Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Gratitude Post #6

Today, I am grateful for blood donors, specifically the seven people that donated blood that saved Kevin's life this year.  That's not an overly dramatic statement from me, for once.  As I wrote in my post "Jagged Little Pill", it details Kevin's crazy experience with losing A LOT of blood and how vital it was that he get blood back in him to survive and how weak he was without it.  So, as a thank you for this, I donated blood today.  It had been several years since I had donated so I looked up a local blood drive and signed up.  This is my arm giving blood (viewer discretion is advised): 
There had been a little gauze covering the offending needle inserted into my arm, but it fell off, so I apologize to those who are a little queasy at seeing this.  It does not bother me at all.  In fact, when I was working at an outpatient infusion center for a few years, we performed phlebotomies, which is when a person has too much blood volume and a unit needs to be removed.  Unfortunately, this blood removed is not available to give to someone else since the iron level is too high in their blood.  I LOVED doing these.  There was something about the challenge of finding that vein with a large needle and the patients did not always have veins that popped up, so you really had to know your vascular anatomy to get it right with the available veins.  This time I was donating my blood, I didn't do the usual fake passing out like I have in the past.  I have scared a few techs that way, but it's so funny. 
If you haven't donated blood and are able to, I strongly encourage you to.  You can help a generally strong healthy man rebuild his blood supply back to a normal level after he gets a vitamin lodged in his throat that tears his esophagus that causes internal bleeding that cannot be repaired until the large clot surrounding the tear can be dissolved and then the doctor can repair it. 

Monday, November 5, 2012

Gratitude Post #5

Today I am grateful that I only have to go to a Shadow Mountain High School Swim Banquet once a year for the next 14 years.  That was a loooooong 3 hour celebration of the swim team.  I am very proud of Dillan for his first year of high school swim.  He is a great swimmer and has a lot of potential (and height) to be really great at the sport.  But as the mother of four swimmers, I will be going to these for quite a while. 
Which is what I am really grateful for, that I have children who are athletic.  I was never an athlete growing up.  I was on a swim team when I was 7-8, but when my goggles broke, that was the end for me.  I ran one 5K race with my sister, Jen.  Let me rephrase that.  My sister Jen and I participated in the same race.  She was first.  I was last.  She finished the race, got her medal, and came back to run, okay fast walk, to the finish line with me.  I love being a cheerleader for my children.  Love it.  And swim is especially great for me to spectate and cheer at because they tell me that they can't hear me under water, so I can go as crazy as I'd like yelling for them.  I'm so grateful that they got that part of my gene pool as well as Kevin's natural athleticism.  Kevin can do any sport and do it well. He is my personal trainer at the gym (this is not his profession, just his passion and hobby) and when he trains me, he's lucky that I am a lady or I would cuss at him like a sailor for the (good) pain that he puts me through.  But I digress. My children have his natural tendency to pick up sports.  So it is one of the many reasons why I married him.  GO PARTRIDGE KIDS!!!!

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Gratitude Post #4

Today I am grateful that my sisters and I did not die when we went to the Grand Canyon together.  That statement may seem a little melodramatic, but I realized that I was going to be driving all of my sisters in one vehicle on a long drive on two lane highways at some points on the drive and I thought that if there was a car accident that it would probably be a fiery crash that would send my car flying off into the canyon where we would all perish.  Yes, I am dramatic.  If we got in a car accident, there was no way that it would have just been a fender bender.  And I was so worried with all of us together in the car that if something did happen, then there would be five families without moms and no sisters to pick up the slack, which is what I picture will happen should something happen to any of us. 
But on a lighter note, I am sooooooo grateful that all of my sisters came down to hike down to the Colorado River and back in one day in the Grand Canyon. It was quite a feat to get us all together, and then the hiking in the rain was a separate issue.  That was actually not bad, and I am so glad that we did it mostly together (Nikki was at the top with Chase.  I knew that if we took him with us that we would get in major trouble with the Park Rangers.  I love my sisters (and brother) so much and it fills my cup with so much love to have them all with me and share all our silliness together.  It makes me miss having a sister close by, so I am grateful for my sisters in Zion in my ward that pick up the slack. 

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Gratitude Post #3

Today I am grateful for musicals.  I love them.  I went to my first one when I was five and I have NEVER looked back.  I mostly love the songs from them.  Last night, I enjoyed a Girls Night In and we shared our favorite movie clips and one of mine was Moulin Rouge when Ewan MacGregor sings. That's what inspired me to share this bit of gratefulness.  This is a list of the musicals that I have seen in person:
Fiddler on the Roof (4+ times)
Wicked (5)
Les Miserables (7)
Phantom of the Opera (3)
Camelot (2)
Annie (4+)
Bye Bye Birdie (3)
Chicago
A Funny Things Happened on the Way to the Forum
Grease
Guys and Dolls
Hello Dolly!
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (5)
The King and I
Little Shop of Horrors
Mame
My Fair Lady
The Music Man
Oliver
Oklahoma!
Once Upon a Mattress
Pippin
Ragtime
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
Showboat
West Side Story
9 to 5 (if there is one that I regret seeing, it's this one!)
Annie Get Your Gun
Billy Elliott (sorry, Mom.)
HMS Pinafore
Pirates of Penzance
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
Kiss Me, Kate
The Student Prince
Sweet Charity
You're A Good Man Charlie Brown

Those are the ones that I have seen live.  Holy cow!  I had no idea it was that many.  I have movie favorites that I love too which are The Producers (again, sorry, Mom), Dreamgirls, and Evita.  My favorites are Little Shop of Horrors which I saw with my cousin Carolyn I don't know how many times.  We also saw Labryinth in the movie theaters so many times that I have the movie memorized.
I have my mom to thank for this love.  She took me to so many musicals when I was growing up, many times all the way at the very top of the theater in the back row, but we didn't care, we were seeing a musical.  I love songs that are funny and fun and especially a song that I can belt out in the car when I am alone or even when I have a child with me.  My dream is to be on Broadway one day.  I will probably just be on the street Broadway going to a show, but there is that chance that one of my children will make it there.  Olivia is the one.  She has gotten the musical bug.  She asks me to watch a musical movie all the time.  That's my girl.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Gratitude Post #2

Today I am grateful for running water. I'm grateful that I can go to the tap and turn it on and out comes Phoenix water.  I would be a little bit more grateful if it was Seattle water, but then I would have to suffer through the rain.  Sometimes in the summer it comes out too hot to touch, but still, it is "safe" to drink and I don't have to walk anywhere to get it.  I need to flush the toilet, BAM, it's done.  (And that is usually after I notice that someone "forgot" to flush the toilet.  Someone's still nervous that the flush will suck them into the pipes).  If I think my kids are dirty, turn on the faucet and they get all fresh and clean.  If I HAVE to do the laundry (Please people, can't you be nudists), I can start the washer whenever I feel like it.  I can water my lawn, I can water the chickens, I can fill the pool with water.  I don't take this for granted.  I am very fortunate to be here and have water.  I love water.

Gratitue Posts #1

Since this is November, and it seems that a lot of people on FB name something that they are grateful for, I decided to jump on the bandwagon and say what I am grateful for.  Now, I can be silly and snarky, so some of these gratitudeness things may not be as serious as others but I like to have fun, and one of my nephews, Noah, chalks it up to me being underdeveloped. 
Yesterday I started and my first post was that I was grateful for clean, ironed sheets and clean shaved legs.  Let me explain because I was called "Supermom" by a reigning pie contest winner.  My favorite day of the week is Saturday when we all wash our sheets, and since it happens to fall before Sunday, which is the only day that I REALLY need to have shaved legs, they coincide so nicely that it is heavenly to get in bed.  And, when I was growing up, for some reason, our mom made us iron the sheets and pillowcases.  I think she gave us that chore to keep us occupied.  I have not kept that up UNTIL Kevin and I went to a very fancy resort for a couple of vacation days and they have a world renowned iron press for their sheets.  I didn't want to get out of the bed.  So for our anniversary this year, I got Kevin (okay, they may have been a little for me) very nice sheets.  And then I remembered to iron them.  Just when I thought clean sheets and clean shaved legs couldn't get any better, it did!!!  So now I am a little hooked.  I haven't ironed the sheets every Saturday because sometimes there is just too darn much to do, but when I do, it makes me soooooooo happy.  And grateful. 

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Jagged Little Pill

As summer was winding down, we planned a getaway to San Diego.  It was going to be our last hurrah before school started, a chance to tour the naval base with Kevin's brother Adam, Legoland, Sea World, the beach.....instead, this is what happened.
I picked up Chloe from the airport who was visiting her grandparents in Kentucky when the unfortunate incident happened.  This is how the story was recounted to me.  Kevin, who enjoys working out and taking supplements, was swallowing an Amino Acid pill, which is about an inch long, when it got lodged in his throat.  He tried to dislodge it by forcefully retching.  This alarmed Blake and he came in the kitchen to assist Kevin.  Dillan and Olivia was too engrossed in America's Got Talent to be concerned.  Kevin says that it eventually passed, and he even congratulated himself on not throwing up any of the food he had just eaten.  I was mildly concerned as well, after all, the situation seemed to have resolved itself.
The next morning, Kevin was still in bed and said that he couldn't get comfortable, was weak and dizzy, and didn't sleep the night before.  He said that he felt like he had the flu.  I said that we would wait to leave for San Diego, as we were scheduled to leave that day.  He said we could still go, just put him in the back of the Suburban,  I declined, mostly because I don't like to drive with him. He is a much better driver than I, so I feel self conscious when I drive with him.  I checked his blood pressure which was low and his heart rate which was high, which was not normal for him at all.  I told him that he was dehydrated and that he needed to drink fluids.  He may have during the day, I don't know, because I left to take Dillan school shopping.  I wasn't that concerned with my patient after all.  I checked on him again in the afternoon and things were the same, so I took Olivia to her two hour gymnastics class.  When I came home from that and put people to bed, and got myself ready for bed, finally relieved that the day was done, Kevin told me that when he got up to go to the bathroom he felt very weak and dizzy, like he was going to pass out.  For those of you who don't know Kevin's stats, he's 6'4" and 225 lbs.  I did not want him passing out on me because I could not pick him up.  And then he tells me he had tarry stools, aka black poop.  Slight pause from me.  Dear, that means you're going to the hospital.  His response:  Maybe it's nothing.  Maybe I'll see if I'm still feeling bad and then I'll go to the doctor tomorrow.  Again, pause for emphasis.  No, we're going now (a little irritated that he didn't mention this BEFORE I took my makeup off).  He was resistant to heading to the ER because earlier this year he had to go in because he dropped a 225 lb barbell that he was bench pressing as his warm up, when it slipped and fell on his chest.  I made him go in to the ER then because I didn't want anything to be damaged in there and have it slowly leaking and then I wake up in the morning and him not.  It turned out to be a cracked sternum, which you can't do anything about except wait.  He wasn't very patient with letting it heal and returned to the gym.  So I gathered him up to go to the ER.  I called Dillan in for reinforcement.  Actually, I wanted him to break his dad's fall should he indeed pass out on us. 
We made it to the ER, where he was promptly checked in.  After all of the tests, etc, he was admitted to the hospital to have an endoscopy in the morning.  I went home to get some rest and was told that the endoscopy clinic opened at 7 am, so he would be seen sometime after that.  I made it back to the hospital just in time as they were taking him to the clinic and he was getting his first transfusion of blood.  He was looking pale.  The anesthesiologist came in told him the concoction that he would be getting was Versed and Propofol.  I told him that Propofol was what Michael Jackson used to help him "sleep" until he took his last sleep.  RIP King of Pop. After he was done, the doctor came and found me and told me the results.  Kevin had torn his esophagus. What?!  The doctor went on to explain that he had made a large tear and there was a very large blood clot around it preventing him from closing the tear, so he was going to admit him to the ICU for close monitoring and IV drips to stop the bleeding and more transfusions.  What?!  I was a little shocked, but being the "seasoned" nurse that I am didn't show it.  That was until the kids called me two minutes later to ask what was going on and there was a scuffle in the background.  I started to cry because it was a lot of overwhelming.  I pulled it together and found Kevin.  He was snoring loudly.  His nurse, as nurses are supposed to do, kept bugging him to wake up.  After he cracked his eyes open a little bit.  I told him that #1 He had survived and #2 He was getting admitted to the ICU.  He fell back asleep.  He woke up again two minutes later.  I told him that #1 He had survived and #2 He was getting admitted to the ICU.  He fell back asleep.  He woke up again two minutes later.  I decided to save my breath and told him that he was getting admitted to the ICU.  He said "That's good.  Here, help me off this gurney so I can walk up there."  I told him that NO ONE walks IN to the ICU.  He said he was fine.  I reminded him where he was going.  I told him to take advantage of someone pushing him in a bed.  We made it to the ICU, where I was reminded how bossy the nurses are there.  I was immediately asked to leave so they could get him settled.  I was let back in about five minutes later.  He had to get up to go to the bathroom almost immediately.  The nurse tried to tell him he couldn't walk that far (ten feet) and that she could get him a bedside commode.  He said he wasn't an old man and that he could walk to the bathroom.  This went on back and forth for a few minutes.  I knew he would not concede, so I took the initiative to help him get up with all his tubing and wires to the bathroom.  Walking ten feet to the bathroom sounds like an easy task. Maybe even if you have an IV in your arm.  But this large strapping young man, losing blood internally, and refusing to believe that he was sick was not easy to get to the bathroom, but by the end of our stay, I think I perfected our orchestrated dance.  But when he got back to bed, he was so dizzy and short of breath that it was scary.  And he was still expelling blood.  He apologized to the nurses for the stink.  And for those of you have smelled that stink, it is more horrid that words can describe.  When I worked in the Burn Unit and we would have overflow patients from the Medical ICU, we dreaded the GI Bleed because of that stink.  And we were the nurses that had patients getting escarotomies which is basically burning already burned flesh.   Sorry if you were eating your breakfast when you were reading this.  Kevin described his trips to the bathroom as the Valdez Oil Spill.  Again, I apologize to those eating.  He ended up needing three IVs in his arms for the medication and the blood transfusions, for which he received seven.  By the end, I told him he needed to stop being lazy and relying on the altruistic efforts of others and make his own blood.  Our home teachers came in and gave him a blessing and my dear friend called me out of the blue to find out what was going on, only to discover that I was sitting in the ICU with Kevin.  She got our kids dinner.  She was listening to the Spirit's promptings that I needed help! 
At this time I went home to get a little sleep and catch up with what was happening.  I Googled what was going on with him.  Probably not a good idea, since I read that the mortality rate is 50%.  Needless to say, I did not sleep well.
The next day, the doctor was able to go in again with an endoscope, but this time he was able to repair the tear.  But Kevin was still very pale and still getting blood transfusions.  And he was still not able to eat.  He had not had anything to eat or drink since he got to the ER.  He tried SO HARD to get anyone to give him something to drink or an ice chip or Gatorade or Sprite.  He kept asking for Sprite despite me reminding him how important it was that he not eat because his tummy was very, very sick.  He asked every doctor, every nurse, every tech, every friend.  He is a bad sick person.  Finally, the doctor said ice chips and gum.  Sharon had come to see him and was deeply worried, so when she heard that, she went to the gift shop and bought him every kind of gum they had.  I think it was a moment full of joy for Kevin. 
He was out of the ICU that evening and then home the next day.  He wanted to resume his normal activities really bad, but since his blood levels were still really low (he was still down about 3 units of blood), he got weak and tired fast.  Plus the heat here doesn't help.I could barely stand to look at him for the first few days after he got out of the hospital because he was so pale.  I said he was Fifty Shades of White and Pale Face.  I told him that this would be the only time in our marriage that I would be darker than him.  The next day after he got out of the hospital was Olivia's birthday.  He had searched for a bike for Olivia and he went and got it, despite not getting clearance from me to drive.  She didn't get her traditional birthday dinner at a restaurant, but fortunately she had her baptism party that more than made up for it. 
So, we were anxious to see what the bill was.  I could have gotten a brand new BMW i3.  I would much rather have an alive husband.  I told him that's all I wanted for my birthday, which is the day after Olivia's.  I just wanted him alive and not dead.  I don't think it's too much to ask.  It helped me to remember how much I need him on a daily basis and how grateful I am to be married to him and have him here with me.