Category Archives: Crazy Mama

Aha Moment

The best thing about a bad situation is the opportunity to have an “aha moment.” 

When my first pregnancy ended in miscarriage and then turned out to be a molar pregnancy and resulted in cancer, I didn’t trust my body to do anything it was supposed to do.  I became afraid of and paranoid about my health, and you’ve all seen that craziness unfold in my blog on occasion.   In the year following the incident, I forced myself to do new things – things that scared me, like watercolor classes, acting workshops and yoga retreats – as way of regaining the trust I had lost in myself.  The aha moment came when I finally figured out it wasn’t my fault.

As you can probably imagine, I was kind of a Crazy Mama when I gave birth to Dylan two years later.  My father-in-law joked that there weren’t enough specialists in the hospital or the state of Florida to help me.  He was right!  In my defense, I had a tough pregnancy that ended with preeclampsia and an emergency c-section at 37 weeks.  I also had a blood issue that put me at risk for a clot and meant I had to have daily injections (administered by me!) for six weeks postpartum.  Besides that, instead of milk coming from my breasts, there was blood.

At the end of my second day in the hospital, a social worker came to my room to evaluate me because the nurses didn’t think my emotions were appropriate.  They weren’t, and that’s when I had my aha moment.  I had good reason to be a little (okay, a lot) nutty, but the real reason I was acting so crazy was because I was terrified.  I had no idea what I was doing or how to take care of a baby, but I knew one thing: no one in that hospital was going to tell me how to be a mother so I had to take Dylan home and figure it out on my own.  And that’s exactly what I did.  It’s not that I wasn’t afraid a lot of the time, but I listened intently to Dylan and to the voice inside of me, and eventually my maternal instinct emerged loud and strong.

On Monday, I took Dylan to an occupational therapist that specializes in sensory integration.  She did a full physical evaluation and told me exactly what I anticipated she would say: Your son has sensory processing issues.  I knew this at the deepest center of my core, yet hearing the words spill from her mouth made me feel ill.  She validated what I suspected for a long time, but instead of feeling relieved, I felt angry.  Angry at every person who ever brushed off my concerns, told me not to worry, or smiled and said, “In a few years you’ll look back at all of this and laugh.”  I wanted to line these people up and punch them in their faces.  And the anger I felt toward myself was even worse.  Why hadn’t I done something sooner?

I spent most of Monday curled up in a ball on the couch, crying, and watching “Grey’s Anatomy.”  The aha moment came when I was done crying and feeling angry and I remembered the other thing the therapist said:  We can fix this.  Just like when I first took Dylan home from the hospital, I have to listen closely to the voice inside of me that knows what’s best for my child and act on it.  Boldly.  To start, I’m switching pediatricians. Our current doctor is one of the people who disregarded my concerns overand over again.

On Monday afternoon, I did what any Loving, Guilty and Shopaholic Mama would do.  I picked up the boys at school and took them to Toys R Us.  (I had a $5 coupon.)   It had been quite a day for Dylan.  He didn’t understand everything that was happening – in fact, he described his evaluation with the therapist as “fun”– but he’s intuitive enough to know something was up.  For that, he deserved a new toy.  I snapped this picture of the boys holding hands during the short drive from school to the toy store (don’t worry, I took the picture in the parking lot, not while I was driving). 


And just like that, I had another aha moment.  We were going to be okay.  

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Filed under aha moment, Crazy Mama, sensory processing disorder, shopaholism

Everything AND The Kitchen Sink

Packing a family of four with two young children for a week long vacation, and traveling there in a car without the confines of air travel, is like packing to move. Regrettably, without the moving truck.

We’re staying in a three-bedroom condo (vs. a hotel room), so my packing list looks something like the math formulas BP’s engineers worked on to fix the Gulf oil spill. From diapers to dish soap, sippy cups to stain remover and books to bath toys, I’m ready for anything. The problem is that I just started packing and the car is already full with two car seats and a stroller in back.

In addition to supplies, I also have a bag packed with the kids’ favorite snacks – basically, anything I can think of that might be hard to buy and even harder for my kids to survive without for a week. Between you and me, Riley wouldn’t last 30 minutes without a fruit squeezer, and Dylan wouldn’t make it much longer without an orange cracker fix (any orange cracker will do).

We’re also packing Dylan’s potty seat cover, a stool, Riley’s highchair cover and Dylan’s travel aerobed (he has habit of rejecting traditional beds in unfamiliar places). Oh, and we’re surprising Dylan with a tent for the aerobed. We read in the local newspaper that kids do better while away when they have a special space that is all their own. We’ll see. After that, there are the toy baskets that each kid gets to fill plus movies and books. Then, there are the actual suitcases, and don’t forget the bag we’ll bring in the car for the four-hour drive north.

My dad understands my packing stress and always tells me, “Jenny (that’s what my family and anyone who knew me before 1993 calls me), you’re not leaving the country. I’m sure there’s a market there.” I don’t want to arrive in paradise only to have to search for the nearest Publix to buy diapers and Goldfish. As a kid, I would wear my bathing suit on the plane when we went on vacation so I could go straight to the pool when we got there. The buy-when-you-get-there philosophy just isn’t my style. So, I pack. And since we’re driving, I can pack a lot.

Am I outing myself as a Crazy Mama here? I have to ask, because I’ve been making lists and packing for this trip for more than three weeks. I have anxiety on par with what I was nervous about last week. Not only do I have to pack for the kids, but if Mike were left on his own, he would pack nothing but a bathing suit and a box of cigars. Me, I like to have a lot of choices, but I have to figure out how to pack five pairs of shoes instead of 10. I’m under a lot of pressure.

With 24 hours before we leave, I will channel a calmer, simpler version of myself and try to pack less. Thankfully Mike bought a Roof Bag (roofbag.com) in case my channeling fails. (FYI: He bought the Roof Bag, not me. Shopaholic Mama was not involved!)

So there you have it. Unless you hear from me again, you can assume we fit it all in the car and hit the road. I plan to disconnect at least a little bit while we’re away, but I’ll definitely be in touch if anything especially interesting happens. I’m sure it will.

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Filed under Crazy Mama, packing, vacation