Over You
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Google books | books.google.com |
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Originally published | 2008 |
Authors | Lucy Diamond |
Genres | Fiction |
Chick Lit | |
Contemporary Romance | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2062408 |
About Over You
A compelling story of friendship pushed to its limits from the bestselling author of The Beach Cafe"Sassy, sexy and very funny, this is a great novel about following your fantasies - and then facing up . . .
Barbra Streisand: I haven't had much fun in my life
... " Dollar signs all Over You Leaving home at 16, she took a job as a clerk, while working weekend shifts as a theatre usher, so she could keep up with Broadway s latest shows...
Sarah Lancashire says 'terrible menopause' affects her memory
... " It just comes Over You all of a sudden...
Maine woman, 87, fights off then feeds hungry burglar
... " That was the worst part - to wake up in the dark and have this man standing Over You, " the former primary school teacher of 35 years told the BBC...
Tom Kerridge: Hospitality strain like 'walking uphill, on glass, barefoot'
... " I m very much of the mindset that you lean into a problem rather than let it wash Over You, " he says...
Cardiff: Dad walks daughter down aisle after brain injury
... " Then he said, right, now crawl over to the chair pull yourself up and he said now if you fall Over You can get up ...
Lizzo, Elton John, Rick Astley. Who will give us 'Glastonbury moments' in 2023?
... And as much as we ve talked about singalongs and dancing, there s that flipside to Glastonbury where the sun s going down, and you lie back and let the music wash Over You...
Stephen Bear: Revenge porn prison sentence 'sends clear message'
... " People are looking at you and having sexual gratification Over You and it s completely out of your control, " she added...
Strikes Update: How Friday 17 February's walkouts will affect you
......
Cardiff: Dad walks daughter down aisle after brain injury
By Paul PigottBBC News
Farmer Roger Jones was able to walk his daughter down the aisle two years after doctors warned His Family he might not survive a brain infection.
Surgeons had to remove part of his skull in 2021, leaving it unlikely the 68-year-old would ever return to the Family Farm in Castleton, Cardiff.
" They told us People in Roger's condition end up in long-term care, " said wife Gill.
But determination to be there for his daughter helped him walk again.
" They actually told [My Wife ] they didn't think I'd live, " Roger said, remembering how his illness began over Christmas in 2020 when one side of his face started to droop.
" We thought he'd had a stroke, " Gill said, But doctors diagnosed a possible bout of shingles.
Then in January 2021 he was diagnosed with a sinus infection that had breached Roger's brain membrane causing an abscess.
" At that point they weren't sure whether or not he would survive, " Gill remembered, explaining how because of Covid restrictions she did not see her husband In Person for nearly three months after first taking him to hospital.
Roger underwent nine surgeries over a five-month period with surgeons first removing the infected parts of his skull and finally replacing the bone with a titanium plate.
" It was awful, " Roger said, admitting he does not remember much from that period, besides worrying about the fate of his farm close to the M4.
But Gill and his daughter Kate had " stepped up" managing the cattle and sheep and preparing to plant crops while Roger sat alone in hospital.
" We could not buckle, " Gill said, " because if we buckled he wouldn't have anything to come home to".
Roger began specialist physiotherapy at Cardiff's Llandough Hospital in June and Came Home in November.
Unable to walk or even lift himself up, he had to depend on a team of in-home carers and a hoist to get around.
" When we had the discharge meetings, it was a case of 'this is as good as it gets', " Gill said.
" They said, 'you might improve a bit more But . . People with Roger's needs go to a care home'. "
" I knew I wasn't going to do that, I was gonna fight. I had to fight it, " she remembered thinking.
" We knew that we wanted to get him home, " Gill said.
Roger said being At Home " made all the difference".
He set a goal of driving tractor again, something he had not done yet, and when his daughter Jessie got engaged, of being able to walk her down the aisle.
" It's something you do really, " He Said , " you want to take them down the aisle".
He The First " game changer" was getting a mobility scooter to help around The House .
But when it came to walking, Roger was afraid of Falling Down and not being able to Get Up .
Jakko Brouwers, a physiotherapist from the Morrello clinic in Newport, started to make home visits to Roger in April 2022. Gill remembers him saying " This Man will walk again".
But The First step was telling him to get on the floor, She Said .
" Then He Said , 'right, now crawl over to The Chair pull yourself up' and He Said 'now if you fall Over You can Get Up '. "
By February this year, after months At Home , he was talking his First Steps with a walking stick.
" It's his farming gut determination and strength, " Gill said, " that has put him where he is here because if he didn't have that he could have just said 'you know what, this is too much'. '
In June, his daughter Jessie Wheatley, 37, who was living in Queensland, Australia, Came Home to prepared for her wedding at a chapel near The Farm .
Walking Every Day with her dad was a big part of the preparations.
During these walks, Jessie told her father how surprised she was at the progress he had made in a year.
Roger replied: " You've got to keep fighting haven't you? "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com