Saturday, January 11, 2014

Less Quick Stop November: The hardest month of the year/ my life


Warning: This will get into the grimy details, so if you can't take throw-up and poop just stop here. And know that I respect so deeply those that work in the medical world, so if any of this looks like they are put in a bad light, I am sorry. 

This month started out with a horrible case of Croup. Both kids got it and I thought there could be nothing worse than hearing them wheeze for each breath and cough constantly and violently through the night. It was so hard. I held them so tight. And then it was over. 

Then Jadyn started getting sick again. It started with diarrhea. Then one night she woke up covered in vomit. This was a new thing I could check off my Mothering List. I have never smelled anything so horrible, and it was so hard to clean up and scrape out of her hair. I took her to the doctor the next day and he said it was the stomach flu and it would run its course. And then she seemed to get better. 

Then she woke up almost drowning in vomit. And I cleaned the horribleness again, and let her sleep with us that night. And so it continued. A few days she would be completely normal and seemingly healthy, then another night of vomit and another day of diarrhea. By the time we were to leave for Arizona for Jace's bike race and Thanksgiving I was CERTAIN she was better.

The whole way there she had fits of screaming to stop to go to the bathroom (she was potty trained). So we stopped and stopped until finally I gave up and put a diaper on her and told her it was ok to go in her diaper (I know, stupid). The next stop I pulled her out of her carseat to discover she was covered in her own soil. COVERED. The poor girl just let it happen and took it like a real champ. We got to my sister in law's very late and tried to sleep. Jadyn just couldn't fall asleep. She would scream out in pain about her stomach. I fell asleep holding her on the couch. The next morning I took her to the bathroom and she threw up all over the floor. I was beside myself. I had taken a very sick kid into a house with a newborn and another toddler. Jenedy and I kept our kids at a distance the best we could all day, but it was no use so Jace and I headed up to his mom's house. 

And then she seemed fine again...and then she thew up again....and the diarrea became nothing but liquid. It seemed like there was no substance to it. She stopped eating. She barely drank anything. The morning of my birthday (day before Thanksgiving) she couldn't move from her bed. Seeing her so lifeless felt like nothing I could really describe. I wanted her pain. I wanted to take it all away. The more drained she seemed, the more life that was sucked out of me. 

We took her to a small clinic nearby. They said she would need to go to the Urgent Care because she needed an IV and they were not authorized to do so. We got to the UC and they put an IV in. That part in and of itself nearly killed me. Pinning her down while she whimpered in pain and confusion drew my first set of tears that day. Finally, we were told she would need to go to the hospital. You are not allowed to drive your child yourself when they have an IV, so she had to ride in an ambulance with Jace. We figured it was worth the trouble so she would not have to endure another needle. I followed behind after picking up some things at the house. This time it was Jace that broke down. For the hour or more I wasn't at the hospital with him, he was bombarded with questions that he didn't know the answer to (medical history, diet, cycle of her sickness). You don't realize just how completely involved you are in your child's life until someone quizzes you on everything. Not his fault, I am just there way more, obviously. 

She needed to spend the night so they could monitor her, but she seemed to be improving. Once she was asleep, Jace ran down to the cafeteria and grabbed some dinner and some sort of dessert. He pulled out the iPad and we had my birthday "dinner and a movie". Around 2am, the nurse came in to check her vitals and knocked the IV out. She knocked out what we had gone through so much trouble to keep in! I would have let it slide, if she had apologized....but no...it went something like "Ooops, someone didn't put that in good. You're going to have to wake her up so I can get one in again." I am sure a little steam came out of my ears. After all she had been through today, I now had to awaken her from her much needed sleep and force her to go through more pain. I pulled her into my lap and held her tight while they tried, and tried and tried again. This was the first of only a handful of times I've seen my husband ask me to be the stronger one. They said she was too dehydrated to get a needle back in. Two hours later there were about six nurses in the room, each giving a try and adding a bruise to her little arms. I didn't know what I was supposed to do. I realized my perspective on the medical world had been skewed. I assumed they would always do the right thing and I would never have to question it. But this was MY daughter. And they were pushing her past her limits. They weren't even being kind to her. They yelled and said "We have to do this, Jadyn!" She was covered in sweat, I was drenched in tears. Through her panting and wailing, she still noticed her mother's sadness. She put her black and blue arm on mine and said "Mommy, we're gonna be ok." Finally I snapped out of my helplessness and said something to the effect of "Don't talk to her like that, YOU just woke her up in the middle of the night and started attacking her!" And then another realization, "She has been peeing all day! Does she really need this?" They ran to ask the doctor. The doctor said if she drank enough we wouldn't need to stick her for the seventh time. When I told her she wouldn't have to be poked again if she drank a glass of water she chugged it.

The next day she was discharged. I felt like a had just finished a race, (which is funny because I missed the race my sister-in-law and I were supposed to run together that morning). I wore my imaginary badge of honor proudly all through Thanksgiving. We went out and shopped black friday in the middle of the night. I laughed at how crazy my MIL gets when she's super tired. I felt so much relief. Jendedy (Sister in Law) and I went out again later that day to shop some more. My mother in law called a few hours later with an overwhelming amount of concern. Jadyn was still sick. In fact, she was even more sick than before. Her stomach had doubled in size and was as hard as a rock. She was rushed to the ER.  It was concluded that she had an ileus. This is when the intestines endure enough stress (from a flu or parasite) that they stop contracting completely. She had a blockage because of it. At this time, I really don't know whether I loved my smart phone or loathed it. I tortured myself looking up the possibilities. Surgery was a possibility. DEATH was a possibility. She got an x-ray and an ultrasound but the results took 10 hours to get back to us. We just sat there in that icy cold emergency room, on the busiest day of the year and waited, with a prayer continually looping in my mind to spare my child. I know the rarity of the worst happening with an ileus, but when you sit in a hospital, take in all the frantic chaos around you, and see your daughter completely lifeless sitting on a bed much too big for her little body...well...you just can't help but think the worst is always a possibility. In fact, I had experienced the worst vicarously through Jace's sister and her husband the year previous with their Victory Morgan. When I had been at the house earlier that day to grab things to bring to the hospital I felt it all in one hug. I told Victor (Brother in Law) what was going on. He had been a little distanced this whole time and for good reason. Hospitals were a bitter place for him. But when I told him I didn't know how to handle this, he grabbed me and hugged me. I felt all his pain from losing his precious son. In that instant he gave me the most tender gift: empathy. I knew losing your child was not just something you see in the movies. This reality haunts me often. 

Finally, they came back with the results. The doctor working with us was not a pediatric doctor, but she was one of my very favorite people that day. She worked her tail off chasing down specialists and pediatricians in the ER as they moved between other patients. She admitted her humble knowledge on Jady's case, but did not let that stop her. She told us every piece of information she could. But the most important was that she was going to be ok. It was not fatal. Oh how I sobbed when I heard this. I kissed Jadyn all over. We were so far from out of the woods, but I could stop overdramatizing the situation. 

So the waiting game began. We moved back upstairs to the Pediatric floor and settled in to see what her body would do next. The hope was that things would just move naturally with the help of fluids being pumped into her IV. Oh, right...the IV again. We have learned that her veins are not the easiest. In fact, it was a miracle they got her first one in so easily. There was much more pinning down and deep deep prayers that they would be able to get it in. The IV made it in eventually. My Mother in Law brought my Jaxon (6 months old) to visit and for me to finally feed him. I feel so blessed that we happened to be visiting family when this all happened. I don't know how I could have taken care of my baby and stayed with Jadyn the whole time. I managed to pump enough to keep him fed while being away from him practically the whole time. 

We were there a week. She endured not one, but TWO enemas. The second one was so hard to watch. The sounds she made reminded me of the ones I made while giving birth. It would hit me hard a couple times a day that she was only two and she was going through more pain than I have my whole like. She was prodded and poked often throughout the day as the doctors tried to figure out the cause of this mess. So many blood samples, urine samples, stool samples (yuck). In the beginning of the week she would scream whenever a nurse entered the room, bracing herself for the inevitable pain to be brought. By the end of the week she barely even looked up. Seeing her lose her fight was harder for me to see. During a particularly hard day, when she just hurt all over, she asked me to pray and ask Heavenly Father to take the pain away. Ouch, my heart. Two things I drew from this. One: She had enough faith that Heavenly Father could do this and Two: She had enough faith in ME that I could ask him. I struggled with how to explain that although God can, it doesn't mean he will. Though you better believe I prayed and pleaded that her sweet prayer would be answered. 

She had to stay off solids until the blockage was gone so for 4 days my little girl only had apple juice. We tried offering jello, broth, water... but no matter how bad she was hurting she was still fiercely as stubborn as ever (I wonder where she gets that from). Jace and I would sneak down to the cafeteria and eat when she fell asleep. Jace continually had to remind me that I COULD eat and I HAD to eat to be strong for her and be able to keep producing milk for Jaxon. How I love that man and his ability to give me courage. I felt so incredibly guilty. She'd say things like "Mommy, I'm so hungry. When can I have food?" And the dagger in my heart would twist. I decided to taste the broth they were offering her and realized it was totally disgusting. So I asked if they would use less water. And the clouds parted and she loved the broth. She loved it so much that she pushed the spoon away and said "Mamma get me a straw!" Then I laughed and couldn't stop. She just kept licking her lips and grunting in approval. "This is like food!""This is so good" "This is the best food I've ever eaten."....Jace and I just laughed and cried (so much crying). 

Then just like that she was better, unhooked and playing. We strutted out of that hospital like we had just won a million dollars. I passed babies that were much more sick and kids that had been there for months and I knew that I really had won the prize. I really feel like Jace and I passed some course in Advanced Parenting after this. It was the hardest thing I've ever had to go through hands down. Harder than break-ups. Harder than being made fun of. Harder than child birth. Because it was my daughter. It ripped me apart, which made the triumph so sweet. It changed me as a mother. I am sure I will always see Jady as my little girl, but I hold a certain respect for her that I didn't have before. 

I am so grateful for good nurses, 
For doctors that never stop researching,
For PBS (we watched A LOT of TV),
For priesthood blessings, 
For family that takes the burden when you cannot, 
For songs that comfort, 
For friends that show their true colors when I need them the most,
For the chance to be this girl's mom, 
And that she is here with me today. 







Monday, September 2, 2013

Doing our story justice.

Well hey. It's been almost a year. I can remember exactly when I stopped blogging. It was when Jady was in the hospital. I started typing up that story and just haven't been able to relive it, though this is technically my journal that y'all get to look at so as painful as that experience was I am going to finish writing it this week.

But that's not what I'm writing about today. I told someone the story of Jace and I a day or so ago and it has been festering with me, because I told it wrong. I might be a little obsessive compulsive, but our story is such a strength to me and a testimony of the presence of God in our lives that I just can't let it go until I do the story justice. It is broken down into events that seemed coincidental at the time, but are the reason we are together.  This time I'll focus on the right details. This is the story I'll tell my kids:

Moving to Colorado
In the middle of my junior year in high school my parents informed me that we were moving to Colorado. I was so pissed! I had a very serious boyfriend, my friends, my beach. I hated the very thought of it. Soon after I broke up with that boyfriend. I lived down the street from my cousin, one of my best friends now. And I didn't know then that Jace lived an hour away from me.

Meeting at the right time in the right way
I had the chance to meet Jace sooner than I did. My cousin was going on a date with one of his friends and wanted me to double with them. Bradley (his friend) told me about two friends that he could bring for my date. I didn't choose Jace. And the date didn't work out. I know now that if I had met Jace then we may not be together now. Instead, I found him later on MySpace and we learned everything about each other before we met. We needed to because our first impressions were less than awesome. When I met him in person Jace had crazy curly hair down past his shoulders. He said he wasn't going to college, but was going to be a pro snowboarder. And that's all I would have seen if I didn't know how smart he was, how much he adored his family and how good his heart was. When Jace met me in person he saw a very young girl. He's only a year and a half older than me, but I'm small. And that's all he would have seen if he didn't know my maturity and how "quarky" I was (direct quote from him). So we kept dating in spite of what we looked like at first.

Pivotal Mistakes
I told too much of this part of the story before. When in truth, I have nothing to do with that girl now. The second I went through the temple that was all washed away and I came out a different person. But I had made some very big mistakes that I could not take back just before dating Jace. I hope my children do not have the same philosophy I did as a teenager: "Try it out first to see if it's bad." I could have gotten to a transitional stage in a much healthier way, but the mistakes that stacked on top of each other was the way I chose. And it made me look back and see a mess that I didn't want. Jace also had "skeleton's in the closet" and had felt a desire to change too. So when we met we were not where we wanted to be, but we were on our way. We never really said it out loud to each other, but just changed.

Ward Missionaries
Around the time we started dating, my bishop decided to try something new. He called my entire family to be ward missionaries. Usually this calling is given to an individual or a couple. One of the main responsibilities is to support what I guess I'll call the proselyting Missionaries (these are young men and women that chose to be sent to an area for two years and do nothing but share the gospel). We would often sit in on discussions with people investigating the church. One night Jace and I wanted to go out on a date, but my mom said we had a discussion to go to so the only way we could go out was if Jace came with us to the discussion first. Jace was not planning on going on a mission. (It is pretty custom in our church for all boys to go on a mission when they turn 19, now the age is 18). I was a little uncomfortable with this idea, but Jace agreed. During the discussion something miraculous happened. Jace began baring his testimony. He continued to carry the rest of the discussion. And suddenly both of us had something we wanted to share with these people thinking about getting baptized. In the car ride home, Jace said he may have a desire to go on a mission now.

A Mother's Intuition
Rewinding a little...On our third date, Jace and I stayed out till 2am. My parents were furious. My mother actually said I would "never see him again". I argued that she was 100% wrong about him. That he was the most respectful boyfriend I'd ever had. And he proved me right. He called me that night and asked to talk to my mom. Both of us were pretty surprised as my mom sat and listened to him tell her that he had made a mistake. She had put her precious daughter in his care and he did not take good care of her. He promised her it would never happen again. My mom was speechless and obviously impressed, so the grounding moved from forever to two weeks. In those two weeks he wrote me my first song (one of many). We reached our first monumental feeling: missing each other. When we were reunited, he went on that missionary discussion and soon after we had The Talk of All Talks. We were on the phone very late at night when he told me he loved me, and I told him I loved him back. My mom had her hand on my door knob, ready to tell me to get off the phone when she felt impressed to let it go and go to bed. I am so grateful she listened to that prompting. We talked about getting married. And then he said that couldn't happen until he went on a mission. He wanted to give me what his father gave his mom. I promised him I loved him no matter what. I would marry him if he stayed or went. His mom thanks me for that comment now, because she knew of her son's need to have choices which was exactly what I was giving him. Both of our mothers had been praying a great deal for us. Today, our moms are best friends.

Standing on Our Own Two Feet
While prepping for his mission, Jace and I were such a power house. I had strong convictions in my religion again. We read scriptures together, went to church together, and whenever we felt our pure relationship slip we would drop to our knees and pray to be better. I was immovable. And then he went on his mission. Both of us had not known just how much leaning we were doing on each other. I fell fast and hard. I got a job at Zumiez as an assistant manager because it was Jace's favorite store. I had no direction, but his. And then I tried to pick myself up on my own and fell again, and again and again. I put Jace through hell with my letters. Months before his arrival I finally figured it out. I continued to try to find my testimony in someone else. I needed to mend one very important relationship before Jace came home: the relationship I had with my Savior, Jesus Christ. So I learned of him. I read my scriptures often. The only thing I would allow myself to listen to in the car were gospel talks and gospel music. I sucked out all the poison I could find. The last month I spent in Europe with my best friend. Thank heavens for Haley Edmunds who was my constant companion for that last little stretch. She helped me keep the spirit close by.

And then he was home. He wasn't set apart immediately which meant as a missionary he couldn't even hug me. So he gave me a thimble (if you've ever seen "Hook" that means a kiss). A month later he took me back to his mission and I met the people he had touched. And they knew allllll about me. Under a gazebo overlooking the lake in Wisconsin (his mission) he played his guitar and sang all the songs he wrote me. I just watched him and cried because I knew we had made it, finally! It started to rain so he put an ear bud in my ear and we danced in the rain to music from his ipod (the modern day way of dancing in the rain). And then he asked if he could have me forever.

And that's our story. 5 years later and I still get butterflies when he comes home from work. I still love that shaggy snowboarder I met 8 years ago.

Friday, January 18, 2013

Quick Stop October: 5 Mos


Halloween was a blast this year with Jadyn. She was soooo into it. We must have practiced trick-or treating that whole month. Sandwich bags, purses, groccery bags, gift bags...you name it...she held it out to me and said "trick-or-treat!" over and over and over again until I relented and gave her a treat. She loved going out with all the neighborhood kids on the actual night. She refused to stop to the point that her little bucket was dragging along her side because of the abundance of candy.

Jace and I were Batman and Catwoman. We were pretty awesome and I wanted a picture, but somehow I misplaced my mask once I went to look for the camera. I suppose the world was not ready for us to reveal our identity. 



And we had the first snow!


Quick Stop September: 4 mos

Well look there. I died in the bloggosphere. Just poof!

Apparently I am a woman of habit because the exact same thing happened last year.

And again, I will have to speed through these months I have missed so I can get to where I remember things again. Here's a quick look at September...







Thursday, November 8, 2012

Day 97-100: Anniversary Trip

For our anniversary we took a family trip to Estes Park, the very same Estes Park where we spent our honeymoon. Instead of our cushy bed and breakfast suite, this time we camped...with two kids. It was awesome. Jadyn got overwhelmed with happiness throughout the day when she noticed we still weren't going inside. We ended up with both kids in our sleeping bag each night so we may have looked a little less than desirable half the time, but that's the beauty of marriage. Ya love each other anyways! We hiked, napped, made delicious dutch oven dinners...and it was long enough that we were ready to go home after three days.
By the way, next year we are doing a trip ALONE. 

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Day 96: Camping Practice

For our anniversary this year, we decided to take the kids on a camping trip in Rocky Mountain National forest, then spend some time in Estes Park. We had our honeymoon in Estes. Jadyn was so excited about the trip, she wanted to practice sleeping in a tent. So she did. She slept in her little tent the entire week before. She also wanted Jaxon to get some good practice in.


Day 95: Jadyn teaches Jaxon a song

Day 94: Cowgirl Boots

Couldn't resist.