Looking for Christmas

2013-12-04 08.31.05The view from my office is cold and snowy this fourth of December in the hardest year of my life so far. It wasn’t a particularly fun (or horrible) drive to work and I’d much rather be skiing than marketing today.  Despite those feelings, I’m glad to see the white stuff again simply because it’s putting me a wee bit in the Christmas spirit.

Since I moved back home with Matt in tow almost 10 years ago, we’ve spent almost every Christmas morning at my parents’ house. We even slept over on Christmas Eve most of the time simply because we could. Christmas is big, important and fun and filled with traditions. And a helluva lot of that centered around my mom and the tremendous effort she put into making Christmas nice for everyone.

I think we’ve all been feeling that if left to our own devices, Christmas 2013 might just not happen – or we might just all jet off to Tahiti. We’re not really feeling in the holiday spirit this year. But of course there are two little people who are counting on their big day being just as big and fun as it always has been. And while I don’t think it will be exactly the same, I am determined to do it up right for them.

So a different plan has been hatched this year. It will be light on the presents but hopefully approaching the normal level of joy. Instead of being at Mom and Dad’s we’ll assemble at our house. I feel like this will be a nice send-off for the little house we’ve called home for the past 9 years. Christmas brunch won’t be at my grandma’s – she moved to assisted living earlier this year – we’ll do it smaller at our house. Christmas dinner will be bigger and my dad will host … with us to help.

I’m sure I’ll cry. Maybe a lot. But hopefully we can bask in the real meaning of the season – a pause to appreciate all we have and celebrate with those we love.

Thanksgiving Weekend

cookingThe 4 days off went by in a blink. We kicked off the season by cooking Wednesday evening. We were responsible for Cranberry Cornbread Dressing and Sweet Potato Spoon Bread. We made a huge mess of the kitchen and then cleaned it up like good elves.

We had high hopes of turkey trotting like we have for the past several years on Thanksgiving morning, but the kids were nursing colds and we reluctantly begged off at the last minute. Instead we took a walk and drove around the new hood a bit. Then we went up to my uncle’s for thanksgiving. It was a very enjoyable afternoon and evening of family time … right up until I saw the corner of Ben’s eyes filled with what looked like boogers. Ick. Pink eye. We left immediately and I called the docs to get a prescription called in.

demoing

Friday was an odd sort of lost day. Matt and the kids demo’d the carpet in our master bath (ick). I took Ben to the doctor’s when his ears started bugging him (ear infection, antibiotic #2).

planningWe planned and cut the hardee board for laydown in the bathroom.

drinkingIn the evening we went out for a cousins night – where we actually had ALL EIGHT cousins from my mom’s side of the family. We had a nice dinner at Ace and then …

bowlingWent bowling! It was great fun – something I haven’t done in ages.

trainspottingSaturday we devoted the vast majority of the day to helping my sister move. The kids were supposed to have karate, but they were still under the weather and a bit mopey, so we put them up on their own in a corner of her apartment with some coloring books and an ipad and they did their thing while we carried boxes and furniture.

We came home pretty “early” and let the kids play while Matt and I rested up from our crazy day. Then we put the kids to bed and laid down the hardee board. I laid down the thinset – this is my specialty as it is a good deal like frosting a cake – and then Matt came behind me and screwed the board down. This week sometime we  need to seal up the joints and actually lay down and grout the tile … but for now we’re showering in the basement (boo).

bustingSunday I was determined to get the kids out of the house for some fun – they’d been real troopers, amusing themselves while we moved my sister and other boring stuff. So we took them to see the Mythbusters exhibit at our local museum. It was a pretty fun exhibit with lots of hands on stuff.

buildingLike building houses out of brick or wood or straw ala the three little pigs and then testing them in a wind tunnel. You could make an airplane take off on a conveyer belt, time yourself hanging from a cliff, drive “blind” with someone giving you instructions and some other things.

grinningWe followed it up with tours around the dinosaur and Egyptian galleries (Ben’s single odd desire).

2013-12-01 13.07.13We spent the next few hours at Ikea. We had lunch and went around looking for things for the new house and picked up a few things for the current house – namely light kits to replace our the fan and special light fixtures in the kids rooms that we will be taking with us.

We finished out the day with grocery shopping, house cleaning, laundry-doing and Sunday dinner … of course followed by Grammy stories.

I was supposed to take Monday off, but instead had a very busy, harassed day. Ugh. So so so looking forward to my week off in January.

The Struggle

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I’ll confess. I’m struggling a bit.

It’s not dire. I’m not in the depths of despair. I doubt anyone who meets me on a daily basis would even know that I’m different from “normal.”

But I am. I’m more “tired.” I don’t feel like running, even though I enjoy it when I go.

Work is OK, but best when things are really busy. When it isn’t really busy, I stare off into space for longer than I mean to.

Our manic schedule is both a help and a hindrance. I go so so much and then when I stop, I really stop.

I think what I’m truly suffering from is inertia. Or lack there of, really. Once I get going, I go, almost manically. But when I stop, it’s really hard to get me going again.

Last weekend we cleaned out Mom’s closet. The closet she shares with Dad to be exact. I won’t pretend I enjoyed it, but there were funny silly moments here and there. Like when we found an entire gallon-sized ziploc bag of freebie toothbrushes from the dentist. Mom had a sonic toothbrush and never would have used these, but there they were in her bathroom (we cleaned that too). Of course we cried off and on.

I cried when I pulled out the dress she wore to the last company Christmas party. I have awesome photos of her dancing in it with our coworkers, the ones she loved so much. We cried when we saw the last few clothes she bought, never knowing she wouldn’t even get to take the tags off some of them.

I inherited some kickass red platform peep-toe suede pumps. I love and hate wearing them all at the same time.

We didn’t even touch her jewelry or bags or scarves. I look forward to going through those even less. They’re so essentially Mom.

 

I’m trying not to struggle. Trying to beat this funk I’m in. Some days I do better than others.

Halloween

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Halloween was fun. I got up in the weeee smalls and went into work early (partially because I couldn’t sleep and partially because I had a ton to do). The beginning of the week was manic, but it ended well because I took off by 11:30 on Thursday and took ALL OF FRIDAY off. YAY. My first stop was Tabby’s school to be room mommy. We spent some time decorating and then I got to do T’s makeup, which was fun. I improved my game from the first go-around and added blue eyeshadow which was a fun touch.

I’m room mom along with Tabby’s best friend’s mom. I didn’t really know her (new best friend) until we started all of this and it’s been fun. Neither of us are over the top and we’re pretty much on the same chill wavelength. We just did a few games … math, madlibs and mummy and a bookmark craft. Food was decidedly. I made rice krispie treat pumpkins with tootsie roll stems. I initially balked at the idea of sculpting the rice krispie treat and was just going to cut it out with a cookie cutter, but I really hate smashing the krispies into the pan and I think in the end this was easier. There were NONE left, so I guess the kids liked them OK. Other parents brought fruit and veggies and crackers and cheese and juiceboxes and water. Tabby’s teacher was very appreciative of our work. He’s made it into a very nice class and we had fun.

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After the school party, we picked up Ben and got to work carving pumpkins (totally procrastinated on that!) and prepping for having people over. We were set for a group of 24 (!!) and we had to haul to get it all done. Matt had his robots in full force. They now number three: silly-string-shooting spider, eerie floating ghost and swooping bat. The bat was this year’s project and unfortunately still needs a little work. It was fun though.

The kids were a quivering ball of over-sugared craziness by the time guests started arriving. Our friend who was bringing toppings for the carnitas I’d made was late and we had to start eating without her … or the toppings. But it was really no big deal because another friend had brought seven layer dip and we just used that as toppings. It was surprisingly good. The last family showed up shortly after dinner and then my dad and sister after that. They stayed to eat and hand out candy in peace while the rest of us braved the ‘hood.

The kids were crazy, running all over the place and having too much fun and sugar. Matt bought LED gloves for us on Amazon and they were a big hit and it also made it easy for the kids to find us. We only did two blocks since it was windy and cold, but the kids filled their buckets. Back at Casa de Nichols, the kids sorted and ate their candy and the adults had another adult beverage. A short while later, we bid our friends adieu.

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My kids got their jimjams on and brushed their teeth extra carefully and closed out the evening with Grammy Stories … read by Papa.

October So Far

2So now that October’s almost over, I’ll catch you all up on what’s been going on. Our school carnival was originally scheduled for D (diagnosis)-day. It was cancelled due to the flooding and various road closures in our area and obviously, as everything unfolded, we wouldn’t have gone anyhow. So it was rescheduled about a month later and we met up with our friends to have some carnival fun. It was a bit bittersweet to go … Mom had hoped to go with us and she would have loved it.

3They did something new this year. Last year the food was pizza in the cafeteria, but this year they invited a few food trucks onto the blacktop and we could buy dinner from them … and the PTA got 15%. It was great fun.

4Nothing active about this – I just enjoyed the colorful kids shoes laying on the lawn (while they went through the obstacle course).

I left a little while in to go check out a townhouse with my sister and missed about 45 min of the carnival and since the sun went down, many good photo-taking opportunities. The kids had a great time and played almost all of the games.

Saturday, we went out to Anderson Farms. We were invited by one of Ben’s classmates and as much as I hated to give up (another) big chunk of my weekend, most of our friends have kids Tabby’s age, not Ben’s and it was important for him.

6The kids were thrilled to get out to “the farm.” It’s much more of an enterprise, of course. They had concessions, games, food, etc. Our friends had gotten a “private” campsite and we got to cook dinner around the fire and migrate back to it whenever we got cold throughout the evening.

7They had some really cool pedal cars that the kids got into. I was amazed how well they were both able to keep up with kids twice their size/age. And Matt and I got to take a turn on the adult-sized version.

The people who invited us were as nice as could be and we really clicked with them and thoroughly enjoyed the evening. Ben and his little buddy especially enjoyed the DJ they had later on for the teen crowd that came out for the haunted corn maze. They danced their little 4-year old butts off. It was hilarious and adorable.

Poor Tabby coming off a long day  including 1.5 hours of karate, was tired early and wanted to just cuddle by the fire. Eventually we had to head out and both kids were asleep before we turned onto the main highway.

8Sunday we had another jam-packed day. We spent the morning around the house, working on re-oganizing Tabby’s room. Then we headed off to run a couple of errands and went home to put on costumes and head out to a party. On the way, we stopped by to visit my grandma. We wanted to see her and have the kids show off their costumes. Unfortunately, we were running late so it had to be a quick visit.

9Some of our camping buddies had a great Halloween party. They had great food and planned tons of fun activities for the kids – apple bobbing, donut (on a string) eating, candy-corn relays, etc. They have an awesome backyard and the weather was amazing. It was a very good way to spend the afternoon and early evening.

Grammy Stories

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My mom was the queen of reading – but not in the sense where she’d read every “classic” book or constantly had her nose in a book. No, Mom’s reading always centered around interacting with kids. From the time we were small, straight up until we were either too cool or too busy (probably the later), Mom would read aloud to us every night. Dad did sometimes too, but mostly, it was Mom’s thing, particularly as we got older and we could listen to “chapter books.” Mom read us loads of series: Anne of Green Gables, Little House on the Prairie, All of a Kind Family, Indian in the Cupboard. She would read a few chapters and then we’d beg her for more and usually she’d let us have at least one more. She loved it as much as we did.

So when the kids were born, we started reading outloud to them every night before bed. And my mom did too. And where we, the busy parents frequently only had time for a story or two, at Grammy’s house, bedtime stories were practically unlimited. Mom would go to the library nearly every week and load up her Jefferson County Public Library tote with as many books as it could hold. She found books that we had loved when we were little and completely new authors that we’d never heard of. And when the kids latched on to a particular favorite, chances were good a copy would show up on their birthday or under the Christmas tree, signed “Love, Grammy.”

After Mom died, I worried that since the kids are so young, particularly Ben, they might not remember her in the vivid, technicolor way that I remember her. That thought terrified me. She was an amazing, wonderful, never-to-be-duplicated grandma and I want them to remember her. I wanted something routine to keep her memory going. I wanted something that was essentially Grammy to keep them connected to her. And then I had an idea.

To preserve and honor Mom’s memory, we made a small adjustment to bedtime stories. They are now known in our house as “Grammy stories” and they are read every night that we can possibly manage. The kids have embraced this idea and demand their Grammy Stories nightly. They love to pick out the books that she gave them, remembering, “Grammy gave this to me for my birthday” or “Grammy got this book from the library.”

As I sit with the kids, cuddled up on either side of me, so engaged with the story, I feel closer to Mom than I do at any other time of the day.

Getting Through It

Do you know the bear hunt song? I’m guessing if you currently have or have ever had little kids, or just a decent memory, it’s somewhere in your brain. It’s a fun little sort of game/song where you pretend to go on a “bear hunt” and you encounter all sorts of obstacles. For each one, you say “Can’t go over it. Can’t go around it. Can’t go under it. Better go (or swim or whatever you need to do to surmount it) through it.”

That’s where I’m at with Mom’s death. I can’t do anything but go through it. There’s no shortcut on this one. And in the last two weeks I’ve learned more about sadness and grief than I ever wanted to. The initial parts were so shock filled and all-consuming. Later, I was better able to keep it together, but I’d crack when I could … like at night in bed or in the shower. Now I’m more even keeled except when “things” come up – Mom’s last paycheck, a pair of sandals that she gave me that are almost worn out, or choosing a different emergency contact for Tabby’s Spanish class – that make me tear up. I’m guessing it will be like this for a long time and I’m guessing I’ll have some even bigger ups and downs.

The thing that’s helping me the most right now is routine, or as much of it as I can handle. I’ve been at work all week, successfully even, and doing stuff with the kids. They have lots of lessons and activities that keep us busy. TV doesn’t hold much interest for me, but housework is an OK distraction. I haven’t been to the gym or gone running in a while, mostly, I think, because being somewhat depressed is making me tired. I want to get back to it soon, but I don’t know when it will feel right. Being around people is nice and I enjoy seeing our friends and family. We’re going camping this weekend.

I don’t want to think about holidays or big “life events.” It’s too painful right now. I feel very lucky that I spent so much time with Mom and that she knew how much we all loved her, and I’m trying not to let regrets or whatifs cloud her nice memory, but they keep trying to crop up and that’s hard. My mom’s oldest sister bugged us about not being with her at the hospital the last night. It seems unlikely that would have changed anything and based on the information at hand it seemed totally unnecessary, but it does feel like something of a failing. I also hate that we’d been more busy this summer with work and camping. We’d still seen my mom and everyone a lot, but maybe not quite as much as “normal.” And then I kick myself about not recognizing signs that seems somewhat more clear in hind sight, but of course that’s hind sight.

I know that all I can do is go forward in the best way I know how, in a way that honors and preserves her memory. It’s easier some days than others though.

Mom

DSC_5483_editIt’s been a hellish couple of weeks. About a week ago, we lost my mom very suddenly to leukemia. I am – we are – still a good measure in shock and grieving very much.

Less than two weeks ago, it was a pretty normal Tuesday. Matt left on a business trip. I dropped the kids off at school and headed to work. Mom had gone to the doctor’s office the day before – she’d been more tired than normal (just how much more, I really didn’t know). My day progressed pretty normally until around 3p when my dad called. He let me know that her doctor had gotten her blood test results back and didn’t like what she saw. Mom was being admitted to the hospital for a bone marrow biopsy.

I talked to Mom, but nothing seemed too urgent just yet. At this point I was still thinking things like “anemia” not “cancer” yet I felt panic. I told my uncle (we work together) and called my best friend. Convinced there wasn’t a ton I could do, I went on with my evening, taking the kids to karate and our “normal” evening.

I visited Mom in the hospital the next morning on my way to work. She was in the cancer ward and her oncologist was there when I arrived – unsettling. Mom was scheduled for her bone marrow biopsy later that morning, but her oncologist and the pathologist who had viewed her samples were pretty convinced that they knew what was going on: CML or chronic myelogenous leukemia. This condition, while very serious, is also generally treatable with daily drug therapy. Patients can live fairly normally indefinitely. It seemed like we had an answer and a pretty good one, though nothing was certain until we had the biopsy.

So life progressed for a couple more days. I kept things together at home and at work more or less. I went to see Mom before and after work. Meanwhile around us, the state was under water and everything was going crazy. Just driving around town was suddenly a huge challenge. Somehow this resulted in the biopsy results getting back to us more slowly than they might otherwise have. We thought we’d hear on Thursday and then it ended up being Friday.

I’d gone into work for just a few hours and came to the hospital to get the official word from the oncologist around 10a. The diagnosis was not, unfortunately, what we were hoping for. What mom had was acute myeloid leukemia. The scary kind. The chemo kind. We were all freaked, obviously, tears were shed, but our path was clear. Mom signed her chemo waiver without hesitation. “I have too much to live for,” she said.

The plan was to do chemo for 7 days and then let it take effect for 7 days. At the end of the 14 days, Mom would have another bone marrow biopsy and have a 50/50 chance to be cancer free. If not, we’d repeat with about a 20% chance after that. But it didn’t matter. We adopted “14 and done” as our motto.

We notified family and had lots of visitors. And with our plan in place, my dad and I left to get stuff settled in preparation for spending a couple of weeks in the hospital with Mom. Dad went to work to get things arranged and I went to Mom’s house to pick up some comfort items. I was shaken and cried through the entire time I was at her house.

I went to visit my grandma and give her comfort. After sending mom’s stuff with her sister, I went home to give Matt and the kids some love. My sister had gone by the hospital on her way home from work and came by my house after that. We hugged and talked some more about the plan.

The sleep that night was fuzzy and bad. I awoke for good around 7 and had just pulled myself out of bed around 8 when my dad called. Mom was in the ICU and we needed to come. “Quickly” was never said, but it was felt. We rushed to the hospital, picking my sister up on the way. Matt and the kids dropped us off where we raced to see Mom. Instantly, we knew things were bad. Mom had gotten up sometime in the middle of the night and arrested. I called Matt back and he dropped the kids off with our neighbors and came.

Over the next few hours, we assembled pretty much the whole family. Experts came and went and we learned the worst. Mom had been out for a while before she was found and she was brain dead. We sobbed in cycles. I held mom’s hand, touched her hair and talked to her. I tried to memorize the feel of her soft skin and the color of her beautiful hair. I wanted something to hold on to. I wasn’t alone and there was some comfort to that, but not much. Before we could even withdraw care, she passed away.

Even as I write these “facts,” they don’t seem real to me. Over a week has gone by. We’ve done all the ceremonial stuff. We’ve gathered pictures, held services, eulogized, sobbed, purchased flower arrangements, written obituaries, hugged, done airport pick-ups and drop-offs and sobbed some more. But I keep expecting to see her … sometime soon. Yet I miss her.

My mom was one of my best friends. I worked with her and saw her almost every day. We spent leisure time together almost every week. We talked about everything. She was like a second mom to my kids and also the greatest grandmother possible. I’m truly grateful that we had so much time together, but I wanted … will always want … more.

Tomorrow I return to work after being gone in body for a week, but mentally for almost double that. I dread seeing her office and the portrait of her that will now hang next to my grandfather’s in the front of the office. She deserves this honor, but I so dread the reality of it. The finality of it.

There is so much more to Mom than this crappy, unsatisfying, unfair, totally abrupt ending. I will share that at a different time. For now, I will try to get back to whatever the new normal is going to be and just keep going.

FALLLL!

 hail

I think one of the best things about living in Denver is that rain always feels a little special. We just don’t get much of it. Lately it’s been 90s 90s 90s – for weeks and I know we were all sick of it. We had a little rain here and there, but it never stayed long or did much to the temps. But yesterday around 2p, a storm rolled into Denver and DUMPED. I drove home in 6″ of hail alongside the road! It wrecked havoc all over the city.

But of course by now, really even hours after, it’s melted. The rest of the evening and into this morning has been lovely and rainy with a nice chill in the air. It feels like fall! It was fortuitous that I had a great fall dinner planned for yesterday evening: chicken pot pie cupcakes. I didn’t make them as prescribed, opting to use half the biscuit dough and more vegetables – really I’m not sure we would have liked one with 2x the crust! – and they were wonderful. Thumbs up from the whole family. I will have to post soon.

Matt is out of town for a few days, so I’m on the merry-go-round. Kids start karate officially tonight. But for now, it’s quiet in my office and I have a nice cup of tea and a pumpkin apple spice muffin.

Here’s the Thing of It

benyetiHere’s the thing of it… I’m out of the HABIT of blogging. So now even when I do have a few minutes, it’s not something I automatically think to do. I need to get BACK in the habit. Just like I need to get back in the habit of running more often (BUT WHY IS IT SO HOT???) and keeping my house neat and checking stuff off my to do list. But blogging for now.

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Anyhoo, we had an awesome labor day weekend. I took Friday off (YAY!) and we went to SkiRex because Tabby needed new skis and I needed a new ski jacket. Both were purchased at great discount. Ben tried on, but did not purchase that awesome Yeti hat. More’s the pity.

benridesThat evening we got to try out Ben’s new hand-me-down bike and he CAN RIDE! He’s not super stable and he’s having trouble with pedaling, and he fell and got road rash in like 10 places, but he CAN RIDE! He’s very proud and very determined and very tough.

demobikesWe also took the opportunity to demo a couple of very nice road bikes. Crazy expensive nice road bikes. I don’t think I can justify spending that kind of cash on a bike for a while. But maybe one of their poor cousins will work out for me.

helmethairWe also rode our bikes 7.5 miles to the movie theatre with the kids in the trailer to see Planes. Movie was awesome. Trek home … NOT. That’s the uphill part and did I mention IT’S BEEN HOT?? Tabby got the greatest case of helmet hair ever. Seriously, this does not do it justice.

In other news:

  • Tabby is loving her music class and I have its over-the-top cutesy kiddy music stuck in my head on repeat 24/7 – after this kind of torture, she’d better become the next Mozart (minus the drinking and womanizing)
  • We are going camping this weekend! A big group deal. I’m not 100% keen on being away from home AGAIN, but it should be fun.
  • We signed the kids up for karate. They are Japanese for SUPER EXCITED.
  • Speaking of languages, Tabby is taking Spanish at school. This should be interesting as I took roughly 5 years of super useless German and my only Spanish comes from the (strictly unsuitable vocabulary of the) construction site and Dora the Explorer. Matt actually took Spanish but speaks less than I do (his facility is with logic not languages)
  • Both kids are having fun at school. Tabby has lots of homework and her teacher likes to send us REAMS of stuff to read. I usually skim it because I’m awesome like that.
  • I’m supposed to run a 15 K in a month. That’s gonna be interesting.