Archive for the ‘parenting’ Category

Clutching Cars

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

When you’re tired, you yawn, and start rubbing your eyes

And what you ask me to get you still makes me surprised.

 

“My Ramones,” you demand as soon as you lay down

And you toss, and you turn until they are found.

 

So we scour the house, your dad, brother, and me

We search for your Cars from the Disney movie.

 

It’s not Doc, Flo, or Mac; not even Lightening

It’s the low rider you crave, the cool ’59 Chevy.

 

“We found them,” I yell as we all bound up the stairs

I plop them in your palm which relieves your despair.

 

I kiss you goodnight and you smile at me sweetly

You grab your two cars and roll over completely.

 

I check on you later, with mouth open you’re snoring

On your belly you lie and it’s cars you’re still holding.

 

You think they are amazing and you love them so much

You’re my sweet little boy who sleeps with cars in his clutch.

 

LathamandhisCars

Toddler Talk

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Reichen:  “Latham, you are an amazing genius.  I’m so proud of you.”

What Reichen told Latham after watching him walk down the stairs for the very first time all by his 2 year old self.  I melted a little bit inside when I heard it.  Okay, I melted a lot of bit.

Just the Thought Makes me Sick

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

“What is wrong with you,”  I hear her scream as Reichen heaves open the door to the gym childcare room and Latham and I follow.  “I told you,” she threatens, “if you do not stop acting like an idiot, you’ll be sorry.”  Her teeth are clenched as each hateful word spews from her mouth.  She grips her son’s arm and shakes it as she yells at him.  And he is terrified.  The 6 year old is crying so hard, he can’t even catch his breath.  “Trust me,” she says as she shoves her son into the arms of a waiting childcare worker, “you do not want me to be the one who takes you out of here.”  And with that, she leaves her sobbing son behind.

I realize I’m not breathing when all of a sudden I gulp for air.  I can not believe what I just witnessed and think to myself, if that’s how that little boy’s mother talks to him in public, what happens to him in private?  The thought made me sick. 

And still does. 

I drop to my knees immediately so I can look at my two toddlers in their blue eyes and remind them we never talk like that to anyone. 

Ever

Reichen looks at me and nods.  Latham just looks.

I end up working out with that woman in a group fitness class.  I’m on one side of the room and she’s on the other.  There’s probably 30 people between her and me, and yet, I can’t see anyone else.  As the instructor is telling us to run faster or jump higher, I can’t think about anything other than what just happened.

And I still can’t.

 Today was obviously not the first time I’ve witnessed a parent berating a child.  I was at the grocery store last week scouring the aisles for Rotel, when I heard a mom raising her voice with her child.

“You are a bad girl,” I couldn’t help but her her say, even though I was one aisle over.  “You never keep your hands to yourself.”  By now, I’ve maneuvered my cart around the corner and see who she’s scolding:  a baby.  “Why don’t you ever listen to me?  You’re useless.” 

Now, I don’t know exactly how old her baby was, but I do know that little girl could not have been more than 18 months.  She was so young, she was actually propped on the front seat of the grocery cart still strapped  in her carseat    And already, her mother has deemed her useless.  And I wonder, if that’s how that little girl’s mother talks to her in public, what happens to her in private?  The thought made me sick.

And still does.

I don’t understand people talking like that to their children.  And I don’t want to.  Just the thought makes me sick.

And still does.

 

 

Happy Birthday to You

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

We wanted to wait until the day you arrived

When they said “it’s a boy,” we were super surprised.

 

You were such a big baby, you weighed nearly 10 pounds

With blue eyes, brown hair, and hardly ever a frown.

 

We held you and loved you in our arms so tight

We never put you down;  not at all that first night.

 

When Reichen came for a visit, he was  only a year and a half

We said, “Here’s you new brother;”  he then kissed you and laughed.

 

You’ve grown up so much since that very first day

You walk and you talk and you can’t wait to horseplay.

 

You now sleep in a twin bed and eat taco meat

You’re learning to count and are quite an athlete.

 

I can’t believe time has passed, it has happened so quickly

You’re two years today, which just doesn’t seem likely.

 

It’s our honor to love you, you’re such an amazing boy

Happy Birthday Latham Mason, you’re our pride and our joy.

 

Latham2years

 

 

If You Knew It Was the Last Time

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

If you knew it was the last time, when it was the last time,

 what would you say?

He didn’t know, my dad.

He didn’t get to say, what he always meant to say,

to his big brother.

He only said

goodbye.

And hung up the phone.

And it was,

goodbye.

My dad’s brother has passed.

And I wonder, if my dad knew

it would be the last time, when it was the last time,

would he have said, what he should have said

every time

for the first time.

Husbandism #15

Friday, April 9th, 2010

David:  “If you could guarantee that I could watch Shamu kill someone, I’d go for sure.  That just happened, you know.”

The only way, my husband said, he would take me and the boys to Sea World this summer.  I think he was joking.  I think.

Latham’s Locks

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

LathamHaircut2

 

We told you where we were going when we buckled you up

You smiled and repeated, “Latham get my hair cut?”

 

“Yes,” we replied, “it’ll be so much fun”

“You’ll look just like Reichen when the lady’s all done.”

 

You studied your brother and smiled at him, too

You’d be his carbon copy if it were left up to you.

 

We didn’t know what you would do when you sat in the chair

But you didn’t even flinch and you didn’t even care.

 

When she took out her scissors and cut all your curls

Daddy said your new look would be a hit with the girls.

 

But there’s only one girl and of course that is me

You becoming a big boy is tough on mommy.

 

It’s not just a haircut, you’re making a transition

But no matter what I say, you don’t seem listen.

 

When you look in the mirror you love your new do

Your big boy hair cut looks just perfect on you.

 

I can not believe that we finally did it

But I can’t let it all go, so I kept every snippet.

 

LathamHaircut1

It’s Up to Us

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

“Huh,” was the only sound she made, my doctor, when I told her my diagnosis.  “Toddler’s Diarrhea,” I told Doctor  Holly,  “I think Latham has Toddler’s Diarrhea.”

I had been researching my 23 month old son’s symptoms ever since our doctor said I should have him tested for Cystic Fibrosis.  Latham had been suffering with chronic diarrhea and severe weight loss for 6 weeks and after a series of tests ruled out viruses and parasites, Doctor Holly revealed chronic diarrhea and severe weight loss are also symptoms of  Cystic Fibrosis.

As soon as she said it, I freaked.  But the more I read about the genetic disease, the more I believed my baby did not have it.  So, I started researching what Latham might have.

I typed ‘diarrhea in toddlers’ in the google search engine and Cystic Fibrosis was the first bullet to appear.  The second: Toddler’s Diarrhea.  According to Keep Kids Healthy, Toddler’s Diarrhea usually occurs in children between the ages of 6 months and 3 years and causes loose, watery stools.  Although they have chronic diarrhea, children with Toddler’s Diarrhea have a normal appetite and grow and develop normally, and usually drink juice.

BINGO!

After nap, every day, Latham begs for juice.  Although I only give him about 4 ounces of apple juice a day, mixed with water, I was hopeful Toddler’s Diarrhea was the diagnosis, not Cystic Fibrosis.  I pulled juice from Latham’s diet immediately.  And immediately began to see results.  Less than 24 hours later, Latham’s watery diarrhea began to firm up; 48 hours later, he had nearly normal stools; now, 2 weeks later, not only are his stools solid, he has gained 4 of the 5 pounds he lost during the last 2 months.

When I told Doctor Holly about Toddler’s Diarrhea, we had just tested Latham for Cystic Fibrosis.  She was calling to say our son did not have the deadly disease.

“I haven’t given Latham any apple juice all day,” I said after she revealed Latham did not have Cystic Fibrosis and asked how he was doing, “and I think it’s working already!”

“Oh,” she paused.  “I guess we’ll keep an eye on that,” was her only response.  “Just make an appointment if you think Latham needs to be seen again,” and with that, she hung up.

I have never been so happy and so irritated by someone in my entire life.  Happy that she just told me my son does not have Cystic Fibrosis and irritated that she just went from saying he could have Cystic Fibrosis to saying we’ll just keep an eye on him.  She didn’t say a word about the possibility of him having Toddler’s Diarrhea.

Not.  A.  Word.

Well, I’ve got a word for her.  Three of them, actually:  Latham is healthy!  And we couldn’t be happier.

I’m also happy I didn’t just wait around for Doctor Holly to tell me what was wrong with him.  I can’t imagine how much more weight my son would have lost, how sick he would be, and how many more tests would have been run trying to find out the cause of his severe symptoms.

I listened to my inner instincts.  I discovered what has wrong with him.  I did something about it.  And I am proud of myself.

I’m not saying I’m a doctor.  I’m not saying I can diagnose every problem.  What I am saying:  we know our children better than anyone else, even our doctors.  And it’s up to us to listen to our instincts and fight for our babies, especially when they can’t fight for themselves.

Happy Easter!

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

mommyandboys2010

From our family to yours, Happy Easter!

A Potty Poem

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Whatever your brother does, you want to do, too

Riding bikes or playing cars, it doesn’t matter to you.

 

But you catch me by surprise with your latest request

Going tinkle on the potty is such a big boy conquest.

 

‘HELP MOMMA’ you say while giving your pants a yank

There’s no way, he’s not ready, this must be a prank.

 

But I plop you on the potty and you sit there and smile

I tell you to be patient since this could take awhile.

 

We wait and we wait, and I promise you’ll see

And before we both know it, you’re going wee wee.

 

I yell for your brother so he can celebrate too

He gives you and hug and says, ‘I’m so proud of you!’

 

I know it’s not over and it’s just the beginning

But you and me together –  we can do anything.

 

LathamPotty

It’s. Not. Right.

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

There are too many cars here, I think as David, Latham and I circle the 7 story underground garage until we finally find a place to park.  It’s early, only 9:15am and I shutter to think how many more cars will park in this place.  There are too many cars here, I think again, except this time my thoughts spill from my mind and out of my mouth since David quietly agrees with them.

“It’s not right,” he says.

“It’s not right,” I agree.

We don’t say another word.  We don’t have to.  Those three words say it all.  It’s not right kids get sick.  It’s not right kids hurt.  It’s not right parents have to watch their babies suffer.

It’s. Not. Right.

We find a space to leave our van in the children’s hospital garage, a place I never thought I’d have to park.  We’re here because a couple days ago, our family physician told us to test our 23 month old son, Latham for Cystic Fibrosis, a life-threatening genetic disease that causes mucus to build up and clog some of the organs in the body, particularly the lungs and pancreas which makes breathing extremely difficult.

She is concerned, she tells me because she can’t find the reason behind Latham’s chronic diarrhea he’s been experiencing the past 6 weeks.  She ruled out viruses and parasites through a series of tests she ran on his stool samples last week and since two of the symptoms of Cystic Fibrosis are extreme weight loss and diarrhea, she says we need to cross the deadly disease off the list of possibilities, too.

I.  Freaked.

What if Latham has Cystic Fibrosis?  What if Latham has Cystic Fibrosis?  What if Latham has Cystic Fibrosis?  The question swirls in my mind like a tornado.  I could barely eat.  I could barely sleep.  I could barely think.

I call the children’s hospital to make an appointment for the test our doctor said Latham needs, a sweat test.  It’s a no needle procedure that measures the amount of chloride in my little boy’s sweat.  The first date they had available the nurse on the phone informs me is April 2nd.  After I tell her in a very honest and teary way there was absolutely no possibility I could wait that long, she said she would squeeze us in Monday, March 22nd. 

4 days.  I would have to wait 4 days.  4 days.

My mind was mush as David, Latham and I stepped in the white lightening elevators 4 days later and ride our way up to the ground floor. 

“Where did we park,” I ask David.  “I didn’t even look.”  When David shrugs, the woman riding with us said, “Purple planes.  You parked on the purple planes level.”

I smile to thank her.  It’s so kind of her to notice.

After arriving in the lobby, we wind our way past the rain forest lunch room and radiology, through the working toy train station and the burn unit, then ride up 2 levels on the elephant elevators and walk across the hall to the main lab.  David catches my eye when we see the sign hanging on the lab door.

sign

It’s.  Not.  Right.

Pam is the nurse who greets us when we walk in the room.  Her son is the quarterback for the University of Northern Iowa, she proudly tells us when David mentions the t-shirt she is wearing.  She smiles while talking non-stop about her family, the weather, and Latham’s curly hair.  She loves his locks, she says.  I’m so grateful for the chatter.  David and I are paralyzed with fear while she’s running the test on Latham and she knows it.

The test itself is painless.  Pam cleans our son’s right arm and places two electrodes on it which sends a tingling current that causes sweating.  When the 5 minute test is finished, she keeps chatting us up while she seamlessly repeats the same procedure on his left arm.  She then collects the two pieces of gauze which holds Latham’s sweat and says lab results would be ready that same evening.  She said she would page the results directly to Latham’s doctor.

I try to go about the rest of my day as usual while I wait for the results.  I feed the boys lunch.  I put them down for naps.  I go to Sonic for my route 44 daily dose of diet vanilla coke.  I soak up the sun and play with my boys outside for a couple hours.  I greet David when he gets home from work.  I feed everyone dinner.  I pick up the phone when it rings.

And I hear her voice, my doctor and I don’t even know what she is saying for the first few sentences.  GET TO THE RESULTS, I scream in my mind while I listen to her spout some random numbers and blather on about whatever else she said that I can’t remember.

This isn’t good, I think to myself.  Why is it taking her so long to tell me whether or not Latham has this deadly disease?

“…which means Latham is negative,” I hear her say all of a sudden.  I focus immediately.

“What does that mean,” I want to clarify.

“It means,” she says, “Latham does NOT have Cystic Fibrosis.”

I all but fall to the floor with relief.  And so does David.  While we still have to discover what is causing Latham’s chronic diarrhea, we at least so know what’s not causing it:  a deadly genetic disease.

But it’s not right other parents don’t get the same good news.  It’s not right their children have to suffer with Cystic Fibrosis.  It’s not right their family has to circle the garage day after day to park in the purple plane lot, ride up the lightening elevator to the lobby, wind their way past the rain forest lunch room and radiology, through the working toy train station and the burn unit, then ride up 2 levels on the elephant elevators to the Cystic Fibrosis unit for treatment.

It’s. Not. Right.

A Test for my Toddler

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

My alarm went off at 7:30 a.m. today,

just like usual.

I took a shower and applied make-up today,

just like usual.

I got the boys up and dressed them today,

just like usual.

I fed them oatmeal and fruit for breakfast today,

just like usual.

I buckled Latham in his safety seat and we went for a drive today,

just like usual.

And then, I arrived at the hospital where my baby was tested for Cystic Fibrosis today,

the most excruciatingly unusual day of my life.

LathamCF

Want to Make a Trade?

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

If I had to trade every handbag I own for this one, I think I could.

sakcrossbody1

sakcrossbody2

sakcrossbody3

 

Crank, Curl, and Fling: The Recipe for Latham’s Freedom

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

When I hopped on-line yesterday, all I wanted to do was buy a toddler bed conversion kit for the crib Latham now hurls himself out of every morning, noon, and night.  Now that my 23 month old toddler knows he can crank his leg over his head, curl it around the crib and fling his baby body to freedom, that’s all he does.  I guess he feels the 3 feet he has to fall to gain his independence is a small price to pay.  Mommy disagrees.

 But when I searched the stores to find a conversion kit, I couldn’t find one anywhere.  Not Target.  Not Wal-Mart.  Not Babies R Us.  It’s as if the company who made my crib disappeared.  And in a way, they have. 

After searching Google for all of 1 second, I discovered Jardine Enterprises no longer exists since the company had a MASSIVE recall last year of every one of its cribs made between the years 2002 – 2009.  I bought mine in 2006, the year Reichen was born.   Apparently, the slats on recalled cribs can break, leaving a gap where small children can get trapped or strangled.

STRANGLED!

The company was so damaged by the recall, they have changed their name from Jardine Enterprises to Bergamo in order to continue making and selling baby furniture.

How did I not know about this?  I am so angry I wasn’t contacted by the company about the recall.  I even filled out and mailed all the time sucking address, phone number and e-mail paperwork when I bought the furniture so I could be notified when and if something such as a recall ever happened.

The Google search went on to inform me Jardine Enterprises will give me a voucher for a new crib as soon as I give them the information about the recalled crib I purchased.  But that doesn’t even come close to making me feel better about their company putting the lives of my little boys in danger and not telling me about it.

Not. Even. Close.

 

He Just Kept His Secret and Smiled

Monday, March 15th, 2010

When he meandered out of his room and into mine, I. Could. Not. Believe. It.

“Hi Momma,” he grinned like it was no big deal he just hurled his baby body out of his crib, opened his bedroom door, strolled down the hall to his brother’s room and twisted open that knob too.

“Latham, how did you get out of your crib,” I gasped as he toddled toward me.

“I don’t know,” he laughed after he wrapped his chubby arms around my neck and squeezed.

Released from his room, Reichen was two steps behind breathless to provide play by play of their great escape.  “MOMMA, Latham opened my door!  He got out of his crib,” he excitedly said while jumping and clapping.

Out of curiosity, I walked Latham to his room, plopped him in his crib, and asked him to show me how he hopped out. 

He didn’t. 

He just kept his secret and smiled. 

latham09