After 28 months, I finally did it!
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Michigan's Upper Peninsula
Posts: 857
After 28 months, I finally did it!
3 August 2013 goes down in history, at least my history...
I've had a Viking Mega Quilter for 28 months and haven't used it. Today I did use it: wound bobbins, threaded the machine and sewed. It was a blast! This part of the journey has come to be reality.
DH and I put up the frame a year ago and I've prepared the canvas leaders. The next stage was learning how to use the machine in a basic manner. My first day went smoothly and I will practice some FMQ without the frame in order to get comfortable with the machine.
DH was wondering if I would ever use the set up, but I hadn't been feeling up to trying anything as I had so little energy. I was too tired to take on anything else. Tackling a new area when I wasn't thinking straight was just more than I wanted on my platter.
If you have sleep apnea, make sure your settings are current with your physical condition.
Somehow, I let that slip. After retitration in the sleep lab, I am improving physically and mentally each day. Even if I don't get the desired full eight hours of sleep, the quality of the sleep I do get is much better. With this consistency, I am alert, happy, working and socializing without falling asleep throughout the day.
Again, keep on top of things if you have sleep apnea, as well as other health conditions. Hopefully my lesson will help others to be more aware of subtle changes which happen so gradually that you are unaware that they have occured.
Piecefully yours,
Kay
I've had a Viking Mega Quilter for 28 months and haven't used it. Today I did use it: wound bobbins, threaded the machine and sewed. It was a blast! This part of the journey has come to be reality.
DH and I put up the frame a year ago and I've prepared the canvas leaders. The next stage was learning how to use the machine in a basic manner. My first day went smoothly and I will practice some FMQ without the frame in order to get comfortable with the machine.
DH was wondering if I would ever use the set up, but I hadn't been feeling up to trying anything as I had so little energy. I was too tired to take on anything else. Tackling a new area when I wasn't thinking straight was just more than I wanted on my platter.
If you have sleep apnea, make sure your settings are current with your physical condition.
Somehow, I let that slip. After retitration in the sleep lab, I am improving physically and mentally each day. Even if I don't get the desired full eight hours of sleep, the quality of the sleep I do get is much better. With this consistency, I am alert, happy, working and socializing without falling asleep throughout the day.
Again, keep on top of things if you have sleep apnea, as well as other health conditions. Hopefully my lesson will help others to be more aware of subtle changes which happen so gradually that you are unaware that they have occured.
Piecefully yours,
Kay
#2
Good luck with your endeavor! Rest well and continue your consistency with health matters. I sometimes have sleep issues, but not apnea. I know how lack of rest can mess with your plans. Have fun with your Viking!
#4
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2013
Location: England
Posts: 559
Really feel for you. I have had sleeping problems for many years but nobody seems to take this seriously. I have learned to cope with just a very few hours a night (sometimes only two) but occasionally I may get nearly four. I can honestly say it's a very long time since I had eight hours!! I am so pleased you now feel more able to tackle your new venture and look forward to hearing how it goes. Good luck.
#7
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 9,585
Kay, I'm so glad you've started having fun with your new machine!
#8
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,430
Isn't it so sad that physicians sometimes do not take our health issues seriously! I believe you are on track with your sleep apnea now, but you need more hours of sleep. Do you have a CPAP machine? They are buggers, but they do help. You cannot continue to exist on just 2 or 4 hours of sleep! Do keep searching until you get relief. Best of luck doing it and let us know here on the board how things are going. Glad you were able to get the quilting machine up and running. Enjoy yourself.
#9
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Michigan's Upper Peninsula
Posts: 857
Thank you for your words of encouragement! I am using the Mega Quilter daily and we are becoming "best friends."
My purpose for creating this thread is to share how important it is to be on top of your sleep disorder and the follow up schedule to provide the best of care. The new titration setting for my cpap machine has greatly improved the quality of my life. :-)
My purpose for creating this thread is to share how important it is to be on top of your sleep disorder and the follow up schedule to provide the best of care. The new titration setting for my cpap machine has greatly improved the quality of my life. :-)
#10
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Michigan's Upper Peninsula
Posts: 857
Yes, I have a CPAP machine. The machine is so quiet that my DH doesn't even know when it is on. I was so excited after the first night of sleeping with the equipment at the sleep lab in 2009 that I knew this was a positive life changer. My set up with the nasal pillows, regulation length hose, plus humidified air allows me to sleep without any discomfort.
Someone with the mask covering both the nose and mouth would have more of an adjustment to make just getting used to the mask apparatus.
Some labs offer the desensitivation kit to allow the patient to practice using the mask at home. The idea is to make the patient comfortable with the set up and increase the possibility of the patient using the machine. DH has done this route and I have no doubt that he will continue to use his CPAP each night.
Someone with the mask covering both the nose and mouth would have more of an adjustment to make just getting used to the mask apparatus.
Some labs offer the desensitivation kit to allow the patient to practice using the mask at home. The idea is to make the patient comfortable with the set up and increase the possibility of the patient using the machine. DH has done this route and I have no doubt that he will continue to use his CPAP each night.
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