Saturday, February 24, 2024

Grand Jury Pay, Fixing Fixes, Ethiopia Post Mortem

[Note: This is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland.]

2/24/24
 
Aloha Ohana ---
 
This was a busy week.  I think. I'm not sure since much of the time I was in a mental fog or taking yet another nap. My 12-hour jet lag is lifting, but slowly.  You might be amused to learn what the first three foods we indulged in after getting back to the good ol' USA:  pizza, Taco Bell, and barbecued steak. Shameful and sad.  But really tasty!! 

Neither of us has developed any new symptoms this week, so we survived the 22 hours in a sealed metal tube without catching anything from fellow passengers.  We were particularly concerned about the San Francisco leg -- the plane was absolutely full and there were many young kids on board (aka precious bundles of germs). 
 
Among other catch-up tasks was going through the mail back log.  Lots of tax forms and charity appeals, plus the usual travel brochures, and hidden in the pile was my pay for showing up at the Grand Jury selection session.  Whoopeee!  I quickly deposited that $31.32 and figure I 'll use it to buy some of my favorite beer.  Seems appropriate.  
 
I also spent a bit of time re-fixing my pool solar system that I fixed before we left.  Near the end of our Ethiopia tour I got a text from my handyman who was doing his weekly inspection and found water shooting off our roof and the pool level way down.  One of my connections had come loose and the system was on its way to emptying the pool through the gap in the pipe.  Fortunately he was able to turn off the system and refill the pool.  Over the weekend I re-did the connection (correctly, this time) and got the solar heating going again.  However, it will take some time before the temperature gets up to an acceptable level.  Always something!  Oh, I should note the techno-marvel of texting in real time with my handyman half-way around the world, with my location being in a primitive lodge in the middle of nowhere.
 
On Tuesday I saw my retina specialist and got very good news -- no new edema, so no injection needed.  The pool solar system may be leaking but my eyeball isn't.  I'm scheduled for 5 weeks from now, which would put me well over four months between injections.  Definitely good news.
 
Karen saw her doctor on Tuesday and got some antibiotic for her bronchial infection.  She acquired this fairly early in the trip after catching a cold from another person in the group.  The cold went away but she was left with a persistent cough, made even worse by the dry, dusty, and smoky conditions we encountered everywhere in Ethiopia. She got some medication there but it didn't entirely clear it up.  Hopefully this new antibiotic, plus rest and better air, will do the trick.

We're excited to host some very good friends from Ohio who arrive tomorrow afternoon and will spend about a week. They've been here several times before, so high-power sight-seeing isn't required or desired.  This is good -- given our diminished states I'm not sure we would be good tour guides.
 
It is hard to give an overall assessment of our Ethiopia trip. Here's what I said in an email to some friends
"No Ma'am, this isn't Kansas"
who are interested in our travels:  "Ethiopia lived up to our expectation of being historically and culturally unique and exotic to a degree we hadn't expected. But no one should underestimate how difficult it is to travel in Ethiopia, both physically, in terms of elevation changes, temperature extremes, poor roads, sketchy infrastructure, and psychologically, in terms of exhausting constant cultural whiplash -- from mass exhibitions of Orthodox Christian religion unlike anywhere else we've seen to tribes whose women stretch their lower lips to hold a clay disk as a way of attracting a mate. Oh yes, and food that led to overall weight loss for the trip, a rarity for us. But despite the difficulties that reached even our limits, the trip epitomized why we have traveled all these years-- to experience firsthand the full essence of what it means to be human --warts and all."
 
That's about it for this week.  Stay warm, stay healthy.  Don't listen to the crazies, including the ones who are really AI....  (Put the "I" in quotes....)


3 comments:

Chris said...

What a trip. I am glad to hear your health news and hope the the antibiotics do the trick for Karen. We are gearing up for trip to Europe this summer. I enjoyed reading some of your earlier blog posts about travel.

Coleen Hanna said...

Wow, what a trip. Challenging! But so cool to immerse yourselves in the culture. I don’t know anyone else who does that. The jet lag itself would wreck me.

Anonymous said...

Richard, is that you in the picture? Talk about going native! It actually suits you, but where is Karen?