Quarantine and chill and kindness chatty clubhouse: Jump in and join the conversation! All is welcome!

@lynxstch It depends on what’s happening individually with Summer. Every case is unique. It sounds like she was quite sick when she got to the hospital and I’m guessing had a fever if they tested her blood for infection (which would be sepsis - glad that wasn’t an issue, but can be with flu, which can be a killer with sepsis).

Steroids help decrease the inflammation in the lungs, which, between the illness and the smoking must be very inflammed and junky, and that’s causing her oxygen levels to be so low without - or in this case, even with - oxygen. Eventually they will be able to wean it off as she gets better, but it could be a while. (I’ve been working on this with many patients myself lately - January is the time of year this always happens! People inevitably get sick after the holidays!) They will want to see her be able to walk without oxygen before she’s ready for discharge, OR set her up at home with oxygen if she still needs it by that time, which wouldn’t be ideal. Her lungs basically need time to heal, but may not be able to heal completely because of the changes in the lungs from smoking. Maybe this will be an impetus for her to stop. (I know here in MA we’re required by law to give smoking cessation info, but even if not, they usually give it. Most smokers blow it off, pun intended, lol.) Usually we have people try to walk a bit even if they have to take their oxygen with a portable tank just to get them started and help the body adjust, but it’s a fine line between that and exhaustion/recovery.

As for the blood thinners and heart mediation, no, that wouldn’t be routine with flu/pneumonia, so my guess is that maybe she had something like Atrial Fibrillation (AFib) which would require both of those, or perhaps her blood pressure was high, or there is some other condition I’m not aware of that would require a blood thinner, and the question would be will she need it when she goes home and/or about follow up for that. (A close friend just lost his wife to a large stroke when she’d stopped taking her blood thinner. 😪)

Btw some of the new Covid test kits also test for both Flu A and Flu B (just different strains). I’d used them last month when I was sick and tested negative for all. I probably should’ve gone to UC to check for RSV but that most likely would’ve been negative, too. It was just a tough respiratory illness that lasted for weeks and still seems to be going around as so many people have it. I’d picked it up from DD and she’d picked it up from being at UC for something else with a two hour wait in the waiting room! So I wasn’t in a rush to go there.

Keeping Summer in my prayers for an uneventful recovery. 🙏
Thank you for all the info, I appreciate it a lot!
 
To those of you who have been asking, I just got a text from Mona. I have permission to share it. I told her we were all worried about her.

I am so sorry for worrying all of you. I have been in the hospital. I still am. Good Samaritan. I was transfered from Cedars. I had a slight foot infection. Doctor says what is causing my weakness and pain is needing more nutrients. Need more rest too. Loud around here. But of course I am so blessed to hear
🙂
one day at a time
 
Thanks so much Lynn! Glad she's okay. Pea - sounds like some of your recommendations of late were spot on!

Not a whole lot going on around here. Did a spot of grocery shopping this AM, and a spot of house cleaning this PM. I've got some potato soup started in the crock pot, it's my first time trying to make it. Not sure if we will have it this evening or tomorrow, I'm also making my husband some wings since he's hot footing it from the tree stand to the couch in a bit to catch the football game(s).
I have a FaceTime meeting tomorrow to talk to one of the Board members from the dog rescue we work with. We are thinking of adopting another pup. This young fella is a 10 month old french bulldog who was sprung from a puppy mill in November. Hoping it will pan out.
Off to NC on Monday for a few days. I've got meetings and a bid to take in, but I'm hoping to be home by Wednesday night or Thursday morning.

Mona - if you are reading this, take care and I'm so glad you are getting the care you need for your feet. It's been so long you've suffered with this.
 
We boarded the Treasure today…our first dinner was in Coco, delicious food and nice music while we ate. Am too tired to do much now, will stay in the room and read or watch TV.

I hope Mona gets what she needs to get better. Mona, we miss you! Prayers for your recovery.
 

For those who watched the Rose Parade and the Rose Bowl game on New Year's Day, this might be interesting:

Rose Bowl, football's hallowed ground, transformed into firefight staging ground​

Kevin Baxter
Sat, January 18, 2025 at 7:11 AM PST·6 min read
328
Pasadena, CA - January 10: Firefighters stand in formation as they listen to a daily Eaton fire briefing in the briefing area and Rose Bowl Court of Champions, during the Eaton fire as the Rose Bowl Stadium parking lots has been converted into a temporary command center in response to the ongoing Eaton Fire at the Rose Bowl parking lots in Pasadena Friday, Jan. 17, 2025. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times) The iconic Rose Bowl has become a staging area for more than 4,000 firefighters and National Guard troops, turning it into a city with a McDonald's, a laundry, a barbershop and a cafeteria.

Firefighters stand in formation as they listen to a daily Eaton fire briefing at the Rose Bowl on Friday. The iconic stadium has become a staging area for more than 4,000 firefighters and National Guard troops. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The locker rooms where the teams from Oregon and Ohio State dressed for the College Football Playoff quarterfinals are now a command center and a briefing room. Outside, firefighters and National Guard troops mill about the wide concourse where, less than three weeks ago, more than 90,000 football fans gathered.

And the sprawling grass fields that were recently home to dozens of tailgate parties now hold hundreds of tiny pup tents.

First responders walk past tents set up in a parking lot at the Rose Bowl.

First responders walk past tents set up in a parking lot at the Rose Bowl. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

For more than a century, the Rose Bowl has staged some of the most important sporting events in the world, from five Super Bowls and two World Cup finals to college football playoffs and two Olympic Games.

Now, the historic stadium is making history of a different kind.

Hours after the Eaton fire first flared, the area around the stadium was converted into a staging area that nearly 4,000 first responders now call home.

Read more: Eaton fire: Areas reopened to residents, shelters, resource centers

“This is probably not the most iconic event that we’ve ever hosted. But it could be the most important,” said Jens Weiden, the Rose Bowl’s chief executive.

Overnight, the stadium and surrounding parking lots were converted into a small city. There are massive trailers with private sleeping quarters, portable shower facilities, a laundry, a medical facility, a physical therapy trailer and two kitchens serving thousands of meals a day. There’s an area to fuel and repair fire trucks, a peer counseling center, a McDonald’s, a coffee kiosk, even a place to send and pick up mail.

And everything is free.

“We always say we’re in the events business, and this is an event. Our team just leaned into this,” Weiden said.

Read more: Burned and anxious pets fill Pasadena shelter after Eaton fire

Tim Sell, Pasadena’s deputy fire chief, said the Eaton fire exploded so quickly his department outgrew its first command post in Altadena’s Charles S. Farnsworth Park in a matter of hours. But the 200 acres of open space around the Rose Bowl, already equipped with electricity, water, light towers, bathrooms and located less than 10 minutes away from the fire, was perfect.

So he called his friend Weiden and asked whether he had room for several hundred firetrucks and a couple of thousand firefighters.

Two men shave at a shower truck.

California National Guard soldiers shave at a shower truck at the Rose Bowl as they rest from working security on the Eaton fire. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

“The command post started on the hood of a [Chevy] Tahoe,” Weiden said. “They had their map out and they were doing their thing and we were opening bathrooms, making sure they had access to water and all the things they need.

“It sort of got to the point where they were a self-sufficient city.”

Read more: 12 hours of fire that decimated Altadena: ‘I’m going to lose half of my town'

And if that city had a mayor, it would be Sell.

"Did they tell you that’s my nickname?" the deputy fire chief said with a chuckle. "Because I know all the Rose Bowl people and we plan all of our events here, I know what the capabilities are here. So when they go, 'Hey, we’ve got this problem,' I know who you need to talk to.”

Still, even Sell — who didn’t sleep the first two days of the fire — is surprised by what he and those Rose Bowl people have been able to pull off under trying circumstances.

“I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said. “I don’t know that there’s another place like the Rose Bowl that has this flat footprint with multiple lots where they could go and set everything up. It’s really been a blessing.”

Read more: Shohei Ohtani is giving $500,000 for fire relief. Here's how other L.A. sports figures are helping

On Friday afternoon, the tents lined up in the shadow of the stadium were surrounded by a colorful collection of red, green and yellow fire trucks and water tankers from more than a dozen states and Canada. Twice a day, dozens of those trucks line up in front of sand-colored Humvees and police cruisers and snake out of the parking lots as another line of vehicles returns, marking the end of one 12-hour shift and the start of another.

“It catches your throat,” said Brian Brantley, the vice president for advancement for the Rose Bowl Legacy Foundation, who lives in a house that looks down on the stadium. “All these people coming here to work together to fight this thing.”

For those returning, it’s not exactly like coming home. But they’re not really roughing it either.

“They do really good at taking care of us and bringing in the logistical needs, from the sleeping trailers to kitchens,” said Steve Wallace, an Oregon firefighter who has been on the front lines since Monday. “They really kind of make sure they check all the boxes to make sure we’re taken care of here.”

“You’re definitely not wanting for anything while you’re here,” added Rob Bardossy, the interagency resource representative from the British Columbia Wildfire Service, which has 22 firefighters in Pasadena. “On a small fire you don’t need something as complex as this. But obviously with what’s transpired and the number of different agencies that have responded, you’ve got to expand.”

Read more: Amid the firestorm, all around L.A., signs of gratitude, love appear

As a result, the parking lots Weiden has driven through on his way to work every day for the past 12 years were unrecognizable as he walked about the tents and trailers Friday. To be honest, he’s not even supposed to be here. With the Rose Parade and Rose Bowl game in the rearview mirror, he’s supposed to be in Sandpoint, Idaho.

“I usually am on vacation,” he said. “It’s all right, though. I’ll find another time.”

Hours into the fire, Weiden’s family was warned they might have to evacuate their nearby home, so his wife packed his suitcase. More than a week later, he still doesn’t know what’s in it because he hasn’t had time to look.

“It’s like a time capsule,” he said.

A California National Guard soldier rests after working security on the Eaton fire.

A California National Guard soldier rests after working security on the Eaton fire. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

But he’s not the only one who has put the needs of the Rose Bowl's new city ahead of his own. Weiden said about 60 people have been showing up to work every day despite the fact some are fire victims themselves. For them, the work has become personal.

On the night the fire started, Dominick Correy, the stadium’s director of community relations, was at the Rose Bowl helping set up the command center while his daughter’s house — and thousands of others — burned to the ground just a mile away.

Read more: How did a cluster of homes near the Eaton fire's ignition point emerge unscathed?

“This affected my community. I’m born and raised in this town,” he said.

As Bobby Childs, a security guard, rushed to the stadium to open the gates, his house in Altadena burned down, leaving him only with the uniform he was wearing.

“Wake me up. Pinch me. Just a nightmare,” said Childs, who buried his wife in September. “Would you believe it?”

Yet he remained at his post just the same. He said he finds comfort at the Rose Bowl, where he’s surrounded by people who have fought so hard to save other people’s homes.

“That's why I came back,” he said Friday. “I shouldn't be working today.”

Neither should anyone. But a spark and the wind had other ideas.

Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
 
Last edited:
To those of you who have been asking, I just got a text from Mona. I have permission to share it. I told her we were all worried about her.

I am so sorry for worrying all of you. I have been in the hospital. I still am. Good Samaritan. I was transfered from Cedars. I had a slight foot infection. Doctor says what is causing my weakness and pain is needing more nutrients. Need more rest too. Loud around here. But of course I am so blessed to hear
🙂
one day at a time
Thanks so much, Lynn! Glad she got back to you and is being well taken care of.
 
Good morning. It just started to snow about 45 minutes ago. They still say 1-3" for us, other parts aren't going to be that lucky. It was supposed to rain overnight but it didn't and I got lucky because the car was dry. I unlocked the doors and put the cover on, just to be on the safe side. I don't want frozen locks if it starts to turn to freezing rain. The temp is above freezing right now.
All of the cats are fed, the bird feeders are filled, and I put the box on the deck with the food and water inside where it will stay dry for them.

Summer must be feeling a little bit better, she's starting to complain that she wants to go home. I hope they don't send her home tomorrow like they were planning, they need to find out why her heart rate is so low first. Her breathing is a little better and they took the oxygen off for a few hours yesterday.

@theluckyrabbit Thank you for the pictures and the newspaper article. It was very interesting. I have nothing but admiration for all of the firefighters from all over the country who helped, along with the National Guard, and all of the other first responders.

Have a good day everyone.

1737294838757.png
 
My new grandson arrived this morning at 7:06am.

It's also my granddaughter's 8th birthday.

He missed having my birthday by just 2 days.

Now we have birthdays on Dec 30 and 31, Jan 17, and 19 (2). 5 in 3 weeks time.
I was hoping for 17, 18, 19.
 
To those of you who have been asking, I just got a text from Mona. I have permission to share it. I told her we were all worried about her.

I am so sorry for worrying all of you. I have been in the hospital. I still am. Good Samaritan. I was transfered from Cedars. I had a slight foot infection. Doctor says what is causing my weakness and pain is needing more nutrients. Need more rest too. Loud around here. But of course I am so blessed to hear
🙂
one day at a time
Thanks for relaying the message. Lots of people, myself included, drift in and out of here, and for many, that is the norm. But she was usually here on the board so consistently, that I also had been worried about her absence. Please tell her that I wish her a quick and full recovery.
 
Lynn Glad Summer is feeling better. Hope she gets home soon.

Bobbiwoz I hope you are having a nice cruise.

Mona Hoping you are doing better. I am sorry you ended up in the hospital. But I think it happened for a reason and you now knows what to do to help yourself get better. Sending get well wishes and prayers to you Mona. :grouphug:

Good snowy morning. It is 18 degrees with a feel like temp of 6. We have what looks to be 4-5 inches of snow on the ground. It looks like the storm is just about over. Now the really cold air comes in. Yesterday I went to Wegmans, to the gym, to Target, and made sweet potato and bean stuffed peppers. It was kind of a funky day for me so I just let it be. Not the best day emotionally but I did some meditation and watched some mindless Hallmark movies.

Off to work. Have a good day.
 
Good morning everyone. We are really enjoying the cruise…watching the Eagles win last evening with lots of like minded people was fun. After that Tom and I enjoyed Palo, Tom had the filet and I had the Dover sole as usual. Magdalena was our server from Indonesia, and she filet it perfectly!

Mona, please know I pray that you are improving!

A friend in Toms River NJ emailed to say they got 2” of snow and with bitter cold, it’s not going to go away any time soon. I am very happy to be on our way to Tortola.

Enjoy your day.
Bobbi
 
Good cold and snowy morning. We got about 2 inches of snow and are now entering the deep freeze. Our feel like temps the next couple of days are going to be in the -5 to -15 range.

Dad came home yesterday. He is supposed to go as an outpatient to the other hospital. The first hospital wanted him sent to a long term rehab facility. Mom said NO! I agree with her, been there done that and it doesn't help him. His knees are shot but he is not a candidate for replacements. He was in a facility last year and he went into a deep depression and mental decline.

Not much else going on around here. My grandson Wyatt is 11 today and LJ will be 4 next week. Time flies,

Hope you all have a good day and those in the path of this cold front stay warm
 
Good morning. We had a dusting of snow overnight on top of the 5" we got yesterday. It's 18 degrees out, that will be our high for the next 3 days, but it's not all that bad. I cleaned off the car cover so I could bring it in to dry it off and fold it up till the next storm. I cleared off what was on the steps and ramps. I had a sweatshirt and sweater, a hat/scarf, and a pair of mittens over my gloves. I was out there for about 20 minutes and didn't get cold at all.

I'm going to text Mona with all the good wishes from her Quacker family.

Summer is having heart tests this morning, and if all is good, they're going to discharge her. I don't think she realizes how weak she's going to feel with any exertion, even going from the hospital to the car, and then from the car to the house. At least the kids have been keeping the house clean, and the pets fed. They've stepped up , and it's well past time for that to happen.

Hi @Breezy_Carol Nice to see you!

Have a good day everyone.

1737381523881.png
 












Save Up to 30% on Rooms at Walt Disney World!

Save up to 30% on rooms at select Disney Resorts Collection hotels when you stay 5 consecutive nights or longer in late summer and early fall. Plus, enjoy other savings for shorter stays.This offer is valid for stays most nights from August 1 to October 11, 2025.
CLICK HERE









DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest

Back
Top