working out for Disney

Figgy1

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
I have a serious love/hate relationship with the holidays. I love the lights, smells and family time but I'm not so fond of all the work and serious lack of sleep even more so that dh is still on nights.
Last night was the first decent night's sleep in forever and a day where I woke up in the morning and actually felt awake enough to get my steps in right away:joyfull: I can't even tell you how good it was to get continuous sleep. Right now I'm having a hard time trying to decide if I should make hot and sour soup, a thai veggie soup or veggie and tofu stir fry for dinner
 

Lilofan

Well-Known Member
I have a serious love/hate relationship with the holidays. I love the lights, smells and family time but I'm not so fond of all the work and serious lack of sleep even more so that dh is still on nights.
Last night was the first decent night's sleep in forever and a day where I woke up in the morning and actually felt awake enough to get my steps in right away:joyfull: I can't even tell you how good it was to get continuous sleep. Right now I'm having a hard time trying to decide if I should make hot and sour soup, a thai veggie soup or veggie and tofu stir fry for dinner
Veggie tofu stir fry sounds good.
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
I wanted to take a moment to wish you all a very happy and healthy new year. I know many of us are thankful to have 2021 in the rearview mirror and are praying for better in 2022. I pray that this current surge hasn't been too hard on you and your loved ones. May 2022 be wonderful for us all.

I also wanted to let everyone know that I had my surgery this past Wednesday, which I'm hoping leads to better health in 2022. I won't lie...this isn't fun, but I'm following the dr's orders and while not exactly "working out," I am getting in walking each day to help aid with my recovery. It's slow and it's just inside, but I've implemented 5-10 walking sessions (10-20 minute intervals each) every day. Most times it's just laps around the house, but it's something.
I'm sending you gentle hugs and wishes for a speedy recovery and a MUCH better 2022!
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
I have a serious love/hate relationship with the holidays. I love the lights, smells and family time but I'm not so fond of all the work and serious lack of sleep even more so that dh is still on nights.
Last night was the first decent night's sleep in forever and a day where I woke up in the morning and actually felt awake enough to get my steps in right away:joyfull: I can't even tell you how good it was to get continuous sleep. Right now I'm having a hard time trying to decide if I should make hot and sour soup, a thai veggie soup or veggie and tofu stir fry for dinner
I hear you! I'm like that with most of the school vacations, actually, because I work evenings. Vacations are nice because I don't have to get up in the morning to make lunches for the kids to take to school, which is nice since I don't get home until almost midnight. When the kids have school, I just can't function unless I get in a nap after sending the kids off to school, because I have to be up early and don't get to bed until after midnight. BUT, the downside is that everyone gets a break except me. At least with Christmas break, because my husband's company gives everyone the week between Christmas and New Years off, and my husband will often take time off during school vacations, but he's salaried, so he gets paid days off. I don't, so I still have to work, and while everyone else is enjoying their time off, I still have to do laundry, grocery shopping, cooking, cleaning, etc during the day, and then off to my job in the evening. I'm the only one working, both at home and outside of it, so that's less than fun. And my husband tends to drive me a bit crazy when he's home all the time. I love him, and I enjoy spending time with him, but he'll take a 2 hour bath so I can't get in to shower before getting dressed and going to get groceries, etc. And I'll have a movie or something on the TV and pause it to go do meal prep and come back while stuff it marinating or cooking and find he's comandeered my spot and turned off my program to watch something of his. He doesn't bother to help me out with any of the household chores, but makes it harder for me to fit in my hobby time. At least if he's at work, I don't have to plan my chores around when I can get into the bathroom, or run up and down the stairs 16 times to stir the chili because I can't watch my show downstairs where I'm close to the kitchen. Yesterday, I walked to the pharmacy to pick up a refill prescription and E couldn't go with me because she couldn't get into the bathroom to brush her teeth and shower, so I had to go by myself. Not a big deal, but it's nicer to have a walking buddy. Do any of you have similar annoyances when your husbands are home or is it just me?
 

Figgy1

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
I hear you! I'm like that with most of the school vacations, actually, because I work evenings. Vacations are nice because I don't have to get up in the morning to make lunches for the kids to take to school, which is nice since I don't get home until almost midnight. When the kids have school, I just can't function unless I get in a nap after sending the kids off to school, because I have to be up early and don't get to bed until after midnight. BUT, the downside is that everyone gets a break except me. At least with Christmas break, because my husband's company gives everyone the week between Christmas and New Years off, and my husband will often take time off during school vacations, but he's salaried, so he gets paid days off. I don't, so I still have to work, and while everyone else is enjoying their time off, I still have to do laundry, grocery shopping, cooking, cleaning, etc during the day, and then off to my job in the evening. I'm the only one working, both at home and outside of it, so that's less than fun. And my husband tends to drive me a bit crazy when he's home all the time. I love him, and I enjoy spending time with him, but he'll take a 2 hour bath so I can't get in to shower before getting dressed and going to get groceries, etc. And I'll have a movie or something on the TV and pause it to go do meal prep and come back while stuff it marinating or cooking and find he's comandeered my spot and turned off my program to watch something of his. He doesn't bother to help me out with any of the household chores, but makes it harder for me to fit in my hobby time. At least if he's at work, I don't have to plan my chores around when I can get into the bathroom, or run up and down the stairs 16 times to stir the chili because I can't watch my show downstairs where I'm close to the kitchen. Yesterday, I walked to the pharmacy to pick up a refill prescription and E couldn't go with me because she couldn't get into the bathroom to brush her teeth and shower, so I had to go by myself. Not a big deal, but it's nicer to have a walking buddy. Do any of you have similar annoyances when your husbands are home or is it just me?
Mine makes noise at 1am or decides to cook or gets to his to do list
 

MinnieM123

Premium Member
I hear you! I'm like that with most of the school vacations, actually, because I work evenings. Vacations are nice because I don't have to get up in the morning to make lunches for the kids to take to school, which is nice since I don't get home until almost midnight. When the kids have school, I just can't function unless I get in a nap after sending the kids off to school, because I have to be up early and don't get to bed until after midnight. BUT, the downside is that everyone gets a break except me. At least with Christmas break, because my husband's company gives everyone the week between Christmas and New Years off, and my husband will often take time off during school vacations, but he's salaried, so he gets paid days off. I don't, so I still have to work, and while everyone else is enjoying their time off, I still have to do laundry, grocery shopping, cooking, cleaning, etc during the day, and then off to my job in the evening. I'm the only one working, both at home and outside of it, so that's less than fun. And my husband tends to drive me a bit crazy when he's home all the time. I love him, and I enjoy spending time with him, but he'll take a 2 hour bath so I can't get in to shower before getting dressed and going to get groceries, etc. And I'll have a movie or something on the TV and pause it to go do meal prep and come back while stuff it marinating or cooking and find he's comandeered my spot and turned off my program to watch something of his. He doesn't bother to help me out with any of the household chores, but makes it harder for me to fit in my hobby time. At least if he's at work, I don't have to plan my chores around when I can get into the bathroom, or run up and down the stairs 16 times to stir the chili because I can't watch my show downstairs where I'm close to the kitchen. Yesterday, I walked to the pharmacy to pick up a refill prescription and E couldn't go with me because she couldn't get into the bathroom to brush her teeth and shower, so I had to go by myself. Not a big deal, but it's nicer to have a walking buddy. Do any of you have similar annoyances when your husbands are home or is it just me?
Just had a thought about the school lunch preparation. I thought back to when I was a school aged kid, and my mother had all us kids make the sandwiches, to take with us to school. We'd each take a week, and make the sandwiches for all of us. Worked out quite well in our situation. Wondering if it might also help you out, if maybe your daughter might be able to help prepare the lunches (even if on alternate weeks, for example)?
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
Mine makes noise at 1am or decides to cook or gets to his to do list
Oh I don't have to worry about that....my husband's to-do list pretty much involves sleeping, playing on the computer, taking long baths, etc. When he has time off of work, he considers that time off of everything, including household chores. And really he doesn't have any household chores anymore. Once a week, he takes the appropriate bin to the curb for pickup, but I have to bring it back in. And his chore used to be dishes, but as soon as the kids were old enough, he decided the best chore for them was the dishes, so he doesn't do that anymore either. But he told them they don't have to do chores in their vacations, so guess who gets stuck with the dishes when the kids are off of school? Our original agreement was that whoever didn't have an outside job would do the household stuff, outside of laundry and dishes, which were mine and his respectively. Everything else would be divided based on who was working an outside job. If both of us worked full-time, we'd split household chores evenly. If one of us worked and the other didn't, the one at home would do the household chores. If one worked more hours than the other, the household chores would be divided based on that so it would work out pretty evenly. That's what we decided before we got married. The reality hasn't worked out that way. I only work 12-15 hours a week, so it's a lot less than him, but he doesn't do any of the household chores, and he gave the dishes to the kids, but I still also have the laundry myself, and dishes a lot if not everything fits into the dishwasher, or we do something that has to be cleaned by hand, like the meatloaf pan. So I'm doing 25% of the work outside the home, but 99% of the household chores, while does 75% of the work outside the home and 1% of the household chores. So he does nothing in the middle of the night like that, but he also does nothing in the middle of the day. If he were doing chores, it wouldn't bother me so much. It's the fact that he's doing nothing useful, but also keeping ME from being productive and making it harder for me to do my to-do list that drives me up a wall.
 

Mr Ferret 75

Thank you sir. You were an inspiration.
Premium Member
Oh I don't have to worry about that....my husband's to-do list pretty much involves sleeping, playing on the computer, taking long baths, etc. When he has time off of work, he considers that time off of everything, including household chores. And really he doesn't have any household chores anymore. Once a week, he takes the appropriate bin to the curb for pickup, but I have to bring it back in. And his chore used to be dishes, but as soon as the kids were old enough, he decided the best chore for them was the dishes, so he doesn't do that anymore either. But he told them they don't have to do chores in their vacations, so guess who gets stuck with the dishes when the kids are off of school? Our original agreement was that whoever didn't have an outside job would do the household stuff, outside of laundry and dishes, which were mine and his respectively. Everything else would be divided based on who was working an outside job. If both of us worked full-time, we'd split household chores evenly. If one of us worked and the other didn't, the one at home would do the household chores. If one worked more hours than the other, the household chores would be divided based on that so it would work out pretty evenly. That's what we decided before we got married. The reality hasn't worked out that way. I only work 12-15 hours a week, so it's a lot less than him, but he doesn't do any of the household chores, and he gave the dishes to the kids, but I still also have the laundry myself, and dishes a lot if not everything fits into the dishwasher, or we do something that has to be cleaned by hand, like the meatloaf pan. So I'm doing 25% of the work outside the home, but 99% of the household chores, while does 75% of the work outside the home and 1% of the household chores. So he does nothing in the middle of the night like that, but he also does nothing in the middle of the day. If he were doing chores, it wouldn't bother me so much. It's the fact that he's doing nothing useful, but also keeping ME from being productive and making it harder for me to do my to-do list that drives me up a wall.
monsters inc GIF
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
Just had a thought about the school lunch preparation. I thought back to when I was a school aged kid, and my mother had all us kids make the sandwiches, to take with us to school. We'd each take a week, and make the sandwiches for all of us. Worked out quite well in our situation. Wondering if it might also help you out, if maybe your daughter might be able to help prepare the lunches (even if on alternate weeks, for example)?
I've thought about that, but neither of them take sandwiches and A's motor skills are lacking. He's had physical therapy to work on that, but he's just never going to be great with things like that. But E takes a salad with half a chicken breast every day, and A takes these cracker type things. His is easy...no preperation necessary. But I cook up E's chicken and make ranch dressing at the beginning of the week, and all I need to do is chop some lettuce and the chicken each morning. It does save some work, but the main thing is being up to make sure A remembers to pack everything in his bag, etc. And if I'm going to have to get up anyway, I might as well make the lunches. So I get up early, fill A's cup with milk and put it in the freezer so that it will stay cold until lunchtime, make E's salad and cut up some fruit for her morning snack break, then I get my breakfast and watch the news until 8, then I get A's milk out of the freezer and get him sent off to school. E leaves before him, but she's independent enough to handle packing her bag herself. A does a pretty good job now, but you have to run down the checklist for him, and I have to close the port behind them because it can't be locked from the outside. So I'd have to be up anyway. Then as soon as they are both out the door for the morning, I take a quick nap for an hour or so and then I go up and start my day. It's not ideal, but it works. I don't think there's such thing as an ideal schedule...there are always pros and cons. Working in the evening gives me the ability to be home when the kids go to school, and when they come home, and the work environment in the evening is a lot nicer. But it does mean getting home at almost midnight and having to get up in the morning to send the kids off to school. It's just what works better for me, personally, and there are plenty for whom that's not the case and they hate working evenings. But we also only have one car, so if I'm going to drive to work, I can't work during the day because M has the car. We do what works. It's just sometimes annoying when things don't go smoothly, or I get tired of the routine.
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
I can't get out for a walk today because the weather is TERRIBLE. It's rainy and really windy. It was gorgeous on New Years Eve, but now it's cooling down. The forecast says storms and possible hail today. I had to make a mad dash to the car today when we went to turn in the old one, because it was raining so hard. I haven't driven the new one yet....I drove the old one to work last night, so it was already set to my needs with mirrors and everything, so I drove that one and my husband drove the new one to the dealership to turn the old one in, and I had to have the wipers on pretty high, but at least it wasn't hail....yet. Blech.
 

HouCuseChickie

Well-Known Member
I hear you! I'm like that with most of the school vacations, actually, because I work evenings. Vacations are nice because I don't have to get up in the morning to make lunches for the kids to take to school, which is nice since I don't get home until almost midnight. When the kids have school, I just can't function unless I get in a nap after sending the kids off to school, because I have to be up early and don't get to bed until after midnight. BUT, the downside is that everyone gets a break except me. At least with Christmas break, because my husband's company gives everyone the week between Christmas and New Years off, and my husband will often take time off during school vacations, but he's salaried, so he gets paid days off. I don't, so I still have to work, and while everyone else is enjoying their time off, I still have to do laundry, grocery shopping, cooking, cleaning, etc during the day, and then off to my job in the evening. I'm the only one working, both at home and outside of it, so that's less than fun. And my husband tends to drive me a bit crazy when he's home all the time. I love him, and I enjoy spending time with him, but he'll take a 2 hour bath so I can't get in to shower before getting dressed and going to get groceries, etc. And I'll have a movie or something on the TV and pause it to go do meal prep and come back while stuff it marinating or cooking and find he's comandeered my spot and turned off my program to watch something of his. He doesn't bother to help me out with any of the household chores, but makes it harder for me to fit in my hobby time. At least if he's at work, I don't have to plan my chores around when I can get into the bathroom, or run up and down the stairs 16 times to stir the chili because I can't watch my show downstairs where I'm close to the kitchen. Yesterday, I walked to the pharmacy to pick up a refill prescription and E couldn't go with me because she couldn't get into the bathroom to brush her teeth and shower, so I had to go by myself. Not a big deal, but it's nicer to have a walking buddy. Do any of you have similar annoyances when your husbands are home or is it just me?

I think all of us probably have things that can drive us nuts with our spouses, families and situations. What works for us may not work for others. My husband does his own laundry, he makes his own meals if we're not having family dinner- which he may make if it is, we don't have set chores for the house - decided to live with lowered expectations and respect our need for rest with our busy schedules, I turned over lunch making to the kids a couple of years ago and have since shifted even further by just having them eat school food if they're hungry, and we both cover grocery shopping...just depends on who is where when...or if we just want to order online and do pickup or delivery. We don't have bath shower issues, but I did get fed up with his not cleaning up after himself with certain bathroom matters, so now he only uses the toilet in the master bath and the rest of us use and clean the others. The tv thing seems to be all households, but it's improved with the addition of more screens to our house. Still...there are frustrations. It took a lot of fighting to get to that bathroom agreement. His toilet is utterly disgusting, but it's on him when it gets gross enough to clean up his messes. I get ticked off when he does laundry and throws kitchen towels on the floor. I usually throw them in the machine each time one gets dirty, but figure the 1-3 little towels in there will get washed the next time someone does a full load of laundry. Nope...he just tosses them on the floor. He will do things like start emptying the dishwasher but not finish. He's got a glass half full mindset about it...like he started putting stuff away and it'll get done eventually. I am of the...just do it all mindset or it's a job not done. And while he cooks for himself, he's bad about cleaning up. This morning, I came downstairs to his food boxes, dirty bowls and dirty tray spread out on the counter. Happens all the time and sometimes his food messes sit for days. It may be worth talking to your husband though. Maybe you guys could find a way to better balance things so you're not exhausted and still going while he gets to relax. We all make compromises and concessions, but you have to advocate for yourself if things are really out of balance.
 

HouCuseChickie

Well-Known Member
Hello all! It's hard to believe it's Friday. It's been a challenging week of recovery. I don't have a lot of experience with surgery, but I'd been trying to follow dr's orders. My friends with more experience were sure that everything was normal, but I got concerned and reached out to the doctor, talked for a bit with his team and shared some pics. They think my bigger incision is infected, so I was put on antibiotics. I am not the doctor, but before surgery, I questioned why I wasn't automatically being prescribed post-op antibiotics. I also think the instructions to stop using topical ointment and keeping it open to the air helped invite infection. So, I made my own executive decision to start applying ointment and gauze to help protect it in this delicate stage. I'm hoping by tomorrow, I'll be feeling the way I should at this stage...mildly uncomfortable, but not miserable. My walking was compromised a bit in all of this because it hurt and my calf had this feeling like a balloon ready to pop, but I've still been getting in steps...not normal amount...but it's movement.

Not working out or Disney related, but got a positive jolt this week. Our summer plans currently have us taking a cruise with family and then some days at Universal. Maybe it's the medical diagnosis in my head, but I had been sad that we wouldn't be seeing the mountains this summer. Then I found out that our younger one's big end of year tournament will be in Loveland, CO. I obviously don't know what my future holds, especially with not knowing my test results yet, but having the prospect of mountains this year was just what I needed.
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
I think all of us probably have things that can drive us nuts with our spouses, families and situations. What works for us may not work for others. My husband does his own laundry, he makes his own meals if we're not having family dinner- which he may make if it is, we don't have set chores for the house - decided to live with lowered expectations and respect our need for rest with our busy schedules, I turned over lunch making to the kids a couple of years ago and have since shifted even further by just having them eat school food if they're hungry, and we both cover grocery shopping...just depends on who is where when...or if we just want to order online and do pickup or delivery. We don't have bath shower issues, but I did get fed up with his not cleaning up after himself with certain bathroom matters, so now he only uses the toilet in the master bath and the rest of us use and clean the others. The tv thing seems to be all households, but it's improved with the addition of more screens to our house. Still...there are frustrations. It took a lot of fighting to get to that bathroom agreement. His toilet is utterly disgusting, but it's on him when it gets gross enough to clean up his messes. I get ticked off when he does laundry and throws kitchen towels on the floor. I usually throw them in the machine each time one gets dirty, but figure the 1-3 little towels in there will get washed the next time someone does a full load of laundry. Nope...he just tosses them on the floor. He will do things like start emptying the dishwasher but not finish. He's got a glass half full mindset about it...like he started putting stuff away and it'll get done eventually. I am of the...just do it all mindset or it's a job not done. And while he cooks for himself, he's bad about cleaning up. This morning, I came downstairs to his food boxes, dirty bowls and dirty tray spread out on the counter. Happens all the time and sometimes his food messes sit for days. It may be worth talking to your husband though. Maybe you guys could find a way to better balance things so you're not exhausted and still going while he gets to relax. We all make compromises and concessions, but you have to advocate for yourself if things are really out of balance.
Oh yeah, my husband leaves dishes and stuff all over the house. You don't even want to see the area next to his side of the bed. I don't touch that....that's HIS mess to clean up. I'll empty my own trash, the one in the laundry closet, and the one in the bathroom, but he has to do his own, and he usually only does it when I tell him he needs to do it because I can't get to his corner of the bed to make it anymore because of all the dishes and empty packaging there. Everyone seems to be allergic to emptying trash cans. None of them will ever get emptied until I do it. The one in the livingroom, if it's full, they'll just start throwing things on the floor next to it. And I got really frustrated a few years ago when I came home from work to find my regular sized kitchen bin replaced with a smaller bin with 3 compartments. We have to separate our trash into plastic, organic, and regular trash. When we first moved in, he didn't want to have a trash can in the kitchen at all. His parents don't have one....theirs is outside. Every time you want to throw something away, you have to go outside. If it's pouring down rain, I'm not going outside just to throw something away! So I said no way, I need a trash can in my kitchen. Well, he thought it would be handier to have the one with 3 compartments, and had they all been regular sized, it would have been, but the can is smaller than a standard trashcan, and then it has 3 compartments, each about the size of one of those little ones like you put in a bathroom or bedroom. Not much fits in those, which is fine for an area that doesn't generate much waste, but the kitchen is where 80% of the trash comes from, with food packaging, vegetable peels, papertowels from wiping up spills, etc. So the compartments would all be full after half a day, but no one would ever empty them except me. And when it was full, they'd just throw stuff on the floor next to it, so I'd have to pick all that up AND take the trash out constantly. And it sits under a counter top, and has the foot pedal to open them, which they can't open all the way while it's under the counter. It kept sliding all the way back, so every time you wanted to throw something away, you had to reach under the counter and pull it out before you could access it, and then 9 times out of 10 it was already full and I'd have to empty it before I could throw anything away. It was SO inconvenient, and I HATE that thing. I told him after a month or two that I wasn't going to use it anymore and it was his responsibility to empty it, because it was a pain, and as I wouldn't be contributing to its filling, I wasn't going to contribute to its emptying either. It got full, no one ever emptied it, and it got pushed into the back where no one can get to it, and now everyone just leaves their trash sitting wherever. I'm pretty much the only one who works in the kitchen anyway. I have to make several trips out per day to get rid of trash, but at least I don't have to mess with pulling the bin out and finding it full, etc. Finally last week, my husband admitted defeat and ordered a couple of bins like my old one, so we can still separate the trash, but have decent sized bins. My husband has a habit of thinking of things that he THINKS will be handy, but that he doesn't ever have to deal with, so he does it, and then it turns out he hasn't thought it through and it's not nearly as handy as he was thinking it would be. "We should put screens on the windows so the mosquitos can't get in!" I told him it wouldn't work....the windows open to the outside, but have a lever thingy that goes to the INSIDE, so if you put a screen there, you can't open the window. Oh, no, we can do it....I'll figure it out! he says. He buys all the framing and screen etc....starts in A's room, removes the lever so it's not in the way of the screen...and then realizes if he puts a screen there, you can't get to the window to open it. "We should put a different lock on the port so we can lock it from the outside so we don't have to go around to the front every time to lock it from the inside!" I told him I didn't think it would work because the door doesn't "latch". It's a sliding bar system like a bathroom stall door. The latch isn't INSIDE the door, it just has a bar the slides across into a loop on the wall. He bought a lock mechanism, pried off the sliding bar and loop....then realised there's no way to install a lock that fits into the door and the wall....there's no hole in the brick wall, nor in the door tofit the lock mechanism into. But he's the only one of us who doesn't have a bike and never has to go out the back, so he had never really paid attention to how the door was set up. He figures as an engineer, he can figure something out, but he doesn't look first. He buys all the stuff, and starts pulling things apart, and then realizes afterward that what he wanted to do won't work, and then he sets it aside "until he can get the right stuff" and then it just sits there for years because he never gets back around to getting whatever he needed.

I know he doesn't INTEND for me to do everything. Just the other day, when I had to work and he didn't, I went to the grocery store and he had wanted something particular for dinner that didn't sound good at all, so I was eating something different. I started cooking and he came in and said I didn't have to cook his food, I don't have to do everything, he's a big boy and can do it himself. I know he CAN, it's just that he usually DOESN'T. He's perfectly capable of taking his own dishes to the kitchen, of emptying his own trash, etc, but when a dish has been sitting there for 2 weeks and it's a dish I need for some reason, I can't wait for another month for him to remember to take it down and put it in the dishwasher. I don't want to be the nagging wife always treating him like a child, telling him to clean his room or reminding him 6 times to do this or that. And I know from past experience that his strategy is to nod and say "Sure" and then ignore whatever I said. He told me that's how I should handle his mom when she nags me to do certain things, like when she insisted that I should be riding a bike to my school every day instead of walking, and I kept telling her I preferred to walk, and she kept insisting that Dutch people ride bikes, I had to fit in and adapt, so I needed to ride a bike. He told me just to agree and then do what I wanted anyway. Agreeing would shut her up for a month or two and then when she brought it up again, I could just tell her "Yep, I'll do that." and then ignore it and walk. That's how he always dealt with his mom, and I notice he does the same thing to me. "Yeah, I'll mow the lawn tomorrow." and then when he doesn't, and I remind him, "I don't feel like it now. I'll do it on the weekend." and then he doesn't do it on the weekend, and something always comes up so he can't until I end up just doing it myself. It's not that he plans for me to do it all, it's just that he puts it off and puts it off, and it HAS to be done, so I end up doing it. And then he says "You didn't have to do that! I would have done it!" But there are worse things. It's frustrating, but nothing that's a real deal breaker, and nothing that most women don't have to deal with...from my friends and such, it sounds like it's pretty much standard. I don't really know many women who DON'T do the majority or all of the housekeeping tasks. I shouldn't complain, I guess, but sometimes it's nice to have the validation that it's not just me!
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
Hello all! It's hard to believe it's Friday. It's been a challenging week of recovery. I don't have a lot of experience with surgery, but I'd been trying to follow dr's orders. My friends with more experience were sure that everything was normal, but I got concerned and reached out to the doctor, talked for a bit with his team and shared some pics. They think my bigger incision is infected, so I was put on antibiotics. I am not the doctor, but before surgery, I questioned why I wasn't automatically being prescribed post-op antibiotics. I also think the instructions to stop using topical ointment and keeping it open to the air helped invite infection. So, I made my own executive decision to start applying ointment and gauze to help protect it in this delicate stage. I'm hoping by tomorrow, I'll be feeling the way I should at this stage...mildly uncomfortable, but not miserable. My walking was compromised a bit in all of this because it hurt and my calf had this feeling like a balloon ready to pop, but I've still been getting in steps...not normal amount...but it's movement.

Not working out or Disney related, but got a positive jolt this week. Our summer plans currently have us taking a cruise with family and then some days at Universal. Maybe it's the medical diagnosis in my head, but I had been sad that we wouldn't be seeing the mountains this summer. Then I found out that our younger one's big end of year tournament will be in Loveland, CO. I obviously don't know what my future holds, especially with not knowing my test results yet, but having the prospect of mountains this year was just what I needed.
Oh Loveland is a BEAUTIFUL area....you'll get your mountain fix!! I'm still holding out for Yellowstone. We may not be able to plan to the extend that I like, but at this point, I just NEED to get back to Wyoming and see some nature and E has an assignment that she needs to be done while we're there. She has to work for a week in an English-speaking company, which is hard to do here since we're not near a big city with a lot of international businesses. If she can work in my brother's restaurant for a week, she's golden...he gets free labor, she gets her assignment done and can still earn some tip money without him having to pay her, and she gets some experience with customer relations, English, etc. If we can't make it "home" this summer, she'll have to figure something else out.

I'm so sorry about the infection. I wasn't given post-op antibiotics after my adenoid removal, but that's a completely different kind of surgery, and they don't give antibiotics for much over here....I don't know what protocol in the US would be. Do they USUALLY give antibiotics after surgery? I hope you are feeling better. How long before you will get your results?
 

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