Friday, January 7, 2011

HAPPY NEW YEAR!


My wish for you all is a new year filled with
happiness, love, prosperity and blessings!
May you turn whatever comes along 
into learning experiences,
about yourselves, and life,
and use them to reach your full potential.
Take every opportunity to be the best that you can be!





A slightly belated Happy New Year to you all! 

* * * * *


I stopped baking traditional Christmas cookies several years ago. The last few years that I did bake something, we had american chocolate chip cookies. We just love them, and I could never bake enough. But of course they are full of carbs: lots of sugar and wheat flour, so for a couple of years we just dropped them. 
So, this Christmas, Sigve decided he wanted some, and got me to show him how to bake them. Last night he made the third batch in a week! Of course they are just as good as we remembered. I had some from the first two lots, but that's it for me, my Christmas asylum is over.


Yummy cookie dough.
 
The pastry chef in action.








Jepp, the results were good!


I bought this brilliant device for Sigve for Christmas, an oven proof steam tower. It's so clever, and of course we can thank the chinese, and probably other asian cultures too, for the idea. 



On yesterday's menu were meatballs and creamed cauliflower/ broccoli. I slightly browed the meatballs so they would keep their shape, popped them in the two top tiers (because there were too many for one) and the veggies in the lower bowl. 



I stacked them, cooked for 45 mins, and done! They all go in the dish washer afterwords, so clean-up is easy. 
Wow, I wish someone would give me money for posting this! 





Apart from cooking the occasional dinner, 
I have also been knitting, baby stuff, of course :-)




On Tuesday, Sigve had an appointment at Haugesund Hospital to check his hearing. I decided to go along, so he didn't book a taxi. But parking conditions at that hospital are so bad that in the end I had to drive around while Sigve went in for his appointment. 
Sigve's hearing has deteriorated over the last couple of years, and he has had it checked before. But now it was so bad, on both ears, that the doctor recommended he try hearing aids. So he's going back in late February to have them fitted.


Outside we have had snow, and rain, and snow, and rain. Regular yo-yo temperatures. This morning most of the snow was gone, then it snowed for a while so everything was white again, and now I can hear it dripping off the roof. The skies have had this heavy lead color.



Still, there is beauty around, and without sunlight, 
the camera flash does the trick.




Earlier this evening Sigve and I went out for a 2 hour walk. Really refreshing, but very icy. All the slush had frozen now.  And although it was dark when we left, I pocketed my small compact camera :-)



I am grateful for yet another year,
and all the new possibilities that comes with it. 
I am grateful for the new life Sigve was given by his sister.
I am grateful that Sigve and I could enter the new year together.
I am grateful for our son, daughter, son-in-law 
and the new life our daughter is carrying.
I am grateful for all our dear family members, and our dear friends.
My new year resolution is to live every day as if it was my last.
More than ever I will appreciate every day we get to live through.

♥  From our hearts to yours  ♥




Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Day +135 on Christmas Eve


Two weeks before Christmas my brother Jan Arve and sister-in-law Olaug and their little Milli came to visit. This visit has been in the books for a long time, but due to colds it had to be postponed a couple of times. So it was all the more welcome when it finally could take place. We all get on so well, and thoroughly enjoy our time together. 



Isa and Milli get on well too, even if Isa, who is about 3 1/2 years older than Milli, sometimes acts like an old auntie: "oh, for heaven's sakes, what a child..." But most of the time they are little monkeys, copying whatever the other one does :-) Isa to the left, Milli to the right.



I have a spot at Hiskjo, where I frequently go to photograph the sun as it sets in the ocean. I love this one, where both sea and sky were colored pink.



During the last week before Christmas, astrological events were lined up: a full moon, the lunar eclipse and winter solstice. 
Unfortunately, I missed the eclipse due to clouds and snow. But the sky was clear the evening before, and I got some pics of the full moon. At 4.50 pm it was just raising, big and yellow. 



At 9.30 pm it was clouding over, and the ring that forecasted the snow that would come in the morning was there.



Having passed winter solstice means that the days are slowly but surely getting longer again, and we are once more heading towards summer.


Speaking of moons, Sigve's is disappearing. His hair has started to grow back in! It's very fine and downy, like a baby's first hair, but it's increasing in length and thickness. Funny thing, he never lost his eyebrows and eyelashes. He did lose all hair on his torso, and his thighs and upper arms. However, he has had hair on his forearms and legs the whole time.





The beard and mustache has been growing for quite a while now. 
It's still flimsy, but improving.



Another odd occurrence is what's happening to his finger nails. First a deep groove appeared across the nails, and then they split up and obviously the old, upper layer will fall off when the new nail underneath is fully grown. 
He showed it to the doctor, and was told that this is common. All the new nails cells are in the nail roots and when, as in his case, his whole system comes to a dead stop, this happens. I have read about it before, actually, if something significant or dramatic happens, you can "read" it in the nails. The toe nails are not affected, not yet anyway.



This year, like last year, we got lots of snow for Christmas. I love it, but I also have to admit it's unpractical. We were going to Tysnes to spend Christmas with Hilde Marie and Jon Helge, and we were taking the camper van. 
Sigve started shoveling snow in front of the camper, but during the night before, wind gusts had formed deep heaps of snow on the road, and heavier equipment was required. Fortunately, we have a brother-in-law, Gerd's husband Roald, with a tractor and plow equipment. So he cleared the road from our house and up to the main road, and we could get out.



Sigve took Isa for a walk as usual in the evening, and afterwards told me there were some cool snow shapes formed by the wind. I grabbed my camera, and thew on a jacket and boots, and got a few pictures. Fortunately, because the next morning they were gone. It was freezing cold, but there are few limits to what we'll do for a photo. 



On what we call "Little Christmas Eve", the day before Christmas Eve, the combination of fog and sunset colors turned everything bright pink.



Driving to Tysnes in the afternoon of Christmas Eve.





On reaching the farm, Isa was happy to meet her friends, 
Ira the Irish wolfhound and big Isa.



Jon Helge was busy clearing a space for the camper outside their house.



As most of you may know, we norwegians have our main celebration on Dec. 24th, Christmas Eve. Our meal is made from dried, salted and sometimes smoked, sides of lam. They are cut in pieces and left in water overnight, to get rid of some salt, and then steam cooked for 2,5 - 3 hours. Boiled potatoes, creamed yellow turnips and sauerkraut accompany it. For dessert we make a rice porridge that is mixed with whipped cream, and served with raspberry sauce. Usually we eat so much dinner that no-one has room for dessert until much later in the evening, or sometimes even the next day.
This is our  food tradition, and quite common on the west coast. Other parts of the country have different traditions. 

Jon Helge and Hilde Marie,


Geir Espen and Sigve at the dinner table.



After dinner we settle on the couch, ready to open presents.



Sigve's all time favorite snack is this particular type of milk chocolate, and he always gets a bar or two for Christmas and birthdays. He has been apprehensive about trying it again, worried that it might not taste the same any more. So he did try a piece a couple of weeks ago, and he actually did not like it! This is also a result of all the hormonal changes he's gone through, and many things taste different from before. He'll probably be able to get used to it again, in time, but it was a bit of a disappointment.



Geir Espen and Jon Helge taking a break from opening presents.



The baby is growing, and filling up all available space now. 
It's also very active; sometimes the whole bump just moves :-)



Quite a common sight in the late evening: 
I fall asleep, and someone feels the need to document it,



while others just stay wide awake.


My christmas gift from Sigve was the macro lens I have been hoping for, but never in a million years thought I'd get now!


On Christmas day we all slept in, and had a late brunch,



and then just had time for a walk before it got dark again. 
It was cold, about -18C/-0,4F, and the snow squeaked under our shoes.



Good thing Hilde Marie's suit is roomy :-)



We drove back home Sunday evening, as Sigve had his scheduled check-up in Haugesund Monday morning. The taxi picked him up at 8 am as usual. The blood tests were satisfactory, showing steady levels. His hemoglobin level was even up, and the platelets were steady, so the doctor was pleased. 
For the last week Sigve has started reducing the Sandimmun dosage, and has been told to be extra on the alert for signs of GVH (graft-versus-host) disease. The first signs could be skin rash or heaviness of breath. So far so good.

Last Monday the doctor decided that the visits to Stord Hospital for blood tests are no longer necessary, so now Sigve has Thursdays off. 


Today's sunrise, at 10.15 am,



and sunset, at 3.40 pm.



Christmas this year was special. In August we really didn't know if Sigve would see another Christmas. I never actually thought it, I assumed all would be well, you know, the power of positive thinking. But realistically, it could have gone either way.

So my gratitude today is for still having Sigve here, for every new day we get to spend together. New days can not be taken for granted!



Friday, December 10, 2010

Camera days


Today was a camera day. Actually a 245 picture day.  Of course, in the end they boiled down to about 100, and there are still some I need to delete, and I have become better at deleting. I really see that there is no point in saving 10 almost identical pictures. But the selection process takes time...

Anyway, Sigve went to Stord this morning for bloodtests, and before he left he took Isa out for a short walk, so I got up a little later. Right from my first glance out of the window, I kept my camera close by all day. The lake, that froze over a couple of weeks ago, is now also covered in snow, and this morning, in the soft light of sunrise, frost smoke was drifting over, making light, shadows and patterns  change all the time. It was so mesmerizing I kept running out on the deck, and from window to window to get the best angles and views.















Thursday visits to Stord hospital are nearly always quick as all they do is draw blood  for the tests, and then he comes back home. He never needs to talk to doctors there. The nurses are also getting better at dealing with Hicky, his Hickman catheter. In many cases Sigve has had to tell them what the procedure is. To their defense, Hickman catheters are not that common, but we know they have followed up patients wearing them before. It requires special, sterile treatment, and of course that means having all the equipment lined up before starting. Up to now there have been two nurses, one sterile, and one who could go and fetch whatever they had forgotten. The nurse today was quite proud about the fact that she coped with it on her own.



I had to run some errands, and since Sigve still has to avoid crowded places, I usually do them on my own. (I know, to say that Bømlo has crowded places is an overstatement, but there may be more that 5 people at the grocery store!) 
I finished just around sunset, and while driving home I saw that light and fog over the lake again, and I just couldn't resist it. I took a walk through the cemetery, finding motifs there too.




There is a path below the cemetery, along the lake, with a view to the other side, and with my new 200 mm lens that distance is no problem.







I like the effect of flash photography in the dark, illuminating the foreground details, and leaving the rest invisible.



The wrought iron gates in daylight when I arrived,


and in the dark as I left.






I am so grateful for my camera, my computer, my iphone and my ipod. I know, I am a total gadget freak, but they have become very important parts of my life, letting me record and document daily events, and enabling me to keep in touch with friends all over the world.



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