The X-Ray went well. I caught the tram with time to spare and took the correct one (having written it on the back of my hand). It wasn’t too crowded (lunchtime/early afternoon looks like the time to travel) and I arrived with two minutes to spare. Nine minutes later I was walking out. All done. It would have been less if I’d remembered to take my wallet out of my right leg cargo pocket when we started.
It’s important, I think, to mention when the NHS does well. The receptionist I spoke with this morning to make a blood test appointment was very cheerful and efficient too. I was “Number One” in the telephone queue and I can’t recall the last time that happened.
Very little else happened. We had veg stew with dumplings tonight. Tomorrow it is sausage sandwiches with soup – that will be bean and vegetable soup, which is, by coincidence, the ingredients I have left after the two stews.
I now have a notebook full of ideas too, as it’s the first time I’ve done anything part from work and blood tests for many months.
There were very few masks in evidence. Just three on the tram and a couple in hospital. I can see problems resulting from this.
It seems we have a re-emergence of Whooping Cough as a disease of note. Lockdown and masks just about put a stop to it, so we have brought up a group of kids with no natural immunity. Add this to low vaccination rates and we are looking at a potentially serious situation. Of course, scientists always say this, as do newspapers, who are calling it “the 100 day cough” and “the Victorian disease”. What they don’t tell you is that what they are reporting as “an explosion” of cases is merely a return to the levels we had before lockdown.
Then we have measles. It has killed millions. It can leave you with permanent problems. We have virtually eradicated it, but vaccination rates are a little lower than ideal. On the other hand, I had it as a kid, as did my sister, and we are fine. It’s all a question of balance and it’s easy to get hysterical about these things. I’m sure that there’s a module in Journalism courses “Hysteria and How to Provoke it”. That’s the only explanation for some of the headlines they come up with.
Pictures are random spring flowers from previous years – roll on spring.


