HighCastle of Geek

​A blog/journal about my life and the stuff I like. Popular subjects include music, guitars, gear, books, movies, video games, technology, humor.

Filtering by Tag: Health

Some Time Has Passed...

I’ve procrastinated making any updates here for a bit, as you can see by the nearly nine month gap between posts. Where to start? The summer was the busiest academic semester I’ve had in some time, with my two final regular guitar classes and my level 8 of guitar instruction. To summarize, it was a firehose of theory and sundry and I’m sure most of it has evaporated from the subsequent neglect. I took a break from playing after the end, ostensibly for a bit of palate cleansing and because I wanted to start working on a few lesson programs I had bought in the past. I ended up transcribing all of Troy Stetina’s “Total Picking Control” to Guitar Pro 8 (61 lessons) and learned a great deal more about how GP8 works and transcribing workflows in general. But, I wasn’t playing because I planned to jump headfirst into TPC once I finished.

As luck would have it, the day after I finished the transcription efforts (17 Dec 2025), I woke up with a particularly nasty flare up of my left shoulder/arm pain, a nasty little bugger that has been intermittently plagueing me for several years. This would end up changing my daily lifestyle more significantly than any other event since my retirement from the Army. For the first few weeks, the pain was severe and unrelenting to the point that all I could do was sit on the couch and watch YouTube videos in between attempts to use any mitigating strategies to dull the pain - pain relievers, topicals, heat, massage, etc. Nothing was really effectual at that point, and I even got a same day appointment with my pcm a week after it started. She gave me a steroid injection and prescribed a steroid burst along with a different nsaid from what I had been taking.

Now that several weeks have passed, I’m fairly sure the steroids just made me feel worse and did little to move the needle for the condition. During that appointment, my pcm also referred me to an orthopedic surgeon, who I’m due to see this coming Wednesday. The overall severity of the condition has improved, but the downward arc has been a pretty flat one. Even today, I woke up with shoulder pain and I can still feel the ache. I can’t say I’ve coped particularly well with this episode. I’ve essentially paused all of my creative activities due to the pain and its effect on my motivation. I’ve maintained my daily walks with the diggles, although we’ve had some winter storms that paused all outdoor activities for several days. I’ve had some okay days where I was motivated enough to walk on the treadmill, but I still haven’t risked running to any great degree because just the swinging of my arm is enough to aggravate the shoulder.

To elucidate, the pain feels neuropathic in nature and goes back probably seven or eight years. It previously would crop up with prolonged activities like practicing guitar or working at my desk when I would ignore early signs of fatigue and discomfort because I was focusing on a task. Eventually, pain would break through and I would take a break or reposition myself. This would normally solve the issue in short course, but I’ve had a few flare ups, including the Xmas 2023 episode that led to my first ER visit in thirty years (the symptoms spread into my chest and were suspicious for a cardiac event, although that workup was negative), and a more generalized moderate episode at the end of last summer. This summer episode was tied into a preceding illness that may have been my first ever COVID infection, although I was never tested. All this to say that the more typical pattern has been pain, somewhere around my left shoulder, but sometimes down the arm to the elbow, sometimes with numbness and tingling in the fingers/thumb, sometimes in the upper back/neck, sometimes with associated headaches. The pain can vary between burning, sharp, throbbing, or some combination thereof. Often the severity is unpredictable, although there are provocative factors like any sort of exertion or stretching of the shoulder past the comfortable range of motion.

This is already a dolorous dissertation of dullness, so I’ll leave off for now and plan on posting sooner about what else I’ve been doing in the interim. Sneak preview: nothing particularly productive, but I have finally cracked the code on souls games and have been spending most of my waking hours deep in the lands of Lordran and Drangleic (DS1 and DS2).

It's February, do you know where your posts are?

Some personal updates - the biggest event in the past few months was a brief cancer scare (I know that's so overused but it's actually kind of fitting) for Aeyoung over the past few months. She had been having some intermittent swelling and pain in her neck and a CT scan had showed some concerning calcifications. After much hoop jumping between the imaging center and our insurance (which saw her finally request the study get performed at a different clinic), she underwent a PET scan a little over a week ago.

It took us nearly a week to get the results, but we were thrilled there was no sign of any hypermetabolic activity anywhere in her body. Not only did that clear her of cancer in the area of concern, but it basically gives her entire body a clean bill of health from a cancer standpoint. This was a big weight off our shoulders. The past several weeks have been like 1997 all over again. There's nothing quite as demoralizing as a cancer diagnosis. You no longer know how much time you have and what the quality of that time will be. We were facing the possibility that we might only have months together, and they might be progressively more miserable for her. 

In the days before we received the results, all I could think about was if I could have one wish it would be for her to remain cancer free. That wish came true and we can return to a sense of normalcy for what lies ahead. My hope is that with a change to fee basis we can accelerate our mortgage payoff and give serious consideration to getting a 1-2 acre parcel of land and having a home and a free standing music studio built. Lots of miles to cover before then, but the horizon is wide open and the future looks bright.