This was a very... interesting weekend. Parts of it were great, but not enough to override the bad - by far. Spent our first weekend at our new house - that was great, despite needing to make an emergency run to the nearest Walgreen's for a Tdap shot when my wife discovered a bit of worn carpet and a tack strip in the same spot, while barefoot. Thankfully I remembered that the Tdap includes tetanus and we didn't have to test out the perennially underfunded healthcare system on a holiday weekend. We drove down on Friday and intended to do some painting in the master bedroom - it's currently strawberry-milk pink. We decided to go with a nice dark red (Miller Paint's 1136), picked up a couple rollers, a 3" brush for edge work, some blue tape, a couple drop cloths, and paint. Yeah... Fred Meyer's brand paint? Not as good as the commercial stuff I'm used to buying/using from the cabinet company. Not by a long shot. Gonna have to buy new (higher quality) rollers, brush, and go with multiple coats. This didn't fit our plans, but it's not a huge deal - it's a three bedroom house, we only need one right now.
There is a lot of smoke in Myrtle Point right now, from a couple of fires and an unusually long warm-weather pattern. Normally the fires burn in eastern Oregon and the onshore flow blows the valleys clear and pushes the smoke into Idaho and points east. This year, a couple of the fires are on the coast and/or in the coast range valleys, and the warm-weather pattern is blowing hot, dry air over the cascades from the east, so it's dry as hell and twice as hot, and the smoke is just sitting in the valleys making life miserable for a lot of people - myself included. The first day wasn't so bad, but Saturday and Sunday got a lot worse, and apparently yesterday the smoke in Eugene was so bad, they moved the Ducks' football practice to the coast for better air quality. This morning's reading was 371 ppm of whichever particulate they were measuring, which is 71 ppm into "hazardous." After 17 years smoking, any difficulty breathing tends to turn my anxiety up. Maybe that's where things started, I'm still not certain what the triggering event/feeling/whatever was, but it led to a mental break and panic attack.
Even worse, while I knew it was a panic attack, and I had a quick-acting anxiolytic at hand, I couldn't shut it down. What should have been a perfectly normal drive back to Puyallup yesterday turned into a 5 hour ordeal involving not just one, but two 911 calls, a trip to the ER, a valium prescription, and an extra night spent in Oregon. It was the right thing to do - especially since I needed two of those valium to get home today (my wife drove, and she's a perfectly good driver). Thursday I get to go see my regular doctor for a follow-up and to demand/beg that he refill my Zoloft. Apparently, it had a 5 month efficacy past cessation, but asking for a sixth month was just too much.