We went to a show last night (more about that later) and at
intermission I told Walt that every molecule in my body just wanted to crawl into bed and
go to sleep. I was so tired that I walked in the front door when we got home,
visited the bathroom, headed to the couch and was asleep in seconds. I didn't wake
up for 7 hours.
My word this has been a busy week. I am about to make
my fifth trip to San Rafael in 7 days, and think that yesterday's double round trip plus
all the emotion involved in the precipitous decision to move my mother to Davis just left
me wiped out and not in the best condition to start the day yesterday.
But it started with giving blood. I love the new hemaglobin
test Bloodsource had where it all goes through a machine. Previously I had to wait
for that test drop of bood to sink or not and if it didn't (which usually happened), then
they had to put it through a centrifuge. Now it all goes in this tidy little plastic
case which goes into a machine that checkes hemoglobin levels and I haven't flunked a test
since they started that method of testing.
After I finished my obligatory snack and drink, I raced home, got
Walt, and we headed over to Covell Gardens for "contract signing." This
involved the representative going through every page of the lengthy contract to explain
everything and my signing away my mother's life as her Power of Attorney. My mother
didn't have to be there for that, fortunately. It took about an hour and we did have
some questions, which she answered. (About 5 minutes into the signing, my cell phone
rang and I saw that it was Scott from Springfield. I muted the phone and turned it
off.)
One question I asked was whether my mother could have the San
Francisco Chronicle delivered to her, since this is NOT the Bay Area. Covell
Gardens gets the Sacramento Bee and the Davis Enterprise. We have the Chron
delivered, but I wasn't sure how it worked for a facility like Covell Gardens. I
still have to check with the guy who runs the company that delivers it and see if it's
possible, but I got the fun notion that I could deliver her paper each morning
and have coffee with her to start the day.
After the signing was finished they invited us to lunch at the
facility, so we did that. The food seems quite good. This time I had a spinach
salad with strawberries and turkey and a balsamic dressing.
I had a whole hour after getting home before time to go to Logos to
work my afternoon shift. It was a very quiet afternoon and I don't think my portion
of the day came near $100, though I did have one big sale. A couple of friends came
in and they bought about $50 worth of mysteries.
These are people we have known for a very long time, her better than
him. She is from the South and drips Southern hospitality, in the nicest way.
One of the kindest, sweetest people you'd ever want to meet but I have to tell you that
after David died, she drove me batty, coming to sympathize, bringing treats for us and the
dogs nearly every day.
When Paul died, another friend asked if she could do anything to help
and as she is a politician and quite tactful, I gave her the task of making sure that our
Southern friend didn't drop by unannounced every day. I don't know what she said to
her, but it worked. She didn't. Part of me felt bad about that because her
intentions were so beautiful, but I felt smothered after David died and just wasn't in the
mood after Paul's death to go through it all again.
The afternoon at Logos was so quiet that I tried to return Scott's
call three times, but he was always busy. In the late afternoon he called and we
were able to chat. It was really a very nice chat. They were prepared to offer
us all sorts of incentives for keeping my mother at Springfield, but he realized that 0.8
miles distance from my house vs. 75 miles distance was something they couldn't compete
with. I told him he had been wonderful to work with. He told me he'd keep her
on his list for a few months and call in June or so to see how she's getting along.
We ended on a good note. I will miss him.
Walt came to get me at 6 p.m. and we had a whole hour and a half
before having to go up to the university to see Bat Boy, the Musical. I was
so exhausted the very LAST thing I wanted to do was to see a show and I actually pulled
what for me was a hissie fit when we got to the box office and the girl had no ticket set
aside for me and said haughtily that she was not in charge of comps and couldn't
give me one (later I saw the ridiculousness of this as the theater had about 30 people in
it tops, not even 1/4 full).
I leaned my head against the glass and told her that I was here to
review it and that I really wanted to be home in bed, so if she couldn't give me my two
tickets, I would be very happy NOT to review it and just leave. (that's my
"hissie fit.")
Fortunately someone nearby said she would check and someone else came
out and apologized me and let me in. This company is student run and they always ask
me to review and there is almost always a problem at the box office because the PR person,
once thanking me for agreeing to come, forgets about tickets and the box office person is
also usually new and won't take any step that she hasn't been instructed to take.
Bat Boy is a very odd show, but ultimately a lot of blood is
shed on stage, so we figured it was a nice end to a day that started with my giving a pint
of blood. A parenthesis of blood, you might say.
3 comments:
Oh-h-h, Bat Boy. When I first read the title, I thought it was about baseball. Do people give their material double-meaning titles on purpose?
Your Scott is a super-good salesman, to know that even though he lost the sale, it wasn't necessary to lose your good will. Again, I'm so glad you found a suitable place that's more convenient for you.
Harriet: No. "Bat Boy" refers to a sensationalistic story that appeared in one of those bizarre tabloids several years ago. The "hero" is half human, half bat.
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