The Rain In Spain

A patient, who had been on a ventilator was extubated the other day (ie his breathing tube was removed so he could breath on his own without ventilatory support)...He hailed from Tom Stevenson's stomping ground of Bath, and surprised the ward staff , when he woke up, with a broad West Country "there he beeeeee!" accent.......which did make us all titter!


(This is the closest version I could find on you tube)
No doubt Thomas' accent is NOTHING like this, but it gives the reader a flavour of what it could be like


It never ceases to amaze me just how diverse British accents are, especially given the tiny size of the country........I am sure there are a myriad of social/economic/historical and geographical reasons for this, many of which no longer apply anymore, especially as the "middle England "archers" accent as well as that awful mumbling teen patois seems to be taking over the country.


My least favorite accent is the North Wales "coastal" accent, which is a mix of Welsh, Liverpudlian and Lancashire dialects.In my mind, this "lilt" is common as muck. The "inland" country Welsh accent, however has a lovely "sing song" quality to it..... (see the below video of Trelawnyd ladies Olwenna Hughes and Gwyneth Jones...it is almost as if the ladies are quietly singing!




The above "denbigh" video, shows an example of a change of accents within, just a ten mile radius.
And finally for those that have not heard my accent here it is.......a mix of Welsh, slight scouse (Liverpudlian) and Yorkshire.
Chris' accent is rather more plumy than mine..... but because he remains firmly "in the shadows" so to speak... you will never hear it!


Come on bloggers post some "videos" showcasing your own accents

Tired and Emotional

I was at my brother's house yesterday during the day and worked a night shift on ITU last night.
This morning I felt so tired that I felt physically sick, and just knew that I needed a proper sleep before I reduced myself to an emotional wreck.
So at 8.30 I laid down on the bed fully clothed with the dogs scattered around me and woke up 3 hours later, less nauseous, more awake and with the ever loyal dogs in exactly the same position as I "left" them.
Being pack leader has its uses......
Brain cobwebs can only be really blown away by having a walk, and without the limitations enforced by a breathless bulldog, I decided to take the dogs up the Gop on one of the most blustery days of the year.


One of the best feelings ever......being used as a dog mattress
Meg, staring into middle distance

The Main Village



William looking down the valley
It did the trick. The dogs' exuberance was catching, and the blowy weather recharged my batteries... 
Mind you, the whole excursion did make me miss  Constance's flatulence and needy nature... grief whether for an animal or human, is a fickle bugger....it slaps you when you least expect it....
hey ho

I miss Joy in my life

No I am not depressed!
I just have a severe crick in my neck which is causing me some considerable irritation and discomfort and even after 6 years away from Sheffield, I still mourn that my good friend Joy Hutton is not still "on tap" to sooth my physical woes away.
Joy (and you can just see her in the above photo) can only be described as an "earth mother". She is an occupational therapist helper,who has worked on the Spinal Injury Unit in Sheffield for more decades than you could shake a stick at. A natural counsellor and intuitive therapist , her input with the psychologically bruised  spinally injured was invaluable and in many ways unseen, for she quietly went about her business of caring, supporting and enabling, without fanfare and without fuss.
Long standing staff, like myself that knew her well, also relied on her all encompassing motherly nature, and at the end of many a fraught shift, when I was shut away in my office with the heavy weight of 50 staff and their never ending parade of needs, wants and problems on my shoulders, she would come in, we would laugh a little, and she would massage all my tensions out of my neck and head.

It was a  kindness that went a long way, and I was not alone in receiving a little" hands-on" therapy around the unit that catered for 64 patients and had over 150 staff.
Other nurses, the consultant medics, even the unit psychologist would seek her out for "chat"....whille many of the most stressed professionals would disappear into the Snoezelen room  on my ward from time to time for an intensive shiatsu massage,amid the rejuvenating darkness, colours and light.
She always had time for everyone
In my mind , it is people like Joy that makes the nhs what it is.
She is not a pure academic, nor is she a high flying manager (I know we need both before you ask) she is a natural, warm and caring person who "knows" how to relate to big and little woes in someone's life, and enables you to do the same.
This skill is innate, and because it is, unfortunately it will never be properly recognised by the powers that be.
Nursing my sore neck today, not only reminds me of how much I miss her healing hands, it also serves as a reminder of just how much I miss her warmth and friendship both on a personal level and a professional one.
All of us need a little appropriate mothering from time to time, bad neck or not!



The internet is a marvellous tool when reminiscing isn't it?
When I was searching for a photo of Joy, I found this old photo taken from the back of the "original" Spinal Injury Unit in Sheffield, when it was located on the outskirts of the city at Lodge Moor.
The photo depicts a patient being airlifted in, which happened occasionally, and it reminded me of jokes we senior staff used to play on student nurses if they were gullible and mild enough not to twig.
Before the helicopter arrived we would ask the student to "don" one of the old nurses capes, but told her to make sure that the bright red lining was on the outside (yes nurses still wore capes in the late 1980s!)
The bright red cape, would, we told them be more easily seen from the air!
Then the poor girl would be given two table tennis bats from occupational therapy and would be instructed to stand on the field borders..."directing" the pilots to a safe landing!
Most students twigged the joke before the hysterical pilots could give it away...but I always remember one girl from Chapel-en-le-Frith....giving it her all, as the ward staff rolled away on the grass behind her...

Thus is the humour on a rehab ward

Happy Days!


http://www.sheffield-steelers.co.uk/about-the-spinal-injuries-unit.html

1861 news

In between heavy showers , I have been digging through the Trelawnyd census  for  1861, the photocopies of which have been spread out all over the Kitchen table.
I have been searching for signs of our cottage history in the 1841 and 1851 census papers with no luck as many of the house names or partial addresses have been omitted for a more generic "Newmarket" ( The Village's former Name before it reverted back to its former Welsh name which means-the place or town of wheat)
The census of 1861 was a little more detailed and after an age squinting over the pile of papers I found two entries under the faint address of "Church Yard".
Now it is not surprising that the census was taken in English as it was an official document, but as most of the documented house names such as pen-y-cefn, Ochr-y-Gop  were written in their original Welsh, I had been looking for the old cottage address of Tan-y-Fynwent ( which literally means Under the graveyard).
Tan-y-fynwent was nowhere to be seen, and I was just going to give up when I spied "Church Yard street" , which must have been the former name of the lane
In one cottage resided a 77 year old shoemaker called Robert Parry, and in the other was a Thomas Parry (A miner then aged 26), His wife Margaret and their little girl, Elizabeth who was just 5...
This I found interesting for above our front door is a carved stone


The Stone inscription states

IN VINO VERITAS
1674
REBUILT BY THOMAS PARRY IN 1864

Fascinating eh? I think I have found another previous resident of the cottage!

"I can't believe I said that!"



Have you ever said something that truly surprised you?
Erm.... I am sure there are a few here that might of done such a thing.
Well I am ashamed and ever slightly amused that fairly recently something shot out of my gob, that not only surprised me.....it shocked me so much that afterwards I had to have a lie down in the old berlingo and have a good guffaw!
A couple of weeks ago I went to Theatre Clwyd to see a film. 
Nothing too surprising at that eh?
As readers recall this used to be a regular outing that Hazel and I used to undertake almost ever week. and always out of habit we used to book the same two seats... we always sat in D12 and D13!
Anyhow alone ( and feeling a little lonely) I stood at the booking desk and booked my ticket , choosing my favourite seat the aforementioned D13.
The clerk looked up and seemed to recognize me
"Oh it's you" she said presently, before asking "Where's you friend?" 
Now I should have just said " she's moved to the city" that would have been the logical (and normal) thing to say of course!
What did I actually say?
...wait for it
I said..( and I cannot quite believe I did)
"oh she died!"
Now where the hell did that come from?
The woman was mortified and was no more shocked than I, believe me, at my Freudian comment and as she tried to be all sympathetic and supportive in that silent kind of way....I was all curled up inside, trying desperately not to giggle at my own stupidity or indeed catch her watery eyes further so that I would have to explain what my friend had "suddenly" died of!
To this day, I cannot quite believe I said it!


To assuage my guilt , I told Hazel what I had blurted out when we met up in Manchester the other afternoon and she laughed long and very hard at it all!


I told my colleagues at work the story today......and they all reacted with varying degrees of disbelief and laughter!
One sister commented wryly
"You cannot take any other good looking lady with you to the cinema ever again John" she said
"Everyone there will think that you are a serial killer"
HEY HO

Time for a nap

I am at that age that when faced with the rare opportunity to have a little sleep-et in an afternoon..I grab it with both of my sweaty little hands!
We went out for ham and eggs for lunch, returned home......and the next thing I remember was waking up from under a pile of dogs and the duvet!
what next?
Watching Countdown in the afternoons?.........telling everyone I meet that "I'm 49 you know!"?
Sigh...I am getting old!

Wicked Audiences


I was clearing some flotsam from our writing desk today and found some old tickets to the production of Wicked!
We had seen the musical during our last holiday to San Francisco and whereas Chris hated it, I kind of got caught up with the silliness of it all, and enjoyed it immensely.
We have been to many,many theater productions in the US (mainly on Broadway) and I have never quite gotten used to just how rude American audiences can be (please no offence intended to American readers here)
On the whole UK theater audiences are quiet and rather subdued, but American audiences (even the one at the the New York Met's production of The Magic Flute have a tendency to chatter a lot, a fact that has nearly driven me to complete distraction on occasion!
Once when I was working in Pittsburgh I went to see the movie Serial Mom (why?) and couldn't hear any of the first half of the movie because a family of 10 behind me was chatting merrily with each other as they where eating a huge picnic lunch!!!
When I complained in my stuffy English accent... the mother of the group threw an empty KFC box of bones at me!!!!
This is why I enjoy going to the movies in an afternoon.. no one is around not in Wales!

Talking of theater going.. Nia my old theater going pal from the 1980s turned up today to say hello..... this is no mean feat as she now lives just outside Sydney Australia...but catching up with her on her whistle stop UK "tour" today reminded me , just how easy it is to meet up with true old friends and to pick up where you left off.
Nia ( which means Princess in Welsh) and family

Born Free?

Click the video before reading this blog!


Now I think it is fallacy that animals do not look up into the sky......true they don't generally day dream when cloud watching, but when there is something of interest to note ( a buzzard, a sparrow hawk etc) the field protectors such as the cockerels will look up and growl a warning to the rest of the flock.
William, on occasion has been seen sitting calmly watching a passing low plane with benign interest, and this morning I spied Camilla arching her graceful head up into the air, seemingly fascinated with something far away in the heavens.
I stopped what I was doing and followed her gaze, and there flying in an untidy "V" way out above the Gop was a flock of wild geese.
The breeze carried their cries down over Trelawnyd, and gently Camilla honked back, flapping her wings wide and bowing her head low then upwards again, her eyes never leaving the V as it ebbed and flowed across the clouds


For an awful moment I thought she would try and join them.


But then good, old dependable  Winnie ambled up beside her,
she also bowed and arched her head in acknowledgement of the interlopers, but did so rather half heartedly, and within seconds the two geese relaxed and started to graze the grass again quietly and without fuss.
...and I let out a small sigh of relief