tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8371572.post6567060365526183972..comments2024-03-10T10:05:51.113-07:00Comments on misswhistle: The Fosbury FlopMiss Whistlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11103831095827005334noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8371572.post-25248783006418626742018-04-08T08:44:46.792-07:002018-04-08T08:44:46.792-07:00Good lord. Glad you are okay. For a few weeks, che...Good lord. Glad you are okay. For a few weeks, check to be certain all is well with your head and your body. Agree about risks. We do have to keep taking them. There’s a reason the saying “Get back on the horse that threw you” exists. Also? The Fosbury Flop won its popularizer a high-jump gold medal. When you wrote about you in the bath, with your man adding hot water and then sitting on the loo seat to converse, it reminded me of Cassandra Mortmain in I Capture the Castle. (I love companionable conversations in the bath, though hers was with a stranger, explaining that they'd all been dyeing.:) Sending you love and support. xoxoxo.Katherine C. Jameshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08834591103511225376noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8371572.post-22241302336943497202018-04-07T16:47:23.793-07:002018-04-07T16:47:23.793-07:00Just one thing. Risks that involve flying through ...Just one thing. Risks that involve flying through the air and landing on your bones are risks in a class of their own.<br /><br />I say this because I had an aunt I loved dearly. At 75 she broke her back from a fall off a horse she was jumping in a ring. Decided to unplug the ventilator. She was certainly doing what she loved at an age when many simply sit by a fire, but a little caution isn't such a terrible idea.LPChttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18209861350905135093noreply@blogger.com