merry christmas from frank & em.
So I checked to see what I was blogging about last year in December. I only wrote one blog: Snow. In that blog I said something like, “Well, once we get our stuff put away and a light fixture hung in the dining area, it will feel like home.”
Thanks to Frank, we finally got the light fixture hung this week.
Welcome home, K fam, welcome home.
Knowing when to say “when” is not my strong suit. Ask my husband.
I am the queen of bad timing and timing misjudgments.
My timing issues tend to center around my inability to leave the office, but have also seeped into other areas, including when to leave a party, when to leave church, when to leave dinner, when to go to bed… etc, etc.
And when to let go in an argument.
I have to say I’m getting better at the last one.
Ask my younger sister Cait, she’ll tell you that I used to always try to get the last word in ALWAYS. I’ve been like that since she’s known me. Her first day home from the hospital as an infant and she was like, “darn, girlfriend, have a bottle and CHILL!”
When should I let go of the fertility biz? When is enough truly enough? How many shots, scans, opinions, tests and screenings can I handle?
This isn’t to say that I think we are at the end of our time in fertility treatment world. I’m not ready to give up yet. I know Frank isn’t ready to give up either.
But I know there is a chance that a time might come where I might have to recognize that we fought the good fight and there is no more we can do or pray for, at least regarding having a biological child.
At the end of the day when I am beyond tired, that is usually when I decide to bake cookies, wrap Christmas gifts and wash the floor. When I should rest, I find that I am too tired to sit still.
That is why I worry that God will give me all the cues that we cannot go any farther, and I will miss the cues because I am too tired to see them – too focused on searching for the solution, the next option and the next treatment to realize that the game is over and the crowd went home.
After reading a few blogs about women at varying stages of this process, with several of them undergoing treatment for three to five years, I just can’t even fathom what that is like to go through that emotional and physical marathon.
I am amazed by God’s tremendous grace and blessing. God gave me a husband who is an expert at knowing when to say “when.” Frank puts 100% into everything he does, but he knows when a situation is done. He knows when the party is winding down, when the game is over and when it’s time to turn the lights out and go to bed.
So we’ll keep chugging along and I’m hopeful that if I miss God’s cues, Frank will see them.
So obviously I’ve been pretty sad lately (as in over the past few days).
But the Irish girl in me (about 1/4 to 1/8 of me… I’m a bit diluted) is fighting hard to find a joke in here.
I think about different conversations I have had or might have, and I try to work in a infertility joke.
It’s not possible.
Infertility is the most unfunny topic ever.
And even when I think of something that sounds funny to me, I realize that if I say it out loud, I will put everyone else in a bad spot. You can almost see the panic on peoples’ faces as they think: Laugh? Don’t laugh? Is it funny? I don’t know! I don’t know! HELP!
That’s not really fun for anyone.
I guess I’ll just have to honor the Belgian in me: chocolate and beer, please!
I don’t know what else there is to say about the BFN today. I was hoping that some elegant words would come to mind, but most of the words that have come to mind have been less than elegant.
Mostly the words are born out of frustration and anger. Oh, and a ton of sadness.
This month was more difficult than most. It marked a full year of trying. Yes, I totally understand that most people try for a year before they think something is wrong and get checked out. We were just fortunate (or unfortunate?) enough that it was evident that we had a problem on our hands four months in to trying.
For the past eight months I have been on and off of Clomid. I have been stuck and poked and prodded countless numbers of times. I am pretty sure I could give myself an ultrasound if the technician were to accidentally pass out.
This is not how I imagined how this process would go.
I know that I am blessed beyond comprehension in so many ways. I remind myself of that daily when I get sad or upset about this situation.
But this situation just sucks.
I’ve learned a lot of fertility lingo in the past year.
TTC = trying to conceive
Luteal Phase = time between ovulation and the next menstrual cycle
Trigger Shot = an injection of hormones to trigger ovulation
BFN = Big Freaking Negative pregnancy test
Today was another BFN.
I don’t even know how many BFNs we’ve had in 2009 because I had some weird cycles – 12? 13?
It’s getting old.
I loved The Wonder Years when I was growing up.
I loved the older voice of Kevin that narrates the story of the younger version of his junior-high self because I love that his voice sounds like he is sharing the lessons, joys and sorrows of his late 1960’s youth with his children – explaining himself to them.
I remember watching The Wonder Years and hoping that one day I would be able to tell my children about my life. And I don’t think I am alone – I think the need to share our story and pass it along is universal. The idea that we would live our lives and no one would know who we were, who we became and who God created us to be, feels tragic. And sometimes the memories are simple snapshots and moments.
Like lying in bed in the house I grew up in on a hot summer’s night, with the windows open and the breeze puffing the curtains in and out, like deep breaths, and the whole house fan whirring in the hallway. We slept with all of our doors open and I would listen to hear my dad start snoring. Every once in a while, a car would wander down our street, coming home from a late night at the office or a late night with friends. Sometimes I could hear both a car engine and music wafting through the air, a rising crescendo that then faded as the car approached and passed our house.
I wonder what it would be like if I could step back in time and walk through a day in my childhood. I suspect it would feel like a sick day and sick days always felt wrong, like I was diverging from an already drawn-out timeline and visiting an alternate universe. Driving to the doctor’s office on a sick day, I would marvel that people lived all these varying realities being played out beyond the walls of the classroom. People going to the grocery store, visiting the library, going to the hair salon, and stopping at the post office. Even now, I feel that way when I take time off of work – there is a feeling of being out of step with the universe and glimpsing an alternate reality. I feel like a visitor in my own life.
Plus, remembering things from my childhood is sometimes like remembering a dream. I can generally recall what it was like to walk through the front door of my house, but if you asked me to describe some of the specifics, that’s when things get fuzzy. I remember the black slate floors. I remember that we always had items sitting on the stairs, waiting to be carried up (which we never did and which Mom or Dad always did begrudgingly while saying, “You kids pass all of this stuff, and never bring it up with you!”). But I don’t remember the wall color in the kitchen and when I try to remember, it gets blurry in my memory and I am not sure if I am remembering the right wallpaper.
But regardless of how shoddy my memory can be, I sometimes will transport myself back to the places of my childhood. I try to adjust the angles to see things from my adult perspective and not from my smaller child memory. I have to remind myself that the house I grew up in would probably feel smaller if I actually went back inside as an adult. In my memory, I walk into the garage and I look around, trying to mentally feel out the space. I walk through the garage door and into the house. The powder room door is on the right, immediately followed by the door to the laundry room. To my left is the door to the basement. Directly in front of me is the family room. I try to remember if the hutch was always on the wall next to the basement door or if it was moved there when mom got a dining room set.
I fight the urge to call Mom and ask her. What is the use? And who really cares?
A few steps further into the house and on the left, there were two sets of stairs going up to the other half of the first floor. Just three steps. Maybe four. But I’m pretty sure just three. The first set goes into the foyer and the second goes into the kitchen.
And in the kitchen, on a wall near the kitchen table, Mom hung a needle point piece. It was a woman rocking a baby and the words stitched carefully next to the image read, “Cleaning and scrubbing can wait ’til tomorrow for babies grow up, we’ve learned to our sorrow. So quiet down cobwebs, dust go to sleep, I’m rocking my baby and babies don’t keep.” We memorized the words one day while eating lunch. I think it was just my sister Cait and I. And we sat there an practiced the words until they were burned into my memory. I don’t even know the color of the wall that the piece was hung on, but the words will always be there.
Isn’t it interesting what you remember from your childhood? And it was funny to see that same exact piece hanging on the wall in my husband’s parents’ home.
The Wonder Years was a family favorite show when I was growing up. We would all gather around and watch the show together. Mom would ask one of us to get her a really big glass of water, and we would hurry up the three stairs to the kitchen and fill up a big blue cup with water for her. And Dad would have a banana and a glass of orange juice, and we would all sit around and watch Kevin Arnold grow up. We would listen to his older, wiser self narrate his life and I would wonder about the person that I would become.
The finale of The Wonder Years was bittersweet and perfect. The last narrative from older Kevin reveals that life did not go as anyone had planned and as he finishes, he says,
“Growing up happens in a heartbeat. One day you’re in diapers, the next day you’re gone. But the memories of childhood stay with you for the long haul. I remember a place, a town, a house, like a lot of houses. A yard like a lot of other yards. On a street like a lot of other streets. And the thing is, after all these years, I still look back…with wonder.”
I’d long considered the Good Bar the “filler” candy in the mixed bags of miniature candies (you know, the assortment with milk chocolate, dark chocolate, krackle and Good Bar).
It’s the Good Bar. It’s not my personal favorite (miniature Reeses Peanut Butter Cups all the way!), but I had a miniature Good Bar today.
Think about it: the peanut is America’s nut. If you don’t like the peanut, you are probably allergic to it. Peanuts are the perfect snack because just a small amount goes a long way!
They have protein. Who doesn’t need more protein??
Take the peanut and coat it with the perfect proportion of smooth milk chocolate and it IS the Good Bar. MMM!
If only it came in dark chocolate – then I think it could give the miniature Reeses Peanut Butter Cup a run for its money.
And that is my third grade narrative on the Good Bar. Thank you.
Sally is our new snow blower.
After a somewhat rocky start (how do I put this thing together? where is the gas? what is a choke? how much oil goes in there?? wait, where is the oil thingie??) and a 30 minute break to let the engine dry out (woops), Sally and I conquered the driveway.
What a thrill!
After just 30 minutes (several minutes were spent banging snow off of our pine tree so that the branches weren’t hanging too low and hitting me in the face) I was back in side, in my comfies and watching TV.
But I didn’t come in until I wiped down the snowblower and made sure she was safe in the garage. I thought about bringing her into the house for the night, but I thought it might be too much.
Ah, sweet Sally. Welcome to the K Fam.
And lots of thanks to Frank for getting her!
I believe, as a Christian, that God is everywhere. That God is in everything that is true and good.
And I also believe that something doesn’t have to be labeled “Christian” to be true or good. If there is something true and/or good, then I believe that it is from God. And not all things labeled “Christian” are guaranteed to be true or good.
So about five years ago I started reading this book called Fabric of the Cosmos – and I’m still reading this darned book! It’s basically quantum physics/mechanics explained. The author does a wonderful job explaining why time moves in the direction it does and sparks great curiosity in me to understand why the world works the way it does.
I loved reading this book because in the plainest possible English (which is still quite difficult to understand), this author explains (to the best of the scientific community’s knowledge) how the intricate fabric of our universe works, including space and time, and it left me in awe of the Lord who created everything.
One of the things the author talks about is possibility and probability, specifically when he was talking about why time moves in one direction only. As a girl raised on science fiction novels about time travel (the first novel I read with my dad was The Time Machine by HG Wells), I was disappointed that the author of Fabric of the Cosmos hadn’t cracked the code for time travel – but I digress.
In Emily-speak, basically the author describes an egg falling off a counter and breaking when it hits the floor. There is before, and there is after. There is dispersion. Now, according to quantum (as best as I understand it) physics, it is entirely possible that the egg will fall off the counter, hit the floor and NOT break. There is a possibility that it will maintain its shape and continue on without a problem.
It’s just that the probability of that happening is so slim, I don’t have enough time or energy to calculate that out.
Same thing when you open a can of soda. The “Woosh” sound (mmm, I love that sound) is the sound of gas escaping from the can and dispersing into the air around the can. There is a possibility that this gas could disperse into the exact shape of a can of soda. Again, the probability of that happening is a small number.
All things are possible, but when you graph it on a probability curve, certain things are more probable than others.
That is a beautiful thing to me.
Why?
If all things are possible, although statistically some things are less probable, then nothing is impossible.
It’s like God saying, through science, anything can happen.
We’ve been riding this fertility roller coaster for almost a year now. The odds of pregnancy are getting slimmer and slimmer. If this IUI cycle doesn’t work, my current fertility doc is referring us to a whole different clinic because in her experience, the odds are better over there. But really, anything is possible. I’ve had friends who were told that the PROBABILITY of pregnancy was slim to none – and they have healthy children. I know a woman with 1/8th of ONE ovary and she has 5 kids.
I know our probabilities are shrinking, but I also know that with God, anything is possible.
The other thing that I believe is that sometimes the thing we think we need is not the thing we actually need.
Take Jesus for example: the Jews thought they needed a political savior. They believed Jesus was going to rescue them from their political oppressors. Jesus, ever the big thinker, was actually meant to reconcile the world to God – to bring the world back into harmony with its creator.
I take comfort in that because it encourages me to think big.
Anything is possible.
Think big.
Got it.