Tuesday, December 8, 2009
One Bad Turn Deserves Another
Toss in the bad news about Watson (my dog with lymphoma). His blood work came back poorly and left the doctors unable to give him his next course of treatment. This meant we could only provide him with steroids and antibiotics and pray that the lymph nodes will not grow too large in the next week when he goes back in so that maybe we can give him his next CCNU medication. If not we’ll only be able to give him the steroids until they stop working.
Mix in a good dose of bad luck when I went to pick up my twins from preschool only to find out my tire was completely flat, my husband was a hour away, I could not get the jack under the fancy step rails we installed to keep the kids from falling out of the car onto their heads, the auto club would send someone right away (translation in 40 minutes), my neighbors have had the police at their home no less then three times in the last year for domestic disturbances, and no other local friends were answering their phones. This tire luck was only further enhanced by the preschool program manager who decided to berate me for being unable to pick up my children in a timely manner and for not having a better “emergency plan.” She provided such helpful advice as sending the children’s grandparents. I told her that while I’m sure they would be happy to come the FIVE hour drive from their home might not fit into the prompt pick up she was hoping for. She then suggested the twins other set of grandparents, but I had to tell her that the drive from Texas might again prove a problem. She ran through all options I had already attempted, husband (who was on the way but as stated was an hour away), neighbor (my other two children, myself, and the twins would not fit in their car and police action makes me a bit nervous about sending virtual strangers to pick up my children), and friend (who I was unable to get on the phone) leaving her to simply return to her mantra of a better “emergency plan” and teachers needing to leave on time as if I planned to have a flat tire and not pick up my children.
Today I added some good old self pity to the mix. I went to my Mops group. This should have been therapeutic except that all around me are moms with one or two children talking about their trips to the mall and the trauma of being busy shopping, sending Christmas cards and putting up their decorations during the holiday season. Don’t get me wrong, these are lovely women. They are caring, genuine people and I usually enjoy their company but this week all I could feel was jealous. I have not gone to a mall in about six months since four children ages 4, 2 and 4 months just don’t travel well. After cleaning up my millionth and one dirty diaper, wiped my zillionth dirty hand, face or snotty nose, wiping up more spills, crumbs, crayon scribbles than I care to count the last thing I can even begin to fathom are Christmas cards and decorations.
I’m hoping my cocktail for the week is complete and I can just close my eyes and have the week be over. Maybe then the sound track of moaning/wailing will be done but for now it’s in full force and I need to go try and change the volume from wailing back to moaning.
*By eye infection I mean barely able to open my eye to put the drops in, Christmas red and itchy eyes that could tolerate almost no direct light source. This made driving quite an adventure and leaves me thanking God for the divine intervention that made it possible for me to drive with out any vision and still manage to not leave us wrapped around a tree.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Please Sir I'd Like Some More!

My husband loves butter. He loves it so much he is the only person I’ve ever seen put butter not just on the top of his bread but on the sides as well. Recently I discovered that this is a genetic trait.
At dinner my four year old children faced with a plate of potatoes clambered for salt (a taste they clearly got from me). Their request was granted to be followed only seconds later by pleas for butter. My soon to be two year old joined the ruckus and being a good parent who just wanted to silence the noise I put a pat of butter on the potatoes. My four year olds clambered for the butter to be spread over their potatoes. Being a good mother who again, only wanted some peace and quite, I complied. All would have been well and harmony restored except that while this was going on my two year old, Jordy picked up the butter and popped it into his mouth. I was certain it would be spit out a moment later, but instead it was met with emphatic pleas for more! Spread it on the potatoes for him, my husband suggested….this sounded good so I tried it. Nope, he wanted the butter which he happily ate two more times before my disgusting quotient couldn’t take it any more. Maybe he’ll grow out of it?!!!!!
Friday, November 20, 2009
Killing Babies, Health Care and the State of the Union
Life begins at conception. A unique human being is created at the moment of conception with its own unique genetic code. About three weeks from fertilization the heart starts beating and a week later the brain development speeds up so that by week six the first perceptible brain impulse can be found. By the 8th week 90% of adult structures can be found in the human embryo now called a fetus and by 10 weeks the unique human fingerprint can be found. It is a human being no matter how it came into being. It is a human being and as such is deserving of respect and a chance at life.
Andrew White, M.D. makes some very good points in his work, Abortion and the Ancient Practice of Child Sacrifice. He points out the parallel between the rites of child sacrifice and the practice of abortion as a way of parents killing their own offspring. He goes on to point out how “It is no secret that in American society extramarital sexual intercourse is the cause of most pregnancies that end in abortion. Pregnancy is a risk many are willing to take knowing that any undesired consequences can be eliminated by abortion. The theologian Carl Henry recognizes this fact in calling abortion "the horrendous modern immolation of millions of fetuses on the alter of sex gratification."" As suggested earlier, child sacrifice in Canaan may have been a convenient way to dispose of the consequences of the illicit sexual practice of temple prostitution associated with the cult of Molech. If so, the modern practice of men irresponsibly engaging in sexual intercourse with women to whom they do not intend to commit themselves and provide for parallels the wayward Israelite man engaging in extramarital relations with a temple prostitute. In both cases the men leave the women to bear the consequences of their aberrant sexual practices.”
So because people do not want to curtail their sexual experiences innocent lives are lost to the tune of about 1.6 million a year!!!!! This is a staggering number and these abortions are not the result of rape or incest. According to Wikipedia a study in 2000 found that cases of rape or incest accounted for 1% of abortions. Further, in 1998 another study revealed that in 1987-1988 women reported the following reasons for choosing an abortion:[27]
• 25.5% Want to postpone childbearing
• 21.3% Cannot afford a baby
• 14.1% Has relationship problem or partner does not want pregnancy
• 12.2% Too young; parent(s) or other(s) object to pregnancy
• 10.8% Having a child will disrupt education or job
• 7.9% Want no (more) children
• 3.3% Risk to fetal health
• 2.8% Risk to maternal health
• 2.1% Other
What is wrong with our society when killing a baby becomes a matter of convenience for the mother? In the face of the new health care debate and the Stupak amendment I am horrified by what I’m seeing. The Family Research Council reports that “the Stupak-Pitts language was entirely stripped from the liberal plan and replaced by the phony compromise first introduced by Rep. Lois Capps (D-Calif.) in the House. On pages 116-124, the legislation authorizes the Secretary of HHS to fund abortion in the public option, offers tax credits to private plans that cover abortion on demand, and abolishes conscience protections for health providers who refuse to perform abortions. It even goes so far as to insist that a plan to cover abortion must be available in every U.S. District.”
Is this what our county has come to? It clearly has when people vote in an administration like Obama’s and his blatant pro-abortion stance. It is enough to make me physically ill.
My Grandfather was arrested and thrown into a Russian jail for being a spy. The man was many things a teacher, farmer, husband and father, but he was not a spy. What he also became was easy cheap labor for a government that viewed its desired plan above that of human life. Because of this devaluation of human life I grew up without ever knowing my grandfather, with parents who wore the scars of these and other losses. It is from these experiences that my firm conviction that human life is not an expendable commodity grew. It saddens me that I live in a nation where babies die because adults want to experience unencumbered sexual gratification and it saddens me even more that blood relatives of my children helped vote in this administration which supports these practices.
This is a long post and a bit of a rant but I needed to get it off my chest and if my pro life stance makes me uncaring then I guess so be it.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Chaos, Laughter and a Sleeping Baby

So this morning was one of those days I wish I could ship my children off, someplace, anyplace. All parents of small children have these moments, I understand, but with 4 children ages 4 to 3 months I have a lot of these moments. Today it was my 23 month old pooping, yes I did say pooping, into his newly run bath water, the twins smashed goldfish crackers all over the floor, the unending calls of “Mom, I want ____” (fill in blank), putting on the Barbie shoes again, again and again, all to the sound track of my growth spurt queen’s dulcet tones as I try to feed this child enough to make her stop crying (a trend that began three days ago and as far as I’m concerned could have ended three days ago too).
I am in the phase of parenthood where the days are loooooonnnnnnggggg but they tell me the years are short. Sometimes I believe them, but this morning I was sure they must be parents of a different kind of child than the ones I’ve got.

But then my husband turns up over lunch to give me at least a few minutes without my four shadows, and it gave me a minute to step back and appreciate all I have before I reengaged. After a rousing game of “chase the buddy” and a few action packed rounds of I Spy Bingo, I can’t imagine any life without them. The fit of my daughters hand in mine as she asks “what can I do to help” as I get dinner ready, the shrieks of laughter as they play horse and ride on daddy, it all just feels right and Noelle must agree because finally at long last the baby in the midst of all this chaos sleeps peacefully.
Monday, November 9, 2009
Bittersweet walking sticks

On our way up to skyline drive this weekend for some hiking and a cook out my husband and I got into a talk about how there are things in this world beyond that which we can explain or see.
The hiking with the kids was a great success, the cook out not so much (but that is a story of spit up hot dogs and screaming babies for another day). On our hike we took the kids on a trail that was handicap accessible and thus a good fit for out stroller bound family. The twins were disappointed that we had forgotten their walking sticks (a recent acquisition from another trip up the mountain), but in the midst of the million other things we would need for our cook out and a potentially cold evening on the mountains they got left behind. My husband went looking for good walking sticks for them among the fallen branches and he and twins went swinging their sticks down the lane with Jordy in tow and me bringing up the rear with the stroller. We had great fun and for the twins the highlight of our walk was ….the park benches; not the deer, or the birds, or the beautiful scenery, no, not for our kids, for out kids it was the park benches. Oh well at least they had fun.
After our hike my husband and I stopped at a place that is very special to us. It is at an overlook called Timber Hollow and visits there are always bitter sweet. On March 28, 2004 I miscarried a baby. For reasons that are too long to go into we chose Timber Hollow as the site to make a small memorial for our lost baby, who we named Joshua. Our memorial was nestled into some
brush at the base of a tree just above an outcropping of rocks that overlooked the beautiful valley below. When ever we come up to skyline drive we always stop and “visit” Joshua and it is always a bittersweet stop. My husband and I have talked about how we can almost see Joshua playing on the rocks and we reflect on how our family might be different if this baby had been born.This most recent visit was no different but with a surprise. When we walked down the steps we saw a stick (just like the ones the twins had been using) tucking into the tree. I have no way of knowing how that stick got there and there could be a very logical explanation, but then again I believe there are things beyond that which we can see or explain.
Friday, November 6, 2009
blogging, divorce and the videotape
I read about how she and her new husband adopted a dog and how much this dog loves her. This makes me fume as I scrubbing the cat vomit off my carpet left from one of the two cats she’d adopted and left behind when she left my husband. I then reflect on comments to her blog saying she is so good hearted and all that is good in the world. Reflecting on this while I spend my time cleaning the litter box of her past benevolence does little to provide peace and serenity for me.
I read about her exploits with her single child and all her outings with friends while I live like a virtual shut in with four children under the age of four. I read about her running in races, while I, a past marathon runner have become the runner that makes everyone else feel great about their ability as they pass me by. I read a blog where she jokingly refers to “divorcing” her husband and I think has this woman learned nothing? She left a wake of emotional destruction and she has the nerve to joke about doing it again!!!!
Like I said I find these reading to be less than bastions of tranquility for me. But really this obsession of mine has less to do with this woman and what she’s doing than it does with me and with my history with my husband.
I don’t know exactly when this compulsion began. I know it has its roots at the very beginnings of my relationship with my now husband. There was a line in a movie, I think it was Sweet November, about how a woman leaves her mark on a man. This woman had certainly left her mark on this man. I had started dating him a few months after the divorce had become final and about a year and a half after she had left him. Perhaps I shouldn’t have dated him, perhaps in retrospect I should have moved on and found someone who had already worked through his past relationship. But I didn’t move on. At the time I had little inkling that this relationship would lead to a tomorrow much less a marriage and a forever.
Later in our relationship, after we had become engaged and began planning our wedding, he made the mistake of providing me with the video of his first wedding (what was he thinking?). I watched him (on video) promise this woman that he would “love, and cherish her until death did they part” and hear the minister proclaim that what God has joined together let no man put asunder. And inside I scream those were my promises; those where the words that should have been mine alone and yet I had to watch him make them to someone else. This is a wound I’m not sure will ever completely heal. But, it is not this wound that causes me to read this woman’s blog. I think that reading her blog, and the indignation that it causes me provides me with my internal justification for my own selfishness. I think that internally I look at her life and I can say look, despite the hardship, I kept and cared for the cats, and I take care of four children not just one, and because I’ve done that I can’t do all these things that she can so thus I deserve ____ (fill in blank). It’s my way to justify to myself why I should have what ever it is I have decided I want.
In the end, the world is an imperfect place and in life we all have to work with the less than ideal reality we’d like. For now I’ll just be glad she did leave this man and that he and I have built a beautiful family and life together. In the end, with all of it’s imperfections it is enough, and maybe someday I will be able to accept my wants for what they are and not feel the need to justify them.
Monday, November 2, 2009
Watson & Me
It was during this period that I happened to attend church when the priest gave a homily asking what we did for God? The priest pointed out that we went to work to provide for our families needs and we spent time doing things we enjoyed, but what did we do specifically for God? The answer I had to admit was not much but I had no idea what I could or should do. I prayed that God would show me what it was he wanted me to do. The idea came to me a few days later. It was as if a voice in my head told me that I was to go to the animal shelter. I was to provide what comfort I could to the animals at the shelter. Maybe this was not God or an answer to my prayer, but all I can say is left to my own devices I would never have opted to go to the animal shelter. Anyone who thinks this is a good uplifting idea has never been to an animal shelter which is filled with unwanted, lost and left over animals. My gut reaction to this idea was “you have got to be kidding me,” as I remembered visiting with Bean in a large room where on a table at the other side of the room was the body of a euthanized dog waiting to be picked up. Go to the shelter? Really? But go I did. Each week armed with a bag full of dog treats I would spend about an hour petting the dogs and cats. I don’t know if I did any good and I think the workers (mostly high school aged boys) thought I was a bit of a crazy lady, but I went. It was after several months on one of my visits that I met Watson.
Watson was a full bred American Eskimo dog which is a white, midsized Nordic looking breed. My dog, Shep was an “Eskie” and I was partial to the breed, but Watson was skinny and his hair was falling out in clumps. He made a rather pitiful picture that was completed when he would stand on his back legs and hop up and down.
The shelter had a policy of only holding dogs for three weeks, one for the owner to claim them and then two for adoption. Week one passed, then two, and then three and no one adopted Watson and he tugged at my heart. On his last day at the shelter I adopted him and after a visit to the vet brought Watson home. Armed with medication to take care of his worms and some strong flee shampoo I set to introducing Watson to his new home. His past life had left their mark. He was skittish. If anyone approached him too quickly or if a male even looked in his direction he would cower, roll over and submissively pee himself. He was terrified of being left outside and he refused to go outside. He would go only if someone went with him and even then he darted inside the first chance he got.
About a week after I brought Watson home I received a package. When I opened the door to get it he darted outside and began running in what I could only call a blind panic. Grabbing my keys I went on a thirty-some minute run through the neighborhood as I chased him. He ran as though his life depended on it and I was so fearful he would be hit by a car as he ran seemingly oblivious to anything around him. He finally stopped in a grassy field. His eyes looked panicked as he looked around. His breath came in gasps. I approached him with my hand outstretched. Talking softly to him, I was fearful that he would start running again. When I was a few inches away he stopped and looked at me as if seeing me for the first time. I scooped him up and carried him back to the house. This time I think he understood that it was home. He never ran away again and he became my shadow. If I was home Watson was in the room, if a door separated us he would wait for me until the door opened. He wanted nothing more than to be with me. Over time his other behaviors improved as well. His coat grew healthy and full and he learned to go outside on his own (though he never liked to stay out for long). He learned not to fear and when approached instead of cringing his tail would wag in greeting. Watson taught me more than anything else in my life about the healing power of love. It was nothing more than love that took a fearful, skinny dog and turned it into a full, healthy, happy little dog. This has been a lesson that I have been able to apply to many situations. Love and attention when they are real can have miraculous results both on people and animals.
Watson was diagnosed with lymphoma this summer. Initially he did not respond well to treatment. The side of his neck and face swelled and then a large abscess opened on his neck and began draining. Watson was taken in to the vet and several hours later the vet called, they had been monitoring Watson’s vitals and they did not think he was going to make it. The family raced to the clinic. Watson was in bad shape. The Vet gave him 50/50 odds of making through the night at the clinic. Given his history, I could not leave him to die in a cage with out his family so we took him home despite the Vet’s opinion that his chances would be diminished if I did so. I took Watson home and sat with him and said my tearful goodbyes to my sweet little dog. The next morning I fully expected to find he had passed away but Watson lifted up his head in greeting, and the morning after that he wagged his tail, and a week after that he was begging for food, and a week after that he was running in the yard.
We would have another close call a few months later. Watson fell coming up the stairs, staggered and then seemed unable to get up. He stopped eating and it seemed like we had only days or hours left. Again, I said my goodbyes, but again Watson rallied. First taking broth from a syringe, then drinking the broth himself, then eating hotdogs, then his dog food, and finally begging at the table snatching scraps from my accommodating toddler. I know that time is not on our side and that too soon I will have to say my final goodbyes to my sweet little friend but for now Watson is here at home, at my side, and he is loved.
