Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Bath Blogging

It's not what you think. I'm not blogging from the bath - I'm just not that adventurous. But I often sit on the floor right outside the bathroom door while the Tornado Twins are in the tub, as I am now.

So this post will be a compilation of everything I can write before they start to drown each other (sibling baths never end on a good note around here).

Remember how last week I praised my new calling as the primary music leader? I changed my mind. Sunday about did me in. This is all so familiar from my days serving in the presidency. Some Sundays are wonderful and rewarding. Others make you want to pull your hair out. Week Three was a hair-pulling Sunday.

We are still working on our garden and plan to be shoveling rocks for weeks to come. The second half of last week was rainy, so we had to put our yard work on hold.

Despite questionable weather patterns, I have to say, THIS IS MARCH. People keep making comments about the weather as if this isn't normal. It's March in Utah, my friends. Some days are sunny and warm, others are rainy and cold. This is how it goes. EVERY. YEAR. And yet, people are still always shocked at the weather in March. Easter is pretty much a day for us to get together with extended family and listen to everyone gripe about the weather.

Speaking of the weather, I've started walking in the mornings again with some friends. It snowed on Sunday, so we were debating whether we should walk on Monday. We decided to go for it. I set out from my house to meet KoriAnn, and it was pretty amazing outside. The air was so clear and fresh - it felt good to get outside and breathe. There was snow on the grass, but the walks were clear, so it was really serene and peaceful. I felt amazing - it was like I had the world to myself for a moment. About a mile into our walk, it started dumping snow, and we just kept going (we had important matters to discuss - things that are more important than seeking shelter in the snow). At the end of our walk, the path was completely covered, and both of us had snow all over us. My clothes were soaked through, and KoriAnn had a snowman forming in the collar of her coat.

Again... it's March. This is how it goes, and I actually like the variety.

My kids' spring break starts tomorrow. I'm not ready. I need to have a plan. I don't have a plan! What am I going to do?

And with that, the first naked bum has escaped from the tub.




What I Need From General Conference

This weekend, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints across the world will participate in a General Conference. The conference takes place twice a year here in Salt Lake City, but it is broadcast to church buildings in over 100 countries. It's translated live into 80 languages, and the transcripts are later translated into even more languages so the messages can reach millions of people from different places around the world.

It is all very miraculous to me.

I'm really looking forward to General Conference because there are some things I really need right now:

-I need to feel PEACE and comfort.

-I need my worries and anxieties about raising children in this world to be put at ease.

-I need to know that everything is going to be okay and that there is still HOPE.

-I need to feel spiritually and emotionally SAFE.

-I need to feel the LOVE of Heavenly Father and the LOVE of my Savior.

-I need confirmation that I'm not screwing up in every aspect of my life.

-I need to escape from the DISDAIN and CONTEMPT that are running rampant in our world.

-I need to feel LOVE for my fellow humans.

-I need to reset and come out FRESH and RENEWED.

I believe I'll get to have every one of these things this weekend, and I can hardly wait!

Friday, March 23, 2018

When I'm Super

There are a lot of super powers I wouldn't mind having. 

How about the power to kill a yak from 200 yards away?

With mind bullets?

(That's telekinesis, Kyle).


I definitely wouldn't mind having a touch of telekinesis, but I probably wouldn't use it to kill yaks. I might pull some Matilda-like pranks, but mostly, I'd use my mind powers to make my life simpler.

Like right now, I could be using my telekinesis to load the dishwasher while I type. It would be the ultimate "MOM" power!!!

But then again, teleportation would be pretty sweet. I could teleport to the grocery store for milk, and my life would be all the easier for it (as long as the milk can teleport back with me - here I go with my hypotheticals again).

A third arm would be really handy (ha! "handy") but that's more of a deformity than a super power - plus telekinesis can help me with a lot of the tasks that I'd use a third arm for. But really, I feel like two arms are not enough. Can I get an 'amen?'

Flight would be nice, but it wouldn't be my first choice - not if I could teleport. 

Teleportation over flight, for me. 

Super human strength would also be really nice, but again, not my first choice. 

Time pause, though. That might be cool. If I could pause everything but keep going myself, I could accomplish all sorts of things. 

Like cleaning my house without my kids interfering.

Or binge-watching a TV series without feeling guilty.

Okay, let's be honest, if I could pause time, I'd probably abuse the privilege, but I'd be able to shower everyday without anyone peeking through the curtain or standing in the bathroom crying.

Since none of these powers are real (the truth hurts), I'll settle for functioning at a high level. If I could have a super power, that would be it - I'd just have my crap together. I'd be able to have more than one area of my life under control at a time. Right now, I'm only capable of one. I can't be caught up on laundry and stick to a budget and study my scriptures and exercise and be a patient, loving mother. I can only be good at one at a time - which means I have to let a lot of things go.

The power to have my crap together. That's it. That's the one.

I can visualize what it could be like to meet the X-Men at Professor Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters. It would go like this:

Wolverine: Hi, I'm Wolverine. My bones are fused with adamantium, I have retractable claws, and my body regenerates at the blink of an eye.

Me: Hi Wolverine, I'm Brittany, and I have my crap together.

Wolverine: Whoa!

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

It's Been a While (and ten other random facts)

Fact #1: I went through a bit of a writing phase where I had a lot to say, so I was posting almost daily for a few weeks. It's funny how it comes in waves. Sometimes I have a lot of ideas for blog posts, and sometimes I have none. Right now I have none.

Fact #2: Scotty and I are spending as much time as possible working on our garden. Back in 2011, we put in some garden boxes. Then in 2012, we expanded and put in a few more (see the garden of 2012 here). The past two summers, we've let the garden "rest."

Fact #3: By "rest," I mean we let it go to crap. It got overtaken with weeds. We didn't pull out our plants after summer of 2015. Our peach trees dropped fruit, leaves, and branches everywhere, and our chickens dug out all our strawberry plants and flung all the dirt out of the boxes (we built a fence around the garden to keep the chickens out, but there's an area where they can still weasel their way through our honeysuckle plant and get in the garden. Eventually we gave up on trying to keep them out).

Fact #4: Because of our stupidity laziness rest period, our garden is in shambles. Therefore, we are working on digging up all the rocks and sifting the dirt out of them to put back in the boxes. We are also putting down a fresh layer of weed barrier. We pulled out two trees - one was dead, and one was just an inconvenience, and I'd never thought to take it out, but as soon as Scotty mentioned the idea, I was so relieved and wondered why it hadn't ever occurred to me before.

Fact #5: The type of work we are doing in the garden is literally accomplished inches at a time. It's a tedious, labor-intensive task. I hope we don't lose our momentum. We tend to get started on yard things and then weather interferes.

Fact #6: As you might have guessed from this post, I have a new calling (church assignment). I'm now the primary music leader (formerly known as the primary chorister, though I'm not sure the name really makes a difference. Do people feel more empowered by being called "music leaders" instead of "choristers?")

Fact #7: I've felt very strongly for a few years that this would eventually be my calling. When I was the primary president, my friend Jennifer was the music leader, and I would watch her and feel this little nudge saying, "You're next!" Luckily, Jennifer served for a really long time.

Fact #8: I was not okay with the calling at all when it was first extended. I had so many reasons to say no - one being that I still haven't recovered from being the primary president and another being that it took two years to get Zoe to go to primary, so I was worried that being in there would mean I wouldn't be able to do my job without a five-year-old clinging to my leg.

Fact #9: I decided to just have faith that everything would work out, so I accepted the calling.

Fact #10: I've only done it two weeks so far, but everything has gone pretty well. It's actually a really good calling for me. My kids are doing well with it - Eva doesn't cry when I leave the nursery after I sing with them, and Zoe has been good to stay with her class during junior primary. It involves a lot of prep work and planning, but I'm good at those things. There are definitely things I need to work on (like getting better at reading music and singing the right lyrics), but I think I'm where I belong, even though I didn't believe it AT ALL a month ago.

Monday, March 12, 2018

Currently {March 2018 Edition}

Reading: The Family Romanov by Candace Fleming

Watching: The Goldbergs

Procrastinating: Finding a primary care physician. 

Wanting: New couches. If you remember (which you probably don't, and that's okay) "new couches" used to make regular appearances here. We eventually got a new (used, actually) couch in our living room, but it's now in shambles. Several springs have popped lose in it, and it makes horrible screeching sounds when anyone sits on it. It recently swallowed a member of our Relief Society Presidency - the one with the bad back, of course - so now I'm to the point where I don't want anyone to sit in my house lest they become injured or lost. 

Craving: Chinese food

Wearing: Jeans that have a stretchy waistband and look a lot like maternity pants, but they aren't maternity pants. I refer to them as my "glory jeans." Also a blue hand-me-down t-shirt from Shannon. A significant portion of my wardrobe is Shannon's hand-me-downs. 

Relieved by: Scotty getting to come home a week early from a business trip (he was supposed to be gone until St. Patrick's Day, but he was able to home on the 9th).

Stressing about: Food. I'm working on my grocery list for later this week, and deep in my heart of hearts I want to make healthy choices, but I also have a special place in my heart for cheap & easy. I don't care what anyone says, eating healthy is not cheap or easy.

Neglecting: The floor of my house. I can't look down or I'll be overwhelmed. I'm just going to keep my head high, and if anyone comes to my house, I'll clear a path. Not sure where the path will go since no one can sit on my couch. Maybe to a kitchen stool?

Classy.

Trying: To drink more water. I feel like I drink a lot of water, but when I actually track the quantity, I come up short. 

Feeling: Kind of blah. There are some things eating away at me right now. I'm struggling with some family relationships, and I feel like this world is a hopeless, awful place and why, oh why, did I think I could raise four children here? You know that feeling? 

Wishing: That I had a personal assistant (I call her Sue).

Relieved by: A large medical bill that somehow got taken care of. I don't know how it happened. A miracle? Maybe. I wish I knew.

Burdened by: Something reflux-y/heartburn-y. I don't know what my deal is, but I could barf any moment. Remember how I'm procrastinating finding a primary care physician? This is one of the side effects of my procrastination. I feel like there's a balloon inflating in my throat.

Loving: The warm weather this week that allows me to send my kids out in public in sandals and flip flops without great scrutiny. Winter is not kind to the feet of my children. They need air.

Worried about: My kids. I've reached the point in motherhood where I'm worried all the time. I think it just stays like this permanently from this point forward. 

Thankful for: Alone time. It's such a rare occurrence for me to be alone that I've come to treasure it dearly, even though I spend most of it freaking out about spending it wisely - which prevents me from spending it wisely.

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Blended Family

This past week I've been working on some "blended family" projects (by the end of the month, I'll be able to show you what one of the projects is. I'm really excited about it).

Even though divorce and remarriage is very common now, it wasn't the norm when I was a child. My parents were divorced for five years before I had a friend whose parents were also divorced (that friend is now my sister-in-law so we are part of the same blended family). Even as an adult, most of my friends come from "intact" families, so as common as divorce may be, a lot of my generation is experiencing it for the first time.

Being a part of any family has its ups and downs, but the dynamics of blended families can be pretty complicated. "High drama" might be a good way to describe it, but "never boring" might be a kinder way of putting it.

As I've been working on my blended family project, I've been thinking about some of the adventures of being part of a blended family:

  • If you've ever used the introduction, "This is my brother Kyle, and this is my other brother Kyle,"... you might come from a blended family
  • If you have nieces named Haley, Haylie, and Hailey... you might come from a blended family. 
  • If you are the oldest child, the middle child, and the second-to-youngest child all at once... you might come from a blended family. 
  • If you have 51 nieces and nephews, and some of your siblings haven't even started having kids yet... you might come from a blended family.
  • If you didn't know your nephew existed until he was three... you might come from a blended family.
  • If you've ever had to draw a diagram of your family to use as a visual aid during an anecdote... you might come from a blended family. 
  • If your friends think you're delusional because one time you said you have no sisters and another time you said you have 7 sisters... you might come from a blended family. 
  • If you host a "grandparents only" birthday party and 26 people show up... you might come from a blended family.  
  • If you write a blog post about your family, and it's outdated by the end of the day... you might come from a blended family.
For those who don't know, Scotty and I both come from very large, blended families, so we get to experience the "never boring" aspect from every side. We have 8 parents, and together we have 21 siblings (that's our siblings, half-siblings, and step siblings* - no spouses. In addition to that, Scotty has two family members who were raised as his siblings but aren't biologically nor legally related to him, so depending on how you count, we have 23 siblings) (can you understand the need for diagrams?)

*In case you don't know the blended family vernacular, half-siblings share one parent (Scotty and I each have one half-sibling. Half-siblings are biological) and step-siblings are by marriage (i.e. not biological)




Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Twelve Favorite Quotes - The Blessing of a Skinned Knee

I always have a book on parenting, marriage, or family in the works. I find them fascinating. I guess it's good that I had the sense to get a degree in something I have always been interested in, eh?

I know a lot of people poo-poo parenting books, but I find a lot of great inspiration in them. None of them offer perfect formulas for raising children - you have to take them with a grain of salt, but I have found a lot of helpful gems in the books I've read, and as someone who does not consider herself to be a natural at raising children, I appreciate the education.

My most recent parenting book is The Blessing of a Skinned Knee by Wendy Mogel.

{Via}

This book takes teachings from the Torah and the Talmud and applies them to parenting. Personally, I found it to be so much more than a parenting book. I have always been fond of the Jewish faith. There are so many rituals and symbols in Judaism that I can connect to my own faith as a Mormon. 

This book helped put some of my parenting fears to rest as it addressed many aspects of overparenting. It helped me reflect on some of the religious practices I participate in and their purposes. It also inspired me to write a new workshop curriculum. I have an "in" with a family centered conference that's in the works, and I've been trying to decide what I want to present there. I've had some ideas in the back of my mind, and I think I'm ready to bring one of them to fruition.

I had a hard time narrowing down the quotes to share from this book because my copy is highlighted pretty heavily. I decided to go with twelve, and I grouped them by topic. 

Family Meals,  Eating, & Blessing the Food


"Sanctification*... is the process of acknowledging the holiness in everyday actions and events... One traditional Jewish expression for home is the same as the word for house of worship: mikdash me'at, or 'little holy place.' Our dining table with our children is an altar. It has the potential to be the holiest spot on the planet." p 35

"The Talmud instructs us to find a balance between eating to live and living to eat. We are to elevate the act of eating by being conscious about when, what. where, and why we eat. In other words, we must make our table an altar." p 165

"We need to approach food in a conscious way so we can take full advantage of our human capacity for self-control and enjoyment... Sanctify mealtime. Sitting with other people around a table, as Jewish tradition encourages, assures that we'll spend at least part of our meal conversing instead of consuming. The blessings we say before we eat can also help. These prayers of thanks force us to slow down and reflect on the meal set before us." p 165

"In Judaism, the purpose of eating is partly to fuel ourselves to serve God and partly to force us to enjoy what God has provided. This means that if you eat a chocolate bar or allow your children to have one, you must say a blessing before you eat it to remind yourself to celebrate its worth. If you eat too many candy bars, you can't celebrate, because they are no longer special. If you eat and feel guilty at the same time, you demean the experience of pleasure and misspend the blessing. It's not a celebration anymore." p 166

Gratitude & Recognizing Blessings


"Children are specialists in the holy details... Their gratitude and uninhibited enthusiasm can be contagious, but you have to slow down and make these moments a priority or else you'll both miss out. Formalizing the ritual of blessings so that it becomes a habit is another way to teach children to remember what they've been given.** We tend to want to send God 'wish lists' of the things we want rather than remembering to thank Him for what we already have." p 127-128

"Tikkun olam (healing or repairing the world) conveys the idea that if we are blessed with abundance, it's because God wants us to figure out how to use it to help others." p 129

"In Judaism you are taught to 'be' a blessing. Every day, you mine the details for opportunities to elevate, to sanctify, to make order and find meaning. From your actions, you begin to learn God's wisdom and see the mark of God's touch." p 241

Repentance


"In Juadaism, the word for repentance is techuvah. It means 'return,' both in the sense of returning to your true best self after having strayed off course and the sense of returning to God, to a divine, objective standard of goodness." p203

Honoring the Sabbath Day


"What is forbidden on Shabbat is any act that changes the physical world. When we rest on Shabbat, we stop manipulating nature... and changing the physical. This makes Shabbat a time to focus on the eternal..."  From The Art of Jewish Living: The Shabbat Seder by Dr. Ron Wolfson.

"There are peak spiritual moments that happen in a family spontaneously. The prescient, poetic observations our children make, the questions they ask us as they are climbing out of the bath or playing with their toast, cannot be pumped out of them or choreographed. The way time stops when a glistening bull-frog hops onto the driveway or when your child has a long and tender talk with a grandparent ushers in the neshamah yeterah without effort. But the idea of guarding the Sabbath teaches us to increase the odds that we'll find ourselves in these moments, that they will be prolonged rather than fleeting, and that we don't have to leave them entirely to chance." p 214

"[British psychologist D.W.] Winicott believed that we speed up our lives unintentionally in order to escape feeling helpless in the face of overwhelming problems or inner struggles. This may explain why the idea of a whole day of rest is terrifying to so many people. We're not afraid of losing time but of having time to reflect. Without the usual distractions and interference, we may have to confront feelings of disappointment, loneliness, frustration, panic, helplessness, and exhaustion, and our fear that we are not strong enough to make the changes we need to make." p 221

God & Science


"God and science aren't in competition... To teach about science we use the laws of logic and instruments like a microscope. To teach about God we use different laws, like the Ten Commandments, and we use stories instead of instruments to show how the laws work. To test and measure God we use the part of our mind that sees beauty in nature and goodness in people... Science makes God's incredible world credible." p 242-243


*Many of the teachings in this book are based on the three cornerstones of Jewish living: moderation, celebration, and sanctification
**Jewish tradition encourages adults to say 100 blessings of gratitude per day.

Monday, March 5, 2018

Scenes I Don’t Like Watching

Last week I finished watching Lost. I did some math and determined how many times I have watched each season:

Season One: 6
Season Two: 7
Season Three: 6
Season Four: 5
Season Five: 4
Season Six: 3

(If you're curious, the reason I have watched some seasons more than others is because when the show was on TV but off-season, I would go back and watch the past seasons in anticipation of the new season. This time I started watching in season 2, which is why it has the most. I skipped season 1 this round because I was trying to catch up to Shannon, who was also watching it).

I love Lost (if you've been around here for a while, you know this), but there are some scenes I struggle watching. It's not a Lost-exclusive problem, though. These are scenes that make me cringe in any show. Lost just happens to have all of them.

The first scene I hate watching is women going into TV labor. You all know what I'm talking about. They have one sharp pain, and suddenly the baby is crowning. I understand that TV births have to be somewhat unrealistic for the sake of moving foward with the plot, but really? You're not even going to let the woman have a few contractions before she has to push? Lost has several labor scenes, all of which consist of, "Ouch! Oh my gosh, it's coming! Push! BAM! Baby."


Thank heaven for Call the Midwife for redeeming TV childbirth.

The next scene I struggle with is the underwater scene. I have a hard time watching them because I feel like I have to hold my breath. The characters are always underwater for much longer than is humanly possible. I'm very aware of the point where I would just give up and inhale, so underwater scenes basically force me to imagine my own death over and over.

In addition to that, I'm claustrophobic and the thought of scuba diving or going on a submarine makes me completely anxious. Lost has a few submarine scenes, and the narrow hallways and the lack of natural light and windows makes my pulse rise. When I watch a submarine dive, I again imagine my death over and over.

(My first time on Finding Nemo's Submarine Voyage was really hard. I almost couldn't do it, but then I reasoned with myself. "Britt, if these windows break, and the water comes in, you can just stand up. You're not fully submerged." Now I'm okay on it, but I don't love it).

I also have a hard time watching MRI scenes due to claustrophobia. And of course, someone needs an MRI in season 6.

The next scene I struggle with is people kissing in the morning. All I can think about is how bad their breath would be. Really? You just roll over and start open-mouth kissing each other? You just woke up! You haven't brushed your teeth! Are there people out there who don't have morning breath?

I am truly asking. Are there?


The last one I will mention today (because I'm sure there are more I haven't thought of) might seem a little odd. It's another kissing thing. It makes me uneasy when heads tilt to the left. I don't mind if they go right and then left, but when they start on the left or stay on the left, I feel like something is wrong.

I first noticed this at my sister-in-law's wedding. When she and her husband kissed, it looked really weird and uncomfortable to me. I kept thinking, "Something is wrong with the way they kiss!" but I couldn't figure out what it was. Later, I saw them kiss again, and I realized that I really wanted their heads to go to the right. That was the problem - they went left!

There are a lot of left kisses in Lost which leaves me wondering if that's the way the actors naturally did the scene or if the director specifically instructed them to go left. There are probably times when going left is better for the camera angle, but it messes with my mind.

Which leads me to my personal mantra to always choose the right!

Saturday, March 3, 2018

The Long but Incomplete List of Things I Won't Do

For Valentine's Day, Scotty gave me a card telling me that he'd planned a date for us that would get us out of our comfort zones.

I tried to not freak out, but inside, I was scared to death. I didn't hide it as well as I hoped. Scotty knew right away that I was not okay. He offered to tell me what the date was (it was about four days out), but I told him not to tell me because if it was something I would hate, I didn't want to spend four days dreading it.

(My poor husband).

The next day, we had a very thorough conversation about possible dates. Scotty asked me about all sort of activities, most of which I said I would not be interested in doing.

Here is a fact about me:

I am not adventurous.

Like, not at all.

(My poor husband).

I told Scotty that if our surprise date involved being up high in any way, he needed to cancel it. I keep my feet on the ground. He's been instructed to never "surprise" me with an activity that requires me to go up in the air.

This claim made me consider whether I would do a trapeze class, if ever an option. Would I? No. Why? Because I'm too overweight to hold myself up. But if I were 50-75 pounds lighter, would I?

In truth, I don't know. I want to say yes, but I seriously don't think I could get myself to swing on a trapeze. I don't know if it's a fear of heights, though. I think it's a control issue.

Here is a fact about me:

I am a control freak.

(My poor husband).

I don't think I can swing from a trapeze because 1) I might fail and/or fall, 2) I would feel out of control, and 3) I can't stand the idea of people watching me try something for the first time.

I also don't want to zip line, sky dive, or do a ropes course. Maybe I'll have a near-death experience someday that will change my mind, but for now, this is my policy. I don't go up high, especially for a "surprise."

I also don't like being wet, so Scotty has been instructed to never surprise me by taking me swimming or anything like unto it. No indoor surfing for this gal.

There are some things I would be willing to do with a group of close friends but not with Scotty alone. I could maybe do a ropes course with a group of friends. I just can't deal with strangers and being up high all at once.

I'd be willing to go to Top Golf with friends or play paintball with friends (but the whole paintball arena has to be friends or friends of friends because I can't shoot or be shot by strangers). There are some activities you just need groups for.

I am not interested in Paint Nite or Color Me Mine. I don't want to have my feet pedicured by fish. I don't want to go to a museum or aquarium that I normally take my children to.

I don't want to play mini golf or go cosmic ice skating.

I've reached a point in life where I don't need all the dating activities. What I need from a date is the chance to feel relieved from my responsibilities for a night and connect and spend time with Scotty. Mini golfing with my husband ain't no thing to me. It serves no purpose.

I can tolerate bowling about once every five years. Add this to the list of activities I would prefer to do with a group.

I don't want to take a ballroom dance class with my husband. I know there are women who dream of this. Not me.

I don't mind riding the Alpine slide (after the horrible part where I have to go up high on a ski lift). And I'm slightly open to bob sledding (maybe I'm only 90% adventure-less, but the percentage is still high enough to warrant the description of "not adventurous).

After our conversation, I was really anxious to find out what Scotty had planned, and I hoped I didn't crush his dreams. He was really trying! And he'd donated plasma for weeks to pay for our mystery date.

In my heart, I hoped it was a couple's massage, but that didn't fit the "out of our comfort zones" description. I'm totally cool with getting naked for strangers and letting them rub me. In fact, it's one case where I really like strangers (as opposed to people I went to high school with - which was what happened last time I had a massage).

It turned out to be precisely what I hoped for! We went to dinner and used a gift card we got for Christmas. Then we went and had massages. It was exactly what I needed - time with Scotty and a chance to relax. And since Scotty had never had a massage, it was our of his comfort zone, but he loved it (I always knew he would).

For this Valentine's Day surprise, Scotty nailed it!

(Part of me wonders if he initially had something else planned but changed it after my reaction. I'm not even going to ask him. I'll feel too horrible if that's what happened).

Friday, March 2, 2018

The ER

Last week, Daisy contracted cellulitis in her arm (I'll spare you the photos of the infection). She had an IV in her arm for four days and had to have nightly doses of antibiotics in the hospital. The IV came out on Tuesday. We're not in the clear quite yet. We're keeping a close eye on it, and she is continuing on oral antibiotics.


Part of me was super chill about the experience, but another part of me was a complete basket case. 

The emergency room is a horrible place. It wasn't my first time there, by any means, but after being there four days in a row, I am abhorred by it. We had so many issues, and the quality of care was shockingly poor. I can understand one bad hospital experience, but day after day of it really makes me concerned for humanity.

After going to the ER four times in four days, I started saying, "We've been to the ER more this week than I have been in my entire life!"

Then I started wondering if that was actually true, so I dug in the deep files of my mind to recall all my emergency room experiences.

My first visit to the ER was when I was a child. My nose started bleeding while we were camping, and it bled pretty consistently for about two days. My parents finally drove me down the mountain to a small town hospital. They talked about cauterizing it, but I don't think they ended up doing it. If they did, I've somehow blocked the memory of it. What they did do, for sure, was shove a tampon up my nostril where it remained for several days. When I had it removed, it felt like it was pulling my brain out with it (it was a wound tampon, so it didn't have a string. In fact, I don’t know if “tampon” would be the correct medical term for it, but it was totally a tampon. I had to have it removed by a doctor). I remember having nightmares about my nose tampon while it was in. I thrashed all through the night because I was uncomfortable and had a hard time breathing through one nostril. I was instructed to keep the tampon moist, so I had to squirt it with water from a syringe several times during the day.

Now I live the bloody nose lifestyle with my own son whose nose bleeds constantly. His has been cauterized, but the blood vessel is so large that the ENT said he would need to do it in the operating room under anesthesia to really get it to work. Nicky's nose has gotten a little better, though, so we haven't gone that route yet. No ER visits for Nicky's bloody noses, though. Our ENT instructed us to always call him first, and that has saved me from having to make the choice to go to the ER.

My next ER visit was when I was 14. I got a pain in my side while playing basketball. I thought it was a side ache, but it wouldn't go away. It got increasingly worse over several days. If I laughed, coughed, or even breathed wrong, the pain was excruciating. I knew I was going to die, so I wrote a will. I wanted to make sure my friend Michelle got my stereo. But my mom took me to the ER, so I didn't die after all. I had pleurisy, an infection in the lining of my lungs.

The next visit was for Nicky. He fell in a window well at a family party and hit his head. He threw up after, so we were worried he had a concussion. He ended up being fine (no concussion). In fact, they were more concerned about his nose, which was slightly swollen, than his head, and we hadn't even noticed his nose!

After that, I had two ER visits for myself in one week. I had some bizarre stroke-like symptoms, one of which was severe head pain. The first hospital treated me very poorly, so I declined some of their services and went home (after being there for four hours, the symptoms had mostly subsided). I threw up on the triage nurse while I was there. I don't even feel bad about it. The next hospital (one week later when the same symptoms hit again) was wonderful. They did a C/T scan and a spinal tap but didn't find anything wrong.

Then we had facial stitches for Nicky, Zoe, and Eva on three separate occasions.

And that brings me to a total of nine ER visits prior to Daisy's cellulitis. So that means my statement of being there more in one week than I'd been in my whole life was slightly inaccurate.

At any rate, I prefer to avoid the place altogether. 

Thursday, March 1, 2018

Moving On

For the past three years, I've taught youth Sunday school at church. This is my second time serving as a youth Sunday school teacher. My first calling (church job) was teaching youth Sunday school as an 18-year-old. In hindsight, I laugh because I was a youth teaching the youth! But I thought I was so grown up and cool (I even wrote about how cool I was in my Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul Journal. All legit adults have one of those, right?)

I loved teaching Sunday school then, and I loved it the second time around. It is, by far, my favorite calling, and the one I would hand-pick if I could.

Recently my time as a Sunday school teacher came to an end. It's been very emotional over the past few weeks as I've prepared to leave my class. I wasn't ready for the change. I cried every day for the first week after I heard the news. Then I cried every two days for the week after that.


The worst part of it was when I had to teach my class, knowing that I would be leaving them soon, but not being able to tell them yet. Of course that day, a girl said in the opening prayer, "We're thankful for Brittany."

Cue tears.

I had to suck them back in and get on with the lesson.

The thing about teenagers is...

They are hard. Frankly, I'm terrified of them.


But when I serve and teach them as individuals, they are everything to me!

(Sidenote: Remember how Scotty and I were Ma & Pa for Trek a couple of years ago? We loved our family of teenagers so much. The same week I found out I was being released from Sunday school, two of our Trek children got engaged... to each other!!! And one received his mission call. It was a big week for my teenagers. Again... they become everything to me!)

During my time teaching Sunday school, I faced plenty of challenges. I had kids walk out of my lessons. I had kids make me cry. Sometimes I felt defeated, lost, or overwhelmed. Sometimes my lessons were really, really bad.

But I loved it.

And I loved them. My teenagers.