posted
Actually, it should be, "...books that will help me regain the brain cells that decided to jump ship when lyme came on board."
Here are my interests but feel free to add any that you feel are really good but not within the interest areas: Fiction and non-fiction with these themes-
philosophy science social science, history, social justice medical stuff, detective/mystery nature, animals, planet religion (I am a spiritual person and consider myself a christian. I have read the Bible and want to start it again....) I also like reading about some buddhist principles/philosophies
Thanks for your recommendations.
Posts: 446 | From California | Registered: Jul 2004
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Loribelle
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
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Hi Pippy! how about the pippy longstockings series? sry, couldn't resist!
seriously, i ALWAYS recommend 'relationship rescue' by Dr Phil. whether you are in a "RELATIONSHIP" relationship or not...
also 'the 7 habits of highly effective people', a very good read.
spiritual reading, if you'd ever find it i don't know, but one VERY humbling and very inspiring is 'Eucharistic Whisperings'.
and... ABSOLUTELY ANYTHING by Euell Gibbons
or Dr Bernard Shaw, on healing. i especially like his iridology book.
posted
Hey Loribelle, Yeah! its from the book series about Pippi Longstocking, the wild, crazy, strong, Sewdish girl with tons of pirate treasure, no parents, and a pet monkey! I changed the spelling... I've been told the nickname fits....
Thanks for the book pics...all new titles so i will have fun looking at them
I was gonna chime in to your asparagus insomniac discussion but i was shy about saying I'm here late at night....well here its not that late yet...
are you getting good baby asparagus out there in your garden?...I used to eat it right out of the garden....
Posts: 446 | From California | Registered: Jul 2004
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treepatrol
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The Bible Posts: 10564 | From PA Where the Creeks are Red | Registered: Jun 2003
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Kara Tyson
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I think one of the best fictional books is Dune. I could almost hear my mind thinking.
I also think that board games are great. Also, card games.
Also, learning a skill--such as how to work an abacus. Or teaching yourself a language (bookstores today have a whole section).
Loribelle
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Member # 6293
posted
awh Pippy, don't ever be too shy to speak up! i post that stuff 'cause i want someone to talk to never know when i will be on, i'm a frequent inso-maniac. i hate tv so i come down here to my computer and see who is around. keeps me from waking my husband with the tossing and turning.
so, you have long blonde braids tha curl up on the ends? i used to love those books
we've been eating fresh asparagus for a couple or 3 weeks. slow start because it got and stayed real cold, but ok now i think. i got enough 2 days ago to put 8 pint bags in the freezer. have to ck the patch again today, yeh it is YUMMY raw, and IMO better for you that way. it is also delicious pickled but i have never done that, just tasted it!
well, you are asking about books so i will recommed a great book-finding site. you can find anything there, and they have used books, rare books, new books, etc. movies, music cds and magazines too. i think there are 40 stores they search...
cootiegirl
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Member # 3216
posted
Hey there Ms. Pips. Well I don't know about you, but I was a voracious reader, then one day, the brain simply would not allow me to understand the slightest thing. I had worked and was used to reading technical journals, but was now getting lost in a magazine article.... Give me a good psych thriller or a courtroom drama or medical mystery and I'm there. But when it took me well over three weeks (instead of maybe two days) to read "Runaway Jury" because I had to take naps between pages and had to keep turning back to remember who was who, it was time to scale back.
So I started out simple. I did crossword puzzles. It was tiring but it helped me to sharpen what was left upstairs! Then I went to children's books! I started re reading Nancy Drew or any chapter book with simple plot lines. Then I 'graduated' to trashy novels - the kind of thing where boy meets girl, boy and girl fall in love, boy loses girl, then they reunite. Pretty basic, few characters!
My interest in reading is still waxing and waning, but I keep a book or two on hand where the plot isn't too complex. I also reread some books - after a passage of time, they seem like a totally new book to me!!!! Right now for me it's really more about practicing the skill. cootiegirl
Posts: 1728 | From New York State | Registered: Oct 2002
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Have you read any of the Patrick O'Brian sea historical fiction novels (Jack Aubrey, Dr. Maturin)? Good stuff, a whole series, got some science thrown in too.
I had a spell of brain fog before starting treatment that prevented me from being able to comprehend any written material. So, now, on top of being a reader anyway, this keeps me goosed so I always have a half dozen library books and skip around. Go look at the new books section of your local library, bet you find something there. Or just browse the stacks. Good way to find books on subjects you would not have thought of on your own.
Posts: 8430 | From Not available | Registered: Oct 2000
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The CBC radio had a series of shows about the writings by Ivan Illich. This was at a time when I couldn't read. This series talked about "The Corruption of Christianity" by Ivan Illich.
This is a beautiful book, it's not what you think from the title. Slowly it has restored my faith in Jesus, and I am trying to be my "brother's keeper."
Corinne
Posts: 461 | From Abbotsford, BC, Canada | Registered: Oct 2003
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Hi thanks so much for the recommendations everyone...keep them coming! I will have to rediscover Pippi Longstocking and her friends...she was my childhood heroine.
my mother sent me some mystery books that I would never have touched before lyme...they actually were fun...cootie, got any titles for really cheesy ones that don't require more than 2 brain cells? I am with you on the short-term memory stuff. Ahhh the Nancy Drew mysteries....classic! It almost feels naughty to read some of these books That's part of the fun
Some days I feel cognitively back to normal and ready for some fairly dense reading but its unpredictable.
That's a great idea about the CBC program! There are lots of programs that NPR and CBC put out that are free to listen to and there are also titles on audible.com that are free. I download these when we go on long car trips. A fantastic show is called, "This American Life" out of Chicago. I don't get the CBC where I live now...I miss it.
Posts: 446 | From California | Registered: Jul 2004
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You can get CBC radio on your computer, you need RealTime Player, and another program (you only need one). If you download them, then can listen to CBC radio. It is explained on the CBC radio site.
When I have more time, will post more. I also listened to NPR today, lots to go over.
I found out last week when went to see eye specialist, I have a secondary cataract on capsule (below lens, more precisely what the lens sits in). When they take out cataract, they try to get all the debris (cataract is made up of cells) out, b/c if any of it is left behind, then cells start to grow again and that is what has happened to me.
Assistant called it a piece of fluff, I asked for medical terminology and went home and did research. Anyway this fluff is not in the direct line of vision, but b/c pupil is wide open it makes everything I look at distorted/blurred, especially at night with bright lights. I am managing and learning to adjust.
This new cataract can be blasted out with a new kind of laser, but just not yet, b/c have to wait until new cataract and old operation (last summer) is stable. So I still can't see clearly, perhaps that will never change, but I can still see and that is all that matters. They won't take cataract in left eye out until it gets really really bad. Heck, I can stay cockeyed for a little while longer. Have to live up to my reputation.
Corinne
Posts: 461 | From Abbotsford, BC, Canada | Registered: Oct 2003
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Corrine, Hugs for you...ouch! That must be downright infuriating. Is the problem with the eye due to lyme disease? makes me humbled that I take my vision for granted. Heck, I take all my senses for granted come to think of it.
I am sending you prayers and healing for your poor eyes...
Posts: 446 | From California | Registered: Jul 2004
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Yes, eye problems due to lyme and negligence/incompetence caused by stupid stupid egotistic doctors. That's another story.
That is why I harp on about don't let eye problems go. Actually, it was TinCup who saved my eyesight, God bless her. I read something that was so similar to what I was going through and next day woke up with all hell breaking lose, and b/c of what she wrote off to hospital I went.
If search was working you could go back and read TinCup's and my posts about eye problems. It is far more serious that you can imagine, and nobody has an idea of what it is like until it happens, you just have no idea. Let's see - can't see too well, can't hear too well, can't smell yet (prednisolone), can't taste (tongue is always sore), and can't touch too well (fingers numb).
Is lyme a crappy disease, again unless someone has it, nobody else can imagine what it is like, a disease from outer space.
I am off to bed, it's very late and I have to work tomorrow and catch a bus in evening. Everybody have a lovely weekend.
Corinne
Posts: 461 | From Abbotsford, BC, Canada | Registered: Oct 2003
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Loribelle
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how is the reading going, Pippy? Posts: 1149 | From southeast iowa | Registered: Sep 2004
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3greatkids
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John Steinbeck The Red Pony,short but sweet and easy reading.
Jan Karon also has a series that is very easy reading and I found my Lyme brain could handle that.This is funny,entertaining and each book builds upon the rest.
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