Daily life

All posts tagged Daily life

Roller-coaster of a few years since my last blog update. Had a new roof put on my house in early 2021, had to get surgery for my dog’s right rear leg in 2020, and have been busy tinkering on my VW bus, the Benz, vintage computers, and antique radios. Health-wise I found a new set of doctors in early 2020, before the pandemic begun. I had hoped for a quick recovery from a number of issues, but it’s been a slow recovery and at times a fight.

I have severe allergies, very severe, far worse than I believed. Years of them being untreated have turned them into a primary flareup trigger and a source of migraines. After a year and one half of working with my primary to make sure my bloodwork was healthy (no more anemia or vitamin D issues, yay!) and experimenting with various allergy meds, I sought out a sinus/allergy specialist, started allergy treatment a month after my first appointment, sinus surgery a couple months later. Before beginning treatment I was seeing upwards of 25 migraine days a month, seeing relief only a couple of times a year, which coincide with low pollen/allergen months.

I saw major improvements after the sinus surgery, immediately I could breath better than I have in years, then, as the weeks went one I noticed less migraines, less flareups, less attacks. The allergy immunosuppression treatment itself is rough on me, causes my sinuses to become inflamed and, when allergens are high, sick, weak, foggy. I’m still early in the treatment, but I’ve seen a lot of improvements and overall feeling better. I should see significant improvements over the following year, especially once other health issues are resolved.

Due to the immunosuppression treatment I put house and fleet repairs on hold. Being sick for 5-6 days a week took up the time I was spending working on repairs and maintenance. Stopped working outside when I couldn’t be outside for more than 10 minutes before headaches would begin and lymph nodes would swell, going out to the garage caused similar issues, then I noticed that drywall dust was making me extremely sick. I can mostly handling being outside now, the garage itself doesn’t both me as long as I’m not out in it all day, but it may be some months before I can handle drywall dust again.

I’m fighting an infection, have been for years. Heat makes it flareup, painfully, but it would often turn dormant, sometimes for months, usually weeks at a time, making it hard to find the right treatment. Many treatments would turn it dormant, some worsened it, but eventually one that worked was found. There are side effects, heat sensitivity, headaches, exhaustion, chills, they come and go, but overall they are lessening as the infection clears up. No clue how long before it’s completely clear, but it’s been a long battle.

Things are rough right now, this past year has been rough, but improving week by week. The infection should continue to clear up over the following months, and I should see significant improvements with my allergies. Partner has been helping with a lot of the yard work and house maintenance, but I’m really looking forward to when I can go outside and not worry about headaches or the infection flaring up. Anemia is under control, vitamin deficiencies are under control, bloodwork is looking great, I’m ready to move on.

Haven’t posted to my blog in a few years, but it feels like time to get back to work on it.

Updated the software and plugins, cleaned up some other files on my website, not exciting but long overdue. If I configured everything right it’ll post to both Twitter and Mastodon.

Anemia is hell, or at least the kind I have is. After the hurricane hit Florida last September I started getting sick and never fully recovered. December and January I pushed myself hard with energy drinks, due to traveling and house repairs. I started having headaches every morning that never went away, my heart-rate was constantly high, I was constantly cold and I couldn’t do chores or even cook dinner for myself. Worst part, doctors would blame my issues on my fibro and I believed them at first.

Eventually I blamed the issues on mold. I had found serious mold in my kitchen in January and had to gut the sink area and build a new countertop. When the shitbirds were squatting in my house, the sink had leaked, possible for a couple of years, causing the particle board of the cabinets and drywall behind them to become moldy. After that I gutted part of my office/lab where I had an ant issue, found a small bit of mold, not enough to make a person sick though.

Exposure to that mold would make me sick for a day or two, so it made sense that mold was causing my health issues. I was wrong, as I remained sick and wasn’t getting better. The house was smelling good again, my sinuses were clearing, but I was not in good shape.

With my health was going to hell I quit energy drinks, quitting caffeine helped before. Even after the caffeine detox I started passing out every day. Usually around lunch time or shortly after color would drain out of my skin, I would become extremely chilled, then have trouble remaining conscious. At the worst it caused mental issues, confusion, word slurring, there were a few times that I started babbling pure gibberish. The mental impairment was scary, I could barely function. That coupled with the fatigue attacks causing me to pass out made me realize that I was becoming anemic again.

Everything about being anemic is horrible. I’m not sure what is worse, the weak immune system, infections, lack of sleep, fevers, the exhaustion, or the headaches, but I think it’s that I could only function during the day. By 5pm the fevers would have taken me out of commission, rarely would I feel better before the next morning. Sleep was nearly impossible, five or six hour was normal and upon rising I would have horrible headaches. If I tried to exercise, the headaches would worsen. These weren’t the only major issues I had.

Wounds, from minor to major would become infected, even if I cleaned and treated them. The infections made them itch so badly I couldn’t sleep. Wounds would take a minimum of 3-4 weeks to heal, then leave scars. In addition this was the first time in a few years that I had reoccurring sinus infections.

The anemia really made it seem like my body was falling apart. But once I realized what was happening, I bumped up my B12 and made sure my folate intake was healthy. It has been nearly two months since I was at my worst and I am recovering.

The headaches have gone away, I’m passing out less and less often. My cold tolerance is returning and I’ve mostly kicked the sinus infections. I still get tired easily, prone to low grade fevers (possibly due to fibro), evenings can be hard, but I’m sleeping more also. My heart rate is slowly trending down and my wounds are healing. One of the best parts is that wounds no longer become infected, they just heal with normal amounts of scarring.

Two and one half months left for initial recovery.

Originally written back in November 2017, then never posted due to me getting sick.

 

As a Florida resident I have to keep an eye on potential hurricanes. Tropical storms have never been an issue, unless I need to drive through flooded roads, but hurricanes I don’t mess with. In the twenty years I’ve been in Florida I’ve seen quite a few cat 1, 2, and 3 hurricanes. I’ve had giant old trees fall yards from the house I was staying in, and see roofs ripped off buildings where I have worked. Hurricanes are stressful and post cleanup can be exhaustive, not a good combo when one has Fibromyalgia. While my thirty years old home is in a good location, on a good grid and my street has never flooded, none of that helped during Irma.

Hurricane Irma came through and it was not as severe as it was expected to be, but the local utilities haven’t been maintaining their lines. Before I moved to South Florida the utility lines were always kept clear, after moving back I discovered massive overgrowth across the entire grid. Two months ago I had the power company out to see about doing line clearings, it was scheduled for the end of September, but because of the hurricane they still haven’t done the clearing. Luckily during Irma the overgrowth didn’t damage the lines around my house, but did damage the lines further back in the grid. The power line damage from overgrowth caused us to be without power from before the hurricane hit us through the entire week.

The house itself took no damage during Irma, front yard looked untouched, yet the backyard looked like a tornado went through it. Trees and bushes in the backyard were all pushed westward, branches twisted around branches. My orchid tree took the most damage from the wind, it looks like half a tree now that all the leaves and branches are on one side of it. My lemon tree took almost no damage, although we lost most of the lemons. Most homes in the neighborhood had little to no damage, but there was plenty of yard cleanup.

First day after the hurricane was bearable. Without electricity we had no AC, but the weather had not warmed back up. It was fairly easy to start on limited cleanup and it seemed like I was going to be in good shape. On the second day the Florida summer heat returned, along with mosquitos. We had a tiny generator to keep our fridge running and a fan on us, even still the late afternoon left us overheated and exhausted. Thankfully I kept my Quell unit charged, so while the fatigue grew, the pain was kept managed.

The hurricane hit us on a Sunday night, power was restored to us Friday afternoon. I was struggling to function at this point, having slept only a few hours each night. When power came on, and stayed on, that gave me an adrenaline rush that allowed me put the well system back online, but not much more than that. Over the next few days I struggled to sleep, then struggled to stay awake. I managed to take the plywood off the windows, one window a day.

After that, it took over a month for me to recover. I struggled with sleep over the following weeks, each week sleep improving by a tiny bit. Each day I felt extremely drained, heavily foggy, struggling to do the most basic of chores. I could mostly keep up with work, but at the expense of house chores and personal projects. I flared up bad and was in a flareup for most of October. The flare would occasionally become extreme and my immune system was weak. Got sick a few too many times over the past month. Now it is early November and I’m starting to feel more like myself. I’m able to keep up with my chores and have resume work on my projects. I have good days and I have bad days, but the good days are starting to outnumber the bad days again.

Sleep is so important to manage fibro, the entire body weakens without enough of it. It was a hard recovery, something I hope to not have to go through again. If we get hit with another hurricane I have a nice generator ready to keep a couple of window units running.

 

After the anemia attacks the other week I reanalyzed my supplements and found that I was getting upwards of 80% of my B12 per day, some days far less than that. I had purchased a smaller dosage of sublingual B12 than I should have, this dosage was healthy for a normal person who can absorb B12 without issue. Because of the somewhat low dose my B12 levels slowly depleted over the months until it became too low again. We have doubled the dosage and I am in recovery.

I have not experienced a full crash since my dosage was doubled. While I still become fatigued and foggy in the evenings, it’s happening later and the duration is shorter. At the beginning of the week I would start to fade by 4pm, as of yesterday I didn’t fade until 6pm. Early in the week I would feel heavily fatigued for a few hours, then start to feel normal again, yesterday I started to feel normal after an hour. Before the treatment bump I was experiencing nearly non-stop fibro flares, bad ones.  A week later there is still some minor flaring, the usual aches and pains of fibro, I’m back to where I was a month or two ago.

Whenever my B12 gets bumped back up to healthy issues I have trouble sleeping for the first week or two. At first I’ll struggle to get 6 hours of sleep, but each night I should see an improvement and soon I’ll be back to my 7-8 hours a night. B12 treatment also has a small weight gain side effect, but it should be easy to prevent thanks to the healthier diet I’m on combined with regular exercise.

Most people don’t get excited over socks. I get excited if they’re cute or super comfy, which is why I’m excited today. Recently received an order from Sock Dreams, my favorite online sock retailer. They have some of the most colorful and comfy socks I have worn.

Growing up socks were these rough ugly things you wore to keep your feet warm during the three seasons that are not summer. Socks came in a variety of shades of navy blue, black, tan, or white, and rough or semi-soft. The golden toe brand socks were often the most comfortable, most other socks drove my feet crazy. As an adult I either wore dress socks or none at all, at least until I discovered Sock Dreams.

Sock Dreams had more than just soft colorful socks, they also had socks in larger sizes. Since then I have also discovered that most of the one size socks will fit a size 11, sometimes a bit tight. My favorite socks are a pair of purple and pink rainbow knee high toe socks. While they’re mostly for colder weather, they’re so cute I can wear them almost year round in Florida.

This latest order of socks includes a bunch of plain black bamboo socks, my generic go to for exercise and physical labor. Usually I buy the ankle socks, but they were out of those during the latest sale, so I bought some crew socks. I also added more rainbow socks of various heights. I am a sucker for bright, pretty, colors.

Note: Brain fog is an issue today, grammar may suffer.

The Florida summer is finally coming upon us here on the Space Coast. The summer used to not bother me, overall I enjoy the warmth and extra sunlight, but these days the heat will easily exhaust me. Sometimes I end up dehydrated as I am terrible at maintaining hydration in the heat. Other times the heat makes me sick, triggering overbearing headaches, muscle weakness, and exhaustion. I have experienced heat sickness and dehydration periodically growing up in New England and only occasionally in my twenties living in Florida. Since the fibromyalgia became strong in my early 30s I’ve experience this heat sickness regularly.

While I was in my mid-twenties I purchased a home in an area many of my friends refer to as ‘the middle of nowhere’ in Florida’s Space Coast. Where the house is there are only a handful of other homes. Most of the lots are undeveloped with extremely tall pine trees interspersed with palms and well maintained 3 or 4 bedroom homes. It’s a nice quiet place to live, 10-15 minutes from most stores and the highway, about 30 minutes from downtown Melbourne, Fl. Having a quarter acre lot I proceeded to start adding gardens around the house and throughout the backyard. I would spend most of the day outside working on the gardens and house. Back then I could hop on my bicycle and knock out 15 miles in the middle of July, with only a rare flareup of exhaustion the next day.

When the fibro started to get strong I wasn’t able to do the physical labor of gardening, struggling to do the minimum maintenance. Many gardens died out and returned to grass, but I kept the largest most established gardens looking decent. Not only was the physical labor becoming difficult, but I was losing my heat tolerance, often becoming sick when outside. At the worst I would start to suffer heat sickness from standing outside too long. At one point I was on medication that made me highly prone to dehydration, thankfully that has since changed, but bad habits still lead me to occasional dehydration.

Hydration is super important, but I learned bad hydration habits growing up. I worked summers and most weekends helping my parents with their rental properties. While we would bring water with us, there were many times where we could only drink the water after we were done with our work. Same thing in school, you were only allowed water when they said you could drink. You learn to ignore the thirst, instead relying on the watch to tell you when you can hydrate, it is a very bad habit and hard to break.

Earlier this past week I was up on the roof trying to patch my skylights, I’m fairly sure the one above my kitchen is the reason for the bad roof leak(s). For the first half hour I was fine, but towards the end of the job the heat started to get to me, I was overheating badly. I was able to finish the work, get off the roof, grab a gatorade and lay down with the ice pack to help me cool off. I recovered from that by the next morning.

Come Sunday afternoon and a friend is borrowing my garage to do an oil change. I decide to work on the bus for the hour or so we’re outside. I go in and out of the afternoon sun many times, each time leaving me feeling a bit warmer than the last. Eventually I’m moving bus parts around and realize that I can no longer lift a door. Just minutes earlier I was able to lift the door without struggle, but now my leg muscles are starting to hurt as is my head. I struggle to put my work away, my friends are finishing their work. That’s when the dizziness starts to hit, I excuse myself and go inside to lay down with an ice pack. I made one big mistake that afternoon, I drank very little water or other hydrating beverages. Usually I’ll bounce back once i rehydrate.

I felt terrible for hours and even though I was rehydrating, my muscles were aching. I figured that I needed sleep and would be okay the next day. I’ve spent quite a few hot days outside working in the sun and heat, sometimes I’m fine, sometimes I get sick. I can be stuck in traffic in a car with weak AC and overheat, triggering a flareup. I can spend the entire day working on the yard and be fine, then the next week I will barely last two hours. Sometimes the fibro feels like rolling dice, you never know what you’re going to get on your next throw.

I woke up this morning feeling worse than when I went to bed, woke in a full fibro flareup. This is not normal for me, it may be the most severe reaction to overheating I’ve experienced, but nothing about living with fibro is normal. It was hard to move this morning, random pain sometimes triggered by movement, muscle weakness returned along with lots of stiffness. My wrists and hands ache, are stiff, and feel inflamed. My shoulders, arms, and legs are in a lot of pain. To add to it, I’m highly foggy, I lose track of what I’m typing easily and forget words. Luckily bad brain fog like this is rare and should be gone by tomorrow. I ended up having to take the day off from work so that I can recover. My day will be full of turmeric and ice packs, along with gentle yoga and stretches for the achy muscles.

Note: This was originally drafted in late April, 2017

I took a short break from my normal use of technology in March. It was a nice change as I’m often on the computer after work and the weekends. Unless I’m doing house or car repairs, I’m usually I’m studying new concepts, doing research, updating my Gentoo desktop, tinkering with one of my SBCs, or working on one of my personal projects. More recently I have gotten back into automotive work. Besides usual maintenance on my Audi, I’ve been working on putting my 1962 Impala back on the road, plus it was time to put my 1973 VW Westy camper bus back together.

Long before the fibromyalgia affected my life I was a very active person with multiple active projects. Late summer of 2006 a friend and I bought this rusty bus from a dude in Orlando, saving it before it went to scrap. We talked a lot about what we would do with the bus, cleaned it out a bit and tinkered on it. It had no engine, scary looking electrical, but was solid. A few years later I became sole owner of the bus and decided to take it apart. I wanted to teach myself auto restoration on it, then I could restore my Impala. At the time I was working on my masters degree and a very demanding job. It took a few years of very intermittent work for me to pull it apart with help from friends. During that time I obtained a couple of engines, a nice transmission, and various used parts, with the bus interior becoming furniture in the house.

I finished my masters degree and started work on the bus, just in time for me to experience bilateral carpel tunnel and guyon’s canal syndrome. I could barely use a keyboard much less lift a wrench. Months after surgery, in late 2011, I tried, but could barely work on the bus for 15 minutes before I would flare up. I gave up on the bus and focused on my newly acquired Benz. The Benz didn’t require the body and interior work I had planned for the bus.

In fall of 2013 I moved away and said bye to my bus, with the intention of handing the project over to someone interested in it. Life got in the way and the bus sat in the garage while the family renting my house became squatters. Fast forward to 2016, I end up moving back to my, discovering the bus and all its parts were left untouched; all I needed to do was body work and throw the bus back together.

It’s now 2017, late winter, and I need a break from Technology. The bus and all of its parts are taking up too much space, constantly getting it my way. It was time to start putting it back together. First thing was rust repair, which, because most of my body working tools, welder, and welding supplies were stolen, would mean rust removal with my die grinder and power drill, then fiberglass. While the fiberglass repairs were drying I started cleaning up and reassembling the interior, including stripping and refinishing all the wood panels. The more I worked on it, the more excited I became about it and the more work I found needed to be done. I’m dreading installing the electrical.

Now it’s April and I’m back to using computers. The bus I work on a few days a week, it’s coming along nicely. The break from tech was nice and recharging, I no longer feel burned out using computers after work. It also feels healthier to split my free time between house repairs, bus work, and computers. The house repairs are exhaustive and stressful, computers are my passion, but I’m on the computer 10+ hours nearly every day, cars are a nice break.