Category Archives: Life

An Awful Day

Helsinki did not turn out to be the fun weekend trip we had imagined; On our second morning, we woke to the alarm and Kay saw an urgent email from his father, so he Facetimed him. I was still half-asleep when my FIL jerked me out of my reverie with the most unexpected words: “Mami liegt im sterben”. (Mami is dying.)

I didn’t understand all of the rest of their conversation as Kay’s father explained what happened, but Kay told his father, “I’m coming,” and then we flew into action trying to find a flight home as soon as possible.

We knew his mother had a brain bleed and it was bad, but I was afraid to ask more on the bus to the airport. Neither of us could believe this was happening. The phone call seemed like an awful nightmare. Everything was moving in slow motion and we were afraid to hear more news about her before we made it home. We prayed for a miracle.

It took us eight hours and two delayed flights to get home and by the time we made it to the hospital in Winterthur, I gripped Kay’s hand tightly as we entered the ICU ward together.

A nurse met us inside the dark ward to take us to Kay’s mother. As she started explaining how it would be overwhelming to see his mother hooked up to a ventilator and many tubes, Kay desperately asked for an update on her situation and her outlook for recovery. That’s when the nurse explained that it was too late… she would not recover from this. She didn’t say the words then, but I started crying as I realized my sweet MIL was brain dead.

It was scary and foreign walking through the dim back halls of the ward to the patient rooms, past elderly people hooked up to machines and people obviously in pain. We arrived at my MIL’s bed and it was too much… the machines, the tubes, the ventilator, and there sitting next to her was my FIL holding her hand.

“It’s all over,” he said as we all started crying together. We hugged him tight, so tight, and tried to catch our breath that this is reality, that this was really happening.

Through tears, my FIL explained how they had been watching TV together on Saturday night and then my MIL went up to bed while my FIL took a shower. When he came to bed she was snoring loudly, far too loudly, so he asked her what the deal was, and when she didn’t wake after he tried to rouse her, he knew something was terribly wrong. He called the ambulance immediately, but when the squad arrived they said the outlook was grim. She’d obviously had a massive brain hemorrhage.

At the hospital, scans confirmed that a third of her brain had filled with blood. Not only was the location in the inner brain inoperable, but recovery chances from such a massive bleed were next to nothing.

We waited for my BIL to arrive from the airport. His reaction was even more heartbreaking than Kay’s. Disbelief and utter, total heartbreak. These boys had such a special connection to their mother with Portuguese, it was truly excruciating to see this connection sever in front of their eyes.

Later on, the doctors explained how it was likely that she went to bed and very shortly after had an entirely debilitating, expunging stroke. They explained how often, stroke victims have some physical response in the hospital if they are still “there” at all, like raised body temperature, sweating, etc, that show that the person is suffering. My MIL had none of that.

She displayed no sign of hearing upon arrival, pupil reactions in one eye were already gone and followed with the other one by mid afternoon, and she did not display any kind of sign that she was still with us. Her brain had stopped telling her body to pump her lungs, but aside from that, everything else was normal. Her heart beat, she was warm to the touch and it appeared as if she were just sleeping and might wake soon.

Together, as a family, we agreed that the doctors would do one more neurological exam before marking her official death. We all agreed that we should donate most of her organs. My FIL and her had only talked about it a little, but the rest of us were also sure that she would have wanted to help others in any way possible. That was the kind of woman she was.

The transplant coordinator thanked us for all coming. We asked her what she meant, isn’t it normal to come in an event like this? But she told us, unfortunately most of the time she deals with families where they either cannot deal with the circumstances or do not want to come. That was surprising and depressing, but it also showed us how strong our little family is.

Those hours in the hospital were truly horrible and I hope it is a long, long, long time before we ever see an ICU like that again, if ever. There were a lot of words in German that I had never, ever heard before and hope I do not have to hear them again for a long time.

We spent the following week planning her funeral and asking ourselves, why? Why her? Why now…?

She had just turned 64, the retirement age for women in Switzerland. By law, you must work until the end of the month of your birth to reach your pension, something she and I complained about together because we were both born on the first of our birth months. She had one more week, three working days, until her pension started. One fucking week.

Instead of bringing the snacks to work that she’d purchased for her leaving party, my FIL was heading there to clean out her locker. We canceled their joint 60th birthday for my FIL and retirement party for her and on what should have been her first day of retirement, we held her funeral mass. How’s that for irony?

The next day, on the fifth anniversary of my engagement to Kay, we buried her in the family plot that we’d all visited together just a few years ago. We knew she wanted to be buried there, but never, ever imagined that we would take her to rest there so early.

It is still so hard to believe that she is really gone. We accept it, but it is still so difficult knowing that just a short time ago she was here. Moments before she went to bed, she wrote on one of my Helsinki photos on Facebook: “Have three wonderful days in Helsinki. Kisses.”

I really, really wish we had had three wonderful days there and that we could tell her all about it right now. 🙁

Gluten-free Year One

Well here we are, one year later.

When people I haven’t seen for a long time asked me how I have been doing, it’s hard to hide the truth: It was a tough year. It was a depressing year.

“Do you feel better now that you cut gluten out?” they ask. No, not really.Even with a complete diet overhaul to fix my nutrient deficiencies from the celiac damage and exercising daily to improve my health, I have experienced more stomach pain and problems in the last year than I did the entire time I was stuffing my face with gluten every day.

I also spent a lot of time inexplicably hungry. I have never tried to lose weight, so I don’t know what dieting feels like. Do others also feel like their stomach is caving in and that they might pass out if they don’t eat something soon?

The truth is, I still do not know what I should be eating in order to feel full, satisfied and pain-free. My gliadin levels are normal again and I’m not experiencing my gluten-reactions, but my stomach is still all sorts of unhappy more often than I’d like.

There is this promise of magically feeling like a “new person” when you cut gluten out and while it feels slightly different, I don’t feel reenergised or reborn. I still feel broken and vulnerable, like there is still so much more for me to figure out in order to be a happy, healthy person.

Mentally, I felt much better after ridding gluten from our house, but I’ve almost entirely stopped eating out in Zurich, which is hard for some friends to understand. I anxiously research tons before trips and bring snacks so I always have safe food to eat. I am much less spontaneous regarding food and easily upset when food plans change.

Through the year I’ve gotten better with protein so that I don’t feel hungry all day long. At home, I’ve come a long way from a totally overwhelmed newbie. Cooking gluten-free at home is a breeze and I slowly started experimenting with more foods that I used to eat  gluten versions, like cake and pizza, for example.

(Breaded fish tacos with homemade corn tortillas)

Actually… that’s a lie, I haven’t really done a proper cake, only a cheesecake, but I am baking one tonight. 😉 It’s just taken this long to get to a place where I feel comfortable dealing with multiple types of flour and branching out into new baking territory.

Hopefully in another year I will feel better internally, but it’s also still depressing to go to the grocery knowing that half of the store is not applicable to me anymore. Even a year later, I am still depressed to shop for groceries alone and find myself looking at all the foods I cannot eat whenever Kay is not there. There are constant reminders of my former diet everywhere, from the bakery smells in the train station in the morning to the birthday and visitor cakes sitting across from my desk in the kitchenette at work.

I must also be conscious of whatever goes into my mouth whenever I’m not eating my own prepared food. It’s getting better, but it’s never going to be as good as when it wasn’t a problem. I think I will never stop wishing that it wasn’t a problem.

Our Geeky Adventure: Let’s have a chat

The Geeks posted a link-up over the weekend, and I’m participating because I’m really behind on my blogging and still need to edit photos from all our traveling in December and January!

1. What are your goals for the year? Do you have a plan to accomplish them?

I’ve almost reached my one year anniversary at my gym, where I workout every weekday morning before work. I plan to keep improving my overall health both with diet and exercise. My New Year resolution is actually to work on being able to do the splits! We’ll see how far I make it with that goal. 🙂

2. What’s your favorite snow day activity?

Making snowmen and coming inside for hot cocoa. Who doesn’t love that sticky snow that clumps together perfectly? Sadly we haven’t had that much snow in recent years. The photo from below was from 2010 before Kay and I were married!

 

3. What is used more often in your kitchen this time of year- the oven or the slow cooker?

I think I actually use my slow cooker more often in the summer so that I can avoid heating up the whole kitchen and spending time in the kitchen “working” while I could be at the lake or enjoying sunshine outside. Whatever the reason, we’ve also started using Cooksmarts for meal planning and they seem to have us roast veggies or meat all the time. I’m not complaining, this meal Kay made over the weekend was awesome!

Okay folks, it’s your turn- answer any or all of these questions in a post on your blog and link up on Our Geeky Adventure!

November Blogging Challenge

The weather has turned and Kay is away for a month, so it’s time for another blogging challenge! Three posts a week for a month. Let’s see if I can keep up. I’ve been writing a few posts for the Weddingbee “After the Wedding” series lately, but I’ve got some ideas for things I’d like to update here too.

It’s chilly and rainy here, but I’m keeping busy at work and exercising every mornings still.  Most evenings, I feel too beat to do anything besides watching TV and paying my bills, and sometimes even that is too tiring.

I usually look forward to the autumn and winter, but this if the first year where our summer was so dismal that I don’t feel ready for the cold. They say we’re in for a big, bad winter in Switzerland this year. We’ll see!

Are you looking forward to the winter?

 

Pet Peeves for Parents on Social Media

I’m at the age where my Facebook newsfeed has turned into a sea of baby and bump photos. I truly love seeing the joy and happiness that the little ones bring, but I’ve also got a running list of pet peeves from my parenting Facebook friends.

We all know that us childless friends can be hella annoying to parents (I’m sure I often am!) but here are the things that grind my gears about parents on social media:

I love when parents celebrate the growth and progress of their little ones with monthly photos, but I am getting tired of the parents wishing their babies “Happy birthday!” every month. Some even do cake and candles every month. Really?

Have they all forgotten that birthdays are the day on which we were born? They are not ALL the days in the months that share the same numeral as a baby’s birthday. Birthdays occur annually and the term can stretch to “half-birthdays” which would be the six month mark between birthdays. Everything else is not a birthday and people sound silly referring to them as such.

Sure, babies are at an age where we describe their age in days, weeks and months, but that still doesn’t make any of those milestones a birthday. I am 327 months old today, but it would sound pretty darn ridiculous if someone wished me a “Happy 327 month birthday.” It doesn’t sound any less silly when people try to make every month until 1, 2 or 3 years into a birthday for their child.

Jane is going on a trip while  pregnant. This means baby is going on the trip too, technically. I say “technically” because “technically” the baby is not considered alive until they come into this world, you know, on their “birthday” as we previously discussed.

Personally, I believe the baby needs to be born before people can start documenting his or her visits to places. I would say “My mother went to Maine while she was pregnant with me.” but I would never say that “I went to Maine.” because it is not actually true. My mother would never have uploaded a photo of herself titled “Baby’s first trip to Maine” while she was carrying me because that sounds bizarre.


Otherwise known as “vacation” where people happen to be pregnant. Do we really need a special term for this? We travel a lot guys, I’m spoiled… what will I do… declare that I’m going on like five babymoons? And all of them I will document how much baby enjoyed its visit to Italy or Ohio or whatever.

I don’t like the term babymoon because like the traditional honeymoon term, it is thrown around with the idea that this is the one big trip before people maybe never travel again, as if your life will be over when baby arrives. Maybe that’s true, but I just think the term is excessive. Unless I have hyperemesis gravidarum, I plan on traveling multiple times while pregnant and then again when the baby is born. (Yeah, yeah… laugh it up parents when I eat my words later!)


We’ve all entered a Twitter contest or two before, but don’t be that person people have to de-friend when they enter 10 baby contests per day and stop posting real content entirely. I will re-follow people post-birth when they stop with the contest spam. Or maybe not?

I’m always irritated by people who aimlessly drive around the block wasting gas because their baby is asleep and then try to blame it on the baby and look for commiseration on social media. If they want to waste fuel, money and time driving the baby around, they shouldn’t blame it on the baby. We all feel bad for folks with cranky, colicky, never-sleeping babies, but this is a blatant waste of an increasingly limited natural resource and the parent, the adult, made the decision to keep driving. They’ll find no pity here!

I’ve only really noticed first time parents doing this. Funnily enough, this “keep the baby sleeping” trick doesn’t work as well when there is a toddler blabbering in the back about how they want a snack or need to go potty.

FWIW, my mother of nine children never kept driving us around because the current baby was asleep. If people are going to have more than one child, they might as well start practicing the baby-in-car to baby-in-house transition. I’ve heard you get bonus points if you successfully transition a sleeping baby to a crib.


I have so much beef with these scans. I think the technology is amazing and it’s exciting that parents can see their children’s faces before birth, but I do not want to see a picture of a baby covered in amniotic fluid squished in my friend’s womb.

It’s just… too personal for me. Maybe they’ll also upload some pictures of their endoscopy for us to see, no wait… they wouldn’t do that. Or would they?? I don’t know any more. Can we just wait until the baby has been safely born and cleaned up a little before we start posting pictures of him or her on social media?

I mean… how would you feel if your slimy, distorted face was paraded around the internet before you were born? Would you be OK with that decision being made for you? I would be fine if my mother only shared pictures like this with family privately. I actually don’t even necessarily need to see photos of babies covered in blood and placenta. I’m sure people should take them if they want the photos, but again… maaaybe not for the whole world to see?


Even worse are when people use their 4D scan as their profile or cover photo, or both. When it’s their profile photo, every time they show up in my newsfeed I can see their fetus again. Remember… until a baby is born, it is still a fetus inside a womb. Not all friends and family might appreciate seeing a fetus all throughout their newsfeed, even if they are over-the-moon excited for you to become a parent.

This seems to be one of the most irresistible crimes and I can totally see why. It seems harmless. There is no sweeter face in the world than someone’s own baby’s, of course they want to post their baby’s beautiful face everywhere they can! But it irks me because this is supposed to be their profile photo, not their baby’s. It violates their baby’s online privacy and misrepresents who they are.

Profile photos represent who we are every time we make a comment or post online and sometimes those comments might not be appropriate to appear like they are coming from a baby. How does it look to friends when it appears like someone’s baby is complaining about the weather, the situation in Iraq or explaining views on breastfeeding in public?

If we would turn the tables, how many of us would be weirded out if our mothers made our picture their profile photo and then started posting all over Facebook? Would you be upset if it appeared like you were making statements that were really your mother’s thoughts and words? I would find it really strange if my mother did that.

From the privacy perspective, most profile photos are always public. On Facebook, we can hide old ones, but current ones are visible to people even if they are not friends. Do people want strangers or people they are not friends with anymore to be able to see pictures of their little one because they use them as their profile photo or cover photo? It is something to be aware about.

After reading more and more about digital trust funds and the privacy of children who grow up with their whole life on display on the Internet, I have some conflicted feelings about posting photos of children online. Kay and I haven’t decided how we would handle it some day, but personally I draw the line at using my own baby’s images as my own profile picture without their permission. I still want to be “me” even if I am a mother one day. If I want a baby picture as my profile picture, I will use one of myself as a baby. That way it is still me in the photo!

Aside from the public profile photos issue, I think sharing a photo of parents and baby together as a profile picture is a much more realistic representation of people as parents. Pictures of people with their babies, spouses, friends, etc have always been fine for me because they still show people being themselves with their loved ones.

And for those very concerned with privacy, pictures of pets or symbol pictures always seem a safe bet. I’m just always surprised when friends who always had a non-personal photo switch to a picture of their baby almost immediately after giving birth or when strong, independent women do the same thing. By using just a photo of their baby, it always feels a bit to me like they are throwing away a bit of their former self as they fall head over heels in love with this new little person.

So… those are my peeves. They are just some small things I notice all over and wonder why certain people do them and others not. Overall, I am happy to be able to witness my friends’ kids growing up when in another generation, this would have been impossible. And seeing the outpouring of love and joy in everyone’s lives is really quite astonishing at times.

So parents, are you guilty of any of the items on this list? Did you have any parenting peeves before your first child that you totally do now?

Non-parents, any other pet peeves not listed here that really get to you about your parenting friends?