Is that all you got, universe?!
*sigh*
So, apparently we were behind with the Gods of Happenstance on our Agony Dues and are now being properly caught up.
Got home Monday to discover the heater running, the house freezing, and a horrible chemical smell all through the house.
Took the furnace (it's an ancient gaspack) cover off, tested the fan (which tends to stick), rang the gas company to be sure we were green, checked all the electrical junctions. Well, it's got gas, got spark, fan works, and it will fire up ... but then the flames go out and it just blows cold air (and gas?!) into the house.
So the heater is broken. We've been getting by on a small electric space heater and the wood stove (which is in the kitchen - opposite end of the house from the bedrooms).*
Is there some universal rule that All Bad Crap Must Happen At Once?
The medical bills just started coming in and the prescription costs have been eating us alive. Just the cost of the strips Bodog needs for his blood tester (he must check his blood 4 times a day) is astounding.
My truck is acting up, my tractor won't stay cranked, and the roof still leaks.
Hmm. I guess it could be worse ... the chainsaw could be broken. ROTFL!
OH, on the subject of Bitty and school, I got some pics of her at the end of the day her first day:
She did quite well and was eager to go back. She did, however, have a meltdown yesterday. I'm trying not to stress about it, but it was so painfully clear that it wasn't a 'normal' kid reaction to the situation (some other classmates had been rewarded with Smarties for good behaviour and Bitty, not understanding why she was excluded, had had her typical reaction: cry, then shut down like a switched-off robot.)
I suppose that both she and I (and her teachers) will learn more every day how to cope. I hope I won't fret myself into an ulcer before then. *rolls eyes*
*We do have a parrafin (kerosene) heater for emergencies but, 1) it triggers my asthma so badly that I'm miserable whenever it's on and 2) I will only have it in the mud room (which has a concrete floor and a high ceiling). I absolutely refuse to run it anythere else in my 140 year old tinderbox of a house. Wood frame, wood floors, ultra low ceilings? Nope.
Labels: Caution - venting gasses, School issues, Special needs













