Wednesday, May 28, 2025

A Thing-Filled Wednesday

Rain today, gentle and just what my newly planted containers needed. There are tiny signs of flowers coming up, and hair like fronds of chives, last year's cosmos pushing up tall, and I'm hoping for reseeding forgetmenots.

This morning was my annual physical, or what Medicare grandly calls wellness check. Which they start with a form to fill out and bring,  asking about depression and illegal drugs -- would anyone ever really fill out those details? -- and go downhill  from there.

My doctor is one of the good ones who seriously does the whole exam, not just pro forma.  And she was very impressed that a month out from joint replacement, I was driving, dressing and undressing with no dressing aids, climbing unaided onto the exam table, and feeling cheerful about life. I lost a bit of weight, from my already meager total but she says it's due to the general circumstances of surgery, fine. 

All good. And on the way out, I met a baby. The mom had just put down the carbed in the lobby, waiting for their car to pull around for them, and this little guy was not having it. 

Grumbling loudly, shoving aside the pacifier, looking around indignantly ready to call for the manager. I asked their age. One month!  I had never seen so alert a baby at that age. Lots of luck to them. I bet they're standing at five months like Handsome Son and walking soon after!

While I was at the medical building, I left ACLU  Know Your Rights cards in  the waiting room where caregivers might see them, and in the exam room, possibly cleaners might see. A lot of documented and undoc. residents not citizens in those jobs around this area.  So a little bit more sand in the gears.

Home again very pleased with my day, to soup and cheese toast. Then I continued reading the Grantchester stories.

Now here's how it goes. At one point there's a discussion of a disputed old painting, expert says it doesn't have the careless seeming virtuosity of a genuine Goya.  Then someone explains it as sprezzatura. 

So of course I had to look that up and see the etymology and origin. Turns out it was invented for the purpose of describing the ideal courtier in Castiglione's classic work. He said it described making the many skills and talents of the courtier, from combat to table manners, look unstudied and natural.

So I had to find and read a bit of the sixteenth century The Book of the Courtier.  And so it came to pass that he is now in residence on my Kindle, zero cost after credits were applied. 

You never know what rabbit is in wait down which rabbit hole. Speaking of which, go to She Who Seeks' blog for a great rabbit themed post today. 

 Finally I returned to Grantchester, enriched.

Happy day, everyone, get rich in events today! They're all over.



39 comments:

  1. That was one interesting rabbit hole! And thanks for the shout-out!

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  2. It is good to hear your check-up went so well.

    The Grantchester series on PBS here is a favourite of mine.

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    1. I'm picking up a DVD set tomorrow of one season

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  3. I am amazed at how quickly you have recovered
    It’s great that you got a complete check. It’s important to keep having them so if something does appear it can be quickly diagnosed and dealt with.

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    1. I see her every few months. And get testing regularly.

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  4. I wonder about those questions, too. Why bother. If someone was seeking help, they would ask for it. They aren't going to volunteer something so serious on a form.

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    1. I wonder if it's just to say they asked.

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  5. Learned a new word today. Hope I can remember it.

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  6. You are a tough old bird — said with repessct.

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  7. Fell free to correct my spelling of whatever. I did not mean to hit Publish previously., and me and to add a smiley or whatever. Ah well.

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  8. Donyou just love rabbitholes in reading material? I'm currently reading Nefertiti's Face - the creation of an icon. The Egyptology is a bit hard going but part II which puts the bust in a modern context including political pawn and artistic inspiration is really interesting.

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    1. That sounds interesting. Noted. Oh dear, from sixteenth century France to ancient Egypt..

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  9. You wonder just how much gets missed with tick box forms

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    1. A lot, I expect. My doctor always asks these questions in person anyway. I think they just file the form away.

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  10. Fascinating rabbit hole, as they usually are. Your description of the baby makes me smile.

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    1. The baby is someone to be reckoned with.

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  11. It's encouraging to have your good health and strength officially confirmed.

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  12. Yes, I've been down similar rabbit-holes, though mine are seldom so highbrow!

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    1. Apparently Castiglione is not as serious as he's depicted. I want to find out if this is partly a leg pull disguised as a serious treatise. Like Nancy Mitford's U and nonU essay that was taken as an upper class manifesto and fiercely debated.

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  13. This sounds like an excellent day! Please email me and tell me which Grantchester books you have already read. I have one I was going to take to donate but I'd rather send it to you if you haven't already done that. My email should show up on my comment!

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    1. Your email link isn't responding so I answered on your blog! Thanks so much for the offer.

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  14. Ah yes! The yearly wellness check. And if we are lucky, that is exactly what it is! Congratulations on this year's success. I imagine on the whole you are doing better this year than you were last.

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    1. I'm definitely better than for several years in energy and calm. I wonder if the hip was bothering me long before I registered it.

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  15. Glad you had a great checkup and are doing so well. I have a lovely nurse practitioner who went through my annual wellness check with me. She takes the time to talk and is always so encouraging and helpful.

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    1. It's important for the practitioner to take time, encourage and really see the patient. Often nps can do that more than rushed doctors, and people prefer them. I'm glad you have a good one.

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  16. You sound happy. I, like your doctor, am also impressed by your speedy progress. I need some of what you've got!

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    1. It's easy to be happy when nothing hurts! For me anyway. And it frees up energy to enjoy with.

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  17. Lovely findings at the docs and I enjoy the rabbit holes you fall into ass much as those I find myself in sometimes.

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    1. I'd like to hear more about your rabbit holes.

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  18. I am very happy 😊 that your good health has been confirmed.

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  19. Oh those rabbit holes - only surpassed by the squirrel moments. Wellness checks are becoming scarce for us - once you reach a 'certain' age I think we are considered expendable and don't require as much care.

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    1. That's awful about wellness checks. What about your universal health care? I didn't know you could age out of it.

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    2. I can't say that we age out of it, but with the current shortage of doctors I suppose they concentrate their efforts on the younger folks and our check ups are spaced wider apart.

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