
Only one more week remaining here in the hunker bunker! I’m fighting the good fight.
Hand rehab is going well: 90 minutes of PT weekly, plus prescribed exercises several times daily.
I’m not yet able to fully extend my fingers or make a fist, but I’ve recovered most sensation and flexibility, and the pain is almost entirely gone, which is encouraging.
Most importantly, I’m able to practice for a little longer each day, so it should be safe to return to work soon.
The stiffness in my fumbling flugel fingers, however, is supremely frustrating!
Passages I could play before with lyrical ease are now difficult to execute.
So it’s back to basics: scales, patterns, and etudes. Shout out to my old nemesis Herbert L. Clarke!
I play each exercise slowly with the metronome, gradually increasing the tempo, only after I’m able to place each note precisely and with equal weight. It’s mind-numbing work, but necessary.
Meanwhile, I’m also battling the bean-counting bureacrats of the deviously labyrinthine Medical-Industrial Complex. Sigh. #IYKYK
In the martial art of Aikido, the Japanese term “randori” (乱取り), literally “seizing chaos,” is an advanced technique in which the practitioner must improvise a defense against multiple attackers.
Opponents strike randomly using a variety of weapons. The unarmed randori master, alone at the center of this chaotic whirlwind, remains relaxed and ostensibly motionless. He anticipates, reacts, and deflects, expending little effort, even as he sends assailants flying in every direction.
What a beautiful and inspiring image!
To calmly face all of life’s battles—mental, physical, financial, existential—with grace.
Seizing chaos! Stillness within motion. You dig?
Fortunately, we don't have to fight every battle alone!
Thank you all for your encouragement and support.
