I had my booster,
and all seems well. Helen was able to insinuate herself into the system and get
hers too – thus making the hours she had nobly consumed on my behalf more profitable for
herself. We had to go all the way out to the airport. She has decided to go
ahead with Greece – she’ll take a train down tomorrow, and fly direct from Stansted to Thessaloniki.
My consultant rang
up today asking why I had cancelled the colonoscopy. She seemed satisfied with the
answer. She suggested my going into hospital for the preparatory days before
the procedure. I agreed without enthusiasm that that might work. But she also seemed
to agree that if “anything sinister” (the usual NHS phrase for cancer) turned
up, they probably wouldn’t do much about it, given my age. We have a telephone
consultation booked for next week. She will talk to gastroenterology in the
interval. I’ve never actually met her – I liked her voice.
Knitting
I did a fair
amount, as we sat around after our injections waiting for an anaphylactic shock
reaction. Machu Picchu was perfect – round and round without lengthening the
knitting or diminishing the ball of yarn. And I did a certain amount after we
got home, while reading about Roman history.
Matthew (comment
yesterday), thank you for the link to the ladder-back jacquard hat, which I
watched with interest. I think I’ve got at least the rough general idea. The
technique is completely new to me.
Cheetahs
You have to keep
watching. They come and they go.
I found myself
wondering whether they could be tamed. I’m sure their keepers try hard not to
make pets of them. I get the impression that lions are as affectionate as
domestic pussy cats, although they remain dangerous because of their size. I’ve
never heard anything very cosy about a tiger. And I know you can’t generalise
about an animal family from one or two members of it – zebras (or so they tell
me) are completely untameable.
The phone consultant as good as admitted that a colonoscopy at your age would be a waste of time because they probably wouldn't do anything anyway. So don't do it.
ReplyDeleteCheetahs were tamed/trained in ancient Egypt, I believe as hunting animals. They are said to be the most doglike of the cat families.
Lions vary in personality almost as much as house cats. Some are trainable, some are not. (source: old autobiography _Here Keller Train This_, if I recall correctly)
I have seen an old photo online of a zebra in harness to a carriage. If you can trust an online photo.
I am happy to hear that you got the booster and had no complications.
And hooray for knitting!
My father went into hospital this time last year as an emergency for severe stomach pain. He did have a colonoscopy during which they gave him a stent to deal with a blocked bowel! Who knew such a thing could be done! It was very worrying for a couple of days, and took a little while for him to regain his energy levels but he has been here there and everywhere ever since. He was 92 this year. So these things can be done, but need plenty of consideration - of course when it is an emergency everything is different.
ReplyDeleteElizabeth Zimmerman said something about there being no situation which cannot be improved by knitting.
The Rothschilds at Waddesdon Manor had zebras trained to pull a carriage. I've seen the old photos.
ReplyDeletehttps://waddesdon.org.uk/whats-on/creatures-and-creations-platon-katrantzou-exhibition/
JennyS
I'm with Tamar re. the colonoscopy. And I will have to investigate ladder back jacquard. Interesting.
ReplyDeleteSusan Rainey has written about this, and has a video, I think. What I can't remember or figure out is how you "cast off" those background stitches when you get to the top/end. Any ideas, anyone?
DeleteCam