Sleep habits: Top sheet and down comforter, sheet tucked in at the bottom. I generally sleep in a long tee shirt or tank top and keep a pair of pajama pants handy for when I get up in the morning - I cannot stand having anything more than a sheet confining my legs when I sleep. I do start many nights with socks on as I can't get to sleep with cold feet, but I'll toe the socks off once my feet feel as warm as the rest of my body. I'm mostly a side sleeper but shift around during the night.
Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet
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.
Eep, Zen!
Good luck, Scrappy!
But the way he follows her around the apartment, like when she went in the kitchen to get a cup of tea, he was right on her tail, though he didn't want anything in the kitchen.
Being starry-eyed in love with someone has to just delay—not prevent—this becoming annoying as fuck, right?
I live in Virginia dang it. I am not sanguine about earthquakes!
It's not on the map?
I can only hope, Matt. Things were better this evening. Or maybe I just need to drink every time h I spend time around him.
Dinner was so delicious. I've never made this rice before and I'm in awe of myself. Thanks for putting up with my cooking posts (never mind the post about the bf). It is snowing now so they left early to get home before the bulk of the storm hits.
Back on the sleeping, I'm with Brenda and the others in needing some minimal cover even on the hottest of nights.
Nope, not on the map. However, Twitter is giving me reports of a bright meteor over Delaware/Maryland. If that's what I felt shaking things, that was one big damn End Times meteor.
They are scary, but most likely it's all over now, Zen. I know that doesn't help much with the adrenaline dump, but it's something.
And it looks like I gave you a bad link, here's the better map [link] I don't see anything in Virginia.
He can't be Mom's full-time caregiver; for one thing, she really can't walk at all, and must be muscled into the bathroom and to bed by two strong staff-members.
This is so hard. My dad was stuck as the primary caregiver for my pretty much immobile mom for the last couple of years of his life. They did have help that would come to the house to help move her around, but his whole life was about getting her to appointments and worrying about her falling, or calling the fire department when she did fall.
Part of me is convinced that when he got the original diagnosis of his cancer he kept it hidden from all of us because he just wanted to let go. When going through paperwork after his death I found a diagnosis from April that showed the cancer. It didn't get bad enough to bring it all to our attention until June, and then he was gone a month later.
I think if your dad is say he can't do it now that's actually a good thing. It's hard, but it will hopefully help keep his quality of life at a reasonable level.
Dealing with aging and ill parents is not easy, and I know that I feel like I've not done the best job of it.
Jumped off a boat in the pacific ocean to chase after dolphins. (Ended up mostly chasing after jellyfish.)
And it was awesome, and I was...really glad I didn't do it. :) Snorkeling was pretty atypical for me. Today I organized an alumni gamewatch...and then Georgetown LOST in an awful way to a school that was founded in 1997! 1997!?!?!. Seriously. The game was just painful to watch.
And I finally found the mini-moo creamers--they had them at Safeway (where I don't usually go). Yay. (A pack of 24, which I will be much more likely to use by the deadline than the pack of 192 on amazon)