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Posts Tagged ‘ill child’

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Have you ever had one of those days….

April 23, 2010

Where you haven’t slept in what feels like a month (but really it’s closer to a week).  Your husband and 1-year-old are sick with an awful head cold which has caused all three of you to miss work and school a few days.  You husband takes a much needed break to visit friends, leaving you home with the boys (and no car, but that’s usually not a big deal).  After a lazy dinner, (just tea for you – you’re hoping the caffeine can sustain you through bedtime) you get the boys into their pajamas.  There have been no less than 12 melt downs between the two of them since their father left and have I mentioned that you are almost falling asleep on your feet?  When getting the 3 year old dressed, you notice a tic on his leg.  Tics are icky, gross little blood-sucking creatures and while your first instinct is to say “eewww gross!” and leave the room, that’s not really an option.  So you tell your son not to panic, and you try to get it out.  You try everything you can think of (short of actually touching the icky bug with your fingers) and nothing works.  Your 3-year-old is freaking out at the bug on his leg that won’t come off, and your 1-year-old is crying so that he won’t be left out of the chaos.

So, you rally and call your husband.  Only, your cell phone doesn’t get reception upstairs, so you close the door to the bedroom where the boys are (leaving them both screaming behind it) and go downstairs to call.  Your husband isn’t certain about proper tic removal either (the first one either of you have had to deal with).  He stops to look it up on the internet.  While waiting you try calling a few other people to see if they know anything.  After a few answering machines, you finally get a family member who tells you to get a match.

At this point, your emotional damn breaks.  The exhaustion and screaming children and all aloneness out in the woods feeling and the tic and sick kids and the image of trying to a) light a match (which you have never done because you don’t like your hands that close to fire) and b) get said match anywhere near a 3-year-old who by this point has completely lost his shit and vomited on the carpet seems pretty impossible.  You thank them for their suggestions and hang up.  A few more failed attempts to reach your husband, and finally you get him on the phone, you’re in tears, the kids are screaming and he decides to come home and rescue the lot of you.

Finally, the tic is out. The kids are calm.  Your husband heads back out after everything is under control.  A few Phineas and Ferb cartoons later (because you’re really too tired to do much actual interacting or playing with the kids) the 1-year-old goes to sleep without complaint.

A little while later, you put the 3-year-old to bed.  He complains that his stomach hurts, but he’s one of those sympathetic illness kids – if anyone in the vicinity is sick, so is he (according to him).  You tuck him in and tell him to get some rest, and then collapse on the couch for a few minutes.

As you finally stumble to bed at 10:30, you think, “ok Universe, I’ve had 2 sick family members for almost a week now.  I haven’t slept, I’ve lost my appetite, and I’m home alone with the kids tonight, the tic calamity was exhausting.  I need one good night, just one good night sleep to get back on track”  It’s almost as if you can hear a little evil laugh off in distance as your head hits the pillow.

Literally minutes later, your 3-year-old wakes up and asks you to rub his back.  After that is done, you fall back into bed with a sigh, and then moments later, he wakes up again, asking for a paper towel to throw up in.  Well, you know this isn’t the best idea ever, and you drag his sleepy butt to the bathroom where he does indeed get sick, but manages to get most of it into the toilet.

You call your husband at 11:30 and say, “Please come home now” to which he responds “should I call the hospital and find out if we need to bring him in since’s he’s vomiting after that tic bite?”  Great. Now you’re worrying about a stomach flu and Lyme disease.  Awesome. After a late-night call to the pediatrician, you a relieved to learn that the vomiting and tic probably aren’t related, and there isn’t any need to worry about Lyme disease.  The pattern of waking up, vomiting on a towel in bed, and then making it to the bathroom to vomit some more proceeds like clockwork every few hours throughout the rest of the night.  The Universe has scoffed at your desperate plea for sleep and instead given you the duty of cleaning up pile after pile of vomit.  You must have really pissed off the Universe.

Three towels, three t-shirts and one pillow and pillow case later, dawn finally arrives.  The 3-year-old manages not to vomit in your bed, but does manage to hit the carpet, the hard wood floor, his shirt and pants as well as your shirt just before you leave for work.

Oh yeah, can’t forget that.  After this most recent night of torture, you get to get your sorry butt out of bed and into work where you need to somehow become a productive member of society for 8 hours.  Good luck with that.  Those days suck, don’t they?

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So Tired…

April 22, 2010

I have 3/4 of a post written for today, but I’m too tired to finish it.  I’m too tired to focus my brain or my eyes.  If this chair I’m sitting in reclined, I’d be asleep in seconds.

Parker has been sick since Saturday (today is Thursday for those of you keeping track).  Every night since Saturday he has woken up somewhere between 12am and 2am.  Every night since Saturday he has stayed awake for anywhere between 2 and 4 hours.

You forget how much you enjoy sleeping between 12am and 4am until you can’t do it 4 days in a row.

Zach is also sick.  I have to give the guy credit though.  Despite the exhaustion and complete face leak he’s been suffering, he’s still gotten up with Parker and me every night, and helped with every other kid duty.  He’s feeling awful, but hasn’t let it slow him down in the kid assistance department which has been awesome.

But I’m still so tired.  The kind of exhaustion you feel when you have a 2 week old baby who nurses around the clock kind of tired.  Nearly falling asleep at your desk or driving your kids home from day care tired.

When is someone going to call me up and tell me that they’ve booked a quiet hotel room for me to crash in for a week?  Because that’s what I really need at this point.  I need a week of uninterrupted sleep, sleep and more sleep.  I’ll try to get a more coherent post up sometime after I’ve managed more than 2 consecutive hours of sleep…

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Xander Week 56 – Ear Infection Woes

November 8, 2007

P1010088.JPGLast week and the week before in our house have been miserable. Xander has been sick. Not the kind of sick that is easy to diagnose – no “oh, you have a runny nose, fever and a cough” nope, he was just mad – mad at me, mad at his dad, mad at his toys, mad at his bottles, etc. Nothing could make him happy. After about a week of this – which included little to no sleep – Zach took him to see his doctor. After a thorough exam, they decided it must be teething. Though we were hoping for an easier solution, we tried some Tylenol to help with the pain, tried ora-gel and cool things to chomp on. Still, Xander was miserable.

Finally, one Sunday night, we noticed that after Xander had been asleep for about an hour, he was covered in sweat – head to toe. We tried to take his temperature, but our thermometer wasn’t reading properly, so we brought him to the emergency room.

It was the most nerve racking moment we’ve had in a long time. At that point I knew there was something wrong with my child, and I also knew that there was nothing I could do to make it better. The not knowing was the worst – what if it was something awful? What if he contracted something awful? What if this was a life altering moment? It was horrible. After jumping through all of those ER hoops, we finally saw a doctor who looked in Xander’s ears for a while, and eventually decided that he had an ear infection. He prescribed amoxicillin and advised that we alternate between ibuprofen and Tylenol.

It still took another four days for the whiney, clingy, changing-mood-swings-faster-than-we-could-blink kid to finally go away. But when he did it was like a huge sigh of relief swept over our whole house. Evenings with Xander became fun again. He remembered how to laugh at himself, and how to entertain himself. Zach and I were able to share glances of “oh my gosh, how cute is he?” and “he is so amazing!”

It was finally when Xander was feeling better that we both realized how different he was when he was sick. It was just this overall mood shift that was so striking. It also made us realize how truly lucky we are to have such a happy-go-lucky kid. When he’s feeling ok, it is rare for Xander to get mad. He of course gets upset if he hurts himself, or is left alone, etc., but he hardly ever gets mad for an inexplicable reason. He’s such a happy kid, and we are so lucky to have him!!

toddler, baby, parent, parents, parenting, mother, motherhood, mothering, sick child, ill child, ear infection, emergency room, mood change

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