Sunday 30 July 2023

Week 30 - One Daily Positive and Project 365

I was so far behind with commenting (5 weeks) that I almost gave up, but I'm getting there slowly. I'm having trouble scheduling posts with working out the time differences, it has probably all gone wrong by now.

We're in Australia for the summer, having left the pets with a variety of house sitters, friends and neighbours. The first two weeks we're visiting Melbourne and The Whitsunday Islands then 2 and a bit weeks with our 31 year old son in and around Sydney.

We had two Sunday for the purpose of Project365, otherwise I'd be out a photo which is really weird, they all match up but I'm still struggling to make sense of what day it was when we arrived.

205 Sunday We started our journey from Heathrow at 11am and after 13 hours in the air we arrived in Kuala Lumpur having lost 7 hours. Leaving 2 hours later we arrived in Melbourne and lost a further 2 hours and 2 seasons as it is winter here in Australia. We got to our hotel after 26 hours of travel at 9pm on the Monday evening. Body clocks 11am Monday morning.


206 Sunday and Monday Hardly slept, body clock not playing ball, awake at 5am and and by 6am we were walking around the dockland area before finding a coffee shop. We went back to the hotel and slept till 11am, then we walked into Melbourne, exploring the shops, the Yarra riverside, had lunch, more coffee and back to the hotel by 6pm.

This photo was taken at 11am Kuala Lumper time, 1pm in Australia but 2am UK time, so I think I missed a photo for Sunday. Yet after a nights sleep we still had a Monday.


207 Tuesday Awake by 4am, out for coffee by 6am after a stroll around the dockland, back to hotel and slept from 8-11am. Then off into Melbourne, we walked 11 miles taking in the Yarra, the street art graffiti and the MCG, home of test cricket. We explored open spaces, enjoyed street food and were back in the hotel by 8pm with beer and snacks.


208 Wednesday Awake at 2am, we read and watched TV, back to sleep around 4am, then forced ourselves out for coffee and breakfast. Walked into the City for lunch, then back to the hotel to wrap up for the light festival at the botanical gardens.

Sent this photo to our grandchild in the UK, to show them, we're upside down.


209 Thursday Early check out, car hire collected from airport and we drove to Philip Island for the night. We stopped at the Koala Conservation where we spent a couple of hours, checked in at our hotel, then drove to see the Penguin Parade. The penguins come into roost around sunset and we sat on platforms n the beach to watch thousands of them quite literally swept in with the tide. We had our first full nights sleep on local time.


210 Friday A leisurely morning then hit the road to drive to St Kilda for lunch then on into Colac for the night. We bought salad and snacks from the local supermarket, watched TV and were asleep by 9pm.


211 Saturday Awake around 8am, no rush to leave the motel. Drove to The Twelve Disciples then onto to Cape Otway to look for Whales. There were plenty of stops for coffee, cake and lunch on our way to Lorne for the night.


On the blog this week:

No time to die. Are you prepared?


You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Friday 28 July 2023

Post Comment Love - 28th-30th July 2023

Welcome back to #pocolo with Stephanie from Lifeat139a and I. This week I'm in and around Melbourne, having driven part of the Great Ocean Road and visited Philip Island to see the Fairy Penguins and oh my, koalas are just the cutest.


We're off on Sunday to the Whitsunday Islands where we'll be packing away our winter gear and digging out the flip flops and swimsuits from our suitcases. We'll be there for a week, with no agenda other than to enjoy the lagoon, the beaches and a couple of glass bottom boat tours over the Great Barrier Reef. 

Post Comment Love #PoCoLo is a friendly weekly linky where you can link up any blog post you've written this week and all we ask is that you leave a comment on either mine or Stephanie's post which you linked up through and at least one other post. We'd also love it if you could RT us on Twitter when we tag you to help us reach a wider audience.

I'll be catching up with reading your posts, sharing and commenting over the weekend.

PoCoLo

Want to find out more about Post Comment Love #PoCoLo? 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Monday 24 July 2023

No time to die - are you prepared?

I may have pinched this title from a James Bond film, but it is what keeps popping into my head when I think about death.

I don't think about death in a negative way and I'm certainly, not to my knowledge, going to die anytime soon, but over the past few years I have had a couple of scares with blood tests that have led to a bone marrow biopsy and tests for leukaemia as well as currently waiting for the results from scans for a mole behind my eye to check it hasn't grown or changed shape since the last test 8 months ago. I also had a mammogram last week and a recent smear test. Peter had a prostate scare around 15 years ago and he has had his 'over 65 poop in a tube test'

When you reach a certain age, all of sudden everything is geared for dying. Adverts on the TV for the over 50s for funeral plans and constant reminders we're getting near to the end of our lives. Stairlift and bath aid leaflets through the door. And reminders from the NHS that you might have cancer, let us check you over.

We're not infallible, it's the only certainty in life that one day we will die. I don't know if it is age related, I'm 52, that I think more about death, but it certainly stems from watching my father die when he collapsed at home suddenly in 2017.

We weren't prepared for his death, it was sudden and such a shock, but then as time has gone on, I've realised it was inevitable and with hindsight, it was amazing he lived as long as he did after his heart attack in 2012 and his life style choices. I'm also grateful that he just died, no downhill spiral, no worrying, no waiting to say goodbye.

In a way though we were prepared for his death, he had everything in place we needed to ensure a last goodbye. His paperwork was in order, he'd discussed it with me a month prior to his death. He'd written out his funeral requests, psalms, songs and provided us with a brief history of his life for us to use for his eulogy. He kept up to date records of family and friends so we were able to contact everyone straight away and he had a funeral policy in place. 

So we've written our wills, we've informed the daughter in laws where our paperwork is kept and discussed our funeral plans with each other. No religion, play ELO Mr Bluesky for me, no scattering of ashes, no sitting on the window sill in the downstairs loo and no turning us into pieces of jewellery. 

We've told the kids to do whatever they want with the stuff in the house, take it, skip it, house clearance, unless there is anything they want. We've got the solicitors acting as our executors as our children are far and wide, just don't leave the house standing as shrine to either of us.

As for our old age, the bit before we die, if we need care then we can pay for it, have people in to clean, mow the lawn. We're tech savvy so there's no reason why we can't carry on managing our own lives before we consider or need a care home. But the bit before that, the 'adventure before dementia' where we spend as much of our money as we can buying a camper van, travelling the world, sorting our home for our old age is all underway and we're just not worrying about anything else.

This was one of the stands at the Three Counties Fair in June. My first thought on seeing it was 'what?' then I realised it's exactly what I've been talking about, Death being inevitable. Quite a few parents hushed their children's questions and moved them on, avoiding the subject, missing an opportunity to normalise talking about death.


Is death something you talk about? Are you honest with your children about where people go when they die? 

Sunday 23 July 2023

Week 29 One Daily Positive and Project 365

What a weekend, I'm exhausted after the stress and worry with Bob and the drive and upset to Hastings.

Flying out to Australia in the morning where we're visiting Melbourne, The Whitsunday Islands and our son in Sydney and 4 nights in Kuala Lumpur on our way home. Packing has been interesting as we have 15kg luggage allowance each and need to cater for winter and beach weather during our stay.

House sitter has moved in and our neighbours and a friend are helping out with the cat and dog. We are fortunate to have such good friends, we can rely on.

198 Sunday Up and back to the hospital to say our goodbyes. It will probably be the last time my mum sees her sister. We detoured home via another Aunt and Uncle. I drove none stop from there and after dropping mum at home, I got in around 6.30pm. Cup of tea, bath and bed.

Bob getting much better.


199 Monday A long and tiring day in work, evening spent booking internal flights and accommodation in Australia.


200 Tuesday Off work with a migraine. I had to collect a prescription so Peter walked Bob with me to the local chemist. I spent most of the day in bed, but did do a little packing. Peter visited child 1 in Gloucester for the afternoon. Friend popped round in the evening.




201 Wednesday Haematologist phoned to say first gene mutation negative, still got 3 more to wait for. Work and walked into town for coffee and a bit of shopping. Was going to Youth Club but I'd got my dates wrong so Peter collected me. Back out at 7pm for staff leaving do and had a lift home. Cousin messaged to say Aunt was rallying and had eaten for herself today and got out of bed to sit in a chair.

Carnage in the cup de sac at the end of the school day.


202 Thursday Work via a blood test, then home via the nail bar. I scheduled some blog post for the first week we're away, wrote out instructions for the house sitter and watched TV.

Bought myself a new bougainvillaea, which we'll be able to take inside when the frosts come.


203 Friday Malvern Hills walk with school, home by 2pm. I managed to fall over in spectacular style landing prone, flat on my back after being catapulted in the air. Pottered around organising the last few bits of our holiday, checking in and making sure we had insurance and visa details in our hand luggage. Friend round for chips and wine.

Around 1000 of us traipsing across the hills.


204 Saturday Morning spent last minute tidying and cleaning, then out for a coffee while the washing was on. Set off for Heathrow around 3pm for a night before we fly to Australia. Cousin got in touch to say Aunt is now on a main ward and will be moving soon to a long stay hospital for physio and OT.


On the blog this week:

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Friday 21 July 2023

Post Comment Love 21st-23rd July 2023

Welcome back to #pocolo with Stephanie from Lifeat139a and I.

Post Comment Love #PoCoLo is a friendly weekly linky where you can link up any blog post you've written this week and all we ask is that you leave a comment on either mine or Stephanie's post which you linked up through and at least one other post. We'd also love it if you could RT us on Twitter when we tag you to help us reach a wider audience.

We're off to Australia on Sunday for 5 weeks to Melbourne, the Whitsunday Islands then to Sydney to visit child 3. We have a combination of house sitters, neighbours and friends to look after Bob and Pushkins while we are away.

We have to pack for winter, summer and in-between and we've a 15kg luggage allowance which is proving tricky with packing.

Flip flops and a winter coat is an interesting combination for the suitcase at the same time.


I'm up the Malvern Hills today a walk of almost 8 miles with 1300 students and 100 staff for the last day of the summer term.

I'll be catching up with reading your posts, sharing and commenting over the weekend.

PoCoLo

Want to find out more about Post Comment Love #PoCoLo? 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Monday 17 July 2023

What I'm reading in August

We've got a limited luggage allowance of 20kg for our 5 weeks in Australia and a stop over in Kuala Lumpur and we have to cater for both summer and winter on our trip, arriving in Melbourne in winter, flying up to The Great Barrier Reef for a week, back down to Sydney where it can be winter one day and summer the next, then onto Kuala Lumpur for 30c temps and rain.

I've packed 4 large books in my hand luggage, Peter has 2 in his, so I'm hoping we have enough between us, if not, there are plenty of book shops, where we can buy some more and leave behind what we've read.

So far this year I've read the following:

January

Lord of the Flies - William Golding. Re read from O level days

To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee. One of those books everyone should read

A Christmas Carol - Charles Dickens. Re read from O level days

Off Mice and Men - John Steinbeck. Re read from O level days

Macbeth - Shakespeare. Re read from O level days

The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood. Never watched the TV series, but the book was brillant

A Streetcar Named Desire - Tennessee Williams. One we all think we know till we read it.

Frankenstein - Mary Shelly. The hardest book I've read to date, takes ages to get going through a series of letters.

February

Three Men in a Boat - Jerome K Jerome. Loved this book so much, a travel guide to the Thames.

Good Eggs - Rebecca Hardiman. Light and easy read.

March

Pippi Longstockings - Astrid Lindgren. A childhood favourite.

Five on a Treasure Island - Enid Blyton. A childhood favourite.

The Tempest - Shakespeare. Read the summary first to get an understanding of the plot, characters came to life.

Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson. A bit boring, had to persevere.

April

Agatha Raisin Terrible Tourist - M. C. Beaton. Quick read in a day.

Anything Could Happen - Lucy Diamond. A life that could've gone either way, all the 'what ifs?'

Home Truths - Susan Lewis. Dealing with your husbands murder and blaming your son who then becomes a missing person.

The Wild Roses - D.B. Carter Three friends in the mid 80's making different choices and following the paths they lead.

Oranges are not the only fruit - Jeanette Winterson. Absolutely loved the BBC drama with Charlotte Coleman back in 1991. A young woman growing up with the church and not conforming with mothers expectations of her.

The Enemy - Lee Child. Exploring Reachers military days.

May

Robinson Crusoe - Daniel Defoe. My fathers book given to him by his Granny in 1947.

Restoring Grace - Katie Fforde. Easy read about lost love and new beginnings.

Follow Me Home - Cathy Woodman. A light hearted story about finding new love.

Nineteen Eighty-Four - George Orwell. Hard to get going, but once engaged the pages just raced past.

When Breath Becomes Air - Paul Kaplanithi. Pauls' story as a Neurologist discovering he has brain cancer, how he deals with the treatment, life and ultimately his death.

Five Go Adventuring Again - Enid Blyton. I've been reading this book alongside a mentee in school and we've been comparing childhood with the now and the then.

June

Postmortem - Patricia Cornwell - Making sure my windows are locked during the hot weather

Blue Moon - Lee Child - Quite a lot of graphic violence but good plot line

The Hobbit - J R R Tolkien Very different to my childhood memory of reading this book, probably because all I can see now as I read are the characters as they were portrayed on TV

Tess of the d'Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy - hard going and plot didn't really work for me (abandoned) 

Malory Towers - Enid Blyton 'Your people are here' Parents arrive to collect their daughter from boarding school

July

The American Dream 1965 - Norman Mailer A very violent read, stuck with it as it is relevant to the A Level curriculum

The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald More of a book to reference and understand

POSH - Laura Wade Switched to Septembers reading list

F. Scott Fitzgerald - Andre Le Vot Switched to Septembers reading list

August

Again, Rachel - Marion Keyes

Blow Fly - Patricia Cornwall

The Dark Room - Sam Blake

The missing years - Lexie Elliot


Week 28 One Daily Positive and Project 365

It's been a long and difficult week with flight delays, family health and Bob being poorly.

My flight home was delayed due to lightening and I got in after midnight. I was grateful my flight wasn't cancelled as many more were.

Bob stopped eating on Wednesday and started being sick, by Thursday he couldn't even keep down any water and on Friday we prepared to say our goodbyes. The vet said without scans and bloods she couldn't tell for sure but he probably has something serious going on and at 13 there was nothing she could do. We left the vets after an injection and tablets for the weekend to stop him being sick. He started to rally, kept down water and some food and Peter said by Saturday he was pricking up his ears and salivating when there was any food on the go. We've been told to bring him back if he starts being sick again, but it'll be to say goodbye.

My mums sister had a fall on Wednesday and as we go to Australia next week, it would be difficult for mum to get down to south to see her. It'll probably be the last time Mum sees her so was good to fit in the unexpected visit. 

191 Sunday Took the dog and went off for a walk around a lake, the rain was torrential so we all sheltered in the car until there was a break which lasted an hour, giving us enough time to walk. Off to the in laws in the afternoon for a BBQ. Final cuddle with Grandson and dropped at the airport for delayed flight.


192 Monday Car in for a service so Peter dropped me at a students home, he then caught the train home and my students mum dropped me off to collect the car for 4pm. I spent the evening planning the Australian trip.

Bob was happy to have me home, he'd been looking for me all weekend.


193 Tuesday  Really tired, a long day in work then off swimming in the evening. I dropped Peter and Bob off at the pool and they walked home. Peter said Bob really struggled the last part.

Started packing. Winter gear for Melbourne and flip flops for our visit to The Great Barrier Reef.


194 Wednesday Online training in work. Bob was really poorly and we were going to Lydney after work to visit our grandchild. Bob jumped into the car so we decided to take him. We stopped at mums first to say hello and move some furniture around for her. Prepared grandchild that they might not see Bob again.


195 Thursday Home from work and Bob going downhill fast, he refused chips that my friend and I had switched from Friday to today. He was throwing up green slime and hadn't eaten or drunk all day.


196 Took Bob to the vets after work, left there in tears, knowing that the vet was just making Bob comfortable for the weekend and that we can't put off the inevitable. He is 13 now.


197 Left home at 8am to collect mum and drive to Hastings to visit her sister in hospital. We arrived at 2pm and took a shot walk before heading off to the hospital. My cousins wife called to say they'd be called in as my Aunt really was unwell. it was a difficult visit for everyone. Mum and I had a blow out quite literally along the seafront, followed by a go on the 2p slots, dinner and back to hotel. Bath tap wouldn't turn off and mum got drenched from the shower when it switched on her, had to get receptionist to come up and turn it off.


On the blog this week:

Why don't we talk about death?


You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Friday 14 July 2023

Post Comment Love 14th-16th July 2023

Welcome back to #pocolo with Stephanie from Lifeat139a and I.

I've been a bit slack with commenting, but I've been very tired and have been very busy with family and friends and I spent last weekend in Belfast visiting our grandson. This weekend I'm in Brighton taking mum to see her sister who is very poorly and then we're off to Australia the following weekend to see our son. The dog is also poorly and not eating and has even sicked up his water. So all in all I'm a bit stressed with everything going on.



Post Comment Love #PoCoLo is a friendly weekly linky where you can link up any blog post you've written this week and all we ask is that you leave a comment on either mine or Stephanie's post which you linked up through and at least one other post. We'd also love it if you could RT us on Twitter when we tag you to help us reach a wider audience.


I'll be catching up with reading your posts, sharing and commenting over the weekend.

PoCoLo

Want to find out more about Post Comment Love #PoCoLo? 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Tuesday 11 July 2023

Why don't we talk about death?



Death is such a natural thing and will happen to us all, but we never talk about it.

It’s not discussed in schools, we aren’t prepared for it happening to us or to love ones.

However I don’t believe that any amount of discussion can prepare us for death, the feelings, the emotions, the grief, the what next.

Grief is something we all experience in life and it doesn’t have to be just death that causes it. A divorce, moving home, losing a job, change of identity all cause grief in one form or another.


We teach lifeskills, we teach about growing up and the only part of old age we discuss is our pensions and preparing for retirement. Companies offer courses on retirement, primary schools ask about family and their experiences of historical events for show and tell in class.


The only part of discussing death we ever start to prepare our children for is the  loss of a hamster or a goldfish. But even that doesn’t prepare us for how as parents we support our children through their first experience of death.


As an adult I know we had cats that died while I was young and a dog when I was a teen, but the only memory of that was hearing from my mother over the phone that the dog had been put down, so matter of fact, no emotion, but as an adult now with an aging cat and dog I understand my mother had done her grieving, had been prepared for the vets news and the assumption that as the dog was 13 and I’d left home that the grief would be minimal, that it wouldn’t have an effect on me as a young adult.


The family goldfish was an inconvenience, cleaning the tank, remembering to feed it, the kids weren’t interested, but one morning it was no longer there and it did cause upset, because a familiar part of the children's life had gone, something that was always there was no more and it caused upset.


The 2 hamsters, both bought in haste, knowing they only had a 2 year life span, should’ve rung warning bells, but we again owned pets that we knew would die and would upset the children. One came quickly, the other we knew was dying and the youngest child made a coffin, dug a hole in the garden and was almost waiting for the event to happen, then on the day after the funeral in the garden they wouldn’t leave the grave and I stood outside with an umbrella over Childs head with what felt like forever until he was able to come inside.


There were chickens and a rooster that ‘ran away’ then various birds and insects we tended after they’d been brought into the family, injured by the cat and dog.


During my school years there were 3 students I knew of who were killed on the roads, friends parents died young. Announcements were made in assemblies and representatives of the school chosen to attend funerals, but still we didn’t talk about death outside of the event and the discussions were about how individuals were feeling at the time, not the grieving process, not how we can prepare ourselves for others and eventually our own death.


Every death has had an impact on me, whether it’s supporting friends with the death of a loved one from cooking a meal, helping them clear out their parents home, sitting with them as they grieve just being there, listening to them talk, sharing memories, attending the funeral. From old age through cancer or life limiting disabilities, I’ve experienced them all through some form or another either with a family member, a friend or through the children. But again, every time it’s been a shock, it’s happened suddenly and we’ve not been prepared, but in reality we have been prepared, we know it’s coming but we don’t discuss it and why?


We don’t discuss it because we don’t want to upset anyone, we don’t want to dwell on it, the negativity or even wait for it to happen even when it is inevitable.


My Gran died aged 92, the grieving process was horrendous, I cried for days, I could no longer could speak to her, there were so many questions left unanswered, but nothing to resolve. Every time I said goodbye in the hospital I knew it could be the last time. She knew that too and in the end a week before she died, she asked me not to come anymore, it distressed her to see me so sad as she herself knew she was dying and it wouldn’t be long. Cause of death……old age.


My fathers death was similar, he had type 2 diabetes, he’d already had a heart attack, they couldn’t stent him, he had stage 3 kidney failure ( we found that out later ) he’d been having TIA’s (I’d suspected this due to his mobility change and new pains ) he’d discussed his death with me, told me where everything was, prepared his own eulogy, chosen his music. Then I sat with him the night he died, holding his hand until the paramedics arrived. My last thoughts were something I told him I would say to him on his death bed ‘I’m calling house clearance’ I refrained from saying it as he lay dying but I was thinking it and the reality was that within a short period of time most of his life, everything he had collected over the years that identified him were gone.


But as with life and experiences we’ve had such as holidays, where we take photos and buy souvenir magnets for the fridge, for birthdays and anniversaries we celebrate and Christmas’s we share and the gifts we buy, death doesn’t go away, death doesn’t disappear and unfortunately but too often as we get older death comes around on a regular basis just like birthdays, Christmas and holidays.


Would it be wrong to celebrate death? We do in one form or another with holding onto ashes, turning loved ones into pieces of jewellery and even tattoos, remembering birthdays and the anniversary of their death and over time whilst the grief is still there, the layers around it grow and the raw memory of their death becomes memories of fondness. And the good times. My mother always buys herself flowers on the anniversary of her mothers death, a woman I met recently, buys her grandmothers favourite sweets on the anniversary. But those times become something that is personal, no longer a family event, but an individual thought that comes from dates such as birthdays or just random items on the news or seeing something in a shop or a visit somewhere you went with them.


We don’t teach people how to manage this process, we hear people say ‘it will get easier’ and whilst at the time their words are unwelcome, they are in time true.


My father lives with me every single day. I don’t need a date to remember him by. An item on the news will hear my father in my head ‘going on about it’ my husband putting ups. Mirror will have me hearing in my head ‘why does no one listen to me, you’re doing it all wrong’ any sporting event I attend I remember how I would phone my mum to tell my dad where we were sitting so he could keep an eye out on the TV and I’d bring the program back. I’d buy anything sport related I’d see in reference to any event, World Cup key rings, golf hat, water bottle and he’d keep every piece on a shelf, unused, but looked at and loved that I’d bought it for him, it held a little bit of me for him, but now all those items have gone. 


The physical presence disappears when a person dies, but the memories of their life and how it interacted with yours goes on, a bit of what made you, you no longer exists without them to share it with you, but you continue to grow and accept that they are no longer there, but you never forget.


Taken 2 days before his death. he doesn't look like someone who is going to drop dead in 48 hours, but looking back at the photo and witnessing his decline, I shouldn't have been surprised that he did die the day he did. 11th July 2017.


Sunday 9 July 2023

Week 27 One Daily Positive and Project 365 2023

We're off to Australia in 2 weeks time and there is so much to do with booking hotels, internal flights and car hire, but I'm so last minute with stuff like this, it drives everyone else up the wall, the tasks don't stress me out but everyone else around me wanting to know exactly what we're going to do and how we're going to do it does stress me out.

I'm waiting for my latest blood test results, they said 2 weeks which will be this coming Monday. My mammogram came back clear, which is good news.

People keep sending me links to menopause articles and will often raise the subject with me that I'm in denial. I'm probably menopausal or have gone through it, I really don't know. I have a condition called thrombocytosis where my bone marrow produces too many platelets, this is why I have regular blood tests as I am iron deficient anaemic, low in ferritin. Regular iron infusions have built up my stores, but they're depleting again, although I'm not yet low enough for an iron infusion. I'm permanently fatigued, struggle with going upstairs, get breathless and have regular checks with an ophthalmologist and at the retina clinic. Being fatigued does not stop me doing things like swimming and dog walking or going to work, but it does slow me down considerably, I don't ache, I don't have muscular pains, it's really difficult to explain how being so fatigued affects me.

I'm 100% sure that if it was the menopause that I wouldn't be under the care of a haematologist for the past 6 years.

184 Sunday Last day of the golf, I had the biggest cheer of my life as I walked onto the 18th green with the winner Daniel Hillier who finished 10 under par. I've been invited to work several events over the summer and at The BMW PGA at Wentworth in September which I've said yes to.


185 Monday I can't really remember much of what happened today other than I went to work then spent the afternoon and evening on the sofa. Got myself on camera, that's me, bottom left of the screen.


186 Tuesday Stayed on after school for homework club, afternoon the dinner and off swimming and swam 60 lengths. End of term treats, I had to avoid the wheat products.


187 Wednesday Strike day. My student was in as they are a 6th former. A colleague came home after work to meet the dog and cat as they are house sitting while we're away, we took Bob for a walk. Peter and I had dinner, then watched TV and had an early night.

Summer study for RPE.


188 Thursday I've taken on some extra responsibilities in work with learning walks, mentoring and picking up students who are falling by the wayside, not quite qualifying for an ECHP but still having educational needs. We had a bbq and I went swimming, I swam 70 lengths. Hotel stay prior to flight and car parking for the duration of our trip to Australia and Wentworth accommodation booked.

Bag packed for weekend, hand luggage only.


189 Friday Strike day, lots of moving things around as we are restructuring in September, we finished early with 11 of us visiting the new Cosy Club Lounge in town for lunch. Peter dropped me off at the airport around 5pm for my flight to Belfast for the weekend. Son collected me.


190 Saturday Grandson wasn't phased that when he woke I was in his house, he's 20 months old and just accepted I was there, which is lovely. We spent the morning at a mall, then the afternoon at Belfast Zoo, off to the in-laws for dinner then home to walk the dog, watch TV and an early night.

Grandson and I packed in the car, out the way while son and DIL sorted the dog out.


On the blog this week:

What I'm reading in July

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Friday 7 July 2023

Post Comment Love 7th - 9th July 2023

Welcome back to #pocolo with Stephanie from Lifeat139a and I.

Post Comment Love #PoCoLo is a friendly weekly linky where you can link up any blog post you've written this week and all we ask is that you leave a comment on either mine or Stephanie's post which you linked up through and at least one other post. We'd also love it if you could RT us on Twitter when we tag you to help us reach a wider audience.

I'm off to Northern Ireland for the weekend to spend some time with our grandson, he's growing so fast and whilst we can see him on video calls, it's just not the same as having proper granny cuddles.

I had a fab time working at The British Masters last weekend, behind the cameras, you can just see me bottom left of the photo, failing to keep out of sight of the camera as I was recording sound.

This was the winning golfer, Daniel Hillier, finishing 10 under par. I walked onto the green with him to the biggest cheer I've ever heard.


The next tournament I'm working at is at Wentworth in September. I've had to turn several others down as we'll be away over the summer holidays.

I'll be catching up with reading your posts, sharing and commenting over the weekend.

PoCoLo

Want to find out more about Post Comment Love #PoCoLo? 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Monday 3 July 2023

What I'm reading in July.

I've challenged myself to read a book a week during 2023. So far I'm ahead of my target at 30 books read to date.

Some of the books are easy reading with Enid Blyton books are in an evening, the modern day books take about 2-3 days and the classics can take over a week to read and I have at least two books on the go at any time.

I only read one additional book this month and I gave up with Tess of the D'ubervilles, such a lame story in my opinion and hard to read. I'll try to come back to it later on in the year.

So far this year I've read the following:

January

Lord of the Flies - William Golding. Re read from O level days

To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee. One of those books everyone should read

A Christmas Carol - Charles Dickens. Re read from O level days

Off Mice and Men - John Steinbeck. Re read from O level days

Macbeth - Shakespeare. Re read from O level days

The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood. Never watched the TV series, but the book was brillant

A Streetcar Named Desire - Tennessee Williams. One we all think we know till we read it.

Frankenstein - Mary Shelly. The hardest book I've read to date, takes ages to get going through a series of letters.

February

Three Men in a Boat - Jerome K Jerome. Loved this book so much, a travel guide to the Thames.

Good Eggs - Rebecca Hardiman. Light and easy read.

March

Pippi Longstockings - Astrid Lindgren. A childhood favourite.

Five on a Treasure Island - Enid Blyton. A childhood favourite.

The Tempest - Shakespeare. Read the summary first to get an understanding of the plot, characters came to life.

Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson. A bit boring, had to persevere.

April

Agatha Raisin Terrible Tourist - M. C. Beaton. Quick read in a day.

Anything Could Happen - Lucy Diamond. A life that could've gone either way, all the 'what ifs?'

Home Truths - Susan Lewis. Dealing with your husbands murder and blaming your son who then becomes a missing person.

The Wild Roses - D.B. Carter Three friends in the mid 80's making different choices and following the paths they lead.

Oranges are not the only fruit - Jeanette Winterson. Absolutely loved the BBC drama with Charlotte Coleman back in 1991. A young woman growing up with the church and not conforming with mothers expectations of her.

The Enemy - Lee Child. Exploring Reachers military days.

May

Robinson Crusoe - Daniel Defoe. My fathers book given to him by his Granny in 1947.

Restoring Grace - Katie Fforde. Easy read about lost love and new beginnings.

Follow Me Home - Cathy Woodman. A light hearted story about finding new love.

Nineteen Eighty-Four - George Orwell. Hard to get going, but once engaged the pages just raced past.

When Breath Becomes Air - Paul Kaplanithi. Pauls' story as a Neurologist discovering he has brain cancer, how he deals with the treatment, life and ultimately his death.

Five Go Adventuring Again - Enid Blyton. I've been reading this book alongside a mentee in school and we've been comparing childhood with the now and the then.

June

Postmortem - Patricia Cornwell - Making sure my windows are locked during the hot weather

Blue Moon - Lee Child - Quite a lot of graphic violence but good plot line

The Hobbit - J R R Tolkien Very different to my childhood memory of reading this book, probably because all I can see now as I read are the characters as they were portrayed on TV

Tess of the d'Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy - hard going and plot didn't really work for me (abandoned) 

Malory Towers - Enid Blyton 'Your people are here' Parents arrive to collect their daughter from boarding school

July

The American Dream 1965 - Norman Mailer 

The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald

POSH - Laura Wade

F. Scott Fitzgerald - Andre Le Vot


Sunday 2 July 2023

Week 26 - One Daily Positive and Project 365.

I'm way ahead of my book a week I challenged myself to and I've met with my first defeat. I just can't read Tess of the D'ubervilles. I'm really struggling with the writing, the content and the time in which it was written, so I've put it to one side and I'll try again later in the year.

It was my birthday on Monday, I'm 52 and certainly feeling it by the end of the week with all the walking in this heat.

I spent Thursday till Sunday working at The British Masters Golf as part of the TV crew recording live sound for the TV from the golf course. I'd love to be able to do more of this, it's great meeting new people. It's my 6th year being involved. Only the 2nd UK event I've done, the previous years were in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. 

177 Sunday Met friends for breakfast in Monmouth, then off to Goodrich Castle to spend the rest of the day with child 2, his wife and our almost 4yo grandchild. Bob came and we all had a lovely day. Home to watch Glastonbury, read and blog.


178 Monday Happy Birthday to me. Day in work, home early for another blood test, then on the phone most of the early evening sorting out travel insurance. Hung new curtains in lounge and office, had dinner, watched TV and early night.


179 Tuesday I was so tired that by 7pm I was in bed and by 8pm I'd cried so much from exhaustion and frustration about being so tired that I decided to match my physical levels to my mental state and I dragged myself to the pool where I swam for an hour and completed 60 lengths which is a mile.

My favourite card this year.


180 Wednesday After work, I walked into town for a coffee then to the Youth Club, where I volunteer. Peter collected me with Bob, I drove home and Peter walked back with Bob. 2 loads of washing went on and I packed my bag and switched my alarm off as I didn't need to leave home till 9am.

Present from Peter


181 Thursday Washing machine on and off to The Belfry for the golf. Call time was 11.15am but I arrived at 10am to collect my accreditation and familiarise myself with the course. I walked the course without a TV crew which made the job much easier. It was an hours journey each way. Brought the washing in, packed for the morning and bed at 9pm after watching the soaps.

I can't smile and selfie


182 Friday Awoke at 6am, did some blogging, ordered mums food shopping, drank tea and read. Headed off to the golf for the day, home at 7pm. Collected neighbour from work late evening.

Less steps than previously walked at these events


183 Saturday I'll take a photo today of the kit I wear, it's so hard to carry a rucksack as effectively I only have one hand free all day to remove bag, open zip, get food out and all while I'm walking, so today I had a bum bag with my lunch it, it was life changing. 

Walking down the 18th


On the blog this week:

The Death Cafe

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

ShareThis