facthunter Posted November 16 Posted November 16 The Belarus Tractors were often Called "Ivan the Terrible". Nev 1
old man emu Posted November 16 Author Posted November 16 My sister just got scammed in the purchase of hay for her horses. Went onto a website that claimed the feed was good for curing founder (a condition of the hooves resulting from too rich a diet). She paid the money and even spoke to someone about delivery. When it didn't come she phoned back and got all sort of runarounds. Luckily she was only buying a few bales, but the loss was pretty hard on a pensioner. She contacted her bank to report it, but didn't get any satisfaction. I think that she also contacted the police, but it would go into the insoluble cases file. 1
old man emu Posted November 16 Author Posted November 16 2 minutes ago, facthunter said: Do you mean "Unsolvable"? Nev And OME has been caught by the Grammar Police red handed in a spelling violation. "Insolvable" is the correct word. Def'n: If a problem, difficulty, or mystery is insolvable, it is not possible to find a solution to it or the cause of it. : 1
old man emu Posted November 16 Author Posted November 16 4 hours ago, facthunter said: Maybe it was a Malapropism? Nev No. To qualify the misuse would have to be for humerus effect. 1
nomadpete Posted November 16 Posted November 16 5 minutes ago, old man emu said: No. To qualify the misuse would have to be for humerus effect. Humerous is on the end of my elbow. 1
facthunter Posted November 17 Posted November 17 It wasn't Humorous when I ended up dislocating my elbow. Nev 1
spacesailor Posted November 17 Posted November 17 Or my broken elbow. Never be able to straitened the arm Again . Still learning to lift the arm above shoulder hight. spacesailor 1
pmccarthy Posted November 17 Posted November 17 Back on topic...The insurance assessor asks "how high could you lift the arm before?" and Spacey's arm shoots straight up. 3
spacesailor Posted November 17 Posted November 17 I wish ! . I use the weaker left arm for everything now . I broke the skiny bone in the forearm, the elbow & tore the muscle/ tendons with the " rotator " something in the shoulder . All in one hit . ( into the prone position on the road ) . spacesailor 1
red750 Posted November 17 Posted November 17 You have pretty much the same as me, Spacey. A number of years ago, I had a fall and tore two tendons from the bone on my right arm. and partly tore a third tendon. The sports medicine specialist who examined me said those injuries do not heal, and surgery would result in 3 months in a sling with no guarantee of success. The description you were looking for is rotator cuff syndrome. You can look it up on Google. When the pain gets bad, I need a steroid injection guided by ultrasond. I can lift a half kilo dumbell 10 times slowly about 80% of the way to straight up, 20+ times quickly with my left. Getting dishes from the high shelves or putting them away can be quite painful. For hanging washing on the rotary clothes line requires that the line is just above my head. When my son or daughter use the line it is often left at full height and I have to wind it down 15 or 20 turns of the handle. 1
red750 Posted November 17 Posted November 17 13 minutes ago, facthunter said: Funt A steroid and asteroid make sense. Nev I went back and added that sentence without proofreading it, left out a bloody space. Since corrected.
spacesailor Posted November 17 Posted November 17 I tried those steroid injections, but they don't work for me . they tell me they're painful . But I hardly feel it going in, & I watch the procedure. Spacesailor 1
facthunter Posted November 17 Posted November 17 I wasn't trying to pick on you, red. Just commenting on a rare coincidence.. Nev
spacesailor Posted November 18 Posted November 18 (edited) Red keep at it. I'm up to 2 ks . So easy on that good arm , but oh so hard to keep pumping the crook arm . Two or three times daily. When I started , I couldn't lift my empty hand , above my shoulder. Had to use the other hand to assist. spacesailor Edited Monday at 04:14 AM by spacesailor Put brain into gear & sign off 1 1
facthunter Posted Monday at 04:41 AM Posted Monday at 04:41 AM Steroid injections have to be done VERY slowly Don't have them IF you are diabetic. Nev 1
spacesailor Posted Monday at 10:18 PM Posted Monday at 10:18 PM ? . No, ' why ' , Diabetics stick pins in their finger daily. spacesailor
red750 Posted Monday at 11:49 PM Posted Monday at 11:49 PM Steroid medications can increase blood glucose levels. 1
spacesailor Posted Tuesday at 03:09 AM Posted Tuesday at 03:09 AM I see ! . That makes sence, but eating your meal will make the same glucose spike. My mother was put on " minidiab " & " Diabex " . One cancelled the other . spacesailor 1
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