It's not that bad, surprisingly. I have a system .
how about dumping on kitchen table- sit in chair-fold-put a foot stool underneath to raise feet up a hair=it puts less pressure on lower back.I assume. That and hunching over while folding. I guess I'll have to pay more attention to my posture
I haven't. What's so odd is all this started randomly when he was 5. He had no issues, no coughing or asthmatic episodes and no poop problems. It's so frustrating, frustrating enough with problems that can be managed but scary when those problem can become life threatening with little warning.Have you had him tested for food allergies? It's also possible that the scent of something you're cooking or have cooked could set him off. Vapors from drapes or furnishings? Grass or tree pollen you bring in on your shoes or clothing? Allergies are boogerbears to find. I hope you do find the problem.
I'm so sorry you had such a vivid, terrible nightmare. Those linger after you wake up. Try to replace it with some happy memories of this cat. It might make you feel a bit better.
Sounds like a plan.How about this? Sit on the couch sideways, one leg off the couch, the other either under you or cross wise, whichever feels better for your back. If the basket is shallow, bring the chair over and put the basket on it. If the basket is deep, bring the chair over and dump some of the unfolded laundry on it, and every time you empty the chair, you put more of the basket on it. Body fold the clothes, and put them on the couch in front of you so you aren't bending over to make your stack.
I googled why people take it recreationally (if the FBI wants to look at my search history it might seem suspicious ), and, yeah, it seems like those who use it recreationally do it for the sedative effects. Either to be able to sleep after using uppers, or to disassociate for whatever reason. I would imagine that sleeping through most of the day might be tempting for people who are locked in a cage.Being on Seroquel myself, I just got to ask a question. Who the eff takes Seroquel for fun??? It's not like it's going to make you high. It's going to knock you cold and make you fat.
I'm not sure if anything is really new (besides recently mutated viruses of course). I used to read so many old kids' books from the 1800s. How many characters were described as "being of a delicate disposition" or "having to take to their beds often"? A lot. We just have names for that now.Are these really new? I doubt it, though Chronic Fatigue may be. I think these have merely become more well known recently.
It works because most of the pain of a broken anything is the shifting of the bones. Those bones are now stabilized and not shifting, so...no (or very little) pain. And don't push it. Let the "cautious" part of that sentence be your watchword!(and I've no idea how that works, because there's now a metal plate in the back of the wrist holding the bone fragments together), I'm beginning to be able to put weight on the wrist (cautiously, of course), and I can feel it growing stronger by the hour.
Reiterating what several people have already said, it just wasn't talked about. The most you would ever hear about such things is, "Oh, poor things, they have a 'funny' uncle." And all too often, the "funny" one was the one with the money, hence the power, in the family. And all too often, mental illness or deficiency of any sort resulted in the sufferer being locked in a basement or attic if the family lacked the funds for an "asylum."I'm going to draw a comparison that people are going to think is unfair or wrong of me to say, but oh well, you all know me here. You never used to hear of a grown man that did what he shouldn't with young children. Does that mean child molestation is something recently created? Freud wrote of female hysteria and women lusting after their fathers when he heard patient after patient saying what their fathers did to them as children and decided there was no way that many men were perverted. Was he right and the modern trend of molesters being close to home is something modern and never known in the past?
Well, I was going to suggest an inexpensive card table that could be folded away, but I like arouetta 's suggestion even better!Lol, I don't have a laundry room. There's a washer and dryer in the basement of my building. I sit on the couch in the living room to fold clothes.
For a while, it was actually considered fashionable to be as pale as a tuberculosis patient. How weird is that? Who wants to look like they're on the verge of dying?I'm not sure if anything is really new (besides recently mutated viruses of course). I used to read so many old kids' books from the 1800s. How many characters were described as "being of a delicate disposition" or "having to take to their beds often"? A lot. We just have names for that now.