My mother, when she was a few years younger than I am now, was home alone most of the time since my father continued to work waiting for full social security. He usually worked about 60 miles away from the farm. One autumn my mother was in the process of picking cherries from our three cherry trees out back by the chicken shed. She got a bee in her bonnet that using the ladder was not getting her high enough. (What she was doing on a ladder on uneven ground all by herself at her age makes me shake my head?!) Anyway her attempt to climb higher in the tree to reach the last of that red ripe fruit resulted in her taking a nasty fall. She broke the heel of her foot upon landing, and nothing else thank goodness, and had to drag herself about 80 feet across the mowed field, over a dry irrigation ditch and over the gravel driveway into the house and eventually to the phone! I remember her telling me this story, but I was not as impressed as I should have been at the time. (What a little twit I was.) I also remember her complaining at how her other remaining children, all living close but elsewhere with full-time jobs, didn't help her much. I am sure they did as much as they could with their busy lives. My mother also loved playing the martyr.
This incident came back to me while I was lying in bed this morning greeting a new day.
Yesterday, my husband and I using a much too small dolly were attempting to move one of those huge old fashioned television sets from the garage to the attic storage in the closet of the guest bedroom. This old TV belongs to my son who had left it at our house along with a small collection of other furniture since he was moving into his girlfriend's tiny house a few weeks ago. Husband was above pulling the dolly and I was below holding the TV against it. We had just reached the top step of the stairs which has a larger lip when the television flipped off the dolly platform knocking me down a few steps and then landing on my foot and lower leg mashing them against the steps as I fell back. I held my ground fearing I might fall all the way down the stairs as this appliance rolled over me. I managed, although in the early waves of pain. to drag my foot out from under the TV and to put the back of my shoulder against the set and scoot slowly down the stairs allowing the TV to follow against my shoulder.
Hubby could not help because he was at the top behind the dolly and it happened too fast for him to attempt anything. I reached the bottom step and move away while the television slid to the floor taking a piece of the skin off my forearm as it did so.
I managed to limp to the nearby couch before the shock set in. Eventually I felt waves of nausea and waves of pain and found myself involuntarily hyperventilating, until my body finally adjusted to what had happened. After several hours of ice-on and ice-off and two Aleve, I had decided that I had not broken anything because the pain was bearable. I was also very lucky in that I spend time, after lifting leg weights two or three times a week, stretching all of my joints including my ankles to keep me as flexible as possible. That has given me some good resilience and bone mass. We have talked to our doctor friend and all agree an x-ray is not necessary as my pain is easing and I can put some light weight on the foot.
Yes, we were idiots trying to get that 80 pound monstrosity up the stairs. I had told my son to just leave it in the garage since I hadn't decided where to store it, another mistake! My husband had his adrenaline kick in and actually lifted the set and carried it upstairs by himself shortly after! Probably another mistake but I was too busy trying to bear waves of pain to protest.
Since it was going to continue to be my lucky day, within 30 minutes the TV news stations were warning of tornadoes and major storms moving into our area and showing a lovely home missing its roof just about 200 miles to the south of us. No way I was moving to the basement! Luckily the storm missed us.
This morning my left ankle is now twice the size of my right ankle, but the religious application of ice every 20 minutes today, should continue to help keep the swelling at bay. I am told that the swelling caused by fluids causes the majority of the pain. The ankle does not appear black and blue which means little blood loss inside, another plus.
Lots of time to write a long post on this laptop but no way to search for an appropriate accompanying photo as they are on the other PC. Of course, today the sun is brilliant and the angles are perfect for some photography. Wouldn't you know it? Then again, I could take a photo of my ankle....Nah!
This incident came back to me while I was lying in bed this morning greeting a new day.
Yesterday, my husband and I using a much too small dolly were attempting to move one of those huge old fashioned television sets from the garage to the attic storage in the closet of the guest bedroom. This old TV belongs to my son who had left it at our house along with a small collection of other furniture since he was moving into his girlfriend's tiny house a few weeks ago. Husband was above pulling the dolly and I was below holding the TV against it. We had just reached the top step of the stairs which has a larger lip when the television flipped off the dolly platform knocking me down a few steps and then landing on my foot and lower leg mashing them against the steps as I fell back. I held my ground fearing I might fall all the way down the stairs as this appliance rolled over me. I managed, although in the early waves of pain. to drag my foot out from under the TV and to put the back of my shoulder against the set and scoot slowly down the stairs allowing the TV to follow against my shoulder.
Hubby could not help because he was at the top behind the dolly and it happened too fast for him to attempt anything. I reached the bottom step and move away while the television slid to the floor taking a piece of the skin off my forearm as it did so.
I managed to limp to the nearby couch before the shock set in. Eventually I felt waves of nausea and waves of pain and found myself involuntarily hyperventilating, until my body finally adjusted to what had happened. After several hours of ice-on and ice-off and two Aleve, I had decided that I had not broken anything because the pain was bearable. I was also very lucky in that I spend time, after lifting leg weights two or three times a week, stretching all of my joints including my ankles to keep me as flexible as possible. That has given me some good resilience and bone mass. We have talked to our doctor friend and all agree an x-ray is not necessary as my pain is easing and I can put some light weight on the foot.
Yes, we were idiots trying to get that 80 pound monstrosity up the stairs. I had told my son to just leave it in the garage since I hadn't decided where to store it, another mistake! My husband had his adrenaline kick in and actually lifted the set and carried it upstairs by himself shortly after! Probably another mistake but I was too busy trying to bear waves of pain to protest.
Since it was going to continue to be my lucky day, within 30 minutes the TV news stations were warning of tornadoes and major storms moving into our area and showing a lovely home missing its roof just about 200 miles to the south of us. No way I was moving to the basement! Luckily the storm missed us.
This morning my left ankle is now twice the size of my right ankle, but the religious application of ice every 20 minutes today, should continue to help keep the swelling at bay. I am told that the swelling caused by fluids causes the majority of the pain. The ankle does not appear black and blue which means little blood loss inside, another plus.
Lots of time to write a long post on this laptop but no way to search for an appropriate accompanying photo as they are on the other PC. Of course, today the sun is brilliant and the angles are perfect for some photography. Wouldn't you know it? Then again, I could take a photo of my ankle....Nah!