I have little to report on this rather rainy day.
I never got in a rehabilitative walk overnight ─ my third consecutive night of such a failure. I had checked the time soon enough after 2 a.m. ... or was it after 2:30 a.m.? Whatever the case, I was just too darned tired to care to be thrusting myself out into the wet and chilly night. Keep in mind that it was probably just about midnight when I got to bed.
I did get up, though, to do some reading here at my computer. I always deal with Dr. Joseph Mercola's daily mailing. Normally he has two new articles and an updated article that could have originally been published nearly a year earlier ─ I ignore those reworks.
Fortunately for me last night, one of the new articles was concerning a topic that is too alien for me ─ airy-fairy blather that is too irrelevant to my life's situation as I sit here nearly infirm after a serious bout of "COVID pneumonia" last month that has left me with scarred lungs at the age of 72. As well, I have so much credit debt that I will never get out of it alive without a financial miracle such as a major lottery win.
I also have profound personal problems that I will not here broach.
Consequently, seeing an article titled "The Profound Health Benefits of Being Grateful" turned me right off. I am not one of those who sees nothing but blessings and positivity everywhere he looks in his life ─ to my mind, only a simpleton can have that sort of outlook in the face of genuine, life-limiting conditions.
Free me from financial debt and all of the retrained limitations and dependencies it imposes, and bestow upon me robust health and exceptional physical prowess, and I will go through my days beaming with sincere gratitude and positivity.
While I was up, around 3 a.m. I heard what must have been my youngest stepson come home. I have no idea where the lad went. He did go out just before I originally went to bed, but I just assumed he was nipping off for some fast food or coffee or something.
Perhaps he was continuing with the celebration of his 24th birthday which is either imminent or just newly past ─ his mother (my wife) took him and his older brother out late last afternoon for a dinner at the Thai restaurant where she works part-time. They left around 5:30 p.m. and did not return until around 9:30 p.m. ─ or I should say, that was when the boys returned. My wife must have just dropped them off and headed back to join her friends to continue partying (her boss in one of her best friends). I never heard her come home later.
She had to work a full day today. Certainly, the restaurant does not open until 11 a.m., but she looked far from full of life when she got up to begin readying herself this latter morning for her long day.
I am going to finish up this post simply by mentioning two of the rather interesting videos that I tuned in this latter morning for my brother and I to watch on T.V. via our Android TV Box.
One of the videos was a 56-minute interview performed by the Canadian Citizens for Charter Rights and Freedoms' retired Major Russ Cooper: C3RF "In Hot" interview with the Honourable Brian Peckford.
The last living First Minister responsible for the patriation of the Canadian Constitution and its embedded Charter, the Honourable Brian Peckford, goes beyond recounting the history associated with our "supreme law" to chronicle its abject decline in present-day, "pandemic" Canada. In doing so, he rolls "In Hot" with Major Russ Cooper (Ret'd) to discuss the current, and unprecedented, loss of civil liberties to discuss just what can, and needs, to be done to pull back from impending disaster and despotism. Time is of the essence as our young ones stand to be inoculated with potentially dangerous gene therapies as we speak.
I have yet to do so, but I will most likely add my name to LawyersStandUp.ca as a "concerned citizen".
The other video I wish to mention was a 36-minute interview by Liberty Coalition Canada's Michael Thiessen: Former Alberta Nurse: Protocols & Mandates Are Killing Healthcare.
Former nurse Julianne Johnson explains why good doctors and nurses are being pressed out of health care by senseless protocols, and gives advise and courage for dealing with vaccination mandates.
Julianne's story was very similar to those told by B.C. nurses who have been interviewed by Odessa Orlewicz.
I live in B.C., incidentally.
But that's enough for today.
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