Blog

  • Power Outage

    We had a storm roll through tonight, and our power has been going on and off all evening, with the majority of it off. Our nervous dog Eddie has been beside herself. This is how I spent most of my time tonight:

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    It wasn’t enough for her to be near me, she had to be ON TOP of me. The pictures, taken with my computer which was on my lap, are blurry because she was shaking.

    I think things have finally calmed down, and I’ll be back with you tomorrow with my thoughts on being a wife after seeing Julie & Julia. But right now I must get myself to sleep, since I have to work in the morning. Happy weekend to everyone else!

  • I’m Attending SchipulCon09

    My brother is a web designer and head of a creative team at a Houston web marketing/design company called Schipul. One of their clients is the Houston Zoo (check out the awesome website!), and this year Schipul is putting on a two day conference there. I follow Schipul’s updates on Twitter, so I knew this was going on but I didn’t think it applied to me.

    Then I saw my brother at church and he handed me a bunch of fliers for the conference. He said, “You should come!” I said, “But I’m not a web marketer.” He said, “It doesn’t matter, come hang out and learn about the Internet!” And after I noticed that I could actually get the two days off without taking PTO, and thinking about how I’d like to hang out with him and my good friend Margaret who also works at Schipul, and I saw the topics to be presented and that I was actually interested in some of them, I decided why not?

    So I’m going to a web marketing conference, and if you are interested in this kind of thing and live in or near Houston, you should come too!

  • Online Friendships

    Gah. I have, like, 30 minutes to myself in which to produce some words for you to read here. It’s tough when my weeknights are all committed to something because then I don’t get things done at home and I don’t have the time to do the things I enjoy like blog and read and just hang out with my husband, me and him. So this isn’t very well thought out, but what’s been on my mind lately are these relationships that we forge online with each other.

    I’ve been blogging for years, and even a few months ago there were very few other blogs I read that I connected to. I read blogs of personal friends (and still do) who rarely update and when they do just give a hurried summary of what’s happened in their lives since they last wrote. I read some of the popular bloggers who are great writers. But what I was looking for were more people like me: girls in their 20’s or 30’s (I’m not that far away from the next decade, after all) who love to blog regularly who I can relate to. I don’t know why, but I had a really hard time finding people like this.

    I worked really hard at it, and I’m finally beginning to see a network of online friendships building. It’s a great feeling. Now I can usually find new people just by clicking through on a comment that I read somewhere. If that person looks interesting, I’ll subscribe to their blog. I’ll read it for awhile, and if I like it I’ll start commenting regularly. Usually this leads to reciprocation, which is the goal.

    Most of my online friendships are still in the fledgling phase. That’s okay though, because they are growing. I can’t explain why blogging is so important to me, but it is. A lot of people go through phases where they just want to stop blogging forever. They take breaks. They go anonymous. They start new sites. I’ve had my own issues, and sometimes I feel too busy to write often, but I never want to quit. I know I’d miss it.

  • weekend review

    I’m propped up in bed ready to read for an hour or so before drifting off to sleep and then starting another week. Before I do that, though, I wanted to share a few things with you from the weekend.

    We babysat our nephew Lucas for the first time.

    He was adorable, calm, smiley, perfect for the first half. Then he got hungry, so he started to cry. We fed him every last drop of milk that we had. We burped him and got four really good ones. We changed his diaper. We held him and walked around with him, and sang to him. He continued to cry…for about an hour and a half. It was actually quite cute to see David’s reaction to this. He was so worried that something was wrong with Lucas. We eventually had to call his parents to come home, because he was still hungry and his food supply was nowhere to be seen. Before they got home I managed to calm him down by doing deep knee bends and walking up and down the stairs a million times. It was a serious workout.

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    You can see the slightly frazzled look around my eyes.

    I signed up for the Tour de Pink.

    The glitch was finally worked out on the website, and I signed up for the 12-mile bicycle race in Houston that will take place September 13! I’m really excited because it will be my first bike race. Here is where I ask for your help, though, because in order to participate I am required to raise at least $100 in addition to my entry fee. Please donate; even just $1 gets me closer to that goal, and I would love to surpass it if possible! Here is a handy dandy link for you:

    Some other stuff happened too.

    Including, but not limited to: David’s second cousin’s baby shower, cooking and grilling, a long bike ride, leading worship in church, and starting The Time Traveler’s Wife. It was a good weekend, and it’s going to be a good week.

  • Keeping Me Cooking

    Not all of my stories about patients are sad.

    Ms. R, only 54, came to us with thyroid cancer. She had a mass that was obstructing her airway so she had to have a trach put in. She then went through many rounds of chemo and got radiation to her neck, which is a tough place to have that treatment because it left her skin burned and the tissue inside her mouth fragile and sore. Since she came into the hospital in May she hasn’t eaten or spoken. She gets fed through a tube in her stomach, and if she wants to say something she uses a whiteboard to write it down.

    The thing is, Ms. R has been very depressed. She sleeps almost all the time and doesn’t really attempt to communicate. When she was first on our unit I wasn’t assigned to her very often. But one thing led to another and a month in I became her primary nurse. For a couple of weeks I really didn’t know what she thought of me. We had established a routine of care, she was compliant, but I had no idea if she liked me or not.

    Then one day, after one of my days off, Ms. R slept in until 2 p.m. When she finally woke up she wrote down on her board, “You leave at 3?” When I said yes, she made kind of a frowny face. I smiled and said, “You’ve been sleeping all day! It’s almost time for me to go home!” Then she wrote, “I missed you yesterday.” That was the first time I got any clue as to how she felt about me.

    I had never seen any of Ms. R’s family, so I wasn’t sure if she had any support at home. But then one day her sister came up to surprise her. Apparently her family usually comes in the evening after I’m gone. From Ms. R’s sister I learned that she used to be a great cook. When I heard that, I paused, thought, then made a decision. I took a deep breath and just started rambling. I decided that since she couldn’t open up to me, or was unwilling to, I would talk to her about my life and see what happened. I told her about how I’m a newlywed and I’m just now learning how to cook because I never did much of it before. I told her about how I always eat Lean Cuisines for lunch because I think they’re good and they’re easy. I told her about how my parents were coming over for dinner the next night and I was going to be making them enchilada casserole and I was nervous.

    Her eyes lit up. She asked me (or rather, wrote) all about the ingredients and how I was going to prepare it. I blabbed for awhile, and then at the end of our conversation she finally wrote, “I miss cooking. And eating.” And she looked up at me with her big, round, sad eyes.

    Not many days later, Ms. R’s trach got plugged up deep inside and she couldn’t breathe. I’m so, so grateful that I was there when it happened because she was practically dying in front of me from suffocation. I couldn’t get anyone to come help, and I couldn’t suction it out myself. I had to call a code on her, which flooded the room with doctors and respiratory therapists and nurses. They brought her back, but we had to transfer her to the ICU. I sat down on her bed and told her that we were going to have to move her, but that it would only be temporary. Huge tears started rolling down her cheeks. She had been to the ICU before and she didn’t want to go again. I held her hand while she was stuck with needles and given breathing treatments and her bed was prepared for transport. I escorted her down to ICU and I promised her that she would come back to me soon.

    She did. She came back the next afternoon, and ever since then she’s been improving. The amazing thing is that her cancer is gone. Gone. She’s still recovering from her chemo and radiation, but the cancer is gone. I was with her when her doctor came in and said, “This is the lady who USED to have nasopharyngeal cancer.” After three months, he had a 10-day plan to get her home.

    Ever since then, almost every day when she sees me she’ll write, “Did you cook?” Most of the time I have to say no. I try to explain to her that I’m taking it slow, that right now once a week is about all I can handle. One day last week I got tired of disappointing her and I promised her I would cook the next day. The next day came around and David and I got busy and I didn’t get to start the meal until late. David asked me, “Are you sure you want to do this tonight?” I snapped, “You don’t understand. I can’t go back to work tomorrow and see the look on my patient’s face when I tell her I didn’t cook!”

    I was off yesterday, and all this morning I was stuck in a computer class. I returned to my unit in the afternoon to help out. When I went into Ms. R’s room to give her some medicine, she SMILED. I mean a real, big smile like I’ve never seen on her face. We talked about where I had been, her plan for going home, and of course, cooking. She planned out my whole meal for me, and that’s why on Saturday we’re going to be having spaghetti and meatballs, salad, and garlic bread.