Friday, February 27, 2015

Papa's birthday

After a mostly boring day (putter, chase kids, clean, play barbies, putter more), husband came home and we were on our way!  Tonight we celebrated my dad's birthday at Olive Garden. My family, my parents and my oldest brother's family were scattered along a long table, throughly confusing the waitresses. We feasted on salad, breadsticks and pasta, the children bounced around chatting with cousins and our girls eagerly gave papa a couple of cute little presents to celebrate. Yay for birthdays!

Thursday, February 26, 2015

2/26 highlights

1. started a new workout program last night: Insanity.  No really, it's called "Insanity".  and yes, yes it is.  But the part that I love is that my smokin hot husband is doing it with me.  It's only day 2 but I really want this to be part of our new routine.  (as a side note.  yesterday I set a new personal record: 100 pushups.  So sore.)

2. A had art class today, she's loving it.  She was working on a water color abstract piece today.  As long as she's enjoying it, I'm happy.  Also had parent teacher conference with her preschool teacher today.  She's preforming at the top of every academic expectation and meets all kindergarten readiness factors.  On the other hand, her classroom behavior needs a little more practice.  She's full of energy, easily distracted and loud.  All this I knew of course.  It's part of the brilliant, highly imaginative, creative, endlessly energetic, and passionate about everything person she is.

3. Grandpa is in charge of dinner of Thursday nights.  I like this new element of our schedule, I like the time we get to spend with him and the girls having so much "play time" with him.  I like that it's not an "elephant in the room" but we openly talk about missing Mom.  Tonight we called cousins on facetime and the girls squealed and chattered and danced like crazy, showing off for each other.  Then the oldest girls sat on their dad's laps and took turns reading silly jokes off the internet to each other.  I love these crazy girls.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Ragnar #7: Del Sol



Having taken 2 months off from running, I tried to convince myself to buckle down and get back into a good training schedule.  But I couldn’t do it.  I lacked motivation and now had a three mile wall I couldn’t break.  So I was definitely apprehensive about the race.  I finally threw my gear into a bag, haphazardly grabbing what I needed and dashed to the airport.  As I approached security, I recognized my friend and teammate just a few people in front of me.  What a way to kick off!  We sat together on the flight, catching up, anticipating the weekend and suggesting future races.  Our flight came in late but we found our way through the airport and found our team.  I love being with my Rag-family!  Some old friends, some I had never met, but I love my run-cation weekends so much that I think I already knew this was the therapy I wanted and could get me back on track.  We headed out for the team dinner at Olive Garden, laughing and talking.  As soon as we ordered, I announced it was time for “2 Truths and a Lie” and was almost surprised how they immediately went for it and had so much fun.  We spent the night at a friend’s house and then because I was in van 2, we got to sleep in and go to breakfast.  (Much of my Ragnar experience revolves around food.)  We settled into our van, drove to our starting exchange and completed our check in.  We had a brief wait and soon I took off on my first of 3 legs.  I had sunshine, warm weather, good music and my new Garmin watch to coach me along for a 8.6 mile run.  I was slower than I would like but being so undertrained, I didn’t want to push too hard.  I sailed into the exchange, passed the bright orange slap bracelet off to my teammate and then spent the next few hours lounging in the van, snacking and cheering on teammates.  (In particular, I was cheering for my friend that ran the “Ragnar Half” which is a 13.5 mile run.  Tough but since she got an extra medal, I was still jealous.)  Once our van’s runners were finished we stopped at a Chili’s for dinner, enjoying the tabletop trivia game and piles of chips and salsa while we waited.  We headed back to the house for a quick shower and an hour of sleep before heading out for our midnight runs.  I had an easy 2.6 in my best run costume yet: my rainbow yeti boot covers, hot pink tutu and pink light-up antennas.  I crashed for awhile during my teammates’ runs and our van finished around sunrise.  We went to breakfast, discovering a local’s favorite that served traditional German pancakes (amazing!!!).  Our break was brief and then we were back on the road again, finishing with a 3.6 and then running it into the Cubs stadium with my team.  Overall we were a little slower than hoped but mostly stuck to our projected times.  We had a celebratory team dinner at the local brewery, said goodbyes to van 1 and then spent the night at another teammate’s house.  We stayed up late, repacking, showering and talking, reluctant to leave.  We went to the airport together, sending each other off and already starting the countdown to our next races.  I love my new medal, love my new hoodie (I finally splurged after drooling for six races) and feel recommitted to running.  Looking forward to my next Ragnar adventure: Zion’s Trail in two months.

I got home from my “run-cation” and the house was quiet.  Husband and my cute girls were at church.  I immediately noticed the vase of beautiful pink tulips on the table, quickly followed by how clean the house was!  Way to go husband.  He also spent an evening with the girls watching Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and now they all think they are ninjas.  But best of all, our littlest girl was having trouble sleeping and he started using Pandora’s Mozart station to get her to settle down and sleep more deeply.  All the girls are hooked and beg for it each night!  He is so amazing!

quote of the day



Quote of the day: A was getting lectured for not coming when she was first called.  “but mom, I had to take a call.” …did my daughter turn 15 and I didn’t notice?

Valentines



Valentine’s started out with girls night on Friday (the 13th).  Husband was at a scout training, one brother was working and my other brother and dad were both wrapped up in home repair projects.  So all the women, plus a large collection of beautiful, sweet and crazy little girls (my L being the oldest, 9 children total) gathered Friday evening.  We let the kids run and play, thrilled to see each other while we deliberated over dinner and finally ordered pizza.  The pizza picnic on my tv room floor was a big hit with the kids and then we had a blast with our “minute to win it” style games.  All the kids gathered around the table for challenges like stacking conversation heart towers, picking up marshmallows with a straw, sorting colors and more.  The conversation heart tower was my favorite.  L was so focused, lining up her hearts perfectly straight.  A was genius, building a solid, larger base to support her towers.  Then she moved on to patterns.  E was perfectly content to alternate stacking and eating as she went, giggling every time the towers came crashing down.  We had cupid floats for dessert (sprite, vanilla ice cream and a red vines straw) which were fun but actually not so popular.  Eventually we got the kids all in bed and the women stayed up until 1:30am, indulging in truffles and chatting.  On Saturday, the kids woke up ridiculously early and we had to tide them over with a movie until I was awake enough to process anything.  I made pancakes, we played, decorated heart shaped cookies and then spent a long afternoon letting the kids wear themselves out at the park.  Lunch was a huge hit.  I saved heart shaped truffle boxes to use instead of plates, cutting their sandwiches and fruit and veggies into bite-sized pieces.  The kids loved it!

For Saturday evening, Husband and I invited several couples from the neighborhood to come over for dinner and games.  So when he got home after his scout training, he played with the kids, ran some errands for me and then dove right in, helping me clean up and get ready for dinner.  My dad arrived, thoughtfully bringing cute little things for the girls, oreos for me and adorably sweet girls for my mom.  Then my parents kept all the little girls upstairs while Husband and I entertained downstairs.  We had a great evening!  I made dinner and we chatted casually.  As we finished and still sat just talking comfortably, Husband suggested playing “Two Truths and a Lie”.  I laughed so hard my cheeks hurt.  It was so fun getting to know everyone better and to relax and be social.

Meanwhile that evening, L went on on a date with Grandpa.  I was hesitant to suggest it but he loved the idea.  So he picked her up, bringing treats for all the little girls and then taking L with him.  They went grocery shopping and she picked out steaks, mushrooms and asparagus (such good taste!) and then went to Grandpa’s house to cook.  L was thrilled to take their “activity” with her.  She took her favorite movie, Matilda, and two small boxes of valentine truffles to share.  However, she fell asleep before the movie ended.  We decided she could spent the night at Grandpa’s house but she woke up a few hours later, disoriented and homesick so he brought her home.

grief



Four years ago, my mother in law came down with pneumonia.  Never fun.  During that, a scan of her chest revealed a dark shadow.  Upon further investigation, it was determined to be a tumor.  But she faced it bravely with positivity and confidence.  She went in for surgery and had a third of her lung removed.  Tests confirmed the tumor was malignant but the miracle was that after the surgery, no traces of cancer could be found within her body.  So we celebrated her victory, dubbed it “cancer for a day” and went about the healing process.  We visited the hospital every day, sneaking in smoothies or playing scrabble.  Eventually she went home and life went on.

She returned every year for a follow up scan and we celebrated each time the doctors pronounced her cancer free.  As she approached her third year anniversary, a good family friend was losing her fight to breast cancer.  Perhaps it added to our apprehension.  She went in for the annual scan and the doctors broke the news: they found a tumor in her lungs.  And almost as a side note, the scan over her brain was unclear and had to be repeated.  The second scan revealed four tumors in her brain.  We were shocked and heartbroken.  The initial diagnosis was devastating and the doctors told us with certainty that it was terminal.  For further injury, the family friend lost her fight that same day and passed away.

The brain cancer, a metastases of the lung cancer, now became the most urgent matter.  Teams of doctors miscommunicated, the hospitals fumbled and it was a frustrating period of several weeks before they took action.  In fact, they took so long the tumors grew and plan A ended up being rejected in favor of something more aggressive.  They surgically removed the main tumor and she came out of surgery better than anyone expected.  About a week later, she returned to the hospital with signs of infection around the incision.  Staph infection had snuck in, thoroughly infecting the bone plate (that was removed and then replaced to get to the tumor underneath) and the entire cavity.  They had to open the incision again, throw away the bone plate, clean out the area and begin aggressive antibiotics.  But again, she seemed to recover so well that they sent her home as soon as they could.  She returned almost immediately in critical condition due to an allergic reaction to the antibiotics.  Eventually, she was well enough to undergo surgery again and the doctors put an artificial bone plate in her head.  It too became infected and had to be removed.  It would take a third attempt weeks later before it was successful.

During those months, she underwent radialsurgery, an aggressive form of radiation therapy as well as other drugs, some in experimental stages, to treat the tumor in her lung and remaining tumors in her brain.  Those were successful and the newest drug even helped with the symptoms of her rheumatoid arthritis.  We became optimistic; the course was frustrating and full of stumbling blocks but we were increasingly confident that she would return to a place of strength.  Doctors confided that they can’t “cure” brain cancer, but the can often “get rid of it”.  Perhaps she would be well for several years and when it returned, we could treat it again, giving us perhaps many more years with her.

That would not be our story.  In November she began having the first obvious symptoms.  Until then, her cancer had been discovered “clinically” or really, on accident.  By catching it early, it increased her chances of success.  And looking back, we later recognized little red flags, mostly in her verbally communication or energy levels.  Or for me, in the way she responded to my girls, becoming more easily overwhelmed by their noise and energy and immaturity.  Always loving, just more and more, “not up for it”.  A few days before Thanksgiving, she called me and asked me to take her to the doctor.  I had frequently offered to accompany her to treatments or appointments but she always declined, probably not wanting to inconvenience me and the girls.  I got to the house early to visit before taking her to her appointment and immediately determined we were going to the ER.  She was in obvious, debilitating pain.  We rushed to the hospital, my best friend came to get the kids and I sat with her through the day.  My husband literally walked off the plane he had just boarded and returned home as soon as I called.  The doctors investigated the pain, focusing on her back and suspecting a pinched disc.  They got her pain under control, prescribed medications and sent her home.  Late that night, the pain raged out of control again and Husband took her back in, desperately seeking something stronger than the prescriptions to get her comfortable.

After the fifth visit in three days, my husband told the doctors they weren’t leaving until her pain was manageable with at-home prescriptions.  She was transferred to the University Hospital seeking specialists.  In one of those visits, I had asked about meningitis and if they could do a spinal culture.  To my surprise, the doctors agreed and readily ordered the test.  By the time they got to the U, the culture delivered the verdict: she had cancer cells in her spinal fluid.  These cells were attacking her nervous system, causing intense pain and multiplying rapidly.  In retrospect, that was our point of no return.

In the following weeks there would be many more trips to the hospital.  She would have a few good days and then often without reason, the pain would flare beyond the control of her at-home prescriptions and could only be tempered with a trip to the ER.  After a day or two in the hospital, she would return home, sleep for a day or two and then perhaps have another brief reprieve.  It was our new normal, our new baseline.  Fragile, but manageable.  She had the last, and finally successful, surgery to replace the bone plate.  The doctors also installed an omyia, a permanent port in which they could administer medications directly through her head and into the spinal fluid reservoirs to treat the cancer cells.  We celebrated Christmas and New Years, always enjoy the few hours of strength she would have before tapering off again.  My husband started a facebook group so we could share updated with extended family and we were buoyed up by the stories and pictures people posted there.  Husband’s siblings came during Thanksgiving and again during Christmas to spend as much time together as they could.  During other weeks, Husband and his dad worked as little as they could and often from the house so that she was never alone.  Husband and I took turns bringing the girls over, one at a time, so they could spend time with her.

Early in those weeks, I spent a tender moment with her.  I had begun to cry, not needing to explain.  And she told me it would be ok.  “I have favorite people on both sides.  So whether I’m here, or there, it will be ok.”

On January 11th, what we thought was another “episode” began.  In the morning she was talking and able to get around the house.  Toward evening, her pain flared and she returned to the ER.  This time, something was obviously different and the pain was more difficult to manage.  She was transferred to the Hunstman Institute, to the care of her cancer team and she rapidly declined.  Her last spoken words her to her husband.  On Sunday morning, she opened her eyes and said “Hun, will you hang out with me today?”   We spent all of Sunday at the hospital with her but she never became responsive again.  On Monday, the doctors determined there was nothing more that they could do and according to her wishes, sent her home.  Hospice care was arranged and as a blizzard set in, we prepared to move her home.  

Because of the snow, the 45 minute drive took almost two hours.  The transport team was great but it was obvious her pain was increasing, moving past the comfort the medications could offer.  The hospice nurse was at the house and waiting but our smooth transition fell apart, becoming increasingly traumatic.  The prescription for the pain medication was written at half the strength the hospital had used.  It would obviously not be enough.  And now that the long drive had put her off schedule, she was already beyond what we could offer at home.  Oral morphine didn’t even touch the pain and the dilaudid drip into her IV was completely ineffective.  Dad and the nurse called everyone they could at the hospital, asking and arguing for the codes to unlock the electronic box that regulated the drip so we could increase her dose but no one would authorize it.  All the while, her pain raged on until we finally called an ambulance.  At the ER, they administered the heavy doses required to get her more comfortable and Husband’s siblings arrived, heartbroken at her state.  The attending doctor offered his regrets and said she was not likely to make it through the night.  He admitted her to the hospital and we settled into her room to begin our vigil.  
Mom and Dad’s sibling trickled in through the night.  We spent several hours sitting bedside, comforted by the sacred gift of music.  Dad and his sister played guitar and sang as they have before, heralding her to the gates.  In the still dark, early morning hours, we retrieved the girls from their beds.  We had left them at home under the care of my parents.  But now, we wanted them to come say goodbye.  Their sweet innocence was touching but short lived and childish antics took over and they spent more time in the nearby kids room with their cousins.  Sunrise came and more family arrived.  Eventually we took the girls home and with their energy seemingly unaffected by the night’s drama, dropped them off at school.  Throughout the day more family and friends came and the room became crowded with so many friends and family.  The hospital provided plenty of snacks and drinks and someone picked up pizzas. (That was something Mom always did—provided a basket of snacks and treats as comfort during hospital vigils.)  Mom continued to linger, seemingly unaware of us but at least resting.  Eventually, my wonderfully thoughtful aunt pointed out that perhaps mom held on to give us a chance to say goodbye, but now needed us to let her go.  So the crowd drifted away.  I disappeared to take L to her piano lesson and when we returned, the room was quiet.  We were trying again to get hospice arranged so that her last few hours, however long that might be, could be spent at home.  But hospice was dragging their feet and the levels of red tape took hours.  When L and I came back to the hospital, we had only been there a few minutes when there was a sudden shift in the atmosphere and we instinctively knew that was our last bit of time with her.  L said a tearful, sincere goodbye and then stepped back, sitting with her little cousin, effectively keeping them both quiet and entertained while we waited.  One of her attending nurses is a close family friend and he had visited frequently, now telling us this was it.  Her breaths became slower, more labored, sounding more pained each time.  And then there was the relief of silence.

The next morning, we all went to breakfast together, still wrapped in the stunned emptiness.  Dad ordered two hot chocolates, one of those “slips” where your brain still hasn’t processed the new reality.  There has been several since and I’m sure many more to come.  We spent most of that day in a fog, letting the girls play together and the adults just wanting to be near each other.  

Planning the services took almost an entire day.  The mortuary was wonderful to work with and eager to help, even with some of our more non-traditional and unique requests.  Mom wanted a celebration of life including food, music and dancing.  We couldn’t honor her wishes of having the service in her own backyard due to the ongoing snowstorm, but we did best we could.

We did some shopping, picking out beautiful green ties for Dad, husband and his brother.  The women picked out green scarves, even Dad agreed, it was something mom would have picked.

It was a particularly tender and sacred experience when my two sister in laws and I got to assist with dressing and preparing Mom for the services.  

Flowers continually arrived, breathing taking arrangements of every size and variety.  We also arranged for flowers through the mortuary.  The casket spray was all white.  Next to the casket was a standing spray of 38 blushing peach roses—their wedding flower and one for each year of marriage.  There was an arrangement of five long stemmed roses, one for each granddaughter.  And perhaps most unique but so fitting, a large order of wildflowers that we divided into many mason jars and lined up along the base and sides of the casket.  

We struggled with planning the service.  Long ago, Mom told me she had written what
 she wanted for the funeral program in the back of her journal.  I’m not sure why she told me but upon recalling that, we searched the house for hours.  We found old journals but not what we were looking for.  So we planned the service on our own.  The morning of the viewing, I stumbled upon her most recent journal but there were no funeral notes in it.  It was almost as if she had once planned it but that was no longer what she wanted.  Satisfied with our plan, she let us find the journal and peace of mind.

My brother in law, a gifted artist, designed the program.  The front of the program was his own original artwork, almost Celtic in design and incorporating many symbols to represent what was most important to them.

Husband wrote the obituary found here: http://www.probstfamilyfunerals.com/obituaries/Cynthia-Hansen/#!/Obituary and Dad’s sister offered tender tribute here: http://coriconnors.blogspot.com/2015/01/circles.html?m=1.  

The first “lone” evening, Dad’s siblings brought dinner and spent the evening with us.  There was music and stories and so much comfort drawn from being gathered together.

Inspired by that, we invited Mom’s siblings for dinner the next night and again, shared stories and lingered together.  I began bringing down the family photos albums and started scanning photos.  Going through the pictures together provoked many stories and smiles.

There was a viewing held Friday evening at their home.  Close friends offered a true labor of love, clearing the snow and building a temporary sidewalk and enclosure that led to the house, protecting visitors from the snow.  Along the long driveway that approached the house were luminaries, white paper bags decorated by the grandkids and then lit with a candle inside.  It was truly beautiful.  The front room was bursting with flowers that surrounded Mom and had a continual flow of family and friends all evening.  Sisters from the church made and served wassil through the viewing.  Dad stayed next to Mom while their children took turns at his side.

After the viewing, we tucked our kids into bed and left them again, in the care of my parents.  We spent the night with Dad.  The mortuary let us keep Mom at the house for one last night together and we wanted to be a part of that.  

Saturday morning began with a viewing at the mortuary.  The line was lengthy with many friends coming to offer condolences.  My parents brought the girls to join us and stayed with us throughout the day.
Eventually the crowd moved next door where the funeral service would be held at the Town Hall.  The immediate family gathered around for family prayer offered by Dad, followed by the closing of the casket.  In that moment, my sweet little girl fell apart.  A and E had been sad, but easily distracted by cousins and too innocent to perceive the full spectrum.  Up until that moment, L had very little reaction as well.  She was even in the room when Mom passed and had been okay.  But the finality of closing the casket sent her sobbing and we clung together crying as the pallbearers took Mom from the room and to the funeral.

The funeral service was wonderful.  Mom’s sister spoke first, focusing on her life as a child and young adult.  Husband continued the eulogy into her adult and family life.  Husband siblings shared the mic, trading words to describe Mom and offering thoughts as they went.  Dad’s talk focused on the things Mom had taught him, the things he wants us to carry with us.  And the final remarks were offered by the friend officiating the service, the same nurse who had been with us in her final hours.  In addition to the spoken words, there was music.  The beautiful music that carries emotion and sediment when words cannot offered such beautiful tribute and comfort.  Dad’s sister sang “Memoria” and Dad’s brother sang “Amazing Grace”.

At the close of the service, the pallbearers took mom to a horse drawn hearse, per her request.   Dad took his seat alongside the driver and the rest of the immediate family piled into a large horse drawn carriage as well.  The path from the Town Hall to the cemetery passed directly by the house.  Mom’s horses had been moved to the front pasture and being social creatures, we anticipated some acknowledgement.  AS we passed other pastures, horses would look up, sometimes even call to the horses pulling the carriage.  But as we approached Mom’s horses, they came running to the fence.  We paused for a moment and then as we continued, the horses did laps around the pasture as if to demonstrate their own restless ache.

At the cemetery my husband dedicated the grave and we stayed as the casket was lowered.  The pallbearers dropped the corsages onto the lowered casket in tribute, followed by the grandkids each with their long stemmed rose.  And eventually, the horse drawn carriage led us back to the Town Hall.

What followed can only be described as a party.  Lunch was catered by our favorite restaurant in the valley, supplemented with Mom’s favorites: Diet Dr. Pepper, salt and vinegar chips and Good and Plenty candies.  There was an open mic with many wonderful tributes and the chance to spend time with many friends and family.  Even in her passing, that lady can throw a party.

Husband’s siblings stayed through the next week, reluctant to leave.  Then fortunately, after only a week apart, the family came together again for Mom’s birthday on the 30th.  On the 29th, we had extended family join us for dinner at a favorite restaurant in SLC.  The food was wonderful and Dad came up with a great tribute.  We each thought of a word or phrase to describe Mom, wrote it on a paper and put it in a basket.  Then the basket was passed around and we each drew out a slip.  We had to read the word (not our own) and explain why we would think it could describe Mom.  Then the originator of that word also got to explain.  

The next day we went tubing at Soldier Hollow, something we did almost every year as a family.  The initial ride was a great thrill but A got cold quickly so we played in the lodge for awhile.  For dinner we made dinner together and Dad made blushing peach pie, the same dessert Mom made for him the night he knew he would marry her.  We played wii games together, complete with cousins squealing and even Grandpa joined the game.  And then the next morning we had a breakfast feast together, enjoying our time together to the last moment before we said goodbyes.

And now the hard part, finding our way back to regular schedules and routines when it felt like nothing will ever be the same again.



I suppose the story ends there for now.  Heaven knows this entry is long enough.  But there’s still so much rolling around.

I miss her.  I’m still waiting for her to stop by, with her rhythmic knock that sends the kids racing for the door.

We found half-filled gift bags in her office.  They might be for valentines day, maybe for Easter or birthdays.  She was always thinking ahead and gathering little things for thoughtful, fun gifts.  I ache thinking about how many birthdays and Christmases we will have without her here.

I feel cheated that she won’t be at the girls’ birthday, baptisms, graduations or weddings.  That probably hurts most of all.  This is not how the story is supposed to go.

I hate that I don’t get years ahead with her.  I don’t get to hear endless stories about Husband as a child.  I don’t get to call and ask parenting advice.  I didn’t get to learn family recipes.  I had ten years and it simply isn’t enough.

I didn’t get to hear all the stories behind the many treasures she’s collected over the years.  We found half-finished lists of things she wants the girls to have and I wish I knew their significance.

I regret a conversation that hurt my feelings and now I won’t have a chance to fix it.  I wanted a closer relationship.

I’m angry that I missed opportunities.  We knew she was terminal but she was doing so well that I held off certain suggestions, worried that they would depress and discourage.  But it turned so fast that now it’s too late to have her write letters for the girls to give them as adults.  I wanted to video her reading bedtime stories for the girls.  I wanted recipes in her handwriting.  She had an experience last summer in which she knew it wouldn’t be much longer and I regret that I didn’t know that, that I didn’t get to seize that moment. 

I’m mad that the chronic staph infection robbed us of what could have otherwise been long stretches of “healthy time” to play, talk, travel and make memories.

It hurts that her final moments were not a gentle, graceful, sweet step into the eternities.  Her last night was rough.  Perhaps if hospice had been properly prepared, she could have spent a few more days in comfort at home.  I wouldn’t have missed a moment with her but it hurts to remember her obvious pain.

The past few weeks have been rough.  Obviously and for all of us.  I’m not so selfish to realize that what I feel must only be a portion of what her spouse or own birth children feel.  People would ask how I’m doing, how Dad is doing, and it’s easiest to say “ok”.  But truthfully, I think we are all just good actors.  It will take time.

In the midst of all this, something else happened.  And not to belittle either experience, but perhaps to understand better why I’m such a mess: my mom had foot surgery mid December.  She stayed with us through the experience to be closer to her doctor and so I could help take care for her for a few weeks while she would be completely non-weight bearing and while my dad was at work.  To make a long story short, it was complicated.  She became so dehydrated that her kidneys shut down, her medications pooled and she became overdosed.  I don’t know why I woke up early that morning.  Instead of my usual sluggishness, I was completely alert.  I wandered into the tv room to check on her and saw her folded in half.  At first I thought she was stretching.  Then I realized she wasn’t responsive.  We got her to the ER and her vitals were so dangerous they thought it was a massive stroke.  She was admitted to the hospital and spent several days there to get her stable.  She came home just before Christmas and returned almost immediately to discover multiple blood clots in both lungs.  In the end, she’s ok.  Both times her condition became critical, it was caught in time that the doctors could quickly bring her back to good health.  Her recovery was slow and long but she’s ok.  Had I lost both moms only two weeks from each other, I’m sure I’d be staring at a padded wall by now.  The third time we ended up at the ER, discovering more blood clots, was the day after my mother in law had died.  I sat against the wall, crying through half the visit while the nurses reassured me over and over that she was okay, not knowing what else had happened.

But the silver lining is that I’m SO glad she was staying with me.   Once she was feeling better, she was still unable to get around.  But having her at our house meant I could leave the girls asleep at home while I spent time with my husband and his family.  I’m sure she buffered my anxiety and irritability around the kids.  And I got to just be with her and talk to her.

So even a week ago, I admitted to my mom that I was still a mess.  I feel vulnerable, haven’t slept much and cry anytime it gets calm and quiet enough that I actually can acknowledge it.  Sometimes I feel that my grief is out of proportion, especially compared to what it must feel like to other family members closer to her.

But I know it’s getting better.  I’m not sure what caused the change.  I think last weekend's “run-cation” helped immensely—time away with close friends and throwing myself into running in a way that is physically challenging but somehow, emotionally cleansing.  Time with my husband, drifting back into our busy schedule and cleaning the house, maybe all comes together to help me feel a little more like myself again.  Things will never be the same again, but perhaps it will be ok.