I apologize for my absence over the last two and a half months. It has been a trying time with a three-week illness for me, followed by a life-threatening illness for my 91-year-old mother. She was hospitalized on May 4 with a bacterial infection called C. diff (Clostridium difficile), an illness which is generally caused by the good bacteria in the intestinal system being wiped out by an ingestion of antibiotics. C. diff can be fatal if it gets a foothold in the colon. We've all been warned about the overuse of antibiotics, and the result can be what happened to my mom. Two weeks before developing uncontrollable diarrhea, she received a course of Cipro antibiotic for an eye infection, which evidently killed all her good bacteria and allowed the bad stuff to run rampant. She was hospitalized for two weeks and then released to a skilled nursing facility because she was too weak to stand up. After two days in the rehab center, she was rehospitalized for a week due to being in a near-comatose state. As of yesterday she has returned home and is able to maneuver with a walker or a cane but will continue to be treated with physical and occupational therapy by a home health agency. C. diff kills over 40,000 people each year in the United States, most of whom are elderly or infants.
I want to thank all of you who e-mailed me about your concerns over my absence. I have followed blogs in the past where the blogger has just disappeared and I've often wondered what happened. It's a very strange feeling to lose a friend and not know why. I hope I've answered all of you who have inquired, and I'll do my darndest to visit your blogs as soon as I can.
I have decided that two blogs is more on my plate than I can manage, so I hope I may direct you to my blog which started out three years ago as a 365 project. So please visit me at
Kathy Goes A Ramblin for future posts of life in rural East Texas and an occasional visit to Arizona, which I dearly love and miss. My final goodbye photo is of a quaint church which I visited a few weeks ago after my mom was receiving rehabilitation in a nursing home and I decided to take one last road trip into Central Texas before becoming a full-time caregiver.
The Bethlem Lutheran Church in Round Top, Texas (population 80) is the oldest Lutheran Church in Fayette County, Texas, having been established in 1866. Its unique pipe organ of cedar was built by Traugott Wanke, and the stone construction of the church shows the German architectural style prevalent in this part of the state. I was there on a Sunday afternoon but the church was locked and I was unable to view the inside. I must say I had a beautiful day for photographs with those billowy white clouds against a gorgeous blue Texas sky.
The cemetery adjacent to the Bethlehem Luthern Church in Round Top, Texas