Ramblings - Maybe I'll Become A Bubble Boy :roll:
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Ramblings - Maybe I'll Become A Bubble Boy :roll:
Hi All,
Yesterday I probably should have just stayed in bed. After doing a few minor chores, I didn't have anything urgent to do, so I decided to run to a 3-horse town, (about 20 miles away, and much larger than the little 1-horse towns that are much closer), and get some supples. While I was there, I went by a clinic, to cancel an appointment for Dec. 15th, to see a doctor that I had "tested" in early June, (he failed the test), and I wanted to visit my aunt, who was in a room at the hospital there, recovering from a broken hip, (she broke the other side a couple of years ago, so now she has a matched set). She was ready to take her morning walk, so we talked while making the rounds in the fourth floor ward. (She was using a walker, of course, so I was able to keep up without gettin' winded). Considering that she needed a blood transfusion yesterday, to get her red count up, she was looking pretty good.
Incidentally, that little hospital is really laid back. You don't see people scrambling madly up and down the hallways, the way you do in the big hospital, a few blocks away. You can't meet someone anywhere in the hospital, without smiling and exchanging greetings. I had high hopes for that place, but unfortunately, the doctor I wanted, wasn't accepting patients, and the one I settled for, didn't have the foggiest idea how to properly treat hypothyroidism. Well, let me qualify that - he obviously felt quite confident about his ability to treat thyroid issues, but since I disagreed, after listening to his recommendations, (he had no recommendations - the labs looked great to him), I decided to exercise my veto power, and move on along. Call me old fashioned, but in my opinion, when a patients symptoms are not resolved by the current treatment, (regardless of what the labs show), that does not constitute a satisfactory Dr. - patient relationship, and I see no reason why I should continue to pad his bank account, just because he's happy with some numbers on a sheet of lab results.
To the hospital's credit, I hadn't been home for quite three hours, before a lady in Internal Medicine, (the department where the doc that I'm discussing here, hangs his hat), called, wanting to know if there is anything that they should be aware of, or anything that they should change, in that department. Since the doc was just doing what probably 99% of doctors do to treat hypothyroidism, I saw no reason to criticize him, so I didn't. Believe it or not, I had to argue with her for a while, to convince her that he didn't do anything wrong, and leaving was simply my choice, because I had found another doctor that was willing to "think out of the box", and try something different, that's probably no longer taught in med school, (IOW, actually paying attention to a patient's symptoms - I didn't tell her that, though).
I really believe that's a great little hospital and clinic, and I just happened to draw a doctor with whom I didn't exactly see eye-to-eye. I think that he perceived me as someone who prefers to have a significant say so in their treatment, and when he asked me to describe my thoughts about my issues, and I started spurting out stuff that he may have never heard from a patient before, (such as controlling MC with diet alone, and connecting it with the leaky gut syndrome, and treating hypothyroidism by observing a patient's symptoms, etc.), he probably decided I was a kook, (or maybe he felt intimidated), and so he clammed up. In general, though, in that hospital and clinic, the patient is King, (or Queen), depending on gender. LOL.
Anyway, when I left the hospital, I went by the HFS, to pick up the donuts that I posted about in another forum, here, and then I went to Wally-World, to get a bunch of assorted supplies.
After spending most of the afternoon working, (mostly stacking bags of corn on pallets), I noticed that I was feeling a lot of aches and pains, and there was a little D - nothing really serious, though. By bedtime, (after midnight), I was feeling a little worse, with a bit of fever, mixed with chills. Still, I managed to get to sleep, eventually, and I slept pretty good. I woke up a little earlier than usual, though, feeling as though I might have been hit by a truck, complete with mental confusion, brain fog, etc.
It was a familiar feeling, but I didn't have any D, (no BM at all), and I wasn't nauseated, though my tummy didn't exactly feel great, because of all the bloating. I drug around most of the day, (okay, dragged), unable to do much, due to a severe shortage of energy and strength, and mild fever, aches and pains. I really don't think that any gluten got me, (surely I would have serious D, if that were the case, and none of the food that I ate was outside of my normal routine). I thought for a while that I may have West Nile Fever, (the intermediate stage of the disease), because the 'skeeters have really been rough lately, and late August to early September is the prime time for catching the disease, according to the experts. The confusion, brain fog, etc., could not apply to West Nile Fever, however. To have those symptoms, would imply that I had to have the most severe form of the disease, which involves either encephalitis, or meningitis, and surely I couldn't be that unlucky.
Sooooooooooo, apparently some sucker slipped me the flu, and I don't have the foggiest idea who it might have been, due to all that public contact. <sigh> This old country boy is not used to that much public contact, at least not these days. It was only about a month or so ago that I had some kind of summer cold. What's going on here? I never get summer colds, let alone the flu. Something out of the ordinary is going on - a lot of others have been sick this summer. I wonder if it could be somehow related to the bird flu issue. The media has forgotten about it by now, but it's still out there, stewing and developing, every day.
Did anyone happen to notice the truck that hit me, and if so, did you get the license number? LOL. It's probably going to be a long night. <sigh>
Tex
Yesterday I probably should have just stayed in bed. After doing a few minor chores, I didn't have anything urgent to do, so I decided to run to a 3-horse town, (about 20 miles away, and much larger than the little 1-horse towns that are much closer), and get some supples. While I was there, I went by a clinic, to cancel an appointment for Dec. 15th, to see a doctor that I had "tested" in early June, (he failed the test), and I wanted to visit my aunt, who was in a room at the hospital there, recovering from a broken hip, (she broke the other side a couple of years ago, so now she has a matched set). She was ready to take her morning walk, so we talked while making the rounds in the fourth floor ward. (She was using a walker, of course, so I was able to keep up without gettin' winded). Considering that she needed a blood transfusion yesterday, to get her red count up, she was looking pretty good.
Incidentally, that little hospital is really laid back. You don't see people scrambling madly up and down the hallways, the way you do in the big hospital, a few blocks away. You can't meet someone anywhere in the hospital, without smiling and exchanging greetings. I had high hopes for that place, but unfortunately, the doctor I wanted, wasn't accepting patients, and the one I settled for, didn't have the foggiest idea how to properly treat hypothyroidism. Well, let me qualify that - he obviously felt quite confident about his ability to treat thyroid issues, but since I disagreed, after listening to his recommendations, (he had no recommendations - the labs looked great to him), I decided to exercise my veto power, and move on along. Call me old fashioned, but in my opinion, when a patients symptoms are not resolved by the current treatment, (regardless of what the labs show), that does not constitute a satisfactory Dr. - patient relationship, and I see no reason why I should continue to pad his bank account, just because he's happy with some numbers on a sheet of lab results.
To the hospital's credit, I hadn't been home for quite three hours, before a lady in Internal Medicine, (the department where the doc that I'm discussing here, hangs his hat), called, wanting to know if there is anything that they should be aware of, or anything that they should change, in that department. Since the doc was just doing what probably 99% of doctors do to treat hypothyroidism, I saw no reason to criticize him, so I didn't. Believe it or not, I had to argue with her for a while, to convince her that he didn't do anything wrong, and leaving was simply my choice, because I had found another doctor that was willing to "think out of the box", and try something different, that's probably no longer taught in med school, (IOW, actually paying attention to a patient's symptoms - I didn't tell her that, though).
I really believe that's a great little hospital and clinic, and I just happened to draw a doctor with whom I didn't exactly see eye-to-eye. I think that he perceived me as someone who prefers to have a significant say so in their treatment, and when he asked me to describe my thoughts about my issues, and I started spurting out stuff that he may have never heard from a patient before, (such as controlling MC with diet alone, and connecting it with the leaky gut syndrome, and treating hypothyroidism by observing a patient's symptoms, etc.), he probably decided I was a kook, (or maybe he felt intimidated), and so he clammed up. In general, though, in that hospital and clinic, the patient is King, (or Queen), depending on gender. LOL.
Anyway, when I left the hospital, I went by the HFS, to pick up the donuts that I posted about in another forum, here, and then I went to Wally-World, to get a bunch of assorted supplies.
After spending most of the afternoon working, (mostly stacking bags of corn on pallets), I noticed that I was feeling a lot of aches and pains, and there was a little D - nothing really serious, though. By bedtime, (after midnight), I was feeling a little worse, with a bit of fever, mixed with chills. Still, I managed to get to sleep, eventually, and I slept pretty good. I woke up a little earlier than usual, though, feeling as though I might have been hit by a truck, complete with mental confusion, brain fog, etc.
It was a familiar feeling, but I didn't have any D, (no BM at all), and I wasn't nauseated, though my tummy didn't exactly feel great, because of all the bloating. I drug around most of the day, (okay, dragged), unable to do much, due to a severe shortage of energy and strength, and mild fever, aches and pains. I really don't think that any gluten got me, (surely I would have serious D, if that were the case, and none of the food that I ate was outside of my normal routine). I thought for a while that I may have West Nile Fever, (the intermediate stage of the disease), because the 'skeeters have really been rough lately, and late August to early September is the prime time for catching the disease, according to the experts. The confusion, brain fog, etc., could not apply to West Nile Fever, however. To have those symptoms, would imply that I had to have the most severe form of the disease, which involves either encephalitis, or meningitis, and surely I couldn't be that unlucky.
Sooooooooooo, apparently some sucker slipped me the flu, and I don't have the foggiest idea who it might have been, due to all that public contact. <sigh> This old country boy is not used to that much public contact, at least not these days. It was only about a month or so ago that I had some kind of summer cold. What's going on here? I never get summer colds, let alone the flu. Something out of the ordinary is going on - a lot of others have been sick this summer. I wonder if it could be somehow related to the bird flu issue. The media has forgotten about it by now, but it's still out there, stewing and developing, every day.
Did anyone happen to notice the truck that hit me, and if so, did you get the license number? LOL. It's probably going to be a long night. <sigh>
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
FEEL BETTER SOON
Keep out of harm's way. Not exactly fun to have to worry about a storm when you aren't feeling so hot. SORRY.
Let us know how you are doing, please. We're praying you have no storm problems and that you get better fast.
DISCLAIMER: I am not a doctor and don't play one on TV.
LDN July 18, 2014
Joan
LDN July 18, 2014
Joan
-
- King Penguin
- Posts: 3859
- Joined: Fri May 13, 2011 5:56 pm
Hi Tex, wow what a day. There are two people at work that have the flu, why they come to work with it only they know. I have been staying away from them like a bad plauge. Taking my Zinc and C
We are expecting some weather from Ike, I hope none of us Texsans get it very bad, Mike pointed out that the other son lives on the coast in Texas. Houston area. We tried to call him tonight but couldn't get thru. Hope he left.
Take care and I hope you get to feeling better, love Oma
We are expecting some weather from Ike, I hope none of us Texsans get it very bad, Mike pointed out that the other son lives on the coast in Texas. Houston area. We tried to call him tonight but couldn't get thru. Hope he left.
Take care and I hope you get to feeling better, love Oma
May I be more compassionate and loving than yeterday*and be able to spot the idiots in advance
- barbaranoela
- Emperor Penguin
- Posts: 5394
- Joined: Wed May 25, 2005 6:11 pm
- Location: New York
On my-----I am so sorry U feeling crappy----sounds like a 24 hour thing---but of course the medical peoples say no such thing as 24 hour bug--
The truck # was *HIT and RUN*
Well bundle up---keep hydrated ---and forget the bags of corn for now!!!!
Luve Columbo
The truck # was *HIT and RUN*
Well bundle up---keep hydrated ---and forget the bags of corn for now!!!!
Luve Columbo
the fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness and self-control
Haven't you learned yet Sweetheart...anytime we country folk go to town, those City Slickers always get us with those City bugs....( the only time I ever have gotten sick was after going to town...never have a problem with the little town right down the road where I get critter feed and a few groceries...only fellow country people are there...) Sorry you got nailed...rest up, so your ready for whatever Ike is going to throw at you...
Hugs,
C
Hugs,
C
Thanks everyone, I appreciate the kind thoughts. I sure hope it turns out to be a 24-hour bug - I'd hate to miss all the "fun", when Ike rolls through.
Hugs,
Tex
Hugs,
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
- kate_ce1995
- Rockhopper Penguin
- Posts: 1321
- Joined: Wed May 25, 2005 5:53 pm
- Location: Vermont
What kind of fun do you folks have in a storm? We northerners curl up with a good book, a cup of hot chocolate, and a warm blanket, and nap! (no one ever said the book got read)
I'm guessing your Aunt beat the stuffing out of you and you're just not telling us
But seriously, I've been sick all week because the 6th grade germ factory has been working overtime. Kayla started it at the end of last week, I came down with it early this week, and Erin started with it last night. Right now Geoff's a sitting duck. You can figure out a calendar by how long it takes the first cold of the season to come home from school.
Hope you're feeling better.
Katy
I'm guessing your Aunt beat the stuffing out of you and you're just not telling us
But seriously, I've been sick all week because the 6th grade germ factory has been working overtime. Kayla started it at the end of last week, I came down with it early this week, and Erin started with it last night. Right now Geoff's a sitting duck. You can figure out a calendar by how long it takes the first cold of the season to come home from school.
Hope you're feeling better.
Katy
Aw, Tex............... so sorry to hear about your latest physical problems. It sure doesn't make a person want to socialize much does it. Hope you will soon be on the mend, and I'm hoping you won't get too much wind & rain from Ike.
Oma, please let us know about your son soon as you can. Perhaps he evacuated?? If so, let him "have it" for not letting you know.
Love, Shirley
Oma, please let us know about your son soon as you can. Perhaps he evacuated?? If so, let him "have it" for not letting you know.
Love, Shirley
When the eagles are silent, the parrots begin to jabber"
-- Winston Churchill
-- Winston Churchill
- jodibelle352
- Angel
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Hope your feeling better Tex:
Hope your symptoms ease up real soon so that you're back on the "Tex for President" campaign again. LOL
I know that since I was DX's with SLE in March of 1995 that I'm always trying to stay away from the common colds, flu's etc. Now with having CC I'm even worse! My immune system is already compromised because of the Lupus but now being on Entocort once again my system is compromised. I've already told my son and daughter-in-law;"I love Bailey dearly and she's starting Pre-School on the 24th of this month. When she's sick and you know she's sick one of you will have to stay home or she needs to go to her other Grandparents."
David has COPD so immune system is compromised also and neither of us want anything that's going around.
I'm getting off track right now but I sure hope it's a mild form of flu bug and nothing serious that you've gotten. Stay safe and all who are in Ike's view my prayers are with all of you. With Len and LuAnn just moving to 'Umble, Texas (Humble lol) I've been concerned for their safety as well. Does anyone know if that area is being forced to evacuate or not?
Love and God Bless:
Jodi
Hope your symptoms ease up real soon so that you're back on the "Tex for President" campaign again. LOL
I know that since I was DX's with SLE in March of 1995 that I'm always trying to stay away from the common colds, flu's etc. Now with having CC I'm even worse! My immune system is already compromised because of the Lupus but now being on Entocort once again my system is compromised. I've already told my son and daughter-in-law;"I love Bailey dearly and she's starting Pre-School on the 24th of this month. When she's sick and you know she's sick one of you will have to stay home or she needs to go to her other Grandparents."
David has COPD so immune system is compromised also and neither of us want anything that's going around.
I'm getting off track right now but I sure hope it's a mild form of flu bug and nothing serious that you've gotten. Stay safe and all who are in Ike's view my prayers are with all of you. With Len and LuAnn just moving to 'Umble, Texas (Humble lol) I've been concerned for their safety as well. Does anyone know if that area is being forced to evacuate or not?
Love and God Bless:
Jodi
May God and All His Angels, watchover, protect and guide you "One Day At A Time".
- jillian357
- Adélie Penguin
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- Joined: Sun May 04, 2008 2:23 pm
- Location: Ohio
- Contact:
Aw, Tex, that's the PITS.
Summer colds are awful, and summer (or, early autumn) FLU is even worse!
I sure do hope you are on the mend, and soon. I've been watching the weather channel hoping your area doesn't catch the brunt of Ike.
Wish I could send you some GF chicken noodle soup!
Take care, and try to rest!
Love,
Jill
Summer colds are awful, and summer (or, early autumn) FLU is even worse!
I sure do hope you are on the mend, and soon. I've been watching the weather channel hoping your area doesn't catch the brunt of Ike.
Wish I could send you some GF chicken noodle soup!
Take care, and try to rest!
Love,
Jill
Tex,
I've been hit with a bug too, after visiting my DD and grandchildren last weekend. I first thought it was a cold, but I've not had any other symptoms other than a fever, headache and back pain. I haven't had a flu shot yet and I thought it was too early for the flu season. Luckily the fever went down after a couple of days and I'm starting to feel better. I hope you feel better soon.
Gloria
I've been hit with a bug too, after visiting my DD and grandchildren last weekend. I first thought it was a cold, but I've not had any other symptoms other than a fever, headache and back pain. I haven't had a flu shot yet and I thought it was too early for the flu season. Luckily the fever went down after a couple of days and I'm starting to feel better. I hope you feel better soon.
Gloria
You never know what you can do until you have to do it.
Katy,
We handle storms differently down here. We mostly just pace the floor, and nervously stare out the windows, while hoping that nothing important blows away. LOL.
Hey, I get along real well with my aunt - she would never do something like that, (at least she hasn't so far).
Thanks Shirley,
We should be on the outer fringe of the main storm path, so it probably won't be too bad here.
Jodi,
I hear you on trying to dodge germs. I'll go a long way out of my way to avoid them, but it's the people who sneak 'em in on me that get me. The worst part is, you never know who it was who was shedding germs right and left, so you don't even know who you should despise.
Because of the gridlock that kept traffic from flowing during the last evacuation, (Rita), I understand that Houston residents have been told to just sit tight, and ride it out. Humble is a bit closer to the center of the storm track, but it is also a little farther inland, so I'm guessing that they may be sitting it out, too, but I haven't heard anything official.
The "official" decision to advise Houston residents to just stay put, sets an interesting precedent, IMO. It suggests that the "government" has resigned itself to accept the fact that for the larger cities on the coastline, the highways are simply not adequate to allow an orderly evacuation in just a few days. While Rita was a slightly stronger hurricane, it wasn't nearly as big as Ike, (Ike is like 250 miles wide), and Rita made landfall farther from Houston. My guess is, Ike will have a stronger effect on Houston than Rita did, but that still remains to be seen, of course. The problem with the botched evacuation for Rita, was that while the storm killed seven people, (everywhere, not in Houston), many more than that lost their lives in the evacuation fiasco. It will be interesting to see how this plays out, and if officials will be less likely to order evacuations in the future. That will probably depend on how the city of Houston fares in this storm.
Jill,
Well, it appears that this is not going to be a 24-hour bug, so soup will definitely be the order of the day.
Thanks for the kind thoughts.
Love,
Tex
P S By the way, Jill, how are you feeling these days? Better, I hope.
We handle storms differently down here. We mostly just pace the floor, and nervously stare out the windows, while hoping that nothing important blows away. LOL.
Hey, I get along real well with my aunt - she would never do something like that, (at least she hasn't so far).
Thanks Shirley,
We should be on the outer fringe of the main storm path, so it probably won't be too bad here.
Jodi,
I hear you on trying to dodge germs. I'll go a long way out of my way to avoid them, but it's the people who sneak 'em in on me that get me. The worst part is, you never know who it was who was shedding germs right and left, so you don't even know who you should despise.
Because of the gridlock that kept traffic from flowing during the last evacuation, (Rita), I understand that Houston residents have been told to just sit tight, and ride it out. Humble is a bit closer to the center of the storm track, but it is also a little farther inland, so I'm guessing that they may be sitting it out, too, but I haven't heard anything official.
The "official" decision to advise Houston residents to just stay put, sets an interesting precedent, IMO. It suggests that the "government" has resigned itself to accept the fact that for the larger cities on the coastline, the highways are simply not adequate to allow an orderly evacuation in just a few days. While Rita was a slightly stronger hurricane, it wasn't nearly as big as Ike, (Ike is like 250 miles wide), and Rita made landfall farther from Houston. My guess is, Ike will have a stronger effect on Houston than Rita did, but that still remains to be seen, of course. The problem with the botched evacuation for Rita, was that while the storm killed seven people, (everywhere, not in Houston), many more than that lost their lives in the evacuation fiasco. It will be interesting to see how this plays out, and if officials will be less likely to order evacuations in the future. That will probably depend on how the city of Houston fares in this storm.
Jill,
Well, it appears that this is not going to be a 24-hour bug, so soup will definitely be the order of the day.
Thanks for the kind thoughts.
Love,
Tex
P S By the way, Jill, how are you feeling these days? Better, I hope.
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
Gloria,
Bummer! There sure seems to be a lot of this stuff going around in the "off-season". I hope that doesn't mean that it's going to continue to build, and we'll have the worst flu season in recent history. Maybe all this stuff will be history by winter, and we'll have clear sailing.
I sweated like a pig all night long, but every time I pulled the sheet down, I was immediately freezing. <sigh>
Incidentally, I wonder where that saying came from, (obviously not from someone knowledgeable about swine). Pigs can't sweat, except on the tips of their snouts. The rest of their body doesn't have any sweat pores. That's why they seek out a pool of water to lie in, during the hottest part of the day. Without some form of cooling, they will die from the heat rather quickly, on a hot day. I'm not aware of any other animal that has that problem. Sorry, I get sidetracked easily when I'm delirious.
Tex
Bummer! There sure seems to be a lot of this stuff going around in the "off-season". I hope that doesn't mean that it's going to continue to build, and we'll have the worst flu season in recent history. Maybe all this stuff will be history by winter, and we'll have clear sailing.
I sweated like a pig all night long, but every time I pulled the sheet down, I was immediately freezing. <sigh>
Incidentally, I wonder where that saying came from, (obviously not from someone knowledgeable about swine). Pigs can't sweat, except on the tips of their snouts. The rest of their body doesn't have any sweat pores. That's why they seek out a pool of water to lie in, during the hottest part of the day. Without some form of cooling, they will die from the heat rather quickly, on a hot day. I'm not aware of any other animal that has that problem. Sorry, I get sidetracked easily when I'm delirious.
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
- jillian357
- Adélie Penguin
- Posts: 112
- Joined: Sun May 04, 2008 2:23 pm
- Location: Ohio
- Contact:
Hi again Tex,
You know, you are TOO sweet to ask about me in the midst feeling as cruddy as you do!
I'm doing pretty good, thanks for asking. I ran 25 miles last week, and I am happy to report I've had little trouble with these bowels of mine! LOL. I have also given up dairy completely, and that has helped a lot.
Next weekend will be my true test, I'm going to run the entire race course solo (all 13.1 miles of it) to see how it goes. I have learned that there are going to be at least 3 port-a-potties along the route, so that has eased my anxiety about emergencies quite a bit. I'll just do what I have to do on race day.
I'll be sure to check in as it gets closer to the race to let you know how it's going. I fully expect the last few days before the race I'm going to be a nervous wreck, so don't be surprised if I have some crazy out-of-my-head-freaking-out posts!
I still have 30 days to go--but who's counting?
Get well SOON!
Love,
Jill
You know, you are TOO sweet to ask about me in the midst feeling as cruddy as you do!
I'm doing pretty good, thanks for asking. I ran 25 miles last week, and I am happy to report I've had little trouble with these bowels of mine! LOL. I have also given up dairy completely, and that has helped a lot.
Next weekend will be my true test, I'm going to run the entire race course solo (all 13.1 miles of it) to see how it goes. I have learned that there are going to be at least 3 port-a-potties along the route, so that has eased my anxiety about emergencies quite a bit. I'll just do what I have to do on race day.
I'll be sure to check in as it gets closer to the race to let you know how it's going. I fully expect the last few days before the race I'm going to be a nervous wreck, so don't be surprised if I have some crazy out-of-my-head-freaking-out posts!
I still have 30 days to go--but who's counting?
Get well SOON!
Love,
Jill
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- Adélie Penguin
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- Joined: Tue Jun 10, 2008 4:45 pm
- Location: Glendale, Ca.
TEX,
Sorry you're not feeling well. Sounds like you got run over by a freight train not just a truck. In So. Cal. we don't have to worry about the wind, but the earth quake thing is constantly on our minds.
Right now I am in a major flare up. Seems they always happen when I have a big weekend planned. My wife and I are going up to a car show at the Ventura Harbor( about 60 miles up the coast,) along with about 20 other old cars. We look foreword to this every year because, after the show, one of the members who lives in that area, has a pot luck party. Tons of great food, little of which I can eat. I'm thinking about saying to hell with it, eat what ever I want, pay for it later. I know this is wrong but right now I don't much care.
I guess I'm just depressed, which is not like me. Just found out from EL tuesday that I am soy(136 units), yeast (17 units) and egg (38 units) sensitive. That pretty much eliminates most of my "feel good" foods like chocolate chip cookies and waffles. Not to mention a few vitamins that I have taken for years. I'm also considering eliminating citrus fruits, raw carrots and cooked green beans. (Please don't tell me rice checks are bad, that would really bum me out.) Tried to buy the donuts you recommended but they were out of stock. Joan was right when she said she wished she was ONLY gluten and casein sensitive.
All of you who are in the path of Ike, batten down the hatches and I'll be thinking of you this weekend. Hopefully Monday will bring a lot of "close calls" reports.
Hotrod
Sorry you're not feeling well. Sounds like you got run over by a freight train not just a truck. In So. Cal. we don't have to worry about the wind, but the earth quake thing is constantly on our minds.
Right now I am in a major flare up. Seems they always happen when I have a big weekend planned. My wife and I are going up to a car show at the Ventura Harbor( about 60 miles up the coast,) along with about 20 other old cars. We look foreword to this every year because, after the show, one of the members who lives in that area, has a pot luck party. Tons of great food, little of which I can eat. I'm thinking about saying to hell with it, eat what ever I want, pay for it later. I know this is wrong but right now I don't much care.
I guess I'm just depressed, which is not like me. Just found out from EL tuesday that I am soy(136 units), yeast (17 units) and egg (38 units) sensitive. That pretty much eliminates most of my "feel good" foods like chocolate chip cookies and waffles. Not to mention a few vitamins that I have taken for years. I'm also considering eliminating citrus fruits, raw carrots and cooked green beans. (Please don't tell me rice checks are bad, that would really bum me out.) Tried to buy the donuts you recommended but they were out of stock. Joan was right when she said she wished she was ONLY gluten and casein sensitive.
All of you who are in the path of Ike, batten down the hatches and I'll be thinking of you this weekend. Hopefully Monday will bring a lot of "close calls" reports.
Hotrod