I keep all my old calendar planners. Does anyone else do that or is this yet another frightening manifestation of my control freak personality? I buy big, beautiful leather bound calendars. The kind that show the entire month on one double page spread with plenty of room for notes and scratch-outs. I have every one since college wasting space in a manila envelope in my filing cabinet. During occasional cleaning fits, I consider throwing them away, but the only journals I've ever kept are contained in the reminders scribbled on each day's two inch square.
My current calendar (in lilac purple leather) spans March 2007 to August 2008. I don't know how I will let this one go into the file because of the way my heart breaks and swells when I flip through it. For months last summer, as their language exploded, I recorded Ess and Gee's new words each day. I recorded the weeks of Cue's pregnancy. Alongside the baby trivia, I also documented the roller coaster of life with our older son in laughably terse prose. Therapy appointments and phone calls. Innocuous on the surface, but hiding major decisions and agony behind their dry notation.
This morning, I happened to glance at this week, June 2-9, 2007. A week of my life contained in neat print entries fit into two inch squares. On Saturday: "seven months pregnant." Cue's arrival was just seven weeks away. On Thursday: "7 p.m. Call with Smiths." The first actual conversation we would have with the couple that would become our oldest son's second adoptive family. On Friday at the top of the square: "8:30 a.m. 3 hour sugar test." Also, at the bottom of that same day, "bless you - Ess and Gee."
That last entry cracks me up. Friday, June 8, 2007 was not one of the better days I've ever lived, but then again, it's not in the worst twenty either. That dubious distinction is reserved for days like a Tuesday later that same month. That entry reads "our son leaves with B and S, 5 p.m." Such a simple note for the last day I would probably ever see the little boy who had been a part of our lives for over two years.
I had failed my one hour glucose test a few weeks prior and had an 8:30 a.m. appointment to take the three hour test. If you haven't experienced the three hour sugar torture test, it's really fun. Ask for one if you ever get a chance. The lab instructed me to fast for 12 hours before the appointment. For a pregnant woman, at least for me as a pregnant woman, not eating equals unpredictable nausea.
HSSH hadn't been able to get that Friday off and I couldn't get a sitter. I didn't really know anyone in town. At more than 12 hours since my last meal, I arrived at my midwife's office with my 22 month old daughter and 20 month old son in tow. The nurse took my fasting blood sugar level and then handed me a huge bottle of orange liquid derived from whatever mix of chemicals they put into Fanta to make it that alien-life-form orange color. Mixed with sugar, tons of sugar. I'm guessing maybe two huge grocery store bags of sugar? Minimum. Minus the pleasing fizz.
The nurse advised me to drink it fast so that it didn't get warm. Plus, there's a time limit in the sport of pregnant alien orange goop chugging, apparently. If you can't beat the clock, you have to do it again a different day. I chugged like a champion. They should put this stuff on ESPN II or, at the very least, a Japanese game show.
Post chug, they take your blood every hour for three hours (hence the name of the test) to see if you are processing the sugar correctly. If not, you're diagnosed with gestational diabetes. I survived the first hour in the waiting room looking at the fish tank and reading ripped, fraying books to my toddlers. I gave blood again at hour one. I survived the second hour prostrate on three chairs in the play area, blocking my toddlers' access to the rest of the room and trying not to move for fear I would puke right there on the floor in front of the fish tank.
When they called my name at hour two, I managed to get Ess and Gee strapped into the double stroller and wheeled back into the lab. I somehow remained upright through the blood draw. I stood up from the stool in the small lab and I knew it was over. I'd fought the good fight, but it wasn't my day. Fear and alien orange sugar were a factor for me.
As I lowered myself to the floor, just inches from my babies' dangling legs, I remember the nurse saying "you look pale" and barely answering "I'm going to be sick" before I was, repeatedly, into the proffered trash can. My children watched with studious fascination. After considering my retching carefully for a minute, Gee said, "Bless you, Momma." Without thinking, I croaked, "Thank you, baby." This delighted them. All sports are more fun with audience participation. Thereafter, each time I gagged up another mouthful of orange syrup, my little cherubs chirped "Bless you, momma, bless you" from their ringside seats. Their new words for that day.
I wonder if I would remember all of this, if I hadn't written "bless you - Ess and Gee" in my calendar that night at the end of a long day. Writing this story after seeing those little notes convinces me to hang onto all my calendars. Even life's littlest notes are worth something looking back.
Monday, June 2, 2008
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15 comments:
what a funny story! kids are great :) I remember falling on my ass after that test, I hated the drink too ick
I can't help but laugh a little because I guess I am crazy. I took my 1 hour glucose test about two weeks ago. I thought the orange drink was good. I had not eatten since the night before (about 12 hours) because I ran out of time to make myself some breakfast before heading in for the test. I was so hungry that when I got that drink I was "YEA! something besides water!" The tech told me to take it easy and that I didn't need to chug it down. LOL I have to admit though that by the time the hour was done and the blood was drawn and I walked down the hallway to meet my husband and son outside, I was not feeling all that great. I quickly ate something more when I got home. I eneded up passing the test with no trouble. Sorry to hear that if I had not passed it I could have had even more fun.
ew, that sounds awful.
and as for the braids, i think when you are a tiny, blonde, Scandinavian stick of a model, you can wear your hair in all manners of silly ways and still look like, well... a model
I have my calendars, but only back to 2004. So you have just reminded me of the awful awful time that was my glucose test in 2003... even though, unlike you, I didn't have two children in tow.
Brenda - me too! me too! I loved that orange stuff. I was grateful to have something, anything to drink. But I probably would have liked it anyway :-)
Brenda and Burbs - you two are nutty. That stuff is pure nastiness. Are you orange Fanta lovers as well? I have to admit, the fizz in the Fanta does improve it for me.
Z- very good point. Even Scandinavian knitting models are gorgeous.
I'll never forget my 2 year old walking in on my morning dry-heaving ritual when I was pregnant with number 2.. He watched me and his face shifted from horror to fascination to delight. He then pulled up a stool and began mimicking me.
Only a toddler can find a way to make vomiting more difficult and funny and the same time!
Also, if you notice, what do you think about the tree? Yes? No? Maybe?
Great story. I'm new here, so forgive my nosiness - did you ever see your oldest son again?
Oh that cracks me up - and I'm glad to know that a year later it cracks you up, as well.
I don't keep my calendars, but I also don't make as wonderful of notes as you do. My blog is actually my attempt to start recording some of this kind of thing so that I'll remember it someday.
Fortunately, no child has seen me puke, as Mister Man begins gagging the moment he sees something potentially icky. It's a lovely reflex, really.
Lastly... I obviously have so much reading to catch up and figure out all your references in your post! You're too funny to not make a regular.
Hi Amy. No, we are approaching the year anniversary now of his transition to his second placement. I don't think we'll ever see him again. He has a lot of healing to do and he needs to bond with his forever family and learn to trust them. We email with his parents occasionally, so we know that he's doing well.
Michelle - Thanks! That's really sweet. Feel free to ask me if I'm confusing.
Kids always have a way of making what might seem like the darkest moment ever, bright again.
That orange stuff is NASTY! And unfortunately I have to say they improved it slightly in the 5 year gap between R and P...if that's even possible.
You make me laugh one minute and cry the next. This is seriously the best blog I know.
I too have problems parting with old day planners and business cards from another lifetime of mine.
I also failed my sugar tests, but just ate healthier, and solved my problem.
ie: breakfast became two scrambled eggs, one slice of wheat toast and my one caffine a day vs. two eggs over easy on a roll and the large coffee.....
see, i was supposed to be studying for a final and instead i spent hours trying to get that darn header lined up. now i'm going to have to figure out how to get a picture with my comments. i mean really, that's way more important that learning about bladder cancer anyway, right?
oh, and i did follow you to allmediocre... i was insane with jealousy over all the comments, lol.
Megan - thank you.
Fortunately, I passed my truncated version of the three hour sugar test and didn't have to worry about my diet too much. Good thing. Carbs are my friend. I'm not a happy girl if I can't eat a bagel.
Z - way more important! I'm glad you followed me to AM. But, notice how I falsely inflate the comments with my own comments. Ha. And, notice how I have improved the tree from my earlier attempt.
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