RA, TB and Me

Photo by freestocks.org 

I slowly walked the length of the mall, exaggerating the shallowness of my breath, as I attempted to inhale deeply.  My body and I had been at odds for years, but this was different.  Something felt wrong.  

Google confirmed it. I typed out my symptoms as I always did, the diagnosis was as clear as the screen I had typed them on, slightly blurry. I had tuberculosis.  The obscurity of catching tuberculosis, while living in a first world country, made me quite confident it was indeed what I had contracted. My life and my body do not often choose ordinary, and Google had never yet steered me wrong.

I worried I would be a headline in the local newspaper.  Several years earlier, I read about a man who had died while using an outhouse, it seemed like an unfair thing, to publish the details of such a death, adding unnecessary insult to fatal injury.  I worked at a butcher shop and volunteered in two kindergarten classes, while attending university.  I was a public health risk; it would be unwise not to alert the community. 

I remembered the commercials, listing tuberculosis as a common side effect, among many, of the drug I injected into my body twice a week. I had to have both a TB test and chest x-ray before it could be prescribed.  The piles of paper work required to be approved for it almost persuaded me from pursuing it, but I needed it.  

I was sixteen when I began to feel achy and was soon diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis.  Too old for it to be juvenile arthritis, but too young for this to be common, my body fought hard against the usual. 

Upon meeting with a physician, I received a slightly less exciting, much more mediocre diagnosis, pneumonia.  I took the antibiotics.  After a week my breathing eased and I had nearly forgotten it all, when it happened again, the difficult breathing.  As a precaution, I was sent for x-rays which revealed something unidentifiable inhabiting my lungs.  A CT scan revealed something still undetermined lurking in my lungs, so a bronchoscopy was ordered.   

A few days later, a panicky phone call revealed I had tuberculosis.  My faith in Google was restored.  I realized the seriousness of this communicable disease as three more calls, in quick succession, pleaded with me to surrender myself to the Centre for Disease Control. 

I had to stop the medication I was taking, immediately.  I was scared, this medication had made existing less painful, almost comfortable.  It was the last step in a long line of medications I had tried, the only drug that could mask the pain I was in while protecting my body from itself.  

***

My mom cried when I received my RA diagnosis.  To be fair, she frequently cried at heart-warming Tim Hortons commercials too, but this was different.  She cried more as she watched my body slowly deteriorate, the swelling caused my wrist bones to disappear, my thumb to no longer bend and my hands to become permanently disfigured.  She was there when the doctor told me I was bleeding internally.  It made sense.  For months I had been taking an extra dose of my medication, the one that advised to not take it on an empty stomach.  I took it on an empty stomach, in the middle of the night, because the pain that radiated every joint in my body made sleeping painful.  I had to stop that medication, my body had become accustomed to it and it hurt. 

My mom, preparing to attend nursing school, seemed a little too excited when I was prescribed my first injectable medication.  I reluctantly indulged her, I wasn’t ready to do it myself.  She prepared my first injection with gloved hands.  The instructions, she had very carefully read, made the gloves sound very important. The medication entering my body was too toxic to come into contact with her skin.  I’m not sure I gave that drug a fair chance, when I nervously reported it wasn’t working and moved onto the next one.   

***

Perhaps I didn’t quite understand the serious implications of having tuberculosis.  I announced my arrival at the Centre for Disease Control and took a seat in the waiting room.  It was ten minutes before they realized just which patient I was.  In that time I had had a lengthy conversation with a newly landed immigrant.  I shook his hand as I welcomed him to Canada and we chatted about his first weeks here.  

And then they called my name, passed me a mask, and asked me to continue waiting in the exact same area I was hoping to hide my now-masked face from.  Suddenly, all conversation came to halt.  People glanced uncomfortably in my direction, careful not to lock eyes with mine. 

I was brought into a back room.  They asked so many questions.  They wanted to know where I had contracted it, but nothing I said met any of their expectations.  Given a variety of requisitions, several back up masks and a paper bag filled with pills, the next six months were mapped out for me.  

I was sent for x-rays, conveniently just down the street.  I left the building and walked down the busy city street, feeling ridiculous, but I remained responsibly masked.  Free from the confines of the Centre for Disease Control, I tried to pass myself off as one of those mostly-regular paranoid individuals, afraid of contracting some sort of airborne disease, rather than the infected and possibly contagious individual I most definitely was.  Safely inside the door, my masked face bought me a precedent place in line.  

I had been for many x-rays before.  The uncomfortable positions, the lead lap belt, protecting my reproductive organs from the radiation the rest of my body was frequently exposed to, and the awkward small talk with the technician, were all too familiar. X-rays were how the doctors tracked the progress of the disease that was slowly eating away at my joints, my own body vindictively attacking itself and now my own lungs were turning on me.

Then blood work.  Fully masked, they ushered me into a private room and asked another series of questions as they drew vial after vial of blood.  Still stunned, the medical community wanted answers.  While I explained about the medication I was taking, they wanted something further and tested for a gamut of conditions. 

I was also familiar with blood work, and needles.  A well-worn monthly requisition resided in my wallet and the medication I had been on for the last couple of years required that I give myself twice weekly injections.  I always knew what to expect and yet somehow I always put it off until the very end of the day and always hovered a long while before bracing myself and burying the needle into my already bruised thigh.   

I took a test home with me, to confirm whether I had the infectious type of tuberculosis, or the dormant non-infectious type.  The test required me to collect saliva over three days, to submit the collection and to wait.  My birthday was on day three.  

My mom, now a nursing student working part-time, was torn on whether she should risk her health visiting me on my birthday.  She decided that eating cake outdoors would be a small enough risk, that she was willing to expose herself and my two younger sisters to it.  On my birthday, I answered the doorbell to three masked individuals.  No unnecessary chances were to be taken.  We sat outside while my sisters and I mockingly laughed at my mom, at the absurdity of attempting to wear a mask while eating birthday cake.   

I ended my quarantine by delivering my sample to the lab.  I later learned I was not infectious.  I celebrated the good news with a sigh of relief and my fear of being an alarming headline subsided.

The good thing about non-infectious TB is that it is straightforward.  Six months of several antibiotics and a B12 vitamin, no deviating.  

When I was newly diagnosed with arthritis everyone thought they should weigh in, sharing opinion after opinion, treatment after treatment. I politely listened to a range of suggestions.  It was exhausting, and yet I was hopeful something simple would work.  I eventually learned to say “no thank you,” and later to say it bluntly.  Living with chronic pain, I had become slightly irritable all the time and more easily irritated by useless suggestions from people not also suffering from crippling, bone altering conditions.  Exhausted and in pain I needed something strong and something effective.  

I had been to an arthritis support meeting, held in the hospital.  I left despairingly.  I had shaken hands with crippled hands and listened to their daily plights, this was likely the direction that my body was heading.  Only a few years later I too, would have the bent hands indicative of rheumatoid arthritis, I would lose ninety percent range of motion in my wrists and I’d grow accustomed to the constant aches and pains.  A body in constant pain with many restrictions would become my home and I would grow comfortable there, weirdly grateful it was not a harsher more formidable disease.  

After weeks without taking my medication, I realized that my arthritis was in a partial sort of remission.  The inflammation and pain were minimal without the drug that I had relied on for years.  The TB was eventually shelved and added to the growing stack of anomalies.  

And now, 10 years later, I recount my visit to see the rheumatologist, back to my mom, a recent graduate and registered nurse.  At my first check up in years, I asked him, “When do you think it will come back?”  He replied, “If I was a betting man, you’d already have it back.”  And so I wait, every day evaluating my body, checking in with my knees, wrists and feet, enjoying each day where the pain is minimal.  This feels like borrowed time and for once I’m happy with by body’s choice to be unique.

Mother Earth

Photo by Adam Edgerton

Our generous host
She offered everything
But we wanted more 
We reached deep down into her being and pulled from within her
Drained her aquifers 
Extracted oil
Mined metals and stone
We sold her soul for wealth
Sold our own by taking far more than we need
Without thanks
Who could blame her when she demonstrates her majestic rage
Still we refuse to listen
She’s fighting us 
The same way our bodies fight an infection 
With fever and chills

-What have we done?

Waste Not

I dropped the salt.  I know, I know, it’s bad luck to spill a little salt.  Maybe the bad luck ends when the shaker breaks in half, pouring out its contents onto the counter and the floor, a million crystals mocking my clumsiness, one can hope anyway.  Normally something broken would have been thrown into the trash without a second thought, but not today.  

The night before the shaker broke, a few of us had casually discussed the end of the world, over supper.  Climate change is worsening, but I had somehow remained unaware of just how quickly and just how giant an impact this will have on humanity.  Ignorance turned into a feeling of impending doom as we discussed the worsening fires and lack of rainfall.  Ten years “they” say til we feel the harsh wrath of the earth, thirty years before we are likely fighting for existence.  No one knows the exact timeline, but the idea that there is one that expires at all and quite possibly in our life time is terrifying.  It feels irresponsible not to fix the shaker.  

Not fixing it may have imminent consequences.

As a country we are giving up plastic straws.  I too watched the video of the sea turtle with the straw painfully lodged in its nose, poor guy, but there’s no way sea turtles are constantly doing this and yet for that little guy and maybe a handful of his friends, we are doing it.  There are far more environmentally hazardous and unnecessary things.  Maybe we are just being eased into it, if we survive surrendering our plastic single-use straws, surely we can give more without altering our lives too greatly.  Single-use hangers for example, you only need one set of hangers.  After shopping, you take the clothing off the hanger and put it on a better hanger or into a drawer, where does the single use hanger go?  Certainly not the recycling, they don’t get recycled, believe me, we tried.  

Apparently recycling is just a feel-good activity anyway, to make us feel better about our copious amounts of waste products, as most of it is put into landfills.  

But imagine for a minute that “repaired” became the new trendy.  Our items would gather scars and character from their time with us, creating charming conversation pieces.  For instance:

“Please pass the salt”

“Here you are”

“Oh wow, what a charming salt shaker, what’s her story?”

My in-laws very generously lend us their camper trailer each year for my sibling camp out.  It’s perfect, fully stocked with all the necessities it makes packing easier, sleeping comfortable and undesirable weather bearable.  We made a meal, slapped the food onto the plates and the plates literally fell to pieces, right there on the tiny counter.  Just gave out from the weight of the toddler sized portion of food.  I thought this was next-level thriftiness, which is admirable in itself, but now I’m aware that saving free collectible dishes from Shreddies, circa 1985, is very environmentally friendly.  That dish far exceeded its life expectancy and the in-laws can feel good about having not wasted.  I guess this ought to be the trend.  

Waste not, want not, has long been forgotten, and certainly not well practiced here in the western world, not by my generation anyway.  In an age where things are cheaply mass produced and so easily replaced, that’s exactly what’s happening, replacing and not repairing, often replacing before it’s even required.  I’m guilty, so guilty.  I want to change and it begins today.   

We need to evolve or there may be catastrophic consequences. And I hope that all of our little efforts add up.

So I glued that big old piece of plastic back together.  I might even add some cute tape.  And if you’re ever at my house for supper and see that glued-up, taped-up piece of unwasted plastic, I will tell you about the day I feared for the end of humanity.  At the very least it will remind me to be more environmentally conscientious, to take better care of the Earth that cares for us.  

What’s the greenest thing you’ve done this week?

The Hand Mold

A week after Christmas, our home had resumed a level of near normalcy we felt comfortable with.  Presents had mostly found their way into closets and toy bins.  But one item remained on the counter, unopened, constantly attracting the attention of our four-year-old.  We had said enough “laters.” She was clearly onto us.  Knowing we had little to no intention of opening it anytime soon, she pleaded that we open it immediately.

Removal of the packaging attracted our two-year-old daughter, who pulled up a chair so she could partake in the action.  My husband, occupying the tiny space between both chairs, very wisely intercepted a small but dangerous amount of glitter, and threw the contraband straight into the garbage.  With a bit of warm water, they prepared the hand-molding, memory-making kit.  

They poked, then kneaded, then stretched the dough-like substance.  Excitedly, the girls stretched out their fingers as their dad worked to flatten it, stretching the dough to accommodate three hands, on a dough that was meant for one.

It was meant for our youngest to commemorate just how tiny she was on her first Christmas.  Just two weeks old now, I held her as I comfortably sat on a bar stool on the other side of the counter.  I observed my husband using all sorts of patience to complete the task, kindly accepting help from the very persistent hands begging to take part.  

When he deemed it large enough, he took our four-year-olds hand and pressed it into the white material, carefully pressing each finger to make a deep enough indent.  Our two-year-old spread out her fingers as wide as she could, her hand overtook the remaining space.  It took several attempts to position her hand appropriately, only to find she had blue marker all over her hand, that was now a part of the commemorative hand mold.  Now it was time for our youngest daughter, the one it was intended for.  Her hand barely fit in the tiny remaining space, he struggled to unclench her fist, jostling her around, while he pressed her hand gently but hard enough to make an impression. Both older sisters crowded in even closer.  

And then she spat up.  A big one.  All over the whole project.  Our four-year-old was heart broken, our two-year-old cried loudly.    

It was salvageable, just like most of these moments that go awry.  After he wiped it clean, he etched in their names and the year with a fork.  He laid it flat to dry, still somehow it curled.  Maybe it needed the glitter, maybe it needed to not be spat up on or maybe it didn’t like being washed. 

This curled, stained, spat up on commemorative hand mold, perfectly represents our imperfect family.  Normally this happens when we attempt “nice” family photos, someone is doing something ridiculous, isn’t looking or is facing completely backwards.  I love those photos, always laughing at how accurately the camera is able to capture all of our personalities or our particular moods that day.  Like most of our attempts at anything we do as parents, this didn’t go as we had envisioned and all we could do was laugh and carry on.  

And now this beautifully tiring season in our lives is solidified in a weird piece of foam that hangs on our four-year-olds bed.  

It’s perfect.

the island

Photo by Dan Stark

The first time I went there I was nine.  It was paradise.  

We arrived on a barge brimming with building supplies.  On the perfect sunny day, I lay amongst the materials, basking, dreaming of adventure.  As I watched the waves the sea breeze put salt in my hair, on my skin and my lips.  The hum of the motor and the sound of the barge cutting through the water lulled me to sleep.  I awoke to excited cheers from my siblings as we neared our destination.  Soon, metal scraped rock and we waded to the shore of the bay.  We stood together and took stock of our surroundings.  Beyond the barnacle covered rock and the driftwood lay unexplored wonder, inviting us to take notice.  

The arbutus warmly welcomed us ashore, with twisted knotty branches and peeling auburn bark.  A meadow on one side swayed in the breeze, tall trees on the other mysteriously shaded the ground beneath them.  A sea pebble path beckoned.  We had arrived. 

My great uncle bought an island.  Lucky for us, an island requires many work trips and my dad, a builder and contractor, got the call.  And we, my parents, my three younger siblings and I, were allowed to explore it, all twenty-four, thrilling acres.  

We carried our belongings to the other side of the island and settled into what would one day be deemed “the green cabin” unimaginatively so, as the name simply matched the paint.  After choosing a bed, we were free to explore, as long as we kept our life jackets on, mom’s rules.  We didn’t mind, my brother and I, the bright orange vest was a small price to pay for a great deal of freedom.

We hiked the perimeter.  We explored derelict cabins.  We followed every path and created our own.  We hungrily devoured every inch of that island, taking in everything she would share with us. 

Twice a day the shores would transform themselves, leaving even more to be discovered. Furious crashing waves overtook the shore on one side, on the other side the waves were gentle, steady, almost deceptively so, sneaking up on us digging clams. She left behind her a sandy swimming oasis. She completely recreated her shoreline, a timeless ever changing beauty. She formed endless tide pools as she made her retreat, a tiny glimpse of the life she contained within herself.

We studied them, enjoying the aliveness.  We’d stir the water to see what was hiding. Crabs skittered while other unknown creatures made their presence known before quickly disappearing.  We’d let the gentle arms of the anemones wrap around our fingers, pulling us in like the island itself was drawing us in.  

It was magical.

After a full afternoon exploring we all settled in, exhausted.  Big black ants interrupted our sleep as they rained down from the ceiling, really big, winged, black ants, that chewed through boards with little effort.  We snuggled in a little tighter, lying awake imagining all of the other insects the daylight had hidden from us.  

We would return to the island at least once a year.  Family reunions were relocated there and my brother and I made sure to tag along on as many extra trips as possible.  Over time island stories have blended into one large story in my mind, spanning many years.  

Our great uncle taught us to fish.  He led us to a shed full of old rods and passed us a tackle kit complete with rusty hooks and a knife.  It was our job now to feed the crab traps.  Left to our own devices we untaught ourselves and created our own sport, which would not be fair to call fishing.  We needed bait.  We plunged our hands into the water, scraped the side of the dock and raised up fistfuls of mussels.  We began saving money for fancy lures, they paled in comparison to mussels scraped from their shells by our thumbnails and loosely attached to a hook by filthy fingers.  If we were lucky a biting sea worm fell out from the clump.  We only learned about the biting part when my youngest sister, so curious, held one too long.  We caught tiny fish with just a hook on a line, no rod meant more of us were contributing to the excitement.  We used the small fish to catch bigger fish and the bigger fish fed the crab traps.  In the process the sea devoured many lures, many hooks and at least one fishing rod.  

Many rock cod fell victim to our hopeful lines, each one smugly marched back to the adults. We felt like champions. We gloated, a highly regarded skill in our family and we were honing it well. Our success despite lack of expertise and equipment only added to the size of our fish tales, but more importantly to our already swelling egos.

Our great uncle taught us to trap crab and later to cook and eat them. We baited the trap and optimistically lowered it into the water. It was the best watched trap in the Pacific Ocean, as we eagerly hoisted it onto the dock several times a day. We learned which crabs we should release and which crabs we should risk our fingers to bring back for lunch. Large fearsome pincers, meant many were spared only to be recaught the following day.

While on one of our daily perimeter walks, my brother and I stumbled upon a pair of kayakers peacefully eating their lunch on the shore.  Baffled that anyone either missed, or chose not to adhere to, the very large private island signs, we shouted out from behind a large rock, “this is a private island!”  As if we owned the place, at the very least we felt we had a duty to protect it.  Probably out of concern for the young, very dishevelled kids in bright orange life vests they shouted back, “where are your parents?”  We scuttled away.  Later we learned that while the island itself was private, the beaches at low tide, were not. 

Showers were hard to come by, not that we wanted to slow down long enough to be bothered with one.  Our cabin didn’t have regular plumbing or electricity.  Showers were heated over a propane stove, poured into a bag and hoisted into a shower stall in a make shift bathroom on the deck.  It was a fine balance between adding enough water of a decent showering temperature, being able to hoist it high enough and having the water last long enough to get the soap off, all while avoiding the large number of even larger spiders that seemed to be drawn to the warmth of the water.  

We spent our days exploring, fishing, or visiting the different cabins filled with different grandparents, aunties, uncles and cousins.  Our favourite cabin was always Eagles Nest, where an auntie or grandma always greeted us with a warm hug.  It seemed to be the hub of all the island action and if you looked just past the bay, you would see two adult eagles raising their young.  Eagle’s Nest always hosted happy hour, nightly suppers and crib tournaments, organized by us kids.  Two dollars to play, a small price to pay to learn from the older generation, who we believed to be the greatest crib players who had ever played the game.  Lead with what was cut, never split a run and be a gracious winner with just the right amount of smugness.  The laughter each night carried on far past our bed time, and echoed across the bay as we settled into our beds.  We were lucky to be a part of this.  

With at least two to a bed my cousin and I often chatted, ate Rolos and listened to mixed tapes until we were too tired to hold our eyes open any longer.  

There were jobs to do each day, but we were happily occupied by the tedious tasks.  We pulled endless amounts of thistles from an unused corner of the island, noticeably far from where the adults were working.   During high tide we would drag driftwood out of the bay only to see it returned with the following high tide.  We received payment in large fistfuls of jujubes, not that we needed to be paid.  The work was fun and the company even better.  During low tide we scoured the beach for the marbles we had shot earlier, gathering the next days ammunition and possible bragging rights if we hit our target.  We toiled alongside our cousins, happily joking and constantly teasing each other.  

We regularly tried to con a ride on the gator, a small lime green tractor with a box on the back.  Meant to transport aging family members and luggage, seeing how many of the younger members could fit in the box became a source of entertainment for us.  At age twelve, around the same time as we were allowed to remove our orange life vests, we were upgraded from back seat to drivers seat.  We very courteously offered to drive everybody and everything wherever they wanted to go, priding ourselves on how fast we could handle the corners. 

The ocean, a mysterious beauty, scared me, in a thrilling terrified sort of way.  Sure of a very slow torturous death, I tightly held my cousin’s hand each time we decided to make the jump into the bay.  Hysterical screaming ensued each time I imagined my foot brushing a shark or some other fearsome creature.  Admittedly, this happened often and the swim was often short.  

We laughed all day long, lovingly poking fun at one another.  Good jokes voiced loudly were even more loudly appreciated and often repeated, until they became immortalized as a part our of island speech.  

Each time we prepared to leave, we would do a final perimeter tour.  We’d stand on the farthest point, close to where we had seen the orcas play earlier, and study the vastness of the water, the mainland barely visible on the horizon.  The rest of the world was unaware of the island’s magic and yet here we were observing it, a part of it and it a part of us.  

Each stay was never long enough, I missed it before I had even left, the people and the island itself.  Even now, years since my last visit, every time I smell the ocean, I’m transported back there, sweet reminiscing.  The island meant something different to each of us, but to me, she was freedom.  She was exploration.  She was family. 

She was everything.

escape

blue water beneath me 
tall trees overhead
warm sun on my thirsty skin
my body happily sinks below the water’s surface
my spirit drinks in calm splendour 
tranquil beauty
nothing else matters 
until the sun hides herself behind the trees
her warmth made sweeter in her absence 
the air turns cold
the water feels cooler than it was moments before
preparing to leave my mind busies itself with things to be done
my soul plans its next retreat

-escape

Our Last Baby: The First Few Days

After we were released from the hospital, we brought our new daughter home.  Healing from a c-section I slowly walked up the stairs and eased my body onto the couch.  Breathing in the mesmerizing newborn sweetness, we relaxed by eating snacks and watching shows we had already seen.  It felt good, maybe too good, in hindsight.   Surgery had gone smoothly, baby was healthy and so were we.    

And then they returned.  Two tired faces ascended the stairs.  Excited raspy voices called out, “baby!” The bags under their eyes, large and dark outlined the glassy eyes that seemed to have a presence of their own, presenting themselves before the rest of their bodies.  Then their eyes lit up, making them momentarily recognizable, the second they laid them on their new sister.  

“STOP” I yelled.  “Wash your hands!”  

They clambered up onto my lap, smiling, very curious and very smitten.  They introduced themselves to the baby, declaring their love for her, as they pawed at her face and body, while I grimaced at the never ending amounts of coughing.  They were surely still contagious.  With little choice I put all of my faith on the foaming hand soap, it would have to do.  

Grandma and grandpa had graciously agreed to watch the older two girls, even to the detriment of their own health.  We probably would have asked for another night off, but they were beginning to feel the effects of the early stages of the flu themselves.  So they left us, and just like that we were a family of five.  

The hospital had provided a false reality, cocooning us.  All of our needs met in the quietness of the busy maternity ward, a quality under appreciated with the birth of our first daughter.  New parents, again, to our third daughter, we felt fairly confident, we were experienced and prepared to handle this.  Holed up in our room, swept back into newborn bliss complete with sweet cuddles, simple needs and some painkillers, it’s no wonder we were so easily mistaken.  

The two days days before I had gone into labour, our house was struck by the plague.  High fevers, body aches and burning eyes were loudly and tearfully reported by our daughters.  I doled out medicine, encouraged small sips of juice and carefully cuddled them, while the tv droned on and on.  Washing my hands every time they became free for just a moment, I decided that even with only a 10 percent chance of protection, getting the flu shot, when it was offered at work, was indeed a good idea.  

When contractions began, I was glad this baby had held on for at least the beginning of the flu days.  Two weeks and two days early, she was my longest pregnancy.  I had been anxiously anticipating her arrival, counting the random contractions for days as Christmas crept closer.  On December 16th contractions were slow but regular, we packed our bags, showered and settled into bed. I had high hopes of getting some sleep before heading to the hospital.  Contractions consistently arriving every fifteen minutes meant little sleep, but at 5 am when I stepped out of bed, something shifted and they began coming every two minutes.  Trying not to panic at the acceleration, I calmly asked my husband to get ready and to call my sister to watch the older two who were still asleep.  On her way to the gym, my sister unfazed by the presence of the flu in our home, happily turned around.  She had been waiting for this call.  Off we went.  

The very kind obstetrician I had seen for all of my births and the duration of three pregnancies, had given me her phone number, and met us at the hospital.  After losing my first baby due to birth complications, I felt very fortunate to have a kind and familiar face in the operating room at each of my subsequent c-sections.  December 17th at 7:31 am, we heard her loudly enter the world.  

After a great deal of unsuccessful pleas to hold their new sister, we put the older two to bed.  Constant coughing escaped their feverish bodies and echoed down the hall as they attempted to rest, signalling the beginning of yet another long night.  

As we prepared to settle into our own bed, we gently laid our sweet little one into her crib, five feet from our bed.  At first grunt, I pulled her into our bed, just as I had done with her sisters.  Last baby means I’m going to enjoy every minute of these sweet sweaty cuddles.  Coughs, followed by crying, repetitively interrupted our sleep.  Exhausted we took turns comforting the older two with cuddles and meds.  

Each time, I not so smoothly rolled myself out of bed, eased my body to the floor, and gingerly lifted myself into what might be called mostly-standing.  Recommending only Advil and Tylenol for surgery patients seems a little cruel.  I slowly tread down the hall to the room I heard the loud cries of “Mommy!” from.  I needed another dose of Tylenol anyway.  I returned to realize I only had inches of space on a king size bed. Unwilling to move her and risk waking her, I precariously balanced myself on the edge and attempted to replicate the only position I found which allowed even a little comfort for an aching body.  It didn’t matter, I wouldn’t be there long until I was needed again.  

In every one of these exhausted waking moments, my brain and body so tender and so tired, my heart was full.  Our family had been completed with the arrival of our newest daughter.  It’s such a strange thing for a heart to feel such peace, while it simultaneously feels such sadness as I thought of my oldest, the son, I lost.  I had begged the universe for these nights, six and a half years earlier, where a tiny human needed me and now there were three.  Three, creating the most beautiful chaos, and I am so lucky to be in the thick of it.

she walks into the night
wraps the darkness around herself like a blanket
lifts her head to the sky and speaks with the stars
shuts her eyes and listens to the wings of the owl
she smells the dew settling into the earth
she feels the coyotes cry in her soul
connected with the night
she breathes deeply and fills her lungs with peace 

-a moth to no flame

i want you to need me
he said

i want you
i said

-isn’t that more?