Waking up again under an overcast sky today after a fairly good night's sleep, although uneasy, conscious of the need to prepare myself when it would be time to get going for my fasting blood test at St David's Hospital, wondering how to manage taking the morning medication I'm meant to take with food to prevent it distressing my stomach. I drank a pint of water with my blood pressure pill and took a banana and black bread with me to consume after the blood test. It worked out fine thankfully. A 61 bus arrived in Romilly Road as I reached the bus stop, so I reached the phlebotomy clinic shortly after nine, and was fourteenth in a blood taking queue which moved quite quickly. I returned on another 61 bus and got home at ten.
Clare's study group was arriving at the same time, and I was confined to the kitchen to finish breaking my fast. By then the meds were causing their usual brain slowdown. I finished my letter of complaint to HMRC, and printed a couple of pictures of the account information required to confirm my identity and ownership of my tax account while Clare was cooking lunch after the group departed. I took the letter to the Post Office to send recorded delivery, to be on the safe side.
Clare had booked us both appointments for toenail cutting after lunch at Step Podiatry near the Cowbridge Road Co-op. It's only the second time I've ever had this done to me. Although I can still bend down and cut my own toes. I worry about a blood pressure surge making an effort while bending so low and causing a nose bleed courtesy of the clot dispersal meds. The lesions in my nose are healing but they are fragile. The longer I can go, without subjecting them to unnecessary additional pressure, the better. The first session cost me fifty quid. The touch screen card reader threw an error message first go. I think it may be due to a sensitive touch screen not responding to my aged fingers, less able to transmit heat or relay a microscopic electrostatic charge to the screen. Kath told us how Anto's fingers couldn't be detected by an electronic fingerprint reader at an airport immigration control gate. Digitizing everything possible for the sake of speed and efficiency is a recipe for disaster in my opinion.
As sunset drew near, time to take out the recycling bags, it started to rain, turning a routine chore into an annoying damp one. It rained for the rest of the evening, so I paced up and down indoors to complete my daily step goal after supper. Then I spent the rest of the evening preparing the Daily Office text for the feast of the Annunciation and writing a reflection about the mystery.
No statin to take before bed tonight. After today's blood test I switch to month's regimen of alternate days with a blood test at the end to assess the impact on my blood cholesterol level. Having inadvertently done a practice switch a few weeks ago, I'm hoping that the same alleviation of toxic symptoms will occur again. It's been terrible to live with this 'toxic head' for the past six months unabated.