Archive for December, 2008

Gone

This is the first young friend I have lost in my life.  I have lost young acquaintances to tragic deaths, but never somebody this close.  I hesitated to write about this, but it has affected me profoundly.

(The names of the family involved are being “blinded” by using only initials for the sake of privacy.)  Monday, December 15 was a pretty average day.  Brandon and I were sitting on the couch watching something we had recorded on the DVR.  I heard my cell phone ringing in the bedroom, noticed it was 11pm and figured it was a wrong number.  It rang again 2 minutes later.  I ran into the bedroom to see who was calling.  It was our very good friend Clay.  I picked up and his voice was ragged and shaky.  He said, “Lori, we’re pulling up to your place right now.  I need  you to send Brandon out.  I need him.  There is no easy way to tell you this, but R killed herself tonight.”

I scarcely remember telling Clay that Brandon would be right down and sobbing “Oh my god” over and over while I hung up.  I stumbled into the living room and told Brandon he needed to go outside right now and that R had killed herself.

Clay, his wife Linda, and Brandon drove over to their house to be with R’s husband S.  I stayed here with Aidan since he was sound asleep.  I just stood in the living room and sobbed not knowing what had happened and just that my friend was gone.

Clay and Linda, S and R, and Brandon and I were all friends.  We had known each other as couples for over 7 years now.  S and R had their son N in December 2006.  Aidan and N played together whenever we all got together.  R was just 33 years old.

My mind was reeling.  When had I last talked to her?  A week or so ago.  Had she seemed depressed?  No.  What on earth had happened?

Brandon called a couple of hours later to let me know what was going on.  He would probably stay the night and help S with N and all of the stuff that was going on.  It turns out R hung herself.  S walked in to find her.  He tried CPR to no avail.  She was already gone.  Their sweet little son N walked in at some point and did witness S trying to revive R.  I worry so much that N will have a memory of that moment.

Aidan and I went over the next day.  He and N played happily and kept N busy while there were dozens of friends and family coming and going through the house.  When I saw S, I walked over to him and put my arms around him.  He fell against me and began sobbing.  I have never felt so powerless to comfort somebody before.  I just told him that we love him and his son and we will do whatever we can for them.

The next few days saw Brandon spending a good bit of time over there helping to organize things and Aidan and I coming over to play with N and just be there.

R’s funeral was that Friday.  The casket was open prior to her being cremated.  We all got to pay our final respects to her and see her one last time.  Brandon went down early with the family and I stayed with Aidan and N and played.  S felt that N was too young for it and didn’t want the last memory of his mom to be her in a coffin.   The boys and I played happily.  We played trains and tackle Lori.  They loved that one.  Aidan seemed to sense that N needed his friendship in a different way than normal.  He kept extending his hand to N and saying, “Come on, N, let’s go play.”  And then he would lead  him to another activity…almost like a big brother.  He seemed to be very happy to have a young playmate.  But about every 15 minutes or so, N would climb into my lap, straddle his legs around my waist and give me a hug.  Then he would run both his hands through my hair and I remembered that he used to do that to his mom.  I felt like my heart would break. 

Then Brandon came back and played with the boys while I went to the main service.  He played with them and fed them lunch and then brought them both to the lunch after the service.

R didn’t really look like herself in the casket.  She is Indian and had the most beautiful eyes I have ever seen.  She had a gorgeous wide smile and an infectious laugh.  I was looking at her with her eyes closed and the vivacious personality that ignited the smile and laugh were gone.  I whispered to her that I promised I will watch after her son and that I will miss her terribly.

The service was a Hindu service and the lengthiest I have ever been to.  It was difficult to watch S saying goodbye to his young wife. 

I am filled with questions, sadness, and lots of other emotions.  I so wish she would have felt like she could have said something to somebody.  Why didn’t any of us pick up on this level of depression?  I vacillate between feeling empathy and anger.  Empathy for somebody who could feel so hopeless that they could leave their 2 year old boy behind.  And anger at her for leaving her husband and son to pick up the pieces.  I realize these are all part of the natural grieving process.

The thing that is the hardest of all to wrap my mind around right now is that I will never see her again.  We will never talk about our boys (our little ones or our “grown up” ones).  We will never have dinner again.  I will never see those beautiful eyes or hear that contagious laugh.  How long does it take to wrap your mind around somebody being gone forever? 

How to make Daddy get teary eyed

Aidan,

You have an amazing ability to bring out emotion in your father.  I wanted to write this down so that we never forget it.  One night last week when your Daddy came home from work, you ran to him smiling as you always do.  Then you said, “Welcome to home Daddy!”

Daddy scooped you up and gave you a huge hug and it was then that I spotted the evidence of the effect you have so often on him.  He was smiling and there was “sand in his eye.”  :-)

We love you little man.  You continue to delight and amaze us.

Here are some pictures from early festivities of Christmas 2008. You are so enchanted with everything that is going on. Understanding who Santa is, making cookies and gingerbread, going out in the snow….you are loving it all. The Christmas gift you are getting is so big that we really had to have you open part of it early. We are going to Portland to see family for Christmas and we can’t transport it all. Hint to those looking at pictures….what might go ON a brand new train table? :-) You already have a small Thomas starter set and you have asked Santa and Mommy and Dad for a big Thomas set. So we shall see my little man.

Here you are putting the table together with Daddy.

First part of my Christmas presentPutting together my train tableBuilding my first track on the new table

And here is our first attempt at a gingerbread house. We did pretty good!

Starting our first gingerbread houseDecorating the gingerbread manMe and mommy working on the gingerbread houseOur creationThat didn't last long!

I love seeing the magic of Christmas through your eyes, Aidan. Thank you for this most precious gift. This is my best Christmas ever.

Happy “Gotcha” Day Aidan!

3 years ago, we brought you home to us.  We were filled with anticipation and excitement and a healthy dose of fear.  You seemed at home right away.

We are all sad and happy at the same timeOn my way homeDaddy carrying me in the houseMommy has her boy home

And look at you 3 years later. You amaze us literally every single day. Even if you do scare Mommy to death sometimes (check out the video at the end of the post…I think we might be in for a few broken bones in years to come!).

Stealing Dad's coffeeIs that what I think it isWho....meI love his silly facesGotta make sure I get under the bed

Old wounds

I almost hesitate to write this post.  Why?  Because I am mostly over this stuff.  Aidan is a thriving, active, intelligent, curious, healthy 3 year old boy.  Yet it is still possible to be brought back to the difficult feelings of the NICU and his first year or so in a heartbeat.

It happened while on the phone with a friend yesterday.  Her daughter is almost 6 months old now.  I was commenting about how much I am loving age 3 and how much more freedom I finally have.  I said, “Yeah, the baby stage was just not my favorite.”

She replied with an almost tangible indignance in her voice.  She told me that she LOVES her daughter’s infancy and she has PLENTY of freedom.  I swallowed hard and tried just to move along.  But I couldn’t.  I had this idea in my head that I was being judged for what I just said.  Judged for saying I didn’t love the baby stage.  I started my reply.  Lots was going through my head and only some of it came out of my mouth (at least I have learned something!).

I told her that I might not have felt that way if we had had ANY help during Aidan’s infancy.  We have NO family here and our friends didn’t/couldn’t do much to help us.  So for Aidan’s first year we had very, very few breaks.  I reminded my friend that her parents live a few miles from her and will take her daughter absolutely whenever she asks.  I continued by saying that she also has a full term healthy daughter, while we had just taken home a perilously premature baby on home oxygen and with a saturation and apnea monitor.  I reminded her of my “Summer of Puke” and how hard it is to enjoy a 6 month old who is battling such food aversions that he vomits on you 4-6 times a day. 

I didn’t even get into all we battled the first couple of years, but when I look back on it, sometimes I am surprised we made it.  That our sanity held.  That we managed to remain married while things were so hard.  So just for a moment I am going to allow myself to remember all we managed to make it through.  Bear with me.

Early subchorionic hemorrhage during week 7.  Bad quad screen during week 16 of pregnancy.  21 week ultrasound reveals severe IUGR.  Amniocentesis comes back with 46XY baby.  Preeclampsia hits at the beginning of week 24.  Baby doesn’t even weigh a pound yet.  Prognosis is grim.  Strict bedrest at home.  Week 26 sees blood pressures no longer controlled at home and I am admitted to the antepartum ward for worsening preeclampsia.  Each day we are subjected to ultrasounds that decide the fate of whether or not I am allowed to carry the baby for another day.  27w 6d.  Severe Class I HELLP syndrome.  Liver threatening rupture.  Platelets nearly nonexistent.  Aidan is starting to show some signs of distress.  Emergency cesarean.  Aidan weighs 1lb 8oz and is 12 inches long.

7 weeks on a ventilator.  Bronchopulmonary dysplasia develops sentencing Aidan to scarred lungs.  We are fortunate and do not experience brain bleeds or sepsis while in the NICU.  We spend 105 days going to and from the hospital until we can finally take him home. 

Aidan comes home on December 12, 2005.  We are happy but scared shitless.  He has home oxygen (not that big a deal once you know what you are doing).  But the saturation monitor is another thing entirely.  He needs to have it on, especially while sleeping to let us know if he needs his oxygen turned up.  Lots of false alarms and almost no sleep for Brandon or me.  December 25 sees us back in the ER and Aidan has viral pneumonia.  We didn’t even make it 2 weeks at home before something happened.

January 2, 2006 is a night that neither Brandon nor I ever want to relive.  Aidan was happily eating a bottle and for whatever reason, he aspirated.  He choked a little and vomited.  Brandon laid him on his stomach while he grabbed for a spit rag.  I looked over and noticed Aidan seemed a little blue.  I said, “Brandon, is he breathing?” 

Brandon looked and never even replied.  He grabbed Aidan, did back thrusts and then turned him over and gave him breaths.  I am not sure I have ever been more scared in my life.  I called 911 and I kept saying out loud, to myself, “NO! NO!  Not now!  Not after we went through all this!  If you were going to take him, you should have taken him while he was in the NICU.”

Brandon flipped him over one more time to do the back thrusts and I was on the phone with 911.  Aidan started crying.  Brandon had him breathing in well less than a minute.  The 911 operator sent the paramedics to check him out.  The paramedics looked him over thoroughly, felt reassured that we had a monitor, and told my husband, “Good job Dad.”

The winter and spring were lonely.  The RSV risk was so high we didn’t dare expose Aidan to germs with his fragile lungs.  We spent those times in relative isolation.  In the spring, Aidan came off his oxygen and we started solid foods.  He must have had body memory of that ventilator tube, because he developed a HUGE oral aversion at that time.  I spent most of the summer learning what I could/could not do when it came to food with Aidan.  And I spent most of the summer cleaning up vomit.  Finally around his first birthday, I talked to his pediatrician and said I thought he needed feeding therapy.  He agreed and we started.  Gratefully, it did wonders and we have not had behavioral or sensory vomiting in a very long time.  Probably almost a year and a half. 

That January, Aidan had to have a minor urological surgery.  We had no idea what was about to happen.  About a month later, Aidan got VERY sick.  Fevers of 105+ for a few days at a time.  The night I knew something was really wrong, we were in bed with him and he woke up suddenly and vomited bile.  He was lethargic and we both knew a trip to the ER was our next step.  The ER doc ran all the expected tests.  He did a chest xray, urine sample, and drew blood (just in case, he said).  Well, somehow the lab lost the urine sample, but the chest xray was clean and we needed to wait on the results of the blood culture just in case.  I think we went home with antibiotics and he had been rehydrated while in the ER.  He was tired and listless the next day, but did better.  The following morning, my pediatrician called me and asked me where I was.  I told him I was at home.  He informed me that Aidan’s blood culture showed Enterococcus growing in his blood.  Aidan had sepsis.  This was deadly serious.  I needed to get to the hospital right away.  The doctor had already called and done the preadmission over the phone.

Aidan  spent the next two weeks in the hospital on IV gentamicin and ampicillin.  I had a nagging feeling that this somehow had something to do with the surgery the prior month, so I called the doctor who had done the surgery and explained my theory.  He told me that we could set Aidan up for a VCUG.  This test shows the dynamics of the kidneys, ureters, and bladder and would show if a bladder/kidney infection had been the source of the sepsis.

The test was conclusive.  Aidan’s left ureter had mild reflux allowing urine from the bladder to travel back up mildly into the kidney.  Not normally a problem when the urine is sterile, as it normally is, but a huge problem when you have a urinary tract infection.  Aidan likely got the UTI after surgery and it travelled to his kidney where it went into the blood and he became septic.

The condition was called VUR and occurs in about 5% of kids.  The angle of insertion of one or both of the ureters into the kidney allows for the flap to allow backflow into the ureter and up to the kidney.  We could wait for Aidan to outgrow this (at about age 5or 6) or do a minimally invasive procedure where a bulking agent called Deflux is injected into the bladder wall to bulk up the area near the valve and prevent it from backflowing.  We chose this.  As a result of the kidney infection that moved to sepsis, Aidan’s left kidney was scarred minimally.  Gratefully his right kidney is measuring a bit larger than average so it seems as if his body is compensating.  His left kidney is still slightly smaller than his right, but it is growing on the same trajectory as the right one, so the doctors believe he will be just fine.  Even still, we need to have kidney ultrasounds every couple of years to be sure.

Meanwhile, Aidan was sleeping poorly.  When in our bed with us, I noticed he seemed to sometimes pause for several seconds, and then almost gasp a bit when he took his next breath.  It sounded a bit like sleep apnea to me and I asked his pediatrician about it.  He referred me to an ENT who told me his tonsils and adenoids were big but not huge and she would want a sleep study to confirm apnea prior to feeling ok about surgically removing tonsils and adenoids from a 1 1/2 year old.  We went for the sleep study.  The results were horrendous.  Aidan had 54 obstructive apneas in 7 hours of sleep.  During REM sleep, he had an arousal almost every other minute.  The theory was that many former preemies have some transient low tone in their trunk.  When we sleep, all our muscles relax, including the ones that hold our airway open.  So in a sleeping, former preemie with borderline tonsils/adenoids, there was a “perfect storm” being created for obstructive apneas.  His tonsils and adenoids came out the following month.  He slept like a different kid.

At this point, Aidan had gotten pretty healthy.  He was about 1 1/2 years old adjusted age. 

Even reading through this sounds overwhelming now.  I can’t quite believe we went through all that in such a short period of time.  We also spent the first couple of years worried about his developmental milestones.  He managed to reach them all on time, but it doesn’t stop a preemie parent from wondering if it will happen.  Instead of joyfully watching your child sit for the first time, or roll for the first time, a preemie parent wipes their brow and thinks “Phew!  He managed to do that one on time.  What’s next?” 

So to bring you full circle, perhaps you might understand why the comments of my friend hit a nerve.  It isn’t as though I didn’t love Aidan and didn’t WANT to enjoy his infancy.  I just couldn’t.  It is hard to enjoy anything when you are living through that much fear. 

As we celebrate bringing him home to us 3 years ago today, I mostly don’t think about that stuff.  I mostly live in the here and now.  The now of  a precocious 3 year old boy who is giving us a run for our money.  He is bright.  He is funny.  He is joyful.  He is loving.  But it took a lot to get us here.  And while I don’t think of the hard times very often anymore, they will always be there with us.  They are part of our experience as parents.  They played a part in shaping who we are today.  The way we navigated them (I believe) speaks highly of us as a family. 

The sting of prematurity never fully goes away.  But gratefully I can say that it does fade into the distance a bit.

Mommy got served

Have I mentioned that I think Aidan is pretty smart?  There are a ton of reasons, but at the top of the list lately is probably his sense of humor. 

Funny story…Saturday night the family walked down to the Mercer Island Fire Station for the annual Mercer Island Christmas tree lighting and community gathering.  They were going to light the tree in Mercerdale Park and the firefighters were going to be showing the trucks to kids.  Christmas goodies and hot drinks to be served.  Except…

That Mom got the night wrong!  Don’t ask me why on earth I thought the 5th was a Saturday and not a Friday.  But I blame it entirely on Mommybrain.  Does that give me a pass? :-)

On the way home, I suggested we stop at the Starbucks and get Aidan a hot chocolate.  We sat inside by the fire and he thoroughly enjoyed it.  During one sip, he began doing the swishing thing that kids like to do with drinks sometimes.  I told him politely to swallow it.  He smiled devilishly at me and kept swishing.  I said, “Aidan this is NOT a game!  Swallow it.”

He smiled again and Brandon told him to do what Mommy said.  So Aidan swallowed the cocoa and dealt out the following gem.

“Mommy, it IS a game.”  And he smiled ear to ear. 

Brandon looked at me and simply said, “Mommy, you got served!”

A visit with Santa

This is really the first year that Aidan seems to have a grasp on what Santa is really all about.  We have been reading him stories.  He has watched Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer and Frosty the Snowman.  He has a pretty good grasp on the fact that Santa brings good little boys and girls presents on Christmas. 

We took him to see Santa this evening.  He was quite excited.  He actually told Santa a little joke and then told him very clearly that he wanted a train set for Christmas.  I have been looking at Thomas sets and I feel broke just looking at them :-)   He was pretty happy to be sitting up on Santa’s lap.

Then after we left Santa Claus he seemed upset and told us “I’m sad.”  It turns out that Aidan thought that he went to Santa, told him what he wanted for Christmas, and then Santa would give it to him.  Poor little guy.  So we re-explained that Santa has to go make the toys and that he delivers them while boys and girls are sleeping on Christmas Eve. 

It is so cute to see him really getting into the Christmas stuff this year.  He LOVES snowmen and everything he thinks of that he might want he says to us, “Maybe I can get that for Christmas.”

I found the picture we had taken two years ago on my hard drive, and thought it would be cute to post today’s picture beside the one from two years ago to see just how much he has grown!  It almost takes our breath away…well…in truth, it does take our breath away.

I love seeing Christmas through the eyes of my son.  It is the best gift I could possibly get this year. 

Aidan and Santa Christmas 2008Aidan meets Santa