Being disabled, I sit at home and try to do what I can here to make our, the wife and I, lives as easy as possible. The wife stills works, she has a little over 1 1/2 years until she retires. I always go to the door when she leaves and returns to open it for her and welcome her home or to give her a goodbye kiss and tell her to hurry home, I love you. You guys know the drill.
Anyway, yesterday afternoon, when she got home, I went and opened the door and as she entered, she took a bad step and started to fall and the only way I could help was to step between her and the door jam which is a metal jam for the sliding glass door. Our combined weight fell against my wrist which was against the jam with my palm turned inwards.
My wrist is now very painful, nothing feels broken, but it is very sore and bruised. It just blows my mind how something that I wouldn't have noticed several years ago, now can almost cripple me.
Posting will be lighter than usual until the wrist feels better. It took me all of 10 minutes just to type this out one (left) handed.
Take care. Karl.
Very sorry to read that news.
ReplyDeleteWhat help do you need?
I need to take the other half of that pain pill around noon ... I've actually numbed the pain a little bit. I took half of a real weak pain pill ... tramadol.
Delete😳
ReplyDeleteGet well soon.
Thanks Unferth. Doing my best.
DeleteYou did the decent thing - but it's usually enough just to throw your coat. (Sir Walter Raleigh if you need the full story). Don't try to hurry the mending - it won't listen!
ReplyDeleteMy beloved Mother, who died last year at almost 94 years old, told my brothers and I that "growing old was not for the faint of heart." As I barrel toward 74 I can say that I wholeheartedly agree with her. Get well my friend!
ReplyDeleteKarl, did you have it checked out? You may have a compartment (syndrome) fracture which could lead to irreversible muscle and neurovascular damage, torn ligament(s). An once of cure can prevent ten pounds of damage. Hands are highly acceptable to these types of trauma.
ReplyDelete