Wednesday 19 November 2014

Moment's glance




Making : Crocheted kids in animal costumes
Drinking : Tetley Peach tea
Reading: 'Arthur' by Stephen Lawhead
Wanting: Some new wool (my stash is wearing VERY thin)
Looking: At my IPad screen writing this post!
Playing: With the idea of doing Butterfly kid to go with the set of Animal kids.
Deciding: What to eat for lunch
Wishing: The doctors could figure out what's wrong with my kidney
Enjoying: The company of my AWESOME brother
Waiting: For my birthday! 20 this year! SCARY!!!


Cooking: Tomato, Basil and Bacon Pasta for dinner the other night. Man was it good!!!
Liking: Nothing on facebook, continuous updates bug me.
Wondering: What to get a friend for Christmas. It HAS to be something good and she's really hard to           shop for!
Loving: My new sewing machine foot. It's a free-motion quilting one. 
Pondering: The use for a headphone jack on my TV? That would be uncomfortable to use!
Considering: Stopping this list soon, that is if you made it this far! Maybe I'll continue tomorrow, with more pictures!






Lupus Awareness

I never seem to quite catch-on to this blogging thing. 

I see all these amazing people, doing amazing things. 

Changing the way people think, feel and create. 

I do no such thing, I don't reach a huge audience, I don't have a new adventure everyday. 

I don't live organically, cook vegan, dye my own wool or sell my products on a global scale. 

Come to think of it, I don't even sell them on a local scale!

As a sufferer of the auto-immune disease known as lupus and other medical jargon, I find it difficult just to do the small amount I can. 

Very few people know much about lupus, not even the doctors. 

Sufferers go to rheumatologists instead of actual lupus specialists. 

Lupus is NOT like diabetes where there's a "Type A" or "Type B". 

EVERY lupus patient is different. 

Lupus causes the White blood cells, (that usually attack foreign bodies, such as infection) but for a lupus patient the cells attack healthy tissue and our own organs. 

It is a progressive disease, it only gets worse as time goes by, causing organs to fail and side effects from the medication you take to help with the pain. 

For some people, such as my Dad and myself, the disease can change HOURLY. In the morning I can be fine, ready to see friends or go out, the next I could be heading to bed overcome with pain. 

It's difficult to make a healthy person understand, it's a difficult thing to watch someone go through, it's a horrendous thing to have to cause your family to go through.

It's something I wouldn't wish on anyone, but it is a subject that warrants more research and understanding.

Do you know someone going through this? Or something similar?