“If your kids get a stomach virus, YOU will get a stomach virus.”

Remember back in early February when our family experienced 10 vicious days of viral grossness? Well, apparently that wasn’t our only kick at the can (i.e. toilet) for the year. Probably because the flu shot isn’t very damn effective this year?!

We just finished ANOTHER round of the flu at our house, and yes, I’m here to tell you all about it.

We were allllllll set to go out for dinner on Friday night, to thank my stepmother for her two weeks of cooking-and-cleaning-and-childcare servitude after my surprise hysterectomy.

I was feeling OK and really, really, really looking forward to leaving the house for the first time in almost three weeks (to go somewhere other than the doctor’s office or the hospital).

We decided to have her open her birthday gifts right before leaving (her birthday was in a couple of weeks), so we didn’t have to lug them to the restaurant.

FORESHADOWING: C was doing this thing where she makes herself cough and cough, and we figured she had a little tickle or something stuck in her throat.

We sat down at the table, I was all poised to take a photo of the kids huddled around her, and then …

… two-year-old C started throwing up all over herself, the table, and the floor.

Luckily, Darling Husband was home, because he is The Handler of Vomit Situations in our family. (I’m the Run-Awayer and Hand-Wringer of Vomit Situations.)

He cleaned her up while we all discussed that, OH, SURELY, SHE DID THIS TO HERSELF. She’s brought on puking before by doing that cough-cough routine. NO NEED TO PANIC.

She was feeling good and dressed in fresh clothes, and rushed back to the table for the present-opening. My stepmother picked up the first gift, and then …

… four-year-old D ran for the bathroom, shouting that he was “gonna frow up.” Sure enough, he did “frow up” (in the proper place). My stepmother and I looked at each other and shuddered.

I will spare you the rest of the details, but let’s just say WE DID NOT MAKE IT TO THE RESTAURANT.

C and D were sick ALL. NIGHT. LONG. Well, that’s what I heard, anyway.

I barricaded myself in our bedroom, panicking at the idea of throwing up two and a half weeks after open abdominal surgery. “I cannot throw up! I just can’t!” I sob-whispered. “It will hurt too much! I’ll burst open!”

My stepmother told me to think positively, because I probably wouldn’t get sick. “No, you don’t understand!” I whimpered. “It’s like, the cardinal rule of having little kids. If your kids get a stomach bug, YOU will get a stomach bug. You can’t ESCAPE IT! I’M GOING TO GET IT! IT’S JUST A MATTER OF WHEN!”

I comforted myself by staying in bed from 5 p.m. until 11 p.m. binge-watching Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt on Netflix. (That show is awesome, BTW, and I was sad when I finished the whole season. Is there anything Tina Fey can’t do?)

C and D were still sick on Saturday (although the throwing up had passed, luckily) and then back to normal on Sunday.
Then! Guess what happened next?!
Darling Husband got sick late Monday night/early Tuesday morning.

 

He was home sick for a day, but my mom was in town to help out by that point (since I can’t drive or do much of anything for another couple of weeks). I continued to panick and attack every surface in our home with Lysol wipes.

FORESHADOWING: It did not work.

Michael was better by Tuesday night, and returned to work. Mom and I kept crossing our fingers and praying that we’d stay healthy — me, especially, because of the aforementioned not wanting to burst open in the stomach area.

But then … late Wednesday night/early Thursday morning … it struck us …

Mom and I got sick at just about the *exact* same time, which is odd, because that’s exactly what happened with C and D on Friday. We were miserable all day Thursday, but luckily that was the kids’ once-a-week day with the babysitter down the street (a.k.a. my writing day).

I was never so happy to pay for childcare, let me tell you. Michael came home early from work, fed them breakfast, ran them to the sitter’s, and then he came home and all three of us slept until it was time to pick them up.

Today really is Good Friday, because we all finally feeling halfway normal. The plague is over, for now, and hopefully we won’t have any more stomach virus outbreaks until at least the fall of 2016/winter of 2017. Please?

Seriously, if you find out which arm of the medical community was responsible for buggering up this year’s flu shot? Which WE ALL GOT, POINTLESSLY? Let me know. I have a strongly-worded GIF I’d like to send their way.

"If your kids get a stomach virus, YOU will get a stomach virus."

Remember back in early February when our family experienced 10 vicious days of viral grossness? Well, apparently that wasn’t our only kick at the can (i.e. toilet) for the year. Probably because the flu shot isn’t very damn effective this year?!

We just finished ANOTHER round of the flu at our house, and yes, I’m here to tell you all about it.

We were allllllll set to go out for dinner on Friday night, to thank my stepmother for her two weeks of cooking-and-cleaning-and-childcare servitude after my surprise hysterectomy.

I was feeling OK and really, really, really looking forward to leaving the house for the first time in almost three weeks (to go somewhere other than the doctor’s office or the hospital).

We decided to have her open her birthday gifts right before leaving (her birthday was in a couple of weeks), so we didn’t have to lug them to the restaurant.

FORESHADOWING: C was doing this thing where she makes herself cough and cough, and we figured she had a little tickle or something stuck in her throat.

We sat down at the table, I was all poised to take a photo of the kids huddled around her, and then …

… two-year-old C started throwing up all over herself, the table, and the floor.

Luckily, Darling Husband was home, because he is The Handler of Vomit Situations in our family. (I’m the Run-Awayer and Hand-Wringer of Vomit Situations.)

He cleaned her up while we all discussed that, OH, SURELY, SHE DID THIS TO HERSELF. She’s brought on puking before by doing that cough-cough routine. NO NEED TO PANIC.

She was feeling good and dressed in fresh clothes, and rushed back to the table for the present-opening. My stepmother picked up the first gift, and then …

… four-year-old D ran for the bathroom, shouting that he was “gonna frow up.” Sure enough, he did “frow up” (in the proper place). My stepmother and I looked at each other and shuddered.

I will spare you the rest of the details, but let’s just say WE DID NOT MAKE IT TO THE RESTAURANT.

C and D were sick ALL. NIGHT. LONG. Well, that’s what I heard, anyway.

I barricaded myself in our bedroom, panicking at the idea of throwing up two and a half weeks after open abdominal surgery. “I cannot throw up! I just can’t!” I sob-whispered. “It will hurt too much! I’ll burst open!”

My stepmother told me to think positively, because I probably wouldn’t get sick. “No, you don’t understand!” I whimpered. “It’s like, the cardinal rule of having little kids. If your kids get a stomach bug, YOU will get a stomach bug. You can’t ESCAPE IT! I’M GOING TO GET IT! IT’S JUST A MATTER OF WHEN!”

I comforted myself by staying in bed from 5 p.m. until 11 p.m. binge-watching Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt on Netflix. (That show is awesome, BTW, and I was sad when I finished the whole season. Is there anything Tina Fey can’t do?)

C and D were still sick on Saturday (although the throwing up had passed, luckily) and then back to normal on Sunday. 
Then! Guess what happened next?! 
Darling Husband got sick late Monday night/early Tuesday morning. 

He was home sick for a day, but my mom was in town to help out by that point (since I can’t drive or do much of anything for another couple of weeks). I continued to panick and attack every surface in our home with Lysol wipes.

FORESHADOWING: It did not work.

Michael was better by Tuesday night, and returned to work. Mom and I kept crossing our fingers and praying that we’d stay healthy — me, especially, because of the aforementioned not wanting to burst open in the stomach area.

But then … late Wednesday night/early Thursday morning … it struck us …

Mom and I got sick at just about the *exact* same time, which is odd, because that’s exactly what happened with C and D on Friday. We were miserable all day Thursday, but luckily that was the kids’ once-a-week day with the babysitter down the street (a.k.a. my writing day).

I was never so happy to pay for childcare, let me tell you. Michael came home early from work, fed them breakfast, ran them to the sitter’s, and then he came home and all three of us slept until it was time to pick them up.

Today really is Good Friday, because we all finally feeling halfway normal. The plague is over, for now, and hopefully we won’t have any more stomach virus outbreaks until at least the fall of 2016/winter of 2017. Please?

Seriously, if you find out which arm of the medical community was responsible for buggering up this year’s flu shot? Which WE ALL GOT, POINTLESSLY? Let me know. I have a strongly-worded GIF I’d like to send their way.

When control freak parents have to take a step back

You guys know that I am totally and completely OC about certain things (cluttered countertops, what the kids are wearing, etc.) and very laid-back about others (like caring if my sewing projects turn out exactly right … pssssst, they never do). I also hate accepting help, and insist on doing pretty much everything myself, period, end of story.

But the main thing I’ve learned over the last couple of weeks since my surprise hysterectomy is that there is a time and a place to LET IT GOOOOO. Channel Elsa, whatever, just GIVE UP CONTROL for the sake of everyone around you.

A lot of my friends have been doing this for years, in cases where their retired parents frequently babysit their children while they’re at work. They already figured out the importance of sharing their home and giving up control, and letting their parents have a certain amount of free reign.

Me? Nope, sorry. Didn’t get it until very, very recently.

***

The counters are cluttered and it’s making me twitch. A few magazines. A stack of mail. Preschool artwork. Napkins. Charge cords. Small toys. More mail. An empty cup. Seriously, is that a third mail pile? 

But I bite my tongue, because I can’t do anything about it. Not yet, anyway. 

There is a time in every parent’s life when you wave the white flag and call in the cavalry (a.k.a. your parents or in-laws). It might be because you need them to babysit on a regular basis, or you need help financially, or you need a place to stay while you house-hunt. In our case, it was desperately needing help with the kids while I recovered from a sudden surgery that would prevent me from driving for six weeks. 

Since we moved into our home three years ago, we’ve been at least an hour away from most of our immediate family —and a two-day drive from the rest. This meant that we got very used to handling things ourselves, since we didn’t have nearby relatives to call on for help. It also meant that we were totally unprepared for the control you must relinquish when you call on your family for help. 

While I spent four (completely unexpected) days in the hospital — and my husband was mostly there with me — it was like the ultimate trust exercise. Here parents, take our car keys. Move into our house. Watch our kids. Feed them and wash them and keep them alive, with pretty much no instruction from us …

Continue reading in my weekly column, The Mom Scene … 

My surprise hysterectomy at 31

I wrote a bit about my unexpected absence from the blogosphere, but I wasn’t specific about what happened.
I had actually written a lengthy piece about the surgery within the first couple of days of coming home from the hospital, but I wasn’t ready to share it yet. It was so personal, and I was still in a state of shock.
So I sat on it, texted and messaged privately with friends, and watched more Full House episodes on Netflix.
I felt brave this morning, and I pitched it to the Huffington Post a couple of hours ago. I got a quick response that it was live on the site, and here it is … 
Read the full story here

It’s definitely the most personal story I’ve ever shared on the internet, for hundreds (thousands?) of eyes to see — and this is coming from a girl who has blogged about pregnancy constipation, pooping during labour, and peeing in my child’s potty while camping.

I’m holding my breath for the kind of harsh comments I got on my very first HuffPo piece (published last week), but I can’t control what people say. I told my story, it’s out there, and I can only hope it helps someone else going through a similar situation.

Peace, love, and heart-eyed emogios,
Heather

xo

The Winter That Won’t Ever End

There are only five days left in March, and I am pretty sure it will never, ever be warm in Nova Scotia again. Ever.
If you are suffering from a similar winter (fellow East Coasters), I’ll understand if you nod solemnly and quietly flip to a more pleasing blog. I get it. We just can’t talk about the weather anymore, right?*
*What am I saying? OF COURSE WE CAN!
We had a green Christmas (seriously), and a fairly mild January. February was rough, but it was nothing compared to … *whispers tearfully* … March … 
Things started off OK. Lots of snow, but everyone was pretty happy … 
Sledding at a local park. See? Winter fun!

Then things started to get dodgy.

Sidewalks turned into tunnels, and we thought “Surely, this can’t get any worse. It’s MARCH for crying out loud.”

The walk to the babysitter’s.

But Winter is a cruel one. She hissed “Don’t call me Shirley!” and dumped MORE snow on us …

Our driveway started to look like a valley between two snow mountains. Darling Husband actually had to MOVE SNOW to the backyard, just so he had room to shovel the NEW SNOW.

The snow crept higher and higher, until you could literally walk off our front porch (over the railing) and not bother using the steps.

My poor Dad, who lives in southern Ontario (a.k.a. The Part of Canada That’s Warm a lot and Everybody Has a Pool) was in shock over the snow … especially the day he had to help Darling Husband shovel THREE. SEPARATE. TIMES.

See the big smile? Darling Husband likes to shovel. (For some reason)

The back yard was becoming unrecognizable, but March wasn’t done with us yet …

I think we were trying to spell “SAVE US FROM MARCH!” in snow footprints.

Darling Husband had to shovel a legit CHAMBER to get to the shed.

Oh March. When are you going to ease up on your icy grasp, and let us break out the sneakers?!?!

For now, we will have to resort to Instagramming collages of how our yards *used* to look, and hoping that the kids don’t outgrow their new spring jackets before they get a chance to wear them …

Happier (warmer) times