If you would have told me Wednesday morning
that when I went to bed Wednesday night I’d be more worried about Joe than P,
I’d have called you crazy. Or cray-cray, as the cool kids say. But so it was.
I’m probably supposed to be worried about
both of my kids equally as a Mum, but more often than not when I go to bed at
night, one of them is weighing heavier on my mind than the other. I guess this
is normal (at least I hope), and I’d say if I took a poll I’d split down the
middle the number of times it’s Joe and P. So now that I’ve justified in my
head that I worry about them both equally, just on different days, we can move
on with the story (stupid mom guilt)—though I should give fair warning: this
story is not meant for certain audiences, i.e., folks who want to have kids but
can’t decide for sure, or folks who are thinking about having another but are
afraid to take the plunge. If that’s you, you probably just want to stop here.
Another fair warning: this blog post may contain mental images unsuitable for
some. Reader discretion advised. Disclaimer: I’m so grateful and blessed for
two healthy kiddos—I thank God every day that the only things we’ve had to deal
with so far are ear infections, bouts of pneumonia, stomach bugs and irritating
coughs. I’ll take those one thousand times over any day when compared to the illnesses
that some parents face. So I’m in no way complaining here. I’m simply sharing
our day so that we are reminded to laugh at ourselves—and so others know they
are not alone. If we didn’t laugh at ourselves as parents, we’d probably just
pull our hair out (that’s not possible for Jack) and/or cry (sob).
Wednesday Miss P was having surgery to get
tubes in both of her little earsie doozies (that’s ‘ears’ in Steph speak), so
the night before, Pili was heavy on my mind as I laid my head down to sleep.
The deal was that I was taking P to the hospital for the surgery, Jack was
taking Joe into school, and then Jack would catch up with us at the hospital.
We both would have liked to be there, but that’s just how the cookie crumbles
when one kiddo needs to get one place and the other to another, our nearest
family is 2.5 hours away in the Nati, and we found out about the surgery the
day before so couldn’t get anyone to B-town to cover Joe for us. Buf.
Back story: Pilicakes has had an ongoing ear
infection since late July. After the first round of antibiotics, Jack took her
to the doc for a re-check, at which point the doc said her ears didn’t even
look like they’d be treated. Boo. On
to second round of antiobiotics. Shortly after the second round, she went in
for her one year appointment. No surprise to hear the doc say she had a double
ear infection. Argh. Time to pull
out the big dogs: two shots of antibiotics, one in each leg, on that Friday,
and another two the following Sunday. Oh, and time to go to the ENT to check
out the tube option. Tuesday was the appointment with the ENT (mind you, this
is after four shots of antibiotics)—he takes a look at her ears and says
‘Yuck.’ Groan. As Miss P looked at
him, sweet as can be and smiling, he could see the desperation in my eyes.
‘We’ll get her in as soon as possible,’ he says. ‘And if you think she has a
great disposition now, wait until you see what she’s like with her ears fixed!’
He wasn’t messing around—his nursing team called me later that day and said
they would take her in the next day. I didn’t have time to worry and didn’t
have time to fret, it was happening—and soon.
More back story: Unfortunately, the Goetz
kiddos are no strangers to ear infections, and no stranger to tubes either. Joe
had his first set right around P’s current age: one year and one month. Joe got
a second set less than a year later—just three weeks after P was born. Joe’s
also been to the ER on two occasions because of such bad pain in his ears
caused by ear infections. As the nurse who attended P yesterday said, ‘You make
darn cute kids, but you give ‘em terrible ears.’ Well, thanks, Miss Sunshine,
that makes me feel awesome about myself as a Mom. Bottom line: we’d been down
the tube road with Joe. Twice. And we saw how much each set helped. Even so, we
were hoping not to go down this path with P. I mean, who wants that for their
kiddo? She did great the first few months of her life. Her first ear infection
was at 5 months or so. But once they started, they didn’t stop. And to think
she had a perpetual ear infection since July—and it wasn’t even the bad time of
year for colds and snot and such? Yeah, we knew where this was headed.
On with the present story: so the morning of
the surgery, I got up, got ready and scooped up our Pilarina chiquitina and
loaded her in the carseat, with her little buddy Violet tagging along.
We got there and it was an adventure for P.
Ohhhh, the lobby! All the magazines! A nice cold floor to spill out onto! Once
admitted to pre-op, she began to charm the staff immediately, ‘Oh, she’s so
sweet.’ ‘Oh, look at those eyes.’ ‘Oh, what a cutie.,’ But P is a whipper
snapper and could smell something wasn’t right. She looked around then made eye
contact with me and immediately reached out her hands and waved her hands
upside down (that’s ‘Pick me up!’ in P speak). I picked her up and kissed her
and she clung to me like a koala bear. I then got her into her hospital gown
and that’s when she really knew something was going down.
What's goin' down, Ma? |
Baby girl went from suspicious to downright
pissed after about 25 minutes. We weren’t allowed to give her anything after
12:00 midnight and it was 8:30 already—torture for a little gal who still wakes
up between 5:00 and 6:00 for a bottle. So she began to chew on everything in
sight, while simultaneously pointing at her purple backpack, to the pocket that
she knows holds the bottles, and grumpin.’ She looked at me, then looked at
Violet, with pleading eyes. ‘Please, guys!’ she seemed to say. So I took her
out to the nurses’ station where she made more friends and got easily
distracted. Then the doc walked into the hospital and it was game time.
Since I’d done this before, I knew the drill.
They’d whisk her away and I’d hide into the room until she was out of sight. I
hated this part, hated it. My gut tied up into a million knots and I fought
back the tears—without Jack there, I had to keep it together. After a few
moments, I left the room and went out to the waiting room to sit and wait. I
prayed for the doc to have a steady hand and for P to be brave. I’m sure P was
brave, she always is. I, however, was not. Tears and more tears.
I tapped my feet, texted some folks and
generally fidgeted for the next thirty minutes. Then the doc came back out to
report that, while the procedure went well, he found some gunky fluid in her
ears that hadn’t drained and had hardened to what he likened to rubber cement.
No wonder the gal felt awful. He said her ears were in good shape after the
procedure, but that ‘she’s not happy right now.’ I figured as much. P is not
shy to let you know when she’s happy—but all the same, she’s not shy to let you
know when she’s pissed off. I love my baby girl, she wears her heart on her
sleeve (finally, a trait one of my kiddos gets from me!).
P, super hungry and borderline deranged |
He took me back to recovery…and Pili was not
even crying—she was growling. Mad, hungry, and coming out of anesthesia, she
was like a little lion cub fighting the nurse, swatting at her and knashing her
two bottom teeth together with her one top tooth. When she saw me, she calmed
somewhat, but then gave me a crazed look as if to say, ‘Not cool, Mom, how you
gonna leave me and Violet back here with no num nums and in the arms of a
stranger?’ I apologized to her with my eyes and my arms, soothing her back to
normal. It took almost thirty minutes for her to cool down, and when she did,
she drank 8 ounces in less than 5 minutes. She was still not very happy with
me—so Jack’s arrival to the recovery room was well-timed. She reached out for
him and snuggled right up. Figures. Mom does all the work, Dad gets the glory.
We gave her a few minutes to snuggle with
Jack, then packed her up to go home. Violet got to take home some rad hospital
gear, and the nurse gave us some gear for big bro Joe, too, so that he could
play ‘doctor’ later.
Miss P fell asleep on the way home, and I had
no intentions of placing her in her crib or on a bed—in my arms is where she
was going. All day. Cuddling my little snuggle buns, I got a call from daycare.
Joe was struggling to breath—he had a coughing fit that really freaked out his
teacher. Whatty? Rather than wake the sleeping lion cub again, I called Jack
and off he went to get Joe. On the way, he made an appointment with the doctor.
Right away I began composing a letter out loud:
“Dear Sh*t:
Why must you hit the fan all at once? And why
must it be today? Take your whirling, swirling storm of poo and dump it on
someone else, please.
Begrudgingly (and not the least bit
lovingly),
Steph”
Whoever/wherever Mr. Sh*t was, he did not
care and did not listen. Poooooo, I mean, Booooo.
Jack called me on the way home from the
doctor’s appointment with Joe and asked me if I cared to guess what was wrong
with our son. I knew it was either something totally bogus (Joe falls prey to
the strangest things—strep throat in the middle of summer, pneumonia 24 hours
after being checked by the doctor and looking fine, things of that nature—and I
blame his maladies on the fact that he—still—puts everything in his mouth) or
nothing at all. “Strep,” I took a guess. “Nope,” he said. “Nothing at all. Doc
says his lungs are crystal clear, ears are fine, and that he’s just got a yucky
couch caused by all the drainage he’s had.” Neat.
By the time Joe and Jack arrived home, P had
risen and was a little fireball. Almost like she got two brand new ears! She was
jibber-jabbering, getting into all the toys, scarfed down a lunch of grapes and
cheese, and was getting stronger by the minute. On the contrary, Joe was
getting worse by the minute. He was coughing literally every 15 seconds and was
holding his sides, telling me his tummy hurt from wretching so much. Jack and I
looked at each other desperately. “Anything we can do for him?” I asked,
knowing what the answer was. “Not really, but the doc did have a good
suggestion for a cough suppressant—honey.” Joe gets one of these colds about
five or six times a year, mostly in between the months of January and March—and
we’ve tried all the home, herbal and Western remedies we can find. The kiddo
takes puffs of albuterol, we elevate his bed, put a humidifier in his room,
pump him full of Vitamin C—you name it, we’ve tried it. We’d never tried honey
before because, well, we kinda knew he wouldn’t take it. But desperate times
call for desperate measures. We tried to get him to take it, telling him it
would make his cough feel better, would make him sleep better, etc. No dice.
Time to pull out the big guns: “If you take this, we’ll give you M & Ms as
a treat.” We are not above bribery in our house.
Joe nodded, a bit hesitant. Jack had diluted
the honey with water and gave it to him in a medicine spoon. Joe had maybe half
of it down and I began to see The Heave. The Hurl Heave. His shoulders lurched,
his throat extended, his eyes began to water, then raaaaaalf. Joe puked up his
lunch. He began to get upset at having gotten sick and started to run around
the island, stopping to spew every few steps. Really? Really? P was on the floor,
and began chasing after him, thinking it was a game. Once again…really? I threw
Jack, Joe and P out to the porch and started cleaning up the mess. I glanced
outside. Joe was still periodically puking. The kiddo has the worst gag reflex.
Ever. What were we thinking trying to give him thick and sticky honey?
Once the mess was cleaned up Jack had to go back
into work, since his earlier attempt to do so had been thwarted. So there I was
with a fragile Joe and a rambunctious P. Awesome. Joe was so tired at this
point (he missed his nap because naptime was replaced by a doctor visit) that
he couldn’t see straight. So I took him upstairs to try and put him down for a
nap. I was reading him stories, and Miss P was coming up to us groping at the
books and playing peek-a-boo all the while. Every time she’d reach for the
book, Joe would grump, “NO, Pili!” and P would grump back and start tugging at
his shirt or pants—then look at me as if to say, “Mom, it’s MY day to be doted
on!” Poor gal, never ever gets her fifteen minutes of fame. Part of being the
second child, I guess.
Did she really just have surgery? P's a tough cookie, and she just soldiers on |
I tried to corral her and take her into her
room with some blocks and clean laundry (she’ll normally play all day in a pile
of clean laundry—rub her nose all over it, put it in her mouth and slobber on
it, smother it in her grubby post-lunch hands), but five minutes later, she’d
push Joe’s door open and charge us, thinking it was a huge game of
hide-and-seek. At one point I almost had him asleep, then in she came, bull in
a china shop, and his eyes darted open. “Didn’t you just have surgery?” I
thought to myself. I was delighted she was feeling so well, but was pleading
with the sleep gods to give Joe just a few minutes of shut-eye, and P was not
helping. No use. It was almost 5:30 at that point, and we missed the naptime
boat, plain and simple. I tried one last time to settle him in and he downright
refused…then, to put the nail in the coffin, he wailed “I want my Daaaaaaddy!” Time
to move on, clearly sleep was not in the cards.
I asked Joe what would make him feel better. He
said to watch Polar Express. Right on, pal, Polar Express it is. I went
downstairs only to find that Polar Express was missing. Okay, not funny.
Toddler on the verge of a meltdown, P growing hungrier and hungrier by the moment,
and also needing a nap herself. Where in the eff is Polar Express and who
messed with it? Joe didn’t take the news of no Polar Express well. In fact, he
spouted off his favorite insult at the moment: “You can’t come to my birthday
party, Mommy!” Grumble, grumble, grumble. I realized I was starting to hit my
low point when I almost responded to him, “I don’t think so, buddy, because I’m
THROWING your birthday party! Neener, neener, neener!” Thankfully, I kept that
to myself, along with the second letter I was drafting in my head to Mr. Sh*t.
“Dear Sh*t:
Could this not have waited till the weekend?
Could you not have been so kind as to throw us this curveball of crap when we
were a tad bit more rested and not so zombie-esque? If you haven’t guessed
already, you are on my sh*t list.
Not so respectfully yours,
Steph”
I managed to convince Joe that Rudolph the
Red-Nosed Reindeer would be a fair substitute for Polar Express (we watch
Christmas shows in our house year round, you see). He settled into that (still
coughing every 1-2 minutes, laying on his side, eyes bloodshot and snot pouring
from his nose) and in walked Jack from work. I asked him if he knew where Polar
Express was. He walked over to the armoire and pulled out Polar Express and
several other DVDs that I couldn’t find for some time from behind one of our
picture frames. Well, dang. He put in the DVD. Joe was still moaning and crying,
even though his beloved movie had started.
Meanwhile I plopped P in her chair to give
her some yogurt, which she scarfed and then proceeded to lick from the bowl
herself, attempting to self-feed. It turned out pretty messy. The sleepy-eyes
face then became apparent. I told Jack I was going to go out and pick up dinner
(Fast Food! A rarity at the Goetz house, and only an option when we’re stressed
and need to indulge), hoping P would catch a nap along the way. Ha. Hahahaha.
Not so much. P was talking up a storm to Wendy’s and back. She fell asleep
about two minutes before we returned home. Perfect. Yet another plan thwarted
for the day. Wheeeee!
We all attempted to eat dinner—a few bites in
and Joe declared he didn’t want anymore, said he wanted to go to bed. So Jack stopped
mid-dinner to take him upstairs and try to put him down. Again. Nope, he came
crying to the top of the stairs and said he wanted me. So I abandoned my
dinner, and headed upstairs. We did three stories and prayers, but he just
couldn’t settle in. And the cough kept coming, a deep, and guttural cough from
his toes. Every time I thought he’d maybe settle down, there it crept back up
again. Finally, I decided to try something I would have wanted tried on me had I
been in his shoes. I pulled up his little white Hanes tee and rubbed Vaporub
all over his chest, again and again—and every time I could feel the cough
coming on, I pressed down on his chest a little as if to try and suppress the
cough with my own two hands. Twenty minutes in and it seemed to be working
somewhat. Joe finally closed his eyes and seemed to be on his way to a deep
sleep. So was I. I fell asleep holding Joe in my arms, flat on my back.
At 2:30 a.m., I woke up, totally disoriented
and with the world’s worst kink in my neck. I got out of Joe’s bed to see what
was going on with P. I found P down the hall in the guest bed (she’s been
refusing to sleep in her crib lately—it’s awesome) and Jack in our bed, both conked
out. They looked peaceful. Joe sound asleep, P and Jack sound asleep—Steph wide
awake. I went downstairs to my half-eaten dinner, which I threw out, and then
proceeded to clean up the kitchen a bit. Crap, I had a presentation to give the
next morning, so I needed to look at that. I glanced over it, and then went
back upstairs to curl up to P, who I felt I had neglected all day. I hoped she
would forgive me (she did—the next day when I spent all day with just her after
my presentation). And I also crossed my fingers that Joe would sleep through
the night (he did—thank heavens).
7:30 rolled around and P woke up chipper, as did
Joe. I even felt half-way decent, and so did Jack. It was a new day.
A few days later and Jack and I can see the
humor in the sh*t storm that was Wednesday—in fact, the days since Wednesday
have been calm and normal—but in the moment, we were floundering, drowning,
bleary-eyed and fatigued, throwing a serious pity party for ourselves and
thinking we were the only parents to have ever had such a bad day. ‘Yeah,
right,’ you must be thinking. I know that’s dramatic—but if you’re a parent,
you’d be lying if you said you hadn’t felt the same at some point. Told ya.
Jack and I have this thing we do at the end
of the day to gauge how we were as parents that day, and if we are potentially
ready for more kids. We always ask each other “What kind of day was today? A
two kid kind of day (meaning it was a bad day—and we’re not having any more
kids)? A three kid kind of day (meaning we’re feeling pretty okay at the job we
did that day as parents—and our kids even cooperated)? A four kid kind of day (I
think that’s only an option when wine is served with dinner and Nonna and Papoo
put the kids to bed or when we are on a long weekend alone)?” Thankfully, we
didn’t have a chance to re-group that night and ask each other our nightly
question.
To whom do I thank at the end of this blog? I
always end the blog with a nod to so and so for helping me find my way, or el camino, in this crazy life. I think
it’s our kiddos I have to thank. For testing me on that day, for forgiving me
the next, and for loving me all the same. They’re two pretty great kiddos, even
when they’re sick. I'm blessed.
As for a third or fourth—let's catch up on
sleep first. And let's see if it’s part of the Big Man’s plan. For now, Violet
is shaping up to be a nice fifth member of our family.
Violet, the fifth member of the Goetz family (and P's faithful companion in surgery) |
No comments:
Post a Comment