Categories
Kids Life in general Parenting

Even

This delightful piece of writing hangs in my mother’s dining room.  It hangs from a red and white lanyard, and adorns a hand-made gift from my sister  several years ago.

I read it often, and it has become one of my favorites.



The Lanyard – Billy Collins




The other day I was ricocheting slowly
off the blue walls of this room,
moving as if underwater from typewriter to piano,
from bookshelf to an envelope lying on the floor,
when I found myself in the L section of the dictionary
where my eyes fell upon the word lanyard.


No cookie nibbled by a French novelist
could send one into the past more suddenly—
a past where I sat at a workbench at a camp
by a deep Adirondack lake
learning how to braid long thin plastic strips
into a lanyard, a gift for my mother.


I had never seen anyone use a lanyard
or wear one, if that’s what you did with them,
but that did not keep me from crossing
strand over strand again and again
until I had made a boxy
red and white lanyard for my mother.


She gave me life and milk from her breasts,

and I gave her a lanyard.

She nursed me in many a sick room,
lifted spoons of medicine to my lips,
laid cold face-cloths on my forehead,
and then led me out into the airy light


and taught me to walk and swim,

and I, in turn, presented her with a lanyard.

Here are thousands of meals, she said,
and here is clothing and a good education.

And here is your lanyard, I replied,
which I made with a little help from a counselor.


Here is a breathing body and a beating heart,
strong legs, bones and teeth,
and two clear eyes to read the world, she whispered,

and here, I said, is the lanyard I made at camp.

And here, I wish to say to her now,
is a smaller gift—not the worn truth


that you can never repay your mother,
but the rueful admission that when she took
the two-tone lanyard from my hand,

I was as sure as a boy could be
that this useless, worthless thing I wove
out of boredom would be enough

to make us even.

———–

Friday, when I picked Alison up from school, she proudly handed me a Mother’s Day card she’d made in class, along with a plastic cup filled with dirt.  Protruding from the dirt was an inch-tall green stalk, a small plant she’d grown herself from a seed.

It doesn’t matter that her sister yanked the tiny plant from the dirt less than 24 hours later.

It doesn’t matter that Alison still sassed me and stayed up later than I intended.

Because while I know her efforts don’t make us even, I’m going to pretend, just for a little while,

that we are.

Happy Mother’s Day!

Categories
Health and Nutrition Life in general

Answers

I’ve been feeling sluggish lately.  And by “lately” I mean for the past two years. 

What?  “Lately” is a relative term.

So I went to my doctor last week and poured my heart out.  It took a lot of courage for me to do that – to ask for help.  The fact that I not only called to make the appointment but actually showed up for it is testament to the fact that I have been feeling especially horrid for the past few weeks.

After calming me down, my doctor took a brief medical history, including asking for details about Blythe’s birth, which seemed, in my mind, to be the catalyst for my downward spiral.

It didn’t take long for him to make an educated guess on my problem: a fairly rare condition called Sheehan’s Syndrome

All the pieces fit, the biggest one being that I hemorrhaged after giving birth.  I continued to bleed internally for two weeks, until I gave birth to the softball sized clot keeping all that inside my uterus, (a fun mental picture, no?) and then hemorrhaged again in the operating room, losing an entire liter of blood in one go.  So, blood loss after pregnancy?  That’s a big fat CHECK.*

All the rest of it – the moodiness, the lethargy, the difficulty breast feeding, the feeling cold all the damn time, the depression, the anxiety, the “female issues”, the low metabolism, it all fits, too. 

They’ve drawn my blood to test the levels of my hormones to see how badly my pituitary gland was damaged by lack of oxygen during the blood loss.  From there, I’ll start on hormone replacements and see if we can put Humpty Dumpty back together again.

In the meantime, I’ve been taking an anti-anxiety/anti-depressant (Lexapro, 10mg) for a week now.  While the side effects were a bit daunting to begin with, I think I’m starting to adjust, and beginning to see more and more of my old self – my real self – shining through.  It’s so nice to see her.  I was beginning to think she was lost forever.

The amount of relief I felt when my doctor told me there was most likely a physiological reason for the way I’ve been feeling far outweighed the bad news that I’d have to be on hormone replacements, possibly for the rest of my life.  Here I was, feeling guilty for my depression for two full years, and there was a perfectly logical explanation for it all. 

But, as the days have passed, I’ve begun to wonder how I’ll feel if my blood tests come back ‘normal’.  Will I still feel as good as I’ve begun to feel, or will the guilt start creeping back in? 

For two years, I’ve been angry at myself for feeling resentful of the chaos that is my life, all the while knowing I’m grateful for everything I have.  I don’t want to feel that way anymore.  I want to forgive myself for feeling like life is just effing hard sometimes, regardless of whether my pituitary gland is broken or whole.

So, I wait.  Another week, and I’ll know for sure.  I hope I won’t care about the answer.

* Go here and here if you’d like to read more about that crazy experience.

Categories
Home and Garden Life in general

One Task

My wonderful husband took Blythe out to play for awhile this morning and I took the opportunity to do some serious cleaning around the house.

For my first task, I chose to vacuum the living room rug.  Not such a huge job, but it never fails to make the whole room look better.

I headed back to the mud room to get the vacuum, and when I opened the door I was greeted by Cage the Dog and an overwhelming stench of pee.  I figured he’d have an accident eventually – he refuses to go outside to pee in the rain, and his bladder is only so big.

I went to grab a towel to wipe his feet and clean up the mess, but while I was gone, he made a run for it, tracking pee through the house on his way to the living room.  I chased him down to wipe his feet, and then back-tracked, wiping up paw-print pee puddles as I went.

I dropped the towel onto the puddle on the mudroom floor, and noticed that his dog bed was soaking wet, too.  Nice.  

I shoved his bed into the washer, and then ran out to the living room to get Cage settled in there.  It was then that I noticed the ashes all over his blanket from the fire we made last night.  So, I shook off the ashes and swept them up.

While I was shaking out the blanket, I saw that one of the kids had put dry cereal in all the little divots the buttons make in the living room chair, and picked them out, sweeping up any that fell.

Then, I had Cage lay down so I could soak his injured foot in betadine, because I don’t care what they say about pee being sterile, I’m not taking any chances.  I wrapped a paper towel around his foot and went to get the vacuum from the mud room.

Oy, but the floor in there was still disgusting, so I finished cleaning up the pee, tossed the pee-soaked towel in the washer with the dog bed, and mopped really quick.

I finally set about vacuuming, and wouldn’t you know – the vacuum freaked Cage out, and he ran across the WHITE living room rug with his gooshy, betadine-soaked foot.

I got him back on the blanket and finished vacuuming, keeping my evil-eye focused on him the entire time, and then cleaned up the rust-colored paw prints as best I could with some Resolve.

Feeling a bit exhausted after all that cleaning, I got myself a drink and decided to check in on twitter for a few minutes.

It’s then that my husband walked in, having given me a full hour to clean the house.  I’m on twitter, and all I’ve done is vacuum the living room rug.  Sweeeeet.

No wonder he thinks I spend all my time on the computer!

Categories
Blog Carnivals Life in general

Monday Mumbers

                                           


565 = Bales of hay we’ve gotten from our fields so far

1,495,246 = Times I’ve sneezed in the past two days because: HAY!  EVERYWHERE!

638 = Times I’ve considered gouging out my own eyes to stop the burning and itching

2 = Children home today

1 = Child that should be home today

1 = Child limping around on her “spranged” ankle.  Except when she thinks I’m not looking

9 = Days my parents are out of town

7492 = Bottles of wine I’ll need, trying to cope without the babysitter Grandma around

6 = Days it took me to get my blog permanently purple for Maddie!

1 = Day until I meet with my Doc about anti-anxiety meds

18 = Years my Doc’s been trying to talk me into talking about anti-anxiety meds

327,195 = Times I’ve felt anxious about talking about anti-anxiety meds.  So far.  Today.

1 = More day of bandaging Cage The Dog’s injured foot

5 = More days of hand feeding him because of the HUGE cone around his neck

5829 = Pounds of dog hair I’ve swept up in the week he’s been convalescing in my living room

729,437 = Times I’ve thought about eating pizza today.  I wonder what’s for lunch?

Want more Mumbers?  Visit Good Enough Mama!  She always aims to please.

Categories
Kids Life in general

The HEAT

I like heat.  Hot is good.  But even I have trouble transitioning from 50 degree weather to 100 degree weather with nothing in between. 

My kids, however?  They don’t mind it being 100 degrees in April, because they will jump on any excuse to get in the pool.

Me: Blythe, you want to go swimming?

Her: YEAH!!



Me: Oooh, it’s a little cold.

Alison: No it’s NOT! (cue shiver)



Me: Somehow, I don’t believe you.

Alison: OK, yes it is!  A little.  You should get in, anyway.



Me: No, thanks.  I’ll just watch from here.

Blythe: I splash you?



Me: You’d better NOT!

Blythe: Is not cold.  Feel, Mama.



Me: I did feel, and yes, it is col…. Aaaaak!  Alison, you little….



Alison: What?  I was practicing my kicks.

Blythe: Mama aaaaaalllll wet.



Me: You think it’s funny now, just wait till she gets YOU!



Me: That didn’t take long!

The nice thing about them swimming in the afternoons is I can wash them in the pool shower and skip the whole bath time meltdowns. 

What, you don’t let your children bathe outdoors?