Update about blogCa

Lilies of the Valley, Black Mountain NC April 16, 2026

Sunday, April 19, 2026

5 days equal 5 weeks

 A nurse from my health insurance company gave me this formula. For every day you spend in the hospital you'll need a week of recovery once you go home.

So I've completed the first week of 5. Geese, I don't have a life, again. (I wrote this on Thursday, and by Friday I did feel a lot better!)

I'm having dizzy spells, hanging onto furniture. Who me, anxious? Heart, lungs, skin, pulse ox, blood pressure, nebulizer, therapeutic vest, pills, pills, pills! Go to tests for this and that. Calls to and from nurses, insurance, appointment schedulers...when do I have time to just be myself?

Warning - a long discussion leading nowhere follows. 

There was the scary certified letter Wednesday. The mailman comes to your door and you have to sign that you've received the letter. It is like a legal document. Why? This was from the hospital from which I'd been discharged just a week before. OK, maybe they thought I could pay the bill myself, instead of the insurance company. I signed. And stood inside my apartment and opened it. 

La dee da- a standard Dear Patient form letter, with attached "Important Message from Medicare" - in bold face type. It has to do with discharge from the hospital.

I read quickly through the form letter from Medicare, about appealing something.

I go back to the first one...read more carefully. Look for any dates regarding all this. None anywhere. Not even on the envelope. Appeal what?

Why did I get it?

What's it referring to? Somehow the forms refer to being discharged before I felt I'd received adequate care. Being a form letter, it says 

"if you want to appeal (regarding discharge too soon or not feeling medically able to go home) you must contact the Quality Improvement Organization no later than the day of discharge, before leaving the hospital." (underline mine!)

Methinks this is another one of those "they doth protest too much."



QIO isn't given any reference in the letter. Incidentally, there's no way to contact them. Incidentally, I was discharged a whole week before receiving this form letter! 

Oh the Medicare Important Message form does give some QIO numbers and how to appeal your Hospital Discharge (even after deadline - with your Medicare health plan.)

Ah ha. I remember news stories now that this hospital has been sanctioned by Medicare. Maybe this is what it's all about.

Nothing to do with me. I received a discharge summary. I've since reviewed the discharge with my primary physician. What a load of baloney! 

My doctor made sure I had followed his orders (I think, by setting up oxygen at home.) Wait wait. The oxygen wasn't set up until the second day after I went home. Perhaps this is his CYA (cover your ass, if you never ran into that before)! He did say he didn't want me coming back to the hospital with anything related to not having oxygen that first night. Well, I've had it.

And I've doubly HAD IT with this hospital! Ever since HCA bought it out, and half the specialty doctors left, and then all the subsidiary doctors have been brought into their corporate umbrella, it has not done well with the local population. Almost all the nursing staff and technicians are "Traveling Nurses." They used to be called Temps. But they actually work for HCA and are housed by the corporation in towns where they're employed, and apparently put out bids for where and how much they'll work. My phlebotomist was from Sarasota FL and bids for 3 or 4 days a week, a month at a time, here in Asheville, and gets well paid.

I really have had very good care, except for the construction noise the last day. Wait wait, I filled in a survey and said that, and then this letter arrived.

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I really needed this...

Daily Om gave this little helpful reminder last Thursday. 

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Some critters for this week

 

Appreciating the little blown glass cat with a goldfish inside, and my own Muffin fluffy gal from way back when (before 2012).

Lovely Llamas, but small file so foggy shot.


Who I'm sharing my balcony with... She's busy building this nest...first shot taken Sunday April 12, second below on Wednesday April 15.


I don't sit out there but an hour or so a day...and so far I don't see any reason to make her move. Perhaps I will when I consider all her little ones...



Ganesh


"lead-voe-elephant" (That's how I saved it, no idea what it means.)

I enjoy seeing other's critters photos. I hope our love of animals continues to support their lives!

Sharing with Saturday's Critters.



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And trains are running again, first freight train since Hurricane Helene washed out tracks/beds nearby in Sept 2024.

UPDATE – Train Schedule Change 🚨
Happy Saturday, Asheville! We’ve got an updated itinerary and some exciting news—welcome back Norfolk Southern!
The train will now depart Oyama in Hickory heading west between 7:45 AM – 8:00 AM.
This is a 58-car train, and timing is estimated as follows:
10:45 – 11:45 AM: Old Fort
🚂 Noon: Old Fort Loops, then continuing up the mountain toward Asheville.

(Black Mountain will be after the loops...)
Times may shift slightly, so keep your eyes and ears open—and enjoy the ride through the mountains today!


I've got my windows open to hear the toot of the train as it goes across Blue Ridge Rd. at the foot of my hill.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Rear Windows part 1

 

As I recover back at home, my photo opportunities are limited. Here's the April 15 view of fallen dogwood petals and transformation to greenery. Those leaves at the base of the tree were the early harbingers of spring a month ago...daffodils.

On a tangent, I'd like to recommend a short article on Substack by Robertson Work...which I've linked over on my blog Inner Workings. or go directly to his essay Being and Doing in Mystery and Ecstasy.

But let's consider Sepia Saturday for a moment. Suggestion of an old truck. I think I've already posted what photos I had in my files. Let's see if there's anything new available.




Our host Alan gives this information on the above photo:
Our theme image this week features an early twentieth century motor vehicle (the body of which, coincidentally, was built by my father's Uncle Albert). Leaving aside the family pride, you might want to use the image to prompt reflections on vehicles past and present, or, noting that the wagon was used to transport beer, you might want to take a diversion into the realm of beer bottles. And, as always, you can take a completely unchartered diversion to wherever you want - all we ask for is an old image and some new thoughts. Deliver them on or around Saturday 18th April 2026 and leave a link on the list at Sepia Saturday.


When living in Tampa FL until 2007 when I retired, I would drive busy streets constantly. Back before I was blogging, I already was taking photos thinking artistically. And at that point I had Picasa, a free photo editing program. So I formed collages with the topic "Rear Windows."

 


If you live  in a city, you stop in traffic frequently, and see interesting windows of the vehicles ahead of you...thus the rear windows.

I'm going to include some as individual shots too so you can see the details.




















OK, to be continued. There are too many for one blog post. And if you're interested, help me figure out which year all those license plates were from. I can't focus on any so far...sometime on or before 2007.  To be continued.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Those for whom I'm grateful!

 Thankful Thursday 

Shared from FaceBook






Some archaeology for you...

The Cybele plate is a Bronze gilded disc dated ca 300-200 BC discovered at Ai-Khanoum, Bactria (today northern Afghanistan). It depicts Kybele, the Anatolian mother goddess, riding a chariot together with a winged goddess, most likely Nike. The chariot is pulled by lions and above them are depicted the Sun Helios, the moon and the morning star.

But who is the figure on the far right? I will have to do some more research, I'm thinking.


This weekend a friend and her hubby are going to a beach near Charleston SC. They will probably see this. I am so grateful that they'll get to enjoy this...as they have been so giving in helping me while I was sick.


Sedona AZ offered a wonderful vista for one of my daughters-in-law last week. Simply heavenly!

Another daughter-in-law shared her prize of "Best Dessert" at Florida Foodies Fest for her Macarons. (Not macaroons!) St. Petersburg, FL.



Another daughter-in-law in the red shirt came out to support Allison Russo, (in white jacket) a candidate for Ohio Secretary of State, and "Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America"


When a son divorces the mother of my grandkids, she becomes a friend as well as ex-daughter-in-law. I wish her many ways of happiness.




A huge thank you to all my blog friends who have sent supportive comments while I was hospitalized and first at home dealing with total focus on my health. It was so appreciated by this elder who continues to hope for other things to be of interest than myself!

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day

 
Sharing with Garden Bloggers Bloom Day - on the 15th of the month.

Outside my front door, a kind of spastic azalea. Or perhaps split personality? A dark butterfly is on the lower right blossom.



The bewildering array of oxygen tanks with a gauge saying the connected one is empty (in the red). Someone turned it all the way "on" while I was gone...or perhaps the EMTs as they left to take me to hospital Friday the 3rd. Now I need to figure out how to switch the gauge setup to another tank so I can try carrying it around, if I so choose. So far I haven't felt much difference with oxygen "as needed." Mainly it's a pain in the "feet don't trip over the tubing" all over the place inside the house. I have two other methods of  getting O2 in portable ways.


Our native Flame Azalea, pruned and placed in a parking lot.







Tuesday, April 14, 2026

My experience here

 




View of the building in which I live.



by Keith Ramos.USFWS




Pocket balcony is great for springtime fresh air. Until the pollen from my lovely maples gets too strong!



Have you noticed how many photos from space include the Straits of Hormuz?