
Friday and its jab Friday. The alarm gets me going at 7 o’clock. I have breakfast and take my morning meds before I drive down to the GP surgery. My usual nurse does the injection. When I mention I need to come back at 11:40 to have my bloods done she offers to do them. She says that she would not normally do them this early as she is on her own and its tricky if people feint. She says she knows I am not a “feinter” so she will do it. After examining my arms she decides on using my right arm with the words “we will pop the tourniquet on and see what happens”. Not something you hear very often on a Friday morning. As it turns out there is success and the two required vails of blood are soon taken. I drive home and have a quick nap.
After a brief time I get ready to go with my partner to have our nails done. I drive us to the salon at the gym. We are a bit early due to me being 30 minutes previous. We go in and get seated at our specified tables and my beautician sets to work on me. Forty five minuets later I am done, nails looking smart and trim. I am also sporting a new sun on one of my nails. I discussed with my beautician what to have for the world cup and we decided a football and a English flag will be done.

Having sorted out the next appointment and paid the bill I return to the gym lounge and settle down to read while I wait for my partner who is having both hands and feet done. I indulge in a Lucozade sport and a bacon brioche. I continue to read Conn Iggullden’s Inferno. It is clear that Nero at the age of 22 was a real bastard. My partner joins me in the lounge but there is no time to dawdle as my partner is going to visit her mother in hospital. I drive us home where I change clothes and retreat to the sofa to continue reading and ultimately napping. Outside the garden is at 30 degrees but my body tells me its cold, so on the warmest day of the year I am on the recliner under a blanket with warm leggings on. This is what happens in response to my 28 day injection and will go on for the next twenty four hours. I continue to doze until my partner returns and we eat a chippy tea.
The evening is a TV evening as my injection becomes more sore and I enter the “withdrawing junkie” stage of my reaction to the injection. It will pass, I just have to sit it out. My blood results should come through just after midnight but given that this is a bank holiday they could be late so tonight I will take my meds and go to bed and see what the morning brings. I am hoping to get some of the promised sunshine and plant out my sunflowers tomorrow. I have started the process to publish the next poetry collection, I’m hoping for an August publication.
















