Where there's a vibe ... there's life.

2 minute read time.

You will need the fire well stoked in order to get into the mood for this episode: Our Hero and The Meddlesome Wife have, again, the snow flurrying around Cold Comfort Cottage.    

We will set the scene:  The moon is full and The Hounds are dreaming whatever wolfish dreams hounds have on silver, moonlit nights.  (I suspect their dreams are full of doggy clichés, but let’s not disrupt the mood.) They are dreaming, perhaps, that they are snaking down the mountainside with the pack, forming a sinuous, deadly curve down the snow-covered slopes. 

(Oh, for goodness sake, get on with the action!)

Our Hero is sleeping after an exhausting day; a day which included explaining to the maker of the very expensive uber-elf creation why he was wearing the cheap hat with flaps and not the carefully handcrafted one.   (Being the very polite hero he is, he made up some story about the current toothless situation not really doing the uber-elf hat justice.)

He has done the forty mile round trip to his studio and showroom, just in case there was anyone who wanted to spend any money. (They didn’t.) 

He is eating more than he has for weeks and is now nearly seven and a half stone again (still slightly underweight, given he is five foot nine).   He is finding himself sleeping in positions which were, two weeks ago, unimaginably painful, presumably because the tumour was pressing into his back, his ribs, into nerves ... or into whatever a large tumour in the lower oesophagus might press upon (just about everything important, as you can imagine).

 He says that now when he turns over in bed it is no longer like being flayed alive. 

The Uninvited Guest is obviously shrinking fast after the magical PDT from the wonderful maverick surgeon.

The abyss has retreated and life, as far as Our Hero is concerned, is returning to ‘normal.’   And ‘normal’ means going back to work. 

But here is what The Meddlesome Wife is pondering (she would, wouldn’t she?  What is wrong with ‘thinking’?); there is no ‘normal’ any more.    Unless there had been a spontaneous remission, brought on by the collective vibes, or the remote Reiki from the Master in Bulgaria, or the prayers from at least three Christian denominations, the potions which come all the way from China, or the self-injected Mistletoe (I don’t think the Mistletoe has been mentioned yet), Our Hero still has to contend with the tumours in the liver and whatever is happening with the lymph nodes. 

It is off to see the oncologist on Friday where, if the NHS get their collective act together, they might have the results from the CT scan which was done in the middle of December. The oncologist will, we must imagine, be on the defensive since Our Hero has had treatment that was dismissed as being ‘experimental’ (despite the fact it is approved by NICE). Furthermore, the oncologist will have received the letter from the maverick surgeon which states that he has treated the whole of the primary tumour with PDT, and reiterates the fact that the ‘cheap as chips’ stent (all on offer from the oncologist)  would have been worse than useless.     

 The battle lines, as you can see, have been drawn.  

But The Meddlesome is wondering whether they should not just find a dog sitter (any takers?) and fly off somewhere warm - with excellent plumbing.   

Since there is no ‘normal’ any more, she thinks they should seize the day.  

Carpe diem, my friends. 

 

 

Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Ah but then how do you know that I wouldn't sneak up to Cold Comfort Cottage with a top Hollywood agent and sign up our Hero on the spot!!  He already has the wrap around shades, his portfolio photos (shot in Venice no less) are done, he has his own wardrobe of hats and the required go get 'em attitude and work ethic.

    P.S. If you want excellent plumbing then maybe avoid the smaller Greek Islands!!

    Love to all - Judi xx  

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Namibia for me - wildlife/ sun/ scenery with the German comforts of beer & plumbing & food. Just let me get my passport renewed. Mo, Grace, John - interested ?

    jewels x

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    My dear Judi - Jewels will tell you about the problems you can encounter in the countryside with coloured wellies!  Apparently, the wildlife see coloured wellies as prey.  Your 'sneaking' plan could come back to bite you.

    No, I am sorry to say you will have to come with us.  

    I think Namibia sounds a great idea.  Between us, we have the survival skills to confront practically anything - providing coloured wellies are left at home.

    I think that is a plan.   Ladies?  John?

    PS Jewels, did you say you had a Land Rover?  

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    And here is Sonnet 18

    Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?

    Thou art more lovely and more temperate;

    Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,

    And summer's lease hath all too short a date;

    Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,

    And often is his gold complexion dimm'd;

    And every fair from fair sometime declines,

    By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd;

    But thy eternal summer shall not fade,

    Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st;

    Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,

    When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st:

    So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,

    So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.

    –William Shakespeare  

    I don't know why I bother.

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Namibia !!!