Caregiving Thoughts – omega

As the roles began to reverse between my Dad and me, I wrote some posts on the subject of caregiving. Now that I have been relieved of my caregiving duties by a superior officer, it’s time to conclude that series.

Caregiving is always a team effort, to at least some extent. There’s at least doctors, who need to be coordinated to make sure each one has all the information needed and knows what the others are doing. There may be aides and therapists. When my Dad moved to an assisted living home, the staff there became part of the team. As time went on, I became as much a caregiving “team leader” as an actual caregiver.

I wrote about selecting a long-term care home here. We selected Langston Place in Clinton, SC. My Dad had the final word, but myself and other family members assisted with the selection, and we all agreed this was the right place. My Dad had spent some time at a skilled nursing facility, and he was greatly disturbed by some of the patients there who were, well, very near their end. By picking some place that was just assisted living, we hoped to avoid that. Langston is also a smaller facility, and with my Dad not being one for crowds, this seemed like another plus.

Over time I came to know my team, the staff, and they me. Overall I was very satisfied. Oh sure, there were problems from time to time. If anything, it might be a problem if there weren’t problems; like the engine that stops leaking oil because there’s no oil left. But I brought the problems to the attention of the management and they were addressed. Now I know I won’t have any further problems (I just need to collect my Dad’s things), but like that engine that has stopped leaking, it doesn’t feel real good.

I don’t know if there are any statistics on how many long-term care facilities got corona virus cases when, but I think they did a Great job with the pandemic. They began taking action early, and didn’t have any cases for 9 months, not until the virus was pretty much raging all around. From what I was told, heard, what little I was able to see in person, and just knowing the people, I know they did, and continue to do, everything possible to protect the residents and staff. With the surge in cases in the area, though, it was pretty much inevitable that this virus would break in.

Now that the caregiving is done, I’m still waiting on the sense of relief to kick in. I would sometimes cringe when I got the monthly bill, but I’d write the check anyway. That was part of keeping a promise I made to my Mom before she died in 1993: that I would look after Dad. Still, though, even thinking about how I don’t have to worry about answering the phone in the middle of the night and rushing off to the hospital leaves me sad. I’m sure the relief will come though, maybe after all the affairs and legalities are settled, and I’ll be able to get to some things I put off.

It’s very easy to see omens and portents in things are are probably coincidences, but sometimes doing that helps us see events in a constructive manner. My Dad passed away on the Winter Solstice (he didn’t mess with Christmas), our longest dark night of the year. It marks the beginning of winter, which is a hard time indeed for many, especially my wild familiars. But the lengthening daylight attests to the promise of a spring that will come, with it’s renewal and new life. We will have cold, dark days ahead as we come to terms with this, but we will emerge renewed, into the spring sunshine.

As mentioned, there will be no services for my Dad until it becomes safe to travel and gather. If what the media is reporting holds (and it may not), that will likely be next summer, when everything is warm and green.

Has anyone else noticed that caregiving and caretaking pretty much mean the same thing?

Vince Adametz, 1923 – 2020

My Dad, Vince Adametz, passed away on December 21, 2020, of COVID-19 complications, at the age of 97.5.

He was the best Dad I ever had (for the record, he was the only one, but that doesn’t change my feelings on the matter).

I remember all the times he left work to get me at school when I got ill. Helped me with school work. Kept me out of Trouble. All the things he taught me.

Some of those things he specifically taught me, like woodworking and how to fix up a house (a friend of mine once remarked that our house was always under construction), and how to be a good helper. Those skills have stayed with me even to this day.

Some things he taught by example. He and Mom always worked together around the house, did the shopping together, and my Dad never gave a thought to my Mom driving our pickup truck back in the 1970s when the idea of a woman driving a pickup truck would raise eyebrows all over town.

He got me my Big Break into IT. He was working for Digital Equipment Corporation, and would take me into the office on Sundays where I could play around with the computers. One day he showed me some paperwork he had to do that involved a number of calculations, and asked if the computer could do that. I wrote an application and my IT career took off.

He never talked much about his military experience until after the dedication of the World War II memorial. We watched that together on TV, and afterwards he began to tell his stories. I threatened to videotape him, but instead he wrote it all down. You can read ahout his exploits, in his own words, right here, and hear his own words in a presentation he made at a local elementary school in 2013 here. I was amazed by some of these stories. Here’s this parental figure, the one was making me do my homework and eat my vegetables, and now I learn, Wow! Running a flame thrower??? How Cool is that??

He often told the story of when he first went overseas to join the war in Europe. He was in Oran during Christmas, and went to Church Sunday, went to Midnight Mass, and then on Monday for Christmas Day. He, on his knees, prayed to God, “they gave me this rifle and said to kill or be killed, I don’t know where I’m going, watch over me, guide me”. You know, he spent 2 years in actual combat as an infantryman, one of those guys on the front lines in foxholes with a rifle and a helmet, and he got through all that with hardly a scratch. I observed that two significant medical advances became available right around the time he needed them; I do not consider that a coincidence. During some of the tough times I’d seen him through I pointed out that God has been taking care of him, and He ain’t gonna walk away now, and I believe God is still taking care of him. I hand over my caregiver role to Him.

In this time of pandemic, I was not able to visit him when he went to the hospital, but all the reports I got indicated that he was not in much pain, and the whole thing, from detection of symptoms to the end was less than 5 days. A Nurse, Jane, at the hospital was with him at the end.

I believe there is a plan behind everything that happens. I also believe that miracles do happen, but do not always serve a purpose that we can see, so maybe they don’t seem like much of a miracle. My Dad often talked about looking forward to the time when he would be united with Margaret, his beloved Wife, who he was true to all the way to today and beyond. Maybe the Christmas Miracle, on this Winter Solstice, is that he is now reunited with his beloved.

In significant ways he made things easy on the rest of us. He made his own decision to stop driving, for which I am forever grateful. Now another of his decisions is helping us even now. His wishes were to not have a funeral; his only desire is to be cremated and put with his Wife. Under the current circumstances, we will proceed with the cremation, but put everything else on hold. Once it becomes safe to travel and gather, we will have a memorial service and celebration. Watch this space.

He is missed by his three children, two grandchildren, godchild, and countless others.

Updating for 2020

For this Thanksgiving, I was able to orchestrate a video call for a bunch of family members. That got me thinking about more things that are just different this year, and some things that need an update.

“Over the river and through the wood” seems a bit dated now, so:

Over the wifi and through the net —
To Grandfather’s screen we go
The router knows the way to send the stream
through the firewalls and filters

Over the wifi and through the net —
To Grandfather’s screen we go
We would not drop packets
for ’tis Thanksgiving Day

Over the wifi and through the net —
Oh how the links saturate
It buffers the stream
As over the internet we go

Over the wifi and through the net —
and straight through the ISP
We retransmit and buffer
it is so hard to wait!

Over the wifi and through the net —
When Grandmother sees us in HD
She will say “O, dear, the children are there,
send a FedEx for everyone.”

Over the wifi and through the net —
now Grandmother’s desktop I spy!
Hurrah for the fun! Check the tracking!
Hurrah for UPS!

B.O.G. part 2

So sometimes a collar bone just doesn’t want to heal up and weld itself back together. It happens. What that means depends a lot on how the ligaments an whatnot are able to hold the bone in place. If it moves around too much, then it hurts, or sets up all sorts of grinding an popping that can be intolerable.

To help assess that, the doctor ordered some Xrays with me holding something reasonably heavy with my hanging down. The shoulder did fine with that, but my elbow was screaming because it had been bent up in the sling for 2 months and now had about 4kg pulling it straight.

Apparently my bone stayed put well enough that this might not be a problem. The disconnect in the bone might result in a slight, maybe 10%, loss of strength in that shoulder, which, according to the doctor, wouldn’t be noticeable unless I was pumping iron or something (I might develop a right-turning tendency in flight and have to compensate with a left yaw).

The plan now is to get the arm back into service with some PT (Physical Therapy, or what my co-worker calls Pain and Torture). During the first session I could see some immediate improvement in my range of motion. The doctor made use of the arm sling optional: if the arm gets tired and needs to rest, I can use the sling, or if I’m in a situation where my attention might need to be elsewhere and I might therefore make a sudden inadvisable move. In the meantime, I’ve got exercises to do at least daily to stretch and improve the range of motion and to improve strength.

Stay tuned…

One wing flapping

“What is the sound of one wing flapping?” Since both wings are almost always flapped at the same time, the answer is “pretty much like two wings flapping, just less so”. But when you don’t have full use of both hands, things get a bit more complicated.

My recent injury left me unable to do much with my right arm. I could use the hand, but only if I could get it to what I wanted to handle without moving my arm. There’s a lot of things we do that call for two hands, and if you’d asked me six months ago what would be a problem and what wouldn’t, I would not have gotten it half right. I’ve developed a good bit of empathy for those who really don’t have both hands.

There are, of course, a lot of things that aren’t a problem because they just don’t require two hands: opening a door, using the TV remote control, using a phone, typing (if you’re not in a hurry), eating a sandwich, etc…

Then there are things that can be done, but require some modification. Getting a glass of water: you can’t just hold the glass under the faucet and open the tap. You have to turn on the water, then pick up the glass and fill it, set it down, then turn off the water (this also grates on my sense of resource efficiency). Carrying stuff into the other room might require multiple trips, where as before you could just pick up the laptop, its power supply, and your yogurt and head off. Opening a door might not be a problem, but carrying stuff through that door might be. These things require extra planning.

If it’s your dominant hand that’s out of service, things like writing and eating become problematic. While I’ve gotten better at filling in crossword puzzles with my non-dominant hand, at first I had to be very deliberate about holding and moving the pencil (no, I don’t do crosswords in ink). I thought carefully about how I wrote normally and tried to replicate that, in mirror image, with my other hand. Eating was somewhat less of a problem, but still took some mental effort.

Speaking of eating, you can’t use a knife and fork at the same time. Most people think it’s fine to pick up a chicken leg with their fingers and chew into it. I’ve come to believe that applies to steak too.

Hair can be a problem if it needs more than a bit of combing.

I’ve reconsidered the necessity of some things. For example, my home office has two computers, two cell phones, a desk clock, and a clock radio, all of which are perfectly happy to give me the time of day. So why bother with a watch if I’m going to be there all day? Similarly, I’m not going out anywhere, the cat doesn’t care what I wear (or don’t), so as long as my webcam isn’t aimed to low….

And then there are things that are just not an option. Cleaning and cutting up vegetables for my salads requires two hands. Hauling my trash to the landfill. Mowing the grass (my mower is light enough I could probably maneuver it ok with one hand, but it takes two to start it). These are things that I’ve had to rely on others to do for me, and I’m grateful for those people, which includes paid services (those people who can’t work from home during this pandemic) as well as neighborhood volunteers. A tip ‘o the hat to Joe, Deb, Bud, David, Sharon, David, and the others whose names I didn’t think to write down and apologize to for not doing so, for jumping right in when word got around.

B.O.G.

The title of this post is a take-off on “A.O.G”, or “Aircraft On Ground”, used when an aircraft needs to fly but can’t because of some mechanical issue. Usually it implies some degree of urgency, so rush that parts order and have a mechanic standing by. In this case, it’s “Bird On Ground”.

That’s not what a normal collarbone, avian or human, should look like.

To answer the question I know all the hard-core cyclists out there are wanting to know, the bike is fine. The right brake/shifter got rotated inward a bit, but I can fix that. My helmet has some small dimples on the right side, so I’ll go ahead and replace it. This happened when I went around a corner, heard some small gravel under the front tire, the bike shuddered, and I was on the ground. The whole thing took, maybe, I think around 600ms.

The doctor advised me to keep the arm immobilized as much as possible and just let the bone mend itself. I certainly won’t be doing any kayaking over the next 6 to 8 weeks and I may end up with a bit of a bump on my shoulder. If that happens, I figure then when someone accuses me of “having a chip on my shoulder”, I can point and say “YES, and THERE it is!”

Followup with the doctor is in 3 weeks.

Creature Feature 2020 #3

I’m still here. Like I’m sure is the case for all of y’all, things have been a bit “abbynormal” lately.
Anyway, with a rare day off (if I didn’t take some time off, I was probably going to end up yelling at someone), I decided to get out on the lake first thing.
My favorite time of day, early morning:

There are some flowers that only come out early in the day. These remind me of morning glories, if they aren’t:

The early morning light made this fallen piece of tree really stand out:

I saw a lot of these white splotches on leaves in a couple places around the lake. I suspect they’re insect egg cases, perhaps one of those species that hatches and drops into the water to start life there:

There wasn’t a lot of bird activity visible. As we push towards late summer, the breeding season is mostly over, the kids have grown (boy, do they ever grow fast), and things have settled down to a more relaxed pace. If being a bird is ever “relaxed”.
It is, however, definitely the season of the spider. They’ve had time to grow big, and as they get big, so do their webs:

Obligatory Great Blue Heron picture, heading off into the fog:

Here’s a little better Great Blue Heron picture. A lot easier to catch them when they’re standing still, especially if the lighting isn’t great:

Creature Feature 2020 #2

I know, where have I been? Or, more importantly, where have the Creature Features been? The short answer, keeping my head down and out of the line of sneeze. I’d made a couple short excursions out on the lake this month, but it took a holiday (US) to spend some Real Time out there and pull the pictures together to post.

This one was from a couple weeks ago, when a bright sunny day brought out the turtles:

Osprey showing us would-be fliers how it’s done:

And how to operate in tight spaces:

Osprey chick on the nest. I’m pretty sure that’s a chick there, because if the adults are around, they’ll be warning me off by the time I get this close.

For the record, I heed their warnings, because, hey, they’re the parents, they know what’s best for their little ones.

Ducks and geese are around all the time.


There are duck boxes all around the lake. I’ve never seen a duck use one, and they’re all in some degree of decay. This one seems to have aspirations of being a Chia Duck Box:

Grabbed the camera when I saw this bird flying over head. I wasn’t sure, but a close look at this not-so-great photo shows that he is a Bald Eagle:

How apropos for a national holiday.

Humans spend a lot of effort keeping their aircraft in top shape and making sure everything is in place prior to flight. Then along comes a ;Turkey Vulture missing a bunch of primaries flying around like it’s nothing:

I’m not sure if I never noticed this spot before, or just as likely maybe something has changed, and I found this little inlet to a nice lush forested wetland.

Always when I start thinking I’ve seen it all out there, Nature throws something else in front of me. Speaking of which, lots of squirrels hang around under the bird feeders in my back yard, but this chipmunk snuck in with them:

And, of course, the obligatory Great Blue Heron pic. I spotted this one on top of a snag through the trees:

They always look so awkward when they launch from a tree…

but once on those big broad wings, they’re as graceful as any bird.

Creature Feature 2020 #1

It’s been a busy year so far (to say the least), and now with the “civilized” world grinding to a halt, it might be good to pause and reflect that the rest of the world goes on. My suggestion: find a way to get outdoors, while maintaining your social distance.

On that subject, IMHO the best way to get past this current unpleasantness is that social distancing. The virus needs humans to make more of itself, and if we deny it that, it’ll die back.

I had planned to spend a day at Croft State Park, but found they’re now closed on the day I showed up (I now see where SC state parks are just closed for the duration; sigh). So I made the best of it, took a walk in the local woods, and as the day warmed up, broke in my 2020 boat permit.

Recent rains had plenty of water pouring out the lake overflow.

and some of the trails along the creek were pretty soggy from the slosh-over.

In the woods, it’s a lot harder to spot the wildlife, but this Chipping Sparrow came out on the path long enough to snap some pictures:

Up topside, the high water level let me get into those little nooks and crannies around the lake I like to poke into, like this little spot with a small feeder bubbling into the lake up at the far end, almost like a miniature waterfall:

The sun poked through the clouds occasionally, but that was enough to bring out the turtles. Two’s company:

but maybe three’s a crowd:

Five definitely is a crowd:

Up above the lake, I didn’t see many Great Blue Herons around (sorry, no obligatory GBH picture this time), but the Double-Crested Cormorants were all up and down the lake.

I’ve said it before, just when I think I’ve seen it all, Nature throws something else up in my face, like the Chipping Sparrow mentioned above, which I saw for the first time. I also spotted a couple little creatures on a tree trunk. Maybe they climbed up there to escape the rising waters, as this tree would normally be on dry land.

That wasn’t a lot of wildlife pictures from out on the lake, so I’ll fill in with a few from a busy backyard feeder.

Lots of comings and going, a Blue Jay comes, a Red-Bellied Woodpecker goes…

Mourning Dove approaches:

Mourning Dove and Tufted Titmouse share the seeds:

No mistaking the Northern Cardinal, and downstairs a Dark-eyed Junco:

Now it’s the Blue Jay‘s turn to bolt. Gear up!

First (only?) snow of Winter 2020

With nothing else to write home about, I might as well post something about our first snowfall of the winter of 2020. The way the weather has been (6 days ago I was out running in 70F weather), it might be our only snow this season.

The day started out bright and clear,

but turned overcast and around lunchtime quickly went through flurries and into snow. I was out doing errands to the north, where snow did accumulate on the grass and trees:

but farther south by the lake, it was above freezing and melting on contact:

Still, Fluffy seemed as fascinated as anyone about it:

And now it’s all over, about as quick as it started.