Thursday, November 30, 2017

Giving credit where credit is due

I know I write about this a lot, but this is a major part of my life and it’s hard not to. Special needs moms don’t get enough credit in my opinion. I don’t think anyone can fully understand what we as parents go through. I’ve never been to a day of nursing school, but I can perform a lot tasks that nurses go to school to learn and sometimes don’t even learn it until they graduate and get a job. In 11 years I have become a pro at a GJ or Gtube button, feeding pumps, catherization, seizures, medications, and many other things and now PICC lines. We as parents do not get formal training or any special training. Most of the time when something comes up we see a nurse or someone from a medical company and are given a brief demonstration and then sent home with tons of medical supplies and phones numbers if we have questions but are left to learning a lot of it on our own. Dreaming for a “normal” day would never be considered normal to a typical family with healthy children. This past hospital stay was a lot of firsts for us. In 11 years Skylar has never had to have a blood transfusion or had to be intubated for a period. I feel fortunate that she only had to be intubated for about a week. Although I knew what to expect when I got back into her room in the PICU, it still hits you like a ton of bricks and I just broke down. My biggest fear was that she’d not be able to breathe on her own and come off the vent. There have been conversations of a trach before but never to this extent and I just feared that she’d be on the vent for an extended period and they’d end up having to trach her to get her off it. She has a way of proving people wrong and showing them that she doesn’t like to play by the rules. Once they start talking about something she has a way of showing what she’s capable of. This was a different experience for me as a mom as well. When she’d go into the hospital in the past there was never a question of where I was going to be. I never left, and I had no desire to leave. However, this was the first time that I had another child to consider and we have not had a long hospital stay like this since Sawyer was born.  It rocked his world too. He is too young to understand why mom and sissy are not coming home and why he’s having to spend his nights at the hospital. Towards the end if was extremely difficult. The hospital was no longer a place he liked to come and play and see everyone it became a place that he dreaded. He’d leave each night without all of us as a family and he didn’t understand why. The first night I came home was the first night I had ever left her at the hospital all night long. I have left only 2-3 times to go to dinner or run home and get clothes but never all-night long. I know Skylar very well. I can have educated conversations with doctors and I more than understand her condition. I have heard many times that my knowledge as a mom is impressive and they assume I work in the medical field by the things that I know and the things I ask. I say that because I know Skylar and to leave her is scary for me because I know what questions to ask and how to tell when she’s in pain by looking at her heart rate. There are things that I know about her because I’m her mom and I’ve been around her and most people would never know to look for it or know about it because they don’t know her. I’ll admit when it comes to her I am a control freak. I’m sure if you ask my family they will say that I am a control freak about more than just her. However, that first night when I got home with Sawyer I cried on the way home and I really broke down when I got home. It felt empty and even though I knew she was at the hospital I had this feeling of this is what it would be like without her and it took my breath away.
It’s also hard to not only be a special needs mom but to try to work full time on top of that is extremely hard. Having a child with chronic medical issues is full time. I don’t like to say job, but it consumes your day. There are constant phone calls with doctors and doctor’s visits and you are trying to balance your work life with your personal life. You feel guilty for not being at work but not guilty enough to not take your child to the doctor. You send them to school when you’d give anything to keep them home because you want to be there for them when they are having bad days, but you know that you have 3-4 doctors’ appointments coming in the next few weeks, so you don’t feel like you can tell your boss that you’re staying home. Lately, I have had this pulling at my heart because my desire to want to work and be in an office has become less of what I want for my life. I love my job and I love the work, but I love my kids more. If I were to quite my job tomorrow and in 10 years Skylar was no longer here I’d never look back and say that I wish I would have worked more and spent less time with her, but I feel like in those 10 years I could look back and say I wish I would have spent more time with her rather than being at my job. That’s easier said than done though. I don’t have the luxury of quitting my job and just deciding I’m going to stay home.  I haven’t been able to find something to allow me to do that or allow me to work from home so, as of right now, that’s not God’s plan for my life. Regardless of whatever field you work in, you’ll never have a boss that understands what it’s like unless they have walked in the same shoes as you.
Some things that people also don’t understand is that as a special needs mom you miss out on a lot and it’s lonely. We’ve cancelled plans and trips and many things due to hospital stays or just not feeling well or having a temperature too low. Your plans are always in pencil because you truly never know what kind of day they might have when you wake up one morning and just because their morning started out amazing doesn’t mean it will end that way. You have a lot of people that care and love you and your family, but close friendships are hard. They truly don’t’ understand your life and how complicated it is. I have friends and people that really care about my family and care about me, but I’ve had girl’s nights with my church group, but I truly don’t have a group of girl friends that I can call up to go do things with. I have spent most of my adult life focused on my child and that didn’t leave much for friends and time for myself. There is a lot of support and families like to get together and talk about issues and things going on in our life and it’s amazing. I love those times and I love being able to share those moments with people that understand. One thing that I told Hospice when Skylar was it was there are a lot of support groups for parents who have lost children but there is not one for parents with terminal children. I never want to spend my days focusing on the negative but sometimes it would nice to reach out to family and say I’m having a really hard day and they know exactly why and what I’m going through.

I do commend special needs parents and what they go through and what they must learn and teach themselves. It is certainly not easy. It’s like owning a care. I know the basics of how to keep my car running. I know to change the oil and put gas it in but when something goes wrong I have no clue. Parents of healthy children are checking for oil changes and if they need gas, but parents of special needs children are having to know what it all means when the car breaks down, what to look for when things start to go wrong and doing everything we know how to keep the car running as smoothly as possible. It’s way beyond oil changes and gas it’s checking under the hood and checking all aspects of the car 24/7 and the slightest glitch can set so many things off. So, mommas I see you and I’m so thankful that you chose to be the mom that you are the dad that you are and chose to give these kids an amazing life. They truly deserve everything the world has to offer and not everyone is willing to do what is necessary to ensure that happens. 

Friday, September 22, 2017

A Day in the Life

I get asked or told often, “I don’t know how you do it” referring to taking care of Skylar and dealing with everything that she goes through. The truth is I’ve never thought about “how I do it” because I just do. For my household, it’s our normal. Doctor’s offices, ER visits, OR waiting rooms, oxygen machines, suction machines, and a mini hospital in our house with all of the other equipment and supplies that we have is just how we do life. Is it hard? Absolutely! Throughout the years, I have been able to really contain my worry until it’s necessary. I get concerned of course but not that gut wrenching, can’t eat, feel nauseated type of worry that comes when you know something is not right.

Having a child with special needs is a journey that nobody could possibly understand until they can actually experience it from themselves. I work a full time job and it’s a struggle. Skylar goes to school and she has some amazing people that care for her and that truly love her so I know that she is well taken care of but having to balance it is hard. Making decisions about when to pick her up to go to the ER because you know that she needs to go but you’ve also missed so much work that you’re trying to leave as close to end of the day as possible but also keeping in mind that you are about to spend 4-5 hours in the ER at least and you don’t want to get home at midnight. You have this overwhelming sense of guilt because as her mom I want to be there when she’s upset or having a bad day but it’s not always possible. I want to stay home and be the one to care for her when she’s struggling but not working has never been an option for our family. Instead I put her on the bus and pray for her and the ones that are with her during the day and hope that she doesn’t have many issues. There isn’t a day that goes by that I am not texting her nurse about something, calling a doctor, making appointments, talking to supply companies or something to do with her or her care. For parents that have children, you understand what it’s like to be caregiver to someone and you know what it’s like to have a baby and have them be fully dependent on every need that they have. You also know what it’s like for them to become independent and be able to do things on their own and as they grow and get older the more they do for themselves until they are completely self-sufficient. For those that have never been a caregiver before will never understand what it’s like caring for someone for every need that they have and knowing that it will never change. Having Skylar has been one of my biggest blessings in my life. She has taught me so many things and I am proud to be her mom and I would love nothing more than to spend the next 40 years caring for her every need. I love being her mom and caring for her so I don’t want it come off as if I don’t but it’s hard. There are no days off and even in her best days we have a routine of respiratory care and feeding, inhalers, medicine, and more. I say this not to complain but to shed some awareness on what parents of special needs children deal with. Yes, I understand the worry that parents go through with typical children and I know that as parents we’re going to worry about our child. Having a typical child as well, I can understand the worry that parents go through but they truly have no idea. I don’t worry half as much about Sawyer as I do Skylar. He’s a healthy boy and I might wait a little longer than I should sometimes to go to the doctor because I don’t have that sense of urgency when he’s sick because I know he will be okay. Obviously, if something was wrong it would be a different story and I would worry about him like I do Skylar but I don’t treat him like a fragile child.
You also have those that will say that they aren’t sure why people pay so much attention to our children because nobody’s time is known. While that is true, you have no idea what it’s like as a parent to deal with a medically fragile child who has a limited life expectancy. You dream of your children graduating high school and going to college, getting married and having children of their own and I just hope that my child makes it to her next birthday. Almost every day I am having to do something to help her to make sure something more serious doesn’t happen. Like keeping her warm so her temperature doesn’t drop to low 90s and her heart rate doesn’t go below 30s and making sure she has oxygen and suction so she can breathe.

Living the life of a special needs parent isn’t glamorous and it’s not for everyone. It takes some really strong men and women to go through the things that we do day in and day out.  Skylar is a medically fragile child and I am fully aware that there are children that are much worse than her. She has been through a lot but I know it can always be worse and I thank God for our many blessings and every day that she’s here. I commend parents of special needs children and what they go through on a daily basis and how much they love their children and how much they do for them. We all want our children to be healthy, have “normal” lives, be treated like any other child, enjoy the same experiences as any other child and have the best quality of life that any parent could ask for. If I had one wish it would before Skylar to be able to experience life as any other child. No wheelchair, no feeding tube, no oxygen, or any disability and illnesses and to be able to run and play and eat pizza and ice cream and live life like every other child. One day she will but just not on here on this Earth.