Yes, I know, we're talking romance clichés this month, but
honestly, I have no opinion on them good or bad. I think the whole "love
'em/hate 'em" debate is more a writer's peeve than a reader's. Reader's really don't care if your plot is
overdone, or the characters have been there done that. They just want a compelling story and if
you're giving them that, they're going to buy it hook, line & sinker.
So, anyway...because I'm such a rebel (haha) I'm going to
random blog.
This Sunday marks a new season, Autumn, for those not
keeping track because, like me, you live in a dessert where the only seasons we
have are hot, hotter and hell. I can't
believe it's already mid September !
Man, where’d the year go? Or should I say years? Seems like just
yesterday I was a kid, laying in the grass watching the clouds drift across the
sky and arguing with my brother that it was the earth rotating and not the
clouds moving, and wondering what my life would be like when I got older and
now here I am, fifty-something years old, with four grown children and still
speaking a sentence in one breath.
Like most everyone in the world, I was heartbroken by the
death of Joan Rivers last month and watched a lot of the tributes to her played
on TV. One thing that stuck out for me was a scene from the show she did with
her daughter. It was before she was planning another plastic surgery and she
told her daughter, (and I’m paraphrasing) “if it all ends tomorrow, it ‘s okay.
It was a great life.” I have to say, I
agree with this statement when it comes
to my own life. Sure, there were some
hard times, heartaches and days where I didn’t think life could suck any more
than it did…..but I’ve lived by the adage, “what doesn’t kill you, only makes
you stronger” and I’ve repeated it during the bad times. Things happen for a reason. If I hadn’t dealt
with the crises of death, illness, heartbreak, I wouldn’t be the person I am
today.
I recently spent a couple of days in the hospital because my
blood sugar levels were too high. In fact they’d been too high for nearly four
months, I just didn’t pay attention to them because they’d been under control
(and I never check them anyway--bad me).
I only checked that day because I figured the massive headache I was
having was probably because of my sugars.
And, of course, they’d gotten so high that the meter didn’t register
anything but the word HI…which meant
they were well over 600…normal is 70 - 100.
So, even though I really didn’t feel like sitting in the ER, I decided
to go ahead and go in so they could give me some insulin. And of course I ended
up having to stay while they got the numbers down because by then, they’d
topped 800 and if left to continue the incline, I’d have ended up in a coma or
dead. Yeah, that was my reality check
and happy to say I’m back to normal and reading the signs better so I don’t end
up that sick again. As great a life I’ve had, I’m not ready to see it end.
2 comments:
And we aren't ready to see you go! So glad you figured it out, went to the ER, spent time in the hospital and are back on track. I know you have more stories to tell!
Thanks Judith. And I'll eventually get those stories told. ;)
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