Re: 2025 review / 2026 plans
Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2026 3:31 pm
Congrats!
Sorry to hear if your tribulations Delphi - hope things get better.Delphi wrote: Tue Jan 06, 2026 4:20 pm I've got a trip to Ireland in May with some of my Porsche mates which should be good and a couple of family holidays too.
Looking back at that, the overwhelming light bulb going on, is that when I wrote it I was obviously in a worse mental health place than I am now. Dad dying mattered much more then than it does now. That to me is real progress. In saying that, I definitely had wobbles, including one weekend back in July last year where I actually lost my ability to control my brain completely and frankly, rolled the dice and only just woke up the following morning. I know some of you saw the post I made on Facebook that evening, removed a few hours later out of embarrassment at myself, for that I can only say sorry. So not all roses by any means. I had surgery last year for an umbilical hernia and while the healing has gone fine, the returning to the measly fitness I had before has been hard. A little more weight and a little less mobility to finish the year. I am also still stuck in the relationship which I'm 95% sure is fucked. Good news - still loving my job, some tiny murmurs that maybe I'll take over running the place as my boss heads towards retirement, not counting my chickens there but nice to know that's the light I'm seen in. The friends fighting cancer - some won, some are ongoing. My sister (reunited after 15yrs of silence during Dad's passing) is still in contact which is great, but her partner has been diagnosed with a huge brain tumour and a case of when, not if. Shitty few years for her looking backwards and forwards...KiwiDave wrote: Mon Jan 06, 2025 4:06 am I've been looking at this thread every year with a deep seated desire to write something, but each year so far I've been broken to the point where writing it would have me curled up in a ball in the corner. Same goes for the bucket list thread, open in a tab for over a year now... From that I'd say the fact I'm making this post at all is progress.
24 was a year where I've struggled to still be here. Largely driven by the loss of Dad at the very end of 23 and all the bullshit that went along with that. When I added it to some of the other weight I'm carrying in my head, I only just held on. That said, there were some positives - 2 and a bit glorious months in a friend's gorgeous lake house, riding my bike every weekend in Rotorua, was especially awesome. I know she doesn't frequent here any more, but I know some of you know her, so a particular hat tip to Caroline of the former EVO shire who was (and is) quite frankly a gift of a human being. Doing the grief thing side by side with her was a genuine life changing experience and she is fucking awesome. My job continues to be awesome too. It's not extending me any, but it's safe, a good vibe, pays pretty well and is great to have that as a solid constant.
25 - ride the bike a bit more, be less fat. Probably try and start to ease off my love of craft beers. I have a massive shipment of drums coming in 2025 which will probably be the biggest spend I ever make on them which is exciting. I wanna continue to do the odd driving thing, it was awesome to do the odd trackday last year. I'm wanting to finally get into doing some home recording. I hope the year is kind to the three friends I have fighting cancer right now, I don't wanna be doing any more funerals any time soon. The big stuff - I think I'm finally ready to admit I'm gonna seek some professional help for my head again this year - I've been reluctant for so long as I've been there and got the t-shirt, the past few times I've sought some help I felt very little benefit, just an emptying of the wallet. Something has got to change though, it's that or say time is up. The big one I've been chewing on for a while is whether my relationship is finally over, or if it's OK and I'm the problem - I've been in a 'if you're not sure, you're not ready to do anything state' for a while. Maybe I'll still be there this time next year.
I can't believe I've actually written that down. Let's see how much I regret it.
One possible suggestion: write.KiwiDave wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 4:02 am I did try and actively tackle the mental health stuff last year, which seems obvious but is a big deal. Unfortunately the process proved my earlier point of being a waste of time and money. I got several months in, to that stage where meaningful progress was beginning, then the practice which contained the therapist I was seeing closed and relocated nearly 2hrs away. That process of investing time, energy, effort and so on, is a major investment as I'm sure many of you know. I'd been reluctant to do it again for fear of it being worthless, and it was pretty shitty to have that proven true.
I hope you're right, but it does feel like its a precarious house of cards ready to come crashing down. If he gets any kind of infection, doesn't eat properly, or gets his drugs wrong, he slips into full delirium. He's already been sectioned twice due to it. If he perceives *any* deterioration in his situation (his ability to go out, his ability to stay in his flat, his current group of carers), he slips into deep depression, which in turn leads to refusing to eat and drink, or take his meds, and, ultimately, the above delirium. And his mobility is so poor (he can just about shuffle between bed, toilet, sofa and, critically, wheelchair). *Any* deterioration, given his mental state, will effectively see him bed bound, with all the above consequences. If we get to this time next year with him living outside residential care, I will be amazed.Explosive Newt wrote: Sat Jan 03, 2026 11:16 amMy reflection on this with my mum is that you expect some big crisis to come along and change the situation but it never does. It's a gradual, inexorable decline. At some stage a minor change upsets the delicate status quo.Nefarious wrote: Fri Jan 02, 2026 9:17 am Similarly, the situation with my dad's health has continued to decline, although without any dramatic collapse. His grip on reality grows increasingly tenuous, and his mobility is teetering on becoming non-existent. Again, I suspect things will move to the next phase in 2026.
I would agree with that. It's sensible to scope out what is around you - we were totally unprepared when we had to arrange respite care for mum at short notice when the wheels came off her care arrangement. However having done that it meant that a year later when she was admitted to hospital and it was clear she couldn't go home, we had a nice nursing home that was close by and happy to have her.Nefarious wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 9:14 am I hope you're right, but it does feel like its a precarious house of cards ready to come crashing down.
Right Caroline, wrong country - she's still in the UK, just done a lot for me via Messenger and been a good friend.dinny_g wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 2:58 pm And as an aside Dave, it's great you have Caroline to rely on. Never knew she had moved to New Zealand. She seemed like a good person, albeit only based on her postings here etc. I never met her in real life
Edit - that's Caroline, Photographer and occasional soap maker with the 3.0 Z4 and the ridiculously photogenic parents, right ??![]()
Thanks man. Plans are in place - this has been a long time coming. Estate planning/assent management was done over 10 years ago, my brother has LPA, the flat he is in was set up for this purpose (and could be further converted for accessibility), and there are two residential places lined up if things move in that direction. And everyone is suitably braced for the wallet raping of either full time home care or residential care.Explosive Newt wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 6:16 pmI would agree with that. It's sensible to scope out what is around you - we were totally unprepared when we had to arrange respite care for mum at short notice when the wheels came off her care arrangement. However having done that it meant that a year later when she was admitted to hospital and it was clear she couldn't go home, we had a nice nursing home that was close by and happy to have her.Nefarious wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 9:14 am I hope you're right, but it does feel like its a precarious house of cards ready to come crashing down.
The other thing is the finances. Residential care is expensive. The state will want to see all of your father's assets run down before it steps in to help financially, and even then they will only comp about 50% of the fees.
Sorry a bit of a downer I know but happy to share experience over DM if you like.
Right. Totally understandable. It feels weird at first. And that's coming from someone who actively likes writing.KiwiDave wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 10:40 pm The writing suggestion is interesting and I'm not ruling it out, I just find writing to be one of those things which has a wall in front of it unless the planets align. I'm not sure why, partially dyslexia (I actually spelled that wrong, the irony!) and partially attention span of a gnat maybe... I've had people tell me I should write full stop, the same things prevents me. There's a brick wall there until something just clicks, and that's pretty rare.
Ah right, gotchaKiwiDave wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 10:40 pm Right Caroline, wrong country - she's still in the UK, just done a lot for me via Messenger and been a good friend.
Thanks mate. We're doing the Great Atlantic Way, so down the west coast.dinny_g wrote: Tue Jan 06, 2026 8:56 pmSorry to hear if your tribulations Delphi - hope things get better.Delphi wrote: Tue Jan 06, 2026 4:20 pm I've got a trip to Ireland in May with some of my Porsche mates which should be good and a couple of family holidays too.
Whereabouts are you going in Ireland ??