Winning

winning2

Winning.  It feels good.  And it’s not about being first.  And it’s not always about being “the best.”  Sometimes winning can be as simple as not losing!

Every day we wake up and prepare for battle.  The “sword” is sharpened before we get out of bed.  We can not take a step unprotected, or unguarded.  And, even being on guard against Cowden’s Syndrome all the time is often not enough.  So often things just happen…

Sometimes we get a little  A LOT frustrated.  Often we feel beat up by this beast that we battle.  “It” gets quite a few swipes in.  But, we have, and we WILL always remain on top.  That’s why we are BEATINGCOWDENS.

So tonight, as we drove home from a swim meet in the Bronx, we chatted –  my girl and I.

And it was pleasant, easy conversation.

So often as the weekend comes I reflect on the week that was in awe that THAT much “stuff” fit into the week.

This was no exception.

Last month she was sidelined from the swim meet.  Recovering from knee surgery just three weeks prior, she was in no condition to compete.

This month she was all in, and we both loved it.  It is such a treat to watch her when she gives it everything she’s got.  It’s an even bigger treat when she takes 4 seconds off the 100 free and 1.5 seconds off the 50 fly.

Winning.

The conversation on my end for the long afternoon of waiting was pleasant and easy.  A bunch of overheated parents held captive together, all sharing a common hope that their children swim their best.  Meghan talked comfortably with her peers, easily passing the time between events.

There are goals, qualifying times in her brain, but today she was pleased by her success and so was I.  She may reach these times this season.  She may reach them next season.  But, we agreed that it doesn’t matter as much as her continued progress.  And I was able to tell her how proud I am that she persists.  Through 5 knee surgeries, through thyroid numbers that would level the strongest among us, through chronic pain – quitting is not in her vocabulary.  This is the focus she will take with her for the rest of her days.  This is the attitude, this “I CAN do it,” is what I pray will follow her all of her days, through all aspects of her life.

winning

Winning.

This week she got a part she wanted in the play she’s been working on in after school drama.  She was patient.  Persistent.  She calls drama “fun,” and the students, “funny.”  She never acted before.  Except for every day when she “acts” like a pain-free “regular” 11-year-old.  She’s thrilled.

Winning.

The marking period ends this week I think.  Her averages on the “Pupil Path” app impress me.  And I was a pretty good student.  I don’t check her homework, or really bother her about anything.  “I’ve got it, Mom.”  And the numbers tell the same story.  All those years of working together on good study habits paid off.

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Winning.

The fund-raiser, “Jeans for Rare Genes,” is taking off.  And we haven’t seen anything yet.  People are reaching out.  They are coming to the event, donating raffle baskets, making monetary donations, and offering their time and energy.  Local businesses have been extraordinarily supportive.  Meghan had seen the best in so many people.  She knows her life matters.  Her story matters.  Her drive is being rewarded.  Her big heart is teaching her to dream bigger, and help more people.

Rare Disease Day Fundraiser

Winning.

We lost our Allie Girl, our 11-year-old rescue in December.  She was with us 7 and a half great years.  We miss her.  All of us, especially her Dad and her “furry” sister Lucky.  Felix approached me about rescuing another dog.  I thought it might be too soon.  He reminded me that Allie had a good life because we rescued her.  He felt strongly we could be that same kind of help to another dog, and by doing so we would honor Allie, and help Lucky’s loneliness.  I told him I was open – but no puppies.  I wanted to know we were saving a dog.  I wanted a dog no one else wanted.  That made sense to me.

Sweet April showed up on a web site Felix was following.  A three-year-old lab mix with an uncertain history, rescued from a high kill shelter in Florida.  She was being fostered in Pennsylvania.  “It’s all in the eyes,” Felix said.

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We put in an inquiry, and left an application with references.

The Email said she was going to be in Brooklyn Tuesday night.  Could we come and see her?  And if everything went well and she and Lucky got along, would we consider taking her?

TUESDAY?  Who takes a new dog on a Tuesday?

Sound asleep in the car Tuesday night.
Sound asleep in the car Tuesday night.

Apparently we do.

April arrived at our home around 7:30 PM Tuesday, after a brief visit to Petsmart for a new collar, and to meet GiGi and Pop!

We had to get her in, fed, settled and all of us off to bed within a few brief hours.

She found her spot.  And Meghan has slept better this week than she has in years.

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WINNING!

Lucky has developed arthritis in her knee, and a visit to the vet Weds. with both dogs in tow was very emotional for me.  April checked out as healthy and strong.  And my Lucky had her very first blood test.  I am happy to report she is healthy as can be.  I left with a script for anti-inflammatory medicine for her.  She’s going to need it to keep up with her little sister.

And somewhere I can imagine Allie smiling in Heaven, as Lucky is the recipient of the playful nips she used to give so frequently.

Allie always watched over her human sister.
Allie always watched over her human sister.

 

The sight of two tails wagging again was good for us all.

WINNING!

Pain is temporary….

At least I hope so.

I vaguely remember a shirt my older sister used to wear when she was swimming.  The message was something like this.

pain is temporary

It was motivational, meant I am sure to remind the young swimmers that their fatigue from grueling practice would translate into race times that would forever keep them proud of their accomplishments.

And in that case, I hope the pain, the pain of lap after lap, translated into successful meet times that led to a gratifying feeling of pride.

But what about when it’s not that neat?  What about when you can’t sort it out in a package, or tie a bow on it?

There is emotional pain.  The empty pain of loss.

As I type, I have two lit candles on my desk, celebrating the 60th birthday of my uncle in heaven.  The pain of his wife, his children, his mother, my dad, (his brother,) can not be explained.  The loss is raw.  The pain is an open wound.

I think of my college roommate, and her nephews and sister-in-law preparing for Christmas without their 36 year-old father.

I think of the loss of my Dad, just over a year ago, and the flood of memories and seasonal connections complicating my every thought.

I think of the loss of our beloved Allie Girl last week.

I think… and I think.  And I know how badly it hurts.  And I know we are so far from alone.  I am grateful not to be able to imagine the depth of the pain some feel.

pain is real

Pain is temporary…

There is the pain of anxiety.  Very real.  Depression.   Equally crippling.  I’d be lying if I said I haven’t battled with both my whole life, amped up by this Cowden’s Syndrome torment under which my girl and I will live forever.

Try as I might, the worry is stifling.  The sense of urgency all the time is exhausting.  There is little room for error.   Screenings, medications, lab work, surgery.  All scheduled with precision to conserve sick days and minimize missed school.  Except when I can’t.  Like when it’s an emergency.  Then we just roll with it.

The anxiety weighs on my girl as well.  11 years old, trying so hard to be normal, and to fit in.  But, the reality is there is no “normal.”  So she fakes it as best she can, blessed to be surrounded by some spectacular kids.

But, she gets mad.  Mad at the doctor, mad at her knee, mad that she takes two steps forward and three steps back, in this poorly choreographed dance she is forced to participate in.  Mad that she can’t be “the best,” because her own best is unacceptable to her.  And some days when she is extra mad, I wonder about the thyroid.  Cause its absence affects all things.  And this week came the phone call that the numbers have increased 400% over the last 3 months again.  So we continue to raise the dose of a medication that I don’t think does a damned thing for her.  We play the game while I search, frantically for someone to “get it.”

Pain-can-change-you

Pain is temporary…

Except when it’s chronic.  And it involves every single minute of every day.  And the one medication that does work is off-limits.  And the surgery to plug the hole in the artery that was likely provoked by the absence of THAT medicine, causes and abundance of scar tissue and this feeling of a lump the size of a cashew or two exactly where the knee should be able to bend.  And you have no way of knowing if its going to get better, or happen again.  Any minute.

And the pain, well if it was only in your knee it would be better.  But it’s in the shoulder, and the neck, and maybe it’s caused by the feet over a 1/2 size off, or that slight curve in the lower spine, or something else no one cares to figure out.

So, you gather your spoons.  And you borrow a few.

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And you press on.  Through sixth grade and onto the principal’s honor roll, and through student council, and drama club, and fundraising activities, and swimming your butt off.  Cause what choice do you have?

hopeful-spoon

Pain is temporary…

We talk about injury pain, vs healing pain.  Tonight’s pain counts as the healing type cause it was generated largely by exercise.  This pain is movement in the right direction.  Swimming heals the soul.

You have to find what heals the soul, or you will lose your mind.  There is no other way.

Pain is temporary… cause it needs to be.

You have to find what brings you peace.

Two weeks ago on December 4th, I chose this.  The butterfly breaking out of the cocoon.  Free forever.

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I miss my Dad.

My heart is full.

But we press on.  Because pain is temporary.  Even for all of us in the middle of the worst pain of our lives.  The sun will shine again.

Channeling that energy into raising awareness, fundraising, and helping those whose sun hasn’t come back up.

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Jeans for Rare Genes Fundraiser  (Click here to support our fundraiser for the Global Genes Project and the PTEN foundation)

We are living real life, AND

WE ARE BEATING COWDEN’S TOO!

I used to be afraid of roller coasters

I used to be afraid of roller coasters, and their short, fast twisting, turning excitement.

Then I realized roller coasters and life have a lot in common.  So I started riding them, cause really -what the heck?

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If there has ever been a lesson in the unpredictable nature of life, I am confident it has played out in the last two or so years.  And I am confident I have studied hard, and that I understand.  I understand that just when you think you might understand – you don’t.

You see, just when you think you may even comprehend the every-changing, unpredictable nature of life around us, there will inevitably be a way to prove to you you don’t have it quite right.

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There have been more funerals this year than I care to count.  Maybe its always like this, and I am just noticing now that 40 is behind me.  Or maybe not.  But there have been funerals for friends, for the brother of  friend, for my own father, for my uncle, the precious father of three beautiful adult children, and for my Grandma, and a well-loved great-uncle, and the grandparents and parents of friends… and…

As I sit here thinking about all of them I try for the umpteenth time to rationalize.  And I get farther with some than others.  Some will just never do.

But the ultimate realization is that it’s not really mine to figure out.  It’s not mine to decide how it fits in the grand plan.  And I’m trying to stop looking to figure it out.  Because, boy it can be exhausting.

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And as I sit here in the wee small hours of the morning, I remember – that painful Thanksgiving week last year, as Dad fought and fought, and I wonder why.  But, as much as I miss him, it’s not in a pitying kind of why.  It’s in a genuine curiosity for something I will likely never be allowed to understand.  Very much the way he used to ask me why he made it home from Vietnam and his friend Tommy didn’t.

It’s the same kind if why when Mom asks, why after being 18 years a breast cancer survivor, why she is “clean,” and so many have lost the fight.

As I listen to the rhythmic snoring of my husband, and watch my fidgety sleeping 11-year-old, I wonder.

I wonder how we ended up here – again, on the second floor of this hospital.  Today.  Now.

12 hours ago I thought I was tired.  HA!  What did I know.

450 miles in about 30 hours to celebrate the life of a great man, my uncle.  Lots of driving, lots of thinking, lots of observing.  Lots of admiration for his children, grown up children, who undoubtedly will make him proud forever with their compassion and good humor.  Lots of respect for his wife – living her marriage vows through all the crappy stuff with poise and dignity.  Lots of awe for my other Dad Ken, and GGMa, his mom, as they stood together, their original immediate family ripped in half in just over 2 years time.

12 hours ago I thought I would go to bed early.

But I ended up picking Meghan up from swim practice on the way home from Vermont.  And she walked out of the locker room and almost fell to the ground with tears.

“I can’t walk.  It’s my knee.”

And I checked off the list – Did you fall?  Did you bang it?  Did you hurt it doing dryland?  One at a time I asked the questions, even though I knew the answers.

This knee.  The one we’ve been waiting for since we stopped the celebrex had finally given way.

We had had hopes of finishing swim season first.  That was before we had to refocus our hopes to making it into urgi care without falling.

We were promptly told to get out, and get to an ER.  Fast.  The swelling was too big.

Still in my funeral clothes I raced home long enough to tell Felix to dress for work, and to get into some sweats.  A quick bag for Meghan and I and we were off.  This time to Lenox Hill ER.  Cause that’s where they do the knee surgeries.  And not that I’m trying to plan.  But just in case… Maybe we should be at the right place.

They contacted her doctor.  He’s sure it’s the AVM, but he’ll confirm in person in another hour or so.  In the mean time nothing to eat or drink for Ms. Meghan after midnight.  Just in case.

AND regardless – we remain BEATINGCOWDENS!

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State of Mind

Fortunately her shoulder injury has healed quite nicely.

She heals well.  Good thing.   She has had so much practice.

She progressed through the state math exam with extended time for writing.

She weaned herself off the muscle relaxants quickly.

She is tough.

Good thing.

Wednesday she pulled me aside in school and asked me to feel her neck.

“Mom, I think this is a lymph node”

As she gestured to her neck, not far above where the mass that had cause the suspicion that prompted the removal of her thyroid, had sat less than 3 months earlier.

Hesitantly I put my hand to her neck, not as much to check, but simply to verify.

I knew she was right.  She is always right.  I swear she’s like “The Princess and the Pea” sometimes.  She can feel everything.

Princess_peaBut I put my hand to her neck as she instructed and instantly knew there was in fact, one swollen lymph node easily felt.

“Mom, the surgeon said I only have to go back and see him if I have any swollen lymph nodes.  But, he said that was “highly unlikely.”  I guess he didn’t know who he was dealing with!”

She tried to make a joke, lighten the mood while reading me for a reaction.  I giggled.  I reassured.  I felt a deep sinking flutter in my belly.

Not because I assumed it to be a problem, but more because I knew this would unleash a cascade of additional appointments, and really… well, quite frankly… we are NOT in the mood.

Of course, all of that was, and is irrelevant.  I called the surgeon, whose office insisted I have a local clinician verify that it was in fact a lymph node.

I called first the ENT who has been dealing with the throat clearing issue, hoping to kill two birds with one stone so to speak.  HA!  His office released a new flock – of which we will have to contain what we can another day.  Instead of inviting us in to check on her improvement on his medication, he determined, sight unseen – and relayed through a secretary, that Meghan should see a GI doctor.

birds

 

Apparently his on the phone conclusion based on the fact that her symptoms had not fully resolved on the nose spray and increased reflux medication was that a GI needs to treat her for reflux.  While that may be true, on some level, at some point, someone at some point has to realize the two of us are quickly becoming overwhelmed, and sending us to another doctor is not always a good idea.  (Plus, when your kid is 5 foot 2, and 100 pounds at 10 – no GI takes you very seriously at all.)  And in reality – I just needed someone to check the neck!

So, I waited for our trusty pediatrician, and Thursday afternoon – on a bright sunny spring day – after an hour and a half wait – we heard what we already knew.  It in fact is a lymph node, and it should be looked at.

So as Meghan asked me in the car if she should be concerned, and I calmly let her feel my own set of chronically inflamed lymph nodes, I calculated our next steps.

When I called the surgeon’s office this time I was told we would be seen Monday.  They called Friday to let me know that our appointment was to be 9:30 on the 5th.

I woke up Thursday morning with a most unusual swelling in my left eye.  I can’t for the life of me figure out the cause.   By Friday when I went to tell my (patience of a saint) boss that I would need Monday off, I was looking far less than my best.  Puffy eye had turned red and was starting to resemble infection.

As I sat in the urgi care waiting room Friday evening ready to collect my prednisone, my antibiotic, and my stern warning that if things didn’t improve by Monday I needed to see an ophthalmologist, I wondered where the breaking point is.

We had some tough nights this week – the two of us.  We had some nights feeling a lot like we were bearing the burden of Sisyphus.

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It is an uncanny feeling to be at the bottom of the mountain without a prospect of getting to the top.  This feeling that we WILL be at this forever, requires careful mind games to overcome and is not for the faint of heart.  We both experience it very differently, so the trick becomes to rely on each other, but understand our vantage points are unique.  We MUST rest on each other, but others as well.  And we MUST teach each other to look for the sun and the flowers and the beauty around us right where we are.  It is a tall order for me some days.  My 10 year old, well, she is my hero.  Because, despite the occasional setback she finds a way to pick up and keep on keeping on.

i am oneShe sent me this in my Email this weekend.  I read it a bunch of times.  Then I hugged her.  She is determined.  She is driven.  She is my reason for staying focused.

So I shared with her a poem on my mind…

If you think you are beaten, you are
If you think you dare not, you don’t,
If you like to win, but you think you can’t
It is almost certain you won’t.

If you think you’ll lose, you’re lost
For out of the world we find,
Success begins with a fellow’s will
It’s all in the state of mind.

If you think you are outclassed, you are
You’ve got to think high to rise,
You’ve got to be sure of yourself before
You can ever win a prize.

Life’s battles don’t always go
To the stronger or faster man,
But soon or late the man who wins
Is the man WHO THINKS HE CAN! 

– Walter Wintle

Today, she had a swim meet.  Her team lost.  They usually do.  But they are great kids, who have a BLAST, and cheer for each other.  They generally have a great time.  And somewhere in between the team being hammered, she was on two second place relay teams, and pulled this out.

Gray Cap – Lane 4 (After her goggles flipped at the start!)

Clearly the highlight of my week.

Now let’s hope tomorrow is much ado about nothing, and we can get about facing the next set of plans life has for us.

In the meantime – your prayers as always, are gratefully accepted.

 

 

Today

today

In the spirit of one day at a time… today she feels well.

Today homework is already done.

Today her stress level is low.

Today she swims in the water like the fish she longs to be.

Today as I sit poolside with my computer, I can watch her laugh and smile with her teammates.

Today the less rigorous of the two practices, her CYO team comes first – but she is sure she can manage a double practice.

one-ste-at-a-time

Of course about 7 days ago we raised the Celebrex back to its (in my opinion) too high dose.

No one can figure out why the drug works for her, but it does.  And I am grateful, but scared all at the same time.  The list of medicine grows.  The knowledge of Cowden’s Syndrome remains spotty at best.

We know of the cancer risks, but the chronic pain, the low endurance, the vascular issues, the migraines….

One of our doctors theorizes that the Celebrex has kept her AVM in her knee from acting up.  Given the potential side effects of Celebrex I think it’s the medical equivalent of robbing Peter to pay Paul.

Sometimes I feel like with all the doctors we see, there is still no one minding the store.  We travel between specialists, between symptoms, between surgery and recovery.

The blood for the thyroid won’t be drawn for a month.  She slept 14 hours Friday night and another 12 Saturday night.  No major plans for us for a while.

The throat clearing never stopped with the thyroid removal, and I am flat our unsure who to even ask.

Sometimes I like to play mind games, and forget about Cowden’s all together.  I daydream a bit…

one-day-at-a-time

And then I remind myself that every illness, every experience, every event that occurs in our lives helps to define us and make us who we are supposed to be.  Like that ‘ever changing puzzle” my Dad used to tell me about.

And I think of my friends and family.  They are contending with diagnoses new and old.  None of them fun.  I would never say to them that experience shapes who we are.  That is a personal belief that the wrong person just might deck me for.

Especially on my heart is my internet friend from Australia.  Never have I felt so helpless as her daughter endures multiple brain surgeries and I am 12 hours and several continents away.

You Never Know How Strong You Are Until Being Strong Is The Only Choice You Have

Today.  Today my girl feels good.

Today I will do as I have been taught and let tomorrow worry about itself.

Today we are BEATINGCOWDENS!

good-live-one-day-at-a-time1

Keep on, Keeping on!

without hope

Several months ago I wrote about “The Beginning of the End”  Meghan was having trouble keeping us at dancing school.  The pain kept getting out in front of her.

https://beatingcowdens.com/2013/03/25/i-fear-this-is-the-beginning-of-the-end/

While in some ways the decrease in stress these last few months, plus the return of Physical Therapy twice a week, have helped her pain – but, it became increasingly evident dance was just not meant to be.

She was sick, and missed class.  Then she was hurting, and missed another class.  She missed the dress rehearsal  and trophy night because she was home from school with a low fever.  Always seems to be something.

So as we headed out to “Candyland” yesterday morning, we all knew it would be her last recital.  The dancing takes a toll on her joints that it would be foolish to keep repeating.  But, that didn’t dampen the mood on the soggy Sunday.  Meghan was ready.

meghanleigh8903.isagenix.com
meghanleigh8903.isagenix.com

We started her day with the electrolytes from Isagenix that help her so much.  Then we left her backstage at the theatre with all the other dancers.

It can get long when your dancer is in number 25 in a show of 27 acts, but I find the other dances entertaining, and before we knew it – she was on stage, ready to shine.

There was no pain evident in that body as the rush of being on stage overwhelmed her.  She smiled and moved in ways my body just never could – or would.

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When I met her at the stage door to bring her to her waiting father and grandparents, I had some flowers in hand for a job well done.  She knew this was it for her, but as always – she kept looking forward.  “I will get on stage again Mom.  Maybe in Junior High, maybe in a theater program.  I can’t keep dancing, but I love the stage.”

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We took lots of great pictures.  We cherished the memories.  We enjoyed a nice lunch of Gluten Free pizza.

Yesterday was a rush

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Today came the pain.  The elbows, the knees.  An epsom salt bath, and some relaxation.  It helped some, but its hard to tell.  She is so used to the pain.

And as she headed to bed, “How many weeks until my swim lessons start?”

Cowden’s Syndrome, you SOB.  You may have me exhausted, but you picked a worthy adversary in my girl.  She will not go quietly.  She WILL win.

“Beatingcowdens” Not just a blog title, but a way of life.

Candy Land 2013
Candy Land 2013

I fear this is the beginning of the end…

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… of dance class that is.

It sounds so dramatic.  I guess maybe its not such a big deal.  But today it feels like one more thing on a list Cowden’s Syndrome has robbed her of.

Meghan was never going to be a performance dancer.  She wasn’t going to do ballet for hours.  But, for the last 3 years, she has taken one dance class a week.

First recital - 2011
First recital – 2011

Hip Hop.

Not because she knows the music, but rather because they dance in sneakers – and that is better for her joints.

I can’t say enough good things about the studio.  The owner is a compassionate, kind, professional, lovely woman who strives to make every child feel like a million bucks.  She revels in their accomplishments.  She celebrates every ability level.  She truly loves children, and dance.

The Proud Dancer with her fans
The Proud Dancer with her fans

This place is the perfect fit for Meghan.

Her joints acted up in the fall.  She missed a month before she could get it back together.  No worries – no sweat.

A few weeks ago she twisted an ankle at dance.  Xrays, a sprain.  A week or two off.

2012 On the Red Carpet
2012 On the Red Carpet

Then there was the shoulder thing.  Not dance related – but it still cost her some time.

And then tonight.  I picked her up from class and her flushed face told the story before her teacher had to.

“She hurt her hand, but we don’t know how.”

I do.

EFF YOU COWDENS!

So, I took her home.  There was a shower, and some ice.  Nothing more than a light sprain I am sure.  But her back hurt too.  So we put her to bed very gently. And we spoke about maybe finding ways to increase swimming instead of maintaining dance.

The recital though is such a rush.  She loves it.  She loves being on stage – the energy.  The celebration.

On stage - May 2012
On stage – May 2012

Physical Therapy tomorrow morning.  We will let Dr. Jill input her thoughts – although I already know them.

She is pretty good when she dances.  She is a quick study.  She has made so much progress.  And she has some moves.  (Those are NOT from me!)

She will ultimately get to decide.  Although its probably for the best to back out now – before she really gets hurt.  The final decision will be hers.  So I say.

In reality the final decision has been made by Cowden’s Syndrome, and its ruthless attack on her joints and muscles, and connective tissue.

She is resting peacefully  – for now.  But I am cranky.

Things tend to work out as they should, but I am still waiting for this little girl…(young woman…AAAKK!) to catch a break…

strength

A breath of normalcy… shhhh…

There are lots of things that I like about Saturdays.  First, my husband is home with us, and that makes any day better.  I love the routines – wash the sheets and towels and dog beds, head to the bank, general clean up, and the race to see how fast it can all get done so the day can start.

Perhaps what I love the best about Saturdays is that they are almost always free of doctors.  Unless we are sick or have some kind of emergency, Saturday is a doctor – free day.  That means no appointments, no waiting in offices, no waiting for phone calls that don’t come (UGH!), no dealing with billing offices and in and out of network nightmares.  NO DOCTORS!

Have I mentioned I love Saturday?

And today it was even better.  Beyond “normal,” we had a surprise visit from 2 nephews, all grown up now – 18 and 23 – who spent this really HOT day, swimming with us, and just hanging around to chat, play Kinect, and even Uno.

Kinect Adventures
Kinect Adventures (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

We ate a delicious and healthy dinner.  Grilled chicken on the barbecue, roasted potatoes, chick pea salad, and grilled zucchini from our garden!  And, it was ALL  prepared by my husband (who is incidentally a MUCH better cook than I will ever be!)

It gets better – if you can imagine.  Today, for the first time since last summer, I put my new fake boobs, and my post hysterectomy body into a bathing suit – AND I SWAM!  🙂   And, it was ok.  The suit fit.  Everything stayed where it belonged.  It looks like the hysterectomy has finally healed, and shhhhhhh……  even if it was just for today –

it was really nice to have a breath of normalcy in our lives!