nightdog_barks: (Flower: Rose)
nightdog_barks ([personal profile] nightdog_barks) wrote2016-05-01 02:31 pm

Hello May

And goodbye April. I'd say I'm sorry to see you go, but I'd be lying. After all, you were the month in which:

1) I had a huge health scare.
2) Layla broke two (2!) of her leashes.
3) My trusty old Toshiba laptop became a big old paperweight.
4) My camera malfunctioned and I can't find the USB cable that fits it.
5) There was more, but thankfully I've managed to BLOCK IT FROM MY MIND.

So I'm hoping May is better. :-P

There are some good things:

1) The health scare seems to be getting better.
2) I bought a nice new leash and a new harness for Layla.
3) I bought a tiny Samsung Chromebook (using it right now).
4) Well, 4 isn't solved yet.
5) What?

Read John Preston's The Dig and loved it. Now reading Nell Irvin Painter's The History of White People.
silverjackal: (Default)

[personal profile] silverjackal 2016-05-02 01:47 am (UTC)(link)
As long as you had the heart thing checked out then the rest (as horrifying and frustrating as it is) is all manageable. Not that you don't have my profound sympathies on the subject, but I am vastly relieved you're O.K., and the rest is readily fixable, if infuriating to cope with.

I know this particular thing well -- with acid reflux if it hits a particular spot in the oesophagus it causes all the same symptoms as a heart attack: chest and arm pain, shortness of breath, etc. Except it's actually heart burn. Because I have that particular form (very rarely now, my reflux is well contained and so much better that I'm tapering off the Omeprazole) I'm also well aware that I could at some point have real heart attack symptoms and brush them off as "just heartburn" *face palm*. When it was at its' worst it was like having lightening flashes in my chest. Scary shit, yes, even to a certain extent when you know what's causing it.
silverjackal: (Default)

[personal profile] silverjackal 2016-05-02 02:06 am (UTC)(link)
I am glad to hear that what you have is benign. It's always better safe than sorry with potential cardiac symptoms. I obviously agree with you about how cool science is. ;D