WOMEN AGES 50+ FOR JULY 2025
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10711071
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It's very interesting to read the comments about praise and continuing education! In a family of 5 children the difference in our individual abilities was very noticeable. There was not a huge amount of praise but our parents encouraged us in the areas we did best in.
I had my husband drive me to get my drivers license renewed today! When we got there he looked at my license as I filled out the paper work and noticed that it didn't expire until 2026. Ugh! Made me feel so darn stupid. I went ahead and renewed it any way. At 77 hope I'm not getting dementia.
Carol in GA
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I wish you or one of the other ladies who are getting the great summer weather could send a bit to us.
The high today is in the low 70's which is really nice, except for when we have aqua zumba in the evening. It is pretty chilly getting out of the water when it is in the low 60's at close to 8PM. (tonight I won't stay and swim laps after because I am heading to mom's right after class-stopping at home long enough for a very quick shower and to load up my car-everything will be packed and ready to load before I go to class)I had cataract surgery on both eyes in my early 50's- I guess that is a bit early- They progressed very fast. One visit she said one was just barely starting, a year later at the next visit, she said it was ready to come out and because it progressed so fast, she had them take the second one out 5months later(she has a policy that if your eyes change in 6 months for what ever reason, they replace the lenses for free.
Lanette- I need to try and grow blueberries again. I planted one plant- the plant survived but never did anything for a few years then died- never got even one berry off of it.
Raspberries, that is another story. I went out and dug up more and taking them up to mom's so I can plant them up there for her. She loves them. We had them in the past but they died out- as did the blueberries. I ate some of the blackberries from the thornless plants my dad started for me while I was out watering this morning. They have to be super ripe- I like them sweet, not at all sour.Dh's mother was Okinawan and dad was Yugoslavian- they never taught him either of those languages or the others that his dad could speak(he only went through 4th grade before quitting to support the family, but lived in an area where they spoke Russian, Polish, Italian, etc. so he learned and retained quite a bit of it.
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Beth, my older sister called me(she never calls) to tell me that mom told her she thought I was mad at her because I hadn't called. We had talked plus sometimes, actually often, when I call she doesn't pick up or call me back when I leave messages. I did talk to her and she kept saying how much she missed me and she was looking forward to me coming up this weekend. No real work planned- we do have food bank/food program early tomorrow then she will nap a while. Sunday if she wants to go to church, I will drop her off then go out to see my aunt for a bit then pick mom up.
I have to figure out a way to get the conversation started about what is in her trust/executor/etc
I know what was told to me years ago what was in it but that was before dad passed away and mom changed it. DH is pushing saying I need to ask to see it. I know I do but so tired of him pushing and that is a hard thing to bring up- I do know a few things(cremated and buried in the front yard next to dad, her sister, brother in law and two nephews)-other than that, don't know anything for sure.
Usually I look forward to spending the weekend there, this time, dreading it.
Need to figure it out.
DebbieNapa Valley,CA
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🌻🌞 Carol, In my state they send you a postcard reminder that it's time to renew your driver's license. Also they won't let you renew it more than a year ahead of time. When I renewed my license this year (I'm 79) they asked me if I wanted to renew for six years or eight.
🌻🌞 Lisa, I love your new glasses. You look great.
😱🙀 Academic excellence was expected in my family. When I showed my mother an article I wrote that had been published in a magazine, she said, "You always did have talents you never used."
🐾👣🌻🌞 Barbie in NW WA
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Debbie … use one of our stories as the reason why you're bringing the subject up about the future/POA/etc. Something like a friend was saying how many legal problems arose when her dad died…(you get the drift) and then just casually ask about her situation and could you review it with her as the discussion with one of us has made you want to ensure that she will never have problems in the future (you get the drift). Don't mention your husband at all unless you think she'd be understanding, but in my experience in-law references don't usually go over well.
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Some of your stories make me so sad, especially Rita's, which must have been devastating. I was so lucky to go to an all girls grammar school, where the sky was the limit. Even in the late 60s girls were going to university to study Aeronautical Engineering, or Materials Science, Law at Oxford, or Medicine at Edinburgh. We didn't have any idea that it was unusual. My quarrel with the school, and I felt it deeply, was that they only valued academic success, so the lower 'streams' were barely mentioned at Prize Days, and those going off to teacher training college or nursing were an afterthought, after the glittering prizes of those of us in the elite. This was an outrageous injustice, in my opinion. We certainly didn't work any harder than they did. In my case, much less. And there was no sense that we were less than any men. In fact, we thought boys were rather stupid.
Interesting how these cultural and mini subculture differences have affected our lives. My brains were the one thing I was sure of and I feel certain they saved me from a life of severe mental illness. Without them, and the promise they afforded me, the prolonged sexual abuse I suffered at the hands of my father, for the whole of my childhood, would have overwhelmed me. My intellect was my safe place. Untouchable. I am still grateful for it every day.
Heather UK xxxxxxxx
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Carol - M, also 77 (or close) told me at lunch yesterday she'd made a big boo-boo. She made an appointment at Costco, 25 miles away, to get fitted for hearing aids. The appointment was for today, but she wrote it on the wrong calendar, so they braved big city traffic last Friday and arrived only to be told to come back in a week. She said she has a couple calendars she jots appointments on (I do too!).
Her husband has been in and out of the cardiologist's office for the past month, he keeps having dizzy spells but when they test him, all is OK - pacemaker is new, meds are fine. So her mind has been elsewhere - concern about him and braving our hot weather for the past month. She's still very well-read and super sharp. But has had a lot on her mind lately. Perhaps you have, too.
I'm glad my doctor, dentist and vet email or text appointment reminders - I sometimes forget to write them on the calendar and generally misplace the card they give me.😜 We get busy, tired, and have other things on our mind.
Several years ago I renewed Reader's Digest several times in the same year - it never clicked that I'd already renewed and I didn't bother to go back and double check. When I finally realized it, I was paid up for 4 years. 😁 I think these things happen to all of us sometimes.
If you are really concerned, I bet your doctor can give you some simple memory tests.
Lanette😎
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Hi all
Im down with the family in Tennessee having a blast im beat ,but I'll make it till later on.
Had some cinnamon apples
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Allie -Have a good visit. Tracy must take thousands of photos of miles and Delia. I'm sure they delight you.
Carol in GA
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Annie,
Yep! Husband is adjusting better than I am! I kinda miss the sweet old car. But he is the one driving it, and its more comfortable for him, so I am happy. I will not be driving this new car, the tech part is overwhelming! Totally out of my wheelhouse. In the scheme of things that's perfectly ok.
Rebecca Whidbey Wa
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Mo,
Losing over 100 lbs, you inspire me! Ouch with the inner tube mishap! When was this? I'm sorry you have neck pain.😥
I will look for those bars in my health section of the commissary. Normally the protein bar area is this intimidating isle where only the healthy, gym rats ventured, not me, miss obese lady😂. But slowly I am changing that!
I am forever amazed that I have changed my eating habits, like my appetite has up and done a 180'. Yesterday at my favorite Mexican restaurant I was chatting with husband and also mentally counting the homemade tortilla chips! Then the pozole soup was amazing as always, the pork so tender. I did only eat half of the small bowl, and brought the rest home. I ate my crispy taco as leftover tacos do not reheat well. But I figured with all the extra sodium I consumed I would be up in weight. Nope! The chemical change this medication has done to what I want to fuel this body, is a transformation. I was such a foodie, a sugar junkie and my bad skin and sore joints were proof of that.
Hugs from Whidbey to Mississippi!
Rebecca
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Lanette,
It was bound to happen, hopefully I will never repeat that oopsie!
We sadly blew our little savings and need to replenish! It will be a trip planned next year. My traveling to my sisters both end of March and end of June has taken the sails out of any holiday trips for me. I am hoping sons head to see us instead. I think my youngest is planning to come up from San Diego, and eldest is trying to get leave from Japan. One of those, we'll see them when we see them sort of deals.
Rebecca Whidbey Wa
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Carol,
Ah, you are better than me friend and still drive. I seem to have hit a mental roadblock and have no desire to get behind the wheel of a car (even a new car) ever again.
Regarding my military ID, I only have to renew it one more time, then the card is good for life! I guess when you get a certain age the renewal department is like, "they're old, we don't need to bother them with having to renew it, we're just glad they're still ticking"!
Rebecca Whidbey Wa
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Husband took photos of the car this morning.😁💖
👍🏼💖
Rebecca Whidbey Wa
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10721072
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stats for the day-
Walk w/family- 1hr 33min 3sec, 10424steps, 41elev, 2.85ap, 77ahr, 94mhr, 4.43mi= 409c
Strava app= 537c
ROUVY home spin bike- strava stats- 1hr 32min 40sec, 112aw, gear23, 36.1amph, 97ahr, 126mhr, 55.82mi= 541c
Strava app= 595c
ROUVY stats- 1hr 32min 40sec, 112aw, 59arpm, 36.2amph, 55.82mi= 595c
Walk kids around park- 13.53min, 1512steps, 2.73ap, .64mi= 70c
Strava app= 79cTotal cal 1020
2303.33 miles ahead
10731073
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One additional challenge with my education over the years is that I have always been determined not to get a student loan … but education can be expensive.
My parents aren't wealthy and couldn't provide me with much money, but they did provide me with a place to live during some of my education.
I was fortunate to get a few scholarships along the way to put toward some of the education (like $1000 here or there).
Otherwise I worked.
During my Bachelor of Education (2nd Bachelors), I worked about 20 hours a week in addition to classes and homework. In the last 2 years of that degree, I also had to drive from Red Deer to Edmonton and back several times a week. That's a 300 km round trip. One semester, I was driving 1000 km/week between university, work and home. Another semester, I had to get up at about 5:30 am to make my 8 am classes. One semester, I would drive up, attend classes, spend the night in a dorm room in a hostel (which I discovered was where the local prostitutes stayed when they were finished work for the night), attend classes and drive home … twice a week. The ladies would come into our dorm room about 4 am all noisy and chatting and wake me up, but at least I had the evenings to myself.
Even during my mentor teaching months, I would put in a day teaching kids, then go to work at my part-time job.
When I wasn't in one of my educational endeavours, I would often have a full-time job and a part-time job. For about 6 months somewhere in there, I held 4 jobs … and often answered the phone incorrectly because I'd lose track of where I was!!
Most recently, my Master's degree took a long time because I worked full time and got the degree part time.
So I learned time management, prioritisation, organisation and much more in addition to whatever school stuff I was learning.
Machka in Oz
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Skunked! Woke up Wednesday morning thinking Joe’s burned some brussels sprouts. Nope. Shadow and Mooch got skunked. Just a glancing blow, not a full blown soak but Peeuuuuwww. Wiped ‘em down with apple cider vinegar, helped only a little. The stank got in the whole house. Must have rubbed off on my jacket ‘cuz when I arrived at line dance class L asked me if I smelled skunk. Oh no, I said, it’s ME! Wadded my jacket up in the corner but there was still an air about me. Picked up a giant Febreeze refill at Freddies. Wiped dogs down again when I got home. Fortunately the sun came out just as Joe’s guests were walking up the drive. They brought Joe a bottle of tin cup whiskey. We had a lovely visit at the picnic table (outside!), ate all the snacks, drank all the beer and wine and much of the whiskey. Really enjoyed meeting J, we had some work experiences in common. Joe and S seemed to take to each other, chatted the whole time while Joe showed S around the property, pump room, etc. We visited for about 4 hours. Sent them off with a trail cam, some of Joe’s herbs and 2 beit alpha cucumber plants. So much for panicked cleaning ;}
Lisa Bravissima for the PT exercise progress despite pain. ((hugs)) Love the new glasses. For sure the cook’s disdain can be tasted in the dish. Hmm The Cook’s Disdain sounds like a cozy culinary murder mystery title…
Barbie thanks for the podcast reminder. Will fire up some Cas the Clutterbug and count it good.
Lanette, Wednesday was the second time in 40 years together we’ve had neibors over for snacks. The first time was a few years ago when the senior lady at the end of the lane had no heat during one of our longer power outages. We had her over to sit next to the wood stove, drink tea and eat cookies. We get along ok with our neighbors, I hope, some friction but no outright hostility, I hope. We both liked J and S, who talked of inviting us back over to theirs…
Heather 4 hours from London? OMG. Had to google RIB, not sure I’d want to risk touring on an inflatable boat…
Allie can I just say what a jerk I think Kyle is? What Lisa said. Safe travels.
Debbie ((hugs)) and bless you for giving that grandma cat 6 golden years. She reminded me of our Roxie, beautiful. Hard conversation to start with your mom…
Tracey Roger’s reaction to your cleaning made me snort my water ;) I’d add Reese Witherspoon and Taylor Swift to your powerful/smart blondes suggestion for Lisa’s granddaughter, but yah, hair color is not a battle I’d choose.
Carol ((hugs)) for the loss of your big beautiful grand-dog. IMHO better to renew early than not, sometimes it’s hard for me to distinguish between 5 and 6 when the print is small.
Rori ((hugs)) for your OMG corner. There are tiny pockets of emotional stuff lurking in my OMG room too.
Mo taking off over 100 pounds, Bravissima! The how exercise helps bp links that Machka posted imply that daily exercise can increase the number and elasticity of blood vessels so you’re helping the ischemic vessels in your brain too!
Beth brilliant insights and suggestions to Debbie. Brava!
Michele glad the sickness passed quickly. Colby’s indecisiveness will be an opportunity for avoid expectations to minimize frustration ;}
Rebecca love the haircut. (hugs) for saying good bye to your first car.
Action for happiness
17-Stubbornly did BB&B/PT despite being a tad hungover. 18-Let go of all pre-grooming “to do” plans to focus on connecting Joe’s new laptop to our wifi and setting up his local Windows 11 account. It may be that the problem with his old laptop wasn’t the laptop but the mouse. Aaauggh.
OMG room progress
Day 2-Wednesday the trail cam was in the OMG room, now it’s at our neighbors’.
Day 3-Thursday bupkes
Day 4-Friday step sheets filed away, keyboard cleared.Caught up! Now time to snooze…
Later, lighter, lovelies!
Barbara, the Southern Oregon Coastie AHMODJuly focus: Just one thing from the OMG room. Really.
2025: Chose NOW: to move more than yesterday (see action plan), fuel better than yesterday (hold that after dinner sweet down to two pieces of dark chocolate max), open heart and mind before mouth3 -
Machka - That must have been extremely hard work! It makes me exhausted just thinking about it! In my day, in the 60s, (not now, higher education costs a fortune) everything was free, including our accommodation and maintenance. Our courses were paid for, and we got a grant for the rest. Not a loan. The grant was means tested, but my parents were not required to pay much at all, because they only had a very modest income. We could go off to live at university, somewhere very different to our home town, preferably some good distance away, and live completely free, with no fear of debt, or having to work. I did work in the vacations, at various jobs, but that was unusual. I did postal deliveries at Christmas, mushroom picking at Easter, etc, and was lucky enough to get a summer position in my home town as an assistant English teacher for French students. 'Vacances Studieuses'. By the nineties, things were very different for my children, and despite them working weekends and sometimes evenings, and grandparents and my ex helping out, they built up huge debts from student loans. This was without them having to pay for tuition then. Nowdays tuition has to be paid for as well, and crippling debts are built up. I lived in a golden age of education indeed!
John's fond memories of Oxford, in the early 60s, are like something out of an old black and white film. Living in a room in a college, with all your meals provided, and a servant to clean for you, wearing your gown to dinner, with the professors at the high table, grace in Latin. All for absolutely free. His parents were even poorer than mine. He worked in the long Oxford vacations, at various factory jobs, and in a pub at Southend.
Love Heather UK xxxxxxxx
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On another subject, Carol and Lanette, I used to always write all my appointments down in a pocket diary, which I kept in my handbag, which worked, for decades, well enough for me. Then, when phone calendars came in, I tried to do both, which resulted in one or other not having the correct information entered. In the end I gave up on the paper one, and now only use the one on my phone. It is kind enough to remind me when I need to do something! 😃 I just have to remember to coordinate with John, which we often do over lunch. We could sync them, but I prefer not to. I have my own methods of recording things. Better to just have one place where everything is.
I also have to renew my drivers license before my next birthday. I haven't driven for seven years, and probably never will again, but the renewal is totally free, and it's always helpful to have another source of identification in addition to your passport.
Heather UK xxxxxxxx
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Nice article about growing old.
Heather UK xxxxxxxx
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I've spent many years … probably decades when I add it all up … getting 4 to 5 hours of sleep a night just so I could fit it all in. The working, studies, transportation, etc.
I would have loved free education!! Tuition was expensive, and all the way up to and including my B-Ed, books were expensive too. It seems to me that one of the scholarships I got paid for the textbooks for one semester, but otherwise, I was on my own with them, and they often added up to $1000-$2000 a year for second-hand books.
Fortunately, textbooks are no longer required and that was not part of my Master's expenses.
There are all sorts of additional student fees, lab fees, etc.
Plus all the living expenses.
The expense of education is one reason I recommend getting a trade (practical education) first and then going academic. The trade can help pay for future education.
Using my trade, I was able to earn a decent salary during the summers of the B-Ed for which I was very thankful because my part-time jobs were about $10 for 20 hours a week, which doesn't go very far.
When I did the long commutes between Red Deer and Edmonton, one of the things I did was to record myself reading my notes or parts of a textbook out loud, and then play it back in the car so that I covered the material twice.
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On appointments, I use Google Calendar and share the appointments, meetings, etc. with my husband so he can see them too. It's on my phone, laptop, and I can see it at work.
I also have a list of upcoming events, including when bills and things are due in my email. I can quickly add things to that list on the go when I think of them. Most of those end up on the calendar.
And I've got it all on a whiteboard so that when my husband forgets to look at his Google Calendar, he can see them on the whiteboard.
All that also helps me check and double check the information. That's one thing I will spend a bit of time on about once a fortnight … checking the calendar.
And thankfully, many things send emails or texts to remind me if somehow something has slipped through the cracks. If the reminder is an email, I pop it into my Google task list and give it a due date so that it stares at me every time I go into my email, and doesn't get lost in the hundreds of emails that come in.
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Got to see the granddaughters today!! 😍
Machka in Oz
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Good morning my friends!
Lisa Yay for gastro progress! Yay for Skyrizi! And I'm glad your glasses widen your vision. They look great!
Machka I have nothing against people who choose to stay home but everyone needs a job skill, if not education, just in case. You were wise to pursue it despite the struggle. Well done!
Beth I think of bragging as trying to impress an audience, so a parent praising and encouraging a child is a little different, and more appropriate.
Margaret that's interesting about oxalates. I wonder if eating spinach has an effect on my osteopenia. Hmm.
Rita very sad that you lacked encouragement.
Mo Wow losing 100+ pounds! Yay!
Carol missing a detail is not dementia in my humble opinion. Applying the label dementia is useful if you need to justify help, like adult day care. If you need a better calendar to cope with missing details, the dementia label is only scary, not helpful.
Rebecca I hope my 2014 car lasts forever because I can't drive with screens and beeps everywhere.
Barbara Skunk! Oh no!
Heather that article is encouraging and attitude is important. But health challenges and local amenities also play a big role in graceful aging. We would be miserable without the local senior center.
I have been a lifelong learner too. I have three Master's degrees all with military financial support. Many people react to that as though I did it to insult them. I can't even list the degrees on my resume because people get offended at excess education. It's a sore point for me.
May you all be happy, healthy, safe and free!
Annie in Delaware
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Hey, kids,
Barbie and everyone else - Thank you for the lovely compliments on the glasses. 😊
The connections between education and debt now are so tangled that it's near impossible, I think, for someone to "work their way through school" in the U.S. without help, like Annie's assist from the military, or going into debt. My student loan story:
Busy day ahead for me and the man just getting the place in good shape. Before I start on that though, I'm going to run up to the Farmer's Market just around the corner and get a dozen eggs and drop off a few egg cartons to the lady who wanted them.I started my college years at 34 years old, and came out of my 3 1/2-year sprint to a bachelor's degree with more than $25,000 in debt. That is just for the bachelor's degree. And it was only that low because military wives got in-state tuition in Nevada.
For the master's, because I was graduating with honors from my bachelor's degree at UNLV in 1998, I was flown down to Texas A&M and toured the campus the summer before I graduated, was granted tuition and given a part-time position there developing websites and doing data entry that covered my books. My second year, tuition was covered with a veteran's exemption offered by the state of Texas. Which was good, because by then I was working full-time as a reporter, then managing editor, for a small newspaper in a town 50 miles away, but the pay was… skimpy. $7.77 an hour in 1999, no joke. Went up to $8.50 an hour when I was promoted to editor. 😂
By the time 2004 rolled around, my ex- and I would declare bankruptcy. In the U.S., bankruptcy does not erase student loan debt. I was still paying it off by the time I divorced him in 2008 and married Corey in 2009. We finished paying my student loan off, as well as what little we still owed debt-wise, with the layoff package I got from Cisco Systems in 2013. So… 15 years to pay off.
Hope it's a grand day! Later, y'all,
Lisa in Arkansas0 -
😎
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Lisa agree with others on your new glasses!
Mo Great job on weight loss!
Annie I substitute Arugula for spinach and other spring greens like chard and beets because of their high oxalate levels. Arugula has a peppery taste. It is high in Vit K.
I am tweeking my diet to reduce the high oxalate diet I have been eating. There is a push now to go to a more plant based diet especially when getting older. I need to pay better attention to the oxalate factor.
In the last month I have been sitting at 158. With the small changes I am making down to 155 again. Again I am making the changes gradually. I did have a small portion of black raspberries in my Greek yogurt last night. Black raspberries and red have high oxalate. I won't totally give them up just eat them in much smaller portions. Calcium does help negate the negative effects of oxalate.
Third year finally at their peak. Late this year…
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Barbara ~ Yeah! You removed an item from the OMG room. Seems like having company was Fun, Fun, Fun!
Rebecca ~ Like the new car. It looks really sporty!
Must confess that my father paid for 100% of my undergraduate degree. Then I started working on my Masters when my son was around 9 and found that I could not handle the stress of working and home. At that point I was paying for it and we were just getting by so I finally quit. Yes, I regret not finishing but that was my life at that time.
Carol in GA
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More on schooling: When in Elementary (nuns!), as soon as I was old enough, my parents made arrangements for me to clean classrooms after school to pay for my tuition. I was maybe 12 when I started that. Did that through high school as well. My biggest issue was that my mom wanted me to become a nun, and I did not. When it came time for college, she went without me and signed me up for an all girls college with a working scholarship. My guess is cleaning classrooms again. However, I refused and went to work in a glass factory where I was for 22 years until they closed to move to Mexico. My college classes were paid: AS cash by me, BS, MHIS, MIS by loans. I kept going to school because I couldn't afford the over $200,000 in school loans I had accumulated. I ended up getting disability for my panic attacks and got the school loan forgiven because of the disability. I'm proud of my degrees though I didn't have much occasion to use them because of the panic attacks.
Driver's license: My DH and I both need to renew our licenses next year. I'm curious as to what they will offer. We had the last ones for 8 years. I hope they allow 8 years again. That way, I will be 78 for next renew, and DH will be 82. Things will be very different then.
Last Diabetes Class Info.
Session 26:
Preparing for the Future
Overview
Congratulations on your success in finishing our Program!
You now have the tools to live a healthier lifestyle. In this
session, you will begin to get ready for your future of
wellness.
As you move on in your path of being well, it is key to find as
many support persons in your life as you can. By pairing up
with helpful friends and family, you will not be alone. Your
team will be there to cheer you on, pick you up when you
fall and help you to stay on track with your health plan.
Could they be a part of your team?
➢ Parent
➢ Siblings
➢ Co-worker
➢ Children
➢ Trainer
➢ Close friend
➢ Grandparents
➢ Workout buddy
➢ Health care team
➢ Your dog (for walks!)
In weekly Session 5, the key message was that social support
will help you to continue to be successful with your new
healthful lifestyle. Each support person can provide you with
a different gift. For example, an active friend may be your
go-to person for keeping on track with exercise while an up-
beat family member may be your go-to person when you
need some words of support or cheering on. List your go-tosupport persons at the bottom of your long-term plan
worksheet (discussed at the end of the session).
❖ See Handout: Social Support Team
Along with the backing of a team, it is key that you stay
positive. You are in charge of your health. As you move
forward on your path, keep this list in mind:
People who are successful with their weight loss…
Are honest with themselves
Know that changing the way we do things takes time and
hard work to keep moving forward
Learn from their slips and keep trying
Build off of their small wins
Have an open mind and trust in themselves
Feel good about living in a healthy way
Now that you have picked out a group to support yourself
and have a few ideas to keep in mind for your ongoing
health, take a look at your DPP goals:
➢ Have you met your goal to be active? If not, how
close are you to meeting your weekly minutes?
➢ Are you willing to make the effort to move more?
➢ Have you met your weight loss goal yet? If not, how
close are you to your goal weight?
➢ Is this goal a good weight for you? Talk to your coach.
Thought for today:
Why was the math book unhappy?
Because it had too many problems. And every time it tried to solve them, it just got more frustrated!
RVRita in Roswell
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Barbara- glad the visit with J & S went well! And that you were able to gather around the picnic table due to the skunk. When we lived on the farm, our house dogs were skunk magnets. The vet sold a soap/spray (I can't recall which) that really took away the odor and I think I later found the same product at the feed store. Or Amazon.
Annie - during the time I was looking for jobs that were just a way to earn money, I'd leave my degree off the resume too. There was the fear of being "over qualified".
Margaret - I read someplace that Arugula is one of the most healthy greens, many more nutrients that just lettuce alone in addition to the Vitamin K you mentioned. I try to eat it often and give some to the hens for their treat. I'm kind of wary of too many oxalates too after having a kidney stone years ago. Never "caught" the stone, so not sure what it was comprised of, but better safe than sorry.
Debbie - Good luck talking to your sister. Lots of good ideas here - just mentioning what some of us here have gone through, planting a seed. What's the worst that could happen if she decides to not do anything? So important to get that stuff figured out beforehand as we and those we love and care for start to decline. Glad the burial took place even though it didn't fit in with plans. It's done now.
Back to the gym -
By the way, I'm so impressed with you gals that make the effort to go out and attend Zumba, BB & B, line dancing, swimming, etc. Before I retired, T and I would go the gym after work and do the gal's circuit training which was comprised of "Curves" type hydraulic resistance machines. I stopped in at the gym about 6 months ago - the machines don't work real well anymore- but they do offer some resistance. At least they are an opportunity to work muscles that walking and bicep curls don't touch. I plan to stop early Monday morning before grocery shopping and get some time in on a treadmill too. Plus, the ten pound dumbbells I have for Farmer's carry are getting manageable now. I know the gym has free weights and kettle bells in graduated sizes and I don't want to purchase any more weights so can use theirs. Going twice a week is the plan, and if it works, maybe up it to three when our typical dark rainy season starts.
Paying for college -
In the early 70's, children of disabled WW2 veterans were eligible to have their tuition paid by the government to attend a 4 year college. I'm not sure if it was part of the GI bill? That might still be the case with disabled vets from more recent wars. Anyhow, my dad had a 10% disability, but he was categorized as disabled so we kids qualified. My sis lived at home and commuted to an Indiana U satellite campus in South Bend. I did that for a while, then moved out and rented a room near that campus and worked in a factory at night and attended school during the day. The first time in my life I wasn't either working or going to school was a few months in the summer of 2002 when I left the 911 Center. Over 30 years. That lasted a couple months, then my accountant friend in Seattle hired me to stay with her during the rest of that summer to work on a special project having to do with fisheries quotas. I retired from my most recent county job 8 years ago and it was hard not feeling I needed to be busy all the time.
T's FIL finally left the hospital yesterday.
Still has the catheter, it might be a permanent thing now. He thought he was going home and was miffed when they dropped him off a the care facility but I'm sure the staff fawned all over him. He still has an eye for the ladies and T said a couple of them are very nice looking, lol. He's worried, though, that they haven't given him the keys to his car. 😣
The healing power of sunlight and Vitamin D –
I've been watching a YouTube interview on Diary of a CEO with Dr. Roger Seheult about the benefits of Vitamin D, but more importantly, the benefits of sunlight and how being in the sun for even 15 minutes a day exposes us to healing infrared - which penetrates through clothing. Gives our mitochondria - our cell's energy centers - a boost. It's 2 hours long, I've been watching it in 1/2 hour segments since there's so much to take in.
Vitamin D Expert: The Fastest Way To Dementia & The Dangerous Lie You've Been Told About Sunlight!
I have LED lights in most of my lamps and fixtures - I like that they are bright and last for a long time. But the old-fashioned incandescent lights - which are hard to find anymore - are full spectrum (as discussed in Seheult’s interview) and better for us.
Well, several years ago when it was announced incandescent light bulbs were going by the wayside, I loaded up and still have a stash of 60 and 75 watt. 😁 Too warm, unfortunately, for my current table lamps. I was able to order 40 watt bulbs from Amazon a couple years ago, no longer available. But, there are now "full spectrum" equivalent LED bulbs for plant grow lights, for example, that have beneficial wavelengths. I put one in the little desk lamp on the table here where I have the laptop and it's bright but not too warm. So an alternative, at least for circadian rhythm and perhaps to fight depression during gloomy winter months. Probably doesn't have enough infrared for other health benefits though. (Seheult talks quite a bit about the benefits of "red light therapy" too.)
Lanette 😎
SW WA State
5
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