Frame of Reference



 In supervision I am always being reminded to see things from my clients frame of reference, ie from their unique perspective. 
It’s a hard skill to develop and to learn as we all analyse and unpick people on the hoof so to speak. I’m trying to view Trump’s apparent victory from the American voters point of view.
Most want more money in their pay checks, cheaper prices in the shops and a life free of the anxiety of illegal migration 
Not that much different to the aspirations of the voters in the UK Brexit vote of 2016 me thinks.

I’m sad that Trump got in again. 
He’s a liar, and a buffoon. 
And America wanted you

Sing For Water - Ise Oluwa.mov


Five years ago exactly I was going through the worst time of my divorce life
And five years ago I had joined a choir 

This song was one we were being taught my Jamie and his 1940s RAF moustache 
And the choir couldn’t quite catch the power or the harmony
So Jamie told us to sing it one last time , in the cold village hall in Gwaenysgor , and as we did  
He turned the lights off in the hall

Devoid of self consciousness, our choir sang beautifully 
And when the lights flickered on most of the choir was crying 

I will always remember that moment  as it pulled me through the worst time in my life 
And it’s a time that should be celebrated like Christmas 

Trelawnyd @ Night

 

I have slept most of the day 
The virus’ worst day 
I took the Welsh out for a proper walk late on
It was well after 9 pm 
This never happens now.
But they needed the outing.

Every house I knew had a light on, curtains drawn  . Mrs Trellis the only exception, as she was playing her piano at the window, her tongue out of the side of her mouth in concentration .
The Randa’s cottage had flowers in the windows as always and the Hoose’s, Smith’s, Richard’s, Ackroyds, ,Velvet voiced Linda’s cottages were little pools of colour and light in the dark and the cold . 
I saw no living person , not one apart from Trellis 
But I felt their lives behind glowing windows and solar light in the garden. 
Even the pub looked quiet and closing and no one except me and Mary ( Roger typically missed it) saw a large vixen totter up High Street , her head held high 

We walked home and the Turpin house and Margaret’s bungalow on London Road looked cheerful, and welcoming as did the the little semicircle of houses on Rhodfa Arthur. 
Someone has hung solar fairy lights around the lytchgate of the Church 
( Islwyn?) 
And the walk home was gently illuminated by Christmas lights 

How sweet


Anger

 


King Filipe and Queen Letizia were pelted with mud by some of the frustrated and angry residents of Valencia today. I was saddened by the footage today, saddened for the people and saddened for the royal family, whose intentions were sincere.

As a nurse, and now a trainee therapist, I’ve always known that anger, is the easiest emotion to mobilise when things goes tits up
It’s the most irrational emotional  and hardest to deal with, and from what I could tell Filipe and Letizia did their very best against incredible odds. 

I remember as a staff nurse on intensive care being wing man to a consultant who was giving bad news to a family. I remember so clearly the Blind fury of the father as he raised his fist to strike the doctor as I stood between them and “ shushed” him as a mother would do to crying child. 
The shushing worked, it diffused the anger, but not the pain

Thank goodness 

I’m still feeling rough, and I write this in bed, with the kittens purring like aircraft 

Mac n Cheese


 The virus is worse today, apparantly that’s how it’s presenting itself
I had a lemsip and filled up at the Spanish reaction to the flooding.
Mostly young people
A credit to their country.
I was going to have Yorkshire puddings filled with Mac’n cheese for lunch but Roger ate them in the back of Bluebell.
I’ve lost my appetite
And lost it even more when I caught these two with their heads in the macaroni cheese



 
 

Kid, You’re On Your Own!


 I’ve got that virus that comes back with a vengeance . Several of the older members of the hospice have it and this morning we were comparing health notes like old ladies do at a bus stop.

If you are a singleton and poorly, you only have your dogs to lick your feet better. Ok Diane the  support worker I worked with last night, who has a heart the size of a fridge, gave me her curry supper to eat as well as furnishing me with copious amounts of sweet tea, but generally kid , you’re on your own.

Hence the lucozade. 
Now when I was a child, Lucozade was classed as a medical drink. A gloriously golden sweet fizzy drink wrapped up in yellow selophane, that could only be bought at the chemists. 
It was expensive
It was wonderful and it was a treat.
Your mother really loved you when she bought you a bottle, and you had to drink it quick sticks before anyone well got there nasty little mits on it.
It was the ambrosia of the 1970s

So I bought myself a bottle today
From Tescos
There was a whole section filled with lucozade
Lucozade light, lucozade sport, lucozade high energy
All in common plastic bottles
No cellophane
No tradition.
I bought a bottle of lucozade original
And drank it in the car park

I could have wept
Ok I got a sense of the real taste of childhood
But the drink was just a fizz
A shadow of its former self
And no panacea to a snotty, painful head.


 

Videos

 The lisping choir was quiet for this piece and I remember how gentle the Metropolitan Orchestra was.
Tik tok made the following video without me hardly doing anything , how scary is AI .
I will leave it to your imagination why the third video popped up
I’ve seen clients today then went to bed.just getting up for a night shift




Falling Asleep at the cinema

 

The Room Next Door is my kind of film . 
Typically lush and heavy with its colours andwith a heavy orchestral score this quiet melodrama about euthanasia on the surface is more Almodòvar than Almodòvar .
I went to Chester Picturehouse to see it. With its plush seats and warm interiors, I sat my coffee down on my little armrest, and took,in the first arty meeting between old friends Tilda Swindon and Julianne Moore  before falling fast asleep with , what I was presuming to be a snore that could out do the average warthog
.
I knew nothing except Tilda was found dead in full battle makeup and Moore was being all soft spoken to the police. 
The credits- the end.
I was mortified 
Not for me but for the half dozen other patrons who would have had to coped with an hours plus of my night noises. 
At the end of the credits. I apologised to a couple two seats behind, who gallantly waved me away with a smile
Perhaps it was the seats, perhaps I need that blood test to check just why I’m so tired, or perhaps  my psychi just doesn’t want to deal with another story of preparation for death and a story of the dying

Who knows.? 

Answers on a postcard please