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Archive for April, 2009

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Parker Week 12 – RSV arrives

April 14, 2009

As most parents of babies and toddlers can tell you, kids get colds – a lot. One variety of cold that most kids get is RSV (Respiratory Syncytial Virus). For most kids, this is usually just a bad cold – stuffy nose, cough, fever, sometimes an ear infection. In other babies, like mine, this can cause difficulty breathing.

Last Tuesday I brought Parker to see the pediatrician. He had been sent home early from day care on Monday with his cold. By Tuesday morning he was wheezing and having a little trouble breathing. The earliest appointment available was 10:40. We were there for over an hour, and it turned out that Parker tested positive for RSV. We gave him some Albuterol in a nebulizer at the office and that seemed to help. This was a good sign, because if the nebulizer hadn’t worked, he would have been admitted to the hospital.

Generally, our doctor’s office has nine nebulizers available to loan out to patients. Unfortunately for us, all nine were missing that day. So, we purchased a nebulizer (luckily, they aren’t too expensive, $40.00). We began giving Parker nebulizer treatments every 4 hours and continued giving him acetaminophen to help with his low grade fever.

The doctor told me to use my best judgment on how the nebulizer was working. If Parker continued to wheeze after a treatment, then I was supposed to call and bring him back to the office, at which point they would likely admit him to the hospital. Naturally, this made me extra nervous – what if I judged wrong?  It felt like with every breath Parker took I was trying to evaluate him – was that a wheeze?  Is he exerting too much effort in taking a breath?  His breaths are fast and short, but are they too fast or too short?

To add to the stress, last week was my final week working for the Learning Commons at PSU. This week I started working for the Advancement Office. So, I was working as hard as I could to get things wrapped up and finished before I left the Learning Commons. This was especially difficult when I had to keep leaving work to pick up sick kids. Zach also had several important meetings, so the two of us negotiated for time (I can push my 2:30 meeting to the morning and take the afternoon off, if you can skip your morning meeting and stay home, etc.)

It all worked out in the end. Zach and I both managed to get everything done at work that needed to be done. Parker spent a few days home with us before returning to day care, and after this weekend, we no longer needed to use the nebulizer, and we didn’t have to visit the hospital (whew!)

The only thing left to worry about is my grandmother remaining healthy. At 96, she is very susceptible to RSV and it can develop into scarier illnesses such as pneumonia for her. We tried to keep the kids at a distance during our Easter dinner, but RSV is very contagious. It will be so sad if she does get sick and we know that one of my kids infected her. On the other hand, she would have been very disappointed to miss them on Easter as well. So we’re keeping our fingers crossed that everything turns out ok.

RSV was a rather stressful and scary experience at times. Luckily, we all survived with just a few less hours of sleep and things could have of course been much, much worse.

Like many mommy bloggers this week, my thoughts keep cycling back to Maddie and Thalon and their families. I couldn’t begin to write about these losses as eloquently as the rest of the mommy blogging community, but I do feel the same heart-wrenching sympathy for the families and at the same time overwhelming relief/guilt that my family is alive and healthy.  Losses like Thalon and Maddie force me to remember that even on the hardest most difficult days, I have kids who are healthy and happy and I am in awe of my good fortune.

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One of “those” weeks…

April 9, 2009

Have you ever had one of those weeks were your list of things that go wrong hugely out numbers the list of things that go right?  Like when you’ve been awake since 3am because your kid with RSV keeps coughing and choking on phlem.  Then when you do finally get up, you watch you cat pee in the bathroom sink and stand there thinking “do I interrupt her and risk getting cat pee all over the bathroom, or do I let her finish her disguisting deed and then clean up?”  Then, when you’ve cleaned up that icky mess, and you’re on your way upstairs to pick up your sick kid to nurse him and give him a nebulizer treatment you almost step in cat vomit (yeah, ready to get rid of the cats that day…).  After finally getting that cleaned up, you realize that with all of the rain and the spring thaw, your basement has flooded (which is why the cat was peeing in the sink this morning).  When your toddler wakes up, you put on a cheery face, pick him up and make some chocolate milk.  Then you sit on the couch for a minute with the boy on your lap before you discover that his diaper has leaked – all over your shirt and pants…  After another outfit change for the two of you and lots of cajoling, you somehow manage to get out of the house on time (horay! )  You drop one of your kids off at day care (the baby is still too sick to go, so he’s home with dad).  Unfortunately, the co-worker that you’ve been commuting with is late (again).  He finally arrives 20 minutes later, and you make it to work 5 minutes late (instead of the much preferable 15 minutes early).  When the first 3 hours of your day go like this, do you smile because you know it can’t get worse, or do you sigh and wish you could crawl back into bed and hide under the covers until tomorrow?

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Xander Week 111 – More entertaining sayings…

April 2, 2009

Every once in a while I like to make note of some of Xander’s more entertaining phrases before they decay into recesses of my memories.

As most of our family knows, Xander refers to SpongeBob as “Bobich”. I have no clue where this came from. If you ask him to say sponge, he can say sponge. If you ask him to say bob, he can say bob. If you ask him to say SpongeBob, he says Bobich.

Similarly, he calls Boo from Monster’s Inc. “Haas Gassie”. Again, we have no idea where he came up with this name. He can say Boo of course, and sometimes asks for the Boo doll we have by name, but when you ask him who that girl is on the movie or the doll on the couch, he’ll tell you Haas Gassie.

In the World According to Xander, a back-pack is really a pack-pack. A hood is really a hook. And no matter how many times we use the correct words, his words don’t seem to change (though secretly, I don’t really want them to – I think pack-pack and hook are much cuter than our grow up terms).

Recently Xander has decided that our friend Norm lives in the computer in our kitchen. If you ask him where Norm lives, he’ll point and say “In ‘Puter”. Specifically, Norm resides in the Clock Tower at Plymouth State University, as seen from the Webcam in the weather channel of myPlymouth.

This morning I got Xander dressed in the dark. When he first wakes up, he is overly sensitive about light. I think even a night light might send him into a fit of tears about it being too bright. At 5am, getting a weepy 2-year-old dressed in the pitch dark is a challenge. This morning, after Xander was up and dressed and working on a puzzle, Zach noticed that his pants were on backwards. When he asked Xander if Mommy had put his pants on backwards, he responded “She did put my pants on backwards. I need to go talk to her.” Apparently this mistake warranted a scolding from my two-year-old. I promised him that I would try not to put his pants on backwards regardless of our lighting situation in the future ;-)

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