New Year's Eve is upon us, and I just want to wish all of you a happy New Year. By this time of the year, pretty much every year, I'm sick of the "year in review" shows on TV, so I'll just post a little about my year in review. It's customary to start the New Year with a reference to the Roman god Janus - his name is where January gets its name - who could look both backward and forward at the same time, so we can do the same thing.
It seems to be a pattern of the last several years that a major part of the
year revolves around some medical crap. Without a doubt the worst of 2025 was
March 1st, when I woke to my little buddy Mojo, our old man cat, passed away in my
arms. To be honest, I’m not completely over that. I don’t see him in his favorite places around the house like I did at first, but certain pictures or tunes still
choke me up. We brought another cat into our lives in July, Independence Day weekend, but she’s not a replacement, she’s a completely different
“personality.”
My semi-annual visit to my GP in February was boringly normal, but April’s annual visit to the cardiologist was the start of an “adventure” (only slightly sarcastic) that still hasn’t played out fully. I’ve mentioned this many times, but a short summary is that on my birthday in 2013 I started having weird heartbeat sensations that ended in being told I had various arrhythmias including afib, PVCs, PACs and more. At this April's visit, the technician doing an echocardiogram asked it I ever had trouble with my afib and I told her I don’t know that I ever had it besides that one time 12 years ago. She replied, “you’re having it now.”
After several visits with my “regular” cardiologist, that vocal exchange happened with other people. My cardiologist referred me to a cardiac electrophysiologist and the short summary is that
I’m currently heading toward a procedure with him to burn out areas of my heart that are causing the improper
heartbeat. I don’t have a date assigned, yet. The ablation uses a radio
frequency source called a Farapulse to do the burning, which seems appropriate
for a guy who designed radio receivers and transmitters.
The big thing of the year was I finally got my umbilical (belly button area)
hernia repaired on June 12th. It was all pretty much by the book until about
one week post surgery. Still living with the “don’t lift anything heavier than
a coffee mug” I stretched out in bed to take a nap and I woke up, noticed my
abdomen was covered in an itchy rash. I treated it with benadryl or
calamine/benadryl mix and it would knock out the itch for a few hours. I was
able to bump up my appointment with the Physician’s Assistant for the
post-surgery checkup, and he just confirmed what I was doing. He said that I
had never said I have allergic reactions to things they used, and I pointed
out that never having had one doesn’t mean I ever had whatever it was they
used that gave me the rash. Surprising to me is that one of the old suture
incisions still gets itchy once or twice a week. Cortisone or those other
things still work.
After a few months post-surgery, I started pushing toward doing core strengthening mostly with sit-ups. I’ve gotten back to doing a hundred situps on weightlifting days so like a couple of times/week. For a variety of reasons mostly related to the need for the ablation, I’ve gone from riding the bike three days/week to walking, which is unrealistically easy.
As for looking toward the future, my crystal ball is cloudy. I'm a "real money" guy and the gyrations of the central bankers have had me expecting economic collapse Real Soon Now for about 20 years - certainly before the '08 collapse. I had seen talk of the subprime crisis developing in '06, before it started and led to the '08 collapse. I've written so many times about economic collapse that haven't come true that I've stopped believing in myself - or my ability to predict it. I've also written about the collapse of technological civilization, the "new dark ages" so many times that the same conclusion happened. I'm just not going to put out wrong predictions again. I'll do a post on the collapse when it happens.
A couple of years ago, I thought (and still think) I could see the Crusades 2 point 0 approaching with Islamists openly attacking other countries. When we see the DEI mind virus pushing into STEM colleges and programs, when competence, hard work, and attention to detail are derided as "white supremacy" or whatever, will you ever feel safe crossing a bridge or riding a commercial jet? So few people actually know how to design the critical parts in the essential electronics we take for granted, if the semiconductor fab plants were suddenly gone - intentionally or by some natural disaster - could they be recreated?
I think it's going to happen, I just don't know when.
On the stuff we watch the closest here: space exploration, I expected that Starship would have reached orbit two years ago or maybe more. I remember asking if something as ambitious as Starship could reach orbit in fewer flights than the vastly simpler Falcon 1. On the other hand, they know vastly more than they did about making orbital spacecraft back then, but something as ambitious as Starship has never flown. That said, I think they make orbit this year. As for other predictions, Rocket Lab's Neutron will fly, and there's a rumor going around that Rocket Lab is going to buy the leftover-hulk of ULA.
Let me leave it there, along with a wish for a very Happy New Year to everyone who stops to read here. May it be healthy and fun for all.

Wishing you a peaceful and successful 2026.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year! I too fear the "we've had enough" moment is coming soon. The attacks, physical and monetary, are getting to obscene to ignore.
ReplyDeleteGood morning, SiG. Yeah, I stopped making predictions too. IIRC, I first got really worried at the tail end of Bush II, with TARP. I don't recall specific circumstances, but the sharp knee in M2 at Feb 2020 caught my attention, I'm sure. That corresponds with a sharp spike in debt/GDP ratio, which still remains a major concern.
ReplyDeleteI hope the infrastructure will still be functioning for your post, when the collapse happens. Actually, I hope that it's delayed long enough that neither of us will have to live through it.
- jed
"I hope that it's delayed long enough that neither of us will have to live through it."
DeleteTo borrow a line from Shakespeare, "'tis a consummation devoutly to be wish'd."
Ideally, I'd prefer nobody has to live through it, but I don't see a way for that to happen.
a very happy New Year to you and yours
ReplyDeleteand thank you for keeping me updated (and renewing/maintaining my interest) in/on space, electronics, and ham
I see two different cardiologists for two different heart problems. They refer to themselves as a "plumber" and an "electrician". The bad news is they tell me I'm too old to operate on so I guess that means if something goes wrong my next specialist will be a priest.
ReplyDeleteback in '16 I was advised that my aortic valve was on its last legs. when prepping me for the operation, they suddenly (BION) discovered that my heart's "electrical impulse center" was not doing its job properly (sending an impulse to contract ~ 7 out of 20) and recommended a pacemaker. I was already on the table, so I said, half anesthetised, "go fer it!"
Deletethat was done when I was 2 months short of 75; here I am 2 months short of 85; rarin' to go.
as a point of interest, the surgeon was Jonathan D. Hoffberger, DO at Sarasota Memorial; he's still doin' 'em with an excellent record.
At my last echo, the Transesophogeal Echo, I was told I had a leaky valve but it wasn't bad. Among my hopes for the ablation is it keeps the valve from deteriorating.
DeleteWhile I don't particularly trust that my smart watch is really telling me how many Afib episodes I get per night, one trend I'm fairly confident is real is that when I sleep longer the morning numbers are higher. I believe that's just because I'm lying quietly longer and it can only detect the probable Afib episodes when I'm lying quietly. To me, that implies I'm probably constantly having some number of afib incidents. I still haven't run into other people that don't feel their afib.
Anon 11:59AM, - I saw a video recently where the cardiologist described himself as the electrician and called other guys the plumbers.
Happy New Year's SiG. Thanks for being my window into the world of space.
ReplyDeleteLike you, I have given up predictions. Other that potentially the weather, where I seem to do okay...
Happy New Year SiG n Mrs. SiG!
ReplyDeleteI am looking forward to another year of your posts.
RE the ablation: roomie was quite apprehensive about having it done and said it was a piece of cake. Lie down, get sleepy, wake up, doc has a look-see with the Sun Engine Analyzer, go home.
Personal note: made a new-to-me batch of spicy carrots last night. I expect my face to melt and hair to catch fire, so it will be a good start to the new year!
I have two friends who have had an ablation and they both describe it the way you did. They both had to have it redone in a few years and it sorta came to my mind that it might simply be that their body is healing itself, as it always should. This Farapulse thing is too new for that info to be out there, yet. I think it has been on the market for under five years so nowhere near as many patients as the older technologies.
DeleteI had the ablation done to the spinal nerves in my L region due to cracked vertebrae AND two compressed disks. Painful because they do only topical anasthetic. Worked somewhat well but I am still essentially crippled, can't do any more repair(s) involving body moving/twisting/lifting. Basically, bench work only, light duty.
DeleteAs for my Aortic Stenosis, it doesn't get any better, they have to watch the backflow pretty carefully - then do the valve job when it gets past a certain percentage. They didn't discover mine until I had about 60% leakage, but once it got replaced I was MUCH better (until the back broblem). Now I take it fairly easy even though I need more exercise.
As for SpaceX doing the "impossible" ad doing it quickly, be aware that what t hey are doing is brand-new stuff. They have to build it as light as possible, as strong as possible, and as *durable* as possible - something that sounds easy but is not. They'll get it whipped because they are NOT the Old Space guys living off of cost-plus nor under NASA "leadership". Although I think Rook is gonna really shake things up...
Anyway. New year. Same old crapola with some newer twists but still the same old crapola.