Sunday, 8 March 2020

Ghosts in the midday sun


I don't mind that our Waitrose (and Morrison, and Sainsbury) have run out of toilet paper and aspirin, but I do deplore the panic-buying of Acme Earthquake Pills. You cannot find them for love nor money ever since we were rocked by an earthquake centred somewhere near Bristol last year which measured a shocking 2.3 on the Richter scale.

I don't particularly want to catch the virus, but certainly do not want H.I. to get it, so I am following all the instructions and hoping for the best, and the best I am hoping for is an ordinary dose of Winter flu.

The trouble with this latest version is that  is that the injection that I forced her to have a couple of months ago is for a different strain. If the elderly whose immune systems are not as they used to be - or should be - get it, it can turn into pneumonia, which is a bacterial infection. I have just found out that you can be inoculated against pneumonia so I am sending her off to get that one too.

I had pneumonia when I was about 9 or 10 years old. It was one of the few times which I can remember when my father turned on the central heating of our vast house, but the hot water was diverted to my room, and my room only. We were short of money, but my mother forced him down into the oxygen-depleted, carbon monoxide-rich cellar to stoke up the ancient boiler with anthracite.

It was the fever aspect of it that I remember the clearest, not that you see things that clearly during a fever, except maybe for etherial, other worldly things. Laurie Lee in 'Cider with Rosie' spoke about a childhood fever in Slad, when he imagined faces in the stains on the walls of their little cottage looking like 'gods gone mouldy' staring at him out of the darkness.

I saw my guardian angel during my pneumonia.

It was at the height of my fever when I woke up in the middle of the night, knowing that I was actually very ill. When I opened my eyes I saw a benign, elderly woman sitting on the chair next to my bed with her hands on her lap, looking down on me and smiling reassuringly.

I looked at her for a few moments, then went back to sleep in the sure knowledge that all would be well. In the morning the fever had gone and I was well on the way to recovery.

Thinking about her later, I wondered how I saw her in perfect detail in total darkness. It seemed to me that this could only be explained by her glowing with her own light. At that early age I suddenly realised why ghosts are always depicted as glowing in the dark.

We don't notice ghosts in the daylight because they look exactly like everyone else. They just walk around trying not to do anything out of the ordinary to attract attention.

21 comments:

  1. Fortunately l'm quite lucky in the health department..Never have colds, or flu..in fact
    it was just suggested last year l should have
    a flu jab for the first time, l was told that
    a new Australian strain of flu was in the UK..
    Which can kill..
    So best if l had it..so the young lady in the
    chemist took me out back and...HeHe! Joke there
    somewhere..! :).

    I popped up Lidl this morning..every Sunday
    for my weekly bits and pieces..all stocked
    up..no empty shelves..
    Summat made me laugh yesterday..in the paper,
    on the news and on line..A very silly man had
    purchased toilet rolls..not one, two, twelve,
    hundred..but he was filmed wheeling out a
    pallet..4ftx4ft..of toilet rolls..Oh! and 4ft
    high..all the way to his car...HeHe! Perhaps
    he thinks this Caronavirus causes diarrhea..!
    And he's just getting ready for it...! :).

    Ghosts..Oh! My! Yes! I've had several experiences in my life time..especially once
    in Germany..but, lt'll keep for another time!

    Best get on..Just had my own made Sicilian pizza for lunch..half bottle Chianti..finish the half later..what am l saying..! :).
    Couple games of footy to watch..and that's me
    done and dusted..No! Visitors lord..! Please!
    ♥♡♥(ꈍᴗꈍ)♥♡♥ ♥♡♥(ꈍᴗꈍ)♥♡♥ ♥♡♥(ꈍᴗꈍ)♥♡♥
    other half
    lunch..

    ReplyDelete
  2. He was a speculator I bet. A friend of mine was at a very muddy Glastonbury Festival one year when he had the brilliant idea of coming back to Bath and buying every pair of Wellington boots he could find. He bought hundreds. By the time he got back to Glastonbury, the sun had come out and baked the mud completely dry.

    Years afterwards, he would begin conversations by asking people what size feet they had.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. HaHa! Brilliant...
      There's a story about Napoleon..He asked
      Josephine once at bedtime.."Who's are those Gum Boots at the end of the bed"?
      And..Josephine replied.."Oh! There just
      Wellingtons"...! :O).

      Delete
    2. I have been tearing my hair out..Well not
      really..I could'nt place that guy at the top of your post Tom..Suddenly..Yes! Yes! :).
      It's Harold Travers..Remember him in the
      1945 film..The Bells of St. Mary's..with
      Bing Crosby..Hooray! Glass of wine is
      called for..Cheers Harold..! :o).

      Delete
  3. I once met a professional exorcist who told me that ghosts look exactly like ordinary people in the daylight. I regret I didn't ask him what they looked like at night.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well I suppose you can either see them at night in the dark or you can't. If you can, wouldn't they have seemed to be giving off light in your recall?

      Delete
  4. Nice story
    I hope I have my own old lady

    ReplyDelete
  5. The old lady I saw at night had no glow, and I had no fever. What scares most, I heard a man on TV describe the same figure. He is decades younger than me, as in we don't share the same movie and television show character associations. How does another person you never met describe what you saw when you were nine years old? I think he might watch vintage TV shows. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What did she look like and how was she so distinctive?

      Delete
  6. Nice image of 'Clarence'. His was such a charming character.

    I haven't noticed the panic-buying in my local store, but have heard from some that their shops have been cleared out of hand-sanitizer and toilet paper.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wonder why everyone panics about toilet paper?

      Delete
    2. Loads of folk are hygiene-obsessed? I really don't know. It's odd.

      Delete
    3. Paper is far from hygienic. They are mad.

      Delete
  7. I wish you and H.I. both luck and health - you will be well.
    I am stunned by German hysteria and panic - Berlin streets are empty! - but I thought a lot and then went to my doctor and asked for an injection against pneumonia (as I think that is the most dangerous part of a flu. I have no injection against flu and will not have it).
    I got some of the last serums, they told me - honestly: that is the part that makes me sick here with anger: no masks, no sterilium, not much of medicine when people need it.
    Tell H.I.: it is a very easy injection - I had no side-effects. (I wait for another injection tomorrow - mmh, hope it might be easy too: against pertussis, (you can get that only in a package with diphtheria, tetanus and polio - that I wanted not at the time when I would visit the triplets).
    Enough of in-sanity: I wish you well! Stay healthy!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think that the tactics to slow down rather than stop the outbreak (impossible) is to do with the health care systems. They could be swamped if it grew too fast.

      Delete
  8. Go with Britta on this. The pneumonia vac is worth two jabs in your life.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She is in no way worried about injections. It's just a case of making sure they are arranged.

      Delete
  9. Viral pneumonia is an infection of your lungs caused by a virus. The most common cause is the flu, but you can also get viral pneumonia from the common cold and other viruses. These nasty germs usually stick to the upper part of your respiratory system.
    Treatment. If a virus is causing your pneumonia, antibiotics won't help, but your doctor may prescribe an antiviral medication. If you have an influenza virus, your doctor may prescribe medications such as oseltamivir (Tamiflu), zanamivir (Relenza), or peramivir (Rapivab).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The NHS says there are bacterial pneumonia infections when I checked.

      Delete
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