Relish, my Relish

Entries tagged as ‘nightmare’

Normalish?

October 18, 2009 · 1 Comment

Well I am finally heading towards normal.  It is Sunday afternoon and all is quiet and dare I say ‘drama free’ in the house.  Girl-child and a friend are upstairs destroying playing quietly in her bedroom.  Boy-child is outside playing wii with our latest family addition (the new student arrived safely this morning), man-child has wandered over to a friends for a drop of red and I am sitting down to enjoy a drop of red also, relaxing to some great music, smelling the wonderful aromas of dinner gently simmering on the stove.  Mmmm, red chicken curry.

Today has also included a flying trip to Ikea to get a desk and chair.  In the 90 minute round trip I managed to get the items I required, plus a laptop bag, 1 1/2 dozen glasses, a desk lamp, power boards, napkins for tomorrows picnic in the park if the rain holds off, as well as stopping by the florist for some much needed fresh flowers to brighten up the place.

Oh and speaking of tomorrows events, I have made Honey Joys to be taken into girl-child’s class to be shared by all (hooray for simple sweet food that meets the class allergy criteria list), and because they were so easy to make I made a second batch to be eaten in the park.  When that was done, girl-child and her friend and I made an ice cream cake for her party.  OK, so we didn’t actually make an icecream cake, we partially melted some ice cream, added choc ripple biscuit chunks and chocolate toffee pieces, poured it in to moulds to re-freeze ready for the party!  Now all that is left to do is chop up some fresh fruit and vegetables and the party food is covered.  As for activities I think I will take a pile of dress ups to the park and they can all run around as fairies, princesses, mermaids or puppy dogs and make their own fun.

The easy part is done, trying to get 8 hours of work done in 5 hours or less tomorrow will be much more interesting but it will be done.  Fingers crossed I will get a better sleep tonight and not one that is filled with dreams/nightmares of me being injured.  I dreamt the same dream over and over all night – Some incident would occur (the incident would change with each variation of the dream) where the outcome was me being taken to the hospital for xrays of a broken ankle.  Of course knowing that I didn’t have the time or energy to be injured I had the hospital staff put a cast on my ankle that was black.  I then put a heel on it so I could pretend it was a boot and I was able to go about my life and work unhindered.  Naturally my walk was very suspect and ungainly looking so people were always questioning me about my strange footwear.  I must have been holding my foot as if it was in a cast all night long because today my calf muscle is as fatigued as if I had run a marathon in ill-fitting shoes!

Hopefully sleep tonight, aided by a drink or three will be more relaxing and sleep like, ready for a day of celebrating girl-child’s 6th birthday.

Edited to add:  OK, so I am clearly not back to normal yet.  I decided that I should post a link to the Honey Joy recipe as I had touted it as being so simple and delicious for the kids.  Doing this I noticed that right at the top of the recipe it says Preheat oven to 150°C. Oops I forgot that part, I haven’t cooked them yet!  How awesome am I?  A simple 7 line recipe and I forget the first and last of them.  I had better go do that now before I forget again.

Categories: all about me · just a day
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A Looooooong Day

September 24, 2009 · 6 Comments

It has been a really long day.  The kids didn’t get back until around 11, giving boy-child a chance to show us how well he can do pushups and giving us enough time to get a few toys and colouring books thrown into a bag before heading into the Royal Children’s Hospital.

Push Ups Before Surgery

Push Ups Before Surgery

We arrived at noon and paperwork was filled out and then the waiting began.  After a short wait we met with the anesthetist where boy-child was told about how he would be given medicine to make him go to sleep for the surgery.  He was told that they would put cream on his wrist so that he wouldn’t feel the drip being inserted and then he was given a choice of flavours for the sleeping gas.  He chose strawberry!  Then it was back to waiting again.  The waiting room was packed and we were expecting a huge wait.  Man-child and girl-child went to the market to stock up on food, and to get some food for a late lunch – girl-child hadn’t eaten since her early breakfast at 6am stating it wasn’t fair for her to eat when her brother couldn’t.

Next we met with a surgeon who discussed explained exactly what they would be doing – making a small incision along his existing scar to remove the 2 screws.  The surgeon drew an arrow on his arm pointing to where the surgery was to be.

Fix this Arm!

Fix this Arm!

He thought the procedure would last about 30 minutes and when it was done his arm would be bandaged and he would be required to rest.  I actually laughed at that point – how am I supposed to keep him still and quiet during the school holidays?  Boy-child wondered if resting meant he couldn’t do pushups and was disappointed when he was told no pushups for 2 weeks at least!

More waiting.  Next nurses weighed him (he checked in at the hefty weight of 24.90kg) and put anesthetic cream on his hand and elbow.  We were told we were second on the orthopedic surgery list and the first person was currently in surgery so the wait shouldn’t be too much longer.  We filled in time by playing Uno and watching movies in the waiting room.

Finally we were called through.  Boy-child put on his hospital gown and climbed up on to a gurney and snuggled under a heated blanket.  His tiny little body was shaking with nerves but he was being so brave.  Luckily it wasn’t long before the anesthetists came by and the boy was wheeled through to the prep area.

Awesome Medical Staff

Awesome Medical Staff (Fiona and Jonathan)

The anesthetist and nurse were fantastic posing for a photo and keeping the boy-child distracted as they inserted the drip.  Once the chemical cocktail was introduced to his body and he had two breaths of the strawberry flavoured sleeping gas he was out cold.  I gave him a quick kiss goodbye and then it was back to waiting again.

Strawberry Sleep

Strawberry Sleep

It was over an hour before the surgeon came in to tell me that they had just finished the surgery.  All went well but it took longer than expected to remove the screws and the washers that had fused with the bone.  The incision they had to make was larger than they anticipated but they were able to stitch him up and bandage him without the use for a plaster or backslab.

It was another half hour before I was called through to recovery and he still wasn’t awake.  We had to annoy him awake only to have him tell us he was tired and wanted to go back to sleep.  It wasn’t much but he was able to wiggle all his fingers when requested and he was responding to questions, even if it was with a request to sleep more or for more drugs for pain relief.  Extra drugs were administered to help with the pain then it was time  for him to be moved back to the day surgery area to recover more and eat icy poles.

Man-child and girl-child were there waiting as he was wheeled in to the day surgery area so his spirits lifted pretty quickly.  Slowly his appetite was returning.  He skulled 2 glasses of juice, ate a jelly cup and an icecream.  He even managed to snaffle a piece of my chocolate bar and get to play man-child’s iphone.  At this stage of the day I was exhausted and forgot to take photos of the success.

Finally, 5 1/2 hours after arriving at the hospital it was home time.  Boy-child was tired and fragile and very disappointed that he couldn’t keep the screws that they took out from his arm.  By the time we arrived home he was really hungry and scoffed 3 bowls of pasta, the first covered in vegetables the second two bowls covered in a tomato based sauce and cheese.

My brave little boy was yawning all the way through dinner so I promised him that he could lay in the study upstairs and watch a movie.  That was 3 1/2 hours ago and he is still awake and hungry.  He has just had some more panadol and another banana and hopefully will fall asleep soon.  That said I am about to head back upstairs at his request, to snuggle with him so he will get some sleep.  I am so glad that today is over.

Categories: all in the family
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The Easter Break – the Not-Good Parts

April 15, 2009 · 4 Comments

I have been struggling with trying to write about my challenges of the past few days.  They seem insignificant when I think of the pain that others are suffering as they farewell beautiful Thalon and Madeline.  I can’t imagine the pain that their families are suffering now, and the pain they will continue to feel as they remember their angels.  

There is really no segue into how the pain that these people are feeling can possibly equate to how I am feeling as I lay awake at night, trying to comfort boy-child.  I don’t know whether my tears are tears of exhaustion, frustration or of thanks because I still have my children with me to hug.  I am not a religious person but I find myself praying for my family and for the families of those I know and love in real life and in the online world and wishing for their safety and happiness.  

 

Now that boy-child has become accustomed to life with his arm in a cast, things were beginning to settle down.  He was spending most days with his best friend playing in the park or wii-ing together.  Girl-child has big girls that are her new favourite people in the world, so she is more than happy playing close to home with friends.  We have even had more than a few child-swap sleep-overs.  We were all having a great time.

Just last week, we shared a dinner with another family before yet another child-swap.  It was during this meal that the boy-child pointed out some bite like sores on his broken arm, 2 near his arm pit and another one on his pinky finger, where the plaster caused it to rub against his next finger.  It wasn’t causing him any discomfort so we slapped on some antiseptic like cream and a band aid and forgot all about it.  

That was on Thursday.  He didn’t complain about it and we thought no more about it.  Friday afternoon hew was a little miserable, but not really complaining.  By Saturday afternoon, despite having a friend over to play, he asked to go to bed.  He was a little feverish so I helped him to take off his t-shirt to get more comfortable.  That was when I noticed that he had a dozen blistery spots on is back and a few on his stomach.  It looked like he had chicken pox – AGAIN.  He was more than happy to spend the remainder of the day resting and watching movies.  

Easter morning he was full of energy.  I don’t know if it was as a result of the nurofen he had taken or if it was the prospect of a day of chocolate overload.  He ate well, we all ate well, both chocolate and ‘real’ food.  We all had a fantastic day with family and friends.  We were going out Sunday night and my parents and sister were staying with the kids.  

Not long after we returned home, he began to stir.  He couldn’t settle.  I tried to comfort him but nothing seemed to work.  We spent an hour or so snuggling on the couch in the study before he was calm enough to go back to bed.  I spent the remainder of the night dozing fitfully on the floor in his room trying to comfort him as he writhed about in pain.  The pox had spread, it wasn’t itchy but he described the pain as ‘hundreds of little men tap dancing on his nuts’.  In a sleep deprived haze, it was hard to try and keep a straight face with such a graphic description.  Even nurofen wasn’t working, but sometime around sunrise he finally dozed off, from pure exhaustion.

When he woke a few hours later, his breathing was laboured and he found it hard to swallow.  He was panicking and stressed and spent the remainder of the day sitting on the couch wrapped in blankets.  Late in the afternoon, he actually asked to be taken to the doctor.  Naturally it was just out of business hours, so it off to the hospital after hours clinic with man-child.  

I was exhausted and sat around with girl-child, waiting.  Apparently that is what boy-child was doing, he declared that the reason that it was called an after hours clinic was because after a while you work out that you have been sitting around for hours.  It was good to hear that his sense of humour wasn’t suffering.  When he finally saw the doctor, the chicken pox were confirmed, as well as a severe throat infection.  Now he is back taking more antibiotics to fight the infection.

He was exhausted when they finally got home from the doctors and he fell asleep on the couch.  I should have realised that the sleep wouldn’t last.  After wandering downstairs to him twice in 15 minutes, I realised that it was going to be a long night and grabbed my phone and went to sleep alongside him on the couch.  I use the term sleep loosely, he dozed fitfully and I comforted him as best I could.  I was pleased to find that he was most comfortable watching and singing along to Dr Horrible, at least if I wasn’t able to sleep I would be pleasantly distracted.  Needless to say, I didn’t get much sleep.

Finally today brought some good news.  He had to go back into the hospital for x-rays and a fracture review.  As he is still in a contagious stage of chicken pox, he was seen first, ahead of schedule.  Not only did an expected 2 hour sequence of appointments end in less than an hour due to him being pushed to the front of the queue.  As well as getting in and out in an unprecedented time, the results were great, the screws in his elbow appear to be held in place securely and the break is healing nicely.  He has good movement of his fingers, and even of his elbow where he has damaged the cast.  He isn’t due to go back for another 3 weeks when they will remove his cast and do more x-rays before deciding if the cast can be left off.

Right now, he is upstairs not sleeping.  He is struggling to close his eyes, not because he isn’t tired but because he has chicken pox on his eye lids and it is scratchy on his eye when he shuts them.  Somehow I feel that it will be another long night!  

 

Categories: the monsters · the world of blog
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Alexander and the No Good, Horrible, Very Bad Day

April 1, 2009 · 3 Comments

The day that my boy broke his arm shall also be known as the No Good, Horrible, Very Bad Day.

When the school call to say that boy-child had fallen and looks to have broken his arm, you are  almost relieved.  Not about him being hurt, but about not having to deal with work for the remainder of the day, and perhaps even the following day.  As it was the second broken arm that he had suffered, you think you know what you (and he) are in for – a quick trip to the hospital, a long wait, an xray and a backslab plaster bandaged to his forearm.  It would be done and dusted before the end of the day and we would be at home tucked up in bed as quick as a flash.  Oh how wrong could you possibly be?

When you arrive at school, he is ’sitting’ in the sick bay with two staff members trying to console him.  You say sitting, but it was somewhere between sitting and laying down, he was unable to do either.  No one was allowed to touch his arm, not even with an ice pack, but you could see that it was very swollen above and around his elbow.  He couldn’t lift his arm or move his fingers.  He couldn’t decide if he would be more comfortable sitting down in the car or in an ambulance.  In the end, after he had me bandage his arm to his body to stop it moving, he decided he would go in the car with you to the hospital.  He couldn’t manage to get into the safety of the back seat so you allow him to sit in the front, with the seat reclined to allow him to not bend his arm.  You don’t dare fasten a seat belt around the break and drive the slow painful drive to the hospital.  

Fortunately the Royal Children’s Hospital is merely a 5 minute drive away.  It was the slowest and most painful trip you have experienced, and you are the driver.  Every tiny little bump in the road caused him to wince in pain, train and tram tracks caused him to scream like a banshee.  Throughout the drive you remain calm, plotting how the remainder of the day would unfold – who would look after girl-child, as well as how to cover other appointments and meetings.

You make it safely to the hospital and into emergency.  You don’t even register at triage and they moved him, in a wheelchair into a room and had a doctor examine him within a minute.  You are impressed by the speed and efficiency of the staff.  Being in a place that he associates with feeling better, Boy-child had also relaxed somewhat.

The first dose of pain relief does little to take the contorted look of agony off his face, the second had the same response.  They didn’t waste any more time and instead inserted a drip and some morphine.  Finally he is able to relax enough to respond to questions, both from me and the medical staff.  

When he is comfortable, he is wheeled through into xray.  You waited with him and the xrays were taken without him having to move from his gurney.  You see the images as they flashed onto the screen in the technicians cubicle.  You have seen xrays of broken bones in the past, most frequently your own broken or damaged bones, often struggling to see where the break is.  This isn’t the case here, you can see that a large chunk of his upper arm bone had snapped off entirely.  Having a medical degree isn’t required to see that it was broken and a consult with the orthopedic surgeons is arranged.  Surgery was planned for later in the day, to allow for the food that boy-child had just eaten prior to injury to continue to digest.  In the meantime he is to be kept comfortable, but he isn’t allowed to eat or drink anything.

The afternoon passed slowly, really slowly.  Thankfully you have an iphone to use as a trusty tool of distraction.  Eventually my boy begins to tire of playing hangman and he requests that you put some music on, some slow relaxing music so that he can sleep.  You flick through itunes and settled on Sting, the first song to play was ‘Fragile‘, making you sit and think and giving you time to truly appreciate just how precious and fragile life and the human body is as he drifts off to sleep.

Minutes became hours as you sat in the semi darkness as you wait and wait and wait.  Man-child comes  in to visit, but you send him back out again.  There is no point in him missing out on ‘an opportunity of a lifetime’ to sit and do nothing other than wait.  

Finally it is time to move upstairs to have your boy prepped for surgery.  From the time you leave emergency you can see the look of panic increase on boy-child’s face.  Both the orthopedic surgeon and the registrar came and speak to you and answered all of your questions.  The real question you want answering – ‘How long will it take?’ can’t be answered, they don’t know how long it will take until they know the extent of the damage.  Boy-child’s biggest concern is waking up.  Like most kids, he believes that he doesn’t sleep, ever.  If he does sleep, he wakes up really easily, or so he believes. The anesthetist is amazing in explaining how the sleep he would have is different from normal sleep and that the medicine would keep him asleep.  She tells him that she would be watching him the whole time and that there would be computers watching him making sure that he stayed asleep and wouldn’t feel anything.  She also lets him know that you would be there with him when he went to sleep, holding his hand and you would be there with him when he awoke.

It is strange, holding your first born’s hand, trying to comfort him and allay him his fears, watching as the various chemicals are pumped into his tiny little body as the anesthetic takes over.  Then being rushed from the prep room to allow the surgery to commence.  

Then the waiting begins again, sitting alone in the parents waiting area whilst his little body is being manipulated back into place.  The maths is simple; the longer the wait, the more complicated the procedure.  Best case, yet highly unlikely scenario – an external manipulation would move the dislodged bone back into place.  Most likely and hoped for scenario – the bone would require a pin to hold the bone fragments in place and surgery would take place through a small incision.  The actual scenario – an almost 3 hour procedure that found that not only had the end of the bone broken away, there were smaller fractures and a chipped bone that needed attention, as well as the dislocation of the entire elbow joint.  Two screws are required to secure the bone into place and stablise the joint to enable the extensively damaged surrounding tissue a chance to heal.  

Finally the surgeon comes to see you, to tell you that the surgery was a success but that the damage that he has suffered was extensive.  He tells you of the repairs that have occurred and you sit their almost in disbelief as you imagine your child being rebuilt like a robot can be rebuilt out of meccano.  He also tells you of possible outcomes after the surgery, consequences of having a still young and growing bone held together with screws.  He tells you that ‘Yes he may be lucky and have no adverse effects’, but he also tells you of complications other than wound infection and pain, complications that may limit the movement of his arm, or its strength, or even its growth.  All of a sudden it goes from being an obstacle that we overcome now, with only short term implications to possibly long term and even lifelong consequences.  It all seems too much.  Of course the surgeon reassures you that the surgery was a success and finishes with ‘Your son should be stirring soon, you will be able to go and see him’.

You wait to go and see him in recovery.  Although only 30 minutes the wait seems longer than the wait through the entire surgery.  You were able to read a book, chat on the phone and even watch a little tv when you know that he is in safe hands being repaired.  You know that he is still in safe hands, but what is taking them from calling you in there to see him damnit!  When you are finally allowed into recovery his tiny little body was atop a huge gurney.  The plaster and bandages around his arm seemed to dwarf his frame yet he was sleeping like and angel.  He does not wake, he barely even stirs.  The staff want him, need him to be responsive and open his eyes before he can be transferred to a ward to sleep the night away.  No matter what they do, he does not wake.  Other children who are wheeled into recovery after him, they stir, their parents are called in and they leave whilst your baby sleps soundly in a drug induced sleep.  In fact, one child is in the prep area waiting for surgery when you are called into recovery, he has surgery, spends time in recovery, chats to us and is moved to the wards before your boy showed signs of stirring.  

We, the nursing staff, man-child and myself try everything – talking to him, pressure point massage, tickling his sides and his feet, blowing on his face and dripping water on to his forehead.  Even an impromptu comedy routine by man-child with a light saber can’t stir him.  After 3 hours in recovery, whilst still not fully responsive, he is moved to a surgical ward to begin the healing.

It is after 1am by the time the little boy is settled in his new bed and he is still sound asleep.  Eventually you drifted off in the sofa chair beside his bed.  You sleep soundly until 3am when your baby wakes with a ravenous appetite.  You feed a still disoriented child jelly and yoghurt in the wee hours of the morning and follow it  by reading a chapter from a favourite book.  Eventually you drifted off to sleep again, only to wake at 6.20am to the declaration that your little boy is still hungry.  Whilst waiting for his breakfast to arrive, you watch him devour more yoghurt, more jelly and even a fruit salad, and then a huge serving of cereal before asking for more yoghurt!  

The morning drifts on and the boy-child wants to know when he can go home.  You don’t know, but you suspect that it won’t be today.  You wait for the doctors to visit to give you more information as to what will happen next.  Unfortunately the belief that the boy will be required to stay another night is confirmed.  The boy is devastated.  He has held up extremely well with being confined to a bed and being uncomfortable, but he was barely holding it all together.  You wonder where man-child is and why he isn’t in visiting yet.  You call his mobile phone but remember that his phone has a flat battery.  You call the home phone but there is no answer.  Perhaps he has gone to his own doctors appointment, perhaps he is on the way to work.  

Soon girl-child and Aunt Lil Sis visit.  Being the ever thoughtful and caring person that she is, Lis Sis has already collected a get well card for girl-child to write on.  She has even picked up some fruit and treats on her way in to the city.  Together we help to distract boy-child from the fact that he is trapped in a hospital bed for another day.  

You continue to wonder where man-child is, and keep trying to call.  You begin to worry.  It is getting late, he should be at work, he should be able to recharge his phone and call.  He should be able to use the phone at home to call his son.  Your moods swing wildly, from being pissed off that he doesn’t care enough to check in on his family to where are you? what has happened?  are you OK?  You don’t want to seem too paranoid, but when it is after 11 am, and your husband is unable to be contacted, you need to do something.  You are so concerned you are trawling through your phone list wondering who you should call to go and check at your house, to make sure that man-child is in one piece.  You can’t decide and you continue to procrastinate, slipping into the dream that if you pretend it isn’t a problem, then it will just disappear.  As you ponder what you should do and who you should call for assistance, girl-child and aunt Lil Sis entertain the boy.  It is all too hard, all too much, you curl up on the chair and drift off to sleep for a few minutes.  

Fortunately the procrastination pays off and man-child calls.  You are immensely relieved but you don’t know whether you are happy or pissed off.  He has just explained that he has just woken up.  He didn’t take a phone upstairs with him as the batteries were running low (hello!  There is a charger beside the bed) and he didn’t know that I had even called.  He doesn’t understand why you would even be concerned.  

After a brief conversation, man-child declares that he has a lot of work to do today at which point you remind him he has a son who is in pain, who has been told that he can’t go home yet, who is wondering why his daddy doesn’t care enough to even answer the phone when he tries to call him.  You think that perhaps he may have understood the errors of his way!

Man-child visits briefly, but can’t stay long.  He promises to visit as soon as he can get away from work.  You suggest that he says in hospital that night, to have a special boys night.  The promise of fun to come later in the day is enough to temporarily distract the boy from being abandoned.

Girl-child is becoming frustrated with being trapped in a hospital room and boy-child is tiring, so Lil Sis takes girl-child out for an afternoon of shopping and fun and declares that she can have a holiday at her house again tonight so that you can get some rest also.

Later in the day, after boy-child’s pain medications are running low, he gets a visit from his fairy god mother.  He is immediately distracted from the pain by more gifts and new entertainment.  Unfortunately the distraction doesn’t last long and the boy looks for his pain relief, not realising that the morphine pump has been removed.  He doesn’t understand that he needs to be able to medicate without an intravenous drip to be able to go home, that taking the drip away  is actually making the likelihood of him being able to go home tomorrow more likely.  All he wants is for the pain to go away NOW.  

You try to explain that he can have medicine to make the pain stop, but he has to swallow it.  New bouts of tears emerge.  Now amounts of cajoling can get him to take the medicine from a syringe.  The nurse returns with a capsule, he screams and refuses to take it.  You try and mix it with yoghurt and still he refuses.  You begin to get angry.  You know that he needs to take the pain meds and you know that he can take the pain meds.  You begin to wonder who is most stubborn, you or him.  Eventually, he sips at the yoghurt and he manages to take some of the now dissolved capsule.  He doesn’t take it all, but it must be enough to take the edge off, either that or he is so distraught that he has given up.  You feel wretched, you never wanted to have to force feed your child anything and you are reminded of the phrase ‘it is for your own good’.  It doesn’t help, you still don’t like the feeling.

The boy is resting quietly watching some mindless kids show on tv and you are talking to the fairy god mother and thankful for the company, when man-child arrives.  He distracts the boy and cheers him up, but he still asks for your assistance to help himself get comfortable in his bed.  It makes you feel better that even though you are the ‘mean parent’, you are still the one who fixes things.  It isn’t much, but after such a long day (or so) it helps.

The boy is getting settled in for the night, man-child has come armed with a fully charged laptop and many boy friendly dvds.  They are both more than happy to settle in for a movie night.  You are exhausted.  You don’t want to leave, yet you know that there is no point being there.  You are of no use when you are physically and mentally exhausted.  You try to leave a number of times, but the mere thought of it threatens to overwhelm you and the tears try to flow.  Finally you kiss the boy goodnight,  you don’t want to make eye contact and are barely controlling the tears that are threatening to spill.  You practically run from the hospital.

You make it to the car and the door isn’t even closed before you break down and sob uncontrollably.  You are feeling alone and overwhelmed.  You can’t drive, your entire body is racked by shudders.

Eventually when you are feeling composed enough to drive, you go home.  The entire drive you are crossing your fingers to make it home and inside before seeing anyone that you need to talk to.  You almost make it, the key was in the front door and you are about to breathe a shuddering sigh of relief when a neighbour and class mate calls out.  You try to convey the details of the experience without crying but you end up brushing them off  and then escaping inside to cry uncontrollably.

Despite the physical and emotional exhaustion that you are feeling, you are to overwrought to sleep.  You are feeling annoyed.  You are annoyed that you insist on being alone, to remain strong and whole.  You are annoyed that you know that there are so many people around you, at any time of the day or night that could comfort you but instead you wish to remain alone and stoic, to maintain the facade of staying in control.  You are sorry that you can’t turn to the people that love you and care for you, now in your time of need or at any time, but you want those same people to know that simply knowing that they were there, willing and wanting to help is comforting in its own way.

 

It was an intense emotional rollercoaster of anxiety and sleep deprivation.  I wrote most of this when I returned home from the hospital, but it was garbled and angry and painful, I have since edited the piece and added to it, to try and make the story complete and make sense.  I’m still not sure why I had to write this, perhaps as a way to show boy-child of the arduous journey he has travelled.  Who knows, but I am glad that I have written it – the story of Alexander and the No Good, Horrible, Very Bad Day.

Categories: Uncategorized
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One of Those Days!

March 27, 2009 · 3 Comments

The day started not unlike many others, the mad dash to get everyone to school on time with the appropriate bags, lunches and books.  It even started with no cursing under my breath or yelling at kids who were intent on ignoring every plead to hurry up I issued.  

It was almost pleasant, until I realised that it was a work day and then it all went downhill.  I don’t have the time nor the energy to write the full story just yet, there is too much emotion flying around in all directions, but if I copy my recent tweets here, it will explain my absence here and in lack of comments elsewhere.

  • Yay – at work and find out that other people haven’t done their job so now I have to fix their mistakes. It’s going to be one of those days. 
  • One catastrophe averted, only 362 kajillion to go.  I don’t even know where to start.  It is going to be a long, long day!
  • In hospital, boy child has broken his arm and waiting to see surgeon. A really long day ahead.
  • My boy is finally asleep. Now it is time to wait some more. Surgery is scheduled for some time around 5 (in 2 hours). My poor little boy.
  • The wait continues. My boy has just gone thru to theatre. Poor darling is terrified. Luckily the staff are fantastic.
  • My baby is just out of surgery. A bad break, a dislocation, a chipped bone held together with 2 screws. Can go see him soon.
  • The boy is finally out of recovery and on to a ward, although not awake yet. Time for me to try WMD get dome sleep too.  (Clearly overwrought and tired – I don’t even know what I was intending to tweet here)
  • Not much sleep to be had, but my boy is enjoying early morning cartoons in bed and munching away on fruit salad. Things are looking better!

So to summarise the last 36 hours.  I dutifully went to work and had barely started when I received a phone call from the school to say that boy-child may have broken his arm.  I quick trip to school and then off to emergency to wait around until they could operate to set his arm.  Finally he was in theatre at 7pm and remained in surgery until 9.45pm.  The break was worse than expected, with the entire tip of his elbow breaking off and needing to be screwed back together, a further chipped bone and a dislocated elbow were re-set.  There was extensive damage to the muscles and tendons around the joint and there could be further complication, we just have to wait and see.  Once he eventually awoke from the surgery, not much more sleep was to be had.  For the early part of the day he was comfortable, but the pain and discomfort increased throughout the day.  Man-child is with him tonight and I am at home, alone, wanting to get some real sleep, hoping that he will be OK to come home tomorrow.

So that is the cut and dry version of what has happened.  I hope to write the true story to express the emotions that have been on hyperdrive the past few days, but now it is time to hope for sleep.  Thank you to everyone who has tweeted, emailed or phoned their recovery wishes and thoughts our way.  Knowing that there are so many beautiful people out there who care has helped me through such a horrible situation.

 

In Recovery

In Recovery

Sleep well my beautiful little man, I will see you in the morning.  I love you.

Categories: all in the family
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Priorities

March 23, 2009 · 1 Comment

So after last nights ‘adventures’ and lack of sleep.  Man-child declared that he would be fine to go to work.  In fact, mere minutes after the ambulance had left he had decided that if he didn’t need to go to the hospital NOW, then he didn’t even need to go to the doctor at all.  I hoped that it was just a passing comment but no, he got up and went to work this morning.  I couldn’t believe it, work potentially being the cause for or at least a major contributing factor in the drama that unfolded.  

Despite my snide remarks that it made more sense to go to work and exacerbate the problem rather than going to the doctor he continued to work, stating that he might try and go to the doctor later in the day, as long as the appointment didn’t interrupt too much work!   GAH – drive me insane, it is great to see where a person’s priorities lie.  

Naturally by lunch time, an appointment still hadn’t been made and I was forced to play dirty – do you really want to be a burden on our kids the way that your dad is a burden on you?  I didn’t want to do it but I really don’t want to spend the rest of my life sitting around watching the man I love kill himself slowly and whilst he is doing it, doing irrevocable damage to those around him.  I felt horrible saying it, but I knew it was the only thing to stir up a response and eventually an appointment was made for tomorrow morning.  

I know it sounds ruthless and cruel and rounds out the picture I paint of myself being a heartless wench but I don’t want to be married to my father in law.  He is a rude, selfish, arrogant man who let his ’secret’ dependance upon alcohol ruin his life and damage the lives of is family.  Now he is old and alone and still rude, selfish and arrogant.  One day I will actually write the true story of the ‘outlaws’ and my relationship with them, but for now I will just pray that I don’t become like them.

I love my family and I will do anything to protect them and keep them all safe, even if it means turning up the heatless wench persona a notch or two.  Fingers crossed that the report from the doctor will be reassuring and that perfect health is nothing more than a lifestyle change, healthier eating, less drinking and generally taking better care of ourselves.   

Hopefully all is well.  Thanks to everyone who has called, emailed or commented.  

Categories: all in the family
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Heartbreaking

February 9, 2009 · 2 Comments

Cooler weather and even a few spots of rain has hit Melbourne and other areas of Victoria, but the damage had been done and is still occurring.  Victoria is in the midst of the biggest bushfire disaster ever, Australia’s worst natural disaster.  More than 700 homes are destroyed, entire towns no longer exist and at the latest count 108 people have been killed.  Unfortunately this number is likely to rise.  Entire families are missing, access to communities is restricted to emergency personnel only.  Burnt out cars litter the roads and still the fires are raging.  

Victoria erupted in flames on Saturday afternoon, with temperatures of up to 46 degrees and winds of 100 kilometers an hour.  Families and communities have had a choice to evacuate or stay and fight.  Despite homes being equipped to fight the fires or to protect  themselves and their belongings the fire was too fast and ran over the dry landscape at speeds that didn’t allow for escape.  People were trapped in their cars trying to escape when the fires swept through, some were fortunate enough to cover with blankets as the fires burned around them, others weren’t so lucky and the car and everything in it was destroyed.  

There are more than 30 different fires burning across the state.  The fire crews are still out fighting, with more crews arriving by the hour but still the fires are raging.  Even the army has been called in and is working to clear areas of land.  Volunteers and emergency workers are working around the clock to try and save people, homes and property.  The worst disaster in the history of the country, made even more heartbreaking by the fact that in some cases, the fires appear to be deliberately lit.  

 

I am fortunate enough to not be affected directly, but please spare a thought or a prayer for everyone who is affected by the tragedy of the bushfires.  If you can, please donate to the Australian Red Cross fund to help them provide food, clothing and shelter for those who have lost everything.  If you don’t have any available cash in this difficult financial climate, think about donating blood.  Perhaps even a donation of food, blankets, clothing and toys to your local op shop, they may not go directly to those affected by the bush fires but will help others in need.

 

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Night Terrors

June 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I don’t often wake from dreams remembering what has occurred.  Unfortunately, last night was a night that I did wake from a dream and not a pleasant dream.  It was a dream that left me shaking and near tears. 

As the dream began, it was almost like Con Air, where through no fault of his own, the good guy was was involved in an incident that resulted in a death.  It was unintended but he was still the the cause of someone’s life ending and so he was sentenced to a term in prison.  My dream started in a similar way, but the good guy was a grown up version of my 6 year old son.  Instead of waiting to go to prison, grown up boy-child fled.  I knew that bounty hunters were looking for him, so I set out to find him first.  

I found boy-child in our fictional country hut, minutes before the bounty hunters arrived.  He made me promise not to turn him in when they came knocking at the door.  I answered the door.  I couldn’t tell them where he was, but I also couldn’t deny that he wasn’t there.  They began to push past me, to get into the old hut.  I ran inside and grabbed boy-child into a huge hug.  I couldn’t let him go.  I held him tight, declaring my love for him, re-affirming that I would always be here for him.  

I awoke as my son was being taken from me.  I lay in bed, to afraid to go upstairs and check on boy-child.  Instead I lay there begging that this was only a dream and would never come true.  Thinking about my nightmare, and writing about it still brings me to tears. Thankfully, boy-child is still my beautiful boy-child and is now playing upstairs with friends. 

Categories: all about me
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