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Showing posts with label illness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illness. Show all posts

Friday, May 8, 2015

Parenting by doctor

I've had poison ivy for two weeks now. I thought, as an adult, if I didn't scratch it, it would clear up and go away on its own. I was slightly wrong. Despite my ignoring the terrible itch, it spread anyway. First, I thought it would clear up, so I didn't go to the doctor. Then I had a conference to go to, and didn't have time to go to the doctor. Then I thought, well, it's got to be almost done spreading by now, and didn't go to the doctor. Now, 16 days in, I'm sure there's nothing a doctor can do, so I'm not going to the doctor.

Growing up, we never went to the doctor if we could help it. My mother was a nurse and knew things I just do not know. She was able to assuage our tummy aches and fears, and we waited out a lot of illnesses and injuries. She knew they weren't so bad, that we'd heal. As such, I hardly ever take myself to receive medical care. I know it's not that bad. I will heal.

But when it comes to my kids, or even my dog, I'm almost the first in line to go to the pediatrician's. Because I'm not them, and I'm not a nurse, and they can't really tell me themselves if it's just a bit of bad food, or reflux, or a burst appendix. So we go. Just in case. My kids suffered bronchospasms last month. A symptom of a virus that we could do nothing about. I spent nearly $1,000 carting them to the doctor multiple times, buying humidifiers and nebulizers and inhalers. Anything to help my babies breathe. What if it wasn't a virus, but asthma. What if it was pneumonia and the docs weren't catching it? What if it were the flu? They never tested for the flu.

It was a virus. It went away on its own (though the nebulizer did help. The humidifier, on the other hand, is holding on to old water and probably becoming its own health hazard, as we only used it once. Great waste of $70 for sure.)

The other night, my puppy started acting strange. He wasn't...biting me. He's very playful and hates to be petted (like a puppy) and he was just putting up with it. Moving more slowly. Not interested in his toys. Growing up, we would have just waited it out. A dog is a dog.

But I was so concerned I was going to call the vet the very next morning. I mean, what if something was seriously wrong?

I waste a lot of money this way.

A lot.

And thankfully, the puppy was back to his old self the next day, so I avoided those fees.

I always try to tell myself to wait it out, that it's nothing. But I usually end up caving and bringing my little things to their doctor. It's always nothing. But what if it's not?







Wednesday, February 18, 2015

An Open Letter to Employers -- Guest Post

An Open Letter To All Employers.

While I, myself, am not a mother, I work for mothers. Or, should we say in the past I have worked for them. Between daycare jobs and nannying jobs, moms have been my bosses for the majority of my work life. And there’s one thing that always comes up. And I do mean always. This is very much a solid happening. I get at least one call per month from a mother who needs me to come sit at home with her sick kid because the daycare won’t let them in and mom can’t stay home from work without being penalized in some way.

Don’t get me wrong. I don’t mind filling in for mamas when it comes to sick littles. But it’s not the same thing. I have a friend who will remain anonymous, along with her company, who could still lose her job even with a doctor’s note. Now, I get it … to a point. You need your workers so that your company can be productive. But how productive is it when you have four workers show up with various flus and pneumonias and other contagious illnesses that they are now passing around to each other. Nobody can ever get well because the moment their immune system tries to make a comeback, it gets hit by another germ.

As some of you know, little kids are germ factories. If one gets sick, they’re pretty much all going to get sick. You want to know why? Because they’re too little to understand how to taking universal precautions. I mean, let’s be real here - there are plenty of adults who don’t follow universal precautions themselves. How can we expect a child under the age of say … 5 to be able to take them. Sure, as daycare teachers we do our best to sanitize everything every chance we get. We seclude the sickies at naptime away from the healthy kids in hopes of creating a barrier. We even wash their hands and faces as much as we can.

But that’s not the problem. No, the problem lies with you, dear Employer. Because there are parents who have such strict sick day/personal day/time off policies that they will dose their feverish child up before bringing them to school. Do you know how long Motrin lasts? 6 hours. That means that if they drop their child off at 8am, we won’t find out until said child wakes up from their nap that they’re running a fever. And guess what? A fever masked by medicine doesn’t mask the germs they have. They’re going to make other children sick.

At the age of 28, I came down with a virus usually only seen in toddlers and infants because so many of my toddlers had it, that I just couldn’t escape it. And even though it was my own illness and not a child’s, it cost me my job because of how sick I was. My Hand, Foot, and Mouth turned into bronchitis which lead to me still running a fever. The doctor would allow me to go back to work and DCYF’s attitude is “well, you better be in ratio” so they had to let me go and find someone that could help keep them in ratio.

And again, I go back. I really do understand that you need your workers there. I understand that if they don’t do their jobs, you can’t do yours, and your company fails. But there has to be something that can be done. Leeways that can be put into place. For office jobs - let your secretaries and clerks and accountants come in on a Saturday to get work from the week done. Yes, I know, you’re going to have to pay them, but the day(s) they took off during the week were either sick time or personal days and in a lot of jobs, if you don’t have any hours logged, you don’t get paid.

If your employee can work from home, please let them. Maybe it’s not the most professional thing in the world, but it is the best of both worlds. Baby isn’t Patient Zero at daycare and while Baby is napping, mom (or dad, but I see this happening more with the moms) can get her work done. There has to be a solution that you, the Employer, can come up with that will make you, your employee, and the sick wee bairn (sorry, I went Scottish for a moment) all happy at the same time.

It’s tough out there these days. I understand that better than anyone. There’s so many unemployed people and not enough jobs to go around. So you, the Employer, can give the ultimatum. “If you can’t do this job, I’ll find someone else who can.” But you know what. Stop for a moment and think about that. Think about your employee. Will you really be able to find someone as good as them? Aren’t they with you company because they do good work and you like how they get along with the rest of the staff?

In the end, it comes down to people. We have to stop looking at people as employees and nothing else. We have to start appreciating their whole. Their value to their employer, their family, and to themselves. I bet more people wouldn’t need anti-anxiety drugs if we could all start treating each other like humans and less like cogs in a machine. A little understanding, in my experience, is going to go a very, very long way.

Kindness is free. Sprinkle it wherever you may go.

...

Bridget Frazier:
A twenty-something young woman who, over the years, has come to realize that hopes and dreams don't always coincide with reality. Take a journey through what it means to accept what life has given you, to be happy with the blessing bestowed, all while mourning the loss of dreams once passed.



Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Why are we always apologizing for expressing ourselves? -- Guest Post



Today I found out that I have Lyme Disease. It has already invaded my joints, judging from puffy tautness of my left hand knuckles and wrist. I have no memory of yanking a tick from my skin. But that’s beside the point.

Yesterday in my online journal I complained about how much my wrist hurt. Immediately after posting that I posted an apology for whining.

That got me thinking.

It’s a strange business communicating online. On Facebook we’re expected to put on public faces and post photos of our loved ones, or, save that, repost inspirational quotes or photos of cute baby animals. Online journals traditionally eschew that for intimacy with a handpicked built-in audience who will celebrate your joys, comfort you in your grief, help you solve an issue you’re currently experiencing.

One thing I’ve noticed over the years is how we’re apt to apologize for complaining online about something.

Doesn’t that sound weird to you?

If we want to vent, whine, or complain about something in our own space why do we suddenly feel the need to apologize? Is it because we shouldn’t express the, shall we say, less sunshiny sides of ourselves? Is it because we’re afraid we’ll alienate our audience? What if we can’t stop whining? Why do we feel we need permission to vent about an actual medical condition?

Maybe our support systems are too preoccupied to listen to our woes. Perhaps our friends live too far away for us to drop in for coffee and a chat.

Maybe we should just shut up, put on the proverbial big girl panties and deal.

BUT WHY DO WE FEEL WE HAVE TO APOLOGIZE FOR ALL OF THIS?

I sure as hell don’t know. All I know is that I’ve been diagnosed with a disease which, if left unchecked, can wreak havoc not only with my nervous system but also with my short-term memory. I’m already past the too-tired-to-move stage.

As I said in my online journal, I know, in the greater scheme of things, Lyme is a mere blip and it boggles my mind that someone as relatively healthy as me has it.

I apologized in my own online journal because I didn’t want my friends – my audience – to think badly of me. I still have that tiny “what if they don’t like me anymore?” shred left over from junior high. I don’t want them to think I’m tedious or I’ve branded myself as The Woman With Lyme. Ergo, I apologize. In my own space.

Heck, apologizing can just be as tedious as whining.

Here’s a thought: Maybe, just maybe, if we all stopped apologizing we’d be more apt to accept ourselves as the flawed humans we are.

I have Lyme Disease which now explains all the niggling conditions I’ve had for the past few months.

As soon as I finish this I’m going to take my first dose of doxycycline and call it a night.



And I’m not apologizing for it.
...

Kathi B. is a writer and baker living in New England.




 

Monday, October 6, 2014

That time I came fairly close to dying and thought I was just being lazy

If you know me at all you know lazy really isn't in my lexicon. So, this weekend, when I "just didn't feel like getting out of bed", I gave myself a really hard time.

"Don't feel like getting out of bed?" I asked myself as I lay there with my head under the pillows. "Sounds like someone wants to use the weekend to her advantage and play hooky from being a housewife. Because, oh, you have it so hard, wah wah wah. Have to do dishes and laundry and go grocery shopping and to kid soccer games. It's SO HARD to be you. What is your problem?"

Still, I lay there. (Although, don't kid yourself, all of that gone done except the grocery shopping and that's only because my husband wouldn't let me go. You'll find out why in a sec.)

I was seriously peeved at myself. Unlike the flu, what I was / am suffering from currently comes with a side effect of "malaise" which means "feeling washed out / off." So, I wasn't feeling sick. I wasn't even feeling too tired to move. I was literally feeling washed out. I wondered at one point if I was actually suffering from depression (not having ever experienced true depression, I have no idea how it would affect me. I was grasping at straws. I just don't lay in bed for "no reason", and yet there I was. I was searching for an explanation. From my bed, where I refused to leave, no matter how much I yelled at myself.)

I got no school work or writing done. I could not bring myself to care enough to sit upright to do it. Also, sitting was painful.

The malaise, which I thought was a separate issue, was actually a symptom of this other thing (that I'm not telling you about. Just think about the grossest thing you can imagine, make it ten times grosser, and that's basically what I'm dealing with.)

Anyway, by mid-Sunday, I could no longer bend down. I had to ask my children to get the laundry I had folded and placed on the floor because I couldn't reach it. I still thought this was separate from me wanting to be a lazy ass this weekend, but not being able to bend over, on its own, is reason enough to seek care, so I went to the weekend walk-in.

Again, I won't go into detail, but yesterday ended up being the worst medical day of my life. And I've had twins via emergency c-section, so...

When the doctor finally looked at me, she could not believe I was up and about at all, couldn't believe I had driven myself there, and couldn't believe how advanced the situation had become. And I'm just there like, what? I mean, I know I feel kind of off, but really?

Yes, really.

I have to be pretty careful for the next  little while, even, until I see a surgeon about this. I have watch my temperature, and make sure I don't get super sick or die of an infection. Awesome. Totally have time for this.

When I got home, I felt slightly better, and mentioned going grocery shopping, and that's when my husband was like, ARE YOU KIDDING ME? WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH YOU.

I'm glad he's around, because that would have been stupid. I mean, so we need milk? It will be okay for a second.

And that's the main point of this whole thing, even though it's all been about me and a rare, odd thing that happened to me.

It's applicable to the general audience, particularly to the moms out there.

Sometimes, be it a medical emergency or not, you're going to need time to recharge. A nap, a coffee away, even a whole weekend.

It's not laziness. You aren't lazy. You're so very hardworking, and you come down really hard on yourself, and there's no need to.

It doesn't matter the reason, and it won't be a permanent personality change.

If you need a break, speak up. Let your loved ones know. They will understand because they know and love you.

And, honestly, if you find yourself doing something totally out of character, don't try to bully yourself out of it. There is most likely an underlying cause, be it pure exhaustion, some kind of illness you hadn't bargained for, or, you know, a mammoth killer infection trying to take your life while you're busy calling yourself a lazy sack of shit.

Make sure you look around every so often, take stock of who you are and what your life is like. And then, give yourself a break. In all senses of the phrase.



 

Sunday, May 4, 2014

In the End, There Is Peace -- Guest Post

Today, Bridget Frazier has a touching post about an inspirational woman whose life was cut short by disease. Today would have been that woman's birthday. It's a tale of suffering, yes, but also of hope and happiness. Thank you, Bridget.

...

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease after the famous ball player. Many of us are familiar with the term sclerosis, but usually when paired with Multiple Sclerosis (MS). ALS as many of the same components as MS except for one: within five to ten years of an ALS patient’s symptoms beginning, the patient will die due to paralysis and organ failure. ALS came into my life when I was still just a child. A preteen, technically, but looking back on that day we found out, still very much just a child.

It was October, 2000. My aunt had been suffering from what they thought was a drop foot that was getting worse. She was suffering numbness, she was tripping over things, she had to have a cane or a walker to be mobile. Her doctor decided something else was wrong and since his tests weren’t showing what, he would send her to Lahey Clinic in Massachusetts, one state north of us.

The day they got the diagnosis was the same day we found out. My aunt called my father, her nephew, that night to tell him. I will never forget the moment. My dad turned a shade of ash that I had never seen and sank into a chair, tears in his jade green eyes. My mom called his name several times as the phone started to beep loudly, letting us know that the call had been severed.

“Chris! Christopher, what did she say? What’s wrong?” my mother asked him. I remember thinking “Brain tumor. It must be a brain tumor.” but in reality, it was something so much worse. My dad finally spoke. “She has Lou Gehrig's disease, Jame. They gave her five years to live at most, based on her symptoms. It affects her nerves. It will paralyze her. She’ll be trapped in her own body.” I don’t know if I was supposed to know this yet, if he meant for me to find out this way, but I remember slowly backing up against the wall in the living room, unable to breathe.

Trapped? Paralyzed? Those were two of my greatest fears as a claustrophobe. I couldn’t imagine it. It was a real life, actually happening nightmare. And it was happening to my own flesh and blood. What were we going to do? What was going to happen next? What do I say to her? “I’m so sorry your body is betraying you.”? How do you look at someone who has just been given a death sentence and act like the world is still turning. HOW is the world still turning? Why is any of this happening?

As someone who currently is in the medical field, it was no surprise to anyone when I was the one who jumped on the research. Anything I could find. Back then, it was the library and encyclopedias. It was learning how to use the internet to find what I wanted to know. It was a time of great growth for me, both emotionally as I dealt with the death of my aunt, and knowledgeably as I learned all the skills that kids these days take for granted. I hunted down every piece of evidence I could find. Every drug that MIGHT work at staving off the deterioration that was happening inside her body.

I remember the day she took my hands in hers, now confined to a wheelchair. She thanked me for my research, thanked me for caring, and told me that she had accepted her fate. I didn’t know what to say. What to do. She had accepted it but I hadn’t. Did I have a right not to accept it when she did? I mean, it was her body. Her life that was ending. It had nothing to do with me so did I have this right to feel the way I did?

My panic attacks began during this time. My one panic trigger - death. One day, I will die. My body will cease to exist. Where will my mind go? My thoughts? My conscious being? What happens when we die? All those questions would plague me in the middle of the night as I sobbed and gasped for air. I kept silent, telling no one about my attacks. They didn’t need something else to worry about, for someone else to be ill. I didn’t know then how common panic attacks are and I was sure it was something that would burden them.

When my aunt lost all feeling in her legs, I learned how to use the lift to get her from her chair to her bed and back and forth. I learned how to change her oxygen tanks. I learned how to make sure her chux pads were in place. I learned how to take care of her because she couldn’t. I would stay with her so my uncle and my cousin could go out and get a bite to eat. So they could get a bit of respite from my aunt’s illness. I would feed her crackers smeared with Alouette and I would tell her about school.

Those, I think, are my fondest memories. She couldn’t even put spread on a cracker because her hands didn’t work properly anymore, but she could still talk and she could still listen. She’d let me ramble about the kids teasing me and she’d listen to me sing the latest Hanson song even though my voice was off key and horrible. I told her more in that time than I told my parents because I knew she’d take it with her. She’d hold onto my secrets like no one else.

In August of 2003, she was given two weeks to live. At that point, her lungs were functioning at 20% capacity. Hospice was called in and we were all on “death watch”. My attacks grew more frequent. Every time I saw her, I wanted to say something profound. I wanted to say something, anything, to let her know how much I hated what was happening to her. How much I wanted to make it better, make HER better. And yet, she persevered. Her only child, her daughter, was getting married in October and by gods, she was going to be there.

Her last outing was in October of 2003. It took my dad, my uncle, my cousin’s betrothed, and my fifteen year old brother to get her from her house to the country club two miles away where my cousin’s bridal shower was being held. She looked gorgeous that day. Her smile was never more radiant. Her speech was slurred and you had to listen closely and she never got mad when she had to repeat more than once. She was slow and methodical, trying to get her words out. I listened to every single one of them, soaking them all up. I knew how tiring this was for her, what it took for her to be here. I was so proud of her and I just KNEW in my gut that she was going to make the wedding in November.

On November 6th, 2003 I was sitting at the computer reading Backstreet Boys fan fiction. (How lame, right? I suppose if you’re going to tell a story, include all the sordid details!) Suddenly, my gut twisted. I couldn’t even begin to explain it. I just had this feeling. My stomach hurt. The little hairs on my body rose up in the air. I got up and came down the stairs just as my mom, who was on the phone with a friend, said “Steph? Hold on a second. The operator’s breaking through. It’s Ed.” I started to cry in that moment. I knew it. She was gone. She died 36 hours before the wedding would have taken place. All those months she had fought and she was 36 hours too short.

The wedding flowers became funeral flowers. The wedding was pushed back until January. Instead of a wedding, we had a funeral. The mayor of our town came to pay his respects. ALS creates a small community and he had heard about her through people he worked with who knew her. The firemen, who had all come at one time or another to help her up when she had fallen due to her illness, came in their uniforms to pay their respects. She laid in the casket in the dress she was supposed to wear to the wedding. That hurt the most. Seeing her lying there with her hands folded around a rosary, eyes closed like she was sleeping behind her glasses. Like she had just fallen asleep for a cat-nap but dressed in the purple skirt suit she was supposed to wear to watch her daughter get married.

My father and my brother were both pallbearers. It was sobering, incredibly sobering, to watch my fifteen year old brother hold up part of a casket. You see, no one this close had died before. Not like this. They had all been old people. People who died of natural causes. People who had lived their lives. We had a service at the chapel at the cemetery. The priest spoke yet again about what a wonderful woman she had been. A daughter. A sister. A wife. A mother. An aunt. A great-aunt. A mother-in-law.

I saw a butterfly that day. It struck me as being so odd. A butterfly on a cold November day? They’re not out and about in that weather. A few months later, I was reminded of the butterfly and looked up it’s symbolism. I found a website that spoke of an old Irish folklore. A folklore that declared that those that were ill and infirm on this earth were transformed into beautiful butterflies upon their death so they could spend one last day flying freely upon this earth. To this day, I still cannot find that folklore no matter what I search. Maybe it was her way of telling me that she was going to be okay in the end after all.

One year later, one month shy of the anniversary of her death, my cousin gave birth to a healthy baby boy. He was born twenty days before my aunt’s anniversary. The day we mourned her death, the day we celebrated her life, we had Levi with us. A brand new reminder that life does go on. That while we mourn the dead, we have to celebrate the living. The two go hand in hand.

It’s been ten years since she died and nary a day goes by that she doesn’t come into my head. I have a butterfly tattoo on the inside of my right wrist. It’s purple, her favorite color. Whether that folklore was real or not, it comforted me in a time of deep grief and so I wear it for her. As a reminder that the dead are still alive among the living. That we carry them when they can’t carry themselves. That love crosses boundaries we don’t necessarily understand. That in the end, there is peace.






 

Friday, July 12, 2013

My Daughter Saved My Life - Guest Post

When Heather Von St. James contacted me about this guest post, I was blown away by her story of strength. I think you will be, too. It's more than important to get the word out and raise awareness about the different types of cancer out there and their treatments -- it's, in fact, essential. And while there are many heartbreaking stories, there are also those that have a happy ending, like this one. Thank you, Heather.

...

Every time someone asks my seven-year-old daughter about my cancer, she always replies, “I saved my mommy’s life.” That has become an automatic response for Lily. Some people may not understand how much truth is behind what my daughter is saying or take what she says seriously. However, I will be the first one to explain to anyone just how right Lily is.

My husband Cameron and I were married for seven years before we thought about having children.  I was 35, and I was a little nervous about having complications during my pregnancy because of my age. I did not know how long it would take for me to get pregnant, but three months after we decided to have children, I was pregnant. I was shocked, nervous and excited all at the same time.

During my pregnancy, I would constantly rub my belly and get excited knowing that a little baby was growing inside of me. I also had a thousand questions run through my mind. What type of mother would I be? Would I be a fun mom? A cool mom? A strict mom? I knew that being a good mom was more important to me than anything else.

I had a very smooth pregnancy, but the road got bumpier when it was time for me to deliver. I found out that Lily was breech, so I had to have an emergency C-section. I remember I jokingly said, “At least she will have a round head.” I am the type of person who always tries to look on the bright side of things. I was overwhelmed with emotion when I first held her. I knew that I wanted to do everything that I could to provide her with happiness, love, and protection. Nothing mattered anymore after I held her in my arms. My entire life was about her. Everything was going so wonderfully that I never could have imagined that things were going to take a turn for the worse.



Three and a half months after I had my daughter, I was diagnosed with pleural mesothelioma. My doctor told me that if I did not receive treatment, then I would only have 15 months to live. I was shocked, and I could not imagine leaving Lily and Cameron in this world without me.  Cameron listened to the doctor’s treatment options and decided that it was best for me to get the most drastic form of treatment. We would have to go to Boston and meet with one of the best mesothelioma doctors in the world. I also had to undergo an extreme procedure that removed my entire left lung as well as the lining of my diaphragm and heart.

I spent 18 days in the hospital and two weeks in an outpatient facility in Boston. I then spent two months at my parents' house recovering. My parents were taking care of Lily the entire time. Then, I returned home to Minnesota for chemotherapy and radiation treatment.

Like any other mother would, I made sacrifices so that I could be there for my daughter. In this case, I had to sacrifice being there for my baby’s sixth month of life. Being away from my baby for an entire month was the hardest thing that I had ever experienced. However, I knew that my little girl needed her mommy to live, and that gave me the courage to face surgery, chemotherapy and radiation treatment.

Mesothelioma cancer kills 95 percent of the people who are diagnosed. I realized that motherhood was what gave me the strength to keep going. Knowing that my baby needed me throughout her life, helped get through each day. Therefore, Lily could not be more right when she tells people, “I saved my mommy’s life.”















 

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Expecting the Unexpected - Contributor Post

Kim Wright who blogs over at No Progress Without Pain is one of the strongest women and mothers I know, full stop. She has ridden through tough times, smiled at the good ones, and braced for more. This post is just one of the reasons why she should be president of the world.

...

All my life people have told me I need to expect the unexpected. I think I’ve been told that so much it might be at the root of a pretty serious anxiety disorder that I have. It’s taken me a long time but I’ve finally realized you can’t do it. There’s just no way to expect the unexpected.

To be completely honest with you there’s very little way to expect anything in life, and just when you think something is a constant it’s my experience it can change on a dime. I make a habit of trying not to make promises to my daughters. I guard our plans with careful wording. Plans fall through, things change, and they certainly don’t always occur, as we desire them and we have to adapt and overcome. Simple things like play dates change all the time and if I utter the words “I promise” it’s a death sentence to the plan, you can almost be sure it’s going to go up in flames. I don’t know why that is, maybe I just have bad luck, but that’s my experience and I’m a little sick of working myself up and my family up when things don’t go as I plan.

I have a special needs daughter who just had surgery. Dorothy has Conradi Hunermann Syndrome, and we travel 7 hours each way to have her VEPTR growing rods that are used to treat her severe scoliosis and breathing issues expanded. If you are interested to read more about her syndrome and treatment you can visit her caring bridge which admittedly I don’t update as much as I should. We have made the trip every 6 months minimum so when I say it wasn’t my first rodeo at planning a surgery trip I mean it. At this point I’ve lost count, but I know she has had more than 14 surgeries and she’s only 6 years old.

Her surgery that occurred last fall I planned on going easy, like others. I told our house sitters we would only be gone a couple days, I promised her such things. Just like usual when I make a promise it went up in a fiery inferno of doom, instead of a couple days we were gone more than a week. Instead of the surgery going well it went horrible. We were worried and sick and stuck in ICU beds hearing stories of “flaky bones” and bone grafting and waiting on big icky back braces that she’d have to do her first half a year of kindergarten in.

So this time around I planned for the worst. I worried and fretted and my daughters surgeon was even fairly concerned about my inability to form coherent sentences by the day before surgery. I told our house sitters it would be a long haul, and I balanced credit cards to see how much more debt we could possibly juggle because hotels and food add up. Just like that though, this surgery was the easiest one I’ve watched her recover from. No surgery trip is easy, but I really didn’t need to make it as hard on myself as I did if I had just let it be and planned like I normally plan

I could have taken a moment to breath. I could I stepped back and maybe formed those sentences more coherently, and I could have gotten a few extra full nights sleeps in and avoided being a babbling crazy person who deep cleaned every room of her house like maniac in expectation of being gone for weeks.

I really can’t plan for the worst all the time, I shouldn’t plan to expect the unexpected because the unexpected could be more terrible than I can imagine or it could be much better. Sure I have to be an adult about things and be ready to handle what comes our way without it breaking me apart but the way to do that is not planning for every unexpected scenario. I think a better way at least for me to approach plans is bending and adapting to them as they come. I’ll still guard my promises to avoid those flames of doom whether they be tantrums from missed play dates or fiery pits of financial ruin from two unexpected weeks of hotel stays.

From now on though I’m going to do my best to not try to expect the worst case. My daughter’s surgeon told me he just “takes what her body gives him and works with that.” I think that’s a good guideline for life, take what it gives you and work from there.





 

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

How to Be an Amazing Nursemaid

So, I'll come out and admit it, I am a crappy, crappy nurse. I'm just about as caring and sympathetic as a foot, though I try my darn hardest. Ask my husband. It's one of my (few, I'm sure...haha) weaknesses. You know, along with cooking, and cleaning, and parenting, well, anyway, let's just move on.

I've been observing my intense failure for several sicknesses now, and I've compiled a list to help you avoid completely losing it when your loved ones are sick.

1) Always have medicine in the house. And, no, children's Tylenol does not count. If your kids are sick, chances are your spouse is sick or will get sick, and he'll look to you for common medicines. So, stock up on Nyquil, Robitussin, Dayquil, Excedrin, etc. Bonus points if you do this before anyone is ill. However, I'll still give you a passing grade if you remember to do it by three days into the sickness.

2) Cook bland, easy-to-eat foods. You'd think I'd have this totally covered, right? Well, my ineptitude in the kitchen knows no bounds. My children have decided they hate soup. What does this leave me with? Well, my husband still wants soup when he's sick, so I'm a short order cook as of late (and a shitty one at that.) The kids are basically getting by on sandwiches. Last night, I made my family's sick food when we were kids. Bacon and eggs. Hahahaha. Apparently, not every family is my old family, and bacon is not a sick food. Good to know. I also have ridiculously expensive steaks that I can't use because sick, so if anyone local is reading this and wants some free filet mignon, I will give it to you with tears.

3) As if it's even possible, kids will be even more clingy when they are sick, and you can't just tell them not to touch you, even when they're literally standing on your effing face. I have been grabbed at, groped, and manhandled in all ways these past few days, and I just want to toss them aside and be like, dude, seriously, stop touching me. As my friend Sarah aptly put it, "Why must kids live on our faces?" So, yes, you'll want to open your womb back up and be like, "Climb on back in, it's cool, as long as you leave me alone, Gawd!" But you can't. Suffer silently. It sucks to be sick, and they just love you.

Of course, if you have more than one, you can be assured that they'll find some way to fight about who gets to be closer to mommy at any given moment. Awesome.

And the never-ending chorus of "I'm sick, mama. I'm sick." I know you're sick, sweetheart, I'm sorry you're sick. There is nothing I can do.

And then when they figure out that you're actually not going to make them better, well, you're a bad guy. Get used to it.

4) Tissues and juice. Sick people use a lot of tissues. That empty box isn't nearly as funny to the sick person as it is to you. Also, they don't like being told to use a napkin while you run out for more.

5) Be prepared to be unappreciated. Sick people don't like anyone. My kids have told me such, word for word. "I just don't like anyone." And the two hours you spent cleaning the girls' room will go completely unnoticed as they seethe over the lacking juice and tissues instead. The laundry you did do will go unnoticed because you forgot to do the jammie pants. Also, you need a larger laundry basket and why is everyone such a slob, it's depressing. Sick people have fewer filters.

Head high, crappy nurses. You can do this.

 

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

They Don't Know They're Sick

We've just gotten back from a beach vacation, which ended up, of course, being a day of travel, a
night of interrupted sleep, an hour at the beach, and intense illness for the remaining day.

Just as we were leaving for the beckoning waves, Dulce came down with quite a cough. Bad enough that we stopped on the pharmacy on the way there, but not bad enough for my 'sometimes I'm actually a good mom' radar to flip on.

We got there, and she played. I mean, she really wanted this. She played for, like, 15 minutes.

You know a three year old is ill when she's at the beach and she's been looking forward to it for weeks, and all she can do is flop on a towel next to Nana.

We carried on, trying different little things in case she was only kind of sick. We played in the sand instead of the water. We had her in the shade. We tried feeding her some lunch.


Look at her, resolutely helping Pop Pop with a bucket of water. Determined to have a good time.

Meanwhile, her sister was having a blast.


Can you even tell the difference? One twin is on death's doorstep, the other is perfectly fine. The only difference is the smile. One is playing with grim determination. The other is carefree.

We brought her home. Where she immediately slept.

That night, she requested warm milk. I was against the idea, but she wanted it, and as my mom's old friend used to say, "Whatever the children want."

She got three sips in before tossing it back up.

And yet she still wanted to get up and play with her daddy and sister before bed.

All of these reminders of what I should have known already.

Kids don't know when they're sick. They ignore it. They have such fierce wills, they believe they can force the illness away. They continue on as if it's nothing. At least adults (most of them), acknowledge that illness takes a toll on them and rest up. We know that we can combat the next day as a well person. We know that taking it easy and allowing ourselves to heal means better fun tomorrow. Kids don't know that. It's as if every time is the first and last time, and they don't want to miss out.

If we don't watch out for our little ones, they certainly won't do it for themselves. It's up to us.

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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

The Sickness Olympics

When you are a twin, you're constantly vying for someone's attention. You're never getting someone's undivided self. You learn to share and take turns, but if you're three, well, sometimes those lessons don't always stick. You love your sister more than anything, but sometimes you just want her to disappear for a hot second so you can get a hug without her clamoring up for the same attention. Is nothing to be yours, ever?

I can't imagine this.

It ramps up tenfold when they're sick. Especially since one usually gets the other sick, meaning the sick-phases are rarely in sync. One almost always feels better than the other one. In physical symptoms, that is.

This particular illness first hit Dulce over the weekend. She got a lot of attention because she was quite sick and she needed it. Natalina was fine, bouncing off the walls, and trying to distract me from caring for Dulce at every opportunity, but in a good-natured way.

Natalina fell really ill just yesterday, as Dulce began her upswing. Now, Dulce had gotten used to all the extra attention, and resented the shift as I had to turn my eyes to Lilly for a while. She tantrumed, cried, pretended to be sicker than she was and tried all sorts of things to even the balance of attention out.

I try, really try, to give both kids an equal share, but when one is sick, I cannot take time to comfort the other one's jealousy. I'm busy trying to break a fever or calm a coughing fit.

It becomes a competition as to who is the most sick.

It's not that I don't love you, child, it's that I cannot comfort you while I comfort your sister, especially since you both refuse to share my affection. I can't sit with both of them at the same time. I can't hug both of them at the same time. I can't do anything with the two of them. That messes with their competition.

This spills into wellness, as well, with the occasional "You said Dulce was beautiful. I'm not beautiful." Or "You called Lilly nice, I'm not nice?"

The sooner the girls get the notion of "both" the better. But I can't say I fault them for not understanding it. Most children don't have to learn "both" until, well, they grow up and get married.

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The Hygiene Hypothesis, Take Two

Jo has a problem with germs. A big problem. She hates them and has waged full-out war with them, and I, for one, support her cause...at least armchair style.  You see, Jo's motto goes like this: " Avoid What You Can, Deal With What You Can't."

I simply cannot avoid all the germs she can. I have a life.

The other day, Jo wrote about the "Hygiene Hypothesis" (something I hadn't heard by that name, but, of course, knew what it was), using my children's first day at preschool and subsequent immediate illness as an example.

Now, everybody told me my kids were going to be sick all year, from now until at least December, when maybe their unused immune systems would catch up to the rest of the world. They told me this because as a stay at home mom, the babies have seen me and the inside of this house about a million times more than they've seen anything else. They simply haven't been exposed to real-life germs.  According to the hypothesis mentioned above, this means they'll be prime real estate for those Mucinex-commercial guys. I bought into this, especially when the girls did indeed get sick the next afternoon. I referred to our lives as having been in a bubble.

Correctly, Jo informed me, that, no, we do not live in a bubble. She's right. We go to the grocery store. We go to the park. We have playdates, go to the library. We go to the Playland at the mall (shudder). We use public restrooms (my daughter is finally coming back around to big potties after I flipped out about someone leaving a turd in there. Bum bum germs that I can't see? Those don't usually cross my mind. Bum bum germs sitting in log form in the toilet my babies have to use. ACK ACK ACK. My reaction, obviously, made a big impression on the girls.)

Which brings me to my point, my one weapon against the cleaner of the clean. The microcosm of the public restroom experience gives great insight into the mind of a child and that child's relationship with her parents on a subconscious level. Dulce was more than ready to jump on the OMG I'm scared to death of this thing and that thing and this thing, and AHHHHHH! All she needed was a slight push from me. All she needed was to see me bolt from a bathroom one time, see me wrinkle my nose in disgust, see me complain to my husband about the indecency of some turd-leaving adults.

Those ten seconds of her life impacted her thoroughly for the next two months. We must be so careful.

I try never to go over the top with anything in our lives because I don't know how my reactions impact my girls. I want to keep them on an even keel. I'm not saying Jo doesn't, but I know in my family's case (particular to Dulce) they take strong cues from me. Another example is hand-washing. After the babies got sick last week, I implemented an even stronger hand-washing rule. No more was hand-washing just for after bathroom breaks and before meals, and after play. Hand-washing was all the time. Let's get rid of these foul germs, right? Let's wash them away. You can never have too much hand washing, right?

Wrong. At least in my case.

Within a few hours of this new regiment, I had a toddler melting down about not being able to wash her hands 24 hours a day. She washed her hands, then dried them, then wanted to wash them again. And again. And again. She tantrumed for a long time because her hands had dried and I wouldn't let her wash them again. Enough is enough.

Yes, washing your hands is good. Yes, it's clean and I advocate it strongly for everyone. But to the point of compulsion? If I see a compulsive tendency popping up in my kid, taking care of that (provided they don't have a mental block that predisposes them to compulsions in general) trumps hand washing.

Mental health as important as physical health.

I want my kids to be able to experience life to the fullest. I want them to run and play and jump and learn. They can't do that in a sterilized bathroom while they wash their hands over and over again.

So, again, I advocate moderation. My babies know about germs. They know that we are to avoid them. They will repeat endlessly in a public restroom, "don't touch ANYTHING," because that's what I tell them every time we enter.

But they touch grocery carts. The very same grocery carts that another child just wiped his nose all over, I'm sure. They slide down slides at the park and the playland and then, I'm sure, they touch their faces. I had to tell Natalina yesterday to please stop biting the outer wrapper of the goldfish bag. After the cashier and bagger had touched it, and the stocker and any number of children who wanted it before their parents put it back on the shelf.

They really haven't lived in a bubble, and that's okay. I'd rather them be sick sometimes if it allows them to live a little.

As far as the hypothesis goes, I don't really know if I believe in it. I certainly think that the babies will not be able to catch all the germs they need to in preschool in order to be germless for the rest of their lives.

Whatever the case may be, I don't think I'm better or worse than Jo. I do, however, feel pretty positive that we're both better than her "Acid Test" friends. But who knows even that? Maybe in ten years, we'll all succumb to a plague and the Acid Testers will be the only ones to survive because they've rendered themselves immune. Then the hypothesis will be a theory, won't it?

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Thursday, August 25, 2011

Welcome to the Cesspool, I mean, Preschool

So, it is Thursday. The babies should be well into their learning and playing at preschool. But no. They're here with me. Watching Sesame St., no less.

This is not because I feel I can do a better job teaching them abstract concepts. It's certainly not because I'm doing such a stellar job socializing them on my own. As much as I complained and worried on Tuesday, I didn't pull them out because I missed them too much or because they were miserable and unable to survive without me. (They actually had a great time, with a few tears thrown in here and there for good measure. When I went to pick them up, they were pretty much leading the class in story time. Heart melted.)

No, I think preschool is going to be good for us. Except for one thing. The germs.

Yes, the babies are home sick today. Yes, they got sick on the first day of preschool. The first day. You could have knocked me over with a feather when they started sneezing yesterday afternoon. I could not believe it. Which, of course, is silly. You can't live in a bubble for the first three years of your life and expect germs not to find their way in when you venture out into the world of snot and grime and sniffle-ridden kids.

But the first day? I admit, I expected them to last longer than that. And, because I'm always so prepared, I had no idea about the school's sick policy. I called to let them know this morning, although I wasn't sure if I needed to. Through that conversation, I learned two very important things:

1) The babies are going to be sick all of the time. The woman was very kind to me and basically laughed at my description of their illness and told me to feel free to drop them off because there was nothing wrong with them. "As long as they're not throwing up and they don't have a fever over 101, you can come on and bring them in, any time."

Oh.

Now, this is great because kids get colds and what are you going to do, right? Viruses are viruses, and I'm sure at this stage, my kids aren't contagious anymore anyway...or something. Plus, most people actually have lives and are busy during the hours their kids are in preschool, making it a huge inconvenience for them to stay home.

Of course, that's not the case for me. The only difference in my life is an hour more of television for the girls while I write this at home on my couch. I'd be here writing this either way.

2) People are going to send sick kids in a lot. Why? The preschool does not give you a switch day, nor does it give you your money back if you don't utilize its services for any reason. I totally understand this, but I had to ask, especially since I figure the babies will be sick more than not. It's not cheap to send twins to preschool. I can't just be having them skip days because I want to coddle them. I mean, I can and I will, I'm sure, but I really can't afford it. I'm doubting any other parent can either.

Welcome to the cesspool. At least they're having fun, right?


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Thursday, July 28, 2011

The Day Between Sickness and Wellness

We've been sick here. Very sick. Having lived in a germ-free bubble for the most of the last year means that one of the twins invariably picks up a virus or two whenever we come into contact with the outside world.

This time I'm sure the culprit was water day held at the preschool's summer camp. What started like this:


Ended like this:



And this was only the first day. Back when it was still cute, and no one was losing their minds.

Today, we're perched on that precarious ledge between sickness and wellness. Yesterday, the babies were in great spirits, happy to be feeling even a little better and thankful for the reprieve. Today, they're already taking it for granted, plus they have cabin fever (as do I) and yet we're all too sick to venture out into the world again quite yet.

They have slightly more energy, but they still feel awful, and they blame me (of course). So that if they didn't see me cut the orange, then it's not the orange they want. If it's not the toast I buttered five minutes ago that's been eaten, but instead some shady replacement toast (of exactly the same caliber, in the real world that isn't a twisted toddler mind), the world has ended and the only appropriate response is to scream and yell and cry and carry on.

It's devolved to this:



It's cuter without the sound, trust me. So, it's going to be a great day. Just well enough to cause a stink and demand the impossible, not well enough to actually have the energy to play or do anything fun.

I pretty much feel like this:


But as captain of this sinking ship, I'm doing my darndest to keep it together.

Wish me luck.


___

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Monday, October 4, 2010

Baby Is Sick

Toddlers cry.  A lot.  They tantrum, they yell, they toss themselves on the floor.  They have all of these emotions, and not only do they not understand the effect of emotion on a person, they don't even know what an emotion is.  On top of all of these feelings they have to learn and learn about, they also are still trying to learn language.  This is a recipe for disaster.  This is the cornerstone of the terrible twos.  Almost no parent is a bad parent to a two year old, even when they seem out of control.  Even the wisest among us cannot teach a baby to handle emotion, cannot teach a baby to speak a language they do not know, even as that emotion bubbles up within them.

My babies are sick.  They have a stomach virus.  This makes everything so much worse because not only do they not understand emotion and don't know how to tell me about it, they also don't understand physical feeling, and can't grasp why their stomachs are hurting.  In fact, they don't even know there is a difference between that physical pain and the emotional trauma they suffer when I fail to give them the correct number of ice cubes in their juice.

This is where a parent can help.  As my babies' misery increases, their demands increase, as well.  I find myself alternating between feeling bad that they are sick and feeling utterly frustrated at their complete lack of logic, which is only exacerbated by illness.

My babies cannot tell the difference right now between annoyance that the right Raffi song isn't playing and irritation because their stomachs are exploding.  They only have experience with the former, so instead of being able to broaden their horizons and tell me they're in pain, they scream extra loud about the Raffi.  If I'm not completely aware of the situation, I become exasperated with them and can quickly make matters worse.

It's up to us, as parents, to remember all that faces a two year old everyday - the information, the pain, the emotion.  We need to realize and remember that to the baby, it's all rolled into one.  And that one magnificent feeling will manifest itself in a million little tantrums over little things because it's the little things that they understand.

And really, we're not so different ourselves.  How many of us break down into tears when the cookies burn, or someone makes a flippant remark that hurts our feelings, when really we're stressed out about money, or health issues or something really big is looming on the horizon.  People deal with things they know and attack things that they can handle.

It's almost heartening to see my babies relate their illness to whether they're holding the exact spoon they wanted.  It's optimistic in a way.  It reminds me that this virus, as well as all things, will pass.

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