Monday, May 30, 2011

Two years

Hard to believe we've been doing this for over two years!

Have a wonderful Memorial Day, and please, take a moment to remember our servicemen and women who have offered their lives for our freedoms, and another to be grateful for the lives theirs have helped us build.

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8 years

Eight years ago, this foolish couple embarked on that adventure called marriage.
Who would have thought it would have lasted this long?

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Outdoors

How many times have my kids stared wistfully out the window, desperately wanting to go play outside, but I've been too tired or busy to let them?
Well today we went outside, but then no sooner did we get back home, and he's glued to the windows and door, begging to go swing.
So right now, I am blogging this with one hand while pushing him with the other. We could probably all do with a little more fresh air and cloud gazing.

See you outside,
Slee
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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Wordless Wednesday: Functional Marketing

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Tuesday, May 24, 2011

He likes tools

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Monday, May 23, 2011

Legislating planning for the unexpected.

Kansas State Representative Degraaf,

I am saddened to read that on Friday, May 20th, you likened women being assaulted, raped, and impregnated, to something they should insure themselves against and plan ahead for, much like you carry a spare tire.

Firstly, this is sexist legislation. Men do not have to take out specific insurance for broken bones and gunshot wounds, in other words, treatment for the aftermath of violent crime. Yet, you want insurance companies to specifically not cover the gambit of injuries women might sustain if their bodies are violated.
These measures also smack of victim blaming. Saying "she should have planned ahead," implies that she should have reasonably expected her rights and her body to be violated. No, she shouldn't, and it is the job of legislators and law enforcement to create and uphold laws ensuring her safety, not make her pay extra in insurance costs and health care costs, which she likely can't afford, considering women still make substantially less than men.
Women deserve an apology, and your constituents deserve better representation.
Shame on you.

Sincerely,
Slee Fenton


PS Please note this letter is being copied to my blog to publicly voice my disappointment in your attitude and legislative maneuvering to truncate women's rights and safety.


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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Doctor, doctor.

Today was the dreaded trip to the doctor's office.
I may have mentioned it before, but my son fears doctor's offices and their staff in much the same way that the members of the Westboro Baptist Church fear gay people- irrationally, yet intensely.
I am happy to report that this time we made it through height, weight, and head circumference checks, as well as a plethora of developmental questions before he got clingy. We still managed to get lungs, ears and eyes checked before the full fledged screaming started.
I think all the time spent practicing using the tools of the trade at home have really helped. Investing in a doctor's kit was a good idea.
Sure, he still only talks to the nurse and doesn't want to look his doctor in the eye, he probably still remembers how many times his pediatrician asked if we were sure we didn't want any bits lobbed off his penis at birth. I might want to do a little screaming too if someone suggested similar for me.
Nonetheless, only the last 10 minutes involved screaming and tantrums so fervent he changed color. I am going to call this visit a success.
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Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Conversations

Me: Do you want to watch a Movie?
Toddler: Yes! Mowee!
Me: Which movie would you like to watch?
Toddler: Docda Who! Mowee Docda Who pleeez."

Yeah, my geekling mama heart just melted.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

On the notion of taxing sodas and other sweet drinks in the name of obesity.

I think it's absolutely classist, sizeist, and elitist. If something is too unhealthy to be sold in stores, it shouldn't be legal to sell it. As for alcohol and tobacco taxes making harmful compounds less desirable to people, it just means that people who want those things will buy them before doing things like paying bills and buying groceries.


I think a better idea would be regulating GMOs (banning perhaps) and encouraging soft drink companies to use cane sugar instead of HFCS, as corn products are, for many people, a great way to gain wait, and GMOs are a great way to sterilize populations of mice over three generations.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Who is it?

A few weeks ago, Jabberwalky started playing with the tween's old play house. Pardon the dust, we need to scrub it up for the season.
He really enjoys the house. He plays with it's kitchen it's phone, the door. I pretend I am calling on my cellphone and he play answers. I knock at the door and he answers with a first time homeowner's pride.
But it got me thinking. When I was little, I played games like this with my mom and my friends. They were opportunities to learn the social conventions of answering doors, and phones, and opportunities to learn what to do when different people come to the door.
It strikes me that in all her years, tween has not ever answered the phone or door at home for real. Only in games or when I have looked outside and verified that it was a grandparent and specifically asked her to open it.
I wonder if I'm the only one, and if it's normal that I reserve door answering for adults. How do you handle it?
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Saturday, May 07, 2011

Extermiday

We had the toddler's birthday party today, complete with a Dalek birthday cake. We also had bowtie pasta, because bow ties are cool. Yeah, Doctor Who birthday party for the win.
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Friday, May 06, 2011

Lanolin on my Dalek

For his birthday, my delightful friend Vilate over at Nifty Nappy sent Jabberwalky the cutest wool cover in the history of time.  Well, in the history of the Time War. It's so cute I think it just may exterminate me.

Of course, I've never done the initial lanolin wash on a wool cover, so I'm wondering if maybe you have a great method for lanolizing wool covers.

As is I usually use the nice smelling lanolin wash my friend Melinda  from Buddha Bunz, but since this is the all important initial lanolination, I wanted your input first!

Ooh, and isn't that the cutest alien bent on the destruction of all mankind you ever saw?

Thursday, May 05, 2011

Two

Two years ago I woke up early and put on my bright orange paisley sundress and waddled out of the house.  The contractions were about 10 minutes apart, but they'd been between two and fifteen minutes apart for months.  After weeks of bedrest, the fact was, this kid probably wasn't coming on a convenient schedule for my OB, and she played the "your last baby was very large, and I'm afraid he seems to be bigger," card, and I was looking for an end to the pelvic pain, and agreed that Cinco de Mayo would be a grand birthday for a boy, and so it was that morning I went in to have my labor started for me.
I was in a wretched mood, griping at spouse because we got there two minutes after we were supposed to already be checking in, and I was terrified that after all the preparations I'd put into being psychologically ready to have this baby, and into making sure my parents could take off work to pick my older child up from school, that I'd be sent home because they were too busy for me.  
This wasn't an unfounded fear, as when my daughter was born I had gone in more than once to be induced and been sent home because there were too many other people having children that day, and in her case, the pre-eclampsia was killing her placenta, and she really did need to come out.
I was also terrified because my daughter had been a pitocin induction, and pitocin induced contractions hurt, a lot. 
I was also afraid because parts of my right leg never felt quite right following the epidural.  (Hm, pitocin leading to an epidural, who'd have guessed?)
So it was with trepidation, fear, and irritation that I checked in on the verge of tears.

Upstairs they hooked me up to this machine and that one, asked a plethora of questions, ran an IV of precautionary antibiotics, checked under the hood, and brought out the prostinaglandin of choice along with a breakfast menu.  
I ordered a cheddar cheese omelet with hashbrowns and cranberry juice.  There may have been toast.
Within minutes of the little pill being placed at my cervix, the contractions seemed to get stronger and more regular.  I ate breakfast and live tweeted how I felt about the whole experience.  I was touched by the outpouring of attention, even though the hashtag #twitterbirth hadn't yet been stumbled upon.  
Spouse plugged in his laptop and continued to do work and take business calls as the contractions built.  
As the contractions got harder I did a lot of walking, up and down the hall, turn around and back again.  It occurred to me that they would do well to have a round walking track with interesting things to look at for laboring mothers.  I was told that the lobby preferred if we didn't go downstairs, but I didn't ask if I could go out on the terrace. In retrospect I should have, it would have made walking a lot more interesting.
Around three or so, my OB breezed in to break my water since I wasn't dialating as quickly as she had hoped.  After the first gush it was perhaps five minutes before the intensity of contractions started to grow exponentially and it must have shown in my face, since the nurse started insisting that I wanted an epidural, or would want one.  Spouse was in her court, because it seemed the thing to do.  I figured that if they were going to hurt like last time, I'd be begging for one eventually and I might as well get it sooner than later.  What sense is there in suffering longer than you have to if you're going to make that choice anyway?  Right?
Well, of course, fate had a lesson to teach me.  It was that I need to just give up on the silly notion of epidurals.
The anesthesiologist, Mo, came up and got to work at about four, and it felt very different than the last time. There were tendons I remember feeling pop last time, but I thought, "since last time was problematic, perhaps this is right." That said, the needle going in hurt many times worse than the last time and was ultimately worse than any of the contractions going on at the time.
The doctor told me I'd need to lay on my back for an hour while the meds got to work.  You know, because that's a great laboring position.
Yeah. Great.
Well, the contractions still hurt, and the nurse checked back every so often with an ice pack to see when the numbness had set in.  Ultimately, on my right thigh, where I already had some longterm numbness, the icepack felt only a little cool.  Everwhere else it was still nice and icy, and the contractions felt just like the always did.
At about four thirty, in all of this, Spouse decided he was very hungry and went to grab a burger.  He came back and asked me if I'd like some, and I decided that since my OB had said I could eat, maybe half a cheeseburger was a great idea, despite the pain.  I figured, all this work is making me hungry, and dang it, I'm going to eat.  So at about four forty-five, I ate half a cheeseburger shortly after an internal check and frown that made it look like perhaps I wasn't progressing well.  
Interestingly, the eating of the cheeseburger made the contractions hurt worse, a lot worse, and so the nurse went off to call Mo back to see if a different placement would work.  When the nurse came back in she helped me roll onto my side as the contractions were coming very close together and I was in a lot of pain.
At this point, in my head, I was a fox.  I'd given up on being me and decided that this must be what a fox felt like when it was giving birth, and I embraced that, clutching the side of the bed and choking back the yelps and screams I didn't have any desire to make. 
The nurse came back in and glanced at me, cancelled the call to Mo and called my OB back in, sounding panicked, then she said, "try not to push. I mean, if you have to push, push, but try not to push."
The OB was only two or three contractions away, and she arrived just in time for my three push boy to come, screaming and crying while half out, into the world.
They handed him directly to me so I could introduce him to the breast and get to know him before daddy cut the cord.
Soon they'd be gently washing him while the doctor yelled for a shot of pitocin because I was bleeding too much while a nurse massaged my belly. 
The nurses giggled that he was definitely a boy since he had some pretty severe hydrocele.  In retrospect, it was fairly comedic.
Then he was swaddled and brought back to me where he nursed and blinked at me, and I was completely in love with this little nameless boy covered in soft fur, white pimply dots, and some notable stork bite.  
It wasn't until the next morning that we named him, until then he was my surprisingly red haired little 
sweeting.
I can hardly believe how much he's grown.



He's been nursing for a full two years now.  Hard to believe, two great big years. 

Tuesday, May 03, 2011

Maybe I should tell you what I'm up to.

I want to share a couple tutorials I've been working on, but they are both gifts for someone who might read about them on here.
I thought "maybe she won't realize they're for her," and then I realized that I still don't want to spoil the surprise.
So my mom has mailed them out, and as soon as I get confirmation that they've arrived, I promise, I'll tell you what I'm up to.

But you can look forward to two fun with fabric projects that can be finished in under a day. As a matter of fact, I finished them both in one afternoon, while taking  pictures. :-)

Monday, May 02, 2011

Team Diedrich Update

For those of you who have been following the story of my nephew Diedrich, I wanted to update you on his condition and thank you for your prayers, well wishing, and love.
Diedrich had his transplant surgery on the 28th and 29th. He was in surgery for about 15 hours.  When the transplant team had him open they determined that most of his organs were in too bad of shape to be functional.  He had been in multiple organ failure for a while and so they not only did a liver transplant, but also transplanted the stomach, pancreas, and intestines.  He kept his own kidneys and had his spleen removed.  It is called a full abdominal transplant. They used the donors existing arteries.
It's been wonderful to watch how quickly his new liver took him from bright yellow to regular baby color.  He nearly matches his mother now.

His recovery has been going well, though he has had many setbacks to overcome, including rashes from allergies his new organs brought, a bad reaction to the anesthesia, and a recurring problem with one of his tubes irritating his vagal nerve causing his heart to stop many times.
He is improving, but it is a long road and he could use all the prayers and support he can get.

He still will need a follow up surgery to close his belly when the doctors are certain that the swelling is down enough and that they don't need back in there.

Thank you for following along, and thank you for your continued support.

He's my little hero.