew it as I was doing it. I didn't want it, I kept telling myself. And yet, I did little or nothing to stop it.
This is a complicated thing. But it's kind of at the center of the shitstorm, if you know what I mean. It isn't going to be particularly fun for me. It will be incredibly boring to some, self-indulgent shit to others. But I gotta get over this hill before I can see what lies beyond it. We're gonna be her for a little while.
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