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The Recovery.

The Jetlag if you will.

The inevitable fallout that happens after spending a few weeks in the hospital.

Fallout for Kendall, fallout for me, fallout for all of us. We need to re-enter “normal life”, but normal life often involves an increase in the complexity or care of Kendall and her needs, which means there’s a lot less actual time in which to pretend like we are back to normal.

I don’t usually like to focus on the “hard” part of our lives. I hate feeling like i’m complaining, because in actuality, i try really hard not to.  I try to not get mired down in the “woe is me” or “woe is us” dumps.  I try to not play the comparison game, and I try to not ever take a minute of my “hard” life for granted because I know there are so many who would gladly give up nights of sleep and take the boxes of bliss back if it meant they got to hold their baby’s hand one more time. This is the reality of the life I live – knowing that as hard as life is many days, as many things as i WANT to whine and complain about – I know at the end of the day, that the fact that we are all still HERE and still alive is the biggest blessing of all. This is not a lesson I take lightly.

But even knowing that – sometimes it is still hard to walk in these shoes.
And today, for some reason, I just had a lot that I wanted to get off my chest.

It was hot today. A beautiful preview of summer to come.
And of course, Kendall couldn’t handle it.
And really, I hate overusing that term “she crashed”.  If I’m honest, I hate seeing other people use and abuse that term. I know that “crashes” look different for each person, and that what I’ve seen and witnessed in my child is probably far more than most people will ever have to watch their child endure during a “crash”. (I told you – i’m just getting it all out here today!) Anyways – while she didn’t have what I would consider a “crash”, she definitely had a horrible day.  Which led to her nurse having a bad day, and then making me feel like a horrible parent, and left me feeling helpless and angry and sad all at once. And maybe this was because I was already trying to deal with my own emotional fallout and so the timing of everything was just really crappy.

But i had a few times today where I just wanted to bury my head in my arms and just cry. For no good reason really – just blogrecovery1let the tears flow because it seemed like the right thing to do. (Have i ever mentioned how much i REALLY hate to cry?? It’s just not cute. It serves no purpose except making my eyes puffy and my sinuses swollen.)
I was sad to see Kendall wanting SO BADLY to just be a normal kid and go to school.

I mean, my gosh, today was her last day of KINDERGARTEN. I have a big first grader now.  She did it! She learned most of her letters and all of her numbers and she can count to 100 (almost – she gets stuck on 60 and kind of loops back around to 40’s and then throws a few teens back in but you can get her on track and she can do it!) and she knows her colors and most of her shapes and wow….she actually learned to SIT and to not yell at her teacher and to not throw markers at other kids and in spite of having TWO horrible blood infections, a broken wrist, and countless little viral things this year – she did it. I am SO so so proud of her. I am so glad our school doesn’t do the graduation thing for kindergarten because i would have just been a hot sobbing mess who needed the Neti pot for the next three days.

But my baby had to go in spite of the heat of the day which just literally zaps her of energy, and she is now carrying two pumps and two bags of fluids in her little backpack and she’s running antibiotics that she is technically allergic to and which makes her feel like absolute shi-caca. And yes it would be easier to just snap those pumps to an IV pole and make her wear her oxygen and make her sit in her chair which are all things she SHOULD be doing but you cannot tell this kid differently and even though i know I am the parent i just wanted her to have this one last day of “normal”. You know? Maybe you don’t. Maybe you don’t know the absolutely heartbreaking crossroads I battle at every day – between wanting to give Kendall the wings to fly and trying to tether her to me for safety.  I know she has challenges. I know she would likely have a smoother course if I made her be “that medical kid”. I’ve seen this happen a lot in the special needs community – kiddos tied to IV poles when a backpack will work just as well, becoming reliant on their chairs, spending so much time in the hospital because things aren’t just perfect. And while I don’t know each individual situation, I know mine. And I know Kendall’s. And I know I will daily strive to find that perfect balance between overmedicalizing her, and keeping her safe from her own stubborn will to do whatever she sets her mind to,  mito and other health issues be damned.
And this is what drains me.  Letting her fly while keeping her tethered. Taming a wild beautiful horse.
And while I am writing these thoughts, a song comes on that brings a smile to my face and reminds me to just breathe and take it day by day.

There’s more than one answer to these questions pointing me in a crooked line,

And the less I seek my source for some definitive, closer I am to fine.

 

So I guess that’s that.
I know it will be a tough summer with the heat. It always is. It is really fricking hard to keep her cooped up in the air con while she watches her sisters and i going out to do fun things.  And in another slap to the face, she asked if she could have a bigger bike. I told her she had kaylen’s old bike and it was her size. And then I realized – she cannot ride a regular bike. She does not have the balance or the coordination to sit on the small seat and balance herself and her backpack and make her legs propel the pedals forward and keep her eyes on the road ahead. She does really awesome walking around and looking mostly normal but do you know how hard that is for her? How much it wears her out to go from point A to point B? You probably don’t. Because she keeps it together in front of most people. And because she holds it together, I hold it together. But her sisters and I see the fallout. We deal with the fallout of a hurting Kendall, lashing out at us because her legs hurt and she’s exhausted (she really doesn’t lash out at daddy ever….)
And I was just sad that I realized we have to figure out a way to get her one of those special adaptive bikes. It will be all she can do right now – and it’s all she wants to do is ride bikes with her sisters on beautiful nights like tonight, when the humidity isn’t completely zapping her and she can tolerate being outside and looking normal and doing normal things.  I’m not trying to make this all seem like some huge whinefest. It is just the bare bones truth of how things are right now.

Hard.

But we do hard things around here. And we figure out a way to keep on keepin on in spite of the hard things.
So we will get through this day, and the sun will rise again in the morning and things will look different. Maybe still hard, maybe a little better. But each day is new and always full of the opportunity for good things.

This is how we survive. This is how we recover. We roll with the punches, even though a few of them land right in the kisser, and a few of them are stinging blows.  (Should I put more song lyrics here? Because it fits so perfectly!!! I have used them before. They will soon be tattooed on my body even!)

But the fighter still remains.

So that’s how recovery is going.

Kendall is recovering. Her body is still weak from the infection and from the effects of the super strong antibiotics she is on every six hours, and they run for two hours each time. But her fighting spirit is strong as ever. As for me, I am getting there. No it wasn’t as emotionally taxing as some of them have been. And yet, how do you measure that? I feel like I hardly had time to sit and breathe after returning from Mexico, when my mother’s day was thrown into upheaval by an ambulance ride and then a 3 am drive up to milwaukee smacking myself so hard in the face to keep myself awake that I broke blood vessels in my cheeks.  And really things never calmed down from there. Two weeks of the chaos of our lives being thrown into a blender.  Coming home exhausted with an exhausted child and three other exhausted babies who just have to make it through the last few days of school. And then we can all sleep, said the mama.

So that’s all I wanted to get out tonight.  That some days are really rough and it doesn’t mean it will always be rough but it’s also not always as easy as I work so hard to make it look.  Home doesn’t always mean things are smooth sailing, but it means we are working on it.

If you’ve managed to read through this drivel this far, you rock. And I thank you for hanging in there with me through this stage of the journey. The sun will come out tomorrow, right? (I am totally busting out in my best Annie voice right now!)

Keep on Keepin On, party people.

Love,

T.

 

5 thoughts on “The Recovery.”

  1. I am like a kid with a gift, finding that you have added a message to your blog. Now that I am connected via Facebook there are lots of tidbits; but this is like opening the freezer and finding my favorite candy bar in there (and that no one else had eaten it) Okay, bad analogy; but it is still sweet, surprising and special (I’ll make up for the bad analogy with a little alliteration 😀
    Here’s what went through my head when I saw the quote from your song. (I am old and S&G songs are a part of my long term memory.) I sometimes sing the words to this song just because. “In the clearing stands a boxer and a FIGHTER by his trade and he carries the REMINDERS of every glove that LAID him OUT and cut him ’til he cried out in his ANGER and his PAIN, “I am leaving, I am leaving . . . ” But the fighter still remains–and you and Kendall still fight, still remain when all the smoke has cleared.
    And in a little side note; I would LOVE to hear your ANNIE. PLEASE!!!!

    1. Terra Atkinson

      Let’s go do karaoke together sometime ok??? I was totally singing aloud with you and the Boxer lyrics. And I love your analogy. Any analogy involving chocolate is never a bad thing. But I am seriously overjoyed that my actual blog posts make you this happy! Hearing that is honestly good motivation to write even more frequently. Thank you for all of your faithful commenting and interacting! It makes it so much more fun to sit here and peck out my random jumbly thoughts! <3 Happy Friday!

  2. It breaks my heart that you feel the need to apologize for “whining”. What you’re going through is really hard and you deserve to be able to whine on your own blog. My son was born still in April, so I get where you’re coming from when you say others have it worse. BUT…. it’s not worse or better – it’s just different. Hard is hard. This is your safe place and we come here to read about your life and your feelings, not to compare it to our lives and feelings. So keep on keepin’ on! Many prayers coming your way! 🙂

    1. Terra Atkinson

      Oh Kristen~ how my heart breaks to read of your son. And your ability to beautifully and graciously share your thoughts with me about it being different… Thank you. It is this kind of perspective exactly that keeps me keepin on. I thank you for taking the time to leave a comment and for the encouragement to continue sharing my authentic self in this space. I needed that boost today. <3

  3. I think maybe fate or luck somehow guided me to your blog, my daughter is very much like your own. Right now I’m watching her sleep in her hospital crib that reminds me more of a cage for the hundredth time it seems. I think it’s wonderful that you have taken the time to write about your family’s journey. I hardly have time to go to the bathroom between catheters and antibiotics and appliance changes so I commend you for being a master at juggling time!
    I want you to know that you are not alone in feeling guilty or selfish for being tired and over worked… Hopefully you understand that through the terrible wording. It can be an emotional Rollercoaster and although I’d never want anyone to be on that ride with me, somehow I’m glad to not be alone.
    Best wishes

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