Posted on 05/14/2008 5:16:40 PM PDT by trussell
Thanks for the ping. Yeah, I missed the great pics.
Thanks! The pictures are great! Hope Jim will be out of the hospital & home soon.
Thanks for the pictures JustAmy. I’ve been off the net for the last two days. Prayers continue for Jim.
Thank you for the update and the photos! Marissa looks pretty cute, too! Prayers continue.
Thank you so much for your wonderful photo’s! They all were very good. I think Jim really looks good considering what an ordeal he has been through! God Bless Jim....hope he continues to make wonderful progress and thanks again Syncro, for all the pics! Those flowers were gorgeous and I feel I could eat half that fruit! Hope he and his family enjoyed eating the fruit together!
Thanks for pinging us to the pictures. They were all great! I think Jim looks really good, Amy!
Great updates from Jim with pictures at 2048 and 2092.
Thanks to everyone for all the continued prayers.
God Bless
Amy, I couldn’t find the pictures of Prissy Missy! Could you tell me where they are? I will thank you for it!
GET WELL SOON, BIG GUY!!!!!!!!!!! ;)
Thank you so much for the update!
Continued prayers for Jim and everyone! Happy all seems to be going well.
I found them Amy! Very, very good. Marissa is precious....I have seen her before but she gets cuter! Jim looks really good, I think!
We figured there would be some rough patches after the drugs wear off. The tummy problem could be from the Morphine. Bad stuff with lingering effects. Yogurt, if he can keep it down. Prayers continue for better days ahead.
I've got a few miles on the odometer (I look back to my 50th H.S. class reunion), and I don't tolerate lactose as well as I did. So when I was traveling in Turkey and didn't know the cuisine nor the lingo, my SIL suggested I try a Turkish yogurt called "ayeron." So I ordered it, took one sip, and said, "Oh! Buttermilk!"As it happens, I helped my grandmother churn butter when I was a kid, and so was introduced to buttermilk positively and always enjoyed it on the occasions when it just happened to be in the refrigerator (my wife, OTOH, grew up on a farm where buttermilk was fed to the pigs, and can't imagine liking the stuff). So I have been drinking buttermilk for about a year, and I have taken to using it when taking pills that are prescribed to be taken on a full stomach. I find that pills that otherwise have a tendency to 'repeat' on me (even when taken just after a meal) cause no trouble if taken with a little buttermilk. So if you have/can acquire a taste for buttermilk . . .
It makes perfect sense to call buttermilk "yogurt," since in fact it is easy to culture the stuff (at least in warm weather). Simply start with (say) a quart of milk, add about a cup of cultured buttermilk to it as a seed, and set it out in the kitchen for around 8 hours. The time isn't at all critical - all that happens if you go long is that it very gradually starts turning to cheese. I tried lower butterfat percentages than the 1.5% stuff that they sell in the store, but I find the 1.5% stuff to be far more palatable than anything less rich. 'Course salt tastes great with it, if your diet allows . . .
Conventional "yogurt," OTOH, needs the temperature to be about 115F +/-5. So that requires a heat source to keep the culture growing (I've used a light bulb) and some attention to keep from killing off the bacteria you're trying to grow.
I just wanted to comment that those are gorgeous flowers you posted! I’ve never seen cactus blooms before. Absolutely beautiful! :)
I want to thank you for sharing the pictures of Jim this morning. Jim looks great, and you still inspire even from that hospital room.
Prayers for your recovery
Go bless you Jim.
Great pictures, JustAmy. Love, M
Morning prayers from the cold East. Here’s hoping that you get your wish to go home real soon, Jim. Don’t push it though. You are looking good in the pictures. Loved the ones of you and Missy. She’s really growing (too fast). I’m waiting for you to get a bionic leg so you can walk again. I’m holding out for “better” legs than you have had for some time. Why not dream big? Love you, Jim. ((((((hugs))))))
He lived another twenty years and died at 79 of causes unrelated to either diabetes or its sequelae.
Good luck, Jim. Since you are a charter member of Albert Jay Nock's Isaiah's Job and one of the exclusive 400 or so, we need you back soon. For those who don't know either who Albert Jay Nock or his ever more quoted essay, go: HERE.
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