She had some wheezing and an ear infection. Antibiotics,
steroids, and nebulizer treatments have straightened her out and I am hopeful
that the home nebulizer treatments will help keep her home longer. We are
getting closer to spring and with winter ending there shouldn’t be as many bugs
to catch.
I got to talk to Dr. Kays at one point and it turns out that
Anya is way too big. Not fat, just too big. She is 50th percentile
and it would be better for her to be in the 5th percentile or less. Counterintuitive
as it sounds it makes sense. The bigger you are the more you have to breathe to
support all that body. the more you eat the more CO2 is made, and the lungs
need to get rid of that. Anya’s lungs are not developed enough to do all of
this for the body she has right now.
Anya’s calorie goals were cut down, and she has been doing
well with it. She has started eating baby food; two tablespoons at a time. She
gets excited about food and enjoys the different flavors, and is behaving much
like Arwen did when she was just starting baby food. Anya is also putting
everything in her mouth, most of her aversions appear to be gone, but she still
will not take a bottle!
We are right at a year since this roller coaster got
started. February 15th, 2012 I waited on an exam table to learn that
my unborn child had a life threatening condition. One year since Adam got home
on a red eye from Las Vegas and I pretended to be asleep, because I didn’t know
what to say or how to deal with his reaction, since I couldn’t work through my
own. One year since I hid Arwen’s baby sibling books because I couldn’t figure
out a way of telling her we might not bring a baby home. One year of heartbreak,
pain, frustration, fear, exhaustion. Slowly it turned into a year of blessings,
joy, triumph, and different forms of exhaustion.
One day all of this is going to catch up with me, and I will
have a nervous breakdown. No doubt it will be fantastic. Right now however the
emotions of a year ago are too close. Comparing where we were to where we are
now, watching the wonder of Anya’s story develop, I am unable to allow myself
to wallow in negative emotions. Well, at least not too much. Yes everything is
insane, I constantly feel like I am forgetting something essential, I hardly
know what it is to relax without leaving something undone. Be that as it may
this is exactly where I hoped we would be a year ago when I pled with God.
Not all of you know but February 15th is another anniversary
for me. This year it marks the fourteenth year since my mother died from lung
cancer. She was 42 and I was 18, and I always will remember how she handled
herself after she was diagnosed. One day she found a verse from scripture in a
frame, and brought it home. I thought she was a little bit crazy, to be
diagnosed with terminal cancer and have this verse as a motto:
In everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in
Christ Jesus for you. 1 Thessalonians 5:18
I guess I am crazy too, because it makes sense to me now.
Hi Kelly--Clearly we are somehow cosmically linked :) Totally with you on the upcoming nervous breakdown, too. I'm so glad Anya is making progress with her eating! Many prayers for health and no more hospital stays.
ReplyDeleteLeslie