After a bluh late morning with lots of fussing and fighting...I threw the big boys outside, got H down for a nap, then went outside myself to soak up some of the signs of spring around here:
:: lilacs leafing out
:: grass greening up (and lunch outside! yay!)
:: rhubarb emerging
:: dogwood leafing out (and pussy willow in puff already)
:: prairie smoke flowers budding out
:: my big boys setting aside whatever they were bugging each other about for a few minutes of cloud watching...
Friday, March 23, 2012
Saturday, March 17, 2012
record highs....
We went from major snowstorm to record highs in a matter of a couple weeks. With temps in the upper 70's all week and hitting 80 today, we are setting high temp records left and right! So out we go and out come the t-shirts and shorts and balls and sun-hats.
Anyone want to come over and play? =)
Friday, March 16, 2012
an unusual and memorable leap day...
Now February 29, or Leap Day, is unusual and memorable in and of itself because it only happens once every four years.
Our original plan for the day:
G especially was excited because it was her "real" half birthday, being born on August 29, and those who have summer birthdays in her class get to celebrate on their half birthdays. She was going to bring treats (little toy horses that I found on clearance - since their class just got done reading Misty of Chincoteague), and I was planning on packing a special lunch for her. S was bringing her to school and then heading into work for the later shift of the day. The boys and I were going to hang out, possibly go to the library for "Leap into Reading" day, and I was going to make a meal for our neighbor, Miss K, who was having back surgery that day. Our other neighbor, Mrs. L, was going to come over at 6 to watch the big kids until S got home so that I (and H) could go to small group meeting with s.i.l., C.
Whew! Big day planned, and NOTHING on that list happened. The day was definitely unusual and memorable though.
Why it was unusual and memorable for the kids:
We had a big ice and snow storm the night before and we woke up to LOTS of snow! (first big storm of the winter, crazy enough!) The ice underneath the snow made the roads really icky and they cancelled school, which is very unusual for the cities here. It was G's first snow day!
French Toast for breakfast and Trader Joe's little pizzas for lunch to celebrate G's half birthday since she couldn't do that at school.
Auntie C, Uncle J, Pippin, and cousins K & G came over! Unusual for the middle of the week. This in and of itself made the kids ecstatic, but then on top of it, they got to play outside in the snow with their cousins and puppy ALL afternoon.
Why it was unusual and memorable for the S & I:
Not the best day ever. Short story? S had heart problems (A-Fib), was admitted to the hospital, and had his heart shocked back into rhythm. All VERY unusual.
Long story?
Last August, S had a day or two where his heart raced. It was strange enough that he noticed, but not enough that it really bothered his activity. And just about the time we thought he should call or go in to the doctor, his heart went back to normal.
Fast forward to the night before Leap Day. After eating ice cream before bed, S noticed his heart racing again. We chalked it up to being tired and very sweet ice cream and headed for bed. S slept just fine, but when he got up in the morning his heart was still racing and he was very tired and a bit light-headed. He checked on the school status and came up to tell the kids that school was closed for the day. We were all getting ready, and S threw on some clothes and was going to head down to start on breakfast and then scoop the driveway. But he got really light-headed again and tired and by the time he got down the steps he needed to sit down because he felt all flush and nauseous. He had me listen to his heart and when I put my ear to his chest, what I heard was not a regular fast heartbeat. It was all over the place and probably the strangest and scariest thing I have ever heard. We both knew he had to go in.
He was able to get in right away to the Metropolitan Heart and Vascular Institute, connected to Mercy Hospital, which is within miles of our house. I was going to call our neighbors to help blow out the driveway and come and watch the kids so I could drive him in, but S started to feel a little better and convinced me he could drive in himself. I was not cray about this plan, but he would call me as soon as he knew what was going on and we could decide then if I needed to come and join him.
S met with a cardiologist who determined right away that his heart was in atrial fibrillation. And since this was his second episode in less than a year, and also since his heart was not going back into normal rhythm yet, they would admit him to the hospital, do an echocardiogram to see if there were physical problems with his heart, then put him under anesthesia and shock his heart back into the right rhythm.
In the meantime, I had called our parents, and then s.i.l. C to let her know what was happening and that I wasn't going to make it to our meeting, regardless of the weather. And after getting over the surprise of S being in the hospital (everyone was surprised at this unusualness, as this is S, who is only 33, healthy and fit and never hardly ever gets sick!), C didn't even hesitate and said "Do you want to come here or do you want us to come there?" She sent S's brother J right over while she finished up a few things and then they all came and completely took care of the kids so that I could go in to the hospital to be with S.
At the hospital, when the cardiologist came in, we talked again about what was going on and possibly why. There are 5 factors that they usually look for that can cause A-Fib.
1. genetic history - none, I confirmed this with S's mom when I called her
2. physical defects - none, as the echocardiogram came back clear
3. drugs and alcohol - no drugs and hardly any alcohol
4. diabetes - no problems with that at all, or a family history either
5. caffeine - well, S does consume this daily, but after telling them it was 350ml of coffee in the
morning and a soda with lunch, they almost laughed as that is not much at all.
So while A-Fib is not uncommon, it is pretty unusual to have someone as young and thin and healthy as S have it with no apparent reason. The most important thing at that point though, was to get it back to normal and take care of it in the future. And that is what they did. Thankfully showing me to the waiting room while they did it, they gave S propofol, which is a quick acting anesthesia that also leaves the system quickly (S joked with them that it was the Michael Jackson drug, and was out before he could say another sentence =), and then one 200 Jule shock that did the trick to put his heart back into correct rhythm.
For S this was an incredibly fast 15 minutes and although he felt beat up and tired afterwards, he was much better. For me it was an excruciatingly long 15 minutes. It was really hard for me to process this whole situation and grapple with the fact that for the first time I really had to worry about my husband. It was once again a huge reminder that we are not in control, but it is God that is in control over everything and has a plan for everything that happens. Even if it is unusual and we don't understand why. Lots of prayer and holding sweet baby H got me through those 15 minutes (holding sweet snuggly babies is VERY cathartic), and I never was more relieved when the nurse came to get me and said that everything was just fine.
We waited for the effects of the anesthesia to wear off completely, we talked once again with the cardiologist about where to go from here. He told S no caffeine and alcohol and perscribed him a med that would slow his heart rate and give his body a chance to correct itself if it should happen again. Otherwise normal activity. And that they wanted him to see their cardiologist who is a heart rhythm specialist in 2 weeks for a check-up.
And then they unhooked him, and sent us home (shock marks on his chest and all). Everyone was happy to see us come home and that S was doing fine. Rather than leaving right away, C fed us and then let us talk her ear off about the whole experience. That was really nice as it gave us a chance to kind of decompress and wrap our heads around the whole very unusual day.
(big thanks to J & C and family for helping us out so much - you really helped us get through a very scary and trying and yes, unusual day)
...and now...the rest of the story (so far at least)
S had a good appointment with the specialist this week (of which I tagged along for my own peace of mind). He has what they diagnosed as Lone Atrial Fibrillation, which is A-Fib without any apparent cause. The good thing is this isn't a life threatening condition. You can actually live with your heart in A-Fib, it just comes down to whether you can live with what your body feels like when it is in A-Fib. Options to treat this are live with it, take drugs daily that chemically regulate heart rhythm, an ablation surgery, or the choice that S went with, a "pill in the pocket." So he will carry meds that he can take if his heart goes into A-Fib again, but won't need to do anything until that happens. (which we hope won't for a very long time if ever!) They are going to have S come in next week for a stress test just to get a complete picture of his heart, and he will have to go in for check-ups every year as well.
So back to normal. Which is great, but sometimes hard to do when something big like this happens. But as time goes on and as S continues to feel good it is easier to be calm and accepting of this whole situation. We thank God for the good health of us all and pray that he will continue to bless us with that!
Our original plan for the day:
G especially was excited because it was her "real" half birthday, being born on August 29, and those who have summer birthdays in her class get to celebrate on their half birthdays. She was going to bring treats (little toy horses that I found on clearance - since their class just got done reading Misty of Chincoteague), and I was planning on packing a special lunch for her. S was bringing her to school and then heading into work for the later shift of the day. The boys and I were going to hang out, possibly go to the library for "Leap into Reading" day, and I was going to make a meal for our neighbor, Miss K, who was having back surgery that day. Our other neighbor, Mrs. L, was going to come over at 6 to watch the big kids until S got home so that I (and H) could go to small group meeting with s.i.l., C.
Whew! Big day planned, and NOTHING on that list happened. The day was definitely unusual and memorable though.
Why it was unusual and memorable for the kids:
We had a big ice and snow storm the night before and we woke up to LOTS of snow! (first big storm of the winter, crazy enough!) The ice underneath the snow made the roads really icky and they cancelled school, which is very unusual for the cities here. It was G's first snow day!
French Toast for breakfast and Trader Joe's little pizzas for lunch to celebrate G's half birthday since she couldn't do that at school.
Auntie C, Uncle J, Pippin, and cousins K & G came over! Unusual for the middle of the week. This in and of itself made the kids ecstatic, but then on top of it, they got to play outside in the snow with their cousins and puppy ALL afternoon.
the snow easily slid off our aluminum roof (no kids were near at the time) onto our deck and steps and with a little shoveling and convincing, made a great...
...slide down the steps! not quite the same as the snow mountains of my childhood, but so much fun to slide down on your butt or the sled.
literally hours of entertainment...along with making forts and a "snow pool"
H had fun watching the big kids from the window with Auntie C!
We then got to hang on to Pippin for a little bit longer (while J&C&K&G went to the gym) which our G really enjoyed as she cuddled up with him and read on the couch with him as her pillow.
In G's words, one of the best days ever.
Not the best day ever. Short story? S had heart problems (A-Fib), was admitted to the hospital, and had his heart shocked back into rhythm. All VERY unusual.
Long story?
Last August, S had a day or two where his heart raced. It was strange enough that he noticed, but not enough that it really bothered his activity. And just about the time we thought he should call or go in to the doctor, his heart went back to normal.
Fast forward to the night before Leap Day. After eating ice cream before bed, S noticed his heart racing again. We chalked it up to being tired and very sweet ice cream and headed for bed. S slept just fine, but when he got up in the morning his heart was still racing and he was very tired and a bit light-headed. He checked on the school status and came up to tell the kids that school was closed for the day. We were all getting ready, and S threw on some clothes and was going to head down to start on breakfast and then scoop the driveway. But he got really light-headed again and tired and by the time he got down the steps he needed to sit down because he felt all flush and nauseous. He had me listen to his heart and when I put my ear to his chest, what I heard was not a regular fast heartbeat. It was all over the place and probably the strangest and scariest thing I have ever heard. We both knew he had to go in.
He was able to get in right away to the Metropolitan Heart and Vascular Institute, connected to Mercy Hospital, which is within miles of our house. I was going to call our neighbors to help blow out the driveway and come and watch the kids so I could drive him in, but S started to feel a little better and convinced me he could drive in himself. I was not cray about this plan, but he would call me as soon as he knew what was going on and we could decide then if I needed to come and join him.
S met with a cardiologist who determined right away that his heart was in atrial fibrillation. And since this was his second episode in less than a year, and also since his heart was not going back into normal rhythm yet, they would admit him to the hospital, do an echocardiogram to see if there were physical problems with his heart, then put him under anesthesia and shock his heart back into the right rhythm.
In the meantime, I had called our parents, and then s.i.l. C to let her know what was happening and that I wasn't going to make it to our meeting, regardless of the weather. And after getting over the surprise of S being in the hospital (everyone was surprised at this unusualness, as this is S, who is only 33, healthy and fit and never hardly ever gets sick!), C didn't even hesitate and said "Do you want to come here or do you want us to come there?" She sent S's brother J right over while she finished up a few things and then they all came and completely took care of the kids so that I could go in to the hospital to be with S.
At the hospital, when the cardiologist came in, we talked again about what was going on and possibly why. There are 5 factors that they usually look for that can cause A-Fib.
1. genetic history - none, I confirmed this with S's mom when I called her
2. physical defects - none, as the echocardiogram came back clear
3. drugs and alcohol - no drugs and hardly any alcohol
4. diabetes - no problems with that at all, or a family history either
5. caffeine - well, S does consume this daily, but after telling them it was 350ml of coffee in the
morning and a soda with lunch, they almost laughed as that is not much at all.
So while A-Fib is not uncommon, it is pretty unusual to have someone as young and thin and healthy as S have it with no apparent reason. The most important thing at that point though, was to get it back to normal and take care of it in the future. And that is what they did. Thankfully showing me to the waiting room while they did it, they gave S propofol, which is a quick acting anesthesia that also leaves the system quickly (S joked with them that it was the Michael Jackson drug, and was out before he could say another sentence =), and then one 200 Jule shock that did the trick to put his heart back into correct rhythm.
For S this was an incredibly fast 15 minutes and although he felt beat up and tired afterwards, he was much better. For me it was an excruciatingly long 15 minutes. It was really hard for me to process this whole situation and grapple with the fact that for the first time I really had to worry about my husband. It was once again a huge reminder that we are not in control, but it is God that is in control over everything and has a plan for everything that happens. Even if it is unusual and we don't understand why. Lots of prayer and holding sweet baby H got me through those 15 minutes (holding sweet snuggly babies is VERY cathartic), and I never was more relieved when the nurse came to get me and said that everything was just fine.
We waited for the effects of the anesthesia to wear off completely, we talked once again with the cardiologist about where to go from here. He told S no caffeine and alcohol and perscribed him a med that would slow his heart rate and give his body a chance to correct itself if it should happen again. Otherwise normal activity. And that they wanted him to see their cardiologist who is a heart rhythm specialist in 2 weeks for a check-up.
And then they unhooked him, and sent us home (shock marks on his chest and all). Everyone was happy to see us come home and that S was doing fine. Rather than leaving right away, C fed us and then let us talk her ear off about the whole experience. That was really nice as it gave us a chance to kind of decompress and wrap our heads around the whole very unusual day.
(big thanks to J & C and family for helping us out so much - you really helped us get through a very scary and trying and yes, unusual day)
...and now...the rest of the story (so far at least)
S had a good appointment with the specialist this week (of which I tagged along for my own peace of mind). He has what they diagnosed as Lone Atrial Fibrillation, which is A-Fib without any apparent cause. The good thing is this isn't a life threatening condition. You can actually live with your heart in A-Fib, it just comes down to whether you can live with what your body feels like when it is in A-Fib. Options to treat this are live with it, take drugs daily that chemically regulate heart rhythm, an ablation surgery, or the choice that S went with, a "pill in the pocket." So he will carry meds that he can take if his heart goes into A-Fib again, but won't need to do anything until that happens. (which we hope won't for a very long time if ever!) They are going to have S come in next week for a stress test just to get a complete picture of his heart, and he will have to go in for check-ups every year as well.
So back to normal. Which is great, but sometimes hard to do when something big like this happens. But as time goes on and as S continues to feel good it is easier to be calm and accepting of this whole situation. We thank God for the good health of us all and pray that he will continue to bless us with that!
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
mmmmmmm, pi day....
We did not have appropriate attire for the day like my beautiful niece does, so we went for an edible celebration instead:
No Rolling, No Pie Weights, No Fear Pie Crust (from America's Test Kitchen)
**makes one 9 inch pie crust**
1 1/4 cups all purpose flour
2 Tbsp sugar
1/4 tsp table salt
8 Tbsp butter (1 stick), softened but still cool
2 ounces cream cheese, softened but still cool
Raspberry Pie (based on my Grandma's recipe instructions for strawberry pie)
1 no fear pie crust, baked
6 oz. cream cheese, softened (use rest from pie crust)
3 Tbsp powdered sugar
1 cup sugar
3 Tbsp cornstarch
1/2 cup water
1 cup mashed raspberries (I microwaved frozen raspberries for this)
2 pints fresh raspberries (or enough to fill the pie crust)
Beat cream cheese with sugar or small amount of whipped cream. Spread on bottom of baked and cool pie crust. Put crust in refrigerator to chill. Mash enough berries to measure 1 cup. In a saucepan, combine sugar and cornstarch. Gradually stir in water and mashed berries. Cook until mixture thickens and boil for 1 minute. Cool in refrigerator. Fill pie with remaining raspberries. Pour cooked berry mixture over top and spread even. Chill overnight, or at least 4 hours.
No Rolling, No Pie Weights, No Fear Pie Crust (from America's Test Kitchen)
**makes one 9 inch pie crust**
1 1/4 cups all purpose flour
2 Tbsp sugar
1/4 tsp table salt
8 Tbsp butter (1 stick), softened but still cool
2 ounces cream cheese, softened but still cool
Lightly coat 9-inch Pyrex pie plate with cooking spray.
Whisk flour, sugar, and salt together in bowl. With electric mixer at medium-high speed, beat butter and
cream cheese in large bowl, stopping once or twice to scrape down beater and
sides of bowl, until completely homogenous, about 2 minutes. Add flour mixture
and combine on medium-low until mixture resembles coarse cornmeal, about 20
seconds. Scrape down sides of bowl. Increase mixer speed to medium-high and
beat until dough begins to form large clumps, about 30 seconds. Reserve 3
tablespoons of dough. Turn remaining dough onto lightly floured surface, gather
into ball, and flatten into 6-inch disk. Transfer disk to greased pie plate. Press dough evenly over bottom of pie plate toward sides,
using heel of your hand. Hold plate up to light to ensure that dough is evenly
distributed. With your fingertips, continue to work dough
over bottom of plate and up sides until evenly distributed. On floured surface, roll reserved dough into 12-inch rope.
Divide into three pieces, roll each piece into 8-inch rope, and form fluted
edge around top of crust (I could not get this to work, and the crust still turned out fine). Wrap in plastic and refrigerate at least 1 hour. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 325
degrees. Lightly prick bottom of crust with fork. Bake until golden brown, 35
to 40 minutes. If large bubbles form, wait until crust is
fully baked, then gently press on bubbles with kitchen towel. Bubbles will
settle as crust cools. Cool on wire rack.
1 no fear pie crust, baked
6 oz. cream cheese, softened (use rest from pie crust)
3 Tbsp powdered sugar
1 cup sugar
3 Tbsp cornstarch
1/2 cup water
1 cup mashed raspberries (I microwaved frozen raspberries for this)
2 pints fresh raspberries (or enough to fill the pie crust)
Beat cream cheese with sugar or small amount of whipped cream. Spread on bottom of baked and cool pie crust. Put crust in refrigerator to chill. Mash enough berries to measure 1 cup. In a saucepan, combine sugar and cornstarch. Gradually stir in water and mashed berries. Cook until mixture thickens and boil for 1 minute. Cool in refrigerator. Fill pie with remaining raspberries. Pour cooked berry mixture over top and spread even. Chill overnight, or at least 4 hours.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
more pictures from the farm...
I miss this view
catching up with good friends...(thanks for driving out to see us A & M!!)
G (before we left): Momma, does Edgerton have snow? me: nope, sorry honey!
G(at the farm): Look!!! There's a little bit of snow! Can we go play in it?!!
and play they did...
so much fun in Aahma knitted hats and mittens
then Monday the real snow came!
and Boppa took them for a Ranger ride in it.
whee!!! (W absolutely loved this, G did too, but was a little green after getting off, and it was just a little too much for C =)
Boppa's shed is a great place to work...
...and play!
it was a treat to spend time with my siblings...both L & J who live in Edgerton (loved visiting with them in the evenings and also spent a great afternoon with them visiting L's new workplace and seeing the updates to their house), and then M & A and our niece E who drove up from NE (lots of fun just hanging out and also playing Carcassone with the Princess and Dragon expansion)
And how much fun for G to have a little girl to play with! She played with and doted on E the whole time...well, we all did!
loved E's fascination with scarves - good thing G was there to whip her up a knitting fork one to play with! (love you Ev's!)
beautiful sunset
Monday, February 27, 2012
H's first trip to the farm...
Baby H will all too soon love going to the farm to run around and ride the tractor and play in the shed like his older sister and brothers, but for now, what H loves is being held and cuddled and snuggled and talked to and paid attention to by those who love him, and that is exactly what he got a lot of on his first trip to the farm last weekend:
with Boppa...
and Auntie J (who he color coordinated with again like at Thanksgiving!)...
and Uncle L...
and Nana...
and "Auntie" M & "Auntie" A...
and Aahma...
and Uncle M (and Auntie A too, there was just no photographic evidence =)...
*and cousin E!
And after just one of Boppa's infamous rolling over lessons...
...H decided that the farm was where he was going to first roll over (once again, no photographic evidence, but lots of witnesses and cheers for H!).
But at the end of each day, H found his way back into Momma and Dadda's arms...
...and we were more than fine with that.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
"mom, can we make valentine cards this year?...and can I make 21 pom-poms to go with them?"
(while I admit the finished product for all the kids' cards turned out very cute, and we really did have fun making these "Jackson-Pollock-esque" cards with pom-poms attached for G, and robots drawn on the front for W & C, the night before Valentine's Day there was much procrastination, very little patience, definitely annoyance, and maybe yelling and tears that caused me to tell S at the end of the night "NEVER AGAIN! We are buying them from the store next year!," to which he gave me a look and chuckle that said "yeah right, when your daughter wants to make cards and a craft next year you will TOTALLY do this again.," and I have to admit he is right - I love Valentine's Day with kids..."
Monday, February 6, 2012
C's 3!
Our New Year's baby turned 3 this year! C is so proud to be 3 and a big boy, especially since he is a big brother now too. And he really is a big boy - he tries to do EVERYTHING that his big brother and sister do, and loves it when they include him in their play. He likes to be independent and "do it myself!," and also has a bit of a stubborn streak in him (really?! where could he have gotten that from? =) which leads him to get very frustrated when he can't do something himself or if something is done differently than the exact way he wanted it done (he has specific opinions on a lot of things). He talks a lot, but it isn't always the clearest yet. Fortunately we all speak "C" so there aren't too many issues with communication at home. He has a big tender heart and loves to read books and play, especially with his siblings. C is all boy too as he likes to roughhouse with W and those two can get into such mischief! He felt a little left out this fall when G went to school and W started DoodleBugs, so we made a big deal out of him being in Sunday School and that being "his class." He is still pretty attached to momma and dadda when his siblings aren't around, so one of us usually stays in class with him. (and I am fine with this - my sweet boy still needs me a little bit yet - plus a class of 2 and 3 yr olds needs an extra adult anyway!) We also go to storytime on Thursdays at our local library and he really enjoys that, as well as spending special time with Momma (and now H too) on Tuesday mornings when the other 2 are in school and nature center class.
S's parents and sister M and brother-in-law C were able to come over on New Year's to celebrate C's birthday with us this year. They also brought along some belated Christmas presents, so the gift-opening went on for quite a while with much happiness from our children!! (thanks to M and Dad B for the photos of the birthday boy that day so this momma could hold the baby and enjoy everyone's company =)
| when books are given to our kids, all gift-opening has to stop and the book must be read at that moment... |
| this was by far one of C's best expressions caught by the camera...so excited! |
After gifts it was time for cake! When I asked C earlier in the week what kind of cake he wanted, I wasn't expecting him to have an opinion at all. But he answered with no hesitation "BANANA TAKE!" So we got out my mom's recipe for banana cake that I enjoyed as a kid, and C got his banana cake. C's other request was to invite the neighbors over to eat cake with him, and Mrs. L said to call when it was ready and they would come on over.
| calling Mrs. L to say it was "time for take!" |
| blowing out the candles |
| "I get my tools to help you Dadda!" |
- bed frame the same (we planned this)
- special character sheets (Thanks Mrs. L for Thomas the Train sheets! She gave G princess sheets and W Lightning McQueen sheets for their birthdays last year.)
- name banner at end of bed (Thanks Auntie C! and also for the use of your gate =)
- name on wall (gift from Auntie Avis a while back that we strategically placed so a bed would fit under it)
- painted C on wall (craft we did a while back that we have hanging on the walls above the kids' beds)
| ready to sleep - what a big boy! |
Happy Birthday dear C! We love you!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)