Maybe you need to explain to him how bad you can be and that when it's out of hours it's incredibly difficult to sort...
Maybe you need to explain to him how bad you can be and that when it's out of hours it's incredibly difficult to sort...
Do a little of something that makes you happy every day!
I'm fed up of explaining how bad it can be.
Tên përdu, jhamâi së rëcôbro
If you only knew the amount of times I wished I could plant my head on a doctors neck and say "Well put up with that for a week!" I doubt they'd put up with it for long. To be fair though, although the docs here aren't too bad Gorgeous Graham in Scotland was quite understanding. Possibly because he was so ill at one point. Is you BF with you at the weekend? He sounds very empathetic and kind.
Maybe you need to tell him more often? Or get J to come to an appointment with you - he's seen how bad you feel at times....
Do a little of something that makes you happy every day!
Tên përdu, jhamâi së rëcôbro
to you both!
Do a little of something that makes you happy every day!
I'm trying to weigh up going to this wedding at the moment. I realised last night that my appointment with the nurse prescriber is the same day. My appointment is half 9 and could take up to an hour. I wouldn't get to the station much before 11. The train won't get to Crewe until half 2, then I would need to check in, get changed, race to get to the town hall and it would just be hugely stressful. I could rearrange my appointment but I know how lucky I am to have got one so soon. I've talked it through with J and he thinks with how ill I've been over the past week or so, I really need this appointment and that my friend would understand.
Tên përdu, jhamâi së rëcôbro
I feel for you both. But ironically, at least you both have a full understanding of each others struggles....sadly, as you say. He sounds very sweet.
I tend to agree that the appointment is vital. The real question is, whether you want to go to the wedding ...
The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well.