Sunday, November 30, 2014

To Thee We Raise....

Practicing gratitude for an entire month has been a difficult discipline.  The beginning of the month found us exhausted but hopeful, recovering from Babygirl's first hospital stay in nearly two years.  The horrible headaches that lead up to that stay were finally gone, so it was fairly easy to start, but as the days went on and the headaches returned and worsened, being grateful became one of the most difficult tasks out there.

Writing a 'gratitude' post on mornings when I woke up already crying was actually quite stressful.  Remembering that there were still things to be thankful for despite Babygirl's suffering and the apparent indifference of her doctors created an interesting type of mental tension, one which I believe was good for me in the long run. 

It is all too easy to look down.  The burdens that rest on our shoulders are often heavy ones.  Disciplining our hearts to focus outside of our own struggles and pain is good for us.  A friend of mine has said that she plans, as a Thanksgiving Resolution, to find three things that she is thankful for each morning before she puts her car in gear.  It is a worthy ambition, one that I am all too aware can be a tremendous challenge on some mornings!

My sister-in-law, on one of our last runs to the hospital, gave me a gift.  It's a little plaque that reads, "Life is all about how you handle Plan B." 

So Lord of all, to thee we raise Plan B. Or C. Or F.  Or whatevertheheck plan we are currently on, with gratitude for the strength to carry on.

DeeDee

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Peace on Earth and Joy in Heaven.....

Humans are, by nature, not peaceful.  We glorify struggle, and put those who can prove superiority in the limelight.  We spend millions fighting over who gets to host the Olympics and billions hosting them.  World Cup Soccer games are watched worldwide, and the outcome of the competition can generate rioting whether the home team wins OR loses.  And how much does a thirty second ad cost on Super Bowl Sunday?  Around four million dollars in 2013.  This is what we do in our free time, in times of peace.  We dedicate infinitely more time and money to actual war.  The US defense budget in 2011 was about $665 billion.

It has been said that if you want peace, work for justice.  If we were to tithe our military money, use 10 % of it for other causes, we would have enough money for every single thing we need here:  Enough for housing for the homeless, enough to give workers a living wage, enough to fund fully universal healthcare including care for the mentally ill, enough to give paid maternity leave. 

I'm not foolish enough to assume that this will alter human nature.  But imagine the joy in heaven if we all at least tried to treat each human being as if they have worth simply because each and every one of us is equally created in the image of our creator.

Wouldn't that be something to be grateful for?

DeeDee

Friday, November 28, 2014

For That Great, Great Love of Thine......

I woke this morning to the sound of my grandsons chatting over Hubby's extensive pin collection.  He has a corkboard, about three feet tall, nearly covered in commemorative pins of all kinds, going back to his days in the Boy Scouts.  Wherever we go, he looks for more of these little pins, and many of them are recognizably iconic, even to young children.   Squeaker and DoodleBug were especially excited to spot Mickey Mouse.

Thanksgiving is a great family holiday, and I've noted before that it is my favorite.  Hubby and I spent the morning yesterday working together to prepare the feast, and such was our level of organization that we had every single dish prepped and in progress for the 6 PM meal by noon.  Kids and grandkids began arriving at about three, and things stayed hectic until midnight, when I looked at the clock and realized...oh, it's only 7:30.  Lordy, I don't quite have as much stamina as I used to!

Due to a recent job loss, Curlygirl and SqueakersDaddy are on a very tight budget this year, and although I have a theoretical objection to shopping on Thanksgiving Day, I understood their need to make the most of a limited amount of cash (and their need for transport) so I agreed to let them hire Babygirl to watch the boys overnight at our house (she's still headache free, thanks be to God) and drove them out to wherever they needed to go.   (As a side note, I have worked both Thanksgiving and Christmas day in a retail shop back in the early 1980's. I needed the money.  Although shopping and spending time outside of the home on these days is more common now, it is by no means a NEW phenomenon. Of course as a physician working those days is hardly a rarity one way or another.)

There were a lot of people out there.  We missed the first wave of crazy, but there were a LOT of people for all of that.  I'm not a fan of WalMart, but the store was fairly full of people, about like it is on the first Saturday after the local University opens in the fall and all of the students are looking for microwaves and mini-fridges.  But I'd say about one in three of the people there were employees, most with carts full of merchandise needing reshelving.  I ran into one that I knew, and she said that there had hardly been room to move about three hours earlier.  Overhead announcements were instructing employees to go to the produce aisle to pick up toys.  It must have been complete chaos.

We checked out a couple other stores and came home at about 1:30 AM, officially into Black Friday.  So the sound of little voices and the pitter patter of little feet (seriously?  Squeaker sounds like a baby T-rex when he runs)  was perhaps not the joyous wake-up call it might otherwise have been. 

But hearing DoodleBug's excited chatter, and Squeaker's I-worship-my-big-brother echo of everything he had to say was a sweet blessing as Hubby pushed a cup of coffee into my hands with a kiss.  Our Leftover Night Dinner tonight will continue to echo our gratitude for the love that surrounds us here.

DeeDee

Thursday, November 27, 2014

To the World So Freely Given....

The things we get for free are the things we most take as granted, don't you think? Until the air around us becomes too dirty to breathe, we accept clean air as a given.  We might pay a small fee for our water but we rarely worry about whether or not we are going to catch something deadly if we drink it.  Sunshine, rain, shady trees - all a part of my normal day-to-day (well, maybe not the sunshine.  I live in one of the least sunny cities in the entire US - Seattle gets more sunshine than we do). 

For most of us growing up, we took our next meal as granted.  Our parents might have known that things were a little dicey but they never let on to US that we were a couple of dollars away from hungry.  We took our safety as given - no helmets, car seats or seatbelts for us!  We never doubted that there'd be a roof over our heads, streetlights on the corner, or a school to attend.  I'm not entirely sure how far I was into adulthood before I made the ultimate connections between wages, property, taxes, firemen and schools, but I think it might have been about the time I first owned a home at age 30. 

We take grace as granted as well. We know those who love us will tolerate us, support us and forgive us.  We know that love is a bond that can't be severed - until it is.  Those of us who have been through divorce or the demise of a deep friendship or the fracture of a family relationship understand that tolerance has boundaries, support can become unsupportable, and love can be shattered beyond repair.  Drugs, alcohol, gambling, domestic violence, infidelity, apathy - these are a few of the things that can take a relationship beyond the point of no return, be it spouse, parent, child, or friend. 

Wait, what?  Child?  Of all of the relationships listed, giving up on a child is the hardest.  What could a kid possible do for you to finally stop loving them?  Certainly I can think of things that might make me choose to keep some distance ("Your cocaine habit means that you steal my computer every time you come to the house, so you can't come there anymore.  Where can I meet you?"), and even some things that might mean separation (violence) but not much, if anything, that would stop me from feeling love for my child.  And separation would be anguish.

For a child, the death of a parent means the loss of that safety net of unconditional love.  It's why, whether seventeen or seventy-five, we take it very badly when a parent dies.
 
For me, the love of God feels like this.  Like a Mother, anguished when I choose to separate myself, and like a Mother rejoicing when I'm home - it's the underlying safety net of my life, for which I am grateful.

DeeDee

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

For Thyself Best Gift Divine....

Faith is a mystery.  Why some of us have faith and others don't I have no idea. My parents took me to church when I was very small, but stopped going before I started school.  But somehow, my heart felt at home there, and when I was big enough to walk there on my own, I did.  Despite my many, many flaws I became a doctor to work toward my goal to live the ideals taught by Christ:  Heal the sick, feed the poor, work for justice. 

One of my favorite patients is an atheist.  She firmly believes that since there is no afterlife, one must achieve everything possible in THIS lifetime.  She became a legal aide lawyer to achieve her ideals:  Lift up the downtrodden, work for justice, proclaim liberty to the captives - in other words, to live the ideals taught by Christ. 

Of course, she doesn't see it that way, and might even be offended by the comparison, not that it makes it any less true for all of that. 

If she doesn't believe in any afterlife or higher power, why is she so passionate about the need to serve?  Why do I feel so passionate about what I do when I know 'doing' isn't truly necessary to arrive in the afterlife, given my faith? 

Jesus' life was THE roadmap of what we could become.  He gave, and gave and gave over and over.  He healed.  He reconciled.  He fed.  He taught. He freed.  He set a phenomenal, unforgettable example of what God intended us to be, and sent His Spirit to help us become His hands in this world. 

I was raised in a pretty fundamental environment.  By all I was taught, my patient, despite her life choices, will arrive in hell at the moment of her death.  And those who profess faith in Christ but vote to take food away from hungry children will go straight to heaven. 

But there are those verses regarding separating the sheep from the goats on the basis of "When I was hungry you fed me, and when I was thirsty you gave me drink, and when I was in prison you visited me...."  These things happen at the final judgment, after, I assume, we're dead.  Jesus clearly told his disciples that he had sheep in 'other folds.' 

My faith is pretty broad.  I serve the Lord, not (only) because I hope to go to heaven but because it is the right, just, fair thing.  I have long suspected that on the last day we will be surprised, deeply surprised, by which of us get Sheep awards, and which get Goats.  The Bible says that God did not send his Son into the world to condemn it, but to save it.  In that eye-opening moment when we see what God has seen - "I was sick, and in prison, and you visited me" - we will see what the Gift Divine has accomplished. 

I am grateful for the opportunities my life has given me to serve.

DeeDee

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

And Buds of Heaven....

We are surrounded, although we are rarely aware of it, by people who hold in their hearts the "buds of heaven."  October is National Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month.  I know, I know, everybody seems to have their 'day' or their 'month' these days.  But October represents a staggering number of people.

If you go to http://www.october15th.com/, you'll see the statistics:  About one in six pregnancies end in miscarriage or stillbirth.  According to the CDC, the US infant mortality rate is 6.1/1000 live births (it drops to 4.2/1000 if you exclude babies born before 24 weeks gestation).  In either case, think about it:  If your high school had only 100 kids in it, 16 kids were missing long before you started kindergarten.  You didn't notice them.  But their parents did.

I've never experienced a miscarriage or the loss of a child, but I've had good friends who have.  I remember the names of the missing children and pray for their parents.  I feel, like many of us feel, helpless in the face of such tremendous loss. 

"I can't pretend to know what you are feeling.  But I'm here if you need me." 

If you know anyone (and I know you must) who has such a loss on their heart, pray for them.  If you have lost a child, I pray for you. 

My gratitude for this day is, that for all we've lost, we've not lost a child. 

DeeDee

Monday, November 24, 2014

Flowers of Earth...

We are halfway through our visits of the morning.  Babygirl awoke with a slight headache, which has resolved.  She is tired, and very cranky, which I am sincerely hoping is NOT a side effect of the Depakote.  The neurology nurse agrees that generating a flow sheet of all medications that could conceivably ever be used for migraine under any circumstances either for maintenance or rescue, traditional, herbal, supplemental or otherwise.  This would be useful for all patients, and also for teaching purposes.  But in our case it would be useful because we would be able to give the entire list to nephrology for clearance in advance of need.

We discussed Botox again.  Babygirl is a bit reluctant to try it, so it was back-burnered for now.  I asked about the Cephaly device (http://www.cefaly.us/) and got permission to try it ($300, not covered by insurance, but well worth the investment if it works at all for either one of us).  The doctor said, "I have patients who swear BY it, and some who swear AT it."  Good to know, Doc, good to know.  He wants to continue the Depakote at a lower dose than the inpatient neurologist recommended. 

All of these things are preventatives.  We still don't have the best plan available to TREAT the headaches as they occur.  Tylenol and tramadol have been ineffective. Migranol was effective briefly.  Imitrex caused chest pain.  So now we've added Reglan and Maxalt (or restart the Migranol with the Reglan) to try, and we are to see if nephrology will clear us for aspirin use (to be avoided at all costs if she is actually ill). 

Flowers of earth.  Botox, Migranol and the aspirin are ancient, plant-based medications.  There is evidence that they have been being used since the Neanderthals roamed the earth, along with foxglove, belladonna, purple coneflower and many other plants that we still use widely in our pharmacopeia today (although it is only recently that Botox has been used for anything other than poison).   More recent development of drugs like Taxol from the Pacific yew for ovarian cancer make scientists keep looking at plants for more potential treatments for diseases.

Our overall disrespect for our planet is costing us medical treatments.  Every time a plant species goes extinct due to habitat loss before we can study it we lose, potentially, the cure for a disease.  Even (and perhaps especially) those plants that we have previously deemed toxic may prove useful if we look at them from a different perspective.  We have take our directive to 'subdue' the earth a bit too literally.

We need to back up, let the planet recover, and be thankful that God put here what we need for our health and well-being.

DeeDee

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Graces Human and Divine.....

 Divine Graces. Forgiveness, love, faith, compassion among them. 

Human graces, the same.  The gentle kindness of our human co-travelers in this life are what point us toward the Divine. 

Babygirl was discharged from the hospital last night, just before nine PM.  They didn't exactly hustle us out - we were offered the option of sleeping over - but Babygirl's headache had drifted down to a 1/10 and she had a suspicion that her second IV site might not hold up for another round of medications, so despite the fact that we both had reservations, we decided to leave.  Unlike our last discharge (which for reasons unknown took over four hours), we were out the door in twenty minutes.  We hiked to the parking garage, and.... the car was dead. 

I checked immediately - the headlights were not on.  But one of the interior lights was - I must have switched it on to look for something when we arrived and forgotten about it. 

We don't have AAA (we keep talking about it and then forgetting to do it).  So I Babygirl and I dropped our stuff in the trunk and hiked back into the nearest building to ask security for help.  "We're dealing with a  bit of a situation, ma'am, but we'll get to you as soon as we can."  It wasn't long of a wait, and a kind guard came and drove us to our car. 

I'm notoriously nosy.  "So...what was the 'situation'?"  "Oh, a chopper came in with a trauma case and a cop.  Emotions run high, you know?"  I mentally translate.  If there's a cop, a parent is likely responsible for the trauma, and the other parent (and/or the grandparents) aren't handling this well.  "You see a lot, I imagine."  "I love my job, but I just made my 90 days yesterday and I've cried twice already." 

He doesn't look like the crying kind. 

The security car has a cool jumper cable hook-up that allows him to wire up to our battery and then just plug the other end into the front of his vehicle without even lifting the hood.  It set off my car alarms when it plugged it in, which made him jump a mile and unplug the cable.  "Was that you?!?"  "It's an automatic anti-theft alarm.  I'll switch if off when it comes on."  It took two more tries (with him jumping like he was being electrocuted each time) before he understood that he had to let it honk for a minute to give me time to turn it OFF.

Maybe he is the crying kind.

The car started without incident (except now I need to find the radio code to convince the radio that no one stole it).  He stayed for bit to make sure we were okay, and left us with a "Have a blessed night!"

Halfway home, Babygirl suddenly said, "My head doesn't hurt AT ALL." 

The fact that we had just made it calmly through what could have been a stressful car breakdown was undoubtedly helpful.  Ask anyone who knows me:  I'm not always good with the unexpected crisis.  The fact that security at the desk didn't do an eyeroll and was nothing but compassionate about it was amazing.  The gentle soul of the man who restarted our car calmed my heart. 

I will say it again:  God has no hands but ours.  I do not always handle the hearts of my fellow-travelers as gently and with as much grace as I might.  I am grateful for gentle reminders that I should.

DeeDee

PS She is still headache-free this morning, and morning is usually the worst.  We have recheck appointments with neurology and nephrology tomorrow morning.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

To Our Race So Freely Given....

Today's been a long day.  Six IV treatments with the DHE and the headache is hanging tough, so they are starting a new medication now. Even as I see the setting sun reflected ever earlier off of the newest of the Children's Hospital buildings across the street, it seems a long, draggy day.

But I have a long list of things I am grateful for today.  I am not these parents:

Overheard in the elevator:  "....and then he coughed, which increases the pressure in your chest, you know?  And a stitch in his heart tore loose and he started bleeding out through his chest tube, and I asked the therapist 'should his nose be bleeding like that?' and she said..."

Or this:  "He's eighteen, just turned this week.  He was born here.  Yeah, we're 'Frequent Flyers'.  I don't know what we're going to do now that he's too old to come here...."

Or:  "We're on day sixteen since they took his appendix out.  The abscesses are still draining...."

Yeah.  We aren't those people, and we aren't any of the many people who arrived by helicopter in the last 24 hours either. 

Sometimes I need to be reminded that my kid is not the only one laboring under the inheritance of Adam. I see the number of moms and dads with the blue 'I-have-a-kid-inpatient' wristbands sucking down coffee like it's a lifeline in the cafeteria at 5:30 AM.  I see sibling groups with matching shirts that say "Team Gabby" filing into the elevator to go visit Gabby with a very tired Grandma in tow.  I can look down into the ER waiting room, never, ever empty. 

Our race was given Paradise.  We traded it for the knowledge of good and evil and gained sickness and death.

And despite that...despite ALL of that, what I see here all around me are people who manage to put off their fatigue and put on a smile and keep walking.  I see moms who stagger out of  kid's room looking like a puff of wind would knock them down forever turn around ten minutes later and go back in singing.  I see peace in the face of struggle.  I see hope.  And I see gratitude.

DeeDee

Friday, November 21, 2014

For Each Perfect Gift of Thine.....

Sigh.

The discipline of using this hymn to outline my gratitude for the month of November has reached challenging heights.  Sitting up in the night with a child in a children's hospital 200 miles from home is always an exercise in maintaining a stiff upper lip.  One of the nurses just asked me if I'm okay - what am I supposed to say to that?

The truth of the matter is, though, that I am better here that at home.  Here, at least, the responsibility of dealing with Babygirl's pain is no longer mine.  Despite the fact that she had pretty bad chest pain from her medications during the night necessitating repetitive cardiac evaluations; despite a one AM I-wanna-go-home crying jag that left us both exhausted, we BOTH slept better last night than we did the night before. 

So where do the perfect gifts lie?

Well.  There is Babygirl herself, who despite her exhaustion and pain remains polite and focused with the staff, which is more than I can sometimes say for myself.  There are family and friends who step up and offer whatever help they can, surrounding us with prayer and love.  There is my job, where people step up without complaint and pick up the slack yet again, dealing with disgruntled folks who are tired of being shuffled around like a deck of cards to accommodate the weirdness that is my life. 

Just because I am weary and sad doesn't mean I'm not grateful.  Making gratitude a discipline helps pull me out of myself and back into the larger world.

DeeDee

Thursday, November 20, 2014

For All Gentle Thoughts and Mild....

I've been short on gentle, mild thoughts lately.  Work has been crazy with the retirement of a colleague. Mom's decline is never pleasant to watch.  Hubby's back pain is no picnic.  But it is Babygirl's headaches that really take it out of us.

Her recent hospital stay resulted in a 100% resolution of her headaches for about five days.  Then a day on, a day off, a day on, a day off.  New medicine working well, then working slowly, then working not at all, until finally she settled back into the chronic daily headache, awakening with a 7/10 pain that would gradually decline to a 3 - 5/10 by the end of the day, but never completely go away, except for one lovely evening for a couple of hours. 

I started calling neurology on the morning of day three of this headache, last Friday.  The nurse called back at lunchtime, said she'd talk to the doc and call back by the end of the day.

Monday morning I called again, and requested again that they please return a call, because day three was now day six.  A coordinator of some sort returned the call and was miffed that I was angry (really? Well, I did say, "I feel like no one gives a rat's ass about my kid."  Cussing at the person who is not at fault is bad form, and I apologized immediately and had to listen to the "you aren't the only one with a kid with headaches" lecture, the immediate Karmic payback for my rudeness), but she promised that she would immediately go to the nurse and that someone would call me by the end of the day.

Tuesday evening I came home from work and sobbed like a child all over Hubby.  He's gotten quite good at just hanging on and making comforting noises.

Wednesday morning I called again (I have an alarm set for 8:30 AM on my phone so I remember to call early in the day.  It is pathetic but that way no one on the other end can say I called too late in the day for them to get back to me.  Not that the time of the call apparently matters in any way). We are now on day eight of a nearly continuous headache and I've waited over 5 days for a call back from a doctor.  Keeping in mind that the poor soul on the other end of the line is not responsible for this, I outline the problem AGAIN.  And I know she can hear that I am crying.  I'm not going to pretend that I'm not.  At 4:40 PM I am with one of my nurses, notice the time, and start crying again because I know neurology goes home at 4:30, so there is no hope of a call,  but I still have paperwork and patients of my own who need to hear from me, so I pull myself together and keep working.

At 5:30, my phone rings. It's the doctor.  I was stunned, sincerely stunned.  I explained, AGAIN, where we are in the process.  It is truly a good thing that there is 200 miles and a phone between us, because his basic excuse is that he needs clearance from the kidney docs before he can try anything new.  I ask what he want to try and he rattles off a list that contains one medication that they have already okay'd, one that she already on, and one that they have already declined.  I point this out to him and he refuses to give her the one they say is okay because HE doesn't like the side effects. 

"Doc, let me tell you something important that you need to know:  My brother took one of those silly online how-long-am-I-going-to-live quizzes and it gave him 46 years.  He said, 'Why would I want 46 more years?  Give 'em to Babygirl!'  Babygirl said, 'Why would I want them? My life sucks!' "

There was a pause.  "Do you want me to readmit her to try to stop the headache again?"  "Yes.  Tell me when you want us there."

I skipped Bible study and choir rehearsal to finish every phone call and piece of paperwork that could be finished.  And this morning we are here at my sister-in-law's house, waiting for a call from Bed-and-Board to tell us when a room is available. 

Stopping the headache is only one step.  They HAVE to find something to keep it from coming back.  So I'd be very thankful if all of you would send your thoughts and prayers our way.

DeeDee

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

And Friends Above.....

I miss my Grandma.  On Wednesdays she would walk to our house, and in the summer I would watch for her to come down the hill about the time the noon whistle blew.  My mom would wash her hair and set it in pin curls and they'd drink tea and chat while it dried.  They'd make me my own pot of tea - probably 80% milk with half a cup of sugar but it kept me out of the way for a while. 

Grandma never spent her change, she just collected it in a little coin purse. When I got older  I had the job of counting it up an dividing it evenly between my brothers and I to use as pocket money for the week.  Since we didn't get an allowance like many of our friends did, this was a real treasure.

Every Valentine's Day Grandma gave us a little heart-shaped box of candy, and for Christmas one of the Lifesaver Books.  Each.  Our friends were envious. 

Grandma helped finance two cross-country family vacations, and camped from Buffalo to Yellowstone and back, and from Buffalo to Yosemite and back.  She survived being lost in the Mojave Desert, exploring the Badlands, being surrounded by bears, drinking campfire coffee, and landing flat on her back (along with my Mom and Dad) when I got up from the kids' side of the picnic table and their combined weight took it over.  Literally.

I asked her for a loan so I could do my first semester of college while I was still in high school.  Without without a second's hesitation, she pulled out her purse and handed me $250, the entire price.  She believed in me, always.  When I told her I was planning on get married at 19, she said, "But I thought you were going to DO something!"

She died a year later, when I was in my second year of college, technically my freshman year, at the end of The Blizzard of '77.  I came home for her funeral to snowbanks taller than the telephone poles, and we couldn't bury her until spring. Her death made me look hard at my traditional upbringing and my traditional life view.  Her belief in me pushed me the rest of the way through college (two undergraduate  degrees in three years) and ultimately medical school.

 I believe she still makes flowers bloom here and there for me when I need them.  We should all be thankful for our friends above.

DeeDee

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Friends on Earth........

It is isolating to be the parents of a chronically ill child. You can't predict more than a day ahead, so rather than cancel at the last minute again, you don't accept invitations.  Invitations slowly stop.  People innocently ask how things are and you have such limited choices:  Flat-out lie, dodge the question, or let on that things aren't going well.

Each choice has its advantages.  Lying gets you off the hook, because if everything is going great, everybody smiles and moves on to the next topic of conversation, sparing you a blow-by-blow reliving of how much your life sucks.  Dodging isn't bad, a good choice with people who really don't care about the answer anyway, but sometimes painful to those who feel they deserve a more honest answer. Telling the truth gets you support.  But telling the truth is exhausting.  Exhausting.  When I was in Migraine Hell myself a few years ago I heard every "Have-you-tried-sacrificing-a-chicken-under-the-full-moon" suggestion from every corner of the universe.  I may have gone to medical school but I'm not so full of myself that I'm unaware that doctors can be ignorant prigs who ignore perfectly good natural remedies.  I tried a lot of them.  I checked known safety data on a lot more.  I've been down this road myself. 

Walking through an illness for yourself is not the same as watching your child suffer.  And she frankly has it a hundred times worse than I did.  Yes, we've thought about hormones. Of course we've examined diet:  Dairy, gluten, chocolate, caffeine, sulfites, cheeses, and every other imaginable food trigger has been investigated.  She has no allergies.  Yes, of COURSE we've had her eyes checked and no, she doesn't have TMJ.  The list of medications we've tried (herbals and supplements included) would astound you.  I will tell you that in the last eighteen months not once has any human outside of her neurologists' office opened their mouth to offer a single suggestion that we haven't already considered.  The only treatment I found on my own was an electronic trigeminal nerve stimulator recently approved for use in adults.  I asked her docs about it.  It hasn't been studied in kids.  I'm willing to sign her up.

All theses suggestions are kindly meant, as are the many stories about people (and it seems everyone knows at least one) whose headaches NEVER come under control (not sure how that's meant to be comforting except perhaps in the 'you aren't the only one' sense).  And I'm ashamed of myself for being so frustrated by the sincere kindness of people who care about me and Babygirl.  But her pain has me so exhausted and so discouraged that  I just don't have the courage to think about it any more.

But here is where I know the value of my friends:  Wednesday, when we get information from Babygirl's new tutor about what hours she wants to teach her, and we need an adult in the house to supervise, I won't have to make more than two phone calls to find someone who will either give Curlygirl a ride over so she can do it, or come over themselves.  I'm 100% certain that that is a gap people will stand in, just as they have stood in every other oddly shaped gap we've had in the past three and a half years.  I can't explain how huge the peace is that comes with that knowledge.

DeeDee

PS Funny story:  For a while the tutors were satisfied that my Mom was on the other side of the house.  Then one of them must have met her.  We got a request for an adult who "isn't so hard of hearing."  I said, "She isn't hard of hearing exactly, she's more.... hard of thinking."  The tutor responded, "Yes, well, I was trying to be polite..."

Monday, November 17, 2014

Parent, Child.....

When my parents were children, they were in sad circumstances. 

My dads father died when he was a toddler.  His stepdad was an abusive alcoholic.  My mom's childhood was split between happy times when her father was not at home, and horrifying nights of abuse when he was.  They married young, he at 19 and she at 16, and began a family a year later.  My mom told me once of a conversation that they had before my older brother was born.

"We sat down and decided what we were NEVER going to do as parents."

Teenagers.  Making plans for permanent change. 

They made promises to us kids before we born that they kept all of our lives.  We never once sat outside a bar waiting for a parent to have "just one more drink."  I was never left alone for even a minute with our grandfather, and I was given permission before I understood why I needed it to stand up to him if he made me at all uncomfortable. They didn't turn themselves into perfect parents - the gap was too wide - but they gave it their best shot.  They had no idea on earth what 'normal' families did on holidays, so they watched "It's a Wonderful Life" and copied the style as best they could.  For the most part, they pretended to be 'normal'.  For the most part, it worked.

The knowledge that that conversation had taken place has had a profound impact on my parenting.  The concept that one could decide to change things ahead of time - how amazing is THAT?  How amazing IS that? To have a love so profound that you plan for a better life for someone who doesn't even exist yet?  It goes from the foundation to the frosting of parental love.

Grateful?  Hell, yes.

DeeDee

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Brother, Sister....

I don't have sisters.  I feel the lack, at times; I think women more naturally tend to end up as caregivers to their elderly parents, and having a sister to share that load with would be nice.

I have, however, been blessed with brothers. 

People who grew up with you in your house understand certain things better than anybody ever will:  The code words for joy and sadness that are bound tightly in specific memories of childhood.  You can discuss such things as 'toon toenails, turkey-gobble sneezes and CaliPhoneYa and they immediately know the subject, the context, the subtext and how it relates to the point you are trying to make, all in less than three seconds.  It makes telling the funny story of my last trip for a pedicure take about five minutes less to tell. 

However often I might not see eye-to-eye with them, I know that there is over 50 years of history there.  I know that our time with out parents is winding down.  Knowing that there are other people out there who've known me has long as they have is comforting.

My younger brother recently visited one of those how-long-are-you-going-to-live websites, and it told him he has 46 more years.  His response?  "F*** that!  I don't need that kind of time! Give some of that to Babygirl!"

How can I not be grateful?

DeeDee

Saturday, November 15, 2014

For the Joy of Human Love.....

One of the best gifts of my life is my hubby.  We have had a rough walk this past few years.  But he's a good man to be walking with, and I'm grateful.

DeeDee

Thursday, November 13, 2014

For the Mystic Harmony......

Sue Fitzmaurice, Author's photo.

You were expecting something profound?  LOL.

Well, you got it.  Meditate on this thought today.

DeeDee

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

For the Heart's and Brain's Delight.....

Yesterday was a full-on all-day I-got-the-Scarecrow-beat Brain Day. 

WTH, you say?

It's difficult to explain the toll the migraines take.  People 'get' that when you have an actual headache, you aren't doing too well.  They kinda get that auras screw up blood flow to your brain and that can make you less functional.  They certainly understand that medications have side effects and can make you less focused. 

There's more to it, though, and it's more subtle and insidious.  Sometimes entire days go by when I feel like there is some kind of fine mesh curtain between me and what I know.  I can feel alert but unable to reach into certain parts of my brain for things I need by the usual routes.  It's a bit like having to drop the back seat of your car to get into the trunk - you know you can do it if you have to, but you try the trunk latch FIRST because that makes the most sense, and then when that doesn't work you have to go looking around for that latch release you never use and then grab a flashlight so you can see....and all of that is running in the background while you carry on the conversation as if a chunk of something isn't missing and waiting to be turned up.

I am at my best in the morning.  By one o'clock I can feel the fog roll in.  By four PM my brain is moving SO slowly that it puts all the big words away for another time.  By seven, hubby can beat me at nearly any game he chooses. 

But yesterday was an exceptional day.  Everything was clear, coherent, organized.  I managed to plough through a ton of paperwork, and what I didn't finish (there was plenty) I at least prioritized.  Despite an aura last night,  I feel about the same this morning.  I pray it lasts, but I'll enjoy what I have while I have it, and be grateful.

DeeDee

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

For the Joy of Ear and Eye....

Our new choir director will be absent this Sunday and I've been asked to cover for the week.  Since we are in the process of learning 872 new tunes for the Christmas Cantata I won't be able to steal much rehearsal time from him, so I need to keep it simple.

Prepping music for a choir is more labor-intensive than people realize.  First, at some point in your life you have to have put in a few years learning to read music.  Like reading text, there is an automaticity to it that non-readers do not fully appreciate.  Think about it:  When you read, you are not spelling out each word in your head any more - what you see is rapidly interpreted, skipping any number of the steps you needed to use while learning, and goes straight to understanding, almost as if you are 'hearing' someone speak it.  A really good musician can look at music and have the same process happen.  Our current choir director is one of those.  He wanted to add a little something to the accompaniment recently and said to the organist, "At measure 86 I want you to add a four octave unison Fa-Sol-Fa-Mi-Re-Do in sixteenth notes in the last two beats that returns us to the a tempo at measure 87."  I understood it immediately, and so did she.  But I would never have been able to say or imagine it that way.

Sadly, I am not a 'really good musician.'  I need to hear what I am seeing in order to really learn it.  Since I am not a piano player, this was a challenge in the days before CD's with split tracks, MP3 players and rapid access to music online.  And I need to practice that 'waving my arms in the air' bit to get it down before I drag the choir through it (something our choir director is still relatively new at - he's a better musician, but I'm a more experienced director). 

When I first began to direct our church choir I was afraid my lack of musicianship would hold them all back.  But I learned that my singers weren't 'musicians' - more than half of them couldn't read music at all.  They were just people who loved to sing, and  what I learned was that when people want to sing praise to God, they will make do with the director God gives them until the director learns the job better. 

I don't direct the choir full-time anymore because of the inherent unreliability that comes with having a chronically ill child.  But there is nothing that puts together the joy of ear and eye like directing a choir, and I'm grateful to be able to do it once in a while still.

DeeDee

Monday, November 10, 2014

And Stars of Light....

We who live in modern times don't think too highly of starlight.  We might teach our children nursery rhymes about wishing on stars, and might be kind enough not to point out to them that most of the wishes they make are on planets, actually, but don't really think of stars as being anything that sheds significant light on our path.  We all know about our sun-shadows, our streetlight-shadows, and sometimes, our moon-shadows.  But a star-shadow?  Certainly not.

If we were to go back a hundred years, before the majority of Americans were on the grid, we would have a different knowledge. 

Starlight is more subtle.  Hundreds, thousands, nay, millions of suns: Many of them unimaginably larger than our own sun and infinitely farther away, all working in concert to light the sky.  And we are so intent on lighting the ground at our feet that we have made their light nearly invisible.

When I first moved from my small country town to Long Island, the immense orange New York City glow on the western horizon blotted out the entire sky in that direction and diminished the visibility above dramatically.  "How do people here teach their children about the stars?" I remember wondering my first night there.  I adjusted to the lack of stars - it simply felt normal after a while.  And when I moved from there to this smaller city, the reappearance of even a limited number of stars seemed miraculous. 

But on the rare occasions when I am in a light-free zone, perhaps four times in my adult life:  Ah, what  miracle.  If you have never seen an unpolluted sky with every distant star visible, you must add this sight to your bucket list - you must. 

We all understand that we need the Light.  Metaphors for the Holy are all around us - Sun, Moon - it is easy to understand that God casts massive amounts of light on us.  But Babygirl and I are forced, at times, to live in a more subtle light.  Sunlight - even moonlight - is enough to cause us real pain.  But the gentleness of starlight, casting only the smallest round shadow at our feet - we can handle that. 

We wonder sometimes why the broken people we see don't seem to respond to the Love of God.  I think, maybe, it is just too much Light.  It hurts, all that brightness spotlighting our darkness all at once.  Maybe God is calling us to be Starlight for our neighbors:  The softest, gentlest light, adjusting the eyes of darkness for a brighter Light.  It makes sense: Many small lights working together.

Thank God for Starlight.

DeeDee

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Sun and Moon......

Yesterday was busy, and a planned soup-and-homemade bread dinner never quite got off the ground.  I did a lot of cleaning, ride sharing to grocery stores, and daydreaming to live Chinese music in a bookstore.  At the end of it all, Babygirl and I had to decide what to do about dinner.

Our church is a busy place.  We feed people.  A lot.  On election day we had a chicken and biscuit fundraiser.  On the first Friday of each month we host a free dinner for any college student who cares to show up.  Our town has three colleges, and our neighborhood has quite a bit of off-campus housing.  About 60 kids come and eat.  On the second and last Saturday of each month there is a free meal for anybody who wants to come, usually a hundred people or so (more at the end of the month when there is less money).  We have a food pantry, open two days a week.  My hubby and his best friend spend a lot of time shopping and cooking.  Babygirl and I don't often attend these meals, she because of her inability to eat food that has been standing out for any length of time (kidney transplant/germ rules) and I due to food allergies.  But we decided that it might be our best option for a hot meal and good company last night.

We drove Curlygirl and Squeaker home first, heading from bookstore to downtown, and from downtown to church.  Along the way we had to pull to the side of the road no less than FIVE times for emergency vehicles, each headed in distinctly different directions.  Fire, police, ambulances:  Everybody going every which way.  The final group was the largest, all apparently ending up in front of the slightly notorious Belmar Hotel, a smallish place where two ambulances, three police cars and one fire rescue truck seemed like they would have more personnel between them than would fit in the building. 

After this last fit of flashing lights, I speculated about the effect of the full moon on human behavior.  Babygirl said, "You don't really believe in that, do you?"

Oddly, medical personnel generally do. "Well, the moon picks up the entire ocean and moves it 12 feet up and down twice a day, right?  And people are mostly made of water, right?  And women's monthly cycles, on average, match the moon's monthly cycle. So....yeah.  I think I do."

So whatevertheheck was going on here last night, full-moon-residual-craziness or otherwise, we said a prayer for everybody and went to church, arriving in time to enjoy a nice, hot meal in the company of some very good folks, and we were grateful.

DeeDee

Saturday, November 8, 2014

And Tree and Flower.....

JuJuBee needed a ride to school this morning.  She's doing clinical rotations for her CNA certification at a local nursing home. It's on a bus line, but she had to be there an hour before the Saturday buses begin to run. She and I were treated to a sunrise spectacular all the way there. 

I have a confession to make.  While generally not a fast-food fan, I LOVE the Egg McMuffin.  Since there was a Mickey D's right on my way home from dropping JuJu off, (and since, for once, I was on no particular deadline and I feel that sometimes good deeds like getting out of bed into the icy November predawn should be rewarded) I headed toward the drive-through. Chatting with the woman who had taken my order, she joked about a grammatical error she'd made in our transaction.  I quipped, "If our Mamas knew how we'd turned out...!" She laughed, and said, "Mine knows."  I said, "Mine forgets."  She smiled and said, "My mother died of Alzheimer's disease a few years ago.  I was hard, but sometimes she said the most amazing, funny things!  You have to really enjoy those moments, you know?"  "We do.  We laugh a lot right now."

I drove away with a smile on my face and tears on my cheeks.  Isn't it amazing how, in one moment, you can connect all the way to the bottom of your soul with a total stranger?

When I was a child, my Grandma had a window covered by glass shelves.  The shelves were full of African violets of all colors, and they seemed to be always blooming.  When she died, my Mom took some, and I know I had a couple of them.  It seemed we could not make them bloom the way she did.  Actually, it came to feel as if it were she who was still making them bloom.  The last time I remember seeing one of them bloom was the day I brought Citygirl home from the hospital, tiny and new:  The first granddaughter of my grandmother's only daughter. 

I don't remember when the last of violets died of the neglect busy young mothers are guilty of.  But  I have proudly kept  a Christmas cactus alive since last year, and this past week it celebrated Babygirl's return from the hospital by putting forth one lavish bloom.


Like random connections to the hearts of strangers, God sends us re-connections to the hearts of loved ones who have left and wait for us elsewhere, signs in the trees and flowers that we are never alone, and I am grateful.

DeeDee

Friday, November 7, 2014

Hill and Vale....

Ups and downs.  We all have 'em. 

Babygirl was headache-free Wednesday evening to Monday night.  Tuesday she awoke with a killer headache, and we got to try the new medication, Migranal.

Migraine medication packaging is designed by Satan himself, I swear.  I can see Lucifer at Big Pharma drug development sessions saying, "Yes, yes, it works for the migraine, that's WONDERFUL.  Now make it impossible to open."  It's like dealing with a mirage in a desert, hope glimmering on the horizon.....

But I digress.  After reading the two pages of fine-print instructions and squinting at the teeny-tiny pictorials, Babygirl and I assembled the nasal inhaler to administer her medication (copayment cost per dose: $6.25).  I wish I'd had a camera to record her initial response to the sensation of a nasal spray.  After taking three doses 15 minutes apart, she had some partial relief and went to bed.  By the end of the day she was able to work with a tutor, and she went back to school on Wednesday. 

The headache was back yesterday, she managed the treatment on her own, and when I saw her last night she said the headache was a '1/10'.  We prefer zeros here but compared to the last six weeks of 5-10/10 headaches on an almost daily basis I'll take it for now. 

It's an improvement.  But being able to proudly say that my kid is down to only missing HALF of school is not exactly the dream goal I was hoping to achieve.  I'll see what she wakes up with and report the final stats to neurology today.  I'm sure I won't hear anything about a plan adjustment until next week, but...

Meanwhile I'm grateful for fewer headaches.  And for a treatment that works. 

DeeDee

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Of the Day and of the Night....

Night is already noticeably longer here now.  Since this week has been a struggle to catch up with everything that fell behind while Babygirl was in the hospital, I'm going to the gym in the dark and leaving my office in the dark, making my days feel somewhat as if they have only nights. 

The week Babygirl was in the hospital was spent in the lowest light level possible. The only discernable difference between day and night was whether or not I needed my flashlight to read (yeah, I brought I flashlight.  It was the most brilliant bit of packing EVER).

Earlier this week, though, there was a golden hour of pure daylight.  Citygirl, Curlygirl and I had wine. Mom and Babygirl were hanging out.  Conversation was lively, flashing from serious to silly, interspersed with Elderly Inappropriate ("No! Gramma! Don't talk about the episiotomies again! NOOO!!) (Citygirl is fairly sure she is never going to give birth to a child, by the way.  Thanks, Mom.)

I don't know if the sun was actually shining; in fact, I rather doubt it was, but my memory of the laughter is bright indeed.  The gift of three of my girls in one place at the same time is a great one.  The blessing of Babygirl's full, open, joyfully pain-free face is beyond price.

Night and day seem to have little to do with sun cycles for me.  When the night of Pain descends on your child, the bluest skies can become invisible to the heart.  And when the Pain lifts, no amount of bad weather can hide the Daylight, and I'm grateful.

DeeDee

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

For the Beauty of Each Hour.....


Tempus Fugit.

How many times do you look up at the clock and wonder what happened to the time?  How on earth is it lunchtime when you just had breakfast?  When was the last time you opened your eyes and looked, really LOOKED, out of a window?  How much of the beauty of each season passes unnoted and unremarked in front of your windshield?  How many smiling faces do you pass without really seeing them?  When was the last time you felt the softness of a blanket against your face, or the hand of your love brush your hair in the dark?

When was the last time you focused entirely on the moment you were in?

Each moment has its own loveliness.  Each caress, its element of holiness.  Each childish hug, a touch of eternal beauty.  Each and every joyful thanksgiving over a meal, holy communion. 

Pay attention!  See the beauty of each hour, and be thankful.

DeeDee

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Over and Around Us Lies.....

What surrounds you?  Take a moment. Look around, right now.  Where are you?  If you are at home, are you safe?  Warm?  Cozy?  Surrounded by things and people you love?  If at work, is it meaningful, honest, good work?  Are your coworkers the kind of people who can make you laugh, make you cry, make you crazy, and make you glad to come back and do it all again tomorrow? 

If you are someplace surrounded by the things that bring you a sense of love, safety and purpose, stop and say, "Thank you."

DeeDee

Monday, November 3, 2014

For the Love Which from our Birth....

One of the most disturbing news stories I've read lately is about the woman who was walking down the beach holding her baby above her head. Eventually she simply heaved her baby into the ocean.  Luckily for the baby, bystanders saw it happen and went into the water to the rescue.  Another recent article spoke of a baby found alive after being abandoned in a trash bag.  There are hundreds of such stories, and many have far unhappier endings. 

I thank God that I have never been there.  But I have heard some unimaginably horrible stories, so unspeakable that if you look at it from the mother's perspective, death becomes a way of protecting a child from a fate truly far worse:  A loving if misguided choice.

We, who have been surrounded by the knowledge of love since our birth, either by the actions of our parents, the love of a grandparent, the grace of a church or the blessed kindness of a teacher sometimes forget what that knowledge has given us in terms of our personal security and mental health.  Despite the limits of the love of the people in our lives we have, at least, made a connection with the Divine Love possible.  Most of us have absolutely no grasp of the level of desperation or hopelessness that would lead a mother to make such choices.  

Do not think that I am in any way supporting the murder of children.  It is unthinkable.  But I want you to think, for a moment, about the love that HAS been gifted to you.  Imperfect, difficult, amazing, wonderful, healing, hurting, kindhearted, generous - flawed as all human love has been.  I cannot express how grateful I am for this love.  And now think of how much MORE the Great Giver of all Love has given you.  Gratitude multiplies.

How do we show that love to the unloved?  Do we stand in cold, unloving judgment of the choices of others or do we show them the kind forgiving grace that Love has shown us?

DeeDee

Sunday, November 2, 2014

For the Glory of the Skies....

Citygirl and I have a 'song':  "I Hope You Dance" by Lee Ann Womack.  It's beautiful (You can see the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RV-Z1YwaOiw)  One of my favorite lines is:  "Give the heavens above more than just a passing glance."

When she was little, we were always looking at the sky.  Somehow, there was always something interesting going on.  In her childhood we had comets Hyakutuke and Hale-Bopp, and Haley's besides.  We had lunar eclipses, a solar eclipse, and a summer when all the easily visible planets lined up in a row on the horizon just in time for us to see them at the beach. 

We used to lay in the dark on the thyme-scented hill of our favorite campground staring at the star-filled sky until we were sure we could feel the earth rotating beneath us.  I put glow-in-the-dark stars on her ceiling with Cassiopeia's chair and Orion and the Big Dipper.

Hubby and I once took all the children to the top of a hill to watch a meteor shower in the middle of the night, all bundled up in sleeping bags against the late-fall cold.

It is too easy to look down, to have our spirits and souls drawn downward by life and care and sorrow and bitterness.  It is harder to remember to look up, to give more than just a passing glance to the beauty of the sky, the clouds, the sunset, the stars, and be grateful.

DeeDee

Saturday, November 1, 2014

For the Beauty of the Earth....

November has Thanksgiving Day in it, so it's become something of a blogger tradition to try an create a month of gratitude blogs.  Blogging daily is very challenging.  Being grateful is very challenging.  Doing both at the same time can be monumental.  I'll do my best to keep them simple, and confess right here that some were at least outlined a little in advance.  Sitting in a hospital in the dark with a sleeping teen gives you a certain amount of grace time.

On my most recent drives to and from Philadelphia I experienced a change of seasons.  At home, fall is nearly over.  The hills have hints of russet and grey, with a tiny bit of yellow and the remaining evergreens.  There is a muted beauty to the look of late fall and early winter. 

As I drove south, the early-winter look fades and mid-fall returns.  Reds and oranges and yellows reappear, dazzling corridors of color against blue skies.  In less than 48 hours I went winter-fall-winter-fall, each time blessed by the beauty of transformation.

Our lives are chaos, certainly.  Very little is harder than sitting next to a sick child in a hospital, hoping that things get better.  Lifting my eyes to the beauty of the world around me helps me remember that transformation is all around me, and I am grateful. 

DeeDee