Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Medieval Humor and a Night Cruise


Things are getting better here. I'm getting out of the house and doing some exploring, which is helping me manage my grief. I promise I'm not going to write a great deal about Olga today because you all need a break from that subject as much as I do!

But I did have a momentous realization yesterday that has helped me a lot -- my "theory" about her medication causing her more severe symptoms cannot be correct, at least not entirely. I realized yesterday that I wrote on July 9 about her being quite ill the previous day -- and yet we didn't get her medicine in the mail until the afternoon of the 9th. So in other words, she was having breathing and walking problems before her first dose. This is important, to my mind anyway, because it means I am not responsible for making her health worse with medication. It was already happening, and stopping the drugs later would probably not have made any difference.

You have no idea how much better that makes me feel.

So yeah, yesterday I needed to take a long walk and get the heck out of this house. At some point I have to learn to spend time in the flat and garden again, but right now it seems incredibly confining and suffocating. I walked all the way through Primrose Hill and Regents Park and down Tottenham Court Road (above) to the British Museum -- about four miles. I wanted to visit some beloved British artifacts like...


...the Tring Tiles! I've written before about these medieval tiles (c. 1330), which depict scenes from the life of a childhood Jesus. They are frankly hilarious in their depiction of a boyish Jesus who tries to play with his friends and winds up striking them down for minor offenses, only to reanimate them after being scolded.

The museum caption for the above panels reads: "(Left) A boy playfully leaps onto Jesus' back and then falls dead. (Right) Two women complain to Joseph on the left, while Jesus restores the boy to life."


Here we have: "(Left) Corn is being reaped in midsummer. (Right) Parents shut their children in an oven, to prevent them playing with Jesus."


And: "(Left) Jesus makes pools by the River Jordan. A bully destroys one and falls dead. (Right) Jesus restores the boy to life by touching him with his foot."

The Tring Tiles are perhaps my favorite artifact in the whole museum. I wonder how accurately the stories are interpreted, but they are supposedly taken from apocryphal Biblical writings describing the childhood of Jesus -- so perhaps the stories are more fully fleshed out there. (You can read more about the background of the tiles here and here.)


And don't forget the Roman-era pottery beaker featuring penises with wings! Those crazy Romans.

After a couple of hours I took the tube home, and met at a nearby pub with my former co-worker Lindsey, who I haven't seen in a couple of years. (She's been working in Myanmar and Ghana, and is about to move to Brazil.) Long ago, back when we first got Olga, Dave and I met up with Lindsey, her husband Gav and dog Nell for an outing to Hampstead Heath. I wrote about it at the time. Well, Lindsey had to say goodbye to Nell last year, so she and I compared notes on pet grief. When I expressed any reservations about the timing of our decision, she said that it's better to take action a month too early than to wait too long -- which she felt they did with Nell. I guess all of us who make these decisions second-guess ourselves, as some of you have pointed out in comments on my previous posts.

Finally, Dave and I took a dinner cruise on the Thames last night because it was the 15th Anniversary of our Civil Union in New Jersey (back in the days before gay marriage was legal there). We boarded a boat on the Westminster Pier and cruised downriver past Canary Wharf while we had salmon salad, tomato soup and a chicken breast with potatoes and veg. I thought the dinner was perfectly acceptable but Dave (with his chef training) was not impressed. We did have some spectacular views from the boat on the way back, though, which you can see here:


I just left the natural sound on that video, so you'll hear the wind and people talking (including us, occasionally). The first clip shows us passing beneath Tower Bridge and then past the Tower of London; the second shows what appears to be some kind of party atop the Walkie-Talkie building, before zooming in on the Shard and the Monument and passing beneath London Bridge; and the third shows the colorful lights of Southbank, the London Eye and Waterloo Bridge.

I realize I have packed an awful lot of stuff into this blog post, so thanks if you've stuck with me this far! It was quite a day.

17 comments:

  1. Such a dramatic view of Tower Bridge with the summer evening sky beyond and I love the slow, cruising motion of that video. In The Tring Tiles, Jesus behaves like Dennis the Menace. I wonder if he also had a holy dog called Gnasher.

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  2. I'd not seen those tiles before....the vitality in them !!

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  3. I loved the video. Not been to London for years....can't do the inevitable walking! I used to like the view from Blackfriars Bridge Station at night on the rare occasions we were there.
    Glad that you have come to some peace over Olga's medication. You did the right thing.
    Oh, and congratulations on your anniversary .

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  4. I was watching your video just as they were talking about the huge and rising costs of building the Sizewell C power station on the coast here and thought " so that's where all the electricity is being used!"
    Love the tiles - I'd not heard of them before

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  5. Without having read the explanation under the tiles, you can also interpret what is shown quite differently. The official explanations are one more frightening than the other.
    Spectacular night skyline, this boat tour is now on my to-do list.
    Congrats on your anniversary, may many more happy years follow.

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  6. Congratulations on your anniversary. What a lovely way to celebrate - a summer evening on the water is just perfect.

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  7. So glad you realized that about the meds. For me, you were not to blame no matter what, but it’s good that you can rest easier about that. Oh, that video. No chance SG will take a cruise with me. He’s tried. The museum would make me so happy. Don’t all penises have wings? Is there something wrong with mine?

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  8. We are in London in November and after watching your video we are going to add a trip to our itinerary.

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  9. I am glad you got out for some adventures, and thanks for sharing them.

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  10. I've been worried about you second guessing yourself over the timing of things with Olga. You did your best for her, always, and should be proud of how well cared for she was.

    I love the tiles. I've never heard those Jesus stories. :) And the winged penises are CRAZY! hahaha

    Congrats on the anniversary, Steve and Dave!

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  11. magic jesus high five! The tiles are incredible- great story telling. Museums are wonderful for exposing kids to "life" Flying penis, something one does not see in every day life. Erik learned about bestiality from the Smithsonian when he was seven years old. He said " Wow, they REALLY love their animals".
    Fifteen years- newly weds!
    Thank you for the trip down the Thames at night- truly beautiful.

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  12. Happy annie! And many more. I'm glad you're realizing you did a very good job for Olga especially in her last days.

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  13. The pottery is, um, interesting? 😁
    Second guessing your decision will stick with you for a while. It was clear when we let Tuxedo go that it was the right time, but I questioned it for a long while after, wanting just one more day.
    Lastly, happier note ... Happy Happy Anniversary!

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  14. I can relate. If the neighbor kid was constantly killing and resurrecting other children, I would keep mine locked up in their rooms too. Nice video of London at night from the river!

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  15. When our last kittie, Barnabas, was ill and going downhill the vet said he didn't want us coming back later with him in even worse shape even though he was alive. You did the right thing for Olga. Also to ease us after his death I gathered his kittie license and a few things he played with and a photo and had a little alter in an out of the way place for a while. That helped me. Just a thought. Pet people know the love and the pain of that special connection to "just" an animal.

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  16. I was very interested in the Tring tiles. I had never heard of them before. I’m very envious of you being within walking distance of the British Museum. I always enjoy hearing of your walks and your photographs along the way. Jean in Winnipeg

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  17. Who wouldn't feel better after looking at flying penises? So uplifting! (Pun intended.)

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