Showing posts with label Fairytales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fairytales. Show all posts

Monday, November 1, 2010

Chapter 3..."I Wear it For My Mom"

(Okay...this is kinda long...of course...
but if you're wondering about the title, please read to the end.
It's really precious!)
For those of you who know me, you know what this chapter stuff is about.
And the only reason I use the word "chapter" is so you know what this blog post is about and you can choose whether or not to read on.

For those of you who don't know me, I was diagnosed with MS on July 2 of this year.
Since then, I have written about it for a few reasons...
I know I can't face this on my own so the support, prayers and love of family and friends mean everything,
and what better way to reach out then my lil ol' blog:)
I also felt that there might be someone who was or may be struggling with this out there who could use someone to talk to...some HOPE.

So that's the reason for this and the other posts.
Having said that, this is the 3rd and final "chapter" to this little saga in my life.
At least until something changes, and I hope that is a LONG way off!

In fact, there isn't much I am going to say.
I've had good days and "not so good" days.
(Saying "bad days" just sounds...well, bad:)
One of the worst was the day my first supply of daily shots came.
3 months worth of syringes and needles and it looked like a lifetime supply.
Taylor was in Maine dancing and Jordan was having fun at a friend's house...
good thing, too.
When I opened that box, I burst into tears.
Not because of the shots themselves but for what they represented.
It just hit me that this is the real thing.

Since then, I have been doing "GREAT" as my Dr. says.
Other than being tired, battling low energy, feeling very emotional at times and a restless feeling in my legs many nights,
I'm okay. 

Actually, I now realize I'm MUCH better off than many people in this world, which is why I want to bring this to a close.  I needed time to process this in my sometimes fried brain (hey...I can say this now and it's kind of true:) and I have thought about it a lot.
I'm ready to move on.
I take my shot every morning and if I'm tired, try to grab a quick nap during the day.
If that's what I have to deal with, I can take it...
and I will take it with a smile and be grateful that this is ALL I have to worry about for now.
It's time to focus on people who need ME now that I have leaned on them.
It's time to once and for all learn to say "no" if I want or need to and to do the things that are really important to me...
like travel to Europe with my family,


walk on the beach with my girls and CUDDLE the cutest boys EVER,

And I need to lighten up life...and my blog.
If I want to talk about something silly like painting a room white or pink decorations for the Holidays, than that's what I'll talk about:)

I wish I could thank each of you in person and give you a big hug to let you know how much your comments, emails and PRAYERS have meant to me over the past few months.
I am truly blessed!!!

And to my family who has been so understanding...
always concerned and always there for me...thank you...
and I LOVE YOU!!

My husband Phil has been extra THOUGHTFUL and I am so grateful.
(and by the way, my doctor, who is also his friend, tells me to take advantage..it can't last.  hahaha.  But he has been wonderful...so far! ;)

To my sweet girls...who are still WISHING this will all go away...

Taylor, you weren't here initially but you knew, even from far away, when I was struggling and I know it hurt you not to be here.
I hope you understand why I didn't let you come home when you heard about me.
I wanted you to be happy and continue to do something you love.
Usually I can't bring myself to walk away from you when I take you to camp,
but this time felt different.
I believe God brought you to this wonderful, safe place in BEAUTIFUL Maine that felt like family so I would be able to walk away and face what I knew was coming.
Your calls and cards meant the world to me and I could cry thinking about how sweet you were/are.  In the morning you bring me coffee and always ask to make sure I took my medicine...and have no problem getting it for me if I haven't...
You offer to miss your ballet class,
even when we both know it is important to you,
if you think I need a break.
And you are ALWAYS willing to do the cooking if I feel lazy...
which seems to be OFTEN:)
I know this isn't always easy and you don't need ANY help being kind and compassionate
but this will make you even more sensitive to others.
I LOVE YOU!

When it comes to shots, things are different with Jordan,
who hates to think of me taking a shot
and will move mountains not to look at my medicine case:)
And that's okay Jordie!

I actually think it's kind of SWEET...
You would do anything for me also and you do!
You just don't want to think of your mum* poking at herself because YOU don't like to get shots.
(you DO know that medical school + sick people - shots, right? :)
You are aware the minute I am tired, as is Taylor, and take such good care of me.
You are also willing to sacrifice tennis lessons or fun times with friends if your MUM needs a break:)
(***We recently spent time in LONDON and since then, I am "MUM" to my girls.  LOVE IT!!!)
And I know you were not away at camp but were right here,
for what turned out to be a rough summer.
You were such a strong young lady through a very difficult time
and this experience will be with you forever and make you an even MORE compassionate person than you already are and an INCREDIBLY compassionate Dr. someday:)
AND...you tried to keep my mind on FUN things...like parasailing...
 (Yep, that's us:) 

I always worried that the "empty nest" syndrome would hit me hard when it arrives...
now I fear it will devastate me.
YIKES!!!
Who wouldn't hate to let these girls go,
even though I know that's exactly what we raise them to do.
But I hope I have at least a few more years before I face that:)
And I know that I have GOOD GIRLS and we will always be there for each other!

See...this is what I mean...it's time to move on.

I KNOW I am blessed in so many ways.

And the other day, when Jordie told me she got a "100%...50 points" on an essay she was required to write for school, I thought that was wonderful.
When I asked her what it was about, she said she had to write about a "change" in her life.
It was to be a change she could write freely about for about 30 minutes or so and not to worry about punctuation...just start writing...
so she wrote about me.
Yep...I thought the same thing...
bring on the tissues.
I'm going to end with Jordie's 8th grade English paper.
THIS is why I am BLESSED...
and THIS is why it's time to move on.



Jordan D.
1.05 Explore the Changes in Your Life
10/11/10

     Change has the ability to completely alter your life at any time.  Most of us will probably never understand  things have changed in our lives.  I believe everything happens for a reason…and yet, I can’t seem to grasp the fact that there is any reason good enough to explain why this happened to my family.  In situations similar to mine, you can’t help but think that sometimes change is the worst case scenario.  I don’t mean things like learning a new hobby or activity, changing your hairstyle, painting your room, and so on.  I mean major life changes that you can never undo or quit if you get tired of it.  The change that happened over the summer was unexpected to say the least.

    Summer is my favorite time of the year.  There’s hardly any stress and a lot of relaxing and having fun with family and friends.  My story begins right after returning home from a girl’s trip to Maine, where we had to drop my sister off at a ballet intensive.  While waiting in the Neurologists’ office with my Dad, who I could see had tears in his eyes and was someone who never really cries, I knew not only did our summer change but our lives.  My Dad is very high up in administration for the two big hospitals in our town. Because of this, when he was driving me to my tennis tournament that morning and instead pulled into the Neurologist parking lot, I knew he had seen the results of my Mom's brain MRI scan since it was done at his hospital.   With my sister gone for 6 weeks, it was a very hard morning for me.  I was the one who was with my mom that day when my dad went back to work.  I was the one who had to be strong during her first day of IV steroids. 

My Mom was diagnosed with MS (Multiple Sclerosis) on July 2 .  The most devastating thing is the unknown.  MS is an extremely unpredictable disease, which means we won’t know how serious her case is for about a year or two after watching the progression.  As of right now there is no cure, only a shot she has to take everyday for the rest of her life to keep symptoms away, and hopefully they stay away!  It was a scary time for everyone.  I was glad my Mom was getting so much support through phone calls, emails, and letters. but part of me wanted everyone to stop telling her that it was going to be ok. I remember thinking that it most definitely was not ok at the time and it might never be! 

I feel so young when I cry or get upset about this, but to be honest I could be 30, 40, or 50 and if this happened I’d still be hoping it would all go away like a bad dream!  When you think about it, it’s not every day you’re told your Mom has lesions in her brain that aren’t supposed to be there so I think I have the right to cry no matter how old I am.  I am so thankful for my friends who were more caring then I could’ve imagined.  Things are basically back to normal, which is a relief!  We live our lives like any other family. We aren’t as upset about it as much anymore and we aren’t mad it happened.  It did happen and it’s just a part of our life now. 

    In the end, one of the most important changes in my life was caused all because of MS.  Two meaningless little letters but when put together they change lives.  Like in all things, there are good days and bad days.  This whole experience has taught me that anything can happen and it’s important to treasure the time you have with the people you love.  We are going to make the most of this.  My mom can still do almost everything as before but now we will try to raise money for a cure or better medicine for her disease.  When people ask me what the orange bracelet on my wrist stands for I simply say “my Mom”.  


 Yes...I am VERY proud of my girls!

And YES...we STILL believe in FAIRYTALES and more importantly...
the GRACE of GOD...


Thursday, July 15, 2010

Happily Ever After...

...or "happiness is being married to your BEST friend".
60 years ago today...
Leo married Irene...
the pretty girl he saw walk by the service station
with her girlfriend.


Hmmm...wonder if he whistled?:)
Anyway, here they are
60 years later,
4 daughters later,
11 grandchildren later,
and lots of great grandchildren later...
still married...
still spending life together with their best friend.


Best friend?
Don't they have other friends?
yes...there have been many for both throughout those 
60 years...
but when all is said and done...
their "bestest friend"...
is the one by their side...
every day...
for 60 years.


What an example for
their daughters...
grandchildren...
great-grandchildren...
and many others who crossed their paths
through the years...
like neighbors,
co-workers,
friends,
campers,
golf buddies,
and choir members...
to name a few.

I think it is probably simple...
don't get married unless it is to your best friend...
and you could happily be by their side for
60 years...
or more.


(See...you can blame them for me believing in 
happily ever after:)
Hey...what did you expect from a girl with a blog called
fairytales and grace?


Happy 60th Anniversary to my mom and dad!
I love you!!!

Suzy
XOXOXOXO


Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Cinderella...


You can probably tell by my blog header that I like fairytales.
I mean, who wouldn't love to live in a castle and marry Prince Charming? (heehee)


What's wrong with a little dreaming...especially when you are a little girl?
When Taylor was little, I had the words to
"When You Wish Upon A Star" painted around her room.
Jordie had "Somewhere Over the Rainbow"...
If my girls don't believe in fairytale endings,
there is something seriously wrong here. :)


Real life happens soon enough anyway.
And hopefully that real life has a happy ending...
even if it takes awhile to happen.



I'm inspired by my daily espresso minute from iMOM.
If you are a mother, please check this out!
Every day it has the greatest tips for raising kids of all ages.
Today it was all about raising Cinderellas.
It really got me thinking...

Thinking that too often we put down the "Cinderellas" of this world.
What's wrong with Cinderella?
She was kind, generous, gracious, forgiving, loving...
a hard worker who didn't expect her life to be easy...
was grateful for what she had and didn't expect everything in life to be handed to her.
She believed that if she was all of these things...sincerely,
someday her Prince Charming would come.



Hmmm...not such a bad thing to want to be like Cinderella someday.
Nothing wrong with wishing and hoping that by being "a good girl"
that someday you would meet a guy who would recognize that and appreciate that...
and sweep you off your feet:-)



On the other hand, we should be scared...
VERY SCARED...
to raise girls to be like the evil stepsisters.

You know...
girls who are selfish, conceited, superficial, shallow, vain, inconsiderate, mean...
who think that they DESERVE the best things in life NOW...
without having to earn them or work for them...
They are the ones who have the cliques...
the mean girls...


the nasty bullying types...
who belittle those who don't have the latest clothes, phone, car.
And unfortunately, this begins earlier then ever!


You might think this is too harsh...
but this is a very real description of MANY young girls today.

The pressure to "fit in",
the celebrity culture we live in...
the parents who can't say no...
combined with the thinking of many young women
that they "deserve" the best things in life...
that it's okay to go after what you want in life,
no matter what you have to say or do to get it...
is definitely more like the evil stepsisters
than Cinderella.

Not to say we should pamper and create girls who think they are
"entitled" to a Cinderella life...
That was the life of the evil stepsisters.
You could say Cinderella earned her fairytale.



So the next time your little girl says she wants to be
a princess like Cinderella when she grows up,
don't brush it off.
She might be on to something.



Maybe you will tell her the difference between
storybook characters and real life.


That's okay.
I don't remember ever having to sit my girls down and tell them
there was a good chance they would never live in a "castle".


Believe me, there are enough people in this world who can't wait to shatter
dreams and "be realistic".
(As if trying to raise nice girls who have hopes and dreams and are
willing to work for them is a bad thing:)

Maybe your life has been so un-fairytale like that you can't stand the thought of
her believing in happily ever after.
I hope not...


It's like the mother who says no to her child when they ask for the balloon
because it is a waste of money that will either pop or fly away...


But even though we know it won't last forever,
that bright, beautiful balloon is still magical to a child...
still a childhood moment to be enjoyed and cherished.

Maybe there is a little something we can take from
Cinderella for our girls today.



We should encourage our little girls to dream...
and to go after those dreams...
like Cinderella did...
kindly, graciously, morals intact, caring for others
and working hard to accomplish those dreams.

Why write about this today?
Maybe because I simply need to remind myself and my girls
that dreams can come true...
that they take hard work and planning...
and that when faced with the choice...
they should be more like a Cinderella if at all possible!
Because they will always be my princesses...

...in the best possible way.

"Life itself is the greatest of fairytales"
Hans Christian Anderson






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