Chilly Saturday…

It’s cold out.  There’s an icy wind blowing in around my back door to prove it.

Sweet Hubby has gone to work at job # 2 for the day and it’s just me and Hurricane Owen today.

We both have colds again.

Nothing serious, just a nuisance.  For me the biggest irritant isn’t the cough, it’s the joints.  Anything that causes my immune system to become active at all seems to send millions of stupid little soldiers coursing through my system attacking anything in their path, whether it’s the invading virus, or say, my knee joints.  My immune system can’t tell the difference.

Interestingly, my sister has just been referred to a rheumatologist as well.  Between my two aunts and us, we could be a study group.   We seem to have something up with the women on this side of the family.  Maybe they’ll name a syndrome after us.  Something catchier than “Systemic Auto-immune disorder”.  I was whining to an ex-boyfriend, who opined that this was Karma’s way of balancing the scales a little, since without some small impediment, the Botari women would be a frightening force to be reckoned with.  (He’s the only one to have met all of us.)

Footnote: I have three significant “exes”.  I’m still friends with each of them.  (We lived across the hall from the most significant one for the first three years of our marriage.)  They all know each other.  They claim to have formed a support group.  They have invited my husband as well.  No one will tell me whether or not he accepted, but there’s a meeting I’d like to be a fly on the wall for! 

Owen is mostly still himself, just a lot snottier.  It has to be pretty serious to slow him down much.  Any parent of young children will tell you that under fives are capable of producing roughly twice the liquid volume of their little bodies in snot every hour.

All that aside, we’re still in our jammies, and may stay that way for much of the day.  There’s a tent set up in our “library” and a racetrack running through the living room.  I’ve cleaned out the deep freeze and the winter pantry into the slow cooker and added a cup of salsa, a bay leaf and a half bottle of some sort of very dark beer that someone left here. 

The results seldom suck.

I have no ambitious plan for the day.  Just me and Owen, hangin’ out.  I’ve really missed our Wednesdays since Sweet Hubby’s stupid boss took away his flex time and forced him back to working five 8 hour days instead of four tens.  We’ve had to put Owen in full time daycare, so now, even though I’m still home on Wednesdays, (*I* still work four tens) I’m home alone.  Don’t get me wrong, I usually need the rest, but I miss my private time with my son. 

So today is a bit of a treat.  We’re too sick to visit anyone-my mom has her surgery coming up on the 24th-she’s being intubated for dialysis, so we can’t risk giving her another cold…but not sick enough to be really miserable.  No, Christine, I’m not being cocky, you showed us what happens to cocky people this week!

So that’s it. 

If you’re looking for us, you know where we’ll be.

We may or may not answer the phone. 

I can’t reach it from the tent.

What the doctor said…

Ok, for those of you who have been asking, yes, I saw the specialist again on Monday for my three month 5, 000k check up.

I’m fine.

Actually FINE.

Red blood count is almost normal after nearly two years skating right on the line between “immediate transfusion” and “let’s give it another 30 days, and hope you don’t die in the meantime”.

All the different toxins from the meds are also down, which means kidneys are functioning pretty close to normally.

Still bruising like a grape, but have been given the go ahead to drop the Immuran dose by a third which should help. 

There is nothing anyone can do about the joint pain.  That’s just life. 

After the last couple of years, I’ll take it.

I’m doing SO well, in fact, that outside of having bloodwork each month, I don’t have to see anyone again until JULY!!!!

I feel like I’ve been let off my leash for the first time in ages.

My creaky old house is cold….

And so is my creaky old self. 

On cold windy days no amount of clever things like rolled blankets under doors can keep the cold air from blowing in through all the cracks.

Which makes everything hurt.

I have a list of errands that need running that is a mile long, an enormous pile of housework to do and a lot of other things that need my attention.

What I want is a book-not something too thinky today,  (Foucault’s Pendulum is still sitting accusingly on the table, reminding me I haven’t finished it!) a blanket, and a cup of tea.

A little quiet time with some happy bit of fluff and a chance to warm up would do me a lot of good.

Instead, I’m going to go look for my car keys. 

I last saw them in the back of a freight car, being “zoomed” around a lego train track.

Then I have to go out.

😦

A season for everything….

As my older sibling reported on her blog, my oldest uncle died this week.  No one’s really surprised, as he’d been sick for quite some time.  Nonetheless, it’s sad.  Like my sister, I can’t look back on a summer weekend at the cottage without him quietly puttering away in the background, along with my dad, making sure everything worked that was supposed to, and keeping the place from falling down under the traffic of several dozen Italian relatives running in and out and all around.  He quietly kept an eye on things, and had a gift for doing it in such a way that you never KNEW he was watching. 

Until AFTER you’d been busted.

Like most of the men in the family, Farna could build you a working barbecue out of any six household objects.

He was a kind man, with a good sense of humour (Apparently a requirement if you’re going to marry a Botari woman.  I’m told we can be a handful, though personally, I don’t see it!) and a gentle nature.

I’m sad for my aunt as well, because it’s hard to lose someone you love, and harder still to watch them suffer, and she’s had to do both now.

I know, everything has a time, and everything dies.  It’s all part of the cycle of life.

But I’m a little sad, nonetheless.  It’s like losing a little piece of my childhood.

The funeral’s Monday, in Port Colbourne.

And I can’t go.

Another great day at the studio for Nero’s Fiddle!

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Laura wins the Internet for finding Studio A Mirador for us!

The final editing session as Nero’s Fiddle with our marvellous studio engineer, Chris Colvin (who is also made of win!) was a success, and I couldn’t be more pleased with the edited version of our upcoming cd.   It’s always a nice surprise to find out we can sound even better than I already know we do.  Hearing it recorded is a very different experience from what you hear in your head when performing.  Now it goes off to mastering once the other four of you have heard it all, and let me know that you are happy with it. 

I can’t say enough nice things about the studio and Chris in particular.  The entire place is comfortable, which was great for us.  Like working in someone’s living room.  Our shows are usually in pubs, and rehearsals tend to disintegrate into kitchen parties if we aren’t careful.  The homey atmosphere made it feel like we’d been there a million times already, and did a lot to dispel “studio jitters” and allow things to unfold naturally.  It was really wonderful to have an engineer who bought in to the sound so much that he actually spent his OWN time thinking about it, and went so far as to jump in and help out as a studio musician, adding a drum for us when we couldn’t figure out how to do it electronically or organically with the means we had available.  None of us would have expected that kind of investment from a complete stranger, who wasn’t the least bit “into” our type of music to begin with.  I would highly recommend them to anyone either looking to put a first CD together, or to any other small band, like us, that wanted a great environment and excellent support to record “live off the floor”.

Now that this is all done,  we have to start pushing BOOKINGS!

Right now if you want to see Nero’s Fiddle, you can catch us during the first weekend in June at the Gregor’s Crossing Medieval Faire in Chatham Ontario-we headline the night of Friday, June 1, after the Joust, if Chatham’s too far, we should also be at the FaeryFest in Guelph on the weekend of June 23-24.  If you miss that, we hope to be back at Royal Medieval Faire in Waterloo on September 15, 2007.

We’ll keep you posted as we add dates.  But for now, here we are:

Here we are

I like this one (above) because you can’t see that my tongue is blue.

Likely saying something rude

I’m likely saying something rude here.

Laura and LES likely saying something rude

Laura and Les are likely saying something rude here.

Jen and Angela TOTALLY just said something rude!

Trudy's signature "Beer Solo"

Trudy performing her signature “Beer Solo”.

There IS an explanation for this

There IS an explanation for this.  But you’ll have to come see a show if you want to know what it is.

Boatman dance mix

And here’s us.  The only time the Boatman “Dance Mix” was ever performed live.

Here’s the video if you’re really desperate.  If you’re one of the 400-700 people that were within earshot that night, it might amuse you.  Want better sound?  Buy a CD!

Hurricane Owen downgraded to Tropical Depression

I have no idea when he’ll regain Tropical Storm Status, much less hurricane strength.  He has a sick. 

The phone rang at about 11:00am this morning.  School calling me to come get my baby.

He went from a cheerful little boy with a bit of a cough to a raving, deliriously sick little boy with a 102 temp, wheezing for breath in the space of about three hours today.

The verdict?  The same “almost pneumonia” that gramma and grampa both have. 

Actually, not to be outdone by anyone, gramma has full blown pneumonia.  Only three weeks before her surgery was scheduled.

So now he’s on trimethoprim – sulfamethoxazole.  It’s a pretty big gun antibiotic combo, but his doctor felt that because of the severity and suddenness that it was worth risking the side effects.  Apparently there’s a new antibiotic resistant staph infection making the rounds that develops into hemorrhagic pneumonia for the very unlucky, and is already killing people in Canada.

Not the sort of thing you want to hear when your child is sick.

The four hours in the walk in clinic today also means that, being immune-suppressed, even if I manage to avoid what Owen has, I’m sure to have picked up something else. 

Besides more kids.

It was an odd visit. 

Sweet Hubby sent along a new kid’s book-Clemmency Pogue: Fairy Killer, which I quietly started reading to Owen while we were waiting.  It’s a little advanced for less than three, but Owen’s a bright kid, and really, when he’s that sick, it’s just about hearing my voice.   After the first 20 minutes or so, I began to notice all the chairs around us filling up.  After 30, there were kids sitting on the floor in front of us.

By the time they called our name, there was a chorus of “Awwwwww” from about 20 kids. 

I forgot school was still out.  Apparently everyone got the plague for Christmas.

When we left, a dozen or so other moms stopped us on our way out to say thanks for providing the distraction that kept their sick, bored little kids quiet for long enough for them to have a cup of coffee while they waited, instead of trashing the waiting room.  (It’s a nice clinic-cafe in the waiting room)  The woman at the pharmacy waved goodbye too.

Then off to Fortino’s to pick up our prescription. 

Our Pharmacist, Atilla was very apologetic when telling us it would likely be a 30 min wait because EVERYONE on earth was sick.  Owen fell asleep in my arms while we waited.  Eventually one of the big teenaged boys that were sprawled in the armchairs the pharmacy provides for waiting was shooed away by a little old lady, who told him to “lift his fat ass and let that poor woman have a chair!” and we got to sit.  Owen just rearranged himself, wrapped one hand in my hair and said “Sing Ear a vatta, Mommy.” 

I did. 

He went back to sleep. 

We were there for almost an hour. 

Several people stopped to tell me that we were the loveliest thing they’d seen all day.

The woman who works the coffee counter saw us when she went on her break.

She came back with a cookie for him. 

The lady from the deli counter brought a drink of water when he started coughing, and the customer service girl from the bulk food brought him a lollipop.

They all remembered his name, even though I hadn’t mentioned it today.

These are all familiar strangers.  We’ve seen them several times a week since Owen was very tiny.  They don’t owe us anything, and it never occurred to me that anyone ever really noted our passing by at all.

Today was one of those days that reassures you of the basic kindness in the hearts of most people. 

In spite of the sick boy, it cheered me up immensely.  Must remember that in my day to day life.  You just never know when the tiniest things you do will make someone’s day.

Every interaction is a choice.

Why I love Scotty….

The other day, I asked for funnies.

Scotty never, ever disappoints me in this regard, coming from so far out of left field that you had no idea he was even there.  Like, just slightly lefter than, say, Australia. 

Scotty sent me this wonderful list from one of my favourite sites, of “Weapons that don’t exist but should”.

I totally agree with him.  The Chuck-nuns was delectable.

And that’s why I love Scotty.