Goodbye to the Continent, Hello Again to London and Home

November 5, 2021

After our very long day in the Lisbon Airport (story a few posts back), we finally flew into London Heathrow close to midnight. We found our hotel and went to sleep excited about having our last week – Week 15 – back in London. We stayed in the Kings Cross area (here’s the Kings Cross tube station), because it’s central to everything.
This is St. Pancras Station, across the street from Kings Cross (they’re often both referred to as Kings Cross), connected by the underground, and the international train depot from which we took the Eurostar to Paris, all those weeks ago!
We went exploring in Notting Hill, a lovely neighborhood in west London.
A posh street in Notting Hill.
We found this house, for many years the residence of George Orwell.
We walked through this area to reach the famous Portobello Market.
The market extends a mile down Portobello Road.
It’s famous for antiques and pretty much anything one can buy and sell (legally).
We feasted on some street food.
This is Johnny, a young man who moved to London from Romania with his wife before Brexit. They now live with their two children in what they decided at first glance was “the most wonderful city in the world.” He was a desk clerk in our small hotel.
Homes in Islington.
I liked this building.
Another day we decided to take the bus to Camden Market. We had to walk the last half mile, and we’d forgotten our umbrellas – and the likelihood of rain in the fall. We’re Amy Winehouse fans, however, so we stopped to say hello.
This is Camden Market, located on the site of the historic former Pickford Stables. The market extends through the old stables and a new building erected to match the old, over to the Camden Lock on the Regent’s Canal.
Another pathway through the market.
More shops.
On our way to the canal.
These little glass pods provide shelter for diners.
The locks at Regent’s Canal.
A boat navigating the canal.
The last day Dempsey rested and I caught the double-decker bus to the Thames.
Approaching the magnificent St. Paul’s Cathedral.
Going through the City of London, the financial district.
A branch of the Bank of Beirut.
I got off the bus and walked across London Bridge, which is reserved for pedestrians, buses and taxis.
Ahead of me was The Shard, a skyscraper that boasts one of the best views of the city.
As I looked left, I could see the Thames Walkway, steps down from the bridge and along the river. The Tower Bridge was lighted up.
The marker for the bridge.
This building was close to our hotel. I noticed it walking back from the bus. Unfortunately, that’s as close as we got to Wales this trip.
We boarded our flight home at noon, but the windows were heavily tinted, we supposed to facilitate sleep for passengers. We landed at 5:45 p.m. Austin time, but our bodies thought it was almost midnight. Fortunately, we had slept and with lots of nighttime sleep the next few days, we didn’t suffer too much jet lag.

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Jillian Coleman Wheeler

Hello, and welcome. I’m Jillian Coleman Wheeler, Trauma Recovery Coach, speaker, consultant and writer. I work with individuals and organizations. I offer classes, and I also speak and write about personal development, spirituality, and health and success in life and work. For people suffering depression, I created the Reboot Your Bliss™ process.

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Our two primary considerations were expertise and price, in that order. As I wrote yesterday, average price for this treatment is $40,000 where we live in Texas. A woman we met at the clinic we finally chose told us one well-known dentist near where she lives in Colorado charges $70,000.

There are a couple of ways to approach searching for a dentist internationally. One is to research on your own, and the other is to make inquiries through some of the organizations that represent dentists all over the world. Dental Departures (headquartered in Singapore), Patients Beyond Borders (located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina) The International Association for Medical Assistance to Travellers, (IAMAT), and The Medical Tourism Association are just a few of the groups that provide information about dental care abroad. Some organizations make direct referrals in exchange for a commission from the clinics.

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We considered a large clinic with an excellent reputation in San Jose, Costa Rica and a clinic located in Cancun, Mexico. However, when we spoke to them we realized they do not send patients home with attached temporary teeth. Instead, they provide dentures (we’d already rejected dentures as uncomfortable and difficult to retain in place) to wear until the implants achieve osteointegration (when the jaw bone grows around the implant).

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