Thursday, July 29, 2021

Hoarders, Florida Again, Gardens At Home

Rasta being quite comfortable

Hoarders come in various versions, but the pathology amounts to the same thing: amassed quantities of stuff that often still carries its original price tag and/or packing material, piled up in ridiculous quantities, often never used and with no place to be properly stored, and challenging the hoarder’s health: financial, and/or physical, social, and surely mental/emotional.

One could call such a person a collector if the items hoarded are expensive, or beautiful, or unusual in a rare-and-gorgeous kind of way, until the hoarding starts to make itself obvious: you can’t take a shower or bath in the hoarder’s house because the bathtub is piled shoulder-high with empty boxes “that might be useful some time,” or the piles of bed linens that used to belong to beds that no longer occupy the space and that don’t fit any that do, or the stacks of bath and kitchen towels that were once a relative’s, but might be useful, even though our own have arrived and are too numerous for the available space, and so are now occupying the bathtubs that were emptied of empty boxes by people who don’t understand. Stained pillowcases, frayed throws, stacks of boxes of staples, and too many expensively-framed pictures – mostly prints – to fit the wall space available, even if you had someplace to store the extras and changed them out 3 times a year. I stopped counting beautiful, unused kitchen towels at 250.

This kind of hoarding deteriorates quickly: 29 empty tissue boxes carefully stored, in which to put “the tissues I prefer”; broken things that were once lovely but are now rusted or moldy; a shower curtain covered in insect poop and eggs that was once very pretty and “I can get it clean again, you have to bring it to me”; sets of a parents’ dishes that fill all the available space so our own must reside in boxes piled high in the laundry room – not a single saved plate for memories, but 12-place-setting sets that will never in a million years be used again if they ever were used even by the original owners. Seven cake stands; dozens and dozens of scented candles, in spite of our asthma; enough underpants to wear a clean pair daily for 3 months without running out; 50 pairs of shoes; moldy, mildewed books stored for too long in the heat and humidity of a garage; rusted ancient tools and kitchenware, when new, good stuff is available;  empty little cardboard boxes with pretty designs on them; empty glass bottles by the dozens; dozens of vases; cans and bottles of beer we don’t drink.

The list goes on and on, and the originating experiences that have combined and aged into the current pathologies are all understandable and things we can sympathize with; and the excuses for “collecting” so much stuff are even almost reasonable, until you look at the whole world of this person: thrift (except the collecting has led to financial straits), memories and emotions, being an army brat with no real home until middle-age, buying stuff being one of the only things we still have control over as our body deteriorates, various interests – even a form of creative art. But then a cousin opens yet another cupboard in the garage and a too-full pile of books falls out and knocks her over; the friend is forced to don elbow-length gloves, a face mask, and double-bag the disgusting bath curtain because the owner, who is ill, is threatening to drive herself to the site and remove it herself; the asthmatic owner can’t part with mildewed items that are making her cough her lungs out; she can’t part with cast-iron cookware that she can no longer lift, and continues to use the scarred and marred and toxic Teflon-coated cookware that belonged to Dad; and when presented with a clear either-or situation (either you get rid of the old towels and half the 150 newer ones of your own, or you won’t have enough room for any of your own and your guests won’t be able to use the bathtub”) a decision can’t, just can’t, be made and we want them ALL and damn you if you can’t make it happen! – and the pathology becomes very clear.

I’m sad and afraid for my dear friend, who is suffering with physical issues that won’t improve, and that are beginning to affect her memory, will-power and stamina. Acquiring stuff is about the only thing she still has control over in her life. She uses that stuff to create lovely little vignettes: a carefully chosen china teacup and saucer, placed on a carefully-folded linen lacy cloth, with a very special tiny teaspoon balanced on the saucer, placed at just the right angle on the chair-side table where she sits every night: a selection of rocks or cones or shells arranged on a lovely plate surrounded by special, beautiful postcards or little framed artwork or a tall jug – her art, pretty much the only art she has stamina for.

My friend is afraid and lonely; how could I remove part of the one thing that she can still control that also gives her joy? More practically, how could I get rid of thousands and thousands of dollars worth of perfectly good stuff, 80% never used or will never be used again? The answer is agony, but it comes down to practicality and safety: mildewed and musty books set off wracking asthma attacks; cardboard boxes piled high are a risk for fall, for muscle/bone damage if she tries to move  them herself, and the boxes are many old and mildew; there is no room to move in two rooms now in the 50’s house she moved her modern stuff into; it didn’t all fit into the moving van. It wouldn’t all fit into the house. No one will be able to stay with her again, there isn’t room.

And oh, how angry she’s going to be when she discovers how Cousin and I edited her stuff!

As you can tell, I’m back from Florida again, and it’s even more of a Third World Country with an attitude and a cesspit than it was the first time I went there in the spring. Delta variant surge? Who cares! Masks? It’s too hot! Vaccinated? Eh – if I am, no need for any care! If I’m not, it’s probably all a fake anyway.

NOTHING nice happened in Florida this time. The crow was nowhere in sight. Everyone I met was originally from PA or NJ. The humidity was unlike anything I’ve ever experienced, and hope never to experience again. I came home exhausted and I’m quarantining and will get a Covid test before going back to work.

My garden, during the two weeks I was gone --- was it really only two weeks?? --- has turned into a green mass. I can see the rhubarb’s going by, but there are still some peas coming, there are yellow lilies in bloom, and golden rod, and Black-Eyed Sues in masses, and bright orange California poppies everywhere. The garlic is mostly ready to be pulled, as are the onions. I picked one summer squash; the chipmunks took out yet another tomato plant; the Husband pulled my shallots so those are also hanging to dry in the kitchen. The catnip’s in bloom, weeds and grass everywhere, balloon flowers big and beautiful this year, raspberries ripening and blueberries too. Dill has headed up and is everywhere; summer savory is wildly everywhere as well, growing out of pebble walks, in beds, in the lawn. My lawn is a lovely purple, because it’s more thyme than grass, and the thyme is in bloom, as are the heathers. Scarlet runner beans are flowering; fava beans are podding; vines are traveling. The chipmunks left me two sunflowers that are too large now for them to damage.

I’m exhausted and haven’t made it all around the garden yet, but far enough to see some of the colored lilies are also in bloom and that the constant rains have broken all the delphiniums that were tall and beautiful before I left. The asparagus has all ferned out and is tall and lacy. I can barely see one of the wind go-rounds from the window, the plants in front of it are so tall. My leeks are starting to look like leeks; there are tiny beans on the green bean plants; I need to go examine the peach and pear trees. Bees were having a grand day yesterday.


 

I’m exhausted and my week of quarantining may not be sufficient to regain my energy. I have a tall pile of papers and notes to go through. Today I intend to lie on the couch and sleep through old DVDs; and start sorting stuff of my own because, you spend two weeks packing and shifting a hoarder’s stuff, and you discover you need to empty out more of your own stuff. It worked that way this spring; it’s going to work that way again this fall. Yardsale redux!

My new big question: she’s housebound: what on earth do I send for birthdays and Christmas now I know how little space she has?


 

Two photos here: this is what the bedroom I lived in after the move looked like; that's an inflatable mattress I was sleeping on.

It's probably not going to change in the next many months. 


 

Followed by a much happier image from home: flowers amongst the woodpile! 



 

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

I Have PTFS

 

Peonies are up, but barely; this is from last year!

 I’ve got a bad case of PTFS (post-traumatic Florida syndrome).

Back in the middle of March, I got a call from the dear friend who foolishly lives in Florida: her dad had just died unexpectedly, and would I come down. I promised years ago I’d come down and help her when her dad died.

First I said NO! COVID! And then I rethought  - well, I’ve been fully vaccinated. So I emailed my PCP for a second opinion, and she said she thought it was reasonable to go. So I got a Covid test, because dear friend isn’t vaccinated and is in poor health in complicated ways. The test was negative, so only dread was keeping me from going. Dread, as in, I’ve been dreading this day for years.

For those of you who are wondering, the airplanes were packed tight, Manchester airport was comfortable but the other airports were jammed, they do a good job insisting people wear masks – except when eating and drinking, and of course that’s what most people do when on a plane or waiting for a plane to stave off boredom. So I did a whole lot of glaring at what I considered offenders on the way down and way back. It is possible to eat and drink around a mask without taking it completely off and leaving it off for a half hour while you have a leisurely meal broken up by phone call and phone games and reading – I proved it, but very few other people were willing to take the challenge. I did a lot of glaring.

Florida is a third-world country with an attitude. Depending on where you go – sometimes, just from one store next door to the next – people are being cautious and there’s hand sanitizer and mask-wearing and it feels safe; or there are no masks being worn, there’s no hand sanitizer, the site looks like it hasn’t been cleaned in years, and I expected the guy standing next to me, who I kept moving away from to no effect, to hock up a goobie and spit in onto the floor in front of me any second. And as soon as their idiot governor cancelled the state-wide mask mandate, which he did as soon as possible, pretty much anyone who was wearing a mask took it off.  I don’t know how many times I said, “Put on a mask. Put on a mask. Put on a mask.”

When people die, especially when they die unexpectedly, the shock is kind of unfathomable. Dear friend’s Dad wasn’t well, and hadn’t been for years and years, and yet, he seemed immortal. What he died of wouldn’t have killed most people, but his brave and loving heart finally gave out. And dear friend lost, overnight, her father, her care-taker, her companion. Not an easy thing to accommodate, mentally or emotionally; even harder if you have medical conditions that turn your world upside down and inside out.

So there was much to be done, in a short period of time, and only one other helpmeet, who also lives at a distance. Florida, besides being a third-world country with an attitude, is where people go when they retire. The law firm Dad had used to draw up his will barely three years ago no longer existed, because the partners had both retired. The new one I found specializes in elder-care law, but the only lawyer in the firm is a Harley-riding 75-year-old. The medical social worker is in his 80s. The caretaker/personal assistant we hired to help dear friend out with stuff that can’t be done in the middle of the night, which is her day, is 63. The real estate agent who’ll have the estate sale and sell one of the properties is in her 70s. Florida is, apparently, a country for old dudes.

At any rate, I was there for a little over 3 weeks, and there’s still a lot to do. A week after I left, Cousin from another distant state came for a week; and there’s still a lot to do. And part of what we do is worry that dear friend is lonely and has to grieve alone. Fortunately, she has some neighbors who are grieving with her: Dad was well-loved and touched many lives.

While I was there I saw a peacock in all his glory, accompanied by his harem, stroll slowly down the main street of town – a not uncommon experience, I was told. There was a crow that sat on the telephone wires near dear friend’s Dad’s house, and every day when I went down the driveway to fetch the mail, the crow would say, “Uh-oh. Uh-oh. Uh-oh.” When I opened the mailbox, it changed to “Oh no. Oh no. Oh no.” And then when I walked back to the house, it said, “Uh-uh. Uh-uh. Uh-uh.” I’d talk to it, and it’d cock its head and listen, but all it had to say, every single day, was the same thing. Which tickled me to no end.

NH crow - Clare McCarthy photo
There were lots of little lizards, and kind of big frogs that climbed the screen windows at night. While I was there they were having a cold snap, so it was a glorious low 70’s – all the locals were running around in sweatpants and scarves, and I was very comfortable in shorts and tee shirts.  The town has these amazing giant trucks that pick up the giant trash and recycle bins outside the house twice a week – the truck drivers don’t have to get out of the truck, instead a giant articulated arm emerges and with great accuracy lifts the bins and upends them into the bowels of the beast – it was like watching a giant robotic monster. I loved it.

And I found out that if you don’t keep a pool filled with water in Florida, if there’s a hurricane, the soaked ground around the pool will pop the pool up out of the ground  leaving a big hole and gawdawful mess. I almost wanted to see that.

And I didn’t see any alligators. Dear friend told me there was a 4-footer holed up in the shed where the recycle bin lives, one year. Fortunately, not repeated while I was there.

I’ve been back now for not quite a month; there’s still a lot to do, and it’s getting done slowly from the distance. And I came back with a vow to hoe out my own house, because when you’ve been helping hoe out someone else’s, you remember how much stuff you’ve got that you don’t need, no longer use, and maybe don’t even care for anymore. So for the last 3 weeks I’ve been collecting a lot of that stuff from my place, in order to have a yard sale this weekend.  My dining room and living room are full of boxes and bins, baskets and piles, of table linens, mismatched bed linens, clothes, dishes, glasses, pottery, bottles and jars, vases, scarves and gloves, coats and socks and hats, books, dvds, hand-made paper, knicks and knacks that have all lost their purpose in my house where once they were useful or beautiful or both. I’m breaking the New England 3 rules of ownership: I’m using all the stuff that’s too new or too good to use, so now I’m drinking only out of the hand-blown glasses that were too good to use until now; I’m getting rid of or using all the dead people’s stuff, but only using the stuff that I actually like; and if the stuff I’ve been saving for years just in case I might need it some day isn’t something I need now or clearly in the foreseeable future, out it goes.

This should be fun. Anyone need a dozen table cloths?

For the blog: herondragonwrites.blogspot.com      11 May 2021

Monday, February 15, 2021

February Update - Masks

February Covid Rant:

Update – Masks

You’ve had both shots of the Covid vaccine. Two weeks have passed. Your life now returns to normal, right?

WRONG. There’s a bunch of hooey going around the Internet telling people who’ve had the vaccines that they no longer need to wear masks. IT ISN’T TRUE.

Here’s the truth:

v  👉As of 10 February 2021, the CDC has said that people who have received both vaccine shots AND two weeks have passed so the vaccines have reached maximum protection, if you’re exposed to someone with symptoms of Covid 19 or who has Covid 19, you don’t have to quarantine for 2 weeks afterward, UNLESS you start to show symptoms.

v  👉Under all circumstances, you still must wear a mask, maintain social distancing, practice excellent hand hygiene, and all other CDC and state health department mandates about Covid 19 risk management. YOU HAVE TO WEAR A MASK ALWAYS. EVERYWHERE.

v  👉If your second Covid vaccine shot was more than 3 months ago and you’re exposed to someone with Covid 19 or the symptoms of Covid 19, then you DO need to quarantine: no one yet knows how long the vaccines are effective.

Things to remember to help you understand why you can’t return to normal even when you’ve had both shots of the vaccine:

  • Ø  The vaccines are not 100% effective, so you can still catch it. You may be asymptomatic, or have such mild symptoms you don’t notice, and you can pass it on to other people.
  • Ø  There are new variants of the virus in the country and no one yet knows how effective the vaccines are against those variants. One, the British variant, which has already been found (Feb ’21) in NH, is believed to be more deadly and cause more hospitalizations. Other variants may be more contagious but not as deadly – except for the people for whom they are; and you don’t know if you are one of those people.
  • Ø  It really isn’t nice to risk passing on a potentially deadly disease to your friends and neighbors. You may personally be safer against serious infection because you’ve been vaccinated, but that doesn’t mean you aren’t capable of giving it to someone else. You are still not safe to be around for the vast majority of the population. Don’t freak everyone else out and don’t put them at risk!

Things for everyone to pay attention to about masks:

  • ü  Masks are now more widely available, so everyone should have access to them. If you don’t, please come see us at Suite 230 and we’ll try to help you with that.
  • ü  Cloth masks are generally less protective than the “paper” masks, because cloth masks are generally only 2 layers of woven material. Woven material is less protective than the paper, non-woven-material masks. Cloth masks with replaceable filters are safer – as long as you replace the filters often enough and wash the masks frequently, and only handle them safely, and they fit tightly.
  • ü  Paper, disposable masks are generally 3 layers of material (some are 4 layers), but most often don’t fit tightly. Some brands fit more tightly than others, and it depends on your face shape, but most gap at the cheeks and around the nose, even after the nose strip is adjusted. These are still slightly more effective than many cloth masks, which usually don’t have a bendable nose-strip, and so are even more “gappy.” And, once again, woven materials let in more pathogen – woven things aren’t tight enough material.
  • ü  Cup-shaped masks with bendable nose strips are the better solution; even better if the ear loops are adjustable for a snug fit. A paper disposable mask with a bendable nose piece, covered by a cup-shaped cloth mask of at least 2 layers of tightly-woven material, if it fits well, can be 90% or more effective. You still have to toss the paper mask regularly, and wash the cloth mask regularly, and handle the whole in a way that doesn’t spread pathogen from the outside of the mask to the inside when you’re putting it on and taking it off.
  • ü  KN95 masks which are becoming more available nowadays are cup-shaped, with bendable nose strips, made of non-woven material. They’re disposable, so you can’t wear one forever, you need to toss them every so many days; they still leak if they don’t fit your face well. They have 5 layers of non-woven material and so are 90% or more effective. They tend to be a little expensive: $2.50 or more per mask. They will fool you into thinking they’re washable – they aren’t! They just look and feel less like paper than the surgical-style paper masks.
  • ü  N95 masks are similar to KN95 masks but are even more adjustable – the ear loops or straps can be adjusted and the cup shape is more rigid, but moldable. These are the masks hospital workers wear under their face shields, and are not widely available, and should be reserved for fragile patients and health-care workers. They are also disposable, unless you have fancy sterilizing equipment. They are also expensive – running about $6 per mask.

Safe Mask Handling:

  • If it gets wet, toss it if it’s paper, wash it if it’s cloth, and if it gets wet while you’re out somewhere, replace it immediately with a dry one because a wet mask is not protective. At all. Carry a clean replacement with you. Clean, unused masks can be stored in plastic baggies.
  • ·         Wash the cloth masks often – you need to have at least 5 or more per person to be able to wash them often enough.
  • ·         DO NOT touch the inside of your masks, paper or cloth!
  • ·         DO NOT put the dirty outside of your mask down on your clean dining room table or kitchen counter or anywhere you don’t want Covid virus. Find a better way to store them. Putting a used mask, folded carefully in half, inside touching inside, outsides out, into a clean paper bag is one method.
  • ·         If you can’t tell inside from outside of your cloth masks, and you don’t wash them every time you use them, mark them so you won’t make a fatal mistake.
  • ·         Don’t handle your masks without clean hands!
  • ·         Wash your face once you’re home, having first carefully washed your hands after  removing your masks and storing or tossing them. Your face has been subjected to everything your mask walked through, and a dirty face will quickly be a source of virus transferral to your nose or mouth because WE ALL TOUCH OUR FACES, ALL THE TIME.
  • ·         How often to toss or wash your masks? Depends on where you’ve been. The more people you’ve been around (grocery store, church, doctor’s office, etc) and the longer you’ve spent in closed spaces with them, the more immediately you should change your mask. When I go get labwork done, or see my MD, for example, I dump the paper mask I’m wearing immediately I get back to my car, sanitize my hands carefully, then put on a new, clean mask  before I go anywhere else. Grocery store? Depends on how long I’m in it, how small it is, how many other people were there. Walking through the Tiptop to get to my office? I’ll wear the same mask for a week or two. Treating patients? Every day; more often if sneezing or coughing (mine or theirs) happens.