I am a night owl so mornings are not my best time. I go to bed about 1-2 AM, set my alarm for 10:30 am and it always rings too soon. I stagger out of bed for my morning ablutions and then to my computer to test and post my blood sugar, then read emails. When I'm done with that I get on Youtube where I spend my days reading, watching, posting learning. If there is nothing catching my attention I will grab a piece of mail from my desk, point to a word and put it in the YT search bar. I have "met" such amazing people and things that way. I watch an older woman in Poland who still bakes her bread daily in an outdoor rock oven, keep up with a family in Azerbijain with grandma, two sons and several grandchildren who pretty much live off the land in the foothills of the mountain. Then I check my Korean couple who live in Japan and watch her cook for the day or do laundry or go shopping. The Japanese are so heavily invested in technology and cleanliness with an emphasis on respect and good manners....such a lovely way to live. Then I visit a woman in Newfoundland and watch her cook and garden. By then I am ready to watch videos of planes landing and taking off at the local international airport followed by checking out conspiracy theories. I don't have patience with movies or TV shows except for a few and never watch "the" news...I love Sky News Australia, BBC, and some US podcasters. I never have been a movie buff since way back when most movies that would interest me would be based on books I'd already read and I would be so disappointed in the casting. I could count on two hands the number of movies I've actually gone to and watched. Every now and again I check into my home town newspaper but don't know many of the people any more. I seem to have outlived most of my known peers. Then it/s time to water my orchids and start or at least think about dinner. If it's a great day, I've actually gone to the grocery or the library or park or walked around a thrift store. So go the days of my life and for me, it's what I want. I worked until I was 72 so now I do as I please; that was my retirement plan.