Sunday, November 30, 2025

A Day To Remember

It was our delayed Thanksgiving get-together, postponed till Saturday because several members of the combined extended family had to work on the actual holiday.  No biggie, right? We could hold it practically any time, though getting the most of us together made it more special.

But this is Minnesota, and there is a pattern in my previous Thanksgivings that stuff happens. I'm talking mostly weather. If something is planned, it gets super cold, heavy snow, dead heat tapes under a mobile home, plugged plumbing, a sick cat emergency (fatal), or what have you. Not all at once of course, and with placid holidays in between. But I never took Thanksgivings for granted when I was the person hosting. Now if we just had to drive a few miles to some relative, or even more than a few, nothing ever happened that I was made aware of. 

This time it was snow. Or at least that's how it started. We'd just gotten over a snowstorm days earlier that started with rain, then freezing temperatures, and I made sure to keep home, warm, and safe for that, despite it being the official holiday. We already had plans for Saturday anyway, in order to accommodate  the most possible people in our home. Too many had to work Thursday. After the ice and snow I didn't even bother to consider heading out for Black Friday, aside for a couple last minute food purchases for the next day.

The headcount of those planning to come topped out at 22, including us. Some of the advanced food prep was done, the turkey was thawing in the fridge, house messes were getting cleaned up, and I was heavy into the planning stage. Did we have all the needed food groups represented? Now remember, on this holiday above all others, desert is a vital food group. There were a lot of food choices planned that were not on my personal approved diet list, but there still was enough that nobody, least of all me, was going to starve. We were among the lucky this year.

A much more important question was where on earth were we going to put them? It wasn't just tables and chairs, but children were included and despite being a quarter of our sizes, they take up 4 times the space and produce 8 times the volume, especially if they're having fun. I had planned ahead by keeping a series of boxes out of the recycle stream until after everybody went home. It's amazing what three to five young children - depending on who all came - can find to do with free rein over a conglomeration of empty boxes when nobody cared what condition the boxes are in when they left for home, but only how much fun they could invent while destroying them.  I have a family source for cardboard boxes ready to be thrown out, and I'm promised a resupply before end of December.

Once the turkey was out of the oven, sitting on the kitchen island resting before being carved, other baking and cooking commenced in a flurry of activity. My work was mostly done until carving time rolled around. Somebody cooked and mashed potatoes, another made gravy, yet another cooked venison fresh from hunting season in some technique with an unpronounceable name I haven't heard on all the TV cooking shows Steve watches.  The judicious application of juniper berries was a delightful bonus. Hungry people waiting as patiently as possible were pacified with some banana bread /chocolate chip /walnut snacks, mostly resuming their conversations.

I'd known there was much to do last minute. The turkey had to be baked, the house cleaned, dishes washed and counters given that final scrub so food, plates and utensils could be laid out in usable locations. But even before that I had to spend what, due to predicted snow and unexpected side trips, became a 3 hour round trip to pick up Steve's daughter Maria since her car is in the shop and she was coming over to help clean so the total burden of that didn't fall on us. 

Naturally I did the night before what I always do before a big day, obsessed over all the details. This translates into getting 3 hours of sleep. Some times I get luckier and pull another hour out of nowhere. Make a mental note: this figures in later. I was fine to drive in the morning after a light snack and my morning mug of coffee. Due to snow, I topped up the gas tank before leaving town, tucked an extra coat in the back seat, and brought along some of my stuffing muffins for Maria's mom who doesn't travel in this kind of weather, so she'd get a taste of what would be in a goodie bag at the end of the evening. She'd miss the conversations and the chaos, but no need to miss the meal. Maria lives in the same apartment building with her and helps take care of her, years after a stroke which keeps her mom in a wheelchair. She won't visit us since we have no ramp. Occasionally the extended family has get-togethers in that building's party room so she doesn't miss all the fun. It's a long trip for most.

Once home, the work resumed. We'd seen the first flakes as I picked up Maria, exactly as the forecasters had predicted, few and far between. The storm was mostly the southern part of the state and Iowa, with a possibility of 3 inches for where we'd be partying, and possible 18 in southern Iowa. One of the TV weathermen started in the middle of Minnesota and said for every 50 miles going south, add an inch of snowfall. His math didn't quite add up, but at least our roads should be quite drivable. 

Of course, most guests were coming from as far as the south end of the metro. The cancellation calls started coming in. First, the couple bringing deviled eggs pulled out. (Steve had really been waiting for those!) Bad tires for the expected snow.  Then a fellow who was fairly local but who doesn't drive at night due to his vision. We'd already arranged to put him up on the couch overnight and keep him until he had good morning light and presumably much better roads. He'd gotten out of his driveway on his way to pick up pies to bring them (not a cook but he buys great pies!). He turned around after seeing how crazy other drivers were. He didn't feel safe at all. OK, so no pies... except for the little pecan one I picked up on a whim the day before when I went out to get Steve's potatoes. If we had everybody here, as originally planned, we'd need a third pie for desert, but nobody wound up eating pie. It still sits on the counter. 

Then we got a call from another family of four. They don't drive much, mostly take the city bus, so handy where they live, and she worried both about driving in snow and dark. We'd already arranged to turn over my bedroom to them, knowing they had two sleeping bags for the kids who were used to camping already, and I have a bathroom attached to it. So there went the dinner rolls.

Before you think I don't care about more than the food, as hostess I was trying to figure what was important, where gaps could be filled. It turned to to be unimportant, since every food contribution arriving had been sized for a group of 22. We told everybody we knew their safety was important, we'd miss them, and work on getting together over the coming holidays. Meanwhile Steve helped other logistical planning by counting heads remaining - or perhaps seats, since there were folding tables and chairs to be arranged. Two more carfuls were unaccounted for, so he and I both made phone calls. Some adult grandkids from Wisconsin pulled out due to the roads where they were (Italian noodle salad), but the family from the farthest south part of the metro were packing up the kids and getting on their way, and my daughter and her husband would be here soon with the venison. And would be making gravy from turkey drippings for the mashed potatoes Steve was doing. And bring a desert of apple/sweet potato crumble. My youngest wasn't even called because he lives only 5 miles away. So the cranberry fluff salad from his grandmother's recipe would be here, in addition to a shovel-pushing helper, and a surprise banana bread with chocolate chips and walnuts would be set out for an appetizer while guests awaited the the final cooking.

We wound up with a pleasant surprise additional guest, a friend of Maria's who'd been here several times as well as at other extended-family events. Of course we had room! Even if nobody had cancelled, there'd been enough tables and chairs to take care of everybody. She was at loose ends for the day, lived only about 14 miles away. She loves the swans that collect on the lake this time of year, usually staying until just before the lake freezes over before they fly all the way south, if one year's experience here counts. My son had announced as he came in the door that there were about 35 near our end of the lake, in addition of course to the Canada geese which also hang out this time of year. As soon as our additional guest arrived and greeted us, she and Maria walked down to the shore to see the swans.

It might have been a mistake. Not that we'd know about it until later. We might never have proof.

The house was about to get noisy. We have great-grandkids! Three are in the one family who came with kids, only their oldest in school yet. They are why I collected boxes for the party, from just big enough to hold whatever while small enough to pop into others, to big enough to be climbed inside of for whatever the reason of the minute is, and in one case, to get folded into a recliner chair after adding a second box as a footstool. They had a whole open room to play in, since the adults were much fewer than planned and folding tales and chairs stayed folded along a wall.

I know people who hate noisy kids. I divorced one of them. These kids were the sound of joy. Very few things in the room were denied them, one being a lighter which had been overlooked during cleanup. I knew from their last visit that the youngest was fascinated by a curio cabinet keeping him from playing with pueblo pottery, particularly several storytellers, each unique and irreplaceable, treasured if not actual treasures. Last winter he had to be pulled away from it repeatedly while he tried to open the doors. This time I took some left over packing tape and secured the lower door shut in a couple places. He can look all he wants and enjoy them. When he's old enough to figure out how to remove the tape put on again for any future visits, he'll be old enough to understand "No" much better. All three kids did get to listen to the ocean in a large conch shell they will inherit some year, and the reactions were unanimous: giggling! But the boxes claimed their attention again back in the large room. My daughter and granddaughter were there to catch up on news and enjoy/supervise them, so I returned to the kitchen. Still stuff to be done there.

There was a moment when I simply had to excuse myself from the food prep activity and go sit down,  I was overworked and overheated. It was noticed. I was brought some ice water, and when serving started a minute later, I was provided a plate of my choices from the supply line. A bit later, even though I recovered to normal quickly, Maria announced she wasn't going to ask me to drive her home as we had planned. She knew I'd gotten about three hours of sleep the night before, and snow was still accumulating, making the trip even longer. She'd talked to her friend who agreed to take her instead, since she already lived in that direction. We offered something for her extra gas, since I was planning on springing for that with my car anyway. Everything was settled. Riiiighhhht! Uh huh, sure, it's always that easy.

 Even with the cancellations there was a large representation of foods, and nobody felt any lack of variety. The great grands had gone early, and conversation continued for quite some time. The food brought was either eaten, sent home with various people including as care packages, or left here as care packages and put in our fridge. We finally had to enlist my son to rearrange the fridge to fit everything in without squishing or dumping things. 

People were getting ready to go home. Or so we had planned.

The friend providing the ride I was relieved from doing started rummaging thorough her purse for her keys. Then her jacket, one of those with zipper pockets inside and out every few inches. No keys! Now the house got searched, along with the path the two used outside for smoking breaks, than back into the house and the boxes the kids had played with, the crevices in every single piece of furniture, floors underneath, the trash just in case, and then the hunt started over, and repeated another time. I called my granddaughter, now at home, and asked if by any chance her kids had found them at some point and played with them, possibly even bringing them home. Nope.

Outside was examined. We knew the keys were removed from the car, since my son was outside when her car rolled up and he heard the key fob beep as it was locked. That didn't stop everybody from trying to figure out some way, any way, they could have gotten locked in the car. Yes, I know, but after nearly an hour, desperation was setting in. She had been pulling things from the back seat... maybe after the beep?

The sidewalk was checked out, plus beyond its paved edges, since that had gotten swept of snow earlier. Could they have fallen along the edge and gotten buried under a broomful? Could they have fallen under the edge of the car in the snow after beeping the doors locked and now be covered over? Flashlights were brought out and another hunt began. No results.

One persistent question never laid to rest was concerning the walk down to the lake to watch the swans. Had they fallen out of whichever pocket they might have been put in, either on the way to/from, or once there waking around off the street area? Our guest was becoming more and more upset and everything we tried, even the second and third times, brought up the negative answer. She stressed it wasn't just the loss of the keys - there were fixes for that... eventually. But there was something on that key ring which was a rare sentimental treasure from a deceased beloved parent, and she didn't have many of those. 

Eventually we quit looking for the keys and started problem solving for getting her car on the road... so I could eventually get mine out. She could at least get into her house if she could break into her car and get the garage door opener. My son volunteered to drive her home and back - in the only set of usable wheels left until her car was moved. There was a second set of keys there, though she'd have to ask where once she got there. The plan first though was to locate a wire coat hanger to open the door. The closest one was at my son's house. When he returned with one, it wasn't working as well as advertised.

Next and last resort was to call the county officer's night shift, explain the problem, and ask them to come open the car, after sufficient ID was proffered, of course. Never mind the little Catch-22 of her having her wallet with ID tucked in its secret hiding place... inside the locked car. They got enough information over the phone to come over promptly with a gizmo to unlock her door. Or try anyway. Maybe he was new on the job or hadn't graduated to his uniform out of a juvie background stealing cars. At least enough jiggling around of car door innards was done to result in the car alarm going off. I was informed, when people came inside to warm up a bit, that neighbors - an unspecified number - had called in an attempted car theft. I guess nobody actually looked out to notice the first squad car. They apparently stopped calling once the second squad rolled in.

Meanwhile the (rookey?) had stopped trying and my son decided to try the coat hanger again. Between the three of them, the door was opened, the car battery disconnected to stop the alarm... eventually, as some special sort of needed ratchet was provided to accomplish something else needed to get everything done until a real key appeared. My son paid close attention for the anticipated restart later. No point calling them back. Now at least she had her garage opener and wallet with drivers license, so when she returned with her spare key she could legally drive.  That trek took over another half hour on bad roads, and - of course, since Murphy lives forever  - reconnecting the battery under the hood once they got that lifted while there was enough battery life left to find the cable -(but only just enough, so put half a dozen D cells on the shopping list) - they had to turn the car alarm off again by using the key the system recognized.

Whew! Who knew car theft was so complicated? Oh wait, I'm not giving away any secret techniques here, am I? Just in case, DO NOT STEAL CARS! Yes, that includes you. So don't start!

This morning I managed to verify everybody who left our house made it home safely, even if hours later than planned. As snow melts, I will be checking for a stray set of keys to show up. I'll also put a notice on the mailroom bulletin board if they are found as to who's looking for them. At least here when they plow they don't take the snow away, just wait for spring melt. If the keys are in there, eventually they should show up. I hope so.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Codependency

 Way back when, you know, those years when I was in a support group learning how to identify my own feelings, hopefully to form better, more healthy relationships, while healing from an abusive one, "codependency" was a bad thing. You wanted to learn to avoid it. It meant you were so dependent on the relationship with another that you didn't even know who you were without it.You were merely reactive to whatever and however the other person felt and acted.

Many years have passed, those goals reached, Steve and I have a very loving, healthy relationship. But let me repeat: many years have passed. We're not spring chickens any more. Our bodies have been discovering many ways to age ungracefully, non-functionally, often painfully.

Recently we have rewritten the "rule" about codependency being a bad thing. In terms of simply coping with life, we are figuring out how to fill each other's gaps, if you will.  The most obvious is our bodies have aged in different ways, but together we can accomplish what one used to. In Steve's case, he has difficulties in reaching things low on the ground or floor. A grabber stick - and there are three in the house - can only cope with certain kinds of things. But I have kept the flexibility to bend over and reach the floor to pick things up which still need fingers to accomplish. What is painful for him is just normal motion for me.

On the other hand, I have extreme difficulty reaching things up high, and the definition of "how high is high" keeps changing for me. But Steve can still do that easily. In that sense, we have become codependent. Both of us not only need the other, but are happy we can do things for the other. Even beyond our affection, it's just nice to still feel useful in some ways.

Of course the downside is knowing we have to deal with the lack of the other on what - fortunately - are still rare occasions. But the knowledge hovers out on the margins that for one of us that day will come when we are no longer "we" but merely "the remaining half of we". What we can no longer do by ourselves will have to get done some other way or not at all. 

This got driven home earlier this week. Steve had to go to the ER for a still unidentified pain. All the tests run were ambiguous. Not ruling things out, just not giving answers. He was kept overnight for observation, given some great pain control via IV, and another test was scheduled for the next day. I finally went home for some sleep, to return the next morning. This, of course, bumped into one of the things I can't do easily (meaning without extreme pain and possible dislocation) by myself, especially in cold weather.

I can only partially dress myself these days. In summer the layers are single, the sleeves shorter, the movements required much easier.  In cold weather I dress in layers, long sleeves under other long sleeves. They have friction against each other that cloth across skin doesn't. I get as far as head through the neck and hands to the ends of the sleeves... and there I'm stuck in a contorted bundle of fabric. My shoulders snag everything, the sleeves twist, my head catches the back of the collar, and I go marching off in a contorted position looking like a warped scarecrow to find Steve. He sees what needs to get pulled where while I can hold the inside sleeves in place at my wrists. We both laugh as much as you would watching us,  because it is so silly, but together it gets done and I'm ready to go face the world, even if that world is only fixing breakfast and coffee and watching the morning news. It might also be work, or some medical appointment, or shopping.

I was facing a morning of no Steve, and I was the one with the car to get him home. There was only one solution: don't get undressed! Fortunately my top set of layers are loose and comfortable. Being a geezer, I have frequently taken naps during the day in front of the TV or with my laptop open and... waiting. No tight spots, no irritations, unlike other parts of my wardrobe.  Now remember that I have no problems reaching low things, so I easily exchanged sweatpants for PJ bottoms, and had a solid night's sleep. My top outer layer was loose polar fleece, so no wrinkles to show, and fortunately no dirt. It even still held the sticky-badge that got me back inside the ER to visit Steve early in the morning. I'd needed it the previous evening when I left in search of supper while the staff kept dithering for hours about what to do with Steve that evening. Not only were there no rooms available for admitting him, the ER was also full.We'd already waited for three hours that morning from walking in the doors to getting a spot in the ER.

I returned to the ER the next morning after having breakfast and packing real food to have during the day as needed so I could stay with Steve. I got greeted with the news they were sending him home! His pain had disappeared overnight, fortunately, and none of the tests pointed to anything to fix. We were out of there in the time it took to print up findings and recommendations, and remove his IV line. He's still pain free a day later, catching up on real sleep he missed, and eating normal things for him. I'm catching up on missed TV shows via the DVR, and following the snow news, grateful to be home hours before any of that started here, and determined to be staying out of it until I can get somebody to come shovel for us... after it stops later

There will be much to be thankful for this holiday. And that absolutely includes our codependency.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Suicide By Kitchen

Whoa, whoa,  settle down. It's mostly a joke, and my apologies to anybody who needed a trigger warning - though if you needed one you've likely already skipped this post. But these days it's how I describe the several days of intense cooking prep needed in order to make my current version of stuffing muffins. Too many parts of me ache, and will continue for a while. The name is my reminder to question before the next time I undertake these whether it's really worth it. I happen to love those little boxed microwave meals, or mixing yogurt and fruit, or making a sandwich.... Steve is the cook in this family.

So far the family says it is worth MY work to make these. But a word of warning here - real warning. If you're starting now to make these for Thanksgiving yourself, you're already too late, unless you come up with a lot of adaptations. You might make it for Christmas, if you serve turkey and stuffing then. Or even Easter, the third time of the year I bother to do a turkey for. Or did.

Mostly if I want bird, it's the already cooked rotisserie chickens available in a lot of stores, still hot and served in a plastic bag. I will buy these throughout the year, and that's my start for making this stuffing. Once everybody's had their favorite pieces of the birds, there will be skin, juice, and meat left on the bones to deal with. I'll freeze a couple bags of the unwanted stuff, then haul them out and pop into a slow cooker (in lieu of a stew pot.) Add water to cover everything, and simmer through the day. Strain the bits through a colander or whatever stands up to the heat, and pop that broth into a container to freeze. Then you separate out the bits of meat - carefully! - and again, freeze those, and pop the rest in the garbage. Doing this throughout the year gives you stock and meat, once thawed. I hope you have a large enough freezer. It also works to include your turkey carcass(es). We bought a second freezer. This is labor intensive, but spread out through the year, even my shoulders hold up to it... mostly. I usually give them a few days off from other heavy tasks before and afterwards. But that's just me. You do you.

I do not add salt anywhere in the process - pretty much everything already has plenty. But if your taste buds need more salty flavor, or even more bird flavor, that time in the cooker before cleaning and freezing can be an opportunity to add chicken bouillon. Salt is variable in the brands.

The next big task is shopping. You need a huge pan for mixing this batch, but bowls usually aren't big enough, or are tippy, so I use the graniteware turkey roaster I inherited from my mom. You can still buy them, even if the stores try to sell everybody flimsy aluminum pans which won't hold a turkey without dropping it on the floor if you're not careful. You'll also need several muffin pans, whatever basically fills two shelves in your oven completely, so you can get by with the fewest number of cycles of baking, saving power and $$. Then stock up on cupcake papers, more than what you think you'll need. When decorated ones are available, they can be festive. Or just pick colors that look appetizing. (So far I've never seen a design with a screaming terrified turkey on it. No, that's not a suggestion. Just an observation.)

During the year I look for sales on certain things that store well, like craisins, aka dried cranberries. I used to be able to find orange flavored ones, but haven't seen them in stores for a long time. So I make sure to pick up a can of frozen OJ pulp, and somewhere in my stores of equipment will have kept a largish container with a lid that can hold the dried fruit, the can of OJ, and just a half- can-full of water. I like to concentrate the OJ flavor that the dried cranberries soak up a couple days ahead of baking time, so that's all the water I add despite directions for making juice. If you're stuck with pre-made OJ, even as fussy as I am, I'd use it anyway. This recipe process is adaptable as it has to be. ( My daughter hates that. She want's measurements! Really, just add more sage!)

Given lots of freezer space, I shop ahead for bread. Not just any bread. For those who can't have gluten, good luck finding the kind that works for you, or find your own substitute carbs to soak up the flavors. For each batch of stuffing, I get a 1 1/2 pound loaf of whole wheat, and a 1 pound loaf of cinnamon raisin bread. (I might add more of the latter.) Unlike a lot of recipes, I do not just throw together dried heels of bread. This is fresh and stays fresh. When I have the time, but at least a week ahead of the big event, I tear each loaf into bits, pour them back into the bags they came from, seal it back up and put it back in the fridge or freezer until the day before cooking. If you want to start in July for November, no problem, Just keep it sealed. Try not to squish the bags of crumbs between then and using. They have a lot to absorb ahead of them.

There is shopping that you'll want/need to do much closer to cooking time, including herbs, eggs, celery, onions, and butter. For each 2 1/2 pounds of bread, you'll need to chop and saute either a large yellow onion, or their equivalent, in butter or margarine. I also - separately - do the same with a celery heart or the same amount in long stalks. I start with the onions since I like the flavor when they brown. Celery just doesn't brown and takes much longer anyway. I give its pan its own butter/equivalent. Each full recipe usually gets 1 to 2 sticks of whichever I have on hand, divided between the two veggies as needed. In poor years, budget wise, I've used onion flakes instead of fresh, and celery seed or beau monde instead of fresh. I don't work with garlic so that's always powder. Not salt.

Each thing that gets added to the bread crumbs gets mixed in thoroughly. Each moist addition gets the mix a bit more messy, so paper towels are handy. I did experiment with chopped pecans but they weren't that popular. No biggie, more for me in other uses. Next to last are the spices. A lot of people like and have fresh ones. I don't. They spoil before I get to them. I like garlic powder, powdered thyme, rosemary after torturing it in a mortar and pestle to break them and release flavor. They are such hard little things. But by far the most important is sage. If you taste your mix (before you add the eggs) your sage will seem stronger than it is after baking. Some years it seems just right, others it tends to disappear by the time it's cooked and eaten.

I save the eggs for last, always. 6 of them well beaten go into the mix and like everything else, mixed by hand. (Again, paper towels are handy. You will be really goopy.) It's the only way to be sure everything is evenly distributed. Being raw is why tasting happens before the eggs go in. The reason they go in at all is they keep everything  together in the muffin cups. Otherwise all you get are crumbs.

One batch makes around 4 to 5 dozen, depending on how full you fill each cup. I like to pat the raw stuffing gently down into each paper liner where everything is touching the adjacent pieces. You can pile it so it's flat across the top or mounded. If it's flat it will bake for about 30 minutes at 350. If rounded, give it 35. If any spots in the tins are empty, fill them half full of water so the tins don't warp. When they are cool, I pop the muffins back into the bread bags I emptied and twist tie the ends to keep them moist, whether for a few hours on the counter, or days in the fridge, or even weeks/months in the freezer. They do last well that way, though a bit of a warm-up is nice. I generally figure on having two for every guest. Some will ignore them, others will take more and work to sneak a few out with them after the meal. Once I know they really like them I plan ahead for gift-packages for them if the meal is at my house, or just leave them behind with whoever the host is, bags and all, keeping my serving plate/bowl. I have learned to leave some in the home freezer before anybody ever sees one, because we both love them and each one is essentially a tiny complete meal in itself. (But shhh, don't tell them there might be more!)

Meanwhile I just pulled out the last of the batch of what started with 6 pounds of bread yesterday to cool. We each had two muffins last night for supper and two just now for lunch. I'll need to dig up a few extra bags as some will be going home with people after a very big dinner this weekend. I'm only doing turkey and stuffing. The rest is pot luck. 

Oh, and this year, for Christmas.... Steve is baking a ham! Next turkey day - as there is a second turkey in the freezer - I'll think about doing this again... really, really, really hard! (And more sage next time.)

Friday, November 21, 2025

Repercussions

 The morning after can be a much better time to assess injuries from a fall. The emotions have worn off, parts moved - or not so much - and sleep quality can provide better information.

Within a couple hours I knew one foot had issues. After much discussion with myself, plus rereading the label, I added a second Tylenol to my evening dose. I still limp, but the pain is on the outside of the foot about an inch behind the toes. I also am not going anywhere - not one more step -  without shoes with the proper arch supports in them, though technically this isn't in the arch. But with the arch supported properly, the rest of my foot is getting less play with each step. Morning meds again doubled the Tylenol, and we'll see how it goes. Steve worries that I need to go to the ER. What are they  going to do? Diagnose a break, worst case, put me in a cast and pretend I'm capable of using crutches with my shoulders?

Riiiiight! That'll work. Uh-huh, no problem. Maybe next year, eh?

Of all the bumps it's the only one still vying for attention. If I push around hard enough I can locate a bruise on my forehead that's too small to even color the skin. It's a classic case of, "Does it hurt  when I do this?" Followed immediately by "Well, then, don't do that, dummy!"

I did locate a tiny landing spot on my right elbow overnight. Not even worth a bandaid, and barely worth the astonishment that, again, the parts of me that went down hardest aren't the ones that hurt. Maybe it's padding on the side that landed first. Maybe I actually did lose some memory of the event during the event.  You do read that it can happen. I'm not going to worry about it, just assess the now of it, and decide if any action needs to be taken. The only thing that occurs is possibly putting an extra arch support in the one shoe to help keep weight off and add stability when I walk, which will be as little as I can get away with. There is always the consideration of how long the walk is from my recliner to the bathroom, right? Plus we're supposed to be getting a package today in the mail, so I'll have a reason to check out any possible impediments to my driving. I won't be walking there and back.

On the other hand, I did call the local police station this morning to talk to their captain. I wanted to be sure they knew how impressed we were with the way (turns out his name is Zachary) performed last night. Everything was spot on. His concerns were appropriate to the occasion, his ability to listen was perfect in hearing my specific needs, and his solution in the lift was an amazing show of strength without bravado.  He made sure I was OK before he left and dismissed the ambulance. When I finished talking with his captain, she informed me that my commendation would go into his file.

Steve and I both think he earned it.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

A Five Point Landing

 It started with a delivery to the house... but to the wrong door, the one with the sign on the door window with "use other door" and an arrow. The wrong door is a step down with just a screen door to hold onto. The mentioned "other door" exits on the same level as the floor inside and has a covered porch to help mitigate rain and allow useful movement with full arms, whatever their burden. Our regular delivery people know where packages go. Others don't, and go for the one closest to the road, however awkward it is for us.

Steve got a notice that a package he ordered had been delivered. I was better dressed, meaning I had been outside recently and was still in extra layers due to being slow to warm up. It's a windy walk to the mail shed,  and November is chilly in late afternoon. Plus, I'm generally in better shape, in terms of mobility. I went to check at the regular door... nothing.  Back through the house to the other door, and there it was, a little thing leaning against the door, an oversized envelope with small items inside. 

I have to unlock two doors and step down to grab it, then turn, step up, and pull the storm door in behind me. As I turned, one of my shoes caught on the threshold, and down I went. I didn't even have time to react by putting an arm out to stop the fall, which, considering my shoulders, is probably a good thing. These days both will dislocate with the wrong pressure and angle. I knew I'd stopped falling when my forehead hit a lump inside the package which had landed on the floor just ahead of it.

I'm getting too familiar with needing help getting up after a fall these days. There was an added wrinkle this time. Inside that door is the utility room. You have the outer wall with that door and a window on one side, and lined up on the other are the water heater, a small cabinet, the stacked washer/dryer, and the furnace. In normal use there is room for one person either ahead of or behind a laundry basket, exiting or entering, with room to turn around and maybe carefully trading places with the basket. Yes, it's a bit tight. And I was in a lump between the wall and utilities.

I wasn't exactly dizzy from hitting my head, but I wasn't perfectly steady either. Even if I could stand at that moment, I wasn't sure it was a good idea.

Steve was ten feet away in his chair and heard me. Did I need help? Absolutely, but I know not to ask him for the physical work of it. Neither of us can or should pull the other person up. I asked him to call 911, which he did. I wasn't sure yet if I was hurt or not, so they dispatched an ambulance with paramedics, but a young cop got there almost as Steve hung up the call. I managed to partially sit up, cautioning the cop against pulling either arm in order to avoid dislocating either at the shoulder. It's way to easy otherwise to just assume you can grab hands and pull. He suggested he could put his arms around my chest under mine and do a dead lift.

I gave him a quick look-over. He was slim and I knew I outweighed him. I also knew the consequences of it not going well. So I gave him my scale weight to let him know what he was in for in case he wanted to wait for a helper, but he assured us both he was good for it. He readjusted my position a bit so all four of our feet were secure on the floor and gave an apparently easy lift. My legs worked fine as we complete getting me to a stand together.

Once I was vertical I gave myself a pause to be sure I was steady, and once I was he followed me inside to my chair before he cancelled the ambulance at my direction, received our well expressed grattitude, and left. After a couple minutes sitting properly in mychair, I went back out to lock doors and turn off lights. Places that hurt were starting to sort themselves out from ones that didn't.

Sitting here writing this, I am aware of a possible bruise showing up tomorrow on my forehead, as well as more on the arm I landed on, a couple on the other knee and on that side's foot. Even the uphill arm is twinging, so I must have managed to get it down to break the fall a little before I actually landed. That's the worst shoulder of course, and doesn't really need a new reason to bark at me. I am left wondering why the side that took most of the impact, based on my final position, took the least damage.  Just luck?

On the plus side, I finally have decided to trust Tylenol enough to start taking that for pain on a twice daily basis, one in the morning, one in the evening. That still leaves a lot of time without pain relief, but it also makes the bad shoulder more tolerable until I see the surgeon next month. It also isn't an NSAID, the only thing that really works for bone-on-bone grinding for me, but I'm still recovering from pancreatitis and am not willing to take the chance of interrupting that healing process. I will be taking the evening pill early this evening however.

In fact, now is good.

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

About That Seatbelt Problem

This is a new one for me. I've never had a car old enough - in calendar terms - to show this issue. I've taken lots of them over 300,000 miles back when I was a courier, even over 400,00, but that usually happened within 5 calendar years. I think this is an aging issue, and because of retirement, even the cross country driving as snowbirds hasn't taken the mileage up much over 170,000 miles.

But it's a 2013 model, so it has aged. It's also gone from heat extremes to winter and back again. AZ proved hard on various rubber components. While the door top gaskets got their fix by tucking them back in place and calling it OK, plus learning to grab the door in other locations to close it, the oil system needed actual replacements, with my needing to note any further drips or excess usage.

I use the seatbelt all the time. It's habit, like the parking brake is habit. It has been since 1975, when all cars were required to have seatbelts and laws mandated their use. I remember the year because that was when the family got a van. I loved/hated that thing.

Let me assure you the seatbelt still works... sort of. It does pull out, retract, latch and release. It's just gotten harder and harder to pull it out from the car frame, taking me both hands most days. Putting it back often means getting it uncurled right before where it coils up since it now likes to fold there. That's just an annoyance, some days more than others. While a delay, it's perfectly functional... eventually. 

Once both hands drag it over to where it latches between the front seats, shoving it down into the mechanism there is more problematic. It used to just click in place. Now I have to shove it, hard, and even with Steve helping from the passenger seat can take a bit. Releasing it is just as hard a task. These days, it's also painful, that being the side my worst shoulder is on. And let me remind you that post pancreatitis I'm off all pain relievers, trying to let everything heal as much as it can. While the docs are optimistic, the gut hasn't decided yet.

I'd love to think the latch part could just be oiled or something, and things would slip securely into place. Since it's a Hyundai, and this is small town America, the mechanics whom I trusted while on the job are nowhere close, if not also retired themselves. Here the locals proudly like Chevys and Fords, stubbornly refusing to deal with "those foreign cars". That leaves me with dealing with the dealership, a half hour trip away. 

OK, start with Google, ask for the price to replace my belt system, parts and labor. Just the one. Google says between $400 and $600.  Hmmmmm.... 

I called the dealership, asking for a price estimate to replace the driver's seatbelt. I called last Thursday. And again Monday. Yesterday I got the estimate from them. It was over $1,100! I thanked them for their work to find it out for me, and informed them I'd try to learn to live with it. Technically it does work, after all.

There will be issues of course. I have my first consult with the shoulder surgeon next month, delayed and rescheduled after the hospitalization. That likely means surgery will be delayed till next year. Once that happens there will be some chunk of time when I won't be driving while things heal and strength returns, starting with wearing a sling for a while. So Steve will be driving, and that's while dealing with his own health issues, which have resulted in me being the sole driver in the family for years. He did drive while I was in the hospital, so his confidence is back, but pain for him isn't just a daily yes/no but a moment to moment yes/no. Those long trips didn't help.

Mostly we fill in each other's gaps, if you will. I help with what he needs, and he helps with what I need. I tend to get my arms stuck in long sleeves, especially that second layer that has friction with the first, and need tops straightened and pulled into place. He can reach the high places I can't without risking dislocation. He needs help getting things off the floor and from low cupboards to save on back pain, as well as other things which I can do easily. He can reach the light between our chairs while sitting but I have to stand and turn to get it.We are quite the pair... so long as we remain a pair. Meanwhile we laugh about how we fit together, and do our best not to worry about the what-ifs of the future. 

Not too-o-o-o much, anyway.

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Yep. Deer (Killing) Season

Normally when we're out and about we see zero deer. Around sunset they grow in numbers to maybe one or two. Maybe still zero. On the occasional day trip there might be a bloated one off in the ditch, victim of road kill. Or as Steve likes to put it, they learn the lesson of what it means to be Minnesota attack deer. Or Wisconsin attack deer, depending. We're close to the border and find no real difference. They may succeed in killing the cars they attack, but always at a price.

On what I consider a really, really lucky day, one can even see a bald eagle, picking at the rotting carcass along the ditch. I do mean lucky for both the person and the eagle, though luckier for the person if they'd remembered to bring their camera along. Possibly also for the highway clean-up crew, with less stinky weight to toss up on the back of their truck, but I suppose that depends on how together the remaining hide is keeping the remains, or whether they have to scrounge around collecting pieces scattered across the landscape, by then no doubt a very sloped and slippery landscape. One would hope they have cleats or similar on their footwear. Imagine slipping, sliding down that bank, and then sitting back in the truck!

If my nose still worked I'd try to describe the olfactory ramifications as well. But lucky you, not today.

Last weekend we had occasion to do a bit of traveling out on country roads. It coincided with deer hunting opener, which always coincides with the rut. The result even for non-hunters is the chance to see lots of deer. A few will be in remote fields, cleaning the stubble from harvest for some last minute fattening up for winter. For some reason these invariably are does. Perhaps young bud bucks too, but either way, not currently being bothered by the rut. Most of them will be much closer to the road however. Permanently so, at least until the cleaning crew makes its rounds. Inevitably they are very bloated as well. Those stomach contents are trying their hardest to digest themselves, as the stomachs' owners have given up the ghost. Just not the gas... yet. A couple more days, if warm enough, and it will no longer be a problem except for people who still have noses.   My sympathies to you all.  

(You notice a recurring theme here?)

Now if these were freeways, there'd be much less bloat visible and lots more highway hamburger, perhaps even the occasional limb stuck in some unlucky trucker's grill. Yep, I've seen that, on a truck with too busy a schedule to stop and clear it off. Maybe it just wasn't his personal rig.

Of all those deer, we saw perhaps a dozen that one trip up. It was dark on the return and, luckily, we saw none, not in fields, in ditches, or in the road.

 We had started seeing deer crossing the roads about a week ago. Amazingly, vehicles were stopping to let them cross. I guess a  small percentage of folks around here have finally learned that the attack deer can be expensive, especially with prices of grills, engines, windshields, bumpers, etc., skyrocketing recently from the weird bouncing tariffs.  My last attack deer cost me a new car when it killed the power steering on the one I was driving, as its age and mileage convinced the insurance company to total it out. That was long ago, fortunately.

We even saw a couple in a neighbor's yard last week. On one side of their house was a buck with a great rack. On the other side was a doe. Both stood so still as I drove very slowly past that I couldn't tell for sure if they were real or not. I mean, not even an ear twitching! When we returned later both had vanished, so we decided they weren't decoys. Besides, this was in town where no hunting is allowed.

(Note that the prohibition does not mean we never hear rifles going off around sunrise and sunset. We just hope those folks are out beyond city limits. This town isn't huge.)

We wondered why this particular yard had attracted the deer. It had nothing visible to offer aside from mowed grass. No bushes, no apple trees, nothing. Perhaps the owners had spread grain to lure them in, either just to watch them or to keep them away from hunters for a little while. I've driven past there since and haven't seen them again.

I was disappointed.

But they might have been the pair that stopped traffic on my way home from the store last night, including the ambulance with lights and siren going! Wise choice.

 

 


Monday, November 10, 2025

We Can Put The Hair Back In Now

 Which is to say I've been tearing it out over two days now - figuratively, that is. But the lost is finally found, and a plan is growing to prevent the next repeat. I won't guarantee all the repeats of course, but they won't be exactly like this one... which happens to be a repeat itself, if a little more drastic than the others.

Habits change, for all kinds of reasons. I've been working on the alternative to a decades' long habit for a few months now. I now know that when I count on the new habit being foolproof, there's still work to be done. But let's go back to the start of all this.

Back when I was working from my car as a courier, aka since '85 till retirement, I needed a way to keep my driver's license, credit card for gas, and all the other important little things both close at hand and hidden while I was out of the vehicle. I started buying the first in a series of pocketbooks, big enough for checks, cards, and cash, plus a few important photos of family. Unlike a man's wallet, I needed the length for holding a checks pad. Obviously that was many years ago. I still have checks, but I think I've used two since we moved back to MN. Everything is plastic or cash these days. I don't do Venmo or whatever non-contact money transfer programs are out there. The closest I come is giving a card number while ordering online or over the phone. Otherwise my regular creditors and debtors do the ACH thing.

I discovered ways to hide it from view in the car. All my cars for the last couple decades have had black carpet and upholstery, so that's a start. It's easy to carry when needed. Nearly all my needed cards fit in their slots, though that lately has pointed out a need for replacement, since the slots are separated by fabric, and a couple cards refuse to slide in peacefully. There are times I get frustrated enough to poke the small end in instead of the wide one, but at least a zipper keeps them in place enough until the next use. I do have a plan to replace it, but that just got moved up a few months... like to now. Or tomorrow or such. The hunt will be on.

Things I needed while driving that didn't go in the pocket book went in the nooks and crannies in the car. Extra fast food napkins (clean) went in the door pockets for quick use. Nail clippers, chap sticks, cough drops, pills, even a tiny hairbrush went in the center console. There was room for my camera when I went out shooting, or my phone when I needed access, though now driving without bluetooth means I don't bother to remove it from its trap in a pants pocket under the seat belt, unless Steve is in the car to answer it for me. New laws these days.

It's not that I didn't have any purses. I do, a couple ugly old clunkers that were always good for on the airplane to keep those necessities handy instead of way up in the overhead bin. Otherwise I didn't use them. Then last Christmas I was given a gorgeous purse, in bold stripes of pink, red, purple, green, yellow, blue, orange, and whatever else could be added to the blend. For simplicity, as well as favoritism, I refer to it as the pink purse. It holds everything, with room to spare for a book, water bottle, snacks, and more. A front pocket keeps keys and my tiny flip phone handy. And yes, the pocketbook fits in nicely... when I remember to put it in of course. Because the old habit still reigns when I'm in a hurry. Plus when loaded it's heavy. These days that's a literal pain. In fact even the pocketbook alone is a pain as well.

So what happened? Well, over the weekend we had a small road trip to a grandchildren's birthdays party. I took the big purse because it held a bunch of stuff I needed to take, including the birthday cards. The pocketbook was inside, not just because my driver's license is in it, but I knew we were going past a place with the cheapest gas around, and prices had just gone up so I wanted to be sure of the best deal available.

I filled the tank after the party, and took the pocketbook inside with me to buy a lottery ticket, just because. Upon returning to the car I put it somewhere.........  And that was the problem.

It was cold when we returned home and together we hauled inside only what we absolutely had to. I was still chilled from gassing up in a stiff breeze over 30 miles earlier, even with the heater functioning well. Steve had to maneuver his walker from backseat to house, now that his arthritic hip is acting up as much as my shoulder is, so I grabbed quickly and randomly, except for the pink purse which was not a random choice at all. At that point I believed the pocketbook was inside. Plus the colors are very visible in the car, should anybody want to be tempted.

Fast forward to the next day when I got a call to drive a friend to the ER. I grabbed the purse, made sure that a book I was partly through and a snack I could actually eat (as opposed to, say, the birthday party food) were inside it, and headed over. We got out of there after dark and in the snow, and spent the least possible needed time getting things back in the car. My pink purse just was tossed on the back seat. Its snack was eaten, its book a little more read, and off we went, straight home for the patient. I'd thought to order something from Arby's that Steve had been saying sounded good enough to try, but only after I dropped my rider off. I pulled over about a block away from their house, a spot with no street lights, and went to dig my pocketbook out of the purse so it would be handy for the drive-through.

It wasn't there.

I checked the door pockets, where it occasionally goes. Nope. A couple more locations. Also nope. I felt around the back seat where the purse had landed in case it had fallen out. Nope. Under the front seats in case it had both fallen out AND slide forward during a stop.  Nope. Nada.  SO.... no Arby's tonight. 

Had I even brought it? I recalled getting everything lined up on the counter ready to go but my visualization held no recollection of the black pocketbook. I called Steve to let him know I was a: on my way and b: minus my pocketbook. He offered to check the usual places until I arrived.

I could give you details of all the places checked, quadruple checked, and even then rechecked, including the least likely ones to ever host a pocketbook. I won't. It continued through the evening, including through the car in the dark of the driveway. I could describe an evening worrying instead of sleeping, the plans for how to deal with the worst case, starting with a new copy of my driver's license so I could go to the credit union and prove I was the one needing new plastic, etc., etc. Searching never stopped, even after I decided it would do no good until we had actual daylight in which to be back to search the car.

Memories were searched - when was the last time that ...? Then they were overwritten with "Well, maybe I..." or "Could we have....?" Nothing availed. What I did manage to do very successfully was convince myself that I couldn't trust my own memory. I knew I had it at the gas station. I knew I didn't have it the next afternoon and - oops - had been driving without it to and from the ER. Good thing I don't drive to attract the cops' attention!

Emotionally it was hair pulling time. I'd think of another improbable place not checked, or one checked three times already just to be sure it wasn't there for the fourth check. Clothing had pockets checked, regardless of whether it might fit. Clean laundry on the foot of the bed was hung in case the pocketbook had inadvertently slid or crawled under. Nutty, right? The final decision was that once I decided I could stand the cold enough to go out in the morning I'd bundle up and take advantage of the daylight and do a full car search. The interior would still be black on black, but daylight at least lets shapes emerge. After all, the black carpet isn't pristine and most of the dirt it holds isn't actually black, so that helps. Front of car including glove box and trash bag... nope. Under seats, front and back sides, nope. Backseat under the sign left from No Kings Day? Nope. (I mean, it could have slid under and then somehow shrunk in thickness so the sign stayed level over the seat, right?  LOL) 

Finally it was the  tough one. I'd been putting it off because if I opened the hatch, the hydraulics would spring it up, but then my bad shoulder would have to reach its top, which even with me on tip-toes is a really big and painful ask, just to close it afterwards. The other shoulder isn't as painful, but neither is it capable of even reaching the top of the open hatch to pull it down because I gave up trying to force it's muscles to do that knowing it dislocates for sure each time. I either avoid it when possible or try to wrangle assistance. I'd checked it anyway in the dark last night, feeling around with my hand, reaching into bags since we put the reusable ones in there for when we go shopping. I knew it hadn't been completely emptied after the party, and there were at least two bags with contents to come in sitting back there. I lifted one out... and my pocketbook was right under where it had been.

I'm sure it was laughing at me! I have no idea how it got there, or when. I don't even care any more. But I can quit pulling out hair and start putting it back in. Emotionally, of course.

Oh, and the lottery ticket earned us its usual: just the place it had been sitting in, waiting for us to recycle it and make room for another one, maybe next month. I can live with that. I won't need it for the next pocketbook... which will be white. Or cream! Or pink! Anything but black!!!!

Monday, November 3, 2025

So Ruin Halloween!

Mom would have considered this a kind of poetic justice. I've always loved chocolate. Ice cream too. Fall is a great time of the year to delve deeply into either or both of them.

Both is the preferable choice, of course. 

One of the first things they repeated to me in the hospital - and I do mean "repeated" - was that my pancreas would be having a hard time handling fats. Yeah, OK, whatever. I mentally reviewed a bit of recent shopping before the trip, stocking up on brats. Not just any brats, but the jalapeno cheddar ones.  Fat wrapped in fat with a kick for flavor. Yummmm!

They are still in the big freezer. I remain an optimist that I'll be able to eat them before they get freezer burn. Or at least that when I can eat them again, I won't care if they do have a little freezer burn. Meanwhile "meat" is chicken breast. Nice and lean. Still good, but not brats.

I didn't have to give up coffee, at least, though I cut down my "mix" of instant powder to just coffee. I wasn't sure about the cocoa powder I add to it. I'd stocked up on all kinds of that of course,  but sugarless, some with and some without any milk powder. But powder, so presumably no fat. Anyway for a while I cut that out, going straight to black, nevermind how bitter. The docs OKed that in the hospital.

As my system slowly crept towards "more normal" I began adding more foods. One was ice cream. Small portions in chocolate coating, for portion control of course. In the grocery stores, they don't come in singles. They come in 6-packs. I hadn't bought any for a very long time, and they have new flavors now. I wasn't sure which I'd like the best....

Well, I had to try them and find out, didn't I? Just, maybe not every day. I'd been very good about ignoring them, until the first one. And the second. And by a couple weeks later.... Well, I did give the very last of them to Steve and begged him to eat them for me. He's such a sweetie he didn't argue a bit! 

I did notice I regained two pounds before that. I also noticed - how could I not? - that I had more excuses to be losing those pounds super quickly than keeping them. I was stuck in the house again until my gut settled back down. Luckily I had the supplies I needed to keep from creating too many messes for several days. (Nuff said, right?)

Just before Halloween I went shopping for candy to hand out. I'd gotten the kind which are basically sugar tablets in all colors already, but I found an aisle display of actual chocolate kinds suitable for the kids as well that didn't have a terrible price. They were so-o-o-o tiny. I offered Steve his chance to grab the kinds he liked and could eat, mostly meaning no nuts. He foraged a bit, and the remainder of all of them went in a box for distribution. 

That box waved at me, doing it's invisible "I'm over here!" dance routine, for the next three days. Fortunately I'd buried the chocolates under the colored candies. But the last day, I decided - just curiosity you understand! - to check out what the varieties were. There were baby Hersheys, tiny peanut butter cups, pea sized malted milk balls. They obviously had been sitting out enough days now that a quality check was required.  Wait now, were those really still good? Be sure and check another three, right? Can't give the kids old stale stuff, after all. It wouldn't be kind.

As it happened, no kids visited our place. It had been rainy. I'd planned to take whatever was left over, put it in a bag, and drive it over to the local food shelf. Of course I had to wait an extra couple days before I dared get far from the house again, due to the fatty chocolate after the fatty ice cream, of course, but this morning, before the food shelf opened, I dropped the bag in the place outside to drop off stable foods. Today is also the 3rd day when nobody gets SNAP benefits for their groceries.

Now you might feel like scolding me for not dropping of something nutritious... and boring, and taste-free, and even more expensive than a bag of candy. But they'll likely be getting that kind of food shelf stock for the future for a while - and that's if supplies hold up. A lot of people won't have gotten out on the 31st. Shouldn't they have a chance to have a bit of candy in what could be very hard times ahead? There will be enough green beans ahead. EVERYBODY donates those to the food shelves.

Meanwhile I'm definitely off chocolate again for a significant time.  Crackers still do well in my gut, but no toppings. Chicken breast works, and frozen fruit on Greek yogurt - all so far so good. A bit boring... can be a relief.

Steve has us meeting friends at a favorite restaurant later this week. I have no idea what I'll be able to order from their menu. But it won't be anything with chocolate for a very long time.

Dang!

Saturday, November 1, 2025

The Problem That Wasn't

 It's a cliche, of course. You take your car to the mechanic to fix something and when you get there, it isn't happening. No weird noise, no odd vibration, no whatever-it-was that sent you there. The problem only happens when you get home and whatever was wrong decides to repeat. Or not at all, sometimes.

I had the car in the dealership a few days ago. First was because I needed better tires than the ones on it because snow is expected. It's coming on winter in Minnesota, after all. I was here back in '91 for that Halloween blizzard, which started with about 8" of snow that Thursday night and over three days piled up over 30", depending on your particular geography and winds. Our streets weren't plowed until the next Monday morning. 

While I'm not saying the new tires on the car now would have made any difference back then, being the little low compact that it is, the ones I just replaced got me stuck once last winter when a bit of drifting of a small amount of snow bottomed the car out before the plow arrived. Those tires were considered "all weather" when I bought them new less than a year before and didn't have much mileage on them. But I did buy them down in Phoenix! After inspecting their tread a couple weeks ago I decided I needed something more sensible for Minnesota winters.

I also needed a repair. My parking brake had been sticking, badly enough that I'd taped the thing down against the center console so habit demanding that I ALWAYS pull it when I stopped could be circumvented. So last Thursday, after parts stocks were checked and tires ordered, I went to the dealership for both to get taken care of.

First, the new tires look great! There's a lot more tread on these than I've needed on tires for over a decade! Same car all that time, just different geography. The old tires I had put back in the car to reuse. They bag them to keep the seat clean. Next spring when all snow is gone I'll have them switched back and the snow tires stored. I should be able to do that for the life of the car, with the amount of use it gets these days. It turns out taking back the old tires dropped the cost of replacing them by a nice chunk as well. I'm sure there's a disposal fee.

I had been expecting to have to spend as much as a grand for both items. I knew I could get cheaper tires than what I asked for from the dealership... if I wanted the exact same ones I was removing. No thanks. But I'd also need to make two trips to get both taken care of if I did that. There was no estimate on the parking brake since a variety of items failing may have caused it to stick. Each was different in labor and parts, and it may even have been more than one thing.

As they do, the staff person returned in a couple hours while I waited with a list of expenses and a price tag. The first digit of the 4 on the left of the decimal was a 4 !!!!!  OMG! WTF? I started trying to figure out exactly how I was going to find that in the budget. I couldn't even get that from selling the car, old as it is!  I waited for the explanations. 

They had noticed a minor oil accumulation under the engine. If I wished, they could replace the parts with what they deem was a bad seal with factory parts. Of course, if they went with after-market parts, the cost would be halved. Mentally I dropped 4 grand plus to maybe just three. Dare I hope for a 2 in that spot? He left to go reprice the bill if that option was chosen. I'd been in a fun book by a favorite author, but now had no interest nor aptitude for paying attention to the plot line. I was seriously discombobulated.

After about 20 minutes he returned again. Before he got started in the new cost, I asked him a question. Last year I'd had some gaskets replaced where oil was leaking. Was this new-found leak the same as what they'd just done? And if so, why was it failing this soon? He went away again to check the older records. Plus the car was now in their carwash, and he'd have better info afterwards on exactly what was leaking and by how much.

When he returned, there was good news. First, after the wash, there was a line of oil that would need to be checked periodically, but for now just looked "wet" - in an oily way of course, but exactly as it had looked before the carwash. So not new oil then. Use the dip stick regularly. The previous repair was up on the top of the engine block, and this new thing was on the bottom, so they weren't the same, but it was decided no repairs were needed. He also got around to telling me that the parking brake was just fine. They'd taken everything apart and tested it, and nothing stuck. Perhaps it had been pulled way too hard?

Well yes, as it happened. I'd been in the hospital and Steve had needed to head home for a couple days, then come back north to pick me up once I was released. The brake had been an issue both times. Luckily his daughter had come along for the return trip to get me, and together they'd unstuck the brake by putting the car into R and with her pushing backwards on the front of the car. It happened twice, with the same cure. After that I was driving, and it hadn't been sticking for me. Further, just to make sure, I'd taped the thing down. The verdict was "whoever had pulled the brake" had just used too much power! The bottom line was there was no charge for checking all the parts. And I had a nice chat at home with Steve on how wonderful it was to still have all that masculine muscle power in his 80s. Just don't use it on that parking brake!!!!!!

I walked out to the payment station with the guy who rang up the final total bill. Not only was it a full digit less in numbers, they'd dropped by more than 3 grand. Hoorray!  I was only getting charged for the tires. Here's the plastic.

Oh, and did they remember to clean the inside of the windshield for me? I had asked when I dropped the car, pointing out how difficult it is for me to reach it with my shoulders, with how far forward of the seats it is placed, and he cheerfully agreed when checking me in that they could do that. In fact it had been forgotten, but he sent another guy out to take care of that while I was paying the bill, and I met him as he came back in with my key. The window looks great in warm weather. We'll just have to see if it still collects all the humidity in the cold which fogs it up inside until the car finally produces heat, generally 2 miles of hiway driving to produce. It makes winter mornings interesting! Idling takes much longer to heat up, and I have to blend in with morning school traffic to get to work. That down jacket gets a workout before I move the car an inch!

I didn't realize until I parked the car at home again that I had managed to walk out without the paperwork bundle reminding me not just of the bill but all the recommendations for further work. Aw shucks! That oil line just looked as it has for over a year. I know exactly why and it wasn't running at the time. And since it gets parked in the same place all the time at home and none accumulates on the ground, because I do check, I'll just keep an eye on the pavement and another on the dipstick.

Now to get my son over to haul 4 bagged tires out of the back seat and put them into the shed for me. I figure it's good for sharing a pizza and some conversation.