Axel Slingerland
Wordy Blues Rocker
I use one of those pill boxes too. Each day has four seperate boxes. Since I take meds twice a day at 9:00 AM and PM, I use the boxes for Morning and Noon for one week, and Evening and Bed for a second one. That means I only have to fill it twice a month. I usually fill it after I take my meds on the first Monday, and start the two week cycle on Tuesday. Then there is meds in the box for the first Monday, two weeks out.
Like most things I have to remember, I have little memory tricks that help me. Each night before I hit the rack I put the next day's pill box in front of my keyboard. I typically sleep four hours, and get up after I wake up to go to the bathroom, because I can't back to sleep. When I sit down in the morning, there's the pill box. That forces me to remember to take them. Then when I sleep the other half of my "night" several hours later, I put the pill box in front of the keyboard again.
Since my days are usually split into two parts because of my sleep pattern, I used to get confused as to whether it was day or night once in awhile. I differentiate the two by how I set the pill box there. With my asthma inhaler is daytime, without it it's night time. Like most of my memory tricks, they really help me to remember to do things. Sometimes, I set timers in the Calendar in Thunderbird, such as when I have something cooking or I turn the AC on.
I used to forget to take my meds a lot, and the times were never consistent. That changed after I got covid in December 2022. After I got out of the hospital two years ago, my Doc drilled it into me that since my meds are to be taken twice a day, I need to take them at the same time every day, or I might end up back in the hospital again. Specially if I don't take my diabetic meds. So I chose 9:00 AM and PM and so far I am sticking pretty close to it. Then of course, I take my fast acting Insulin with meals and the slow acting Insulin when I eat dinner.
I must be doing it right. I'm still alive and kickin'.
Like most things I have to remember, I have little memory tricks that help me. Each night before I hit the rack I put the next day's pill box in front of my keyboard. I typically sleep four hours, and get up after I wake up to go to the bathroom, because I can't back to sleep. When I sit down in the morning, there's the pill box. That forces me to remember to take them. Then when I sleep the other half of my "night" several hours later, I put the pill box in front of the keyboard again.
Since my days are usually split into two parts because of my sleep pattern, I used to get confused as to whether it was day or night once in awhile. I differentiate the two by how I set the pill box there. With my asthma inhaler is daytime, without it it's night time. Like most of my memory tricks, they really help me to remember to do things. Sometimes, I set timers in the Calendar in Thunderbird, such as when I have something cooking or I turn the AC on.
I used to forget to take my meds a lot, and the times were never consistent. That changed after I got covid in December 2022. After I got out of the hospital two years ago, my Doc drilled it into me that since my meds are to be taken twice a day, I need to take them at the same time every day, or I might end up back in the hospital again. Specially if I don't take my diabetic meds. So I chose 9:00 AM and PM and so far I am sticking pretty close to it. Then of course, I take my fast acting Insulin with meals and the slow acting Insulin when I eat dinner.
I must be doing it right. I'm still alive and kickin'.
