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10 Mar 2010
Since not much is happening today other than work I thought I’d share my plans for tonight. Josh is going to work on my state taxes since it’s cost 40 bucks to have turbo tax do them. I tried the state website but it’s very old skool and you need the forms in front of you. I realized half way in Damn I have a kid now…this isn’t as simple as I remember. I gave up and almost paid turbo tax just to get my refund but then realized I’m broke until the 12th and really should hold off. So while he tries out the free tax service on the state website Cambria and I are going to make marshmallow pops. Have you seen them before? I think Martha Stewart may have been the one to make them popular. I hate to say it but the woman has some bright ideas or at least she has the money to pay people for some clever homemaker creations. Anyway I’m trying out different candy projects for the wedding. I’m trying to test how long they’ll take and how far in advance I should make them. I also want to see how they’ll hold up and if they are quick and easy to make while still looking clever. I ventured to Michaels on my lunch break and ended up spending 20 bucks when I only needed lollipop sticks! Thank goodness I don’t work there my pay check would be gone before I got it. I’m going to have Cambria help me make black, purple and white swirled mallow stick pops. If they turn out good I’ll post a picture. She’ll be in heaven just getting to put chocolate all over marshmallows. Wish us luck and lots of fun. We need it. It’s mid week and I’m just simply burnt out. I have to say I do perk up when I walk outside and see my tulips popping up. I can’t wait for flowers.

Continue reading "Taxes and Marshmallows"  →

R.I.P. Corey Haim
Posted by Chula · Syndicated from Ms.Moreno's musings

10 Mar 2010

Continue reading "R.I.P. Corey Haim"  →

10 Mar 2010
We all need a HERO in our LIVES.
& here is MINE.
Her name is SUPERBELLA.
Her super powers are doing rolly pollies, dancing & singing.

Continue reading "Superheros."  →

Stressed….
Posted by Jessica · Syndicated from Viva La Vida

10 Mar 2010

I normally don’t post personal stuff on my blog but it has been a very rough few weeks.

This week (even though the week isnt even over yet) has been particularly stressful. Not for me though, but for my husband. He has been laid off since the beginning of February and because the economy being so jacked up in California right now, his plumbers union is waiting for BIG jobs to fund so that means men are sitting on the books waiting to go back to work.

So in the meantime, he is at home twittling his thumbs, doing yard work, tyring to keep busy. It’s hard for him though. He contstantly worries, I can see it in his eyes. He seems disconnected right now, and I know its from being laid off. I’ve been blessed with NEVER having the experience of getting laid off or getting fired, I’ve always left on my own terms. So I can’t relate to how he must be feeling right now. I want to comfort him but don’t know what to say because the economy is crap right now. It’s a good thing he is a saver and not a spender like I am. We’d be in deep doo doo lol.

The good thing is, is that he is a plumbing contractor, licensed and bonded and ready to get some work. So he defenitly has something to fall back on but because the economy has been slow so has the service calls, remodels and repipes (not many people are refinancing their houses these days) So Southern California residents, if you need plumbing work done on your houses, (repipes, shower installations, remodels, etc) he’s your man to go to! Hes been a plumber for almost 15 years and is a perfectionist when it comes to his work so if you want or need some work done he backs his work 100%. Chassagnes Plumbing License# 919347 email me for his phone#! jcaratachea@gmail.com

It’s been hard the last few weeks to make jokes, or just act normal around him because I know he is worried about money and his insurance and stuff like that. He doesnt have faith in the economy right now and I don’t blame him. I just wish there was something I could do to help. All I can do is pray. Giving my worries to the lord and having faith in Him has always given me strength through rough times but my husbands problem is something Ive never had to deal with before. I hope God gives me some answers as to how I can help.

Lets hope something comes up soon.

Continue reading "Stressed…."  →

Wordless Wednesday
Posted by mommypants13 · Syndicated from Mommypants!

10 Mar 2010
hard work to get that diaper off

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Black Holes and Geysers
Posted by Erika · Syndicated from parsingnonsense.com

10 Mar 2010

Before my little guy was here, I always wondered what was so time-consuming about having a newborn.  I mean, on paper the little punkins sleep 16-20 hours a day, shouldn’t that afford one oodles of time to get stuff done?

What the statistics fail to relay, however, is that there is a productivity black hole that comes gratis with each newborn.  Time, which seems to limp by when you’re pregnant, suddenly becomes fluid.  An hour will slip by completely unnoticed by you while you’re trying to nap, but then you’ll glare at the clock for saying a mere five minutes have passed when you’re trying to get your baby back to sleep at 4 in the morning.

For example, my birth story.  It was long, but I type fast and those two posts would ordinarily have taken me maybe an hour tops to write and edit.  With a baby, however, they took me almost a week.  I would just sit down to work on them when Aidan would decide he’d had enough of napping/looking around/listening to music.

We have a doctor appointment for the little guy in just a few minutes, but I just wanted to pop by and say that life is slowly starting to resemble normalcy.  As much normalcy as a life revolving around boobs and diapers can contain, that is.  I’m optimistic that I’ll post again soon, but for now I’ll leave you with one little gem from new motherhood:

Did you know that a newborn boy can pee one foot into the air no problem?  Like geysers, they are!

Continue reading "Black Holes and Geysers"  →

by LaSara W. FireFox (now Lasara Allen)
reprinted from Gauntlet Magazine, 1999, edited 10/2008

Neo—Feminism:

I call myself a neo-feminist rather than a post-feminist. Post-feminist implies that feminism may indeed be dead, as was the cultural myth for a while (still under debate?) whereas the term neo-feminist illustrates that the movement is vital, alive, evolving. The term post-feminist [...]

Continue reading "Outrageous Roots and a Bright Future; Sex and Feminism"  →

10 Mar 2010

So, we all know that in the real world, no one is able to hold up all of their parenting and life ideals all of the time.  It’s the human condition – none of us are perfect.

I’d like this post to be a load-lightening confessional for all of you, dear readers.  I’ll get the ball rolling.

-I let my pre-schooler and my infant watch TV.  There, I said it.  We pick things we can watch and enjoy together, and damnit, we sit our butts on the couch and watch.  Admittedly, my infant is just in it for the pretty colors, but still.

-I still use paper and plastic sometimes.  Big Shame on this one, but I can’t always remember to put my reusable shopping bags back into the car.

-My kiddo and I indulge in the occasional McNugget Happy Meal with sweet and sour sauce.  Too many fond memories from my childhood and my mother doing the same thing with me.  I want her (and eventually Bug,) to have those same memories.

-I rarely get a chance to use moisturizer on my face or brush my teeth after every meal.  In fact, the teeth brushing is usually only once a day.

-As much as I dislike Big Corporate, I shop at Wal-Mart almost exclusively for non-grocery items.  The explanation for this one is very simple and can be summed up in two words: 24 hours.

So come on, readers.  Get yours out there, this is a post free of judgment and disdain.



Continue reading "Dirty little secrets."  →

These are the women of my family. My mother’s side of the family is pretty dominantly female, both in numbers and in character. Some of these women have already passed, but I hope to at least pass some stories down to Sadie. We had a big Borden Family Reunion last summer, and we plan on making it an annual event. I missed out on a lot of time with this family, for various reasons, so it’s important to me that I reclaim some of it for myself, and that I help Sadie be a part of it.

From left to right, we have my second (third?) cousin, Gay. Then my mother, Laurie. Then her mother, Margie Russell. She’s holding my third (second once removed?) cousin, Andrea. Next to her is my Aunt Lyn. Then another third (?) cousin, Bliss, and her mother Chambliss. Next to Chambliss is Mama Helen, my great, great aunt. On the bottom left is Laurie Jean (she went by Honey), another great, great aunt. And another, Little Helen. Up a little is my Aunt Margie, who raised me after I was 9. Finally is Sadie Lee, my great grandmother. She was feisty. Sadie is her namesake, and I suspect we were on to something when we picked it.

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  3. Cat’s out of the bag

Continue reading "Wayback Wednesday: Way, way back edition"  →

I’ve been sitting here going on 15 or so minutes.  Trying to force myself into the writing zone.  Something I’ve been trying to do for the last several days.  Just cannot get there.  This is me, just putting it out there.  Getting it out.  It’s going to be random, disjointed……  roll with me, I need to get it out.

It’s been just over three weeks since we’ve been discharged.  I have not been able to find my grove.  It’s been day after day of just trying to get-through-the-day.  The first two weeks were physically, mentally and emotionally exhausting.  Gregory was at 15mg Prednisone, twice a day.  Which, for his size, is a lot of steroids.  Every day.  He was cranky, demanding and constantly hungry.  Constantly.  First words out of his mouth and last words before dreamland……..  “What is there to eat.”  No joke.  Add to that the change in his GVH med from Tacrolimus to Sirolimus.  Sirolimus can raise triglycerides.  Cholesterol.  Which meant I also had to police WHAT went into his mouth.  Add to that the weight gain.  It was a daily battle of how much and what food.  All day long.  Along with hyperhydration.  56-66 ounces a day.  He’s roughly 40 pounds.  (18.2 Kg on Monday)  That’s so much fluid.  The idea is to keep his kidneys well flushed and healthy.  Get these meds out of his kidneys, fast.  That much fluids means constant diaper changes.  The best way to get the fluids in him, is to run water through his feeding pump, via his G Tube.  24 hours a day.  Which means he needs a change AT LEAST every 3 hours.  Otherwise, he wakes up in a puddle.  Cannot tell you the last time I slept peacefully for eight hours.  Hell, I’d take 4 peaceful hours.  Peaceful being the operative word. 

Add to that the isolation.  Truly isolated, this time around.  Larry came out the first weekend, but then everyone started getting ‘the sick”.  Including Larry.  Normal seasonal cough/cold stuff.  Of the kids, it was primarily Curtis.  Since Larry and my mom tag team with the sibs AND tag team with us, it meant that neither of them could come out.  Or the sibs, for that matter.  As silly as this may sound, it also meant that I’ve had to relinquish my grocery shopping.  I’ve had to rely on mom and Larry to get what we need.   You don’t know how hard this simple little thing is for me.  Currently, it’s been my only interaction with the outside world.  The only time that I am away from Gregory.  It also is a very personal thing.  I KNOW.  It’s only groceries.  Then again, it’s GROCERIES.  If we lived in a more urban area, I would gladly order them online and have them delivered.  It’s not available to us.  There is something to be said for having particular tastes and having to express those tastes in a list, that someone else then has to look for.  Unfamiliar items.  Sounds trivial, but it’s ANOTHER thing I’ve had to relinquish.  It’s temporary.  It is just one more thing that I have no control over.  (No, I really don’t need to learn a lesson about giving up control.  Really.  I don’t.  This is not another lesson.  I promise.)  

This past Friday I received a phone call from Curtis & AnnMarie’s school.  AnnMarie had yakked at school and was waiting in the nurses’ room to be picked up.  I couldn’t get a hold of Larry, so I called my mom to pick her up.  Which, actually, worked out better for both AnnMarie and Larry.  The kids usually spend Friday and Saturday nights with my mom, anyhow.  After she was settled in at my mom’s, I gave them a ring.  To see how she was and if they needed anything.  Larry was bringing Curtis over later.  AnnMarie wanted nothing more than her stuffed sleeping buddy.  Sparkle.  I started to lose it.  Here was my daughter.  My little girl.  My sweet little thing.  She was sick and I couldn’t be there for her.  I just couldn’t.  Not only that, but I can’t.  I. Cannot.  Be.  Around.  Sick.  Period. 

Yes.  Plenty of Bone Marrow Transplant families have sibs and sickness during recovery.  We had an option before us and we chose to take it.  Gregory’s greatest chance at health is to avoid sickness.  His marrow is still young.  We really don’t know how young, though.  The graft versus host medications suppress his immune system.  So much so, that we are still doing weekly surveillance blood cultures.  (They take samples of his blood to determine if there is an infection in his blood.)  We are still doing surveillance CMV testing.  (CMV is a virus.  Really bad one.  Can be fatal for BMT patients.  He had an positive CMV, just after transplant.  It was treated and he hasn’t had a positive, since.)  Yes, we had a seven week admit.  He’s had several positive blood cultures.  A few of them were determined to be contaminants.  Through all of this, Gregory has not been “sick”.  No coughs, runny nose, sneezing, stomach bugs.  Not even stool or urine bugs.  Nothing.  *knock wood*  The less time he spends in the hospital, the healthier he will be.  Not to mention the whole getting-sick-while-in-the-hospital stuff, too.  Sometimes you can get sicker by being in the hospital, surrounded by all the other sick.  

Every fiber of my existence is to keep Gregory healthy.  It’s working.  Except for the graft versus host, his suppressed immune system and the medication side effects, Gregory is so stinking healthy.  Kidney is stellar.  Triglycerides took a small jump a few weeks back, but they have leveled.  Sodium, calcium, protein, albumin, phosphorus, glucose.  Everything looks great.  We made the best decision.  For Gregory.  

Me?  Struggling, for now.  It’s just been so long.  My world.  It’s a microcosm.  Miniscule.  I have nothing to share that isn’t about myself, Gregory or other BMT/Childhood Cancer families.  I get really tired of talking about it.  I yearn for a conversation with someone that has nothing to do with Bone Marrow Transplant, Childhood Cancer or Graft Versus Host.  Even if I could have such a conversation, the elephant would still be in the room.  I want to be interest in politics.  I want to talk about the environment.  I want to find out the latest in local, organic food shopping.  I want to chat about the new stop light going in on our corner.  I want to plan for the kids’ spring break.  I want to get ready for upcoming conferences.  I want to have conversations on these topics, as if they were as important to me as bmt/graft-versus-host/childhood cancer is to me now.  I want to be home.  I think all of this would be much easier to get through, if we were HomeHome.  For me.  

We had an option.  We chose door number two.  Gregory and I, living out at the Water Retreat, has been THE BEST OPTION for him.    Without a doubt.  Even if we had been HomeHome, as soon as anyone started showing symptoms of “the sick”, we would have high tailed it out here. 

Something happened.  About a month ago, while we were still inpatient.  We had transitioned to our new doc.  We had only been together for about a week.  Things are a little busy.  A comment was made during morning rounds.  At the time, I didn’t give it much thought.  That’s my M.O., though.  I work really hard to not be reactionary.  I also really hate confrontation.  Our doc, without any warm up, stated that it was time for us to all be together.  Time for Gregory and I to go home.  Time for me to get some relief and assistance.  In my usual fashion, I just accepted the words.  Didn’t respond or even really acknowledge the sentiment.  The words did not sit well with me.  I understand where they came from.  At least I think I do.  Unification of the family unit, after all, is the end all be all.  Right?  Regardless of what circumstances might be contributing to decisions.  The doc and I are still learning each other.  We haven’t had the time or the opportunity that comes with getting to know each other.  Time hasn’t been taken to learn about our family dynamics.  Why we have made the choices we have.  There is nothing that gets me more worked up, than when a judgment is made about me, my kids, my husband.  Quite frankly, any kind of judgment makes my stomach turn.  The only person’s skin you live in is your own.  It’s as simple as that.  I love debate, conversation, learning.  Judging others is not part of my equation.  I couldn’t help but feel like a judgment was made on our decision to not be HomeHome yet.  Which could simply be because we have not had the time to establish any kind of relationship, yet.  I feel the need to get this out in the open with our doc, but with all the respect that I possess.  Any kind of transition is challenging.  Going from three docs to two has been a huge transition.    I get it.  I’ve experienced it, from their side.  No matter how solid an office is, it’s still a transition.

The other piece that has been weighing me down.  It’s so simple that I even hesitate to share it, but nothing is simple these days.  Here goes nothing, don’t laugh.  If there is clutter and disorganization around me, I am literally paralyzed.  Suffocated.  Stifled.  I cannot function any further than just getting through the day.  We spent seven weeks inpatient between December 23rd and February 15.  Which included all the Christmas stuff and presents that Gregory received while being in the hospital for so long.  By the time we got out of the hospital and back to the Water Retreat, there was the unpacking and getting settled.  Combined with the Steroid Sickness.  Managing him those first two weeks, out patient……….  exhausting.  I finally gave up on the food thing.  While I am watching his caloric intake and fat, I’m not policing it like I was.  It was just too much to manage.  Screw it.  If his Triglycerides go up and he need medication for it, so be it.  It is just not worth the constant battling with a child who is so wacked out.  We did taper his Prednisone a little bit.  About a week ago we went to 15mg AM & 10mg PM.  That small little 5mg drop made a huge difference.  He still wakes up asking about food.  He still falls asleep wanting “curly noodles” (Top Ramen).  It’s less intense, though.  Much less intense.  Although the last two days have been intense.  Anyhow, I digress.  Disorganization.  Clutter.  Crazy amounts of it.  The only reason I am able to sit here and write is because I finally tackled Gregory’s toys.  They are neatly organized and put in their own place.  It makes it doubly hard ’cause we are not living at HomeHome.  Yes, there it is, AGAIN!   I play this stupid little game with myself.  If I get THIS done, then I can do THAT.  Which means neither gets done and it spirals out of control.  I’m finally getting on top of it and slowly climbing out.  

We also have ants.  My check engine light started blinking on Monday.  Beautiful children have died.  Beautiful children, amazingly, have no evidence of tumors.  Someone close to us had to have an emergency apendectomy.  Gorgeous spring days, followed by rainy and chilly days.  Favorite artists release new albums.  Friends get ready for their last chemo treatment.  I finish my sweater.  Correspondence goes unanswered.  Critters get into my garbage.  (I convince myself it’s a large critter and freak out over our safety.)  A good friend gets really sick and can’t care for their child.  I snap at Gregory a time or two.  Good friends grieve.  I finally admit that Gregory could use a haircut.  (I still think hair dressers should make house calls.)  Gregory spent 10 minutes outside, on his tricycle.  Sun hat and sun screen.  Medications, food log, fluid log, poo log.  Right now, at this moment, I want to fall asleep.  Only to wake up, the morning of Tuesday, February 24th, 2009 after having spent the previous evening getting Gregory IV fluids at the ER.  Just enough to perk him back up.  Enough to return home and have him recover from the common cold.  Right now, at this moment, that is what I wish for.

Instead, I manage it by keeping a low profile.  Checking out for a bit.  Rebuilding the defenses.  There is an ever present finger on the pulse.  Monitoring.  Waiting for the reserves to replenish.  Checking off another day.  That’s all I can do, for now.  It’s enough.  Bottom line?  Gregory is doing great.  Induced with medication, but great.  We will not be here forever.  Things will change.  They will never be like they were before, but they will be different.  Better.  Someday.     

P1020857

Posted via web from MindiTheMagnificent

Continue reading "Pity Party? Party of, All Of You."  →


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