Right now I'm the court's year dad and the family, certain family members signed
that I was incomparable. I had Lyme disease but I was I could function.
I haven't talked for years because they're cleaning and they're talking to each other.
I just stay out of the way. Anyway, I'm here and you don't make a big fuss about it.
Oh, I don't want to mess it up.
Well, it's better to be used than to sit here and rock. But I have a big piece of cheese in here and that's what I'm looking for.
It looks like I'm stupid or something because no.
I used to reach in it and know exactly what I had.
One day they came and cleaned it all out of me, so I'm not thinking of anything that I'm familiar with.
A big piece of cheese, cheese, cheese.
Land of the lakes, Swiss cheese.
If I don't eat, I slow down with memory and everything and I sometimes have a peanut butter sandwich that's sick and just eats the whole thing with a lot of stuff.
This is my peanut butter right here.
But if I don't get my right diet this way, I go down here.
The hot tea opens up my throat.
I didn't take my medicine on time.
It just makes me foggy when I talk and I was fine this morning.
It's just something that elderly people get and it's a pain in the butt.
Otherwise, I can be squallowing medicine all the time.
If I get busy exercising, not only exercising, but in work and do things, all of a sudden I kind of clear this.
With the deer and the weeds and Lyme's disease, I walk all the way up to the back again, over the bar, back again, four or five times, up the hill twice.
Do you get a picture of that curled shoe driveway?
I get the mail and then come around and walk down and then I'll maybe take two or three circles around the house.
Sometimes I walk all around here and I stay out for half an hour.
Sometimes I do it in 15 minutes, but I'm still imperfect.
I've had my ups and downs at this math, but I've had another doctor and I said,
I want another test and tell me when I test my blood.
He said, you're going to have to be 220 years old.
So I said, I'll be an old woman by then. I'm not one yet.
Oh, that cat. Oh, she's waiting for me.
No, he comes over here and then I'm not sure if he doesn't pin on my rug or something.
Hold on a minute.
Kitty, what are you doing?
Hey, if you're done eating, you come with me. Come on.
Come on, Kitty. I'll put her outside.
We're down here and she can find her way out.
Come on. Kitty, kitty, kitty, kitty, kitty, kitty.
Kitty, kitty, kitty, kitty, kitty, kitty.
Come on.
Go, go, go, go, go, go.
No, not under there.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Can you see one thing changing?
Well, that's all you have is memories, memories, memories.
Or do nothing.
That's me when I was 16. This is my home.
And this is where we live.
To me, I've never experienced a lot of turmoil.
And this has been an experience.
We got a lot to think about.
You make your own fun.
They'd say, well, why don't you do a lot of things?
And I'd say, well, you don't want me to drive.
I can't get from here to there.
They'd keep saying, you've got to go out and do something.
And I said, I'm fine.
I come in, give you all a wave.
Right now, I'm the courts, your dad,
and the family, certain family members signed that I was incomparable.
I had Lyme's disease, but I could function.
Once Greg and Lynn, I think, had signed the papers.
And that made me part of the state.
So I'm not myself. I'm owned by the state.
So anyway, it's supposed to have the last Christmas.
All the way down.
Oh, well, I don't know. They're having a meeting,
and now they have a new lawyer coming in.
They keep crushing you all.
I had Blue Cross Blue Shield 65 Special.
So they should just give me a new physical,
okay, and let you have your control back.
But then we'll let you...
See, they've got their finger on it.
That's a shame.
That's frustrating.
Well, it's illegal.
But what am I going to do?
I can't go to court case against them.
I'm not a person.
I'm owned by them.
But the big thing is you've got to use your own job
to know what's going on.
You can't trust somebody else.
I'm supposed to be free in March.
I'll hold my breath.
