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Sunday, February 22, 2026

Tired...

Applications for two library positions and one scheduling one in. Set up a profile on Zip Recruiter and updated my LinkedIn (temporarily, I'm going to really tweak it after reading the library book), updated my online curricula vitae and résumés for patient access, library, and general categories. Applied for various benefits. Not bad for four days.


Tomorrow I see my doctor about changing my ADHD medication. It should hopefully help keep me from making mistakes like what happened the other day.

My roommate told me a year ago, when I first started having trouble, to take my diagnosis report in and ask for accommodations so that I'd have some protection from the Americans with Disabilities Act. My anxiety kept me from doing it. I thought it would be seen as an admission that I couldn't do the job, when, of course, I could; I just couldn't do it as things were. I was afraid they'd just fire me or find some reason to let me go. And now we're here.

Well...at least I lasted long enough to get new knees.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Really?

Okay, now my perpetual affirmation calendar just is playing with me. But anyway, done! 😂

Numb

So I went to the library yesterday and found these. First thing I'm doing today is making a to-do list for today (ADHD essential), then a schedule for the week. Then I'm reading the LinkedIn book so I can tweak my profile there. I may go to the YMCA. I canceled it (I won't be able to pay for it), but I have a week left and with all the snow and ice and being sick I wasn't able to go all month so I don't want to waste the money I paid this month. It would probably help with self-care. I still haven't broken down or let any of this really 'hit' me. I've felt a little anger, a little sadness, but very shallow emotions--exactly like when someone in my life dies. I never cry at funerals. I push my emotions down. Sometimes they come flooding out when I'm alone or when I'm with my roommate, but otherwise, I feel kind of numb. I have one more therapy session we added before my insurance ends. That should help. But going to the Y might help with the somatic stress too, as I carry out all in my body instead of letting it out.

Friday, February 20, 2026

My affirmations calendar has a sense of humour

The photo is of my affirmations calendar page on the day I was fired.

Today's saying is 'I am exactly who I need to be in this moment.' I am meeting this head-on. I've worked since I was 16 years old--42 years. In all that time, I've never been fired, although I've been laid off (twice), had my hours reduced (twice), and my job eliminated (once). Three of those have happened at Shriners, and I've always been loyal and kept going like it didn't matter, but hey. Anyway, I've picked up my things, spoken with various people about options and benefits I may be eligible for, begun applying for jobs, etc. I've made a list of things to do, and I'm already about halfway through it after two days. Tonight I'm trying to integrate the things I had in the office that I'd like to keep in my room. The rest will go into storage until I have another office. Tomorrow I'm going to work up a schedule for the week. I've tried to move some appointments from March to next week, and looking for another job with benefits, especially healthcare, is my main priority. I cannot go without my medicine. It literally would be a death sentence. 

Anyone with leads, feel free to send me anything. I didn't get fired for anything malicious or deliberate or anything like that. If circumstances were different, I'm not sure it would even have happened. But here it is, and in a way, it might be good. I've sort of used Shriners as a comfortable crutch for years, clinging to it rather than taking risks out in the world trying for jobs that might have been better in the long run for my career, As much as I loved being a librarian, being a solo librarian for so long has hurt my chances of getting a mid-career job because I've only supervised a few high school students, not other professionals, even though I've done all the different things a librarian does in a library. 

The librarian position here was perfect for me in terms of my neurodiversity issues; the patient access positions stressed them. Ironically, the final one was better than the others. I was doing better, with it, though I struggled with my ADHD medicine failing, and it directly led to my discharge. I am scheduled next week to discuss changing it with my MD. Too little, too late. But maybe it will help for next time. I've also learned a very hard lesson: coming clean about a disability before it becomes an issue isn't a sign of weakness; it's a way to protect yourself, at least as long as the ADA survives current attacks. I actually had an offer for an interview the week I came back from my last knee replacement, and I wish I'd taken it, but I didn't feel it was right to ask off on my first day back, as it wasn't fair to work. I really regret that now. It was a library job with the state, providing children's books to kids with low vision or who are blind. I sometimes feel I was more concerned about work than vice versa. I was once told it wasn't my business to worry about the number of patients on the schedule or who was out that day when asking off, that wasn't my job, when I thought it was just common courtesy, and trying not to be a bother. Oh, well. No longer my problem. I am exactly who I need to be in this moment. I will continue to be. I will do better. And I am equipped to handle all situations effectively, even if in the short term it seems bleak. In the long run, I will prevail, and flourish, and never give anyone the satisfaction of seeing me fail.

Have a good night.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

So...I'm no longer at Shriners anymore



It wasn't by choice, but I'm not at the medical centre anymore, at the organisation I've called home for 28 years and 11 months. In that time, I've met some amazing people I will miss. Hopefully, new doors will open for me. Wish me luck!

Friday, January 30, 2026

So tired

 I came home and couldn't think straight; I was so tired. I'm on the bus because while I managed to dig my car out of 3 1/2" of compacted snow and ice, I can't get the thing reversed over a shelf of ice in the driveway. I hate ice storms. Monday, I managed to get to work thanks to a veterans group, Camp Heroes, and home thanks to our medical centre administrator. Tuesday, the Fayette County Sheriff's Office, KY's WinterCare folks got me there and back. I couldn't go out the back as per usual because of the back gate being blocked by snow and ice, so I had to go out the front, down and up the same steps I fell off of in June, without any snow or ice. When I was driven, I had help, but I was on my own after that. I took off Wednesday, eating the occurrence, because I knew the temperatures were, if anything, going to plummet further, so it's not like things were going to get better soon, and I needed to dig us out. I did manage to open my trunk to get my little collapsible shovel out, get into the shed to get the snow shovel and a regular shovel (which was great for the ice), and get the layers of ice clear in front of the gate enough that I can squeeze into our out of the backyard's gate. I haven't been able to touch the front steps yet. I cleaned my car mostly off, and got in and ran it for a while, but as I said, couldn't surmount the ledge. I'm pretty sure my tyres are finally no longer frozen to the driveway, at least. But as frustrating as this is, I think it's the Universe protecting me. I'm having power steering issues that may be serious, and not good on the snow. It may be that I shouldn't drive until I can get it looked at, especially on snow. So I'm on the city bus in the meantime.


I forgot that they'd still be on the Snow Plan at this point and went to the regular stop, which is now a Snow Plan stop, then went to the one across the street and caught the right bus after about a half hour, all at about 9° Fahrenheit. The bus wasn't so bad except when it let me off at Shriners on a giant mound of ice and snow where a snowplough had come through. Fortunately, I'd brought my hiking poles with snow tips, rather than my cane, but even with those, you had to kind of have a leap of faith to balance on that and not fall in the street. I may get off at the Kentucky Clinic tomorrow and walk the last block despite the icy sidewalks just to avoid that in the future.

Anyway, I came home, warmed up two microwavable heating pads (I chipped at ice till 11 pm last night while working on the car, and my back is hurting today), and then I collapsed for four hours, did three loads of laundry while the temperature outside was in the double digits, and helped my friend set up another e-mail account on Outlook. They're still on the Snow Plan tomorrow, so I need to figure out when to be ut there tomorrow as that bus comes earlier than the other.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

So we're about to get hit with a major winter storm

and I do mean major, followed by frigid temperatures. I mean, it's just now starting to snow, and it's 13 degrees now, but that's rather balmy compared to what it will be. Here are the alerts in effect for Lexington at the moment:


Weather Alerts- Lexington, Kentucky
Winter Storm Warning Until Mon 7:00 am EST
1 of 2
Action Recommended:  Make preparations per the instructions\
Issued By Louisville - KY, US, National Weather Service
Affected Area Portions of south central Indiana and east central, north central, northwest, and south central Kentucky
Description ...WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 7 AM EST /6 AM CST/ MONDAY...
WHAT...Heavy snow mixed with sleet and freezing rain along and south of the Bluegrass and Western Kentucky Parkways. South of the Parkways, storm total snow and sleet of 4 to 8 inches with total ice amounts up to three quarters of an inch. Localized areas may see total ice over three quarters of an inch. Across southern Indiana and north central Kentucky, mainly snow, heavy at times. Total snow accumulations between 10 and 15 inches. Localized higher amounts of snow and sleet possible.
WHERE...Portions of south central Indiana and east central, north central, northwest, and south central Kentucky.
WHEN...Until 7 AM EST /6 AM CST/ Monday.
IMPACTS...Expect power outages and tree damage due to the ice. Travel could be impossible.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... If you must travel, keep an extra flashlight, food, and water in your vehicle in case of an emergency. In Indiana, for Indiana Road Conditions please visit http://511in.org In Kentucky, for Kentucky Road Conditions please visit http://goky.ky.gov

 

Cold Weather Advisory From Mon 12:00 am until Tue 11:00 am EST
2 of 2
Action Recommended Make preparations per the instructions
Issued By Louisville - KY, US, National Weather Service 
Affected Area Portions of south central Indiana and east central, north central, northwest, and south central Kentucky
Description ...COLD WEATHER ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM MIDNIGHT EST /11 PM CST/ SUNDAY NIGHT TO 11 AM EST /10 AM CST/ TUESDAY...
WHAT...Very cold wind chills as low as 15 below zero expectedW
HERE...Portions of south central Indiana and east central, north central, northwest, and south central Kentucky. 
WHEN...From midnight EST /11 PM CST/ Sunday Night to 11 AM EST /10 AM CST/ Tuesday.
IMPACTS...The dangerously cold wind chills as low as 15 below zero could cause frostbite on exposed skin in as little as 30 minutes. 
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Use caution while traveling outside. Wear appropriate clothing, a hat, and gloves. Make frequent checks on older family, friends, neighbors, and pets. Ensure portable heaters are used correctly. Do not use generators or grills inside. 
 
Well, it never hurts to be prepared, especially if you have major anxiety issues that can only be helped with obsessive steps. I have charged my large car-battery-sized power bank (the one that can be charged either through AC current, via car adapter, or solar (that one I don't have an adapter for, but cool and that runs my CPAP for several hours a night, and I have the CPAP adapter at the ready. I have also charged every electronic device that takes one in the house. I have made sure that all five flashlights either have batteries or are charged. The crank one is in the car in case it is needed there. It also has a radio. I found the 20 LED tealights and 20 regular tealights to put in our many hoarded jars for light, as well as my five normal scented candles, plus at least two he's borrowed from me. I found a cache of matches and bought two lighting wands in addition to mine, as mine is low on fuel. He also has a few boxes of the wooden matches. The car has half a tank of gas for charging the power bank and keeping any vapour lock from happening, but not a full tank because the power steering is having issues, and I think it'll need to be fixed soon, and I may have to switch to the bus anyway after I can get out on my own. My wipers are up. I have deicer and WD-40 for thawing locks and doors, and they are in the utility room with an extra scraper/brush. I have done everything I can think of to prepare. I managed to get all of our foodstuffs except yellow onions, which I thought were pretty good. I was on the waiting list (#!0) for a service that takes healthcare workers to work in severe weather, but I've been assigned a driver, so I think I've been bumped up. I'm going to check. That'll help on Monday. It occurs to me that I did not request a ride home yet(!). Here's hoping we all get through the storm okay. 

PS I just put in my request for a ride home...it's pending. Hopefully it's not too late.

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Do not taunt the tech gods

The other night, during the Great Verizon Crash, T-Mobile sent a text that had everything in it but nyah, nyah. nyah, nyah. The snark is great in this one. Considering I hadn't had any issues, and it was already this late, I would have thought this obvious. That being said, I've only had two outages in the 20+ years I've been with T-Mobile and one case of delayed texts. I'm not particularly happy about recent events (Starlink partnership (aka Elon Musk) and the monetary support of the ballroom, the latter basically to push through a fibre merger with the FCC), but overall I've had nothing but a great experience with them. I have my phone, watch line, and internet with them (the non-fibre kind, which uses their mobile network through a gateway). Had the ballroom thing come up sooner, I might have considered changing, as I'd had my devices paid for some months, but I'd just upgraded my phone and I've got almost two years of credits (it was taxes + activation fee only, I didn't have to actually 'pay' the price of the phone itself, and I can't shell out $1199, even for principle--it was the only way I could upgrade, and my phone was over four years old and was going to lose support fairly soon.)

Anyway, it can happen to any network at any time. Cut back the snark, lest ye be struck by the cell phone gods. They abhor hubris as do all such beings.



Sunday, January 11, 2026

Favourite books



These are some of mine
  • Picture Book: Curious George by H.A. Rey and Margret Rey
  • Children's Book: The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams 
  • Young Adult Book: The Grey King (Dark of Rising Sequence # 4) by Susan Cooper 
  • Mystery: The Last Camel Died at Noon (Amelia Peabody Mysteries # 6) by Elizabeth Peters (Barbara Mertz) 
  • Fantasy: The White Dragon (Dragonriders of Pern #3) by Anne McCaffery 
  • Science Fiction: Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury 
  • Classical Literature: Timaeus by Plato
  • Late Antiquity Classics: Meditations  by Marcus Aurelius
  • Mediaeval Classics: Consolation of Philosophy by Boëthius
  • Renaissance/Early Modern Classics: Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri
  • Regency/Victorian/Edwardian Classics: The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
  • Modern Classics: To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
  • Play: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare 
  • Novella: The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka 
  • Short Story: 'The Lottery' by Shirley Jackson 
  • Non-Fiction: (I can't choose!) Most recent was probably The Art of Living by Thích Nhất Hạnh 
  • Comic: Sandman by Neil Gaiman
  • Graphic Novels: Maus I and II by Art Spiegelman
  • Most Recent Book I Read: Camouflage: The Hidden Lives of Autistic Women by Sarah Bargiela

This!

This graphic is nice, but please follow thelink to the post that accompanied it on Facebook, especially if you really want to understand me at all. This describes my reasons for what I do daily spot on. I never recognised autism in myself until a friend was reading an article about Asperger's (not a thing in the DSM-V, but still), to understand a friend of ours better, and then he started to realise they applied to me, right down to trouble with proprioception and motion issues. He had me read it, asking me to keep an open mind, and I realised it, too. That's when I sought assessment, which was really hard in our area as an adult--it took a year to even find someone here. EKU had a five-year waiting list! But I was finally diagnosed, and I'm going forward with finding support and figuring out how it affects my life, what was missing all those years, and what can help now. I do wish I hadn't been missed for 57 years. It would have made such a difference. I wouldn't have spent all that effort and thought I was messing up for no good reason, when I was supposed to be 'gifted and talented'. I wouldn't have spent all those years spending such an effort masking that I actually lost myself for a long time and built up a huge amount of anxiety. But I'm hoping now that I can release some of the anxiety because I know the underlying issue finally.