Blog

  • More time…

    I should perhaps have given the Codeine and brufen and ‘mol more time to work; by the time I got to the hospital i was debating returning straight home, but having forked out 7.50 for a taxi (I didn’t think I could bear a bus ride both ways) I felt kinda obliged. Not broken, very swollen was the answer.

    The Codeine plus bus plus taxi has left me feeling pretty attrocious though. Although I saw tons of Slough I’d never seen before (that’s got to be the most indirect bus route ever) and also found a very ratty looking BMW Isetta sat on a driveway (careful john). Anyhow, I’m letting myself have the rest of the day off anyway (most ‘cos I promised Kathryn (and I can’t hold anything properly, and I feel really quite sick))… so, yes.

    I have spent some time taking photos of the 1963 paper I found in the wall of the now gone bathroom… It’s far too degraded to keep, but it’s got a few interesting ads. It’s a Daily Mirror, by the way.

  • Ah, yummy codeine

    So, I got lots done yesterday; I headed to B&Q early and en-route I found someone who’d demolished a wall; thereby sourcing a lot of bricks, possibly even enough to do the path. he was quite happy for me to grab them, along with an old brabantia-style bin – which is somewhat of an improvement on the grey plastic one with no lid we’ve been using. So, I turned round, headed home and took the car over to B&Q so I could get a wheelbarrow.

    Having made about 4 or 5 wheelbarrow trips I’d got certainly the majority of the whole bricks. They, incidentally weighed quite a lot. Then I painted the woodwork upstairs which is prep for tiling that last few feet (probably 5 sq foot or so) and started work on the bathroom wall. Now, it started well, and I managed to get the majority of it down without incident. But there was one bitty little incident near the end. Hence the codeine.

    In the process of removing the door-frame from the old bathroom I slipped applying pretty much all of the force I can muster to the act of smacking my hand against a thin sharp piece of plaster. I cut my hand, surprisingly perhaaps not enough to need stitches; but it’s the pain that’s a killer. Enough that I’ve been debating getting it X-rayed today. I’ve buddy/neighbour strapped my two fingers, and taken codeine+paracetamol (CoCodamol) and Ibrufen. I took that about half an hour ago. Having looked, I now am wondering if the knuckle is slightly depressed (all nurses are hypochondriacs), so I might get showered and head over to the hospital. That and I’d’ve expected some relief from the analgesia, not much (it’s a bit quick for that), but some. Arse.

  • Voila, Spam

    So, I decided to kill time watching ‘Fatherland’; for those of you who don’t know, Fatherland is an excellent novel which is set in a future in which Hitler won the second world war; continued extermination of the Jewish people, and in which America has a right wing president, and the Soviet Union continues to fight the might of the new German empire.

    It is, in fact, a truly excellent book; chilling and well written, especially to those of us who had it drilled into us at school that the war was won by luck and 3 days (the German tactic of destroying the RAF would have worked had they continued for about 3 more days; after which we’d’ve run out of pilots). I heard an interview with the author of Fatherland in which he said he regretted selling the rights to it; and disliked the film. And had always vaguely wondered what it was like. So I watched it.

    Meh, read the book. The film is far too short, the characters just, well, the whole thing doesn’t feel believeable and it doesn’t have the texture of the book. My dad always used to say that the pictures were better on the Radio, and I’ve always kind of mentally extended this to books. Books have the best effects, too. And the Berlin of Albert Speer really feels deeply real in the book, but like much else it really doesn’t come across in the film.

    So, there you go. I can’t decide if I think it’s really a bad film, or if it’s really an okay made-for-tv movie but it just doesn’t compare to the book…

  • WARNING: Further updates are likely

    So, with the exception of a few days of shifting, I’ve got the next two weeks off, and you can safely assume that whatever my intentions I will end up updating this journal – probably more than once a day on more than one day. Today you get the added benefit of deranged ramblings from my 20 (so far) hours of awakeness. It’s funny, apart from my stomach feeling rather grumpy I’m actually feeling pretty together. Leave me anywhere long enough and I’ll probably fall asleep; but so long as I keep myself at least faintly entertained my brain’s working really shockingly well. At least I think it is. It’s hard to say. I don’t expect things to get really hazy until around 9 or 10 this evening.

    Anyhow, so I’ve made a start on the week’s work. The radiator in the lounge has had it’s joints tightened. Let’s go and look shall we? Bother; it looks like one end has stopped leaking, but I think the other end hasn’t. Irritatingly, this is the most expensive radiator in the house, and it looks like the pipework needs more PTFE tape. This would, obviously, be annoying. Not completely, insanely annoying. Just annoying. It’d mean draining that one radiator, undoing the joint and re-wrapping it in PTFE before reassembling. Ironically, the 1940s/50s bathroom radiator seems to be okay. Ah, plumbing, what fun.

    I’ve also ‘ooped’ one lot (about four small bags) of rubble generated by demolishing a wall domestic waste and of course surrepticiously covered it up with one bag of rubbish from the kitchen. I’ve run the cardboard to the local recycling doojit, along with a couple of bags-worth of plastic bottles. I’ve also taken Brick down to the local Jetwash, and in a stunning act of dedication to the idea of getting the salt off the poor car sat there queuing for half an hour to use the sodding thing.

    I may have upset them by using the ‘hot foam brush’ when it was neither hot, nor foamy, to remove shite from the car while using their cheapest wash cycle. I also topped up brick’s oil (first time in 3,000 miles) and coolant. It was nice just to get outside in the sun for a bit. I’m too tired to really appreciate it, but the feeling of sun on my skin, even though it was flipping cold, was just nice.

    I also spent several minutes taking Macro shots of the Viva’s salt-covered state before washing ‘im (does that count as work?). I’ve rung the nursing agency I want to work with and need to check when Kathryn wants to holiday so as I can book an interview. It’s frustratingly far away…

    I think I’ll have a break for a bit and then I may start reassembling the back bedroom, which is the one which suffered most from radiator leakages. Most of the contents of this room landed up in the main bedroom, and having had it there for a week both Kathryn and I feel that it’s disturbing the old-lady asthetic of the front room, and needs to go back to it’s home in the back bedroom (she may not have described it quite in those terms)…

    Anyhow. Off I go to waste more time :)

  • ‘Twas the day after nights, and naught was stirring

    At least, not a Kate.

    So, yet another batch of nights over and done with; and yes, I am glad. Though they were by no means the worst set of nights; and I really mean that. I’ve had sets of nights where getting from work ot the house seemed like an unimaginably complex task because I was so tired. Instead, I only had the one slightly scary drive home and that was really because the traffic was surprisingly bad.

    It was however frustrating; Kathryn’s been off for Half term, and I am now off while she’s back at work. But at least our April shifts line up. I’ve had some awesome patients this week though; the 80plus year old who’s probably fitter than me and who seemed to be very much in love with his wife. His wife seemed equally devoted to him and it was just *wonderful* to look after them. Cups of tea were doled out and much chatting was had.

    And there was the woman who we’d switched over to TLC (Tender Loving Care), and who we were letting quietly die who decided to whip off her oxygen mask, pop out the gudeal airway, and announced that she’d just had a really nice sleep. She was still incredibly sick last I saw her, but alive, which was one heck of a shock.

    And then there’s been coming home. Coming home to the woman I love in a house that’s warm. Having showers. So, for those of you who’ve never lived without central heating or central air, or whatever you call the forced air heating you have in the states. Who’ve not spent a winter (or indeed 2) coming home to a house that’s the same temperature as outside, more or less, and who’ve not then lit a fire and lurked as close as possible….

    How to describe the joy, the pure joy of coming home to a warm house. I got home in the mornings this week and I could just curl up in a nice warm bed. And then I could get up and have a shower in a warm bathroom. I didn’t feel like I was freezing my arse off; and the bearings on the electricity meter have taken much less of a thrashing since we’ve not been running fan heaters and immersion heaters constantly. There is currently an oil-filled radiator in the kitchen, because the radiator’s not fitted there yet (because there’s a wall in the way!), but apart from that the house is entirely heated by the boiler (that we couldn’t really afford).

    I’ve got one radiator that needs it’s joints tightening, and there were a few huge leaks when it was all connected up (poor Kathryn had to deal with it because I was off at work), but all in all it’s been pretty good :)

    And the shower. Oh yay, the shower is joy. Standing up in a hot stream of water? It’s great. I am quite proud. I just hope my workmanship is up to the task.This week I’ve got various jobs that need doing, the radiator being one of them, the wall in the kitchen another, channelling the cabing in, in the kitchen another; sorting out the seemingly dead G5 mac, oh and also fixing the laptop so I can let my mum have it, fixing the G3 laptop so I can use it, oh and putting up the last few tiles in the bathroom…

    Ah, holidays are so relaxing :)

  • Saturday, belated but truly fantastic.

    So, Saturday was our anniversary, and we headed to London for the day to celebrate… First up we headed to Russell Square tube station, because that’s where we first met in person. Russell square, thankfully isn’t a dingy grotty tube station; it’s one of the prettier tiled ones, where the edwardian tiles have survived well and the whole place isn’t too shabby. This is fortunate, because otherwise I’d’ve had to come up with somewhere else to ask my beloved to marry me.

    It’s now where we first met, and where she said ‘yes’. I haven’t really got into my head that she said yes; it still makes me smile at every thought. I look down and see the ring on my finger or feel it when I’m doing something and I grin like some kind of idiot.

    So we spent the rest of our day pottering about. We headed to the nearby little italian place immediately after for lunch (paninis), and then to Gay’s The Word (where I was tempted by Claire McNab’s Kylie Kendal series being available, all of it, second hand) and thense over to Islington where we meandered round the Antique Market (I only bought one book, sadly I realised it’s the second half of a two volume set, but ’tis still cute (the Family Physician)). Drank Starbucks Coffee, grinned some more, held hands lots, and then headed off for dinner (French, at a very nice French Restaurant, with Champagne and everything), and then off to Sadler’s Wells Theatre, and then off to Ottolenghi (or some similarly spelt place who do awesomely nice deserts), and then off Dancing in an allegedly Lesbian Club.

    It was an awesome day. And y’know why, because I love her and she said yes.

  • Somewhat Slack

    So, I guess I’ve been somewhat slack in my updates of late; work’s been incredibly hard – after a week of the nicest shifts I could imagine, a week of nights where I came home tired only because I was on nights, and not because I’d been working so hard I felt like collapsing I’ve gone back to days where we have so many patients through the department that ‘coping’ is an innacrurate term. Virtually every day sees calls to management to say ‘we have amulances queuing in the doorway’, and the waiting room looks like the front rows at a gig, people crammed in with no where to go.

    The phrase ‘sorry for the wait’ now trips off my tongue in the same way as “Hi, I’m Kate, I’m the nurse looking after you’. And last night was so busy I came home and spent the entire night dreaming about Resus; I kept waking up from a pseudo anxiety dream in which I was required to shock the patient in Cardiac arrest (which I’m trained and assessed to do, but have never done); in between that one were the multiple sequences of just being so insanely busy in resus that I kept transferring patients out and coming back to a full bay. It wasn’t a good night’s sleep.

    To top it off, finances mean that I’m now in the midst of applying to work for an agency so that I can work on my days off. On the plus side we should have a new boiler soon (the 16th), not that we can afford it, but running the electric house/water heating cost us 400 quid over Xmas, so we need to stop that.

    Anyhow, work calls (summons me from afar), hopefully I’ll get around to updating a bit more, I’ve got some things I’d like to post about.

    On the good (awesome) side, tomorrow Kathryn and I will have been together for a year; so we’re off to London for the day :)

  • Two days off

    So, I’ve got two days off midweek, I did this to myself so that my ‘working 50% of weekends’ actually comes out right; although I’m told some people never roster themselves to do an entire weekend. It’s okay though; I don’t want to not spend the weekend with Kathryn, but at least I get to spend evenings with her.

    At the moment I need that, because when I’m at work I don’t think about money and when I’m with Kathryn I don’t think about money. When I’m sat here on my own I think about money.

    I owe my mum 2k for Rebecca, and she’s not finished yet.
    The boiler’s another 1,300 quid (going by the first quote which seems about right based on my research), unless the second quote is mysteriously much cheaper then that’s about what I can expect.
    The new AM cd is out and it’s 6 quid, I’m winding myself up by listening to the samples on cdbaby and the two downloaded tracks from the website. It sounds good, gaaah. ;)

    I have realised that I am going to have to join a nursing agency if I’m going to have a hope in hell of ‘catching up’ on my finances. So along with the 300 quids worth of gas and electric bills (that’s half of the nearly 600 quid total); there’s a fair amount of ‘catching up’ to do. The application form is here by me, so that’s todays job, find all my training dates, find all my documentation and stick it back in the post to them.

    House work is kinda stalled, mostly because I can’t do anything much until the second quote for the boiler is in. Once that’s in and they’re booked to come in, well, then we’re into a different ball game. I should be scrubbing at tiles, but I’ve realised something; I’m exhausted. I’ve been working on the house, or working at work almost solidly for over a year. It’s occasionally okay to rest. :)

    It’d’ve been nice if it was a nice day for me to rest on, maybe get my camera out, but for the minute I’ll go with just trying not to be exhausted.

    I have to mention that we had a great weekend; Lauren and Chrissy came down and visited and we all piled into town to watch Sweeny Todd, which turned out to be very dark, gory, and really, really good. Lots of blood though. Which turned into a discussion in the car on the way back on the accuracy of film representation of blood… One of the joys of being (or knowing) a nurse…

    Lauren and Chrissy headed off the next day after a trip to Windsor, which is, it must be said, much prettier than Slough. We kinda window shopped (they actually shopped) and we generally behaved much as we always do when faced with a maze. Shortly after they headed off, as scheduled, my mother arrived. We then had a nice long evening with my mom, before I took her to the Airport in the Morning. Kathryn and I had an incredibly lazy morning and then headed off to Windsor/Eton Wick again – this time to wander down by the river (again with the pretty). There’s a bit of an oddity there, in so far as there appears to be a colony of some kind of parakeet (sp.) or parroty thing there. That’s definately *not* a native bird…

     

    Parakeet or Parrot, it's definately not a sparrow

      

    It was all very pretty though, and relaxing, and just a joy to relax and spend time out of the house with Kathryn.

     

    I think it was the Thames

     

  • It’s 2008, time to bore you all silly

    You know, for those of you who read my journal (and thank you for doing so; although I post mainly for myself, it’s nice to get the odd comment) this post may be somewhat of a repeat. But, quite frankly, I care not.

    Every year since the dawn of time, or at least since I started journaling, come sickness or wellness, drunken debauchery or sophisticated soiree, as soon as I physically can I’ll do an journal-summary of the past year. It’s something of a progress meter, a way for me to look back at where I was and where I am now and go “ah, that’s how I got here”. Ironically, the here in this case is in many respects not dissimilar from the here I was at last year. But, there are several huge and important differences, so while if you look at just the simple facts, and even some of the smaller things, my life isn’t that different; if you take in the whole and take account of the biggest and most important change in my life, my life has become a whole other kettle of fish. One I’m actively enjoying (if not right at this moment, riddled with cold as I am).

    Last year in Kate’s Life. (more…)

  • Yeah, yeah, it’s coming.

    That 2k7 review; coming. I promise.

    So I got an e-mail from Pandora Radio, I’ve not used it as much as I should’ve (in fact, I’d forgotten about it) prompting me to go look – again. And I’m reminded why I’d put it on my list to play with. It is, in fact, awesome. By giving it one recommendation it’s managed to play 2 songs by groups I’d never heard of which – if the examples played are anything like the rest of their stuff, well, I’d happily buy their album. And when I played with it a couple of days ago it played a bunch of stuff (again off one recommendation) which I happen to own but think is awesome.

    I find the record industry increasingly short sighted and at times just outright bizzare. Cutting off Pandora outside the US seems, well, like cutting off your nose to spite your face. I’ve lied and given a US zipcode, as usual, but I’m not sure if they’ll be blocking accounts or blocking by ip. If it’s the latter, well, we’ll have to be a little more inventive to continue listening; if it’s the former, then hopefully the lie of the zipcode should be enough.

    Anyhow. 

    The world has been it’s usual self, and work has been incredibly busy. The basic fact seems to be that hospitals in the UK are not big enough. We simply cannot accomodate the number of patients we have in. I remember being on the wards and being pushed to discharge patients even though I felt it was too early. And you’d see them back a few days later because they weren’t able to cope at home. I’m not sure to what extent that’s going on up on the wards, but the beds patients are going in to are still warm from the previous patient.

    And the department is barely functioning most evenings, as streams and streams of patients come in. People who need full and thorough assessment are lost in the melee, people are stressed and tired and each and every day I worry for my registration which, well, I don’t feel I’m doing my job properly. I do the most I can for each patient, but quite often that’s the minimum we can do to get them ‘treated’ and admitted. My documentation is almost non-existent; often consisting of minimal obs and signing for drugs. There just isn’t time to do anymore.

    Anyway, so that’s my world
    Â