Wall!

Probably the last time you heard so much ado about a wall was when one came tumbling down. In Berlin. In 1989.

My version is about a wall going up. At our house. After 14 months of waiting.

Share it with me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

No, no steps yet…I think they befuddled the contractor. At one point yeserday there were four men staring at the dirt where the steps will go. And they didn’t come back today. But as I told Mike last night, even in its unfinished state, the area still looks better than it has in the entire 3 years we’ve lived here.

Stay tuned for the sequel (Beyond the Wall) in which our intrepid homeowners decide how to finish the newly lengthened driveway (where the gravel is now). Will they choose more asphalt? Pavers? Something else? Oh the excitement of it all. But don’t hold your breath — this will likely take a while. There’s still that pesky sewer issue to fix, front porch to rebuild, closet-turned-powder-room in the works, a deck to resurface, a “honey, what if we…” project ongoing in the back yard, and a half-dozen other items on the to-do list.

The big fun never ends on Pleasant Valley Road. But slowly, slowly, slowly, the house is looking like responsible, motivated, proud owners live here.

 He conquers who endures.
                        ~ Persius

And now for something politically charged…

No doubt you’ve heard about a little thing called “rising gas prices” and unless you raise all your own food, ride a bicycle everywhere you go, and live “off the grid” — and probably even then — you’ve been affected by it.

I’m lucky. Working at home means I don’t have to commute every day, but my mom’s recent health issues have meant frequent 70-mile-or-so roundtrips to visit her or tend to her house. I’m guessing nearly 3 gallons of gas used on every trip — you can do the math.

I’ve also been hearing and reading about the surge in interest in exploiting our own national energy resources, which are extensive. Just this morning I signed a petition at www.americansolutions.com to “Drill Here. Drill Now. Pay Less.” even though I told Mike a couple days ago that I thought the “Pay Less.” message should really be a “Be Secure.” message, and that the focus on money cheapened it.

It’s not that I don’t care about the environment (or don’t care about paying high energy prices) — it’s that I think we are being incredibly foolish not to take advantage of the resources we are blessed to have and the security those resources bring. And I think the technology exists to extract those resources without damaging the environment. And I think other countries are playing in our backyard and kicking dirt in our face as they do. Brazil is gleefully chomping at the bit to exploit its newfound energy reserves, realizing the power and opportunity they provide.

Oh, and let’s not forget nuclear energy. I used to write marketing copy for a supplier of nuclear fuel, so I know a little bit about it. How foolish are we not to have built any new nuclear plants in 30 years? Would I live near one? Maybe, maybe not. I do live in the Three Mile Island state, and visited the site a few years ago. You can’t tell me the circumstances that led to that accident haven’t been corrected. Hey, it’s working for France [80% of its energy comes from nuclear], the rest of the EU, Japan…wake up and smell the coffee you need electricity to make!

I’ve heard that neither presidential candidate is in favor of exploiting our energy resources to the extent I am. So that’s another reason to be in a quandary about the election. Not voting doesn’t seem right; voting “off the ticket” seems like wasting your vote; voting for a candidate you don’t really support leaves a foul taste. As usual, it comes down to choosing the lesser of two evils. So what will the deciding factor be? Energy? Defense? Social issues? Taxes? Economic policies? Health care? Sophie’s Choice anyone?

But tell me, why not use the abundant resources we have, and be a stronger nation for it?

Kilometers are shorter than miles. 
Save gas, take your next trip in kilometers. 
                                  ~ George Carlin

Get well soon.

A quick recap. Mom ended up back in the hospital unexpectedly due to a giant blood clot in her “bad” leg (the one recently broken). We are SO lucky it was found (purely by chance) — clots often cause fatal pulmonary embolisms (a piece of the clot breaks off, travels to the lungs, and kills you). She was never in any pain, has been resting comfortably in the hospital with her blood-thinning cocktail, and should come home soon.

This post is really about what it took to get her to this point. When her clot was discovered during an exam at the hospital for another issue, the technicians and docs knew she had to be admitted immediately. We were already at the hospital, so this should have been easy, right? Right.

  • First, knowing what we were in for at “big-city hospital,” my sister and I wanted to take her ourselves to our local hospital — part of the same hospital system as “big-city hospital,” but closer to home, quieter, and less crazed. But no, the doc nixed that idea, saying it would be much faster and better to admit her immediately through the emergency department (ED) so she could get immediate blood thinners. Time was of the essence. We shouldn’t fool around with moving her. (And we were clearly insane for even thinking of that.)
  • Anyhoo…45 minutes later…they finally managed to get someone there with a wheelchair to take her up one floor to the ED (we were just about to get one ourselves and take her).
  • The ED was a zoo — a Friday morning and it looked like the set of ER during one of their many disaster-du-jour episodes. Long story short — my mom laid on a gurney in the hall for 5-1/2 hours. It was 2 hours before she got the oh-so-essential blood thinner shot. Two hours! We could have been to our local hospital in 15 minutes and she could have been in a ROOM within 2 hours. She ate her box lunch on the gurney in the hall, with chaos all around.
  • Once she got into a room, it took 2 more hours for her “orders” to make it up the 9 floors from the ED to her floor, via computer. We could have carried the orders up in the elevator in 5 minutes. So, this meant she was not allowed any food or drink until the floor nurse knew what was what. By then, the cafeteria was closed, so she had another box lunch for dinner.
  • Throughout the course of our 9 or so hours before she made it into her room, we answered the same questions about her medical history, prescriptions, and recent health situation at least 4 times to 4 different people. And then we did it all again for the floor nurse, after the “orders” finally came. The same information 5 times! How is this even effective or possible in today’s “modern” health care system? Whatever happened to having one chart that stays with the patient with all the info on it? It was mystifying to me and still is. (Not to mention she had been to this hospital just a few months ago for the original surgery on her ankle, and last year for another surgery. They freakin’ should know her medical history — they created a lot of it!)

I write this knowing that I live in Pittsburgh — one of the top cities for medical care in the country. As a friend pointed out, imagine if we lived in one of those other cities?! Imagine indeed.

I know her wait for a room was not because there were no beds available — clearly the hospital is full of empty beds. The problem is having no one to staff those beds and oversee her care. I get it; there’s a nursing shortage and hospitals are understaffed. (Maybe they would have more time if they didn’t have to take the same information from every patient 5 times.)

Unfortunately, I don’t have any answers, only many questions. We pay exorbitant costs for health care. We have technology and resources that are the envy of the world. We have dedicated professionals. We just can’t seem to bring them all together to work efficiently. 

Still, the system does its job for the most part — it saves lives. Maybe the rest just doesn’t matter? Hard to accept that thinking, but at this point, it’s all I have.

Getting out of the hospital is a lot like resigning from a book club.
You’re not out of it until the computer says you’re out of it.
                                                                   ~ Erma Bombeck

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