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#1
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OT Sorry
I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor
about using my right arm. He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. Besides taking out my biceps tendon, and saw the ends off of two bones, he had to literally piece together my rotator cuff (the rotator cuff is actually a group of tendons criss-crossed over (or under?) the shoulder bone. To patch together the rotator cuff, he had trim all those torn and shredded tendons; screw a metal corkscrew into my shoulder bone and then sew each tendon and "anchor" it to this little pin. If I were to snap one of those threads or pull out that small pin, there would not be enough tissue left to fix it and I would probably lose most of the use of my right arm. I have to do *everything* with my left arm, so typing takes forever. I have to be much more careful not to "accidentally" move my right arm for 2 more weeks. Well, that was the date of when I was supposed to go back to work, so the doctor "upped" my STD leave time from 6 weeks to 10 weeks, leaving me two weeks of "active" PT so I can re-learn how to use my right arm. Now I'm looking at 6 more weeks out of work (I'm sure my boss is "thrilled" about that). So now I'm more worried than ever about being laid off when I do get back. Well, all of that, taking 40 minutes to write ;, to say I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up, (and I hate this) sending blanket purrs and hugs. -- Hugs, CatNipped See our clowder at http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/ |
#2
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OT Sorry
"CatNipped" wrote in message ... I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. Besides taking out my biceps tendon, and saw the ends off of two bones, he had to literally piece together my rotator cuff (the rotator cuff is actually a group of tendons criss-crossed over (or under?) the shoulder bone. To patch together the rotator cuff, he had trim all those torn and shredded tendons; screw a metal corkscrew into my shoulder bone and then sew each tendon and "anchor" it to this little pin. If I were to snap one of those threads or pull out that small pin, there would not be enough tissue left to fix it and I would probably lose most of the use of my right arm. I have to do *everything* with my left arm, so typing takes forever. I have to be much more careful not to "accidentally" move my right arm for 2 more weeks. Well, that was the date of when I was supposed to go back to work, so the doctor "upped" my STD leave time from 6 weeks to 10 weeks, leaving me two weeks of "active" PT so I can re-learn how to use my right arm. Now I'm looking at 6 more weeks out of work (I'm sure my boss is "thrilled" about that). So now I'm more worried than ever about being laid off when I do get back. Well, all of that, taking 40 minutes to write ;, to say I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up, (and I hate this) sending blanket purrs and hugs. -- Hugs, CatNipped See our clowder at http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/ Lori, I made this suggestion some time ago, and I wonder if you looked into it (or possibly were already familiar with it). That is, Dragon Naturally Speaking might help with typing, both at home and at the office. It permits you to speak instead of using your hands for typing. I have never used it, but I understand that it does take some time to "train" it, but that surely would be better than trying to type with one hand. MaryL |
#3
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OT Sorry
btw both xp and win seven have a stripped version of speech to txt that can
be used, Lee "MaryL" -OUT-THE-LITTER wrote in message ... "CatNipped" wrote in message ... I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. Besides taking out my biceps tendon, and saw the ends off of two bones, he had to literally piece together my rotator cuff (the rotator cuff is actually a group of tendons criss-crossed over (or under?) the shoulder bone. To patch together the rotator cuff, he had trim all those torn and shredded tendons; screw a metal corkscrew into my shoulder bone and then sew each tendon and "anchor" it to this little pin. If I were to snap one of those threads or pull out that small pin, there would not be enough tissue left to fix it and I would probably lose most of the use of my right arm. I have to do *everything* with my left arm, so typing takes forever. I have to be much more careful not to "accidentally" move my right arm for 2 more weeks. Well, that was the date of when I was supposed to go back to work, so the doctor "upped" my STD leave time from 6 weeks to 10 weeks, leaving me two weeks of "active" PT so I can re-learn how to use my right arm. Now I'm looking at 6 more weeks out of work (I'm sure my boss is "thrilled" about that). So now I'm more worried than ever about being laid off when I do get back. Well, all of that, taking 40 minutes to write ;, to say I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up, (and I hate this) sending blanket purrs and hugs. -- Hugs, CatNipped See our clowder at http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/ Lori, I made this suggestion some time ago, and I wonder if you looked into it (or possibly were already familiar with it). That is, Dragon Naturally Speaking might help with typing, both at home and at the office. It permits you to speak instead of using your hands for typing. I have never used it, but I understand that it does take some time to "train" it, but that surely would be better than trying to type with one hand. MaryL |
#4
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OT Sorry
Continue to baby that arm as much as you need to. Purrs for rapid and
complete healing. -- Joy Don't believe everything you think "CatNipped" wrote in message ... I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. Besides taking out my biceps tendon, and saw the ends off of two bones, he had to literally piece together my rotator cuff (the rotator cuff is actually a group of tendons criss-crossed over (or under?) the shoulder bone. To patch together the rotator cuff, he had trim all those torn and shredded tendons; screw a metal corkscrew into my shoulder bone and then sew each tendon and "anchor" it to this little pin. If I were to snap one of those threads or pull out that small pin, there would not be enough tissue left to fix it and I would probably lose most of the use of my right arm. I have to do *everything* with my left arm, so typing takes forever. I have to be much more careful not to "accidentally" move my right arm for 2 more weeks. Well, that was the date of when I was supposed to go back to work, so the doctor "upped" my STD leave time from 6 weeks to 10 weeks, leaving me two weeks of "active" PT so I can re-learn how to use my right arm. Now I'm looking at 6 more weeks out of work (I'm sure my boss is "thrilled" about that). So now I'm more worried than ever about being laid off when I do get back. Well, all of that, taking 40 minutes to write ;, to say I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up, (and I hate this) sending blanket purrs and hugs. -- Hugs, CatNipped See our clowder at http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/ |
#5
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OT Sorry
On Tue, 8 Jun 2010 15:00:55 -0500, "CatNipped"
wrote: I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. Besides taking out my biceps tendon, and saw the ends off of two bones, he had to literally piece together my rotator cuff (the rotator cuff is actually a group of tendons criss-crossed over (or under?) the shoulder bone. To patch together the rotator cuff, he had trim all those torn and shredded tendons; screw a metal corkscrew into my shoulder bone and then sew each tendon and "anchor" it to this little pin. If I were to snap one of those threads or pull out that small pin, there would not be enough tissue left to fix it and I would probably lose most of the use of my right arm. I have to do *everything* with my left arm, so typing takes forever. I have to be much more careful not to "accidentally" move my right arm for 2 more weeks. Well, that was the date of when I was supposed to go back to work, so the doctor "upped" my STD leave time from 6 weeks to 10 weeks, leaving me two weeks of "active" PT so I can re-learn how to use my right arm. Now I'm looking at 6 more weeks out of work (I'm sure my boss is "thrilled" about that). So now I'm more worried than ever about being laid off when I do get back. Well, all of that, taking 40 minutes to write ;, to say I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up, (and I hate this) sending blanket purrs and hugs. Wow, this sounds really terrible! I hurt my right arm back in 2006, and I couldn't tie my shoes, or use the computer very much. But, there wasn't a sword hanging over me if I overdid it, just more pain for me. Sending purrs that your shoulder heals well. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^..^ "Life without cats would be only marginally worth living." -TC, and the unmercifully, relentlessly, sweet calico kitty, Kenzie. Every day is a treasure with Kenzie; I try to treat them that way. There will only be so many, and then there will never, ever, be any more. How you behave towards cats here below determines your status in Heaven. - Robert Heinlein --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 100608-1, 06/08/2010 Tested on: 6/8/2010 8:28:27 PM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2010 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
#6
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OT Sorry
"MaryL" -OUT-THE-LITTER wrote in message
... "CatNipped" wrote in message ... I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. Besides taking out my biceps tendon, and saw the ends off of two bones, he had to literally piece together my rotator cuff (the rotator cuff is actually a group of tendons criss-crossed over (or under?) the shoulder bone. To patch together the rotator cuff, he had trim all those torn and shredded tendons; screw a metal corkscrew into my shoulder bone and then sew each tendon and "anchor" it to this little pin. If I were to snap one of those threads or pull out that small pin, there would not be enough tissue left to fix it and I would probably lose most of the use of my right arm. I have to do *everything* with my left arm, so typing takes forever. I have to be much more careful not to "accidentally" move my right arm for 2 more weeks. Well, that was the date of when I was supposed to go back to work, so the doctor "upped" my STD leave time from 6 weeks to 10 weeks, leaving me two weeks of "active" PT so I can re-learn how to use my right arm. Now I'm looking at 6 more weeks out of work (I'm sure my boss is "thrilled" about that). So now I'm more worried than ever about being laid off when I do get back. Well, all of that, taking 40 minutes to write ;, to say I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up, (and I hate this) sending blanket purrs and hugs. -- Hugs, CatNipped See our clowder at http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/ Lori, I made this suggestion some time ago, and I wonder if you looked into it (or possibly were already familiar with it). That is, Dragon Naturally Speaking might help with typing, both at home and at the office. It permits you to speak instead of using your hands for typing. I have never used it, but I understand that it does take some time to "train" it, but that surely would be better than trying to type with one hand. MaryL I did, but we can't afford it for home use and the way I type at work (e.g. editing existing documents rather than straight letters) couldn't be accomodated by a speech program (I most correct columns of numbers for government forms that we fill out for our clients. Hugs, CatNipped |
#7
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OT Sorry
"CatNipped" wrote in message ... "MaryL" -OUT-THE-LITTER wrote in message ... "CatNipped" wrote in message ... I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. Besides taking out my biceps tendon, and saw the ends off of two bones, he had to literally piece together my rotator cuff (the rotator cuff is actually a group of tendons criss-crossed over (or under?) the shoulder bone. To patch together the rotator cuff, he had trim all those torn and shredded tendons; screw a metal corkscrew into my shoulder bone and then sew each tendon and "anchor" it to this little pin. If I were to snap one of those threads or pull out that small pin, there would not be enough tissue left to fix it and I would probably lose most of the use of my right arm. I have to do *everything* with my left arm, so typing takes forever. I have to be much more careful not to "accidentally" move my right arm for 2 more weeks. Well, that was the date of when I was supposed to go back to work, so the doctor "upped" my STD leave time from 6 weeks to 10 weeks, leaving me two weeks of "active" PT so I can re-learn how to use my right arm. Now I'm looking at 6 more weeks out of work (I'm sure my boss is "thrilled" about that). So now I'm more worried than ever about being laid off when I do get back. Well, all of that, taking 40 minutes to write ;, to say I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up, (and I hate this) sending blanket purrs and hugs. -- Hugs, CatNipped See our clowder at http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/ Lori, I made this suggestion some time ago, and I wonder if you looked into it (or possibly were already familiar with it). That is, Dragon Naturally Speaking might help with typing, both at home and at the office. It permits you to speak instead of using your hands for typing. I have never used it, but I understand that it does take some time to "train" it, but that surely would be better than trying to type with one hand. MaryL I did, but we can't afford it for home use and the way I type at work (e.g. editing existing documents rather than straight letters) couldn't be accomodated by a speech program (I most correct columns of numbers for government forms that we fill out for our clients. Hugs, CatNipped I don't know if it would be any use to you, but I once had a program that would read the numbers off a computer spreadsheet to me so I could check them without looking back and forth between documents. |
#8
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OT Sorry
On Jun 8, 9:44*pm, "CatNipped" wrote:
"MaryL" -OUT-THE-LITTER wrote in message ... "CatNipped" wrote in message ... I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. *He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. *Besides taking out my biceps tendon, and saw the ends off of two bones, he had to literally piece together my rotator cuff (the rotator cuff is actually a group of tendons criss-crossed over (or under?) the shoulder bone. *To patch together the rotator cuff, he had trim all those torn and shredded tendons; screw a metal corkscrew into my shoulder bone and then sew each tendon and "anchor" it to this little pin. If I were to snap one of those threads or pull out that small pin, there would not be enough tissue left to fix it and I would probably lose most of the use of my right arm. I have to do *everything* with my left arm, so typing takes forever. *I have to be much more careful not to "accidentally" move my right arm for 2 more weeks. *Well, that was the date of when I was supposed to go back to work, so the doctor "upped" my STD leave time from 6 weeks to 10 weeks, leaving me two weeks of "active" PT so I can re-learn how to use my right arm. Now I'm looking at 6 more weeks out of work (I'm sure my boss is "thrilled" about that). *So now I'm more worried than ever about being laid off when I do get back. Well, all of that, taking 40 minutes to write ;, to say I'm sorry I haven't been keeping up, (and I hate this) sending blanket purrs and hugs. -- Hugs, CatNipped See our clowder athttp://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/ Lori, I made this suggestion some time ago, and I wonder if you looked into it (or possibly were already familiar with it). *That is, Dragon Naturally Speaking might help with typing, both at home and at the office. It permits you to speak instead of using your hands for typing. *I have never used it, but I understand that it does take some time to "train" it, but that surely would be better than trying to type with one hand. MaryL I did, but we can't afford it for home use and the way I type at work (e.g. editing existing documents rather than straight letters) couldn't be accomodated by a speech program (I most correct columns of numbers for government forms that we fill out for our clients. Hugs, CatNipped I think there might be different flavors of Dragon for different uses. I know when my cousin (who has cerebral palsy) got it years ago, there were multiple versions of it, for personal use, for use in medical settings, and I'm not sure what other versions there were anymore. It might be worth taking a look-see to find out if there are either versions of Dragon that are designed for the kind of use you make of a computer during work, or any competing products that would be well- suited for you to use. I feel awful for you. I've seen what it's like to have major surgery on a shoulder. My mom had a serious accident in 2001 that caused, among other things, broken bones in the shoulder area and a dislocated shoulder. Repair surgery involved a lot of reconstructive work in putting the soft tissue in her shoulder back together. I tip my cap to the orthopedist who did the work, because her shoulder was a disaster area -- I think there were more things in there damaged than there were intact parts. Given her age (70), it's never going to be 100% but it's definitely close enough that she's able to live a normal life. Recovery involves doing what the doctor says, though... absolutely not fun when it restricts activity so severely. But at least the "no movement at all" restriction is only a temporary, if necessary, evil. Sending lots of purrs and wags that the weeks until you're allowed to use the arm again SPEED by. Donna, Captain and Stanley, and MIni |
#9
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OT Sorry
On Jun 8, 4:00*pm, "CatNipped" wrote:
I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. *He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. * (respectful snip) YOWCH!!! Rest that arm, please! As for the boss...well, if I could spell a raspberry, I'd do it and invite you to hand it to him. Besides, if you're on real, honest-to-ouch disability, I don't think the joker can lay you off. You would have so much legal recourse that he'd need a truss to carry the imposing weight of it around. At the risk of trodding well-worn paths, I encourage you to look at the voice-recognition software that has been mentioned by several others. I'm thinking also that if you register with your local disability-advocacy office (ask your local United Way chapter where to go) you may get a grant or some kind of assistance in obtaining and installing the software. This is because of the "reasonable accomodations" ruling set up in your friend and mine, the Americans with Disabilities Act. Do check it out, please. Our local Independent Living Center has helped people get wheelchair-accessible vans so they can drive themselves and not be shlepped by others; they helped me redo my resume so I could pull myself out of the hell wherein I was employed; and helped in legal instances with schmucks like your boss. And again, rest that poor downtrodden shoulder! I had an A/C separation that took years to heal, and that was because I was stupid and went back to physical labor too quickly. Treat yourself well! Blessed be, Baha |
#10
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OT Sorry
"BfloPolska" wrote in message
... On Jun 8, 4:00 pm, "CatNipped" wrote: I haven't been posting because I got my @$$ handed to me from the doctor about using my right arm. He sat down, with pictures, and showed me what he had to do during my surgery. (respectful snip) YOWCH!!! Rest that arm, please! As for the boss...well, if I could spell a raspberry, I'd do it and invite you to hand it to him. Besides, if you're on real, honest-to-ouch disability, I don't think the joker can lay you off. You would have so much legal recourse that he'd need a truss to carry the imposing weight of it around. At the risk of trodding well-worn paths, I encourage you to look at the voice-recognition software that has been mentioned by several others. I'm thinking also that if you register with your local disability-advocacy office (ask your local United Way chapter where to go) you may get a grant or some kind of assistance in obtaining and installing the software. This is because of the "reasonable accomodations" ruling set up in your friend and mine, the Americans with Disabilities Act. Do check it out, please. Our local Independent Living Center has helped people get wheelchair-accessible vans so they can drive themselves and not be shlepped by others; they helped me redo my resume so I could pull myself out of the hell wherein I was employed; and helped in legal instances with schmucks like your boss. And again, rest that poor downtrodden shoulder! I had an A/C separation that took years to heal, and that was because I was stupid and went back to physical labor too quickly. Treat yourself well! Blessed be, Baha Thanks so much for that information - I had no idea that there WAS such an entity! I'm printing this out so Ben can check it out when he gets home. -- Hugs, CatNipped See our clowder at http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/ |
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