Tag Archives: family

Ann’s Update: 23 Jan 2011

Dear Ladies and Gentlemen,

Well, I would have managed to write last night, except for the fact that Sasha got sleepy early and everyone headed for bed, including me, at an hour when I would usually be sitting down and gathering thoughts and memories for this note. I’ll either make this rather short, because we’re going to be interrupted momentarily by a plumber who will, we hope, make things flow as they should in the bathroom and kitchen — or I’ll make it long because the mood will be right and the urge will overtake me. The writing urge, that is.

Right now, despite my knowing that 99% of the world’s population is unluckier and less blessed than we are, I’m caught on that knife-edge between light and energy on one side, and dark grey grouchiness and self-rejection on the other. Mild depression, I guess. (Self-pity, says my inner judge.) On PBS television there is a great program about the Big Bands of the ’40’s. Benny Goodman’s music, tremendously familiar and loaded with memories — or bits of memory — about high school (most of it sheer hell for a girl with an English accent who had recently been in Europe and home-schooled) …. Actually, when I got to private school in New England, things got a bit better. There were lots of weird people there; I wasn’t the only one. (The inner judge grumps, “You think you had problems because you had an English accent? Try having a black skin, kid! Now, THAT was problems!) My mother persuaded my father that my brother and I should change our names to her family name, instead of going around with a name that sounded Jewish (because it WAS Jewish). So we did. We became Ormiston, instead of Gotlieb, because my dear father had experienced anti-Semitism (plenty of it in the State Department, for which he worked), and didn’t want to make his kids go through what he’d gone through (and because he was afraid of my mother). It worked pretty well. But kids will make hell for other kids without the excuse of black skin or Jewishness or even English accents. If they’ve been bullied at home, they’ll bully others at school. Boys, especially, will attack weakness or gentleness, and my brother was very gentle — extremely intelligent and gentle — and he was sent to private boy’s school in Canada and never really recovered from it.

But those were the days when good parents did things like that — sent their kids to private schools (if they could afford it) and told the boys to “buck up” when they wrote home pleading to be released from torment. Bullying was accepted as normal (that lasted until just a couple of years ago, and is still accepted in most schools), and young males were expected to fight back or just put up with it. Nobody talked about the suicides. And, realistically, it was simply the law of the jungle — if you can’t fight back or turn the tables in some manner on your attacker, you will go under and die. The survivors were strong and apparently self-assured. The British Empire was forged by such survivors. And they kept the empire going until a little guy who walked around in a cotton loincloth and taught helpless Indians how to handle the tough, hard British took the country back from them.

I’m probably going to have to throw out all this stuff, unless I decide I’m writing Book Three on Caring Bridge, and Facebook, and I’m not sure that’s what I should be doing.

I’m just in a mood to hate the dark side of humanity (including my own Shadow), and that is a complete waste off time. It’s there because it has to be. My only job is to make unconscious things conscious — starting with myself and my own Shadow.

As for Sasha, he’s doing well and better, really improving every day. It looks as though the various things we’ve been attempting — hanging the heel out over the edge of the cushion — has begun to heal the ulcer. And he’s sleeping better (which means the caregiver at night gets more sleep).

And I’ll stop running on at the keyboard, and give you fuller Sasha information in the next note.

Blessings and love — Ann

Ann’s Update: 14 Jan 2011

Dear People,

Tonight, just a small note — probably a mere short paragraph, because it’s been a day of almost too much activity — all of it positive and good, but tiring. I need a long night’s sleep, then I can continue in the morning, fresh and energetic, full of creative juices. (This, of course, is utter balderdash; in the morning, any morning, I am a monster for at least one hour after waking up, or trying to wake up, or doing my best NOT to wake up, and I don’t even remember what the word “smile” means for quite a long time, although I do my best not to scare anyone, sometimes wearing a brown paper bag over my head on my way to the bathroom, since I feel this is the least I can do to innocent friends, caregivers and other entities.)

By the way, I gave the wrong name to the wonderful cats in my daughter, Wendy’s house. Jason, her husband, whom I adore madly, remarked that these cats were not, he believed, called American Alley Cats. and it seems he was right. I know I saw that title in print, but they are now officially American Shorthair Cats. Tania uses the word, “tabby,” but I think that’s unofficial too. I think they should be called something like “Salt and Pepper Cats,” but nobody’s going to listen to me.

There’s a lot to report, but I’ve got to get some sleep first.

May all of you in the appropriate time zones have a good sleep, too.

Blessings and Good Night — Ann

Ann’s Update: 7 Jan 2011

Dear Friends,

Sasha is home, thank hevvin. I’m on my way to Marin, but before I can even get out of the house, there are so many things to do, including giving Sasha a shot of heparin — to prevent clots — that I suddenly found myself in the middle of a good ole-fashioned anxiety attack, including slightly shaking hands. So I asked Tania to give the morning injection, and promised I could do it this evening. I’ve got to get to the bank, get gas in the car, and I’m going to be waaaaay late. Wendy is the first person to say, “Don’t worry; any time you get here, it’ll be fine,” but anxiety attacks don’t allow that message to get through convincingly.

I’ll continue this later today — this evening — by which time I should have calmed down and retrieved my normal state (well, at least I’ll be over the anxiety stuff).

I haven’t even opened a single Xmas present yet. And I haven’t sent off most of the Xmas presents to my family, would you believe! It’s ridiculous. Have to remember that everybody understands and stop beating myself up about it.

To be continued when I return home from my Mental Health Day.

Ann/Nanna

Ann’s Update: 9 Dec 2010

To All our Friends,

Today we returned to the plastic surgeon’s office and he unwrapped the wound vacuum and took a look at so-called “granulation tissue,” which has begun to grow over the Achilles tendon. It’s doing beautifully, said he, and decided to wait another two weeks to maximize the signs of healing, and if the foot looks appropriately good, granulation-tissue-wise, he’ll set a date for the skin graft, probably December 27th. I felt a true sense of relief, probably because — this time — I’d actually seen the signs of healing on the wound/ulcer, and could indulge myself in a tiny bit of certainty that all this surgery, all this pain and anxiety, was really going to culminate in a healthy left foot!

It’s been almost a full year since this foot problem began!

I would love to write more, and will do so after tomorrow, but tonight it’s getting too late, and I have to get up in the morning in time to cross the San Rafael Bridge before the noon-ish traffic congestion slows everything down to a crawl. It’s my Mental Health Day, the day I get to play with my five-year old granddaughter for a few hours, painting pictures and making wonderful things out of Sculpey clay. The day I’m called Nanna!

Thank you all for your love and appreciation of Sasha — and me.

Blessings — Ann