The Glass Character
Showing posts with label medical tests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medical tests. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 23, 2019

I hate doctors, and I don't want to go (take two)

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The title sums it all up.  I hate doctors . When have they done anything good for me? Every time I go, it turns out to be "nothing...
Friday, August 29, 2014

It must have been owls

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This was an odd day, an odd week, and sometimes considerably worse than odd. You see, after my last routine mammogram, I got the dread...
Saturday, July 5, 2014

Blood sacrifice: or, why I hate going to the clinic

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This is still so traumatic that I haven't even been able to write about it in my private journal. I sit here this morning after a lo...
Wednesday, January 30, 2013

There is always one more. . . doll

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I don't know what gets into me, I really don't. I can't leave it alone, and I never could. A few posts ago I was ...
9 comments:
Friday, November 16, 2012

The waiting list for the waiting list (or: I have a drug for that)

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I don’t remember where I heard this – maybe in Moscow on the Hudson , one of Robin Williams’ earlier films, where he had not yet calc...
1 comment:
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Margaret Gunning
Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada
Welcome to Margaret Gunning's blog: a tribute to the strangeness of the ordinary. Ms.Gunning is the author of The Glass Character (Thistledown Press), her paean/tribute to the brilliant silent screen comic Harold Lloyd. Researching and writing this novel celebrating Harold's legacy and legend was by far the most compelling (and fun!) experience in her long and varied writer's life. The novel is available on Amazon and Kindle, Thistledown Press, and other major book sites. Her previous novels, Better than Life (NeWestPress) and Mallory (Turnstone Press) explore her lifelong fascination with family secrets, alienation, and the surprising joys of the ordinary. She has also written hundreds of book reviews (Montreal Gazette, Vancouver Sun, Toronto Globe and Mail) and newspaper columns for small-town papers across the country. Her philosophy: "Everything that happens is happening for the first time."
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