Embroidered Stockings

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My Mom really liked to fill stocking for our kids. She bought these and used them at her house for several years. She didn’t really have a way to remember from year to year which was for whom. Hence the red and green marker mob sticky label. Liv and Wes’ stickers have disappeared and well, they always deserved to have an embroidered monogram. I finally got around to doing it this year. I started with Wes’…

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It took me a couple of hours, but looked great! I couldn’t wait to pull off my stretcher and see the glory of my labor!

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“Ooooof” (Taylor’s catch phrase of 2020)

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Rip out and repeat!

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Much better!!!

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A few hours of work, a little frustration, overall happiness. I think my mom would love them. I regret not having done it years ago…

Vaccination

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I did a thing today!

I never imagined myself being excited to get a shot on Christmas Day, but it is 2020. A year like none other. My number was picked as I was able to step off the unit and receive the Pfizer vaccine.

More than once in the last week I have shed tears over this moment. The weight of this time, the pandemic, the death-suffering-loneliness, all of it has started feel pretty hefty. In my few moments of quiet, sometimes it just overtakes me.
I mourn many things… the loss of everyday life, my kids graduations from middle and elementary school, vacations, visits from family and friends, a feeling of safety and security, feeling valued in my work, connecting with my patients in the moments when it really matters in the close human way that my work requires at times, dining out, the quiet of my house when the kids are at school and Jon is on a run, the tidiness my house once had when it sat at 1/3 capacity 2/3rds of the day, the laughter of my kids on the playground or socializing with friends, meandering in a store just to linger a little longer, the joy on Wes’ face when we went to a mall with an escalator or rode the Max… so many things.

This little thing I did today (which is making me tired, sore, and a bit woozy) is the beginning. It is a gift of science and exhaustive hours of hard work. I want to take a moment to let sink in the full meaning of this moment.

I know that there is a lot of hard work still to do. Tomorrow I will see more COVID positive moms and try to help them give some immunity to their babies, but I get to do it knowing that my body is hard at work trying to build some protection for me too.

Best Christmas miracle ever!


Merry Christmas 🎄!!

Holiday Flicks

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Since there is little else to do, we have been streaming all kinds of holiday flicks. Some I have seen every year for forever, like a Charlie Brown Christmas. Some I have never seen, and most, I haven’t seen in a long time, such as Miracle on 34th Street. I turned it on (the version with the cute little girl that played Matilda) and watched intermittently with Liv who was drawing on their IPad. Hopefully this isn’t a spoiler for you, but somewhat near the end, the guy asks her mother to marry him with a very sparkly diamond ring. This is the moment that Wes tuned in. A minute or so later he ran screaming from the living room - Wes is fervently against the concept of marriage- I think it is PTSD from a moment on third grade when he “married” his classmate Phoebe on the playground at recess and got a detention, it took us two years to understand that when Wes says “married” he means “kiss”. Anyway, if we want to make Wes get all out of sorts, we pretend to make obnoxious kissy noises. Once in a while we forget he is in the room and he catches is actually kissing. It used to be kind of funny the way he would run to avert his virgin eyes, but now it can lead to a full melt down. Anyway, I took the photo above the second time he popped up during this movie… yup, right at the end, when they kiss inside their new home!

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We took these while working on our Home Alone Keven faces.

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It was hard to hold still enough for my camera to process in the dark!

Holiday routine

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Wes thrives on routine. Holidays disrupt every notion of routine. It’s a recipe for stress and frustration that we deal with every single holiday. What do I mean?

Well, first of all, today is a Monday when Wes would normally have school, but there is no school until January 5th… “winter break”. It’s enough time for Wes to forget his “routine” and make back to school the first week just as miserable as life right now. Then there is holiday hype. Wes really gets excited about holidays. It doesn’t really matter which holiday, he likes, no loves, them all. In his mind, we should celebrate them all with the same fanfare.

It looks like really big highs-excitement and happiness- and then really big lows-fits of tantrums, screaming, crying, and misery. It feels like the highs are fewer between and the lows are louder and longer. All of these ups and downs wear on all of the rest of us. We get shorter and less patient.

It all makes holidays really tough here, not just the holiday, but many days to the lead up to them and many days after.

Right now, for example, I’m in my room listening to Wes’ 4th or 5th tantrum in the last 2 hours. And just like that, the screaming stopped and he is laughing hysterically.

Spreading some cheer

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One of my besties and her family delivered some holiday treats to our home this morning. We made some holiday bread for them. We wrapped it up and set the package in the porch for their arrival. It isn’t the sort of visit we would prefer, but it was really lovely to see one and other and exchange a brief conversation. It is the small gestures (although it’s hard to call this a small gesture as it was raining hard all day and all the treats were homemade with love) that really count!

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Thank you Stevens’ for spreading some joy today! I love my Ezra art too!!!! I can’t believe how grown up the kids are (why do I keep forgetting that they do that?)

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Tree

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When we moved to Oregon three years ago, we decided that it was time to invest in our local industry. We have cut down a fresh tree from a local tree farm on Mt Hood ever since! We go all out crazy hand saw style too. Usually that means Jon and one of the kids crawls under the tree while I pull from above. The other kids cheer from the sideline and worry about how it will fall.

We have a beautiful space where our stairs gently curve down right in the middle of our house. It begs for a huge gorgeous tree. Especially as it opens from the second story down.

This year, we went on the hunt with the idea in mind that we would look for a little bit smaller tree than we have chosen in the years past. I’m not sure that we really succeeded in ‘smaller’, but we think it is a really beautiful tree. It has a little bit of a Charlie Brownie top that is more apparent from certain angles!

Its so hard to visualize when you are on the farm!

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Getting a nice picture is also a challenge! We just have so many goofy angles in our hime… I think this is the least Charlie Browniest looking angle. This is facing from the front door at the base of the steps.

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It felt like most of the trees this year were either really big, like 2-3 times as tall as us, or really small, like a foot shorter than us. This one definitely seems a bit thinner than last year and the year before.

We also cut the bottom inch off this year when we got home. Consequently, the tree drank up water really well for the first week to week and a half. We noticed that there were few needles falling off too.

One of the troubles we ran into previously, was the width of our tree stand. I don’t remember which one, but the tree we brought home just barely fit! So we have learned a lot in three years!

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This year we have had some trouble keeping some ornaments on the tree. They were slipping off so much, that one of my special candle bulbs fell and broke. I had been picking them up and trying to put them back on the tree, but a few days ago I decided to give up. Now I’m collecting fallen ornaments in a box every day.

I hope you enjoy our tree -virtually-!

Baking Merry

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The last month FLEW by! I have wrapped up my first term of my graduate program! It feels really good to be able to say that and still feel firmly on my feet! It was a lot of work, and I neglected several preferred things, but its in the bag! Now as we turn our sights towards the holidays, making merry and bright, and saying goodbye to the year… I’m finding myself with a wee bit of time again.

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While I was working after Thanksgiving, Jon and the kids kicked off our holiday season by putting away fall and brining out our holiday favorites. Interestingly there where a lot of things that didn’t make their way out of boxes. It felt like the spirit of 2020 had seeped in and dampened everyone’s hustle and bustle.

So slowly I have been ordering, receiving, and wrapping holiday (and birthday - at the Stanis house) gifts. I’m pretty proud to say that I have everything wrapped that is here, though I am still waiting on a few stragglers to come in.

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Jon baked bread to share with our neighbors, a holiday tradition from his childhood. It somehow seems like the right time to bring those traditions back in a year when so much feels wrong.

Yesterday I whipped up some sugar cookie dough, and the kids helped roll it, cut it, and bake it! They did it with pretty much only verbal cues. Which was great. I always remember feeling so physically tired after making cookies in the past! Tonight we will apply icing and sprinkles to bring them full circle. Should be equally messy, right!?!

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For me, it doesn’t really feel real that it is Christmas time. My body is still quite full of anxiety over the state of our government, the state of public health, my children’s mental and social health, the questions that remain unanswered about the near and distant future. I feel fortunate to have built in avenues of reliable and supported information, the ability to have stable housing and income, a spouse who always works from home, and lots of technology and knowledge to help my kids through distance learning; just to name of few things I am thankful for. I still live with an endemic level of anxiety and concern for our world.

The weight of this year has been hitting me a little harder in the last few weeks, probably as things have slowed down a bit for me.

My experience on the front line:

I set out two biohazard bags and two clean gloves. Then I tied on a scrub cap. Next I removed a clean disposable gown which I placed over my head, threaded my thumbs through and tied around my waist. Then a pair of clean gloves that slip over the gown at my wrists. I removed my regular surgical mask that I wear all day, and placed my plastic disposable container, with my N95 mask suspended in it, over my mouth and nose. I pull the lower strap up over the container and then my head down to my neck, then the second strap. I cover the container and set it aside. I pinch the metal strap over my nose and breath in and out deeply and slowly, testing the seal. I place my goggles that I wear in every room on next. I test the seal again. I adjust the metal strip when my goggles fog a little. Test a few more times until I am satisfied that the fit is right and the seal is solid. Finally I place the strap of my plastic face shield over my head.

This process has already taken me nearly ten minutes. I’m thinking through every step carefully. I don’t want to screw this up. One error at this moment brings this thing home. It puts my family at risk. I’m not thinking about myself in this moment, I am totally thinking about my kids.

I am hot as I walk into the room. The family on the other side of the door is pleasant. They look tired, like all the moms and dads I see. She has a mask sitting just below her nose covering her mouth and chin. Her baby is swaddled and laying on her lap in the bed. His mask covers most of his face. A bushy beard breaks around the edges on the sides and bottom.

I wonder what they think of me as I introduce myself and explain my business in their room. What would I think if someone walked into my room looking as I do now? They are happy to have me there, they have a lot of questions. The baby is completely asleep. I’m relieved in one sense, I will not have to spend a prolonged period of time within six inches of this mother’s face, but I might have to don everything again and come back. My mind sighs. I start describing the expected feeding behaviors of their baby, and the mom interrupts me to share that her baby is special and already exceeding all of these expectations. Of course she is. I spend about 45 minutes talking and answering questions. My face is sweaty. The shield, or maybe the goggles, or both, are starting to fog up.. my mind focuses on that for a second and I think it’s time for me to get out.

As I finally exit the room, I can’t seem to pull hard enough to break the tie of the gown. I curse in my head as I struggle to pull in the right place. I take a breath and slow down, careful to wrap the gown into itself so as not to shake around any droplets. I get one hand out, then with some effort, the other. I mindfully place the ball gently in the waste bin at the door. As I exit, I hit the sanitizer bottle squirting a huge glop into my hands. It takes a bit for the sanitizer to dry enough that I can put on the clean gloves I had laid out before I went in. As it dried, I thought about the order of doffing what was left. Once my gloves were on, I grabbed a new cavie wipe from the bottle and carefully remove the face shield so as not to touch the mask or my cap. I clean the shield and place it in my paper bag. Next I do the same with my goggles. Then I uncover my plastic Glad-wear. I place it over my face. I reach back for the lower strap and bring it up over my head and around the entire container. Then I repeat with the second strap. I place the cover on and press it tightly to seal. Months ago I drilled three holes into the container for ventilation to allow anything in it to dry. I’m grateful today that I prepared this so long ago. Finally I remove my cap with one hand, while holding the bio bag in the other. I am careful to try not to touch the sides or the edges. I compress the bag a little to let out some air and seal it as well as I can with one hand. I take off the gloves, sanitize and put on clean gloves again. This time I open the second bio bag and invert it, pulling it right side out with the other bag cleverly contained with in. I seal it, doff gloves, and sanitize again.

Its been about 90 minutes since I started, but I think I did a good job. I grab a new surgical mask that I will wear the rest of the day. I store my PPE and place the bio hazard bags in my bag to take home to wash. Disposable hats (bouffon caps) are on low supply so the hospital doesn’t recommend using them for routine care of COVID positive patient.

I sent Jon a text to have my house robe waiting for me when I get home. Its our code for “I’m somehow interacting with someone who is or is suspected of being COVID positive”. He places my house robe in the laundry room that connects our garage to the house. When I pull in the garage, he opens the door. I step in and use the heal of my shoe to close the door. He opens the washer. I give him my phone, lunch box, drinking cup which he will wash right away. I strip down and everything goes in the washer, including the scrub cap that I remove carefully from the bags, avoiding touching the contaminated insides. I put on the robe and make my way to the shower. I scrub and douse in soap and water. My robe and towels go into the washer next, and everything is washed immediately on sanitize. I leave my shoes there for several days when possible.

I don’t get to know if these measures are enough to keep us safe, but the routine is the best chance we have to keep COVID at work. I want so desperately to protect my family, that I take the time to think through it, to plan my moves with intention. This patient experienced only mild symptoms, but many on our unit have been quite ill. A few are lucky to have made it. COVID is devastating to pregnant women. Most of them who have been so ill, also delivered prematurely. This has turned out to be somewhat protective for me as a lactation consultant. When they deliver prematurely, I don’t end up needing to spend time at their bedside, I can provide education on the phone and through bedside staff. Still, it’s heartbreaking to watch this play out on the sidelines. I am grateful for the vaccine that is now being administered to the most at risk of our ranks. I don’t know when my number will come up, nor when my family will be able to receive it. I don’t love that it had to be rushed, nor that long term effects can’t be studied. I don’t love having to be one of the first to get it, but I will get it, and I will take these unknowns. Because the alternative is to let this virus continue to ravage the world. When healthy people get vaccinated, it protects the most vulnerable among us.

May 2021 bring us all peace and humility once again.

Jack-o-lanterns

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We carved and painted pumpkins over the weekend.

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This was the first year that any of our kids carved a pumpkin al by herself. My kids aren’t often independent, so I still marvel when they are.

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Tay and Liv opted for some very simple painted designs. It was fun and not nearly as messy as it used to be!

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And I just realized that I never took a photo of the finished products.

You didn’t tell me you were going to kill it!

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Every year we watch this Halloween classic! I wish sometimes that I could be as wise as Linus! “Never talk about politics, religion, or the Great Pumpkin!

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Wes recited, annoyingly, nearly every line, including Snoopy’s! He was at least really happy, which doesn’t happen for very long periods of time these days.

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We won’t be trick or treating this year, but we will be having a some good family fun Halloween style!