No Weather: Susan’s Medical Update

Friday 6/26/26

This post has taken me a while. Sometimes I am not sure why I do it. Having had parents with neurological problems later in age, I do know that it is not that friends and family don’t care; it is just a difficult thing to talk about. You come up with excuses not to talk about it or contact the family member. It’s not an easy thing to talk about. Susan had many, many friends, clients, and associates in the area. They would probably tell you they never saw her without a smile on her face. A good portion of my followers who never met Sus feel like they know her.  As I said, over the last few months, the majority of the emails I have received have been about her. That and people who say they appreciate me using my platform to talk about these difficult, misunderstood neurological diseases.

To prepare, I reread my update from last year, 7/23/25.  I had not read it since I posted it last year. The first thing that stood out in my mind was, I wish it were still like it was back then. If you want to refresh your memory or are new and have no idea what I am talking about, here is the link from last year. Susan and Jeff Personal Update No Weather

The only thing that has gotten better since my post last year is that she has settled into a healthier weight range of 98-102. This does not mean she is getting better, far from it. I think the weight gain is directly related to my changes to her medications and dosing. Too much of her primary medication led to uncontrollable movements, not gentle; it was as if she were exercising all day and most of the night. She was mostly muscle. She still is, but 90% of those uncontrollable movements no longer happen.

Back then, they had her on 6 to 8 pills of the primary medication used to treat Parkinson’s Disease. 4 to 5 were “immediate” release, and 3 to 4 were extended release (I use that range because that was how it was prescribed, “as needed”). She was on three other pills in the morning, indirectly related to her primary medications. She was in extreme stomach pain every day. Docs told me her crying, “it hurts! it hurts,” was just her way of expressing discomfort, not necessarily related to her stomach.

After some research, I found out that this particular medication has caused extreme stomach pain in some patients. I also found out it lowers dopamine levels. Parkinsons patients take Carbidopa-Levodopa because their brain can no longer produce dopamine. Carbidopa-Levodopa is taken to stimulate dopamine production. So she was taking a pill to stimulate dopamine, and another that had the side effect of lowering dopamine levels. To be fair, I also learned it is a pretty common treatment to take both medications. Either way, it was not working out. I weaned her off that medication. She has not had that stomach pain since (9 months).

Circling back to the original prescription of 6 to 8 pills, there was another pill that helps extend the effects of Carbidopa Levodopa. She took this with 3 doses of the instant release during the day. After more research, I learned that people absorb medications at different rates, which could affect not only the base medication but also the other pill’s ability to extend its “benefits”.  So we had different medications entering her system at different times.  eventually they would all overlap, causing the “overdose” and extreme dyskinesia.

Another pill I weaned her off “could cause psychosis in some patients”. Understatement of the year. Shortly after taking that one, she would get very paranoid. Interestingly enough, she could speak very clearly during the episodes. It was common for her to look out the curtains from the sliding door to the backyard. I would ask her what she was doing. She would say she was looking at the people in the backyard. I would try to explain that it was just the medication (of course, I must admit I would look out there first). She would often get her phone out and try to take pictures of the “people”. One day, I went to the bathroom and came back to find her trying to get out the back door. I was asking her what she was doing as I was wrestling with the door. She said, “I have to talk to them”. So I weaned her off of that one as well. No extreme episodes since.

She is only taking 4 to 5 of the original instant-release Carbidopa Levodopa, which seemed to be the magic number, but things have changed a lot in the last 30 days . Up until that point, I would wake her up in the morning, give her a pill, and about 30 minutes later, she would walk out of the bedroom and sit down on the couch. Now, she falls right back to sleep after the pill. A couple of times in the last week, the pill (or something new) has resulted in mild to moderate psychosis. I was making her breakfast when I suddenly realized she was not on the couch. I walked down to the living room, and she was sitting on the floor underneath her TV tray. Anything I said to her, she looked pretty distant or just could not process what I was saying. Dime store, Monday morning quarterback, psychology led me to believe she associated being under the tray as “safe”.

Reading the last set of doctors’ notes, they were no longer calling her disease Parkinson’s. They were referring to it as Atypical Parkinsons, or falling “under the umbrella of Parkinsonism.” Lately, the “speculation” (perhaps hypothesis is a better term) is that she has a rare (of course it is) disease called Corticobasal degeneration. Here is the short, straightforward definition for you:     Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) is a rare, progressive neurological disease characterized by nerve cell death and the buildup of abnormal tau protein in the brain. Symptoms typically emerge between the ages of 50 and 70 and include severe muscle stiffness, loss of coordination, and cognitive decline. Key Facts About CBD Primary Affected Areas: CBD damages the cerebral cortex (outer brain) and basal ganglia (deep brain), which control movement and thinking. Symptoms: Often begins asymmetrically (affecting one limb more than the other). Common signs include difficulty coordinating purposeful movements (apraxia), muscle stiffness, jerky movements (myoclonus), speech issues, and dementia. Diagnosis: There is no single blood or spinal fluid test. Diagnosis requires a physical exam, medical history, and brain scans to rule out other conditions. A definitive diagnosis can only be confirmed via autopsy. There is no cure.

So many of the things she used to struggle with doing are things that she can no longer do at all. They include reading, writing, telling time, and using a computer, phone, or tablet. Obviously, she still cannot dress herself. It is a big chore to dress her because of the rigidity of her arms, hands, and feet. With pants, the right foot tries to sneak in with the left foot into the left pant leg. With pullover shirts, both arms naturally pass through the neck opening. You get one separated and into the correct sleeve, then, while you’re trying to get the other arm in, she pulls out the one you thought you had just secured through the sleeve. This rigidity has gotten much, much worse over the last few months. Her right arm, I have to keep an eye on because it can be dangerous to her and me. I know this is going to sound completely ridiculous, but her right-hand grip strength is superhuman. She is so weak, yet if that hand latches on to my arm, she squeezes so hard that her fingernails can draw blood on my arm.

She still struggles with incontinence, but I think I read adult protection is now a $30 billion market, so it’s not unusual. I do have to help her in the bathroom. A lot of it is because she has no control over her right hand and struggles a lot with her left hand these days.  Pretty difficult to get toilet paper off a roll when you can’t grasp the sheets. In the last month, the bathroom situation has gotten worse because she gets mixed up about the order of steps when she is done. The other day, I was sick, and she got upset when I went in to help her. When I checked on her, she got her pants off but forgot to pull down her protection before sitting down, so it all stayed there. I hope nobody ever needs this tip, but scissors in the bathroom let you quickly remove the protection.

About 9 months ago, she was diagnosed with PBA, which is another neurological condition that prevents a person from controlling their emotions. In her case, it has only been crying. To the point that there is no consoling or comforting her. It is yet another of those misunderstood neurological conditions. This used to happen a couple of times a day, starting in the afternoon.  All of these things used to happen within a set window each day. It started at 2 pm. Then at 12 pm. Then 10 am (which was why we could get her hair cut in that window). Now, it can start after she has been awake for 30 minutes.

For quite a while, 18 months or so, she has experienced sundowning effects in the afternoons. I am not sure how it is related to the PBA, but she gets very upset/scared, and paranoid. It reminds me of the child who does not want to go to sleep. She will say, “Help me”. I will go over to her and there is nothing wrong with her, but she does not want me to leave.

The only good thing is when one of these behaviors happens, the psychosis, the PBA storms, the afternoon child-like reversion. She has no memory whatsoever of them happening. I assume that the same disconnect neurologically that causes the behavior keeps her from remembering.

The biggest thing, the hardest thing, is communication between us. She was diagnosed with aphasia last year. Aphasia impairs one’s ability to speak. She knows what she wants to say, but when she speaks, what you hear is a jumbled-up bunch of words and mostly non-words. A year ago, we had that nice window in the mornings when we could converse for a little while.  As it worsened, we could work through it. I eventually figured out what she was asking for by asking a series of yes-or-no questions.

Over the last month, it has gotten to the point that there is no starting point, because there is no stopping point. There are no windows; every waking hour of the day, she cannot speak in an understandable way. It’s something I have really been struggling with. I don’t have local family or longtime friends locally. So when I am happy or think something is funny or interesting, I quickly realize I can’t share it with her; she simply can’t process it.

We cannot eat dinner together; I am sure all caregivers can relate. Most of the time, I am not hungry anyway. I get her to sleep. I try to take some quiet time to compose myself at the end of the day. It usually ends up with me reclining my chair, eyes closed, wondering what in the hell she and I did wrong to have to go through this. Before things got this bad, I would have similar feelings, but I would justify it, thinking there must be a reason. These days, I am not so sure, but there is really nothing I can do about it.

Lastly, I know people’s instincts are to say, “You need help” or “you should check into palliative care.” Those are not things I am considering yet. Plenty of caretakers have done everything themselves up until the end. And everyone I have talked to who did that was happy after the fact and could actually assemble some fond memories to hold close.

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6/24/26 Wednesday 1:30 pm

I wanted to spend a little time looking at the most recent data before I posted.  It looks like the precip is slow to start, or at least to reach the ground. It looks great on the radar, but the roads in the cams are still dry. Virga is the appropriate term for precipitation that evaporates before reaching the ground.

Light showers could start between 4 and 8 pm. Maybe a little later in the far south portions of the forecast area.

The current surface map shows scattered showers all the way back to St. George, Utah. Just to the west of there, a shortwave trough sits slightly west of Las Vegas. At the opposite end, on the Colorado Eastern Plains, Is a significant stationary front. That could affect things, depending on how long it stays in place. There is high pressure in SW South Dakota that will try to keep it in place in the near term.

Most of the system should be gone by the end of the day tomorrow. I would expect showers to redevelop late in the day on Thursday, and Friday, as daytime heating will fuel residual moisture left from this system.

As I have said, not a huge producer in the lower elevations. On the low end, 0.20″ to 0.60″ across the lower to mid-elevations. There are a couple of bullseyes showing up across the higher elevations, with amounts ranging from 0.50″ to 1.20″-which would be nice!

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The GFS Woke Up (better late than never)

6/23/26 Tuesday 11:30 am

What a difference 48 hours makes. GFS finally shows the event. It did not 12 hours ago. It is also the run with the least conviction. It shows a”drive by storm” starting tomorrow evening.

Here it is:

GFS12z 6/23

You can call it unimpressive, but you have to keep in mind it had been insistent of a miss.

The EURO’s run continues to evolve, but shows some impressive mountain totals, with just enough in the lower elevations to keep the weeds growing.

I am still working on the medical post. It is more difficult than I expected.

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Sunday Post: The Week Ahead

Sunday, June 21st, 6:30 am (158 days until Thanksgiving)

Just a couple of blips on the (future) radar screen. Not all of the models have found it yet, let alone have any consensus.

The European model seems to be trying to work some precipitation into forecast, it’s even measurable! GFS wants nothing to do with it. The Canadian model (in typical fashion) is curious enough to start revising its own forecast — but it’s far from “all in”.

In these scenarios, the change shows up on Thursday afternoon. It looks like it will have all of the elements necessary for Thunderstorms. Back in the day, we would refer to these as High-Heat Based Thunderstorms. These days, in the world of ever-changing terminology, they are called “Mesoscale Convective Vortices” or, more commonly, “MCVs”.

As I said, the GFS shows nothing (a typical resolution issue). For now, as I have been for most of the year, I am cautiously optimistic, but will be watching closely.

If it happens as planned, it will wipe out outdoor plans for Thursday afternoon and night, as well as all day Friday.

I will update everyone soon. I can already imagine my email box filling up.

Re: Thursday and Friday. ” My daughter is getting married Friday night (on dirt), do you think this will affect her wedding?”

I’ll be baack.

 

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Sunday Weather(?)

6/14/26 Sunday 8 am

I just looked at the weather models this morning. I did not anticipate seeing anything.  Leave it to the European to throw a wrench in that. Throughout the forecast area, I would add a chance of thunderstorms, favoring the higher elevations (without ruling out other areas). Again, these are very difficult to predict, but it looks like the ingredients may come together.

This is the afternoon CAPE forecast. Just think of CAPE as all of the necessary ingredients for thunderstorms.  Values above 500 exponentially increase the chance of convective activity. Also, don’t mistake thunderstorms for heavy rain. It can happen, which would be nice, but it can also result in dry thunderstorms, lightning, downbursts, and high winds. All the stuff we don’t need in our Tinder-box conditions right now. Sorry, I wish I had better news.

Also, regarding the Sus update: Why do I keep thinking I am in charge of my own schedule when literally anything can change at any second?

Yesterday, rather than accomplish all of my “must-dos “. I ended up with watchtower duty. This is when Sus is overly confident and thinks she needs to walk everywhere in the house. She gets angry if I fuss over her too much. So I kind of watch her from afar, following about 8 feet behind when she leaves the room. Even with close supervision, she fell 6 times in about 4 hours of exploration.  Nothing serious, but I have learned that you can’t go through too many “harmless” falls without a bad one showing up-it’s just a numbers game.  I will explain more eventually.

I guess I always feel like I need to explain when I promise something and can’t deliver on time.

 

 

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Boring Weather Continues

06/12/26 Friday 1o am.

And just like that, we are nearly halfway through June, with no significant moisture expected until July (from what I am seeing). I gotta tell you, I was really rooting for a “Summer Solstice” mountain snow storm. That would round out the last 6 months very well.

When nothing is going on at all, I look at the extended models’ 30-46-day range forecasts.  I can’t make this bold a prediction; however, long-term models suggest that, starting in July, a “switch” is flipped and wet weather finally arrives. Then, the models show weeks of above-average precipitation. I am not saying it can’t happen. For many years, that 4th of July timeframe has kicked off our “rainy season.”

I think it’s important to remember what the two driest months of the year are (in the Durango area). Anyone? Anyone? Yes, that’s right:  May and June.

If you are new to the area, most of our precipitation”averages” are derived from anomalies year to year. So, “average” in SW Colorado does not mean the same thing as it does in Kansas or most other states, where “averages” tend to be more predictable.  June tends to look like the following when you look at year-to-year totals: 0.17, .60, 0, 0, 0.15, 2.53, o.30. etc. Over the last century or so, you see a lot of 0.0 to 0.20-inch totals, with some years getting over 5 inches in June (recurving TP storm or depression). Even with the extraordinarily dry winter this year.  June is a bad month to fall on the sword when it comes to lack of precipitation.

I have a lot to share regarding Susan. I get more emails about her than about the weather.

I am going to do a dedicated update (no weather ) on her condition this weekend. She/we have gone through the largest decline so far in just the last month. It’s a lot to process and also exhausting. I will start on it later today, hoping to have it out before Monday morning.

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Tuesday Update

06/02/26 Tuesday 5:30 am

I feel 100% better. Aside from a couple of regular “old guy” pains when I first wake up. Last October, I got really sick with Norovirus. I got emails from people who told me the obvious: lack of sleep and stress caring for Sus weakened my body, and I got sick as a result.

I think that is what I was dealing with last week. It starts with sleep, and I have figured that piece out (again). I will hold off on any other details for a while as I experiment with Sus’s new developments.

I look at the weather each day, and I have not missed much! It looks like the next 7 to 10 days will continue to see occasional afternoon showers and thunderstorms Boring… The good news is that the dry weather is killing my lawn. DIE LAWN DIE!

Models show a wetter period developing after that. But we need a trigger. The best trigger after a couple of months of dryness would be a recurving tropical storm from the Pacific. During El Niño, there is usually more activity in the eastern Pacific than in the tropical Atlantic and the Caribbean. Seasonal African dust seems a little denser than average, I don’t expect anything in the Atlantic anytime soon.

In addition to the extended model runs, this is where I will focus my attention.

Also, we have not talked about this in a while, but some Atmospheric Scientists are attributing all the “Super” El Niño talk to models not handling the potential for an El Niño Modoki. First here is how to pronounce it. It sounds like Hokey-Pokey: Modoki. It means “similar but different. In a typical El Niño, the region that gets the warmest is closest to the coast of South America. With Modoki, it’s the next region of water west (middle) of the plume.

We had one a “couple” of years ago. I am sure I can find precipitation data for the Modoki years compared with traditional El Niño.

I do feel pretty good, I don’t expect to take as long between posts going forward.

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Tuesday Snooze Day

Ooooops, this was done hours ago, and I got called away and forgot to send it.

05/26/26 Tuesday 4:45 am

Good news! Great model consensus! Bad news, all but one is forecasting zero to a coulple of tenths. I had the check back on the SPC’s (Storm Prediction Center) convective outlook for today. Remember how this system was supposed to wreak havoc in the midwest? That all has changed.  They now show no precipitation at all to “Category 0,” which is a slight chance of thunderstorms. I would still keep an umbrella in the car.

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Monday Check in

05/25/26 Monday 11 am

I hope everyone is enjoying their extended weekend! I have very little new to share because of model inconsistencies. That alone turns this into a dartboard event. The extremes are 0.50 inches to Zero.  BTW, with such a weak system, I expect this type of model inconsistency.

For the models, shoulder seasons suck. Why? Because the dominant northern jet retreats to the north. Humidity is generally south of us, and/or east of us.  The systems are essentially rudderless, i.e., they just drift about with very little moisture to tap into until they reach extreme eastern Colorado.

Moisture and the sun are the fuel for thunderstorm development. I looked at surface CAPE (Convective Available Potential Energy) across all models. The best way to describe CAPE is the energy necessary for thunderstorm development.

There is no single answer for correlating CAPE readings with thunderstorms. Generally, the higher you go in elevation, the lower the required CAPE values are. At 6000-7000 ft, you would be looking for CAPE values in excess of 500. If you know what CAPE is and are from the Midwest down to Texas, you are likely laughing right now. In Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma & Texas, it is not unusual to see CAPE values of 2000!

They can laugh at us for low CAPE, and we can laugh at them for panicking with 2-4 inches of snow, seems fair to me! The models still have about 18 hours to come to a better consensus. I don’t expect that to happen, but I will check in early Tuesday.

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Sunday Update

05/24/26 Sunday 4 am

Good Morning!

Not much has changed. For today, a slight chance of very light showers favoring the higher elevations.

On Monday, expect a slow start, with mostly light showers again starting in the afternoon, and a better chance of some of those showers drifting over the Valleys after 5 pm.

Tuesday holds our best chances to get something accumulating, but overall, none of this is impressive. Not yet.

Here are the model forecasts for Monday morning through Wednesday morning.

European

GFS

Canadian (anomaly)

As I identified above, this is a huge anomaly. The Canadian is known for sniffing out anomalies in the winter, but in my experience, not so much in early Summer.  It will be interesting to see its next 2 models run and how that may affect totals in the other runs. For now, I am disregarding this completely.

Enjoy the rest of the long Holiday weekend. I will check back in on Monday.

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