Sunday, January 27, 2013

Help Dream a Store for Our Kids and Our Families


Wow!  What a week!  For a couple of months I have been working on a business plan for an online store dedicated to kids like ours and our families. 

Through the years I was so frustrated by things label for “special needs” that appeared to me to be a toy any kid other than mine could play with.  I searched everywhere I went for toys that maybe Maddie would enjoy and offer her opportunities for independent play.  Ha! 

The Can-Do Spirit store will carry toys, things to make giving medications easier, warming and cooling aids, and other fun things. 

The business plan has made it through round two of professionals and will shortly be submitted to an investment expert.  But I think it can be even better!  With your help...

Don't be shy.  Take a minute to tell me what you wish for, struggle with or maybe what things your child or you love.    You are helping design a store just for your family! 

Thank you!

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Transforming "I can't" to "I can!"

I confess I didn't even know that Sports Illustrated Kids even existed until someone posted this video on my facebook wall.  I watched it, shared it, and watched it again.  I came home later and watched it again.  I hope it is an inspiration for you.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_Lax4zFFoA
  

Monday, January 14, 2013

Brrr...

 
 
 
Brrr!  It’s cold.  I broke out my long underwear this morning.  My toes feel like ice cubes.  January is not my favorite time of year.  As the mom of a medically fragile child January and February were such a struggle. 
As you can tell, I don’t particularly like cold weather and I hate being cold.  Because Maddie could not control her body temperature, winter was a huge problem.  The rule implemented by her neurologist was if it was 10ᴼ or below wind chill, Maddie did not go outside.  Unfortunately the rest of the world does not operate by that rule.  If she was in a school system that provided a nurse, she was without a caregiver for the day.  I, of course, still needed to work.
Snow added even more complications.  Wheelchairs and snow are not a good mix.  Having clear pathways was essential to life.  At times we lived in apartments where snow removal was provided.  However, that usually meant a narrow path done with a snow blower leaving a thick coating of snow.   Thankfully I like shoveling snow because I was out early widening the path to wheelchair width and clearing the snow coat before it turned to ice. 
In addition, Maddie, with her low immune system, struggled to stay healthy.  A cold often lead to pneumonia and in activity seemed to increase her urinary tract infections.  So trips to the doctor and hospital increased. 
So what wisdom do I have about surviving the winter?
First, stay in the moment.  I am easily overwhelmed and that just makes it impossible for me to function.  So taking things one at a time and not thinking about the list of yet to do’s, helps me from creating crisis.
Two, always have a plan B.  That is not nearly as easy as it sounds, especially when it comes to being without a caregiver.  I have never had a nursing company willing to send a nurse on short notice or even have a back up if the scheduled nurse calls off.  Ahhh!  I kept a mental list of people who might be able to come for an hour or two.  If I couldn’t work a whole day at least I could teach a class, or get essential work done.  I alerted my students and supervisors that I would be taking any calls from the caregiver of the day.  I often worked from home or hospital bedside.   
Third, do something fun!  The stress of juggling everything got to me after awhile.  Every day I tried to do something fun with Maddie.  It did not have to long or involved.  But it had to be something that made us both happy.  Sometimes it was watching a movie together while I graded papers.  A few times I brought snow inside and helped Maddie make a snowman.  Often we would finger paint or glue things.  Once a while, we made cookies with Maddie running the mixer with her head switch. 
Forth, do something for someone else.  I know it sounds crazy when I am really the one who needed help.  But the truth is doing something for someone else pulls me out of my little world and helps me to appreciate that other people are struggling too.  So I would send a Maddie painting to an elderly relative, make a casserole for the nurse to take home, have Maddie make cookies for shut-ins or whatever other opportunity came to mind.  It worked then and it still works today!
 

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Save the Couch!


Save the couch!  No matter where we lived, the couch was one of Maddie’s favorite places to hang out.  When she was feeling well, she was in the center of the action.  When she was sick, the couch allowed me to monitor her and do medical treatments.  It was perfect!

Well, almost.  I’m sure there are other caregivers who aren’t as messy as I am (I’m an artist, that’s my excuse!), but I spilled meds, formula, and other things I’ll leave to your imagination.  The first couch was toast in a year and a half.  So I set to work reupholstering the thing.  What a pain!  So to protect the new surface I started using cloth under pads.   It helped but before long I had a mess again.  And I certainly was not going to reupholster it again!  So we got rid of the couch.

I got smart and did not buy another couch.  This time I borrowed a daybed from a friend.  It was the best move I could have made.  I put a vinyl sheet under a mattress pad with a sheet over the top.  I could wash it every day if I needed to and some days I did.

When I went to the daybed I was thinking that I needed a surface that was washable.  But the daybed turned out to be amazing for a couple of other reasons.  For one thing, there was storage space underneath big enough to accommodate big plastic bins for diapers, blue chucks, and other assorted things.  I just put a twin sized dust ruffle with elastic banding around the metal frame and no one could tell we were hoarding medical supplies. 

The number one thing I loved about the daybed was the cuddling opportunity it provided.  Being able to cuddle beside Maddie to read a book, watch a movie, or take a nap was a little bit of heaven.  There were times when she was sick enough that I slept beside her.  Occasionally she was too sick to want me beside her so I slept on an air mattress on the floor beside the daybed. 

I learned!  If you have a medically fragile child, cover everything under and around them with something to protect the surface from wet things and cover it with something washable.  Even pillows need a waterproof cover.  There are some now that don’t feel like plastic so are comfortable to use.  A couple of women made Maddie sets of pillow cases that were bright, colorful, and seasonal.  The winter ones were flannel and summer ones cotton.  Maddie loved them.