Oh no!

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Hi everyone

Just wanted to let you know what happened to me earlier today.

It's a usual Tuesday morning, my wife and son leave for work about 8.15am, and just me and the dog left. It was a horrible morning, wind howling and  rain falling incessantly. No point getting up and freezing with no heating on, I'll be going to the MacMillan exercise class about 12. I'll stay in bed.

About 11.00am the doorbell rang and I made my way slowly up the hall turned left and there's a Yodel van and the driver standing with a large box. Now I'm wearing pyjamas and a pair of socks. So I open the inside door into the porch, squeeze my way into the porch, keeping the dog in the hall and closed the door behind me, opened the front door and signed the delivery guy's pad, thanked him, closed the front door and turned around to open the inside door.

It's locked! It's locked! Am I sure? Tried it again and yes, it's definitely locked! OMG. Ok, what now? I have no keys hidden anywhere. Right! Think, think! My wife and son both work in Comber, about 8 miles away. My mother in law lives over the hill from me about ½ mile away, and my brother in law, Peter also over the hill, just, but Peter, he's at work in Belfast. I need to ring my wife to get her to come home and let me in which is why I'm going to my mother in law's, aged 95, to use her phone. 

Well, it's still raining and quite breezy and I have no choice but to try to make it to her house, in my pyjamas and socks. Remember, I'm a wheelchair user, however I can walk a little but then the pain, in shovelfuls, kicks in. I had to rest against trees, hang on to gates and branches. Not one car passed me, although I'm not sure a driver would have stopped for a rain soaked, bent over man, his face contorted with pain. I wouldn't. All the time I was thinking, "neutropenic, neutrophils, neutropenia, death of cold, death FROM cold". I was freezing and starting to get a little numb.

I had just gone over the crest of the hill and my brother in law came round the side of his house to the roadside. I shouted "Peter, Peter" and he stopped in his tracks, turned around and a look of disbelief came over his face. He told me later that when he saw me walking towards him, water dripping off my face, wearing just pyjamas and socks which were dripping wet, well, you can guess the rest. In hope he asked "Locked out?" and I could only nod!

He brought me into the house, gave me clean dry socks and drove me to Comber, picked up my son's keys and drove me home. I even had time to go to the leisure centre, I missed the exercise class but I was just in time for the Christmas dinner, yay! I tell you what, I had the most interesting topic to talk about.

Hope you enjoyed that

Tvman

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to FormerMember

    Sounds the perfect place to live 

    Kym xx

  • Hi Tvman, In actual fact I did know where it was but wanted to google the Gardens! I had a close friend, who sadly died a few years ago, who had a house in the Bahamas and talked about visiting the Kauali Botanical Gardens, if they were staying in Bahamas for a while, they liked to go island hopping!

    Ive never been to Ireland but thought you described it well! Our daughter in law, as you know comes from Northern Ireland!

    Love Annette x

    Yesterday is History, Tomorrow is a Mystery, Today is a Gift!!!
  • Hi

    I would love to see a place where you can see bluebells as far as the eye can see. If you have the strength and it's not too far, I would love to see a pic of that.

    I have an idea of planting hundreds of bluebells in the little wood that I have planted but it depends on 2 (I think) criteria

    1. expense 
    2. mobility.     

    That's all I can think of right now

    Take care Daloni

    Tvman xx                                                 

    Love life and family.
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to tvman

    Hi

    this photo is from April this year. Can you imagine the fragrance?

    I am told that a bluebell wood like this has to be at least 400 years old  

    xx

  • Hi

    Yes, you must be able to smell it before you can see it.  

    Maybe I won't have enough time to get to that extent lol Joy

    Tvman xx

    Love life and family.
  • Hi all,

    I've been struggling for years to control the bluebells in my garden as they are not the natives but the more thuggish Spanish variety.  They even manage to grow in the roots of shrubs so short of digging the shrub up I think that thay are here to stay.

    Gragon x

  • Hi Gragon

    I know of the variety you are talking about, just shows that every silver lining has a cloud lol

    Tvman

    Love life and family.
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to tvman

    Me too . I dig them up every year and every year they reappear 

  • Hi 

    Every time I leave my house and my wife and son are out, I worry that my house is vulnerable because there are no cars at home, just the dog who has a history of letting the plumbers in while I was up the road a bit. 

    When I was broken into before, my wife was away and my van was away for repair, so there appeared to be no one at home and of course I was in bed and didn't answer the door.

    That day there was heavy rain, there was thunder and it was "blowing a hooley" (it was extremely windy), which is a common time for low lifes to break into a house because the storm.absorbs the noise of the breaking in.

    Tvman

    Love life and family.
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to tvman

    Oh boy! It’s terrible to get broken into. Did they get away with much? Lucky for you, that they didn’t hurt you.