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Middle of the Night Snack?

  • Posted on April 16, 2009

It figures… just when I’m finally making some progress to regaining sleep after enduring eleven days and nights of insomnia, my adrenaline comes back to reverse the progress! The combination of post-menopause and Aspie hypersensitivity doesn’t mix well with a little bit of excitement right after drifting off to sleep. Thank God it’s not too often my little Rascal has to go outside to relieve herself after bedtime! She will not go out of the house after dark unless I’m with her, but the problem is she will sometimes wander around to the dark side of the house without me.

She went around the corner for only a second. Then I heard her give a frightened growl. Instantly I called her back and we both went running into the house (her with her tail between her legs and me ready to pee). If it was an opossum, deer, or neighbor’s cat, she wouldn’t have ran like she did. I know all too well how fast wildlife can snatch dearly beloved pets, so needless to say my legs were shaky over the possibility that my sweet little dog could be gone forever right now. Thank God she isn’t. She sleeps on my couch nearby:

Tired Rascal

Tired Little Rascal

One snow-covered winter night (around midnight) when walking my German Shepherd during a full moon, I noticed at least a dozen pairs of (coyote) eyes scattered around a field I was approaching. They all stood and stared. Both my dog and I promptly reversed direction and ran as fast as we could. That ended my fun walking down that road so late at night. (None of the roads nearby have street lights and whatever houses are around have their lights off by 11 p.m.).

Would you prefer to deal with coyotes in the daylight or in the dark?

Nasty Coyote

Nasty Coyote

Another night around midnight, when I was taking my German Shepherd for a walk in the rain, I heard a black bear grunting off to my side less than fifteen feet away. My flashlight was useless for visibility in the fog. Immediately I had my dog start barking on command, since I’ve heard bears don’t like large dogs. I don’t know what reaction that bear had to the noise, but I do know he left me alone. That was another rubber-legs night for me.

Black Bear

Black Bear

Bears around here will come inside a house. It doesn’t happen often, but I think one such experience would provide me with enough self-induced epinephrine to keep me awake for a month!

Nights… sometimes it’s necessary to be out in them. The good news is I only got hurt once while out in the dark with one of my pets. Here is a peice from that story within the post of 2.26.8:

“Anyhow, suddenly while I was still outside (I’d been out there already for about 5-10 minutes), I heard a strange scream from a wild animal very close by to where I was standing. Since I couldn’t see much because of how dark it was, I ran as fast as I could to the house (Rascal was ahead of me). Bam . . . down I went into a heap! Is that why they’re called slippers? The ground was full of sharp frozen lumps of dirt and snow and there was nothing to protect my arms and legs from getting cut as I fell and hit the ground hard.”

I thought I was ready to share a story of the night that I experienced which did not have a good ending (it happened many years ago), but now I think I’ll never be able to talk about it without feeling sick.

[Edit added on 5.13.9: Most likely the visitor on the 16th was a black bear. I say that because yesterday morning around 12:30 a.m. my bird feeders were attacked by one. The bear bent the wires of the stronger feeder and smashed the other feeder. Of course that had to happen shortly after buying and installing squirrel baffles!]

Morning Rush

  • Posted on April 15, 2008

It was bad enough staying up way too late (lovely tax time again!). Maybe about two hours after having fallen asleep, I was awakened by the thought that some critter must be rattling around in a pile of lumber just outside my open window. The noise was barely audible, but definite and enough to get a morning adrenaline rush flowing. I wasn’t in any hurry to turn around and look, especially when my cat has scared me enough times looking in my window because of being let out before I’ve had a chance to wake up and let her out myself (years ago, it would be one of my chickens eyeballing me at the crack of dawn).

Of course my first guess as to what creature of the night would be rummaging around last night was a bear. As soon as I joyfully put the bird feeders back up 3½ weeks ago (after not having had them in use for a few years), hubby’s first comment had to be, “So, you want to feed the bears?” Maybe that thought stuck in my mind.

That bear happened to be right next to me . . . snoring! I never heard a snore like that from hubby before! Even though I don’t snore when I sleep, I do confess my moans and screams nightmares provoke can wake up the dead sleeper. Now today I get to be a zombie who can’t think of anything better to do than to write about trivial stuff like this while I wait for my morning cup of coffee to do its thing to my brain.

Full Moon Hangover

  • Posted on January 24, 2008

Now that I’ve started to keep a daily record of the barometric pressure pattern to see how it might correlate to my moods and physical well-being, I also am observing the moon’s effects.

A couple of nights ago, it was full. Only when my insomnia was chronic for about 13 years, did I stay actively awake for so long. It wasn’t until just before 4 AM that I went to sleep, but regardless of when I fall asleep, I quit sleeping before daylight!

I doubt I can blame the moon entirely. In yesterday’s late afternoon, I (along with my dog Rascal) went to my daughter’s apartment to bring her some Colloidal Silver, goat’s milk, and water filters. Even though her wonderful (male) mate was there helping her and my grandchildren, it was a shockingly stressful drain on me.

I described the experience as being like taking a deer out of the woods and putting it to stand in the middle of a busy intersection of some major city! . . .

. . . or, like putting sensitive electronic equipment next to neodymium (Nd2Fe14B) magnets! Neurotypical people probably can’t relate to this. Maybe they can at least imagine what it would be like to try listening to all stations playing on the full spectrum of a radio band at the same time?

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