Saturday, June 14, 2014

Bubbles and Baby Shoes

Oh my goodness!  Yesterday was my wedding anniversary.   Mr. K came home early from work (Surprise!) bearing handmade truffles and champagne.  He is my favorite.



When I look back over these years, all I can say is what a sweet life!!

Now, as promised, here are photos from our trip and recent days.  You don't really want all the gory details of what it is to sedate an infant, to get hassled at Penn Station and so on.  So here are all the best parts - train rides, hair do's and little knitting projects.  All the important stuff!



Happy weekend, all.  Time for more champagne...


Saturday, June 7, 2014

Home again. Home again. Jiggity Jig.

Well home again anyway.  I'm not sure I'm quite ready for dancing a jiggity jig.  Mama is still pretty wiped out!

The train was a great way to go and was mercifully on time or early at every turn.  I guarantee you "first class" air travel has got nothing on a sleeper car and a good porter!  Boston was completely beautiful.  And, most important of all, Zelie's tests confirmed that her brain is stable, the procedure worked and her body is managing itself without the need for a shunt.

Can I get a "Praise the Lord" somebody?

For now, that's all I've got.  There were a lot of details between Sunday and Friday that were exhausting for mind and body.  I'm still decompressing.  I'll be back soon to share a bit more in words and probably pictures.

Right now the coffee is singing to me and I must go listen...

Friday, May 30, 2014

One size

Only a measly 72 hours or so before we leave to go to Boston.  In preparation I have purchased those new fangled disposable sorts of diapers (no good place/time to wash our wonderful cloth) for while we are away.

Guess what I discovered?  My two and a half year old and my six month old wear the same size.

That is all.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

The Doctor is In

This past Friday was our first visit to "Clinic".   It's a couple of hours away, so Daddy took the day off and we made a little road trip.

What is clinic?  Its a big 'ol doctor party!  Kind of like Go. dog. Go!  only without the tree and the fun hats.



Instead of a tree, we had a seat in a very large exam room.  Here's who came to see us...

  • Orthopedics - Don't read too much about Spina Bifida.  She's doing so well that we will treat her just as we would any typical child. 
  • Physical Medicine and Physical Therapy - Wow!  That's a lot of movement! Keep working on those hip flexes and kicking those feet.
  • Social Services - Everyone happy at home?  - You bet, Lady.  You bet!
  • Urology - Pressures seem good, nothing concerning right now.  We've scheduled for some new bladder images later this summer.
  • Neurosurgery - Um... her head measurements are off the charts! Somebody grab a growth chart. OH.  Ok. So is the rest of her.  - That's our little Buster. They haven't made a growth chart that can hold her!
  • Developmental Pediatrics - Is she social? Does she smile?  How well does she grab things?  Transfer them from hand to hand without a pit stop in her cute little mouth?  - Mr. we have got that all covered!

And what did J do all this time?  Trains.  He watched trains running many floors below us.  Trains. Trains. Trains.

After all that, we do have some follow up later in the summer.  Orthopedics, Ophthalmology and Urology all want to see her again; protocol, nothing more. 

Then we went home and spent the weekend being grateful.  It looked like this.  Parking was limited...



But the games and the smiles were worth it!




Now we are just counting down the days until Boston (and more Trains. Trains. Trains.).



Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Because its not all fancy medical talk around here

I think it must seem to some as if everything involving Miss Zelie is medical in some way.  Not so.  She's an actual little person not a diagnosis with curls. (Have I mentioned how we love her curls??)    There is extra medical stuff, its true. There will be more medical updates here too, but for now its just plain 'ol baby fun all 'round.

See?

Napping on the Farm


Racing Dad:Everyone Grab a Chair:Sunshine Snoozing


Happy Tuesday!  Hope you're week is as sunny and speckled as ours.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Now where did that mix tape go??

Happy Friday!

I'd love to say that things have been so quiet on the blog because they've been so quiet at home.  In fact the inverse is true.  It's been quiet on here because life with our littles is madness.  Daily and hilariously so, but madness.   
Playmates:Raspberry Practice:Naps:Bubbles & Boots


We continue to email our good surgeon in Boston weekly head circumference measurements.  His replies usually contain comments like, "Just a little ahead of the normal curve", and, "Seems to be growing slightly faster than what we typically see".  Now don't be too alarmed.  Remember that trip to the ophthalmologist, the one where there was no pressure on her optic nerve?  No pressure means no build up of pressure in her head.  Her other signs of well being are all perfect.  No, I think little Zelie's issue is that she just isn't that little!   Just look at those beautiful rolls and creases!!



Zelie currently is the 95th-plus-a-smidge percentile for weight and the 75th for height.  She wears  is outgrowing 6-9 month clothes.  She is not you're average almost-5 month old cub.  So it is reasonable that her head should keep pace.   

In any case, we have planned all along to return to Boston at the 6 month mark for some follow up imaging.  Those plans are now morphing into tickets and reservations and people scheduling time off and the like.  This time it is Aunt Honey who'll travel along and instead of driving we're doing this.


Very exciting!  Even though J has been on a train before, he won't remember it.  I can't wait to see his brilliant little face light up and those huge, saucer eyes spin around trying to take it all in.

In truth the whole trip feels more like a vacation, maybe a reunion, than anything medical. Not only do we have nothing but love for our surgeon, but a return to Our Lady's Basilica, another meal in the North End and summer weather that feels like spring all add up to that delicious feeling of something good on the wind. 

The reality of going back to Boston has me remembering, sometimes re-living, our first trip there.  I've been looking at old posts here, rummaging through all the photos we took then, thinking, praying and ultimately I can draw only two conclusions. 

First, in Our Lady's words:

    The Almighty has done great things for me and Holy is His name.

And second, I'm married to a Superhero ya'll - mild mannered day job, glasses and all.  A true, for real, can fly through the night, Superhero.  

That's all there is.  What else could a girl even want?





Monday, February 24, 2014

The adventure continues

Miss us?

We've been settling into "normal" here, whatever that means.  Actually with the double twos (a 2 year old and a 2 month old) it means we've been doing a lot of cleaning of little bums and big spills, randomly changing our sleep patterns and daydreaming about what it might be like to eat a whole meal without interruption.  We've been rescuing the cat from little hands and little hands from all the many risks they like to take, kissing bumps and working on the perfect recipe for "coffee milk".  We've also been having the time of our lives.  Yes, its exhausting.  It is also hysterically funny, breathtakingly touching and the best kind of crazy.

With all that going on it is easy to think that Miss Zelie's diagnosis is a thing of the past and we are "done" with the need for concern around it.  That just isn't so.  Her condition is as much a part of her as her wacky little dark curls.  She is certainly suffering no ill effects from it just now, but there is much to watch for as she grows. Nothing to be alarmed about, but much to monitor. So...

Last week we made a trip to Jacksonville to meet with a more local Neurosurgeon.  He and our surgeon from Boston have corresponded about our gal and will continue to do so.  He was very pleased with Zelie overall.  Her head is doing very nicely. And, though it measures in the 95+ percentile, so does the rest of her!  (The pediatrician's PA pronounced her the size of a 4 month old!)  Happily that means everything is charmingly proportionate with everything else.  This is a very good thing.  

We left that appointment with a date to return for our first clinic visit and a referral to pediatric ophthalmology.  Clinic is just a nice way for us to be able to see all the specialties we need to follow up with regularly at one time and place.  We don't yet know what sort of frequency will suit her needs best, but we are looking forward to our visit, which will be in early May.  Ophthalmology is just one more area where we need to get an initial check and baseline.  She's been ever so slightly slow and inconsistent in her visual tracking.  The trouble with hydrocephalus is that it puts pressure on all areas of the brain.  While her's is under control now, the initial pressure could have had some impact on her optic nerve resulting in these delays. It could just as easily be the "all babies are different" factor, but we want to check.  As with all interventions, earlier is better. 

Speaking of early intervention, for those who are curious about "what else", we currently have weekly visits with PT and bi-weekly visits with acupuncture.  PT is largely preventative maintenance at this point.  We work to ensure that she's stretching all the muscles and joints that tend to be problematic for this diagnosis in general.  We do some intense tummy time!  And it is already evident that anger makes our girl work harder and stronger.  Acupuncture, for you non-hippie types, is addressing the healing of the deep tissue in her back and her overall continued well being.  The results there have been nothing short of astonishing.

We also took both babies to see the pediatrician last week.  Regular checkups all around!  Joseph was not a fan of being denied his pants while being inspected from head to toe by some strange woman with cold hands.  Zelie couldn't possibly have cared less.  Both kiddos were declared healthy and adorable.  

This week is set to be a bit less eventful.  We do have a very exciting play date planned with another sweet baby who shares our diagnosis.  We plan to make good use of the park nearby, enjoy the sunshine and our new friends.

Here's hoping you have equally wonderful plans for your week too.  Happy Monday!