Sea snakes

I think these are the worst of my visitors.  Fast, small, acrobatic, venomous bastards. It’s 3am and any thoughts of mindfulness or breathing my way through these attacks is laughable.  And what’s brought them back?   Recently, I’ve managed to avoid their visitations and when I woke up at around 2am I thought I could soothe myself back to sleep.  Not a bit of it and without doubt, getting up and doing something else has helped. Whether it is the moving around, or thinking about something else I don’t know, but I don’t even mind being awake when I should be asleep, if the pain has gone.  There is still one which lashes out at my groin and another whips out at my right wrist, but the sensations are dulling.  Perhaps they don’t like green tea?  Or being named and shamed?  I might just try going back to bed…….

7 thoughts on “Sea snakes”

  1. Mandi Thinking of you so much. The blog is very helpful and the ghastliness of the slithery things horribly imaginable . Hope we an see you both very soon . Love Scilla

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  2. Bloody hell! Sounds like quite a nightmare.

    On another note the boy with epilepsy and his mother having their Canadian cannabis oil taken off them at customs has gained a lot of column inches yesterday and it looks as if she is going to fight being as hard as she can. I’m not quite sure how that cannabis oil is different from the CBD brothers?

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    1. Yes, I’m not sure how it differs and I’m now wondering how legal mine is. I might just contact Milena and check it out. But it won’t stop me using it, I won’t say more as it will be my next post. Back to sea snakes I remember the tale you told me about the beach in Mexico where you walked back home in the dark around little heaps of them. Is that right?

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  3. Morning.

    I’ve put a short comment on your blog and funnily enough it was about cannabis oils which I see after I’d written it, that you had said the blog before that you were going to write about it next!

    I had a mystery here this morning. Sam got in another fight the night before last so I locked the cat flap and kept him in last night. I got woken up at about 6 this morning by a rather muffled cat cry. Got up to locate him and couldn’t find him anywhere. I was coming back to bed and heard the cry again and thought it came from outside! Opened up the garden room door and Sam trots in completely soaked to the skin. How on earth did he get out? He was definitely in before I locked the flap and the flap hadn’t been disturbed at all (locked with heavy seed bin in front of it). All I can think of is that he jumped out of the bedroom window into a flowerbed! He’s uninsured and very hungry and quite happy…has my boy’s been at the red bull?

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  4. You poor sweet girl. Have you found anyone else yet with similar symptoms to yours? A shared experience might help. I passed your therapy unit sign yesterday and wondered whether you might be having a treatment. Can one visit?

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  5. These sea snakes seem to have captured peoples attention! Yes, do visit the Centre and ask to see the Hyperbaric chamber, although you can hardly miss it, and they love to show it off. And you will get a flavour of how relaxed it all is. I will be there this afternoon on the 2pm dive. Without the sea snakes I hope. They are just the worst.

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