Tuesday, March 24, 2020

1,000 Sheets


1,000 Sheets
Layered fresh and soft, on pedestal high,
I keep you dry and handy near to me.
You’re vigilant and ready when I pee.
Faithful, trusted, steady, morning til night.

You give yourself, unwind liberally.
I take and take (and take); you’re always there.
Did I forget how extraordinaire?
Now empty you be, all because of me.

I’ll rebound, pursue a new paper roll.
With it, I simply wish to wipe my ass.
For your twin, I go to the cubbyhole.
Half-squatting, I open the door – aghast!

It’s gone, no spare to ease my inner soul.
Perplexed in my self-indulgent morass.
3/34/2020 ~jlr

Friday, March 20, 2020

My 10 things for sick-at-home with flu symptoms:


  1. Pain reliever/fever reducer  Shaving a degree or two off the fever, and any relief to the muscle aches is welcome.
  2. Tissues. I choose sans lotion because I’m always trying to clean my glasses with them. It’s your call.
  3. Saline nasal spray or Neti pot to keep nasal passages moist. I prefer the convenience of the spray bottle. I don’t have to get out of bed to use it; for the cost, I can throw it away when this is over. The Neti-pot also kind of scares me.
  4. Minty lip balm. Right now, my lips are coated with Sky Organics Eucalyptus Mint. As ‘60s children, our parents smeared a glob of Vicks VapoRub ointment on us like a sick mustache. I’ll take the minty lip balm. You do you.
  5. A vaporizer with Vicks Vapo Steam. I don’t have small children or big pets and live in a dry winter zone, so the warm mist one works for me. The one I bought was really the luck of the draw. There are also cool-mist vaporizers. Who knew? Faced with five options, I stood in the pharmacy aisle at Target doing “eeny meeny miny moe.” Warm mist won.
  6. Rehydrating drinks. I like Gatorade G Zero in the 12 oz bottle. Warning – in your weakened
    state, it might be difficult to get the top off. Have someone in your house, a neighbor, friend, person at the store – anyone – loosen the caps. It’s a sad moment when a sick person, alone in a bed, struggles to get the top off a drink to quench fever-thirst, only to fail and give up, content to succumb … or have the thing explode over an already unwashed body. Just sayin’.
  7. Thermometer. My doctor’s office rule of thumb is you are no longer contagious after being off fever-reducing medicine (see #1) and stay fever-free for 24 hours. There is a bit of a thermometer shortage now, but I needed this metric to know when I could return to work. That’s how I ended up with the Kinsa Smart Ear Thermometer. A bit pricey at $40, it was the only one left at the pharmacy. I wish this was a thing when my kids were babies. The app logs every reading and creates a timeline for each user. When I was clearly sporting a fever, I took a screenshot and messaged it to my boss. That was priceless.
  8. New crayons and a coloring book that I will burn when this is over.
  9. A large paper bag, with edges folded over, for used tissues, etc. The bigger the opening, the better. The last thing I want to do after I’m well is clean up a graveyard of diseased tissues.
  10. Emergen C

Self-quarantined, for now, I’m taking my Tamiflu and, in a day, or two, expect to be back among the living.