Ally mcBeal


 This afternoon Mary and I went to Colwyn Bay
We went to see the new( and very short new Pier) 
It was too hot for Dorothy.
We were standing , looking at it, when I heard a woman’s voice 
“ Hello there” it called
I didn’t recognise the woman but felt I ought to
She introduced herself as the sister in law of one of my favourite patients! One who I will call Holly
I placed her then, of course I did ….
We chatted about things!lockdown and her husband and her work and she asked me to thank the hospice staff for their care but before she left, with a shake of hands she said 
Thank you for dancing with Holly, She told us about it, it was a very special moment for her “ 
I laughed
“ It is me to who has to thank her” I told her “She made me dance in public , something I could never do” 
I told her the story from my perspective 
One day, as part of our last conversations together, Holly asked me what things would be on my bucket list, if I made one….after a long think
I shared that I always wanted to dance in public 

She asked me if I remembered Ally McBeal , and specifically the scenes when the cast would share an over choreographed dance to the velvet voiced Barry White
I told her I did and on impulse we danced the dance together. The music from her phone and me in my uniform and she in her expensive Italian bathrobe that dwarfed her. 
I remember that
She placed her bed table in front of the door , like a teenager to prevent any one else from walking in. 
And we giggled like schoolgirls as we did so





from Going Gently https://ift.tt/3hPFD7X

Eating

 


I’m in the zone with my eating. 
Totally in control and practical . And it hasn’t been a trial at all.
Now I only eat two meals a day. 
Breakfast of thin bagels and light fried eggs
Stir fry with noodles, either chicken or seafood for supper.
Lunch is just fruit or veg
Today it’s a big bunch of cherry tomatoes, cold and sweet.
On Saturday at my sister’s house, I had meatballs and spaghetti which was a bloody treat
I only drank Diet Coke .
When I’m at work , I split the stir fry and have half at lunchtime and grab the rest after work…
Energy is a grabbed banana .

Cottage Flatulence has returned to Winifred  levels 


from Going Gently https://ift.tt/2UYUEuV

Downpour

 Downpours

Like life

Are unexpected

But can 

Be exactly 

What is 

Needed 



from R's rue https://ift.tt/2VYRic4

Freedom

Mr Bumble said that today would be our Freedom Day. The day on which Britain would break away from coronavirus restrictions.

On Saturday our new Health Secretary, Mr Spock came down with COVID-19 in spite of being double-vaccinated. Fortunately his symptoms are mild. Towards the end of last week  Spock had been in protracted close contact with Mr Bumble and our Chancellor of the Exchequer - The Pocket Dynamo. 

Following their own rules, this duo should have gone into self-isolation immediately. For thirty six hours they put about a story that they would instead join a "pilot scheme" which would not require them to self-isolate but they were rumbled. Recognising the growing public backlash they did a "U" turn and pledged to self-isolate like ordinary citizens.

A couple of months ago Britain was doing really well. Our key COVID figures were looking very promising with daily infections dropping below one thousand, hardly any new hospitalisations, the successful vaccination programme proceeding at pace and on some days there were no COVID-related deaths at all.

It's not like that now - ever since Mr Bumble failed to act decisively on the "Delta" variant that arose in India.   Our daily infection tally is now worse than anywhere else in the world. Yesterday we had 48,161 new infections - more than any other country on the planet, including India, Brazil, The USA and Russia.

Our NHS driven  vaccination programme has gone really well but several million British people remain unvaccinated. Nonetheless, just twenty five citizens died of COVID-19 yesterday which is a very low number when you consider the mushrooming infection rate.

A top epidemiologist reckons that our infection rate will climb over 100,000 a day this summer  and hospitalisations and deaths will grow correspondingly. It is all very concerning.

 At some stage in the very near future, economies must open up and we must all learn to live with COVID. It is not going away. But right now seems the wrong time for this country to ring the bells for Mr Bumble's Freedom Day.  It is a very strange kind of freedom.



from Yorkshire Pudding https://ift.tt/3BsEHOG