Archive for the ‘allergy’ Category

Death and Children

October 30, 2007

There’s a quote I don’t particularly like, but it does concisely relate how I feel about the vulnerability of children: “To become a mother is to forever have your heart walking around outside your body.”

I know several people online who have lost their children to death. Somehow, they got up the next morning, continued to feed themselves, continued to breathe. Some had other children before the death; some went on to conceive the siblings after the fact. In any case I am always humbled by the strength of their humanity, supremely grateful for them that they still have children to love in the here and now.

Every new parent who actually bonds with their child knows a fear of loss. Entrusted with this new life, this entirely helpless, squirming bundle for whom you’ve been overwhelmed with love, most of us have elaborate fantasies about how we will protect them from all comers. Modern consumer society is happy to oblige this instinct, selling parents everything from car seats to outlet covers to crawling-baby kneepads. Some are useful and reasonable, most are just an elixir one can purchase to buy off that feeling of NEED. If we buy enough protective gear, then maybe that pit of fear will go away. We can protect them! We can keep them safe and with us!

Most parents get over this in time. Every woman has a benchmark: “she’s past the age of SIDS now,” or “he’s three, he can eat popcorn safely now.” They grow beyond the need to take the baby to the bathroom with them, and the parent-child bond reaches a more manageable level. I make great fun of “first time Moms” because I was a classic example of the hyper protective, freaked out Mommy. I would use a stroller in the mall for my first daughter, when I wore a sling everywhere else, because I could put her carseat in it and make this hermetically sealed baby bubble, shielding her from strangers’ eyes and germs. By the time we had our third child, he never even got to use the travel system; who had time to navigate all that equipment?

The truth is, however, there is a big part of my heart still trapped in first-Mommy mode. We all know how horrible it must be to lose a child. We all know that our days are not promised to us. We all say we can not even imagine the heartache…. but frankly, I think I can. My daughter was 13 months old when she had her first anaphylactic reaction to peanuts. She was 18 months old when her allergist told me her IgE count was unusually elevated, even for his office. “This is one very allergic little girl,” he said to us. But I was already well on my way to trusting the child, trusting life to take care of itself. He knew I wasn’t understanding him. When someone looks you in the eye and tells you deliberately, “Listen to me. She will die if you don’t keep these substances away from her,” life pauses. Time stops. He got our attention. He changed my life.

Since then, her general health has improved to the point where she’s probably healthier than most of her peers. While she still reacts to things, she hasn’t had an anaphylactic reaction since she was three. It’s easy to become complacent when her allergies only manifest anymore as the stuffy nose that so many of us walk around sporting. To look at her, to see her life and how easily she navigates our world, most people have no clue. She looks like a flourishing little girl with a nose-picking habit. I am both grateful and proud (for the flourishing part, anyway.) But sometime, at some point during nearly every day of my life, I feel that chill. This is something I do pray for: please let my children outlive me. please.

In my home community, the general attitude regarding food allergies isn’t very accomodating. “Just don’t eat it!” or “YOU need to keep her HOME if she’s that sensitive,” were the prevailing sentiments. They either didn’t get it, or more likely, they truly didn’t care. For us, with our awareness of a new layer of cruelty in the world, it wasn’t until she was six that we started to relax out of that first-parent fear a bit: “She’s old enough to say she’s allergic. She’s old enough to ask about it, to say no.” Even now, I know she’s not old enough to discern whether people are wrong, though, and it dismays me every time I have to correct an adult who has told my child to eat something that would harm her. Every time, I think about what would have happened had I not been there. Every time, I get nauseous and realize that my experience as a mother, our experience as parents, is different from most others’. They can’t understand and they never will.

Nathan was seven this year when he died. Quinn would have turned seven this October. Their mothers know what it is to lose that greatest privilege and joy. Yet they’re still breathing. They’re still mothering. I wonder whether they resent their courage and the admiration they receive; because to them, those qualities are not a result of anything they have chosen for their families. They are coping with something they hate. I care for these women, I grieve with them. But just the fact they exist proves these things happen. The idea that our children were born the same time just pierces me. Death does come for children, and the obnoxious reality is that for some of us the odds are higher than others. All I can do is outwardly ignore the possibility and take comfort that we’re doing the best we can. So is G.

My focus has shifted from protecto-mode to life mode. The allergy doesn’t manage us anymore, we manage it. It’s taken me years to get here, and I remind myself to take each moment into my heart. It’s her life, and I gave it to her to live it.

Placeholder for our wonderful zoo trip

October 8, 2007

wherein I post pictures of the nice meet up we had with Nikay (including free boxes of won’t-poison-you animal crackers they gave each child)

and

try not to cry again that I barely made it home because the tranny on THIS van has decided to kill itself.

Blueberry

July 26, 2007

~N~ is improving drastically. He spent the entirety of yesterday looking and acting normally. The rapport between the children continued until the evening, when he started being really annoying to his sister, and she finally started screaming back. I noticed then (around supper time) that few hives were returning and his eye was red again. I dosed him with benadryl, and proof positive that the reaction is abating in total, he went to sleep quickly. I have noticed in massive reactions like this, the benadryl doesn’t help them sleep if it’s so busy fighting the hives.

Speaking of ~N~, who I call “Blueberry” after his pretty eyes, we spent some time yesterday at the Blueberry farm. It made for an odd Lunch-with-friends because we neither lunched nor spent much time with them, but we saw TheGreenMama and B and barely missed Mackattack. Blueberries rock, man. We all decided we had to stock for the winter, like NOW. As far as I know we all plan to go back as well. (I am musing now whether I should just pack the car while the children sleep so we can get it out of the way.)

The children were extremely excited to go berry picking, and they refused to believe I meant another farm besides Terry’s. We would have left an hour earlier had they not been making arts and crafts projects to give their favorite farmer. Unfortunately as we entered Puyallup, they both realized they’d left them.

After the farm, where we picked 6 pounds of blueberries together, G spent the afternoon making bendie people for their castle and treehouse. They took this class from the Freelance Mama one year ago on an MDC campout–One YEAR!– and have shown little interest in it since. Now G cranked out 7 of them in three hours, very specific to the pattern FM showed them. Kids and their minds amaze me. She made an entire cast of little people based on a story she had written in her head about a farmer and his son who turned out to be a uper hero. She then had to create a supervillain, of course.

Answers to Allergy

July 25, 2007

It’s like nothing every happened, almost. This morning the kids are actively happy and engaged, building their own houses with chairs and stuffed animals and sheer energy. We’re leaving to go blueberry picking in a few minutes.

The big kids slept in a play tent in the living room last night together. G wouldn’t leave N’s side all day and last night, she insisted she be the one giving him the full body wipe-down with hydrocortisone. The green goo– THE GREEN GOO, people!– wasn’t even fast enough for him. She wiped out the bathtub last night from his oatmeal bath. I haven’t seen G this attentive to N’s needs since he was “the baby.” That alone has been a huge, shining silver lining in this week’s cloud.

To answer my friends:

Nick has already had IgE allergy testing, and the only thing he registers as allergic to is milk. He was not tested for pomegranate, so I think that is a safe bet. He is not allergic to milk in challenging, and we will stave off testing for now.

When I looked it up, the pomegranate allergy is strongly co-morbid with pollen allergies, and that we know he reacts harshly to those. (remember his reaction in April?)

Anaphylaxis is an allergic reaction involving more than one system of the body. Full body hives + vomiting + diarrhea = anaphylaxis . He did NOT however, have a drop in blood pressure or in his O2 sats. That means he was not in anaphylactic shock, I saw the numbers myself, he wasn’t even close. He was just miserable as all hell. For now, we have a new Epipen prescription, this time in Nick’s name.

I will admit to having a whiny lump in my throat just writing that. I have worked and prayed towards our children going into a safety place, not anticipating them to develop new problems. I know this is not the worst problem we could have. I am grateful, truly, for the issues we have to be just and only what they are. We handled it well and efficiently with OTC meds, and he was never in danger. But the might-have-beens are terrifying to me, and I am still reeling that “it’s the wrong child.”

Exhausted. EXHAUSTED. Or, B-O-Y-B-O-Y-B-O-Y

July 24, 2007

Yesterday it began with a delicious new flavor of berry cooler: pomegranate blueberry fizz, at Harbor Greens. We all enjoyed it. Within an hour, ~N~ had hives so bad I was damning myself for trying a different laundry soap. His back and trunk were livid from the waist line up with huge, welting hives. Gave him benadryl, gave him a bath, all was well.

I went to bed at 12.30.

This morning at 3 AM, he woke up puking and voiding the other end. Hives were back. I gave him benadryl again and sat with him on the couch until he fell back asleep.

5AM. Boy Jr wakes up wailing. Settle him back to sleep by 5.30.

7 AM. N pukes again, hives are BAD. On his knees, on his shoulder, on his ears, on his eyelids. Everywhere. Give him benadryl, he keeps it down.

Eats 4 eggs for late breakfast. Keeps it down.

Noon, hives start peeking out again and the itchies start. He starts to cry as his hands swell so fast it hurts. I give him benadryl at 12.45 and put him in an oatmeal bath. He starts to scream as his lips and eyelids swell. He shows me on his hand where he was stung by a bee yesterday Now, I don’t know whether to attribute this to beesting or pomegranate. Call the pede.

“Go to the ER,” they say. “Keep the epipen close,” they say.

By the time we meet TheGreenMama at the (new! local!) ER, he has mellowed out from the pain, but now his feet and hands are swelling, along with his ears. His eye whites are red. On full adult doses of benadryl, he had hives from his scalp to his eyelids to the soles of his feet.

N-boy, do you have to do this to us quarterly?

The Doc– incidentally the same doc who saw Nick for his last emergency, in 2005– is putting his money on the pomegranate juice. So random. So random.

I am so tired.

Sitemeter Guilt

July 24, 2007

Sometimes I feel like I have nothing about which to blog. Then there are weeks like this past one, where if I even tried to abbreviate my life into a few blog entries, I’d be chained to the messy computer desk. People keep checking for updates though, and I feel guilty. Shah.

It’s been a good week though; I remembered to go to both the Farmer’s Market and the free day at the Tacoma Art Museum. I was able to spend my 27.00 (this is ~L~nomic replacement of the weekly CSA expenditure) on a good haul of fruits and veggies. I so rarely remember that I could have spent twice that and been in fine, but I didn’t want to be wasteful. I love Farmer’s markets. I am currently eating a cheesecake with local strawberries. I am thrilled because G loves cheesecake with an unholy passion, and we can never buy the beautiful strawberry one from Costco due to the allergy issues. This one looks just like it. :)

This time, the kids all participated in the arts room at the TAM. By the time we left, D-baby was insane so we didn’t get too many stories in at the art library, but it was very enjoyable watching him paint and paint and paint.

Niki left us for Hawaii, so she has some interesting blog entries going on right now.

The Prof flew in yesterday from Gawgia and the first thing she said to me when she got off the plane was “It’s raining.” While she is from KY, she is a true Southerner now and I know what she’s feeling; it’s not that it’s rainy, or that it’s in the 60s. It’s just that for her, it’s a 30 degree temperature drop from her morning commute. It can be jarring. I promised her summers here were clear, because that’s been my experience. Whoops. Tomorrow it’s going to clear up for us all.

N-the-boy has an ugly full body rash, a clear reaction to something. I originally thought it was to some laundry soap but now we think it’s from the dip he had in the pool earlier. Of course, D-meister is not reacting and he swam too, so who knows.

P-Daddy has some interest in a choice position with the county. That’s giving us some serious food for thought. Gut = no movement right now.

Tie-Dye party

June 22, 2007

We had a party here for MackAttack’s 7 yo Dominator. I did the food and Niki did the tie-dye and a double chocolate brownie cake– with no dairy!
Fun! E
ducational! Did I mention Loud?


Thinking about tomorrow…

May 12, 2007

and wondering if we can make a giant cake out of these recipes. We have at least 20 people in attendance tomorrow and at least two of the boys who are coming are allergic to milk; I just don’t feel like saying “oh, except for you” one more time.

M, Milk-free; E, Egg-free; W, Wheat-free; P, Peanut-free; S, Soy-free; N, Nut-free

Double Layer Birthday Cake
M, E, P, S, N
3 cups cake flour
1 3/4 cups sugar
1 1/4 cups water
1/2 cup shortening
3 T. water, 3 T. oil, 2 tsp. baking powder; mixed together
2 1/2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
1 1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour two cake pans. In a large bowl, combine all ingredients. Using an electric mixer, beat until well mixed, approximately 4 minutes. Pour batter into cake pans. Bake 40 to 45 minutes, or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool in pans 10 minutes before removing to wire racks. Frost when completely cooled.

Note: Baking powder is intentionally listed twice in this recipe. The combination of 3 T. water, 3 T. oil, 2 tsp. baking powder; mixed together is the substitution for 2 eggs.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Cocoa Frosting
M, E, W, P, S, N

1/2 cup milk-free, soy-free margarine, softened
1/2 cup Hershey’s® unsweetened cocoa powder
2 2/3 cups unsifted confectioners sugar
1/4 cup water
1 tsp. vanilla extract
Beat margarine on medium speed in large mixer bowl until softened, about 1 minute. Add remaining ingredients. Beat on low speed until ingredients are moistened. Beat on medium speed until creamy.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Hershey’s Special Dark Bark
M, E, W, P, S, N

1 (8-oz.) package of Hershey’s Unsweetened Baking Chocolate, broken into pieces
1/4 cup plus 1 tsp. shortening
1/8 tsp. vanilla extract
2 cups confectioners sugar

Grease 9×9-inch pan. Set aside. In medium bowl, microwave chocolate and shortening on high for 1 1/2 to 2 minutes, until mixture is melted and smooth when stirred. Add vanilla extract. Gradually stir in sugar. If mixture becomes too thick, knead with clean hands. Spread out in prepared pan. Cover tightly. Refrigerate until firm. Break into pieces. Store, well covered, in refrigerator.

Note: After changing the formulation on its Special Dark chocolate bar to include milk, Hershey’s developed this recipe for milk-allergic consumers.

Another new thing learned

April 25, 2007

An acute allergy attack looks a lot like skull fracture.

You’d think in the land of the Wolfmeisters that we’d be used to allergy issues, but it was “the wrong child” whose eyes swelled his face into bruised distortion last night. Mere seconds after he’d slipped on a wet bathroom floor so badly that his feet came to rest on the sink, his eyes started to swell shut. I know they weren’t swelling before, because he was going into the bathroom to check out a scratch on his cheek that I’d just pointed out to him.

“It sure looks like an allergy attack, but to what???” We gave him benadryl, we held him all night and we made sure he wasn’t sensitive to light, in pain, or incoherent.

“It sure looks like an allergy attack, but that was a hard fall… why on earth now? And why is it bruised???” He swore he didn’t hit his eye on the way down, and he tells the story the same way each time we ask it. We thought… maybe Romulus? He’d been on ~N~’s lap just prior to the bathroom incident…. he got a haircut earlier….. maybe?

This morning, when 12 hours of sleep and an adult dose of benadryl hadn’t reduced the swelling on ~N~’s left eye, we decided to take him in.

My last bit of cool, seasoned parental calm went out the window when I considered the consequences of “what if I am wrong?”

We called the Pede on her cell phone and she saw us the first hour the office opened. They checked his orbital bones, palpated his head and checked for any fluid building behind his eye.

Just a bad coincidence that it started just after his hard fall. After dissecting the situation here and with the pede, it was Romulus’ haircut that caused the drama. Our poor poodle was so disgusting that every bit of the pollen from this spring was embedded in the dog’s dreadlocked hair.

Yes. A bad coincidence. But it had me scared. It had me praying for something instead of my normal, private “thank you” pulses to God. For this 24 hours it was a cradled, sleeping head and a whispered “Please help my child.” It’s easy now, with the full knowledge that everything will be fine, to think that this is melodramatic. But when you’re there, in the unknown, it’s all you can do to steel yourself against dark waves of fear. As it stands, gratefully, he will be Just Fine. The swelling is going down incrementally.

Now I can go back to being thankful again.

Anaphylaxis

March 8, 2007

Link so I remember where it is:

http://blog.naver.com/oise523?Redirect=Log&logNo=80005491141