Many thanks again MooseMom, it is so good to be at home and I can definitely sleep much, much better, which is great and I have no difficulty with all the many medicines. What gives me real difficulty is my trying ever so hard to drink such an awful lot every day, which works quite amazingly well, but my new kidney function is not 20% yet and I wonder, whether or not it hopefully picks up a bit more function and is it still early days ?Best wishes from Kristina.
Moose Mom,A few pages earlier in this thread, when Katrina had an infection and wasn't feeling very well, you said something like "I could feel it in my waters that something wasn't right." If you don't mind me asking, what does that mean? And what is the origin of the phrase? I can guess what it means in general, but what does it mean precisely? Thanks.
Quote from: enginist on December 15, 2018, 09:01:33 AMMoose Mom,A few pages earlier in this thread, when Katrina had an infection and wasn't feeling very well, you said something like "I could feel it in my waters that something wasn't right." If you don't mind me asking, what does that mean? And what is the origin of the phrase? I can guess what it means in general, but what does it mean precisely? Thanks.I don't know the origin of the phrase, but I lived in the UK for almost 20 years, and it was a phrase I heard a lot. I speak an odd blend of Brit and Texan. It means the same as "I had a gut feeling", which is equally weird, I guess, when you think about it!
Katrina--My switch to a vegetarian diet about three months ago has just produced its first positive lab results. My GFR, which had dropped five points in a year, gained back every point it lost. This could be due to random fluctuations, but I attribute it to the diet, which I think reversed an ominous decline. Oddly, though, my glucose level shot up 50 points, and I'm not diabetic. What could be causing that? I did eat a bowl of sweetened corn flakes a few hours before the test. Could that have been the culprit? Either way, thanks to you and my nephrologist, who also suggested that I go vegetarian, I am now a true believer.And thanks for the tutorial on Clementi. He sounds like he could be the Stradivarius of the piano.
I'm not familiar with John Fields either. It's interesting that both he and Clementi were near contemporaries of Beethoven. Fields wrote a lovely little nocturne, which was a revelation to me. Schubert also worked with B flat major in one of his last sonatas. Alfred Brendel's rendition is my favorite, although Rubinstein was also a wizard of the keyboard. John O'Conor certainly does justice to the Fields composition, which seems nearly flawless to me. Wikipedia says that Clementi wrote the first sonata. I have to listen to the first sonata, so I'll try to find it on YouTube. But now I don't want to pull myself away from John Fields.
I would put sleep medication in the same category as pain medication, which is to say it's mandatory. I take a combination of pills that help me sleep 11-12 hours a day. Everyone knows that a good night's sleep is the best restorative. It sounds like you need more than you've been getting.