Thursday, May 20, 2010

4 and a half


This is the best age ever. Totally! Four was hell but Four and a Half is heaven. There's such a big difference.

We went to the Dogwood Festival in Phoenixville last weekend. We stopped at the parade and then walked over to the rides. I didn't tell Cha beforehand where we were going. (Mainly because it was a complete spur of the moment thing.) We got in the car and I told her that we were going someplace fun, because she was being such a good girl. She was so excited trying to figure out where we were headed. And when I told her that we were meeting one of her BFF's (Cait) she got even more excited. She was happy when we got to the corner of Main and Bridge to watch the parade and then beamed when she found out that the cars were throwing CANDY. We watched for about a half hour then walked down to the rides, where we met up with Cait and her mom Val. Those two girls are so great together. They're both a bit tomboy-ish and on every ride opted for the 'boy' choice. (Let's go on the Monkey Ride. Shall we sit in the Pink Monkey or the Black Monkey?? Black Monkey!!) It's fun to just stand back and watch them live.

We won two of the biggest goldfish I've ever seen. Cha calls them Rosie and Nemo and surprisingly, they are still alive. (Cait's two fish didn't last 24 hours.) She hasn't paid much attention to them since Saturday afternoon. The cats took notice immediately. I already know how this is going to play out. These wouldn't be the first fish that Petey Cat has 'played' with.


Life is good when you know a 4 and a Half year old.

Friday, May 14, 2010

6 Months

This week marked six months since my brother died. The actual day just happened to be the same day as the monthly Survivors of Suicide meeting. I've only missed one meeting in that six months and find the sessions very helpful, even more so than the cancer survivor meetings which I stopped attending long, long ago.

There were five attendees who were dealing with the loss of siblings, which is rare. Most of the losses are parents, children or spouses. Siblings seem to be the forgotten mourners. The facilitator said something during the first session I attended that has stuck with me. Siblings are the longest relationship you will ever have in your life. Longer than your parents, spouses or children. They have known you since birth and you are in each other's lives (one way or another) until death. Yet even with that significance, siblings don't get the same amount of attention when there is a loss. People are quick to check on the parents or spouses of a suicide victim but never realize that the brother or sister might need the same support.

So it was good to talk about losing my brother with others who have lost theirs. A few things that we all had in common? A tremendous amount of guilt. We were their brothers/sisters, why couldn't we save them? And every one of us in the room felt things ended on bad terms. There were harsh words, angry hang-ups, mean emails or long term silence. Normal sibling bickering that ended in the most cruel way. There is no making-up or saying 'Dude, I'm sorry.' Just stupid, angry words that will hang in your thoughts forever.

Another thing that we all experienced was the internal struggle within in the family, especially with remaining siblings. Some no longer speak, and others are so pissed at the way their surviving brothers/sisters have acted since the loss that all they do is fight. Families are torn apart and are never the same. Isn't that the last thing you need at such a crappy time in your life?

I'm so thankful for finding this group. It helps to talk, yell and cry with people who know exactly how you are feeling and hear from those who are farther down the recovery road. To hear that altho it will never be alright, it will be better. It's wonderful to have the freedom to say things that you could never say to your family and friends and not be thought of as bitter or crazy.

Anyway, here are a few especially hard moments:

Saying their name, or meeting someone with the same name
Saying 'my 2 brothers' instead of 'my 3 brothers'
That first family picture without the missing loved one
That point when you can tell that family/friends/co-workers, etc. really don't want to hear about it anymore

I miss you Keith.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Bad, bad, survivor!

This weekend is the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure in Philadelphia. It's the Mother's Day 5k that I have participated in the past 2 years. It is a beautiful and emotional event and I support Susan G. Komen 100%. I've raised several thousand dollars during those two years and am very happy with the experience.

I signed up this year and raised a few pennies but sometime between last December when I registered and the last couple of weeks I decided not to walk.

You see, it's Mother's Day. And I am a Mother. A mother who just happened to have had breast cancer. Cancer has taken many things from me since I was diagnosed and I just don't want to give it another Mother's Day.

Some girlfriends and I talked about doing Relay for Life instead. We spoke to a representative from the American Cancer Society this morning and will be forming a team later this fall. Walks are typically held in spring and summer, so we're a little late getting started for this year but we will be all over it for next year.

So, if you're local (or even not so local!) and want to join us be sure to save the date - May 21, 2011. A few of us plan on staying the entire 24 hour period but don't expect the whole team to commit to the same. It will be fun, fun, fun!

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

always together

Keith! Jim! Joan! Dan!

I can't count the number of times my mother yelled our names when we were kids. The four names, always together and always in the same order. I can still hear it in my mind and it makes me smile. It's odd the things you hold on to from your youth.

Last month, on what would have been my brother's 47th birthday, Charlotte and I went tree shopping. I wanted to plant something to honor his memory, like the tree we planted for my Aunt Betty who passed away two years ago. We stopped by several nurseries and I found something I'd never seen before. It was a fruit cocktail tree. A single tree that grows four different fruit - peach, plum, nectarine and apricot. The four fruit, always together. It made me cry (tho pretty much everything does lately). I decided we had to plant that tree in Keith's memory and show that we will always be together. Somehow.

We finally got around to planting it today. Well, actually Matt did the planting while I stood silently and cried. Matt took great pains to make sure that the tree was planted just right. He gently dug the hole and sifted the soil, using only the good stuff. Matt spent a good hour getting that tree set properly in place because that's what his brother-in-law deserved. All the while I stood and watched and remembered.

It's simply beautiful.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

the thing about brownies

It was many months ago when my doctor told me that I was 'pre-diabetic'. She suggested that I should diet and exercise to get my body in order. I took the easy way out and opted for daily medication. I had a whole lot going on in my life and my stress levels were too high to concentrate on diet and exercise. You see, when things get crazy I reach for the chocolate and without that crutch who knows where I'd end up. So, my doctor put me on 1500 mg of Metformin a day until life settled and I could control things the 'proper' way.

I will brag a bit and say that I have been working on my diet and have been exercising regularly. I've gotten into a pretty good habit and it's making a huge difference. Back in August my Triglyceride number was 963 (Yowza!) and at the beginning of March it was down to 159 (Yippee!) Major kudos to me.

However, I've still got this little chocolate thing going on. I don't indulge very often but when I do it does a huge number on my body. This may be due to the Metformin or maybe it's just the way my body has always reacted but I just never noticed since I always felt like crap.

Tonight I made some brownies and had a small piece. (Keep in mind this was after going to a kid's birthday party today and passing on some delicious looking chocolate cake.) So, I decided to reward myself with some brownies. Well, here it is almost midnight and my body is M.A.D.!

Heartburn, sluggishness, major poopage, gas, bloating, headache, oh boy! The brownie was totally not worth it. Now I know.

I must remember this feeling for the next time I want to 'reward' myself.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Happy Monday

Cha's school is closed today for Presidents Day. My office is open. We were closed for Martin Luther King day, which her school wasn't. We need to fix that.

I've been talking to many of my working mom friends lately about how to handle the transition from daycare to school. Cha will be starting kindergarten this September She misses the cut off for public school so we had to decide whether to hold her back a year or put her in a private kinder. That was the easy part. She's been going to a school-like daycare since she was 9 weeks old and I'm fairly certain she's mature enough socially. She is familiar with being in a classroom and listening to teachers. She knows what's expected of her and what she's allowed to get away with. So, holding her back just doesn't seem right. She'll miss a whole year of learning simply because she was born 29 days late.

The school district offers testing for those who miss the birthday cut off. However, from what I've heard they expect the kids to test at least two years ahead. Cha is a smart cookie but she's not on the level of a second grader. The other hiccup with the testing route is that our school district only offers half day kinder so we would need to set her up with before and/or after school care. I contacted the places that our elementary school works with and I am far from happy with any of them. (For instance, I heard the Y offers before/after school care which I was excited about. I love our Y and think they offer great programs. However, the Y that is assigned to our elementary school is in the basement of a church that's not in the best neighborhood. I just don't want Cha going there.)

Considering that private kinder was my only real option I gathered information from local facilities. That was a real eye opener and caused me to have a near panic attack. How is it that I am a total over-thinker but am just now worrying about what to do for child care when school is out? How could I have completely forgotten summer vacations?

We've decided to keep her at her current daycare. They offer private kinder which will allow her to start 1st grade in Sept 11.

I'm curious what other working moms have planned?

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

so here's the story

If you blog I'm sure you're familiar with those spammy emails from people wanting you to contribute such and such to their blogs. One of the things I've learned in this blog experience is that to some blogging is nothing more than a marketing tool. Getting your name out is first and content is second. Feelings, emotions, and keeping up with family and friends come in somewhere near the bottom. That's good for some I guess, but I'm not interested.

Last night however I had a moment of weakness. I've been getting emails from a site that has repeatedly asked me to contribute. I've been getting weekly emails from them telling me how wonderful it would be to share my breast cancer experience with others and help newbies. Thanks to what has become my new normal (insomnia) I was up late and not thinking clearly. So, I signed up with that site. There were policies and agreements and such that I had to digitally sign off on and it wasn't until after the fact that I decided to Google the site. (Note: Google is always your first step in anything!)

The site has been called fraudulent scammers by many reputable sources. Oops! What they do is tell you that your content remains your own and you do nothing other than continue blogging as usual. However, they now have rights to that content. They can do pretty much whatever they want with it and honestly, that makes me very uncomfortable. Yes I understand that my words are out there. My blog is public and pretty much anyone can do what they want with it anyway, but it's different when I sign something agreeing to allow others to do as they wish.

I immediately emailed them and asked to cancel. It was within minutes of when I digitally agreed. I haven't heard back from them and who knows what they'll say when I do. So, I wanted to take back my blog before they had a chance to do anything with it.

It's time for a new blog chapter anyway. Soon enough I'll delete the other blog and be more anon. In the mean time I will be posting away about being a tired, happy working mom who just happened to have/has cancer, a brother who killed himself, a husband with um 'baggage' and lots of funny friends and family who make life interesting.

Thanks for listening.