Archives for April 2011

A Glimmer of Hot Pink and Hope

She was dressed all in black, by coincidence more than intent, but it seemed to make a statement.

The black tank – the one she’d slept in – stood out against her pale shoulders. The dark-as-ink yoga pants, plucked off the drying rack, were at least clean.

A quick look in the mirror confirmed her suspicion: it was obvious she hadn’t showered, but a black ball cap quickly fixed that. Where she was going, the rest – the lack of make-up, the unruly eyebrows – didn’t matter.

As she walked, the trail was peaceful and the sunshine bright. The sun had brought her out while the head-to-toe black allowed her to feel hidden.

Her canine companion paused. Looking back over her shoulder as she waited for him to catch up, she caught a glimpse of hot pink. Just a glimmer, but it was significant. A sign that underneath the darkness there is light, and life, and colour.

 

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Notes:

  1. I’m not sure what the point of this post is, but this silly fact filtered through to my anxiety-ridden brain today. It seemed only fair to pay it proper attention by posting about it.
  2. With thanks to Jessica from It’s My Life for the “glimmer” concept. I read it in her post from Friday, Choosing Happiness, and it stuck with me.

Oops, I Did It Again

Three days ago, I realized I was about to run out of meds. This happened in May of last year and it was a very, very, very bad thing. So, shaking the bottle of pills, I counted. Enough for three days. But Connor was sick so I didn’t do anything about it.

Two days ago, I was vaguely aware that I was going to have to sort this out, but I was sick so I didn’t do anything about it.

Yesterday, I got up, finally feeling a little bit better, and called the pharmacist. They had a handy little refill-your-prescription-by-phone option, so I pressed all the right numbers, confirmed I had no refills already prescribed, and chose to have them contact my doctor for a renewal. Beep, beep, boop and back to bed.

Not 10 minutes later the phone rang.

For some reason I don’t understand – and wasn’t lucid enough to question – they have my doctor, and therefore my prescription, associated with a hospital in another city. Translation: they can’t sort out the refill, so I need to see a doctor, whether one of my own or at a clinic.

So much for the easy button.

I called my psychiatrist’s office. She’s away until next week. I called my GP’s office. They closed early and were referring people to walk-in clinics.

Hmm.

I wasn’t feeling well enough to figure out a solution so I left it until today.

First stop, the pharmacy. I explained my predicament and asked if they could give me enough to last until I see my shrink on Thursday. He seemed quite prepared to do that until he looked at my file and realized I had only been on this particular med for about a month. Which, from what I can infer, would have led to all kinds of bad pharmacist karma despite the fact that abruptly ceasing anti-depressant medication can create the previously-experienced and above-noted very, very, very bad thing.

Fine, walk-in clinic it is.

I tried four before I found one that was open at 2:00 on a Saturday. I got in quickly and explained to the quite young, very kind and not entirely unattractive doctor – who generously pretended not to notice that I hadn’t had a shower – what I was looking for. To his credit, he didn’t just write me a script – he asked some questions about what else I was on and how it was working. When I told him he got a pensive sort of look but agreed to give me enough to get me through the week and said he’d leave it up to the shrink to determine if this is the right approach. I wanted to hug him for making me feel like I’m not crazy.

So the crisis has been averted and I’ve got meds again. But I’ve really got to stop doing this.

In Sickness and In Health

Some moms who have PPD can’t bring themselves to leave the house. I went out almost every single day. I had to. I really think I’d actually have gone crazy otherwise.

There was one baby group I went to quite regularly even though it was at a slightly awkward time and it was downtown, which meant it was harder to find parking. For a PPD mom with a baby who screeched a lot, having to drive around to find a place to park and then walk a couple of blocks with an uncooperative infant was an anxiety-inducing situation I generally tried to avoid. But this one was worth it.

Every Wednesday afternoon new moms and their babies would walk through the entrance to the store and gather in the large room that was home to classes – prenatal and fitness – and what can only be described as a new moms’ support group. We’d park strollers, gather pillows and sit down. Some moms would gently set the car seat containing their sleeping baby down next to them. I stood. And bounced.

The beautiful thing about this group was there was no agenda. The owner of the store – a woman from whom wisdom and patience poured like rain on a parched desert – led the group. She went around the circle and asked a simple question: “How was your week?”

On one particular day the tone for the discussion was set early in the circle. A new mom, desperation practically dripping from her pores, complained about the lack of support from her husband. Her list of woes was long and contained many of the usual steps of the husband-and-wife dance. Help around the house. Meal prep. Errands. But what it came down to was this: she was exhausted. Her husband refused to get up in the night, even when the baby didn’t need to be nursed, and the lack of sleep was scraping the bottom of her soul.

I was on the far side of the circle that day. As we went around the room, I sat in silence at the many sympathetic exclamations of “me too” and “mine doesn’t either”. I had nothing to contribute to this conversation. Nothing but empathy. I listened to tale after tale from women going it alone at a time they most needed help – help they weren’t getting from the person who was supposed to be a partner in parenthood.

I simply couldn’t relate.

My husband is amazing. I knew this before Connor was born, but his amazingness overwhelms me now, even nearly three years later. Especially nearly three years later.

He has always been there for the hard stuff. The middle-of-the-night stuff. The stuff that would drain most new mothers and threatened to drown me.

And he is there still. I work and he does the stay-at-home-dad thing and yet, when needed, he still steps in when it’s my turn at bedtime or on weekends.

Right now I’m not working. This past week I’ve been sick, in more ways than one, and at times he has practically done it all. He gets up mornings and takes care of nights. He’s sorting out meals and walking the dog. He’s taking care of toddler duty – feeding and playing and changing and disciplining. And he’s doing all this while managing to simultaneously leave me in peace and checking to make sure I’m okay.

We didn’t actually use traditional wedding vows, but the sickness-and-health sentiment was certainly there. Not only has he not retreated from this promise, he’s taken it to a level I never could have anticipated. He is my partner – in life and in parenting and in so much more.

One of the things we did say is “I do”. And I’m so glad I did.

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Sorry, dear Fledglings. I missed this week’s edition of Fledgling Friday. I’ve been sick and, frankly, had no idea what day it was until it was too late. Please come back next week!

What Goes Around Comes Around

“Are you okay, mama?”

He knows what this is like. The flu he’s had for the last week has made its way to me.

“Do you need a bucket to barf in?”

No, I tell him. I’m okay.

“Do you need some more water?”

He’s taking inventory of all the things we’ve so recently offered him, but right now I’ve got everything I need.

I can see the concern in his small blue eyes. He still wants to help.

Quietly, gently, he lays his head on my shoulder. It’s the perfect medicine.

Waiting for the Words

People tell me I’m brave for sharing my experience.

I’m not feeling very brave this week.

People have said they’re in awe of my honesty.

Sometimes I’m scared to be honest.

My story has taken a turn and for a week now I’ve been trying to find a way to share it. This turn has two parts and both need to be told. I need to tell them. I started to write one – the really hard one – and the other came out. The first is apparently not ready. I’ve tried to coax it, to assure it the telling will be okay, but it’s not ready.

I’m not ready.

The second is now in draft – a jumble on the page. Its format doesn’t do it justice. There is weight to this decision I’ve made – both the heavy weight of admission and the powerful weight of potential.

This part of my story needn’t be poetic but I need to tell it the right way.

I’ll wait, and it will come.