Sunday, March 31, 2019

Light is for other people right now.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.
Beautiful light last night. Snow now, on what is, as I've noted elsewhere this morning already, the locally-official first day of spring, which is marked by the first call of the meadowlark. They say up to four inches are possible, but I'm betting on nothing more than a slight dusting.

Bitter cold, though, made all the more obvious by comparisons to the highs in the seventies of the week just past. Good day to stay inside by the fire, not that I have a choice in it anyway. I seem to be relapsing with this bug, and my autoimmune pain is completely out of control. Add to that the tax stuff that is completely bedeviling me right now, and I'm going to be tethered to work all day long, pain notwithstanding. Light is for other people right now.

Meanwhile, everybody still wants their money. The tax man, the hospitals, it's endless. I shelled out for a follow-up with my doc a few days, plus the monster bill for my inhaler; Wings has an appointment this week, and I have more 4-figure bills to pay on top of the tax stuff this week, too. I'll have another bill coming this week or next for the second biopsy, and then another bill (or maybe two) for the reading of it. We have no answers yet, including no answers as to what almost killed me twice 16+ months ago. And whatever the outcome with this, I still have more testing to undergo related to that. Next goal is paying off the hospitals from that mess, which comes to more than $30K just between the two of them, and they dun me daily. We need to make sales, and toward that end, there will be more items to come: I've already posted two non-jewelry items by Wings's clan brother on Friday; two new pairs of earrings by Wings last night; and a half-dozen pairs of the butterfly earrings by Wings, each with different stones (the jade are already spoken for, but that still leaves amber, rainbow moonstone, amethyst, denim lapis, and blue turquoise) coming up probably over the weekend or early next week. And I need to pay both medical and tax stuff this coming week, so here are the links:
  • My Patreon, The Interstices (Writing Between Worlds) (and if you subscribe today you won't be billed until April 1st for March);
  • Wings's site, for sales, with lots of new items posted;
  • Wings's direct PayPal link;
  • A way to buy me coffee (which actually goes to all of our medical bills, which continue to mount);
  • Amazon wishlist, which mostly consists of animal and household stuff, with the kibble back off it, because Wings can't lift the boxes right now with his shoulder;
  • Partial registry #1, from Bed, Bath and Beyond. I've added two or three new kitchen-y things on it now, stuff that I didn't realize we'd need.
All we want, to be able to have some confidence in making it through the whole year with whatever they're going to find going wrong in my body, is to make some sales. That's it: sales; nothing else. The stress is constant, and it's telling. Good vibes for Raven are needed today especially (he's still hanging with us, and I need him to be safe while we're out). But we all could use some, too, me most of all. We all could also use some help with sharing Wings's site (and testimonials, if you got 'em). Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

The Arc of a Blue Sky and the Spiraling Flight of the Butterfly

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Now posted at The NDN Silver Blog, it's a work for the first real day of spring here, when the meadowlark sings — appropriately enough, beneath new-falling snow. It's a work that embodies the arc of a blue sky and the spiraling flight of the butterfly, one to hold the promise and dreams of the whole warmth of summer.

The post is here. Wings's main page is here. Inquiries via the site's Contact form. And, as always, sales are very much needed (several hundred out in new medical expenses last week, another four figures' worth coming up this week, and, of course, the possibility of major surgery looming on top of the existing $30K worth of bills), so shares of the site links are much appreciated.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Saturday, March 30, 2019

Two new pairs of earrings by Wings!

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Unexpectedly for today, we have two new pairs of earrings by Wings!  And these are at a much lower price point than usual. They're nearly identical, save for the natural variation in the turquoise beads themselves (and they are beads, believe it or not). The ones above are Peace In the Rain, and you can read the description here.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.
The second pair, shown immediately above, is Peace From the Sky. You can read their full description here. Each retails for $125 a pair, plus s/h/i (which runs about $15). If interested, reach me via the site's Contact form, or by Facebook or Twitter DM.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Stillness.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

A rare moment of stillness when outdoors. I wish I had a fraction of her energy. Also of her confidence; she's taken over every upholstered surface in the house.

This week has been absolute crap. Well, the last couple of days, particularly; today's not looking promising, either. No rain today, and I'm doubtful about the snow tomorrow, but that's not the issue. The stress on me right now, from so very many quarters, is threatening to crush me. Several hundred out the door this week; many more hundreds (thousands?) coming up, possibly surgery, still don't know whether I'm living or dying, and I'm running out of time on the tax stuff. If I don't surface the rest of the weekend, this is why. Living with this kind of stress is literally killing me, and there's nothing I can do about it. Stillness? Ha. Not allowed for me.

Meanwhile, everybody still wants their money. The tax man, the hospitals, it's endless. I have another appointment with my regular doc tomorrow, which means cash on the barrelhead. I'll have another bill coming next week for the second biopsy, and then another bill (or maybe two) for the reading of it. We have no answers yet, including no answers as to what almost killed me twice 16+ months ago. And whatever the outcome with this, I still have more testing to undergo related to that. Next goal is paying off the hospitals from that mess, which comes to more than $30K just between the two of them, and they dun me daily. We need to make sales, and toward that end, there will be more items to come, and soon: two non-jewelry items by Wings's clan brother coming up later today; and a half-dozen pairs of the butterfly earrings by Wings, each with different stones (the jade are already spoken for, but that still leaves amber, rainbow moonstone, amethyst, denim lapis, and blue turquoise) coming up probably over the weekend or early next week. And I need to pay both medical and tax stuff this coming week, so here are the links:
  • My Patreon, The Interstices (Writing Between Worlds) (and if you subscribe today you won't be billed until April 1st for March);
  • Wings's site, for sales, with lots of new items posted;
  • Wings's direct PayPal link;
  • A way to buy me coffee (which actually goes to all of our medical bills, which continue to mount);
  • Amazon wishlist, which mostly consists of animal and household stuff, with the kibble back off it, because Wings can't lift the boxes right now with his shoulder;
  • Partial registry #1, from Bed, Bath and Beyond. I've added two or three new kitchen-y things on it now, stuff that I didn't realize we'd need.
All we want, to be able to have some confidence in making it through the whole year with whatever they're going to find going wrong in my body, is to make some sales. That's it: sales; nothing else. The stress is constant, and it's telling. Good vibes for Raven are needed today especially (he's still hanging with us, and I need him to be safe while we're out). But we all could use some, too, me most of all. We all could also use some help with sharing Wings's site (and testimonials, if you got 'em). Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

A Trail Across the Sky

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Now posted at The NDN Silver Blog, it's one of Wings's more recent small works, one of the bright spring blues of freeform skies. It's a ring in the color of a robin's egg against a backdrop of silvery light, a matrix of seasonal clouds blazing a trail across the sky.

The post is here. Wings's main page is here. Inquiries via the site's Contact form. And, as always, sales are very much needed (several hundred out the door this week on appointments and medications, with more next week, a biopsy still to pay, and the possibility of surgery looming on top of the existing $30K in medical bills), so shares of the site links are much appreciated.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Friday, March 29, 2019

All new, from Wings's brother, two very traditional vintage-style works.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Wings's clan brother has been out sick and had some time on his hands (and a lot of boredom, too). It drove him back to his art, and we're hoping he keeps making more. Yesterday, he brought us his two new works, both very traditional, wrought very much in the old way (which, in the modern Native art market parlance, is called "vintage style"). First is the pipe shown above, a perfect replica of a traditional ceremonial pipe, hand-carved out of deer antler and inlaid with walnut. The outside world gets its images of pipes from old Calumet baking powder cans, but the fact of the matter is that ceremonial usage covered every context, from large groups to solitary individuals in prayer and contemplation. This is the personal size, compact enough to hold in the palm of your hand, and it's fully functional; you can use it for traditional tobacco, commercial tobacco, whatever mixture you prefer to smoke. You can read the description here.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.
The second item is likewise wrought in vintage style, likewise fully functional, and just as practical in its application: It's an elk whistle. Google the phrase "elk whistle" and you'll see there's a long, long history behind its use, one that predates colonial invasion by millennia. This one is carved out of deer antler and hung from a bright red leather thong. And yes, it works; Wings has already tried it out (no, no elk came; it's so warm now that they've long since gone way back up into the mountains to be rid of all that accompanies human habitation). You can read its description here. To buy, use the site's Contact form or reach me by FB or Twitter DM.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Storms in the offing.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

The last round of vaguely stormy skies, from two nights ago. Highs have been in the seventies the last two days, and while our own trees are not leafing out yet, in town, everything's suddenly flowering (and our allergies with it). We're just enough higher out where we live that ours are always the last to bloom. When we were in Albuquerque the first time two Wednesdays ago, the trees were all already pale green there, but nowhere north; by our second trip three days, the green had spread north of Santa Fe to Alcalde and Velarde. Now, the town of Taos and El Prado. Ours may be a bit delayed yet, though, given that we're supposed to get rain-turned-snow tomorrow and a lot ore snow on Sunday.

Today, the wind is howling, as forecast. Still no real evidence of winter storms in the offing, but plenty of other varieties, both health- and cost-related. Plumber's bill yesterday for the immediate leak, but there's that whole damage-in-the-wall thing lurking. I also had forgotten until almost the end of the day yesterday that I needed to pick up my inhaler refill; a different pharmacist waited on me, and nearly fainted when he saw the price. It's still pushing $200, even with the discount card they've kindly entered into the system next to my name. Then today was a follow-up with my regular doc, and Wings has one with her next week. Still waiting on biopsy results, and word on whether I'll need surgery (and possibly more) or not.

Meanwhile, everybody still wants their money. The tax man, the hospitals, it's endless. I have another appointment with my regular doc tomorrow, which means cash on the barrelhead. I'll have another bill coming next week for the second biopsy, and then another bill (or maybe two) for the reading of it. We have no answers yet, including no answers as to what almost killed me twice 16+ months ago. And whatever the outcome with this, I still have more testing to undergo related to that. Next goal is paying off the hospitals from that mess, which comes to more than $30K just between the two of them, and they dun me daily. We need to make sales, and toward that end, there will be more items to come, and soon: two non-jewelry items by Wings's clan brother coming up later today; and a half-dozen pairs of the butterfly earrings by Wings, each with different stones (the jade are already spoken for, but that still leaves amber, rainbow moonstone, amethyst, denim lapis, and blue turquoise) coming up probably over the weekend or early next week. And I need to pay both medical and tax stuff this coming week, so here are the links:
  • My Patreon, The Interstices (Writing Between Worlds) (and if you subscribe today you won't be billed until April 1st for March);
  • Wings's site, for sales, with lots of new items posted;
  • Wings's direct PayPal link;
  • A way to buy me coffee (which actually goes to all of our medical bills, which continue to mount);
  • Amazon wishlist, which mostly consists of animal and household stuff, with the kibble back off it, because Wings can't lift the boxes right now with his shoulder;
  • Partial registry #1, from Bed, Bath and Beyond. I've added two or three new kitchen-y things on it now, stuff that I didn't realize we'd need.
All we want, to be able to have some confidence in making it through the whole year with whatever they're going to find going wrong in my body, is to make some sales. That's it: sales; nothing else. The stress is constant, and it's telling. Good vibes for Raven are needed today especially (he's still hanging with us, and I need him to be safe while we're out). But we all could use some, too, me most of all. We all could also use some help with sharing Wings's site (and testimonials, if you got 'em). Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Friday Feature: A Braid of Elemental Powers

Photo copyright Aji, 2019;
all rights reserved.

It's our Friday Feature at The NDN Silver Blog, with a pair of complementary works by a Pueblo artist whose work is bound up with earth and water. These pieces are traditional wedding vases, pieces designed to represent the union of spirits, but these works remind us of broader, deeper links, too, of a cosmos bound to our own experience in a braid of elemental powers.

The post is here. Wings's main page is here. Inquiries via the site's Contact form. And, as always, sales are very much needed (biopsy Tuesday, inhaler refill yesterday, follow-up appointment today, a follow-up for Wings next week, and of course, whatever comes out of the biopsy, which could prove to be another five figures on top of the existing five), so shares of the site links are much appreciated.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Thursday, March 28, 2019

Attracting butterflies.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

A feel-better gift from my honey yesterday. Beautiful spring colors and scent, perfect for attracting butterflies.

Right now, attracting butterflies seems like a metaphor for good luck of whatever sort (although around here, it's usually spiders or snakes with that "prosperity" connotation). Yesterday's butterfly belt, its completion and posting coming as it did on the day of the first butterfly's visit . . . well, with everything going on right now, I'll take my good omens where I can find them, and that seems like a good one. If we could sell that belt? Well, that would almost (not quite, but almost) cover the AFIRMA analysis, although instead of that, we'd put it on existing hospital bills.

No word on results yet; I didn't really expect to have them until they had all the samples except the reserved-for-AFIRMA ones read, including the molecular analyses. I'm guessing I won't know anything before early next week, if then. Hard to sit on pins and needles all the time; the nerves create butterflies of a less welcome sort.

Meanwhile, everybody still wants their money. The tax man, the hospitals, it's endless. I have another appointment with my regular doc tomorrow, which means cash on the barrelhead. I'll have another bill coming next week for the second biopsy, and then another bill (or maybe two) for the reading of it. We have no answers yet, including no answers as to what almost killed me twice 16+ months ago. And whatever the outcome with this, I still have more testing to undergo related to that. Next goal is paying off the hospitals from that mess, which comes to more than $30K just between the two of them, and they dun me daily, so here are the links:
  • My Patreon, The Interstices (Writing Between Worlds) (and if you subscribe today you won't be billed until April 1st for March);
  • Wings's site, for sales, with lots of new items posted;
  • Wings's direct PayPal link;
  • A way to buy me coffee (which actually goes to all of our medical bills, which continue to mount);
  • Amazon wishlist, which mostly consists of animal and household stuff, with the kibble back on it; we gave several of our existing bags to a local disabled vet with a starving rescue dog who needed the help;
  • Partial registry #1, from Bed, Bath and Beyond. I've added two or three new kitchen-y things on it now, stuff that I didn't realize we'd need.
All we want, to be able to have some confidence in making it through the whole year with whatever they're going to find going wrong in my body, is to make some sales. That's it: sales; nothing else. The stress is constant, and it's telling. Good vibes for Raven are needed today especially (he's still hanging with us, and I need him to be safe while we're out). But we all could use some, too, me most of all. We all could also use some help with sharing Wings's site (and testimonials, if you got 'em). Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

#TBT: The Path of the Light

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

It's #ThrowbackThursday at The NDN Silver Blog, with a work specially commissioned by a dear friend as part of a small series of similar pieces. It's a hair cuff featuring a spectacular specimen of what appears to be Montezuma turquoise, one in spring-like shades of blue set in the embrace of hand-wrought motifs that track the path of the light.

The post is here. Wings's main page is here. This is, of course, a one-of-a-kind work that will not be duplicated, but if the style speaks to your spirit, simply inquire via the site's Contact form; Wings can create a version uniquely your own. And, as always, sales are very much needed (another biopsy two days ago, another appointment tomorrow, and a great deal more related expenses looming), so shares of the site links are much appreciated.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

The Visionary Rays of Illuminating Skies

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Now posted at The NDN Silver Blog, it's Wings's newest masterwork, completed only this afternoon after months in the works. It's an old traditional-style butterfly concha belt, reconceived and hand-wrought as only Wings can do it, the butterflies riding the visionary rays of illuminating skies.

The post is here. Wings's main page is here. Inquiries via the site's Contact form (this item is not eligible for holds, layaway, or installment payments). And, as always, sales are very much needed (second biopsy yesterday; another doctor's visit coming Friday, and far bigger bills looming), so shares of the site links are much appreciated.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Out of order today.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Out of order today. Wings is hoping to have the butterfly concha belt done later on today, and if so, I'll post that then. If not, I have a back-up piece we can feature, but given where he is on it, it shouldn't be a problem, as long as the rest of the day cooperates. The plumber will be back, so who knows?

The jays, up above, showed up late yesterday evening, not long before dark. It was a nice way to end a very, very long, tiring, and painful day. When you have a medical appointment in Albuquerque, you always have to give yourself a good four hours to get there. You never know what you're going face when you hit town, and you could be stuck in freeway traffic for an hour waiting for them to clear an accident, or have three or four lanes funneled into one for construction. And so, we left just before actual dawn, and traffic was so light that we found where we were going and got checked in more than an hour and a quarter early.

Yeah. Ugh. Sitting around a hospital waiting room all that time, except NOPE. I apologized to the woman at check-in for being so early and explained why (where we had come from), and she immediately offered to call the radiologist and see if they could get me in earlier. In under five minutes, she told me they'd be coming for me shortly. I was already in and undergoing the procedure before my scheduled early intake time, and out about the same time I was actually supposed to go in for it. So, out of order yesterday, too, but in a good way.

It was a handsome young doctor who came to fetch me (he was the radiologist who would actually do the procedure), and there were two other doctors waiting, one a pathologist and one a student. Unlike with the last biopsy, he spent no small amount of time going over the what and the why and the how, making sure that I got any questions I might have answered to my satisfaction. The last time I underwent this (at a distinctly for-profit institution), the doc informed me that he would be doing three "passes" (that's the term for insertion of the hollow needle to extract the cells) to make sure they got enough material from enough places, then check the slides; if it wasn't enough, they'd have to come back for me. In that instance, he'd pronounced it enough, and we all know how that turned out. And now, thanks to yesterday's experience, I might have a better idea as to why. 

This doc told me that he would do a minimum of five passes, and no more than ten. That's . . . a lot, when you're having someone dig around with a needle in your neck, so I steeled myself for it. Better to get it all in one go than have to redo it yet again, and they take at least two samples for ordinary cytology readings, two for molecular analysis, and one for what's known as AFIRMA, a private, proprietary test whereby they send the sample out for in-depth genetic analysis (and one I'm unlikely to have done, because it costs nearly ten grand just for the test). It's used in cases where genetic variation is a factor is reading samples or in getting all of the available info needed to treat it, but it's also used in so-called "hard cases" like mine apparently might wind up being classified ("challenging" was the first pathologist's word, but the surgeon thought it was a misread or bad sample; after yesterday, it's sounding as though it may not be).

At any rate, the joke is that the lidocaine injection to numb it is the worst (it is and it isn't). This doc is far more naturally skilled, apparently; the lidocaine hurt, but not nearly as much as last time. Last time the various passes hurt, particularly the second and third, and but it was over fairly quick. This time, notsomuch, and I now know why, which might also be why there was a problem (if there was) with the earlier sample. The mass in my thyroid is in an unusual spot, not where you most often find thyroid tumors, and that's no doubt part of what contributed both to my high RADS score last time and to the analysis staking it out as one of two of the rarer forms. Positioning can be indicative in and of itself, but in my case, the tumor is buried deep, making it hard for them to get at it. That depth also meant that he had to do a lot more work to get the cells samples out. It doesn't sound like much, and in practical terms, it's not, but when you have a needle digging around deep in your neck (it's not simple insertion and extraction; it's insertion, moving it up and down repeatedly many times to get the cells into the needle, and then extraction) . . . yeah, that can get very painful, and as he explained to me, the lidocaine mostly gets the surface nerves. 

So. Five passes, with the slides getting stained and the pathologist already reading them to see how the samples were coming along and letting him know; he took a look himself at one point. Also different here: The doctor did both the ultrasound and the needle work; at the other place, the technician assisted and did all the ultrasound work. Then at the very end, the senior pathologist popped in to take a look, and it was already clear from the previous discussions that something was not optimal (I'm talking about sample quality here, not indications of malignancy). The senior path did some more reviewing and discussing, then asked whether they could get two more passes' worth. And when I say "asked," I mean exactly that: They explained to me in detail why they wanted to do it (i.e., to make sure there was enough of a sample, with sufficient spread of the cells, to give the surgeon all the answers he needs), but told me that if I didn't want them going in for more, they wouldn't; they'd work with what they had. That, of course, would be absurd, pain or no; I've had this done twice now, and I do not want to have to come back for a third round simply because they weren't able to get a sufficient sample this time around. (And, as it turns out, I learned that they normally don't like to do thyroid biopsies any more frequently than three months apart because of the trauma and swelling and inflammation it causes and how that can impair readings, but even though it had only been a month virtually to the day since the last one, everyone felt this needed to be done now.)

So. A total of seven passes, more than twice the number last time. The last two were substantially more painful, as I expected, in part because the timing of lidocaine injection was by now more attenuated, of course, but mostly because he made a concerted effort to get more material. I expected all of that, and it was fine, and frankly, I think had the radiologist in my first biopsy been tasked with yesterday's, he would have caused me far more pain than this doctor did; this one, young or no, clearly has an aptitude for this sort of work, with movements that are smooth, conservative, gentle, and quick all at the same time. 

I also, in the course of yesterday's discussions with him, acquired another bit of information that might have bearing on the issues with the earlier sample. He specifically asked me not to swallow during each pass (i.e., from the moment the needle goes in to the point when it comes out), and that made perfect sense to me, because why would you want movement when you're trying to get a lot of information out of a very small, tight space? Except . . . during my first biopsy, that doc explicitly, affirmatively asked me to swallow several different times. So when it was done, I asked him what might be the reason for the difference. He said that it might have been an issue of specifically wanting movement at a certain point to see how the tumor itself moves in relation to the tissue around it. Or . . . as he said, my tumor is very deep. Having a patient swallow under such circumstances creates a shortcut of sorts: It pushes the tumor upward so it's easier to reach. The problem, he said, is that it also places it right up against the carotid artery, and he doesn't like to do that, so as not to put the artery at risk of a nick with the needle. Needless to say, I felt a whole lot better about the extra investment in time and pain to do it this way.

The other thing? They wouldn't take our money. We tried to give it to them, and they told us they have no facility for that; I'll be billed, and I can just send payment in when I get it. They sent me on my way with a bottle of water and an ice pack, and I sat for a few minutes in the waiting area before we collected our things and went back to the parking garage. We stopped off at Whataburger to get some lunch (yes, I went off my diet long enough to have part of a chicken sandwich and a few fries), and then got on 25 and headed for home. They tell me the basic cytology will be done within 24 hours, meaning today, although I probably won't have access to the results yet; the molecular, within three days, so by the end of the week. It'll probably be the first of next week before I hear from the surgeon, at a guess. If they have to go the AFIRMA route, that's about two weeks for analysis and results, but I'm also guessing I'll hear from them before they send that out, because the cost of a thyroidectomy (not all the costs that accrue during the surgery, just the extraction of the organ) is apparently less than the cost of the test. But I will have some bills coming due soon just for these elements of it, and meanwhile, we wait.

So it all comes down, as always, to money. We're still paying off last year's taxes even as I'm spending this weekend buried in this year's. I'll have another bill coming next week for the second biopsy, and then another bill (or maybe two) for the reading of it. We have no answers yet, including no answers as to what almost killed me twice 16+ months ago. And whatever the outcome with this, I still have more testing to undergo related to that. Next goal is paying off the hospitals from that mess, which comes to more than $30K just between the two of them, and they dun me daily, so here are the links:
  • My Patreon, The Interstices (Writing Between Worlds) (and if you subscribe today you won't be billed until April 1st for March);
  • Wings's site, for sales, with lots of new items posted;
  • Wings's direct PayPal link;
  • A way to buy me coffee (which actually goes to all of our medical bills, which continue to mount);
  • Amazon wishlist, which mostly consists of animal and household stuff, with the kibble back on it; we gave several of our existing bags to a local disabled vet with a starving rescue dog who needed the help;
  • Partial registry #1, from Bed, Bath and Beyond. I've added two or three new kitchen-y things on it now, stuff that I didn't realize we'd need.
All we want, to be able to have some confidence in making it through the whole year with whatever they're going to find going wrong in my body, is to make some sales. That's it: sales; nothing else. The stress is constant, and it's telling. Good vibes for Raven are needed today especially (he's still hanging with us, and I need him to be safe while we're out). But we all could use some, too, me most of all. We all could also use some help with sharing Wings's site (and testimonials, if you got 'em). Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Work in progress.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Work in progress in multiple ways right now. That up there is a collection of some of the constituent parts of the famous butterfly concha belt, so long in the making. [The stones are just resting atop the bezels right now; not set. With any luck, it'll actually be complete sometime tomorrow, in which case it'll appear on the site then. It's going to be spectacular (and spectacularly expensive), and the image above in bad light doesn't begin to do justice to the detail work, or to the whole.] Wings lost several weeks' worth of studio time to his shoulder injury, but he's been rocking again the last couple of weeks. When, that is, we haven't been on the road for the next in this seemingly endless series of tests for me. 

"The next" being today. I don't know how long it will take for the results; hopefully faster than last time, given that it's all in-house, so to speak. The surgeon has promised to call me personally. Regardless, it's going to be a day of high stress, no small amount of physical pain and discomfort, significant expense, and more teetering between wild hope and . . . something decidedly not that. As I said, depending on what it shows (and that may not be settled for a while, depending on how much drilling down they need to do on the cell samples), there is still very much the prospect of a lot more of all of those things to come, particularly the expense. [As I also said, there's also the prospect of increased risk and, shall we say, a less than optimal outcome, but I'm not letting my brain go there now. I have a sliver of hope here that it is literally nothing to worry about, and I'm letting a little of that filter in to keep myself sane.]

And it all comes down, as always, to money. We're still paying off last year's taxes even as I'm spending this weekend buried in this year's. I'll have another bill coming next week for the second biopsy, and then another bill (or maybe two) for the reading of it. We have no answers yet, including no answers as to what almost killed me twice 16+ months ago. And whatever the outcome with this, I still have more testing to undergo related to that. Next goal is paying off the hospitals from that mess, which comes to more than $30K just between the two of them, and they dun me daily, so here are the links:
  • My Patreon, The Interstices (Writing Between Worlds) (and if you subscribe today you won't be billed until April 1st for March);
  • Wings's site, for sales, with lots of new items posted;
  • Wings's direct PayPal link;
  • A way to buy me coffee (which actually goes to all of our medical bills, which continue to mount);
  • Amazon wishlist, which mostly consists of animal and household stuff, with the kibble back on it; we gave several of our existing bags to a local disabled vet with a starving rescue dog who needed the help;
  • Partial registry #1, from Bed, Bath and Beyond. I've added two or three new kitchen-y things on it now, stuff that I didn't realize we'd need.
All we want, to be able to have some confidence in making it through the whole year with whatever they're going to find going wrong in my body, is to make some sales. That's it: sales; nothing else. The stress is constant, and it's telling. Good vibes for Raven are needed today especially (he's still hanging with us, and I need him to be safe while we're out). But we all could use some, too, me most of all. We all could also use some help with sharing Wings's site (and testimonials, if you got 'em). Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Red Willow Spirit: Lines of Earth and Webs of Shadow

Photo copyright Wings, 2019; all rights reserved.

Now posted at The NDN Silver Blog, it's an edition of Red Willow Spirit for the elemental and prophetic imagery of spring. It's a contemplation of the lines of earth and webs of shadow that scribe the past and chart the future, the prophecy that guides our planning and planting, repairing and rebuilding.

The post is here. Wings's main page is here. As always, his photos are available for purchase in any of the usual three formats; simply inquire via the site's Contact form. Also as always, sales are very much needed (today's the day, again, with more medical expenses later this week and possibly much greater ones very soon, on top of the existing $30K), so shares of the site links are much appreciated.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Wings and Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Monday, March 25, 2019

All new by Wings, a pair of gently stormy wings.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Every now and then, Wings comes up with a work that leaves me in direct violation of the Tenth Commandment. This is one of those times. I really think I'm going to have to have him make me a pair like these . . . .

His newest, Wings of Rain, can be found here. Two of my favorite materials, sterling silver and iolite, and by definition, two of my favorite colors, too. You can find the full description here. These are made from extras of the butterflies that will appear in the new butterfly concha belt, which I think he will have done in time for me to feature on Wednesday (newly made; very old traditional style). Contact form to inquire about either is here, or you can get me via FB or Twitter DMs.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Predictions are for suckers.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Ice-burst on the deck two days ago. That spot at center left looks creepily like the top half of a Jack Skellington skull, or something even less benign (and no, fates, I'm not tempting you with that word, mmmkay?). We had a brief shower-turned-flurry again yesterday, when there was supposed to be a zero-percent chance of any precipitation. No snow or ice today, at least, but it's just more evidence that, in all things, apparently, predictions are for suckers.

Terrible day yesterday; today hasn't started off swimmingly, either. I'm on day four of this migraine, the kind where you feel like you can't get out of bed, except that lying down hurts even worse so it propels you up in spite of yourself. Aggravated, yesterday, by having to walk Miika in the wind and dust: colic; vet unreachable for 4.5 hours; had to handle it ourselves. She's fine now, but this is what spring does, and it's one of the many, many reasons why this is by far my least favorite season. The plumber did come out, so . . . yay, I guess? He'll fix the immediate leak later this week, and do some testing and so forth on the problem in the utility room walls. The only problem was that yesterday was supposed to be my time to do a lot more work on taxes, and I lost about four hours of the day to all this other stuff. So more of it today, and tomorrow, and . . . .

Speaking both of predictions being for suckers and of tomorrow, it's the next go-round. More travel, more pain, more costs. As I said, depending on what it shows (and that may not be settled for a while, depending on how much drilling down they need to do on the cell samples), there is still very much the prospect of a lot more of all of those things to come, particularly the expense. [As I also said, there's also the prospect of increased risk and, shall we say, a less than optimal outcome, but I'm not letting my brain go there now. I have a sliver of hope here that it is literally nothing to worry about, and I'm letting a little of that filter in to keep myself sane.]

And it all comes down, as always, to money. We're still paying off last year's taxes even as I'm spending this weekend buried in this year's. I'll have another bill coming next week for the second biopsy, and then another bill (or maybe two) for the reading of it. We have no answers yet, including no answers as to what almost killed me twice 16+ months ago. And whatever the outcome with this, I still have more testing to undergo related to that. Next goal is paying off the hospitals from that mess, which comes to more than $30K just between the two of them, and they dun me daily, so here are the links:
  • My Patreon, The Interstices (Writing Between Worlds) (and if you subscribe today you won't be billed until April 1st for March);
  • Wings's site, for sales, with lots of new items posted;
  • Wings's direct PayPal link;
  • A way to buy me coffee (which actually goes to all of our medical bills, which continue to mount);
  • Amazon wishlist, which mostly consists of animal and household stuff, with the kibble back on it; we gave several of our existing bags to a local disabled vet with a starving rescue dog who needed the help;
  • Partial registry #1, from Bed, Bath and Beyond. I've added two or three new kitchen-y things on it now, stuff that I didn't realize we'd need.
All we want, to be able to have some confidence in making it through the whole year with whatever they're going to find going wrong in my body, is to make some sales. That's it: sales; nothing else. The stress is constant, and it's telling. Good vibes for Raven are needed today especially (he's still hanging with us, and I need him to be safe while we're out). But we all could use some, too, me most of all. We all could also use some help with sharing Wings's site (and testimonials, if you got 'em). Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Monday Photo Meditation: At Angles to an Early Blue

Photo copyright Wings, 2019; all rights reserved.

Now posted at The NDN Silver Blog, it's a photo meditation for the first days of spring, a time of that which is new, and that which is so old as to be timeless. It's a time to take our cues from the old warriors, too — to plant and rebuild, repair and cultivate, to stand and work at angles to an early blue.

The post is here. Wings's main page is here. As always, Wings's photos are available for purchase in any of the usual three formats; simply inquire via the site's Contact form. And, as always, sales are very much needed (more medical bills tomorrow and later in the week; possibly much, much more very soon on top of the existing $30K), so shares of the site links are much appreciated.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Wings and Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Sunday, March 24, 2019

Riding out the storm.

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Two days ago — riding out the storm. As you can see, Raven does not detest Chinook and Kit nearly as much as he would have them (and us) believe, although he does maintain that constantly-exasperated look of an older brother. Cricket refuses to go into the studio unless it's empty of human occupancy; he was riding out the thundersnow in one of the four doghouses.

Partly cloudy today, and much warmer. We're not supposed to get heavy weather again until the latter end of this week, after we'll have returned from Albuquerque, so I hope the forecast is right. As much as I like winter, I'm looking forward to warmer weather again, partly so I don't have to bundle up so much, and partly so I can quit looking so pale and sickly.

Speaking of sickly (odd, that; despite my worsening pain and fatigue and the issues I've been battling going on 17 months now, I don't feel "sick" in what I tend to think of the usual sense of that word), and of riding out the storm, the medical expenses will begin climbing again in a couple of days with the second biopsy. All of it means more travel, more pain, more enormous costs. As I said, depending on what it shows (and that may not be settled for a while, depending on how much drilling down they need to do on the cell samples), there is still very much the prospect of a lot more of all of those things to come, particular the expense. [There's also the prospect of increased risk and, shall we say, a less than optimal outcome, but I'm not letting my brain go there now.]

And it all comes down, as always, to money. We're still paying off last year's taxes even as I'm spending this weekend buried in this year's. I'll have another bill coming next week for the second biopsy, and then another bill (or maybe two) for the reading of it. We have no answers yet, including no answers as to what almost killed me twice 16+ months ago. And whatever the outcome with this, I still have more testing to undergo related to that. Next goal is paying off the hospitals from that mess, which comes to more than $30K just between the two of them, and they dun me daily, so here are the links:
  • My Patreon, The Interstices (Writing Between Worlds) (and if you subscribe today you won't be billed until April 1st for March);
  • Wings's site, for sales, with lots of new items posted;
  • Wings's direct PayPal link;
  • A way to buy me coffee (which actually goes to all of our medical bills, which continue to mount);
  • Amazon wishlist, which mostly consists of animal and household stuff, with the kibble back on it; we gave several of our existing bags to a local disabled vet with a starving rescue dog who needed the help;
  • Partial registry #1, from Bed, Bath and Beyond. I've added two or three new kitchen-y things on it now, stuff that I didn't realize we'd need.
All we want, to be able to have some confidence in making it through the whole year with whatever they're going to find going wrong in my body, is to make some sales. That's it: sales; nothing else. The stress is constant, and it's telling. Good vibes for Raven are needed today especially (he's still hanging with us, and I need him to be safe while we're out). But we all could use some, too, me most of all. We all could also use some help with sharing Wings's site (and testimonials, if you got 'em). Thanks.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.

Medicine's Heart

Photo copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved.

Now posted at The NDN Silver Blog, it's one of Wings's masterworks, an evocation of wheel and hoop, of prayer feather and the Sacred Directions, of the heart of healing and harmony. It's a reminder to us, too, that the world needs us to recommit to the ways that are medicine's heart, those that ensure a life well lived in a world healed and back in balance.

The post is here. Wings's main page is here. Inquiries via the site's Contact form. And, as always, sales are very much needed (new biopsy costs in a couple of days and more bills later in the work, plus the path's fees to follow and possibly much more shortly thereafter, all on top of the existing $30K in medical bills), so shares of the site links are much appreciated.



All content, including photos and text, are copyright Aji, 2019; all rights reserved. Nothing herein may used or reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the owner.