A cold dry cloudy day after an inadequate night of sleep. The impact of taking a statin before going to bed wasn't quite as intense after taking my blood pressure pill. I suppose this is because it's been in my system for nine hours. The effect when I took the meds after a couple of hours apart from each other was worse. Even so, getting myself going requires mental effort more than physical. To my shame, remembering to say the Daily Office gets relegated down the priority list until I'm sure I can cope with everything else I need to do. And it can sometimes be at midday.
The war against Iran is costing thousands of lives. Its military assets are being devastated by American and Israeli attacks, but the rhetoric of resistance continues. Though the frequency of retaliatory strikes of all kinds is diminished, attacks continue across the Middle East wherever Iran has allies. The element of uncertainty persists. It's now safe enough for repatriation flights to take place for thousands of expats and visitors caught in places under attack. The first flight out was delayed 'for technical reasons', unexplained until today. Not aircraft being unready but crew 'out of hours'. There's a safe flying time limit for pilots as there is for truck drivers. It's bound to happen if regular schedules are upended by cancellations and delay or aircraft not being in the right place when needed. It was like that during covid as I remember, trying to return from Ibiza via Barcelona to London.
I needed to talk to the clinical pharmacologist about the change of medication frequency and blood tests he proposed, having realised that the timing plan in his letter wasn't going to work. The letter he sent didn't take into account a ten day delay from writing to reception. Results of tests ordered wouldn't be available the day of my next consultation. I phoned the UHW switchboard and reached the Clinical Pharmacology unit secretary without a long delay. I explained the problem I'd uncovered, and received a sympathetic hearing. The pharmacologist in question was on leave but I was promised a call back after the weekend, to revise the arrangement proposed, and clarify whether or not it was meant to be a fasting blood test.
Clare went shopping in town this morning. I walked in Llandaff Fields for an hour to try and clear my 'toxic head' but with little success. Then I cooked veg for lunch, with pork sausages for me and veggie ones for Clare which I left her to cook when she got home, as I wasn't sure how she wanted them done.
I slept for nearly an hour after eating and then completed writing a rather difficult Reflection on a passage for Hebrews about sacrifice - the sacrifice of praise, and obedience to God's will. Then I went out for another walk under an overcast sky making it seem nearer to sunset than it actually was. I forgot to take my Fitbit off charge before I left, so I used the phone pedometer app to count the distance covered when the Fitbit wasn't logging my steps. A small exercise in mental arithmetic, to counteract slow memory and wandering concentration, and tell me when my daily step goal was achieved, regardless of whether it's recorded by the Fitbit app or not. Making an active effort to walk and think seems essential to me at the moment, when the drugs I'm obliged to take are impairing my cognition and confidence, leading to occasional confusion and panic attacks.
Remembering the day and its detail is an important exercise to keep me grounded in reality and not in my imagination. No matter how miserable life can be, given this awful drug haze, it's good for mental and spiritual health to remind myself of how much I have to give thanks for by the end of each day.