Medical Memories

I know it is silly, but I’ve been feeling a low-level concern over how Howard is doing today. Most of the concern is probably due to the fact that I’m reading Reflex by Stephen Gould. The major plotline of this book is “Woman searches for missing husband.” The husband in question was snatched, put through unpleasant surgery, and then kept in inhumane circumstances. I’m pretty sure that none of those things apply to Howard, but he hasn’t called me yet today. It’s being a fun read and I’m enjoying the book. I just wish my subconscious wasn’t hijacking the material to feed my silly anxieties.

My subconscious has sideswiped me with material from this book in more ways than one. A description of the husband waking up just post surgery to discover what has been done, let me to have…I’m reluctant to call it a flashback, but it was definitely a vivid memory of a similar waking of mine. In my case I knew about and consented to the surgery, but that in no way decreased the disorientation of discovering that things had been done to my body while I was completely oblivious. I expected the incision and stitches. I did not expect the patches and stickers where sensors had been attached, or the pairs of pinpricks where a drape had actually been sewn to my skin to keep it in place, nor the fact that I was wearing a different hospital gown that the one I’d gone into pre-op wearing. I’m pretty sure that the sewn drape and the gown change were a result of the surgery being more involved/exciting than anticipated by the surgical team. They anticipated a 2 hour surgery and it was more like 4 and a half. I was supposed to be able to go home the same day, I ended up staying overnight. I was too groggy to ask, but I suspect that the reason for the clothing change was because the orgininal clothing had gotten disturbingly bloody. I’m also pretty sure they were changing the clothes as I was coming out from under anesthesia because I remember being rolled around. I was very dizzy and it felt like they were rolling me right off the table. I remember flailing my arms to regain balance and someone grabbed them and reassured me. Then the rolled me the other direction and I flailed again. I think they changed me from one bed to another too.

I remember the nurse that night was very kind and sympathetic. She kept looking at me as if I reminded her of a dead loved one. I was partially grateful for the attention and a little creeped out by it. There was a thunderstorm that night and I got out of bed and went to the window to see if I could see it. I couldn’t see it well and the nurse found me by the window and ushered me back into bed. I don’t sleep well in hospitals. Howard brought Kiki to come visit me at some point. She was wearing a dress that I’d never liked the look of and so had never pulled out to put on her. But it looked cute on her and after that she wore it alot. She was 18 months old. Howard didn’t bring her when it was time for me to go home. Howard helped give me a sponge bath before getting me dressed in my own clothes. It felt so wonderful to be clean. It felt even better that Howard was doing it and not some creepy nurse (who had thankfully gone off-shift). During that clean up we discovered even more patches on my back and blood that the nurses had missed cleaning up. I remember groggily showing Howard the matching pinpricks and telling him “They sewed it to me!” in a petulant/outraged tone. Howard laughed and somehow that let me laugh too and it was better.

At home I was groggy/drugged. Good friends came to visit. I was supposed to be resting, but somehow the drugs affected my sense of touch. Everything I touched was so soft that it was distracting. I got out of bed, staggered down the hall, and told everyone “I couldn’t sleep everything is too soft!” They laughed and put me back to bed anyway. My speech was noticably slurred for a month after the surgery. Talking was difficult and I often had to repeat things to make them understood, so I often didn’t speak up when I wanted too. I worried that the slur would be permanent and pondered how that would change my life. I’m so accustomed to being articulate. The incision and stitches were very lumpy. The lumpiness went away as the internal stiches were absorbed by my body, but it was a really impressive wound for awhile. We all joked that I’d timed the surgery wrong because it was healed into a pink scar before Halloween came two months later.

My second surgery was essentially the same surgery, same location, same length, same tumor, but the experience was much easier. We knew it would take place almost two months in advance and my mom came to help watch kids. At least I think she did, I may be confusing it with her stay during radiation therapy 8 months later. We knew before surgery that I’d be staying over night. There was no sewing of drapes or changing of clothes while I was unconscious. I still had sticky patches to wash off, but not blood. The incision and stitches were neat, not lumpy. The surgeon was much more experienced and I’m pretty sure that is what made the difference. No surgery is pleasant, but the second doesn’t have the dark lingering angst from it that the first does. In fact I’m pretty sure that much of my hospital aversion dates from that first surgical recovery. I don’t like hospitals not even for happy events like having babies. Bad things happen in hospitals. Or at least so my buried psyche tells me.

Daddy time

It used to be that Howard travelled on business for Novell once a month or more. I missed him lots when he was gone, but the kids didn’t. If he wasn’t on trips, he was busy. The liked him, but having him gone just didn’t make much difference in their daily routines.

Today Howard left for a trip to a convention. Thus far this evening Gleek has tantrumed because she wanted her daddy home for a hug, Patches asked where daddy was, and Link climbed into my lap asking when his daddy would be home and responded to the question “why do you want to know?” with the answer: “Because I like him.”

Our home is a much better place than it used to be.

Week in Review

This past week surely had some fun things to tell, amusing anecdotes to share. To be honest I was too busy and stressed to notice. Monday was a day to try to get the house undercontrol, prepare for hosting preschool, and seeing Serenity. Tuesday was the Preschool day and when I’m hosting it wipes me out all day. Wednesday was Parent Teacher conferences. In theory that only takes place in the afternoon, but it loomed so much that it took up the whole day. Thursday was again prepping for preschool, trying to bring the house mess under control, helping Howard pack, and fall’s last soccer game. This morning was Preschool which included a field trip to the local garden center. It has been a busy week, but not an effective one. On none of the nights did I get enough sleep and so I was tired and sat when I should have worked. And here I am doing it again.

Pet peeve

Minor cinematic pet peeve that I need to get out of my system:

Why is it that women in action movies, who KNOW they are headed into life-or-death combat, do not take a moment to tie back their long hair? Or even cut it off?

I currently have long hair and enjoy having it, but it frequently gets in my way, so I always tie it back or put it up. If I were headed into a combat situation I would shear it all off to an inch long. I would not want to die because my hair got into my eyes at the wrong moment.

Serenity

I saw Serenity today. I’ve been waiting for that movie ever since I watched all of the episodes of Firefly last fall. I was not disapointed. I’m still trying to assimilate stuff from the movie and I want to write about it, but I don’t want to ruin the movie for those who haven’t seen it, so I’m going to use an LJ cut. Beyond the cut and in the comments there will be movie spoilers. Read further at your own peril. …

Up all night

Last night I went to bed an hour later than I should have. Sometimes books are hard to put down y’know? During the night I was awakened once by Patches, once by Gleek, once by Kiki, and four times by Link. Now I’m up. Whee.

I’ve got to get two kids off to school, do my weekly accounting, wash laundry, prepare to host preschool tomorrow, retrieve two kids from school, and all of that before 3:45 when my babysitter shows up so that I can go see Serenity.

I should probably sneak a nap in there so that I don’t fall asleep during the movie. The joys of parenting do not include being awakened in the middle of the night because your 8 year old can’t find his gameboy.

And now the day is gone

Any day that begins with sleeping in followed by breakfast and a long hot bath can’t be too bad. The luxurious bath came courtesy of Shark Boy and Lava Girl which had the kids so enthralled that I dared hop into the tub for a bit.

Most of the rest of the day was spent doing projects while listening to General Conference on the radio. The kids watched too many videos and ate far too much left over snack food, but I figure one day won’t hurt them or me. Tomorrow I plan to actually sit down and create a real meal plan for the month of October. That way I’ll actually be cooking more and we’ll be eating fewer sandwiches, hot dogs, and quesadillas

Tonight I’ll put the kids to bed and then I plan to sit down and watch Ella Enchanted. I’ve already seen it once, but that time I was chasing over excited children in a small space and so I didn’t get to fully enjoy the movie. I rented it this weekend as a potential video for the Kiki party, but they chose something else.

Not a noteworthy day, but a pleasant one nonetheless.

A thought that coalesced in my head

As a parent it is my job to spread acceptance, not to be seeking it. My children and their friends are not the source to which I should turn for affirmation. I will build better relationships with my kids and their friends if I am confident in myself than if I am twisting around to seek their approval.

This thought will probably be increasingly important as my kids turn into teens. As they and their friends mature physically they’ll start feeling more like peers whom I need to impress. Their opinions need to matter to me, but my own approval of myself should be the one that counts.

Soccer Games & punctuality

I am usually a punctual person. Even when I have to drag 4 kids along with me I plan ahead and still get places on time, or even early. So it is very frustrating that out of 7 soccer games that Link has played I’ve been late to every one of them. The first time was forgivable because I was driving an unfamiliar route and mis-estimated times. The second time I had to scramble for chairs and water bottles. But by the third game the scramble to make sandwiches, get Link dressed, and get out the door should have been sufficiently systematized that I made it to the games on time. I guess I just didn’t want to accept the fact that I need 30-40 minutes to prep for soccer-game departure. I want down time after the Kiki pick-up, not to head straight into soccer prep.

Last week I was ready. I had all the kids in the car, we left on time, and then we spent 15 minutes stuck in traffic at a railroad crossing waiting for a train to decide to move. Fortunately most of the traffic we were stuck in was full of all the other soccer kids & coaches, so the game started late and we didn’t miss any of it. Today I was determined to actually be at the field and set up before the game began. At Soccer Game – 20 minutes all was looking well. Sandwiches were made, chairs were already in the car, kids had been warned. Then almost simultaneously Link had a frustrating moment with Super Mario 64 and declared he didn’t want to go to soccer, Kiki wanted me to find a video for her to watch while we were gone, Gleek disappeared out the back door to play at her friend’s house, and Patches’ had massive diaper failure.

The diaper failure was the most urgent problem, so I picked up Patches at arm’s length and carried him to the changing table. Kiki and Link, both fascinated by the mess, accompanied me. The smell quickly drove Kiki out of the room, but Link chose a moment half way through clean up to break out in tears because he didn’t want to miss his school carnival which also took place this evening. (That carnival is a whole different story, I’ll append it to the end of this post.) So I had to manage an emotional crisis while in the midst of toxic waste clean up. When Patches was sanitary again I turned him loose so that I could focus on Link. I talked through why we weren’t going to the carnival and helped him remember that he likes soccer and would be sad to miss his game.

I left Link to get dressed and ran over to the neighbor’s house to either retrieve Gleek or obtain permission for her to stay during the game. They were headed to the school carnival, so she had to come home. This involved chasing her twice around the yard and then over to my house where I instructed her to get her shoes on. By this time Link was in tears again because he couldn’t find all his soccer gear. I located it and helped him with his socks, shoes, & shin guards because those seem to be physically impossible for him to get on by himself. I sent Link out to the car. I grabbed the video for Kiki and instructed her that she was NOT to turn it on until the car pulled out of the driveway. (I didn’t need kids crying about missing a movie). Patches had gotten involved in a computer game, but fortunately all I had to say was “I’m going!” and he ran to me in fear of being left behind. So we all got into the car. Patches had no shoes, Gleek was still dressed in her princess dress-ups from a birthday party earlier in the day, and Link had achieved a state of anticipation. We pulled out of the driveway at Soccer Game + 5. The 10 minute drive made us a grand total of 15 minutes late. One game left. Maybe I’ll get to THAT one on time.

Rant about the School Carnival:
Locally PTA units run a fall carnival to raise money for programs. I like the PTA, I think they do good things. I don’t mind them raising money to help support the school, that is also a good thing. This year the carnival featured between 6-12 rented inflatable toys and other rides. Those things do not come cheap and so tickets for the carnival were 5 for $1 or $8 for an unlimited-rides armband. Those were the pre-sale prices, at-the-event prices were higher. Each ride was scheduled to take 2-4 tickets. For me to take my four kids with unlimited rides I would have been dropping almost $40 up front. Or I could spend $10 and get each of my kids 2-3 rides. Then there would have been the begging for candy and food and the stress of keeping track of my kids in a crowd. I can’t afford the $40 route and the cheaper route would guarantee me to have 4 crying kids at the carnival because they wanted more rides. I hoped to dodge the whole issue. I hoped that somehow Link would miss the information about the carnival. No such luck, they put up big colorful posters all over the school. Link fell in love and had his hopes set on going to the Carnival. He plotted and schemed on the way home today trying to figure out how to make it happen. So now I am mad at the PTA for putting on a big, expensive, shiny, show; then pricing it so high that I can’t afford to take my kids to it. Mostly I’m mad because my little boy was sad. Fortunately Link is a very resiliant person and once we talked things through, he accepted non-attendance at the carnival and will move on happily to other points of anticipation.
End Rant.

The good news is that having survived the pre-soccer-game chaos, the rest of the evening has gone smoothly. I’ve just got Link and Kiki to put to bed and then I’ll have some time to myself. I’ll probably spend it falling asleep the minute I can sit still.