Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Project 365: Week 33

22 months old

08-19-13
08-19-13
Mostacholi for dinner which is one of Barrett's favorites.

08-20-13
08-20-13
After dinner popsicle must be eaten outside

08-21-13
08-21-13
Messy hair! Thank goodness we have a cut scheduled for Saturday.

08-22-13
08-23-13
Technically taken a few days later, but I missed this day so I'm making a substitution. Barrett's a water boy.

08-23-13
08-22-13
Always sneaks other peoples drinks when they leave them sitting out

08-24-13
08-24-13
We posed for a few shots at Callum's 1st birthday party

08-25-13
08-25-13
Little man got a much needed haircut!

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Tidbits

22 months old

~Good news! (or maybe you could care less) I picked up my camera this week so expect Project 365 to commence again with postings on Tuesdays. My perfectionist self really hates that I'll have about 6 weeks with nothing but I still want to continue. Also, I spent my day finishing and ordering Barrett's photo book for the 2012 project. It's only 64 pages which is shorter than I thought it would be! Now I just need to get going on my pregnancy one, Barrett's early months, Barrett's monthly posts and an instagram one.

Here are some of my favorite pages.
Screen Shot 2013-08-21 at 3.53.07 PM

Screen Shot 2013-08-21 at 3.53.19 PM

Screen Shot 2013-08-21 at 3.53.44 PM

Screen Shot 2013-08-21 at 3.53.52 PM

Screen Shot 2013-08-21 at 3.53.59 PM

Screen Shot 2013-08-21 at 3.54.38 PM

~I got lab results today from the doctor and my liver levels are still up. Poo! My infectious disease doctor told me last week I was good to go as long as those came back normal so it appears I'll be back to see him. I'm not sure what this means but I'm not really worried. He mentioned that all my organs will have elevated levels and eventually taper off as my body recuperates. It is very well that my liver is just taking a bit longer. Who knows. I have a chest X-ray to do tomorrow so we'll see if I'm all clear in that area. Next week, I have to do a stress test and then see the cardiologist. I'm on the downslope of appts and doctor visits, I hope! And only a few more days before I'm cleared to drive.

~We are well on our way to planning Barrett's 2nd birthday party! I'm keeping the theme quiet until the invites are out but I'm looking forward to it. The invites are ordered, some of the decor and paper products are bought, ooordinating outfits for Joe, B and myself should be at my door next week. I need to work on the menu and cake. A little over 6 weeks to go!

~Lastly, here are few recent videos of some of Little Man's favorite things.


Don't you love the way he says Popsicle?


Wednesday, August 14, 2013

22 months old

22 months old

I didn't manage a 21 month post before I went into the hospital and it's driving me nuts but I'm not going to let that screw up my remaining month updates. Also, I went almost 3 weeks without seeing B so pictures this month obviously didn't happen. These instapics will mostly be from his 21st month.


IMG_3342 IMG_3356 IMG_3288

Sleep: I have something new to write here! Barrett has moved to a big boy bed when we travel to my parents. Since he lived there most of the month of July, you could say he permanently moved to the big bed but no way am I taking away his crib at home if he's still sleeping good in it. We had basically zero issues with the change. At first, we tried laying with him but that just makes him want to move around. If we leave him just like we would if he was in his crib, he's quick to sleep. My parents did have issues with very early wake ups on occasion but I think that had more to do with his schedule being completely rocked while he lived with them. Naps are, for the most part, the same and predictable.

IMG_3267 IMG_3258 IMG_3236

Food: Barrett is what I would consider an okay eater. I've noticed that it's not that he's picky about his food, it's that he wants to know what he's eating. So unless he recognizes it, he likely won't eat it. Vegetables are touch and go. Also, I've learned that if we ask him to eat something, it makes him even less likely to eat it. If we just give him the food and let him sit there for long enough, he will usually try it.

IMG_3242 IMG_3280 IMG_3121

Words: This is the biggie this month. Kid is a chatterbox. He is talking non.stop. It's probably more pronounced for me since I didn't see him for 2 weeks but it's insane how much he's talking. I try to keep a list going on my phone of new words but these are just a few of the stuff he's saying these days. This doesn't count all the words he says to repeat after us.

IMG_3097 IMG_3059 IMG_3038

He says most of what I'll refer to as "good manner words" such as Thank you, Please, and his favorites, Excuse me and Bless you. Don't get me wrong, he doesn't use these all the time but he uses them. "Bless you" is probably my favorite. It can't get any cuter than hearing a toddler say it after you sneeze. Another big thing this month is him calling people by their names. He's very attached to our families and calls them all by their names. My parents, sisters and brother in laws came down on Sunday to celebrate my birthday and as each of them walked in the door, he had to say Hi Grandpa, Hi Grandma, Hi Rachel, Hi Oreck, etc. Saying hi followed by a persons name is huge right now. We can't get through a meal at the table without him saying Hi 395729 times.

IMG_3064 IMG_3380 IMG_3331

I've already mentioned that he has Mickey down pat and we've added Buzz, Woody (Wooly), Jake, Captain Hook and Princess to our tv/movie words. He asks for Mickey or Wooly about every 5 seconds. Remote (memote) is requested all the time. Sigh. Barrett still loves animals and their noises and he's added birdy, rabbit, kangaroo and hedgehog to his vocabulary. I can thank "Does a Kangaroo have a Mother, too?" for a few of those. Other random words that he knows are "yum yum" when he eats something yummy, sucker, phone, and flip flops. One of my very favorite right now that he loves to say is "hiccup." At some point, he got the hiccups and it made others around him laugh so now he pretends to get the hiccups and does this weird cough thing followed with him saying "hiccup." It's so funny.

IMG_3026 IMG_3205 IMG_3161

B is excellent at grouping 2 and 3 words together as well. One of his most used phrases is "I did it!" He also says "There it is" with a very excited tone. This is usually used when someone asks where something is. He also says "I don't know." It's "Help you" instead of "Help me" when he needs assistance with something. Lastly, my very favorite word he uses is "button" but what he really says is "Butt." He points to the microwave all the time and says "Butt" as a request to push the buttons. It's something that is so him and makes me laugh. I hope he never learns the real word for button.

IMG_3185 IMG_3101 IMG_3084

This month we hit another milestone in that his carseat was flipped from rear facing to forward facing. I was planning on keeping him rear facing until he was 2 (as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics) but my parents got a car seat for their car while I was in the hospital and they installed it as forward facing. Apparently, they thought he was uncomfortable with his legs scrunched while rear facing. I'm really happy to have made it this far without switching him though. The few times I've ridden with him since switching he's been content as can be to look out the window which wasn't always the case so it's no big deal. Joe's car is still rear facing which is the car he's in to and from daycare so I guess he's still sort of rear facing.

IMG_3334 IMG_3257 IMG_3226

Barrett also got a special new pair of shoes this month that he is obsessed with. He wants them on non-stop. He screams when we take them off so we usually let him wear them until bedtime. I had only packed a weekends worth of clothes when we went to Pontiac before I was admitted so 3 weeks later, he has a big increase in his wardrobe, thanks to Grandma. Let's not even talk about all the new toys he got. He is spoiled.

IMG_3377 IMG_3320 IMG_3254

As you can imagine, it was a big shift in his schedule to go from daycare every day to staying with Grandma and Grandpa. It was a mixture of my parents, in laws, sisters, brother in laws, friends and neighbors who watched him at various times. He handled everything fantastically. I mean, who wouldn't love to have a pool, golf cart, unlimited toys, playdates and fun trips at your disposal. He got so much attention. My sisters took him to the fair to check out the animals. He had a few playdates with the Harms girls. I think he took 4+ cart rides a day. It was his own personal vacation. I cannot forget to mention that it was this month that Barrett got his first set of real golf clubs. My dad used to make his own and did so a ton when we were younger so he took an old set of ours from the attic and cut them down to size for him. I haven't witnessed him hitting them yet, other than in videos, but he pretty much refuses to use his plastic set now that he has the real deal.

IMG_3154 IMG_3147 IMG_3138

Segueing from his little vacation, I'm sure you can imagine we've had to detox a bit which has been difficult. He asks for the TV a lot which hasn't gone over so well. I can't do much for him besides sit and watch tv so he's definitely watching more than his normal 30 minutes a day. He also wants to be outside all.the.time which I can't do so unless we have help, I can't accommodate his requests. He's also hitting and saying "No" more than I would like. I'm caulking it up to the detox, him being bored, and him reaching the new lovely age of 2. The first day we were home from the hospital, B was in timeout, I think, 4 times if that tells you anything. We also got our very first biting report at school. He's bit me maybe 3 times so I wouldn't call him a biter but he decided to take his first chomp on one of his classmates. We're hoping those notices will be few and far between.

IMG_3298 IMG_3292 IMG_3238

Overall, he's such a fantastic kid. I can hardly believe he's almost 2!



Saturday, August 10, 2013

From another perspective

I got this in my email inbox yesterday from Adelle and I asked her if I could post it here for record keepings.

Looking back your time in the hospital seems to have gone by in an instant, but living through it felt like an eternity. I knew you were sick with a fever and rash. We had been talking all week about it along with our normal topics in the group text message. I had just talked to you on Saturday morning about coming down to Springfield, and I had lined up Liz to watch our kiddos. I didn’t get an answer so I figured you were sleeping…then it all started.

Joe or Allyson (can’t remember now) told us you were going to the hospital because of dehydration. Once there they ran about a million tests and figured out you had pneumonia and they transferred you to St. Joes. I remember Joe telling me that once you got there you felt the best in weeks and that he should go home. I got that message earlier in the evening so I figured you were good and went to sleep…

I woke up at 4am to a text message from Joe saying you were being sedated and intubated. How quickly everything changed.

Joe and Allyson kept us updated for the next couple days, and finally Joe said he was ready for some company. I headed down on Tuesday to see you. I sat in the waiting room and talked to your parents and Joe. At this point they realized they didn’t really know what was wrong with you because you were so sick. That wasn’t a good day. I started crying and Kel Kel told me to knock it off because I was going to make her cry. Finally, I asked if I could go see you and they said of course. The walk felt like forever. Bob-o walked three feet behind me the entire way. My hands were shaking as I put on the gown, gloves, and mask. I walked in and sat next to your bed, held your hand, and just cried. I remember Bob looking in the little window at me, and I hoped he didn’t realize I was a babbling mess. I talked to you, no idea what I said, for awhile then headed out. Joe and your parents walked out to the parking lot with me where my parents were waiting to pick me up. Somehow I’m the one in the parking lot crying and Joe is comforting me. What’s wrong with that picture? Luckily, by that afternoon your cultures were back and they knew what they were battling. Things were looking up…

Wednesday I came back down with Danni and Linds. I was much more composed this day. I thought you looked better than the day before and it helped a lot that they knew what was wrong. We stood in your room in those hideous gowns and told you all the latest news you had missed. At some point during the day we decided to have dinner at your parents’ house because Allyson and Rachel needed to be cheered up and force fed. They hadn’t left the couch in days unless B needed something and were eating very little. Also, this happened to be Nick’s birthday. For the second year in a row he spent his birthday sitting in the St. Joe’s waiting room to see someone in room 1009. I need to remember to do something extra special for him next year. In the end, dinner was nice, we celebrated Nick’s birthday, and made sure Allyson and Rachel ate, but still not the cheery evening it should have been. You know it’s bad when Allyson starts tapping in to her “twin ESP” to help you feel better.

Friday evening Nick and I came down to sit with you so Joe could go home and put Barrett to bed. They were starting to lower your sedation and you would wake up periodically, so we didn’t want to leave you alone. Mostly you slept, but if a nurse touched you you made some great faces. When they came in to test your blood sugar you were very pissed. You opened your eyes several times and made the machines go crazy. I was in your face essentially petting you Aka rubbing your hair telling you to calm down. Finally, I told you it was me and to relax and you calmed down quickly. While you slept I sang you Disney songs off of the Pandora station Joe was playing for you. Not a lot of choices since you only have two stations and luckily you can’t remember my singing! I told Joe I knew you always wanted your life to be like a Disney movie, but watching Sleeping Beauty is way more fun than living it in real life!

The next few days passed and you kept getting better. I felt so bad for you when they would let you be awake while still on the vent. I knew why they were doing it, but still agonizing to watch, and I’m sure worse to experience. The girls and I came back down to see you when you woke up. You were definitely using your eyes to communicate and it was fun watching you spell on Joe’s hand.

We were all relieved the day the vent came out. I know the meds were making you say funny things, and I’m pretty sure we could make a “Taryn’s top ten”, including: I’ll get your email and squirt in the unhip stealth. We all missed you at the reunion, just wasn’t the same. We were glad Joe came, and don’t worry, Allyson started giving him the look when it was time to go back to Bloomington.

I made it a goal to see you every other day. The progress you made each time I saw you was amazing. It was a relief to see you up and talking, but even better when I came back a few days later and found you on the couch. I knew the moment you looked at me that you were back!

I’ve said this several times lately, but let’s not do this again.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

The Roller Coaster

Remember me? My apologies for the long absence but I've been a bit indisposed for the month of July which left almost no posts.

I've been in the hospital.

As the title of this post reads, it's been a roller coaster for 3+ weeks but I've been home for a few days now and we are slowly getting into a new normal around here. I'm going to try to document the whole thing but my memory and take on it all might be a little different than what others experienced. Maybe I can talk Joe into guest posting from his perspective. Although I'm not sure he ever wants to relive these weeks ever again.

It all started July 8th when I came down with a fever. It was a few days of flu like symptoms. I went to the doctor after a few days and they said it was a virus and to keep hydrated. Then the rash started. I was pretty much covered head to toe. Back to the doctor I went on Friday, July 12 and they diagnosed Hand Foot and Mouth. There isn't anything that can be done for it. They said to try to eat and drink as much as possible and it could take up to 10 days to pass. We hadn't been to Pontiac in 3 weeks and Barrett really needed some stimulation so we kept our plans to travel up north. I packed lounge clothes and planned to be in bed most of the weekend. Saturday, July 13th I woke up still very sick but this time I was having a hard time breathing. At some point, I decided I would try to get in the shower. I got in and promptly laid down. No way was I going to make it. Joe came in to check on me and we decided that I needed to go to the emergency room at St. James.

We get to the hospital and my fear that we would be waiting forever is not needed and they send me straight to a room. There are lots of familiar faces of moms of past classmates and other people we know. The nurses do a check up and ask me a bunch of questions. I don't remember this all that well but I think at some point they must have done a chest X-ray. A doctor came in and told us that we would need to go to either Bloomington or Peoria to the hospitals that are better equipped to handle the situation. We chose Bloomington mostly because it's halfway to home and more convenient so shortly the ambulance came and took me down to St. Joe's.

I remember the ambulance ride. The tech (what is the correct name for this?) was able to keep me calm and relaxed. She kept having to take my blood pressure like every 5 minutes and I remember her holding my hand. We got there quickly with Joe following. I remember being wheeled into the hospital and quickly meeting with a doctor to go over my symptoms and how I was feeling. I'm told I was admitted to the ICU.

Then I'm lost for about a week and a half. I have no memory of this time.

Here is what I'm told.

Sometime in the middle of the night, doctors and nurses flood my room and I am sedated, intubated and put on a number of other drugs. I have A LOT of fluid surrounding my lungs so I am put on the ventilator to help me breath. They are also a little worried that I might have fluid or an infection around my heart but that turns out to not be the case. The next few days have me still sedated and on the ventilator. The doctors are trying to stabilize my stats. Each time they try to turn down the oxygen, my body doesn't like it. Eventually, they stabilize my blood pressure and turn down the sedative in the hopes that I will wake up.

It is now Friday, July 19th, and I still have not come out of the sedation but I make small movements. They tell me I scowl when I'm unhappy which sounds about right. :) I don't squeeze hands when asked. I have to mention here too that at this point, I'm gaining weight rapidly. I've been told I reached up to 216lbs due to the infection or medication or whatever. For a frame of reference, I weighed 160 when I entered the hospital at 39 weeks to give birth. I'm glad I was out of it to not witness that nightmare!

At some point, the doctors had to insert a chest tube into my torso to help my body drain the fluid from my lungs. This relieved a lot of pressure and helped the meds do their job. This also was when they were able to stabilize my oxygen levels and started to prepare to get me off the ventilator. I believe I was still sedated at this point because I don't remember getting the chest tube.

By Monday, July 22nd I am awake but I'm not exactly sure which day I woke. For the next few days, I still have very few memories even though I am awake. I remember the boots they made me wear that hooked to a machine to put pressure on my feet. I remember gripping Joe and my dads hands tightly as I lay in bed. I remember the nurses washing my hair. I remember the sponges they used to brush my teeth around the ventilator. I remember the faces and voices of the nurses. I remember rolling over and the strength it took while they changed my sheets. I remember being really thirsty and wanting nothing but water. I remember not being able to talk and having to write letters on Joe's palm to ask for something. These next few days are some of the hardest. I'm feeling very anxious, trapped. I don't want people to leave my side. I start thinking that I'll never see Barrett again. That we'll never be back to living the life we had prior to all this.

Thursday, July 25th is when I really start to get my memory back. This is the day the ventilator is removed. Prior to the removal, all of my family is in the room with me. The nurses told me that I was still on the ventilator but that they were turning the oxygen down so that I would need to breathe on my own. This puts me in a trance where I start to focus on breathing techniques and relaxing. My family takes turns to breathe through with me. I do this for like an hour.

The doctor comes in and with a big gallery of on-lookers, the ventilator is removed. I have to take a deep breath and push out as much as I can while they pull. I can still hear my dad gasping for breath as it was removed. It didn't hurt but it wasn't pleasant either. The taste in my mouth is unlike anything. It's vile. They give me an oxygen mask right away that is pumping high with oxygen. The smell is worse than the taste in my mouth. I lay in bed for a while. I think I take a nap. Eventually, they bring me some water to try. They want to start slow and see how my body does with digesting since it has been 2 weeks since I've had any food. I've been getting nourishment through a feeding tube.

This is where my recovery begins.

I am very weak. Someone told me some statistic that I've since forgotten but for each day that I laid in bed, I lost so much muscle mass. At this point, I cannot stand on my own, raise arms above my head, really do anything on my own. I am still very swollen and losing fluid at a rapid pace. A kidney doctor is added to my case as my kidneys seem to be working overtime to flush everything out of my system. I'm awake and slowly getting better which is great but I'm still in a limbo because I can't just return to life as normal.

What is my official diagnosis? Mycoplasmic pneumonia. Symptoms include chills and sweats, fever, headache, etc. which were all signs of what I had. However, unless you do a chest X-ray (like they did in the ER), it is hard to diagnose. I had a pretty aggressive form that moved very quickly. I had to be on antibiotics to fight the infection for another week after the vent was removed. I remained in the ICU for most of that time mostly because they had the space for me and I think the nurses wanted to continue to be a part of my recovery.

Speaking of the nurses, I can't say enough about how amazing they were. That first day that I was really awake and off the vent was a weird one because all of the nurses would slowly come in to check on me and I would recognize them but I really had no idea who they were. I knew they had helped me at some point when I was sedated. Some I didn't know because they only had me when I was very out of it but others hit me hard. It was a odd feeling. They were amazing though. Of course, Joe was a huge hit with them. He was by my side almost non-stop so they got to know him very well. Most of them said he needed to come and work there. One of my favorite nurses, Bailey, came to visit on my last night in the hospital and said that it was now her mission to find a guy like Joe.

So the next full week after getting the vent off was spent recuperating. I was still hooked to IVs as I needed to continue the meds but each day brought about a new milestone. My first day I was only able to walk 5 steps in my room while using a walker. The next day we went out into the halls and I walked like 43 feet. The next day was 60some and then I did the unthinkable and did a full 600+ feet loop around the nurses station. All while using a walker but each day I got better and stronger. Physical therapy and occupation therapy came to see me each day. We worked on walking and balance the most during my physical therapy. Occupational therapy is for every day movements that you don't think about. For example: reaching up to get something from a cabinet so we did lots of reaching exercises to get my arms above my head. Also, putting my hair in a pony tail on my own was hard so we practiced things like that. Sunday, July 28th I was able to take a shower! This was huge. It was occupational therapy that day and extremely difficult but felt amazing. I didn't have enough strength to wash my hair completely on my own. I had to sit for most of it but it was still the most amazing shower ever.

That was how I spent my last week of July. I would move from my bed to the chair a few times a day. I forced myself to eat 3 balanced meals to help get my strength up. Then I had therapy twice daily. A few days in the doctor removed my chest tube which was also a pain free but weird sensation. The wound is mostly heeled from it but I assume I'll have a scar there.

On Wednesday, July 31, I was moved from ICU down to the transitional care unit (TCU) which is the rehab center of the hospital. I was almost strictly done with my IV (only had a few rounds each day of meds) so they moved me to try to get some more therapy in before my release. I welcomed the move because it was another step in the process to get me out of there but I was not a big fan of this unit. At this point, Joe could stay with me in the ICU but the TCU did not have accommodations for that. This was not a huge deal and Joe very much needed to sleep at home in a bed. The whole point of this unit though was to hopefully increase rehab and I did not see an increase in it. I still only saw therapist twice a day and it was for the same amount of time. Honestly, I felt like I wasted the day away in here. I technically could have stayed until at least the following Monday to continue rehab but I was not about to sit in that hospital bed for 3 more days to get an hour and a half of therapy each day. I was ready to be home and my mental sanity needed home way more than I needed that therapy.

So on Friday, August 3rd, I was released from the hospital at about 5:30pm.

It was one of the greatest feelings to be wheeled out those doors. The drive home was so surreal. My parents had brought B down to get him settled and I was so happy to get him home and back to his routine. Speaking of Barrett, I can't thank my parents and other family members enough for taking care of him full time during this entire thing. Maybe this is bad to admit but he was hardly on my mind during it all especially in recovery because I knew he was well taken care of. He loves my parents house and feels comfortable there so it was not hard for him to use that time as a little vacation. He got to have so many neighbor playdates and trips to see Joe's parents and my siblings and friends took turns playing with him when my parents needed to be at the hospital. I can only imagine how exhausted they were though. It's a lot to go from 0 to full time care giver.

I'm a few days post release and we're slowly continuing with recovery. My walking and balance is much better (I can go to the bathroom by myself and don't need a walker anymore. Woot!) but still need to work on my strength. Joe needs to help me with showering but even those get easier each day. I'm down to 130lbs which is underweight for me (I feel like I'm skin and bones) but I'm trying to eat as much as I can. They have me on a low sodium diet and a fluid restriction which makes things a little bit more difficult but so far, it's been fine. I will be getting home health care through nurses and physical therapists who will come to our home to get my strength up and continue to monitor my progress. The nurse was here on Sunday to get the paperwork going and I'm hoping to hear from PT today on when we start our schedule. August 13th is my arbitrary day that I would like to be as close to back to normal as possible (as that will be 1 month from hospital admission) but I don't think we'll quite make that.

Either way, I'm thankful to be getting better every day. I've got lots more living to do!