Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Finally, 10 verses about me -- 25 March 2008

Some time ago our oldest daughter issued a challenge to those who read her blog. We were supposed to write ten stanzas about ourselves. I’m long past the navel-gazing part of my life, and I left the angst behind when I went to college at 17, but I thought I’d give it a go. I tried to treat the assignment seriously. That’s not easy for a person who tries to not take themselves too seriously – and I just couldn’t get the rhythm out of my head.

10 verses about me

one
I am an old woman from Texas
Whose bluntness frequently fetches
A smile with a moan, a laugh with a groan
And a few occasional hexes.

two
I’ve worked in a number of places
And lived where I first knew no faces
South, west, north and east, even Germany’s feast
Learning lessons no time erases.

three
I grew up a singleton child
But my parents could never be guiled
Not father, not mother contradicted the other
So I had little chance to be wild.

four
It was easy to do well at school
Genetics and following the rule
Given by Dad, that “B” stood for bad
Kept me thinking being smart was cool.

five
My childhood was loving and stable
There was always food on the table
A bricklayer’s daughter, surrounded by laughter
I learned I was equally able.

six
Mama would frequently say
More earthily on most days
They may have more money, we may be more funny
But we put on our pants the same way.

seven
Live and let live without any fear
To each his own was held very dear
You’re as good as the rest, even the best
Respect the others both far and near.

eight
Independence was similarly taught
Self-sufficiency the ultimate thought
Depend on yourself, provide your own wealth
In every way that you ought.

nine
So what does this mean about me
Shall I do a quick summary?
Outspoken, adventurous, intelligent, accepting, self-reliant, confident
And sometimes the dark sides of these.

ten
These final adages should send
The best clues to me, my friends
You do what you want to do, you are what you do
The person who cares the least wins.


Thursday, March 13, 2008

Kelly's ASID Booth -- March 12, 2008

Many of you have been hearing for 3 years about Trout going to Kelly's to work on one thing or another. Kelly is the craftsman who is doing our cabinets, but his creativity and skill isn't limited to doing things like our little somewhat ordinary project. Trout helps him with the grunt work on his projects and Kelly does the creative part and the fine finishing.

They recently had to meet a deadline for a booth at the local ASID (American Society of Interior Designers) meeting at the convention center here in Tucson. The booth space was very small, just about 10'x10' but it was located right by the entry into the area of the meeting, so it was a great location.

This is the first thing like this that Kelly has done. I'm sure he will learn something new each time he does these shows. This time he learned that he didn't need to be so worried about some things as he was. He also learned that he needs to develop a good website.

To me the most exciting thing that happened was that some people from Tucson Lifestyle Magazine said that what he was doing was so different from everything they normally see that they want to do an article on his work for a summer issue. I think that may be the most important result from all the time, money and effort he put into doing the booth for the show.

Here are Kelly, his wife Lani and Trout posing for the camera after the booth was set up. I've been calling them the AFT (Arizona Furniture Theory -- Kelly's company name) Trinity. So blaphemous, I know, but before you assign roles, maybe their trinity is el maestro, el estudiante and la musa santa.


Here they are working on the booth.


Here Kelly and Trout are preparing to hang the mirror.

And here Trout is hanging it.


This is the wenge table that they used for "business" purposes -- flyers, business cards, etc. It also sort of formed the entry to the booth. Wenge is a very popular wood these days. I really like the legs of this table.


This is a table made of a slab of palo chino. Trout did the welding on the base of it. After thinking about a variety of bases to make, they just used what Kelly had around, largely due to time constraints I think. They added the balls on the feet. Many jokes were made about those.

Kelly loves doing furniture, but his bread and butter may turn out to be unique cabinet doors and drawer fronts. These are the ones that inspired the Tucson Lifestyle folks to want to write about him.

The ones on the left have conchos and distressed leather. The ones on the right have river rock set right into the space.


The ones on the left here have slate set in. The ones on the right have black leather but the inset is shaped.



This is Kelly taking a breather before the show starts. In this picture you can see the A-frames they built to show the doors and drawer fronts.



I took the first picture of the AFT Trinity because this one was good, but Trout's bald spot is in the mirror. Then I just couldn't get rid of it. His tonsure is so cute!


Trout has really been enjoying working with Kelly. He's learned a lot, improved his skills and gained some carpentry confidence.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Trout's Big Adventure at the University of AZ Medical Center

This is pretty graphic, so if you have a problem with visualizing things you read, you might not want to go any farther.


Wednesday, February 13th

We met Kelly in Vail for lunch. After that, we went to the PO across the street to send a money order for some item for the Cobra project. Then I took Trout to Kelly's shop to work on whatever was the work of the day. Kelly showed us the great cabinet doors he was doing for the upcoming ASID show. Trout hit the can. It seemed like a typical day in Tucson.


I was rearranging stuff in the Highlander so I could get on with my afternoon errands. Then I got a call from Trout. He was still in the can and had had a big bloody blow out. He sounded scared. Having some experience with these things, I went in to see the situation. It was bad and it was a mess. While he cleaned up and prayed for it to stop (it did), I contacted our medical people and they said to get him to the emergency room.


We took off in the car, protecting the passenger seat with towels and a blanket and knowing that we'd pass several fire stations with EMTs enroute. It's at least 45 minutes from Vail to any emergency medical facility. We got to the UMC ER fine, Trout checked in and we waited about 2 hours before they got him into a room. I've always heard that what gets their attention is vomiting or bleeding. He wasn't actively bleeding at the time, so he didn't get to go in right away.


The first incident occurred at about 3:30 pm. He was in a room by about 6. The initial prognosis was diverticulosis and there was some talk of letting him go home. We decided I would run home and get him some clean clothes to wear for the trip. I took his bloody clothes with me. That was about 7:30 pm. I got back at about 9 to find him with a cut above his right eyebrow and drying blood sort of all over him. As it turned out, he had 2-3 more incidents depending on how you count and had passed out. We think he actually was cut by the edge of his glasses when his head hit the floor.

Do you think the hospital staff was a little concerned about him being left alone and falling? Yeah...they have to report falls to higher authorities so it was a very big deal. The room he was in had a solid door with no window. He was in too big of a hurry to get on the commode to call anyone for help. After he gained consciousness, he managed to pull himself up on the edge of the bed and punch the call button. He had passed out because he lost so much blood. His BP went down to 80 over 40. This is for a man who has to control his HBP with drugs and even then it's usually at least 140 over 90.

They wouldn't let him get out of bed because his BP was so low and they set up to give him a transfusion. Things seemed to take an awfully long time to do. By 10, I was starving. The UMC cafeteria stays open until midnight, so I went down for a sandwich and to call all the kids and his brother about what was going on. It took me until about 11 to get that accomplished.

I went back to the room to find two docs from the ICU in the room with him. Since he was pretty stable, he was going to be moved to ICU during the night. His BP came up so well with one sack of blood, they decided not to hang another one. I gave up about midnight and went home to go to bed. There was nothing I could do, and get this, we had visitors, Neil and Patty, coming in from WA the next morning before noon!

Thursday, February 14th

I talked to him in the morning and during the night, they had done lots of tests, reminicent of House. These weren't bad ones involving needles, knives or drills though. They were mostly MRIs. He thinks they were more concerned about a potential concussion than the bleeding. He didn't hurt anywhere except the cut over his eyebrow. That was mostly because they deadened it, then took so long to come back and sew it up that they had to deaden it again.

And of course there was the pain when they indadvertently ripped out one of his IVs (he had 2) when transferring him from the MRI table back to his bed. Oh, yeah, and then there was the pain of them trying to get another IV into his semi-collapsed veins. Usually they're like the Alaska pipeline, but not at that time. He later said he developed a lot of sympathy for what I sometimes have to go through.

We decided over the phone that I wouldn't come until Neil and Patty got here and I would bring them along. So by the time we got there, he was stable enough that they had moved him to a regular room and we got to see him there. I never even got to see him in the ICU. He had been cleaned up significantly and he had on red booties.

Anyone who has had a hospital stay knows that they put booties with a non slip bottom on you to keep your feet warm and make it safer for you to walk if you get out of bed. It turns out that the red booties have more non-slip stuff on them and also serve to alert the staff that you're a faller. There were also signs up that he could see telling him not to get out of bed without calling for help. Yeah, they were concerned all right.

As always, he was in good spirits. If you've kept up with the timeline, you know this was Valentine's Day. We had all planned to go someplace for dinner, but I cancelled the reservations and ended up taking Neil and Patty to El Charro. It wasn't very romantic but the food was good. While we were doing that, poor Trout was doing the prep for a colonoscopy. There wasn't much in there by now, but he did push through a lot of coagulated blood.

Friday, February 15th

Neil and Patty decided to go to the Gem and Mineral Show. They also had an engagement for dinner that night. They invited me to go, but I decided to stay with Trout. The GI docs did the colonoscopy Friday afternoon. What did they find? Nothing. No diverticula. No obvious place for the bleeding. Nada. Trout agreed for them to go ahead and do an endoscopy to check the upper GI tract, but he couldn't officially sign the consent form because he was sedated. So I signed it. If you don't have a Medical Power of Attorney for your spouse or partner, I advise to do one now! Anyway, you guessed it, there was nothing obvious in the upper GI tract either.

So what can we do these days if we have to see what's in the small intestine? The pill camera. I had to sign for that, too. We had to wait until he was awake enough to swallow the thing. He said it went down really easily. He had to wear an apparatus strapped around his stomach that downloaded the data during the night. He was able to take it off when the lights indicated that it was done the next morning.

Saturday, February 16th

This was a dithering day on the part of UMC. They fluctuated back and forth between saying he needed to stay until someone read the results from the pill cam Monday or Tuesday to saying he could leave to saying he couldn't even have liquids by mouth to saying he could eat some real solid food. You get the picture. While we were there visiting (we joined the other 3 people who were visiting him), they decided to release him, so he did get to come home late Saturday afternoon.

That was cool because our next door neighbor was having his 60th birthday party and we thought Trout wouldn't be able to come. We were able to bring Trout to Tony as a present. Trout took it easy on the eating had fun playing a little music with Tony and the kids and we bagged it pretty early. Neil and Patty were there, of course, as were some local friends, Don and Patsy, who had made a few trips to see Trout in the hospital. I believe the quote from one of our kids, Dory, who called that night while he was at Tony's was, "That's some rockin' hospital!"

The rest of the holiday weekend was spent with Neil and Patty and Trout did fine. He was very careful with his eating. Here's a picture of us in front of one of our favorite haunts, Todd's at Ryan Field.


And here we are in our living room at home with Guido.


And here's Trout at home with his shiner healing quite nicely. It actually didn't show up until Friday, but I didn't have my camera at the hospital.


He got the stitches out on Thursday, February 21st, and he has quite the character indicating scar there now.

We worried about the pill cam results and were told that if it was bad, we would've heard right away. I'm cynical about that, but he did get in to see his GI doc at UMC on Thursday, February 28th and ... and ... they found nothing! Well, almost nothing. There was an area in the upper small intestine that was "blood stained." This leads the doc to think the bleed was higher than that. The huge volume of blood lost indicates it was arterial rather than veinous.

His marching orders are to get to an ER right away if it happens again. He's supposed to tell them about this incident and that it is not diverticulosis but rather higher in his GI tract. He's also supposed to tell them that he needs to have an endoscopy or swallow another pill cam or both within 24 hours of the bleed so the source of the bleeding will be more likely to be seen. The doc thinks he just healed up too quickly for them to see what really happened.

So if he's with any of you reading this, and he's unable to tell the ER folks or the EMTs about all this, please be my surrogate and do it for him. They can always call me for more formal permissions. He did tell me later that he'd had two other times where he felt he was in life-threatening situations, but this was the first time he really thought it was serious. There's just something about seeing big volumes of your blood outside of your body that gets your attention. I welcomed him to my world.

Postscript: He had another scare on March 2nd. His stomach started hurting about bedtime that night and by about 3 am Monday morning, he was puking like crazy. Now Trout never throws up, so it was very scary. A couple of hours later, the diarrhea started. Fortunately, there was no blood out any orifice this time. He stayed in bed all day Monday the 3rd and was on the mend by Tuesday. We think it was food poisoning or a gut bug of some kind. I'm voting for the former because he had no fever and I didn't get it. Unfortunately, he had plane reservations on Tuesday to go to WA for an enduro and he was so sick he had to cancel out on that. You all know he had to be very sick to not go to a race.