Buen Camino Peregrino!

All good things come from above. James

Ana's Place for the Ordinary.

Ana's Place for the Ordinary.

Buen Camino Peregrino!

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Mourning the loss of my time...


From world of cartoons



Gentlemen: this post may not be of your liking, for it will provide details of a very female perspective to a very natural, but slightly uncomfortable topic for you. However, by reading it, you may garner a better understanding of women and their parts. For that reason, you should continue on.


Ladies: wherever your station on the fertility timeline you will relate, so you should continue on.


March 29, 2012

Dearest Dr. Dineberg,
(not his real name)

As you recall seven months ago, I returned to your office for a full body tune up in celebration of my Jubilee.  If you remember, I passed all of the traditional tests with a myriad of flying colors. I then followed your  prescribed check list of specialists:

Dr. Cardiologist, check;
Dr. Quest, check;
Dr. Mammogram. check;
Dr. ObGyn, check and ---this is where my story begins!!

As you know Dr. D, I have not been seen in ten years by a gynecologist and you 'for shamed me' about that. You handed me a referral to see Dr. Rotley. (not her real name) and I  braved up. I opened up wide for the speculum.  I confess, my womanly gut told me from the very beginning, at this first visit, all was not as it should be. Many, many, many, many,  words were said to me that morning. The first thing I actually heard was, "Ana you are at high risk for cervical cancer." I was agitated, but not convinced.

I blindly did the right thing (with reservation) and I was scheduled for a biopsy - I manned up or better woman-upped.  Urk! Worst pain ever, thank you very much.  I now know what a shark bite feels like. Child birth was a tea party featuring all of my favorite sconces, in comparison. Ladies, ask for anesthesia---never again!

The following conversation ensued between the Dr. R. and I on the morning of the biopsy:

Me: I have to say I am a little nervous, Dr. Rotley.  I took 1000 milligrams of Motrin this morning.I 'Googled' and 'Binged' this procedure and it was suggested. That alright?


Dr. Rotley's Response: Good thing you did. Funny, when I had mine done, I screamed to high heavens!

Me to myself: Funny? Thanks for the warning, Dr.Butcher. That was creepy, thank you God, I did my homework.


My feet went square into the stirrups and there I was, laying back with my legs spread open, and my  thoughts drifted to, "this is going to hurt" and  “should I leave my socks on or off for this?” Should I do as I was told,  “take everything off and put the gown on with the opening in the back.” Does “everything” mean your socks as well?"

Before I could answer the burning sock question a long, shiny, sharp object was introduced into my lower cavity and I began to feel nauseous.  For the next few minutes that equated to an eternity, I was painfully pumped up with sharp, ovarian twisting, partum like cramps.

Two more words: never again! 


I went to work  achy and humped over in pain the same day with a pocketbook full of faith that I did not have any cancerous cells.  I knew. Heck, I know these things.  All I wanted was a routine uneventful check up.

I patiently waited for the results from Dr.R. for quite some time. Ten days later, I finally received a phone call from the assistant to return to the office.  I was so sure.  I was certain. by now. I knew that I tested positive for anything outside of the norm. What a difference ten days make.  Why else would I have to see the Dr. face to face? If negative, a simple, all is fine would have been bombastically good over the phone.

Dr. Dineberg, put yourself in my place!  The day came and  I sat in a waiting room for 40 minutes and then  tete-a-tete in front of Dr. Rotley for another five. "Mrs. B, the results prove to be negative". I was happily speechless.  Even though it was epochal news, the whole experience proved exhausting.  Dr. D., you referred her and I trust you. 

It just didn't end here. Who knew what was to go up and come down the vaginal canal?! The tide began to ripple at this point. I further explained to Dr. R that I was still experiencing post-menopausal bleeding (sorry to be graphic, but a must in order to tell this uterine tale) and she said, "your uterus is full of marbles. Let's schedule a hysteroscopy, D&C and ablation; we will fry your uterus and you are on your way."  Woooooaaaahhh! Wait! What!? That sounded kind of brutal.


I did it any way. I sure did.  I reported to surgery at Mt. Sinai on January 31st, 2012.  After surgery, my hipe team in the waiting room was told the surgery was incomplete as the machine that ablates the uterus would not function. Really? Yes, really.  These things happen, we were told.  I am a reasonable person. Okay, these things happen. 

I was rescheduled for a second surgery after the uterine frying machine was replaced.  As a result, I returned in order to complete the procedure on March 13th, 2012. This time my family and I were told the procedure was successful. Done. I have been fried, and so I thought...

One week later, on March 20th, I visited the office for a follow up only to find out the procedure did not take place. This time I was informed that, a large fibroid somehow remained undetected and collapsed in front of my uterus preventing the procedure. 

Gasp!! Whaaat?!  Halt! Screech! Indeed, I was told that the first failure was attributed to the ablation device and the second failure was at the fault of my uterus. Go Uterus! 

Dr. Dineberg, do you understand my predicament? I sit with an uneasy feeling mostly because I feel as if I have been mismanaged.  I have become the unwilling and innocent participant of a series of unfortunate events.  And, I am only expressing these sentiments because of the impeccable care I have received from you and trusting relationship that we have developed over the years.

Dr. Rotley's final words to me were, "Ana, I am shocked.  I have performed this surgery for 15 years successfully and your uterus is the only one that has stumped me."  I thanked her.  I don't know why. Maybe because I am grateful she didn't kill me.

It's all about the "U!"

Warm regards,
Ana-three-times-a-charm!



Buen Camino...more surgery; another Dr! 





Thursday, March 22, 2012

majuscule OR minuscule? what is your preference and why?


While attempting to select a rubric of my own choosing,  I stumbled upon a forever chatroom/feed about one of my favorite practices: nonce-formation and de-capitalization verses capitalization; tobe or not TO BE?
And, yes this ended up for discussion at the table after dinner! 

As one of my favorite colleagues constantly interjects to remind me: "mi-ja', no life."


Hot diggitydoodleness! The Way, this time, led me to a word walk in the park! Oh what fun to follow a group of  malcontents online making fun of other malcontents regarding the usage of 'mayusculas and minusculas'!

Somehow, this winding road dropped me off at "the topfloorback room at 4 Patchin Place  and found my old companion, 'E.E.CummingsandGoings', kindred spirit to my passion for WordArt and poetic expression.  There was so much about this conventional eschewin I had filed away with my adolescent memories.  Snap! It all came back! I remember the musings of his wordy waves and why I enjoyed his work so much.  

Much like the agitated malcontents I was stalking online, Cummings stirred up a little friction for himself in his  time.  His transformation of words would soon transform the world view of avant garde writings and visual poetry, hence, modifying the rules of grammar for us all.  

Norman Friedman, author of "Not 'e.e. cummings' Revisited", was one of those scholars that hovered over his linguistic inventions. He was known to comment often and vehemently.

Note: Cummings own
signature
"Although Cummings obviously does not follow conventional usage with regard to caps and lowercase, the oft-repeated notion that he never uses caps is pure nonsense. He uses caps all over the place, but he does not use them in the ordinary way, and that is part of his overall typographical strategy regarding spacing punctuation, and so on, in relation to the various visual effects he created to reinforce meaning." - Norman Friedman.

This leads me on the road back to the malcontents.  I have listed some of the gritty banter that foregrounded this unclear element market.

I believe the question at hand had everything to do with distinct personal style and proper usage of a rune.  The group seemed almost hostile about the dismissal of the basic rules of writing that   Kate L. Turabian so carefully illustrated in 'The Manual for Writers' a quarter of a century ago.  This group came up with the following exchange...

They are degenerates. Unable to follow a few simple rules. It is bloody aggravating to read through and it makes the writing appear less important by not being properly prepared.


TO OFFSET THE PEOPLE THAT WRITE ENTIRELY IN CAPITAL LETTERS.


TO OFFSET THE PEOPLE THAT WRITE ENTIRELY IN CAPITAL LETTERS.

Haha, I was going to make a comment like that.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Some people do it because they are lazy. Others do it because they type too slow, and use the "hunt and peck" method of typing, meaning that shifting slows them down. Still, others do it because they do not understand the correct rules of punctuation.

Actual conversation on my friend had in class (she teaches “college prep” – a required course for high school seniors that teaches them how to research colleges and apply):
 "Ms. Stockman -- I forgot, when are we supposed to start a sentence with a capital letter?"
 "Every time, Jamal"
____________________________________________________________________________________________

it's a style of write whose time is cumming 
_____________________________________________________________________________________________




Cause CAP LOCK is broken.



I write (not online, real writing) in all capital letters. I make the true capital letters a little larger than the rest to differenciate them. My dad writes the same way. So does my half-brother, which is weird since he didn't grow up much around me or my dad.
It's just easier for me, and more legible. I switched from writing normally in high school after I wrote an excuse note from school for my boyfriend. I was an idiot and did it in my own writing, so I started to use all caps after I became paranoid about getting caught. But it grew to be more comfortable.



it's a style of write whose time is cumming
____________________________________________________________________________________________


For whatever reason, today's dismissal for the laws of basic grammar and ideographs are very different from the art and times of Cummings.  L'est not forget today's landscape is paved with texts, emails, twitterings and more devices that force character limits; hence, making it almost mandatory to fracture language.  That was not the case with Cummings.  His ironical selection and deselection of characters and inventive language was part of a thoughtful  representation to prose. Ah, refreshing! Indeed, "No life!" 


Done, this meal is over! I have traveled long enough on this post dinner discussion.  The time has come to leave room for a wordy desert on another day.  The reality is that the answer is unclear and like most polemics there is no true right or wrong.  


AS FOR ME, Cummings' topographical expressions through word designs are visual music to my ears.


... And, I wonder... As for Patchin Place, the long standing Greenwich hideaway for artists is now called, 'Therapy Row" - Hmmm...could it be? Capitalization and de-capitalization; throwing my hands up in the air and sayin'...artful words drive me crazy too!  

Norman Friedman befittingly had the following plaques placed outside of Patchin Place, posthumously.

Upper (uppercase EEC):
E.E. Cummings
4 PATCHIN PLACE
ONE-TIME HOME OF "POETandPAINTER" E. E. CUMMINGS (d. 1962) AND
HIS WIFE, MODEL AND PHOTOGRAPHER MARION MOREHOUSE (d. 1969)


"--do lovers love?why then to heaven with hell
Whatever sages say and fools;all's well"

Lower (lowercase eec):

e.e. cummings 

1894-1962 

The poet and painter, who made art 

of commas and parentheses, 
lived here for the last forty years 
                                                           of his life. He characterized himself 
                                                    as "an author of pictures, 
                                                       a draughtsman of words."




Majuscule or minuscule? What do you prefer and why...leave a comment! 


'BUENcamination'




Friday, March 16, 2012

Not quite back...

The Ana goes to surgery chapter is now closed and all is well in the land of Ana.

Snap! The time has come to return to reality.  However, I am putting in a request for an extension; I kindly request to pay some more attention to rest, please.  

In as much as I have disconnected from all things Wi-Fi in the last few days, I finally checked into all my net gadgets and found a barrage of emails to and from my sister 'besties' in celebration of  our one and only 'bestie' Grace.

I interjected into the email skip rope to the beat of the following:

Dear: ...
The sweet name of Grace always brings a spark and a smile to my spirit.  I am
certain that as long as there is life in me this will remain so.

When Gracie spiraled into Mt. Sinai, she asked that I document the events
that would lead up to her recovery back to good health.  She said," I am not
going to remember this time so I want to be able to look back and laugh."
Hence, I did as she asked.  Attached is an early entry from those days.  As
you can tell it was Gracie inspired and full of the kind of humor that only
she could evoke under such duress.

Enjoy! Long live Gracie ...now waiting for us patiently at the right hand of
the Father and Blessed Mother!
Much love, ...


There was a time we celebrated her day of birth, but these days we memorialize her as she sits in her new heavenly home.  I scrolled back to a time not long forgotten and have brought this  entry back to the surface:


monday, june 7, 2010

I’m coming out – Mount Sinai…
…And Moses entered into the midst of the cloud, and went up into the mount; and Moses was in the mount forty days and forty nights. During this time on the mountain Moses received two tablets upon which God had inscribed the Ten Commandments, as well as precise dimensions for the Arc of the Covenant, a portable box-like shrine that would contain the tablets. Soon thereafter, the Arc of the Covenant was constructed and Moses and his people departed from Mt. Sinai.

Perhaps not as epochal as Moses on the mount, but never the less epochal news to us~ Gracie is being discharged from Mount Sinai today after a ten day hiatus. Out she goes with more than two tablets and a host of commandments. To her credit, she was able to check out before the typical stay of 40 days on the Mount.  She is not likely to find a golden calf at the end of her journey, which is good, but will more than likely embark on her exodus in one of Miami’s elite Golden Cross Ambulance Chariot Services.  I submit, she has indeed probably aged like Moses, but Gracie will get her groove back - soon enough.

In her bittersweet departure she leaves behind: a kidney, stitches, an appetite and a cozy bathroom linoleum in a soft ecru that Gracie befriended head on.  On the other hand, she leaves the great Mount of Sinai with three more pints of rich juicy blood (a commodity that did not arrive with her), an itchy bright red rash, a shiny rod that embraces her femur with complimentary matching screws, legal “meds” with great street market value, orchids, more flowers, thoughtful prayers, holy water from Lourdes, a hospital goodie bag and huge dose of the God factor followed by what can only be compared to as the twelve tribes of Israel at her heal. The good news is that she does not have to wander the desert as she is North Miami beach bound.    So, it’s off to St. Catherine’s at Villa Maria  to a destination vacation for ten days. 

Note to self. Someone needs to alert St. Catherine that Grace 'Nz' and a host of kin will be invading their halls, bathrooms, kitchens, waiting rooms, parking lots and their peace.  Godspeed, off to another dance…

St. Catherine's Monastery, Mt. Sinai, Egypt

St Catherine’s Rehabilitation Hospital, North Miami, Fl

Buen Camino, Gracie!
Thank you for the many birthdays shared!





Monday, March 12, 2012

Time off...




I really have to say these two words: brief hiatus! 
 

If you noticed my energy level in the blogesphere is very low. I haven't been very pro-active as much as I would like to because I  have been getting ready for my surgery: tomorrow! Manana! I am feeling like a bit of a writing slacker, but I'm physically exhausted and I need to pay attention to self.
  
I won't be submitting any posts; no surprises. I should be back by next weekend and if not maybe a week after that. In the mean while, I am temporarily dumping the computer and probably my phone



Thanks for understanding and Buen Camino! 

Ana

Friday, March 9, 2012

Screenwriting 101

Light switch by Ana
Slug-line: Conversation Studio - Night

Action Description: Hustle and bustle around the house and kitchen around dinner time.  Pots and pans pinging and sizzling noises.  Sounds of Portuguese television and Spanish speaking females as back drop.

Frana, 50 year old, hustles to check on Iphone.

Dialogue:

Frana: 
(nonplussed)
Hello, Hello...I can't hear you.  Will call you in ten.

Raul:
Frana, hello?  Finally I couldn't hear you.

Dissolve to:  Another location and continued conversation then ended.

Have you ever heard someone say, "I spoke with an old friend last night; it was great catching up!" Typically, this line opens the door to an instant stroll through memory lane. Consequently, the banter beats on and on therefore bypassing the hardest part of socializing; initiating a conversation.  

Last night, I received a call from a new friend who arrived with the feel of that old friend material.  Like a flick of a light switch, it was clear there was no need for ice breaking as it was broken even before we began to talk.  A quiet evening coupled with a pleasant surprise can definitely be found on the other side of a wireless phone and even better when it comes from the mountain timezone.  Thanks 'R'aul and ...

...buen camino.










Monday, March 5, 2012

26 years and still walking...ok..30...



Twenty six years ago we walked down the aisle of all aisles to the beat of a pop chart hit called,  Mendelssohn's Wedding March:circa 1900. From a serendipitous conversation in a coffee shop on board a cruise ship, two ordinary lives became one in an extraordinary way, as seamlessly as, adding water to instant coffee. By the by, I highly recommend  the midnight buffet on the love boat. It was certainly pay dirt for us.


Current Score 
Home team (Us) : 26 [] [] [] [] [] Away team (Future): until death do us part

It's half time and the team is still out.  Certainly life has thrown us a few Mulligans, but like everyone else we have done the ups and down dance, the sickness and health walk, the richer or poorer saga, the good and the bad news game and the greatest shared event of all, the miracle of creation and birth.  And that was just the first half.

The second half is about to begin and we are in position for the his and hers rocker phase, the my turn at the remote deal and the final stretch.  This last stretch is called, the no matter how bad it can get, we are going to get it together; our original promise stands. 

A slightly younger image of us ...as they would say in my town, "estan igualitos..."

Buen Camino, our chariot awaits!



Friday, March 2, 2012

Words on the Camino!

Today has been a literary wash!



Eureka! I woke up to the 'She Writes' community of sister story tellers.  I am in awe of a literary universe unexplored, by me, and have discovered that I really  need to tech-up! HTML - here I come! What a blasty blast!   Out of the deep blue cheese, words stream and feed my soul. No lie, I have adamantly stated that I just didn't have much of a story to tell. Uhumm...guess I might.

As far as the path is concerned, after a much needed Dr's visit today, I finally bought my mountain climbing non Florida Camino kickers... They feel great! Just can't wait to start training.  No offense to New Balance since I am fan.  Yikes, I recently lost two big toe nails to my affair with my NB's; the dreaded black toe!  Post data: an ugly site...no mani and pedi pour moi!



Ready to try again and explore these wild and wonderful North Face hikers; they mean business; shoes with attitude! I guess, I am now committed.  Next week, I stride the Rickenbacker...Lord, help me. 

Buen Camino to the words and to the Walk!

Thursday, March 1, 2012

One of the many things to look forward to...




  • Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies;
  • All's well that ends well;
  • All cats love fish but hate to get their paws wet.
  • You get what you pay for...
  • Dreaming is certainly free.  All of these quotes can be found in the great book of, "that is what they all say"! Question: what does one feel when when the probability of making a dream actually come true is high on the gonna happen scale? I say, Boom! Boom! Pow!  How amazing would that be!

Here is my take on the dream rule of thumb: first, understand that dreams have NO limits. 
Haven't you heard? The sky is the limit! Indeed! This is great guru advice for conquering all kinds of universes, real or virtual.  On the other hand, for someone like myself, I prefer to birth  the dreams that are concocted closer to the ground.  The odds have it: chances are one day you will dance the dream come true happy dance.  

Okay, so my I am beating a mental dream path to Compostela and while cruising the net and virtually climbing my way there, I found Chocolate de Compostela in Na páxina de Santiago Turismo! Shut my mouth and gasp! Talk about the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow - churros and chocolate. A fairly sweet deal; walk for a week, arrive to enlightenment AND find blessed  chocolate. Holy, Willy Wonka! 

Blurb below: the Galician way marker to favorite churros and chocolate cafes:


Hoxe é un día para chocolate con churros. O frío e a auga de novembro combátense en Santiago de Compostela dándolle certos agarimos ao corpo. Ese catálogo de tenruras otonais reserva un posto de privilexio para a poción fumeante de chocolate espeso e a efímera media ducia de churros que adoita vir ao seu carón.


Onde tomalos? Iso o saben ben os composteláns. Na páxina de Santiago Turismo en Facebook falaron algúns expertos na arte de deixar o culler de pé na taza. Así, por exemplo, o pub Metate fai valer a súa condición de antiga fábrica de chocolate nas recomendacións de Susana Lorme Vilas, Manuel Lage e Celalba Rivera. Noa Núñez Sánchez e Ariadne Marie sacan a cara polo chocolate dos establecementos Iacobus, mentres que Juan Fraga suxire o café bar Paradiso e Lauren Vero aposta por El Muelle. Alguén incluso lémbrase das vellas glorias da cidade, como El Yate e o Galicia. Porque o chocolate pode ser unha arma contra os días chuviñosos, pero nunca axudou demasiado contra as doces trampas da morriña.

Once the feet recover, going to make my dream come true complete! 
It's Churros and Chocolate time on the camino! 


Buen Camino!