Thursday, September 27, 2012

Clara: Episode 5

I think this is the funniest set of Clara-isms yet.

1. I made homemade chicken noodle soup the other night. Clara has decided that she loathes chicken, unless it comes from Chick-fil-A.  (But, that's a secret).  So she was thrilled when I served her bowl of soup before adding the chicken.  She was so thrilled that stopped in her tracks, held her hand together near her chest, and then ran over to my side hugging me.  "Oh Mommy!  I am 100% sure that I will never regret living in this family with such a good Mommy!"

2. The kids were playing a game with some homemade cards that have pictures of our family on them. They had devised some system where they would decide the fate of the person on the card before turning it over.  The planned action didn't happen, but it made the kids laugh.  Before one turn they decided that the next person flipped over had to have their arm amputated.  They turned over the card and it was a picture of me. Clara screamed, "No!  Not Mommy!  She already got her mouth amputated!"

3. This one is actually something funny that Audrey (5) said, but she said it to Clara.


Clara:   Did you know that Jesus' name is really Jehovah?
Audrey: His name is not Jevolvah!
Clara: yes, it is. It was his old name, and then he changed it to Jesus.
Audrey: I'd change my name to Jesus too if My name was Jevolvah.

4.During Church on Sunday while I was recuperating - 

Clara, jumping up and down on the bench. Clara, climbing all over people during the sacrament, almost bumping the tray to the floor. Clara, climbing under the benches.

Daddy: Clara, you are behaving the worst you have behaved in forever. Now sit down, and think about Jesus.
Clara: (Loud enough for everyone to hear in the chapel) Daddy, I AM thinking about Jesus. I'm Jesus' Cat
Daddy: You are NOT going to be Jesus' cat during the meeting. Sit down now.
Clara: (crawling into the isle, being sacrilegious) My name is Christ. Christ the cat. Sister Bell can call me Christ, Jesus' Cat!

5. And finally, at dinner tonight, Clara admitted to writing a love letter to a boy at school. She has loved him since Kindergarten.  He went to a different school for 1st grade and came back to her school this year.  At first she loved him because he used blue scissors and because he was so handsome.  Now it has evolved further.  I confiscated the note and told her that it is inappropriate to give to him and she can write him a note complimenting him but not professing love. Here is her letter:

Dear ________,
For some time now I have loved you.  I egmiyered ( admired) you for such a long time.  I like the way you shine like a flower.  You are so hansom (handsome)  Sine- Your secret egmiyer.  


Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Paper Chain

It isn't often that I experience something so awful, so challenging, so consuming, that I am unable to write in detail about it while I am going through the trial.  In fact, I don't think it has ever happened to me.  Until my jaw surgery.

What can I say?  Wow.  It was hard.

My surgery was on September 5th.  After all I could do to prepare, I placed my faith in God and trusted in my oral surgeon, Dr. Urban, carefully selected, to perform a successful surgery.  The procedure that I had is called a Lefort Osteotomy.  Check out this link to understand more.  I had the first kind.  http://www.roopakmaj.com/2007/06/3-weeks-post-op-prepare-to-be-grossed.html

I knew that when I woke up my teeth would be banded together.  I was pretty nervous about this causing me to panic.  I chose not to research the operation because, sometime, not knowing is better.  I'm still glad that I didn't do much research.  I knew just enough to be prepared but not enough to back down.  If I had known how hard it would be, I can't imagine that I would have gone through with the surgery.  People told me it would be terrible.  I told myself it would be really terrible.  I wanted it to be less terrible than I imagined.  It was more terrible.

My last meal was a hamburger from the Training Table and an A&W root beer at 9 p.m. on Tuesday.  On Wednesday we got the kids off the school and headed over to Alta View Hospital.  They checked me in, weighed me, drew a bit of blood to make sure I wasn't pregnant, drew some more blood just to drain me a little ( I don't know why they did it twice), checked my vitals, and deposited me in a room to change into a somewhat revealing hospital gown and  wait it out.

We waited.

And waited.

We laughed when we watched a cooking show called "The Chew" while waiting.  There I was, about to lose my ability to chew for 6 or more weeks, watching a cooking show full of people chewing delicious homemade pizza.

About an hour behind schedule, the ball got rolling.  The Dr. came in.  We talked about last minute things.  I told him I was afraid of throwing up and that Phenergan  had controlled nausea in the past for me, but that it would also make me sleep.  The anesthesiologist came in and put in the I.V.  Without warning me, he also added something to make me drowsy.  I remember them starting to wheel me out.  I can't really remember anything after that until. . .

I woke up. .

The surgery lasted 3 1/2 hours.

I woke up 2 hours after the surgery ended.  It was 7 P.M.

There were two people by my bed and I was in an open space.  They sounded a little frantic and were telling me to breathe.  "Breathe deeper!"  I struggled to breathe, but something was gurgling in my throat.  After a bit I started to cough up blood.  The nurse demanded that I open my mouth.

The first set of rubberbands. They made it very hard to talk and I couldn't open my mouth.  Now I only have two rubberbands that I am allowed to remove to eat and brush. 

What?  I knew my teeth were banded together.  I said I couldn't, the best I could with the tight bands.  She said I could.  So I tried, envisioning the tracheotomy I was going to get if I didn't start breathing better.  And as I coughed up blood, the nurse suctioned it out.  I guess this helped my O2 levels because they started to calm down.  I didn't calm down though .  Blood was dripping down my throat.  I felt terrible.  I remember hearingi someone say the anesthesiologist had been sitting with me for a long time.  I heard the word tachycardic.  I had no idea what it meant.  Now I know it means rapid heart rate.  I think my heart was going 130 or so, where normal for me is in the 70's.

That night is somewhat of a blur of suctioning myself all night long, coughing up blood, blood running down my face, and just feeling miserable.  The Dr. came to see me that night and again the next morning very early and told the nurse to clean me up.  I guess I had blood all over my face.

They were pumping me full of drugs- phenergan, morphine, steroids, antibiotics, and later Lortab, Zofran, something like Motrin, and Afrin.

The morphine burned as it entered, starting in my heart and burning down my body like liquid draining out of my feet.  The steroid burned in a different way.  It took me about two days to communicate that to the nurses.

I couldn't talk.  I wrote everything down for a bit.  My mouth was very swollen. My palate was swollen . My tongue was swollen. I tried not to panic.  At some point they started to push liquids on me.  I had this 2 oz. syringe with tubing attached and a very strong person could suck up the liquid and then squirt it in my mouth.  It was exhausting.  I remember being immensely proud of myself that I fed myself 4 oz. of apple juice and thinking that it was plenty for one meal.  I think I had about 600 calories between Wednesday and Saturday.

I hadn't planned on people sleeping there with me, but I guess I was in such bad shape that Judd decided it was necessary.  He stayed the first night.  I think my dad slept at my house with my kids.  My dad stayed the next two nights.  All they had to sleep on was a pitiful reclining chair.  It didn't look comfortable.  I kept them up while they worried about me.  I was a mess.

The 3 day hospital stay doesn't really fit chronologically in my mind.  It's a mix of half awake half asleep episodes.  There was walking around the halls.  It was exhausting.  Blood pressure, humidifier, I.V. food.  At some point a nutritionist came and brought me a wired jaw diet packet.  I think I opened my eyes for about 5 seconds of her visit.  I never got to read the packet and it didn't seem to come home with me.  The R.S. presidency came to visit me.  The president told me later that she cried after she left my room because I looked so awful.  My aunt came and sat with me and rubbed my hands and feet with lotion and braided my hair.  It was very soothing.  I felt so helpless and disconnected.  I felt like I was dying.

Dr. Urban kept urging me to get up out of bed, but I couldn't manage more than a walk around the nurses station every few hours. He said I would feel better if I got up and moved around.  It didn't make me feel better. It took every bit of will power I had and then I would sleep for two hours after a walk.  On the fourth day, I went home to my parents house.  I began to have anxiety attacks each night.  My nose was stuffy and I was afraid it would completely clog and I would suffocate or have to cut the bands and risk my jaw healing incorrectly.  Every time I would fall asleep I would wake up in a panic. I had this constant heavy feeling on my chest. This lasted for 4 nights.  I slept for only a few hours each night, and only for one hour at a time.  The rest of the time I would just breathe in and out and try not to panic, praying for comfort. My parents set up a humidifier and a fan, and placed a bell by me that I could ring if I needed help. Finally,  on the 7th night after surgery, I got decent sleep.  I thought I would turn the corner and feel better and be able to stay awake and focus on doing something like reading or watching t.v.

 But, I still couldn't function.  My dad took me to the store to walk around.  I got in, went down one aisle, and stopped.  "The cart is too heavy.  I can't do this," I didn't care about anything at that moment.  He took me back and told my mom I was getting worse.  She called the doctor and they decided I was dehydrated.  My parents pushed water and pedialyte on me and it actually worked. 8 days after surgery I finally turned a corner!  I was able to stay out of bed and walk without my knees buckling.

I decided I didn't need a blood transfusion and that I wasn't going to die.

I had done some things in the previous days, like working a puzzle with my mom.  It was one of the hardest things I ever did.  I only did it to pass time and to try to stay out of bed.  I could hardly hold my head up. I couldn't walk straight.  I had to hold on to my dad's hand when we would go walk outside because my knees kept buckling under me.  I couldn't seem to lift my arms up. They were just too heavy.  I was walking crooked.  My body just wanted to tilt.

It was so wonderful to emerge from the fog!  And it's just gotten better every day since then.  It has now been 20 days.  I spent 3 days in the hospital and 2 weeks and one day with my parents.  Yesterday was my first day home with my family.  I did have visits with them frequently, but I really stepped back into the mother role today.  And it was hard.  I am pretty much seriously really tired.

 But, nothing has ever been as physically hard as those 8 days.

I knew I was scaring people, and there was nothing I could do about it.   I had many priesthood blessings -probably 5 or 6 over 8 days. I knew I wasn't going to die, but I still felt only half connected.  I heard my mom tell my husband that she could gauge my recovery process by how many times I said,"I don't care.".  I just didn't care about anything.  "You decide Mom, please.  Just tell me what to eat, what to do.  It's too hard."  I personally was gauging my recovery by how well I could play the piano and whether I could beat my mom at Carcassonne.  The first game was a disaster.  I just wanted it to end.  My face hurt so much and I was so tired.  The end was a relief.

I am so glad that the hardest part is over.  I can deal with the rest.  I can deal with no feeling in my palate or upper teeth.  I can deal with the constant tingling and heavy feeling in my upper lip, nose, and cheeks all the way up to my eyes.  I can even handle being banded shut, especially now that I get to take them off to drink through a straw and eat baby food, I mean pureed food. I will not even go into details about how great it is to brush my teeth after not being able to brush for two weeks. Let your imagination fill in the details on that one.  I can handle the pain.  It's not too bad.  I can take the bruising that started by my mouth and spread and then started to sink under my chin.  It's pretty ugly, but I think it will be mostly gone in another week or so.  I can totally handle the weight loss.  Oh yes, that part is sweet.

This all started over two years ago with a broken tooth, soon followed up with a most confusing blessing that told me how much I would need my family to help me through. At the time I remember thinking, "I don't know what's wrong with me, but this doesn't sound good."  My family has rallied around me and supported me and my husband and children in so many ways.  I have received many get well cards, encouraging emails and facebook messages.  My parents cared for me for over two weeks.  My husband took on all the responsibilities at home.  Other family members babysat and brought meals, often both. My sister and brother in law are paying for a mother's helper and cleaning of my home for the next two weeks.  The ward family also flooded our home with goodies and offers of babysitting as needed.  I truly felt cradled in the arms of  love extended by my friends and family. And I needed it so very much. I also felt nourished by the word of God as I read the scriptures alone and with my parents.  The scriptures soothe the spirit, regardless of the state of the body.

So, almost three weeks down and three weeks to go.  I'm halfway there! The paper chain my mother made me is much smaller than it used to be. Has this healed my problem?  Well, I don't know.  My problem had to do with my bite and how it affected my ability to chew properly.  It had to do with how my bad bite was causing me to clench and grind in my sleep.  It was a complicated problem and fixing it is a process.  So, I think I am closer, but I guess I won't know for sure until I get the feeling back in my upper teeth.  Right now my bite feels pretty good, but that is only the opinion of my lower teeth. I am not done with my orthodontic treatment and will have my braces on for another 9 months to a year, mostly likely. Ask me then if my mouth problem is better.  I do believe I'm on the right path and that in the end I will be improved to a point where I am not in daily pain.

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Clara: Episode 4

1. Clara recently learned a little bit about hypnosis and also how to snap.  So, she was all set to try out her new skills.  "Daddy" Clara began one night," Look at my finger". She began to move her finger in the standard hypnosis pendulum like swinging movement. "You are getting sleepy! You are getting very sleepy."
Judd decided to play along and eventually closed his eyes.
Gasp! "It worked!  When I snap my fingers you will open your eyes.  You will not remember anything."

Silence.

More silence.

And more silence.

Then, a frightened cry, "Oh no!  I can't make my fingers snap. I've hypnotized Daddy and he's going to be asleep FOREVER!"

2. Clara:  Mommy I've been feeling really itchy today.  I think I've been around too many men.  Do you think I need some allergy medicine?
Me: No.  I think you should just stay away from the men.

3. This one was relayed from my friend and one of my few blog followers- Natalie. She had brought us some goodies the night before.


  • At church, Clara said "You know the thing I asked my mom if I could have some of when you were there yesterday?"
    Natalie 'yes' 
    Clara replied "Was it you who brought that over?
    Natalie" 'yes' "GASP! THANK YOU!( 
    giving Natalie a huge hug.) That kind of bread is my FAVORITE KIND OF MUFFIN!"
  • Then Dustin (Natalie's husband) complimented her dress and said it was the prettiest dress he'd ever seen, and she said, "Thanks. Except for this.." and was pulling the neckline out and for some reason looking down at her bare chest. Then she said, "There's something red in here.." and pulled out a little piece of something and looked at it for a second then popped it in her mouth- "Mmm! It's a Swedish Fish!"


4. Clara,"Mommy I am 100% sure about that, except I'm not certain.  I don't really know, but I'm definitely 100% sure"


Surgery this Week!

My surgery is scheduled for this Wednesday, September 5th.  I have done a pretty decent job of not freaking out too much.  I think I've only had a couple of "I'm so scared I can't breathe" moments that I quickly fought back.  I have spent the last two months preparing myself and my family in every possible way for the coming weeks and months.  I didn't get every single thing done, but most of them, and we are in a good place.
As part of my preparation I decided to look into my chronic post nasal drip problem.  Long story short- I am allergic to 10 trees, 5 weeds, and dust mites. Nothing is wrong with my bone structure, nose, or sinuses.  The medicine doesn't help much, but it's something.  Allergy shots or alternative treatments may be in my future.  After my surgery I will not be allowed to blow my nose for 4 weeks or use my neti pot.  I'm a little nervous about that and praying that no colds come my way. So, after 3 doctor. visits for this problem, I'm still at square one with guck dripping almost constantly down the back of my throat, and other annoying side effects.
And I'm ready. I've got my blender.  I've got 5 pounds of Muscle Milk.  I have bran flakes, chia seeds, wheat germ, powdered milk, frozen tomato puree, spinach and fruit.

And the whole surgery is up in the air.  I met with the oral surgeon on Friday for the big meeting- the one where I got to ask my questions. He rescheduled it once because of a problem with an impression, which required an extra office visit for me.  His office called Friday morning and asked to reschedule again and I threw a polite fit.  I said I wanted my questions answered and I didn't want to wait any longer. They agreed that I could still come in to see him.  It's a good thing I did!  When I first was told I needed surgery, it was to expand my jaw.  During  the time I wore the mouth guard and got braces, my teeth have moved  in such a way that I've developed an open bite. This means that when I bite down my front teeth do not overlap at all.  There is a small gap.I cannot bite into food with my front teeth with any success.  I cannot break spaghetti noodles by biting into them.  I have to push soft food against my top teeth and bite harder food with my side teeth.  It's really annoying.  The oral surgeon is planning on fixing this by cutting through my upper jawbone and then shaving some off of the back, bringing the front forward so that I will be able to bite into food. This sounds great! But, that's all he was planning to do.  I asked about expansion.  You know, as in the expansion that three different orthodontists said I needed.  He said I don't need expansion, in his opinion.  He showed me on the model of my teeth.  I could see his point.  My back teeth do match up.  I'm not sure how the front is supposed to be, but he said it was fine.  I'm not even sure if my insurance will pay for it if he does decide to do it because he may have only received pre-approval for the open bite procedure.  The jaw expansion would require a few more cuts and a slightly different after care procedure. I don't really understand how we've been going along since April with this misunderstanding.

My orthodontist is out of the office until Tuesday.  The oral surgeon is out of the office too.  He's going to drive to the ortho first thing on Tuesday morning and have a chat with my orthodontist.  They will decide the fate of my mouth.  I have no idea what is going to happen, but I feel peaceful about it. Maybe I will have expansion, maybe I will not. Either way I'm having a three hour nasty jaw surgery.  Maybe the reason I felt compelled to wait was because I'm not supposed to have the expansion. I don't know.  I just know I feel right about using Dr. Urban.  I carefully selected my orthodontist and my oral surgeon and I am going to trust in their combined expertise.

My teeth will be rubber banded together for 6 weeks.  There's a chance that after a couple of weeks the rubber bands will be loosened and I will be able to open my mouth some.  There's a chance that won't happen.  It depends on if I get both procedures or not.  I do know I'm looking forward to Christmas.  I have another surgery scheduled in November- to fix my pre-existing condition that makes me ineligible for private health insurance.  That surgery will be a cakewalk compared to the jaw surgery- I hope so anyway.

In closing, lest you all feel depressed after reading this, let me conclude by saying that I know absolutely that this is the right course for me.  I feel so peaceful about it.  Yes, I also feel nervous and a little bit afraid, but mostly I feel like I am on the right path.  I am so grateful for all of my body parts that work correctly.  I try to remember how lucky I am that most of my body functions without pain.  My blessings are so vast they are embarrassing.  How many people in the world get 6 healthy, intelligent, fun children?  How many people live in a nice home with electricity, heat, air conditioning, plumbing, t.v., and other conveniences?  In a worldwide perspective, not many.  How many people are lucky enough to have the Gospel of Jesus Christ as a firm foundation for all trials in life?  I'm so fortunate.  I don't know why I have been blessed in mortality with so much more than many of God's children, but I do know that I have an increased responsibility because of my knowledge and blessings.  I know that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, that he came to earth and atoned for our sins, that he died that we might be resurrected.  I know that the family is eternal. I know the things I need to do to return to Heavenly Father.  I am so blessed.  As much as this mouth trial has been difficult, it has given me many opportunities to learn and even some chances to bless other people.  I'm so grateful for the blessings that come from trials.  I hope to be up and blogging again soon!