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This was on my facebook page this AM ----under Googled Stuff -----thought I would share it here --
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Imagine you were born in 1900.

When you're 14, World War I begins and ends when you're 18 with 22 million dead.
Soon after a global pandemic, the Spanish Flu, appears, killing 50 million people. And you're alive and 20 years old.
When you're 29 you survive the global economic crisis that started with the collapse of the New York Stock Exchange, causing inflation, unemployment and famine.

When you're 33 years old the nazis come to power.
When you're 39, World War II begins and ends when you're 45 years old with a 60 million dead. In the Holocaust 6 million Jews die.

When you're 52, the Korean War begins.

When you're 64, the Vietnam War begins and ends when you're 75.
A child born in 1985 thinks his grandparents have no idea how difficult life is, but they have survived several wars and catastrophes.

Today we have all the comforts in a new world, amid a new pandemic. But we complain because we need to wear masks. We complain because we must stay confined to our homes where we have food, electricity, running water, wifi, even Netflix! None of that existed back in the day. But humanity survived those circumstances and never lost their joy of living.
A small change in our perspective can generate miracles. We should be thankful that we are alive. We should do everything we need to do to protect and help each other.
 
Still, I do wonder how others are managing.

It is making me a little crazy that I can't see Dave. I have a neighbour at the end of the street, who also goes to my church, who I have known most of my life. Her husband was a lovely man (in a sort of curmudgeonly way, if you know the type; old farm family). He died a couple of months ago, after a long sad decline after a major hip/pelvis break, sadly, at the front doors of the church. Anyway, he stayed at home with her, and some homecare and family help, until he took a sudden and terrible turn for the worse. He was diagnosed with bone cancer and died less than 3 weeks later. It took his wife 10 long days of working with the system so that she could be with him as he died. I have a minister. She's a lovely lady. Her Mom is 102, and in a LTC facility. She doesn't want her Mom to die alone; what does she do? Hospice spaces are very limited; you MUST die within 3 weeks...
 
It is making me a little crazy that I can't see Dave. I have a neighbour at the end of the street, who also goes to my church, who I have known most of my life. Her husband was a lovely man (in a sort of curmudgeonly way, if you know the type; old farm family). He died a couple of months ago, after a long sad decline after a major hip/pelvis break, sadly, at the front doors of the church. Anyway, he stayed at home with her, and some homecare and family help, until he took a sudden and terrible turn for the worse. He was diagnosed with bone cancer and died less than 3 weeks later. It took his wife 10 long days of working with the system so that she could be with him as he died. I have a minister. She's a lovely lady. Her Mom is 102, and in a LTC facility. She doesn't want her Mom to die alone; what does she do? Hospice spaces are very limited; you MUST die within 3 weeks...
Have you checked on the visiting regulations in your province? NS allows one dedicated visitor which can be a different one every week. Different rules for palliative patients, but the physician has to declare them palliative at a certain stage. I find that sometimes nurses doesn’t know exactly those new covid rules ( like the palliative score has to be 30%, which means someone is bedridden, but might still be eating and communicating). There are also exceptions that can be applied. I had to look that up the other day after a conversation with a relative who felt really bad not to be allowed to come in as a second visitor because her mother wasn’t “ that bad”.
It might be different regulations in your province but worth asking until you get an answer from someone who knows for sure. All those regulations are given in writing, so there should always be a policy to look up. Also good to find an advocate, which could be the hospital chaplain - or checking with the unit manager.
 
And there are a sector of the populace that say life is all good!

Is something wrong in the common wealth system? Could it be the dictating oli garchs? That's a slippery fish ...
 
I had a meltdown on Thursday night. I realized it was a culmination of things that began a year ago.

When we're undergoing unremitting stress - as this pandemic is - we have to find a way to release some of that stress just to keep soldiering on. In that sense a meltdown serves a purpose, like a boiling kettle giving off steam. Also, you are also living with a serious illness - which is an added stress.
All things considered, I think you're doing well. :love:
 
When we're undergoing unremitting stress - as this pandemic is - we have to find a way to release some of that stress just to keep soldiering on. In that sense a meltdown serves a purpose, like a boiling kettle giving off steam. Also, you are also living with a serious illness - which is an added stress.
All things considered, I think you're doing well. :love:


Can eruptions be abstract? Considering the altar egos do not wish to know anything but what is confined to a controlling tome ... in truth what's there is very distributive as to interpreted data ... vast variance according to interpretive gifts! Some mist it in the beginning in the struggle to control the stem of the tree ... limbics! Alexander Gibson of Fredericton called the stems ... deals! Thus the boarding industry ...
 
AB has really loosened LTC restrictions here, they did some a while ago and more now. It was with consultations with all involved. Some of what will be allowed will be what those living there actually decide. They are taking the entire health of the residents into account and it's been obvious the visitor restrictions were affecting health.
 
I don't know what kind Northwind has but they're probably portable because they live in an RV. Not much electricity required. Plus, there's warm weather. There are newer ones have built in power storage that can power up electronic devices directly.
 
But even if they're regular ones that power a battery - I was thinking, I usually say I'm charging my scooter (using electrical outlet and charger cord as source and power transfer method) - rather than saying I'm charging my scooter battery. Or, "I'm charging my phone" not my phone battery. Semantics.
 
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