Typin’ Tyootorrrial

This quiet blog must make it obvious I’m still taking it slow and easy after last week’s excitement.
We’ve kept mostly to home, except for piano lessons. Our old high-tide
mood is upon us, has been for a couple of weeks, so there are lots of
read-alouds and lively discussions going on (this I can do from the
sofa!), and Jane is in love with a giant tome on chemistry, and Beanie
and Rose are elbowing each other for FlashMath turns on my iPod Touch,
unaware that this game is nothing but math drills. I guess if it’s on
the Touch, it’s automatically fun?

Yesterday Beanie asked for a turn on the computer to play “the
typing game,” which means the Mavis Beacon typing tutorial CD-rom. Jane
hunted it up for her. But I think she might enjoy this new discovery even more: the BBC’s online Dance Mat Typing site. I found the link at Educating Emme. Personally, I’m a little mixed on these lessons—the whole rock-and-roller goat thing wears thin very quickly. I mean, he’s a goat.
On the other hand, I love his Scottish accent. On his tongue, banal
phrases like “use either of your thumbs on the space bar” become
delightful dialogue.

On the other hand, he’s a goat.

(And his cartoon hands—a goat with hands?—in the keyboard demos: shudder.)

But I guarantee Beanie’s gonna love it.

Doing Much Better

Thank you all so much for your comments and well-wishes. I am making
a good recovery. The food poisoning or stomach bug or whatever it was
has finally left me alone, and yesterday I was even allowed out of bed
for a while by my very protective husband. 🙂 Today I am feeling more
like my old self, though I find I run out of steam very quickly. I
guess we’ll be laying low here at Casa Bonny Glen for a while.

To address a few questions from the comments (and comments, by the way, are split between the Typepad and WordPress blogs because some readers still seem to be landing on the old site instead of the new one):

1) Yes, I am looking for a new doctor. Possibly a new hospital as
well (though we like how close this one is to home, especially since I
tend to have very fast labors). I’m sure I would fare better in the
Labor & Delivery ward during a real delivery than I did under last
week’s circumstances. The nurses there just weren’t geared to take care
of sick people. (And as my night nurse said to me at discharge: "You
were one sick lady!")

I would probably have been better off in the ER for the hydration
and potassium treatments, but they were just too scared to keep a woman
who was having contractions.

2) No, I am not eating lots of bananas! I’m afraid bananas are the
food I loathe above all others. Can’t abide even the merest hint of
banana flavor in a smoothie or anything. But no fear. Knowing this, and
having suffered from bad leg cramps during my very first
pregnancy—which all the books said meant my potassium was low—I have
ever since made an effort to get LOTS of potassium from other sources.
Peaches, melon, spinach, oranges, orange juice, and lima beans, to name
a few. Dried apricots are especially high in potassium, but I’m
thinking it’s best to go easy on the dried fruit for a bit longer.

Also, I’m taking pre-natal vitamins, of course. I don’t think I
headed into this illness with low potassium; I think its sudden onset
and severity just depleted my reserves. Of everything. I also think,
now that it’s over and I’ve had time to do some reading, that I am
fortunate the whole thing didn’t turn out much, much worse.
::::shudder::::

Back in her chemo days, Jane used to sometimes get high doses of
potassium. This was always a serious business: she had to be hooked up
to a heart monitor during the hours-long i/v drip, and a doctor was
required to be present in the room the entire time, watching the
monitor. That last part was actually a very good thing for us: usually
it was one of the young interns assigned to babysit the monitor, a
twenty-something first-year doctor fresh out of med school. Scott and I
were twenty-somethings ourselves, so we generally hit it off with these
docs and wound up making friends with many of the people caring for our
little girl. This helped so much as the months of treatment wore on:
when your doctors feel that kind of personal attachment to you and your
child, they really listen to you. They respect your judgment. You get
better medical care that way.

This OB barely knew me—I had only had one appointment with him. My
first choice of OB retired over the summer and sold his practice to
this fellow.

Anyway, back to the heart monitor: I was a bit surprised nothing
like that was mentioned during the four hours I was getting those
potassium boluses. No one so much as brought a stethoscope into the
room. They did use the Doppler thingie to listen to the baby’s
heartbeat once or twice, but not during the potassium treatment. I can
tell, now, how sick I was because I never asked about it. It is NOT
like me to keep a question to myself. Looking back, I’m shocked at that
part. But that’s the trouble with hospital stays, isn’t it? When you
most need to advocate for yourself, you’re least likely to be able to do it.

At any rate, I’m glad it’s over. I’m glad we all had a four-day weekend to recuperate in.

A few sweet moments from that awful day:

On Thursday morning, while I was waiting for my OB to return my
phone calls, Wonderboy climbed up next to me on the bed and said, "You
sad, Mommy?" "Oh, no, sweetie," I told him, "Mommy’s just sick. My
tummy hurts." He laid a gentle hand on my belly, his brow furrowed with
concern.

"I go get you a band-aid?"

Melt, melt, melt.

Also, there is something indescribably sweet about using your
husband’s cell phone to call home and seeing, when you dial the number,
that the name that pops up onscreen is: Love.

Have I mentioned I’m glad to be home?