Showing posts with label motherhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label motherhood. Show all posts

Monday, November 23, 2009

Home for Thanksgiving...but first she had to leave.

August 26, 2009...I wrote

Sitting in Amelia’s room with her gone – she is back to school for her second year of college, I well up with pride and something I have no words for. There are so many, many moments of reflection, smells, laughter, tears, fears, joys and the complete and unexpected surprises that came with the journey of motherhood.

My nest is now empty again, and my heart runith over. I cry so hard that my chest heaves and the loss feels never ending.

I drove Amelia to school this past Sunday. She was expecting to go up with her dad, but when his plans changed at the last minute we grabbed the opportunity to spend a few days alone. We were unable to do this last year.

I had been secretly wanting to take her up, but feeling a twinge of financial guilt I prepared for her dad to take her, and I would see her later in the year for parents weekend if I could.

Last year we all went up to school with her for her big send off... mom, dad, sister, boyfriend, and then visited again for parents weekend with more extended family. She and I had not had much time alone. I was going through cancer treatments, and needed all the support I could muster, and she needed her whole family to send her off into her next stage – her college career. Her freshman year was an adventure and a dream come true. Amelia had gotten into her early decision school and received an amazing scholarship. When I saw her at orientation, walking the campus grounds, I knew she was at her second home.

In the small northern New York town of Geneva the college keeps the community alive, particularly in these very difficult economic times. I thought of the struggles of pride and gratefulness this community must feel. A year of tuition is probably about the same as many residents annual salaries. The college plays numerous roles in supporting projects ranging from primary education tutoring, supporting the arts, and a campus chapter for Habitat for Humanity. The community brings to the students a steeped heritage of triumphs in democracy and the political shaping of the nation we live in. It has worked in partnership for over 100 years.

Sometimes, I wonder if my daughter relates more to the town’s folk than her schoolmates. Puerto Rican and Irish American (with a few other WASPY ingrediants thrown in) from Brooklyn. Her dad and I separated when she was two, and it has always been a simple middle class life with a careful eye on how to pay for what may come next. Amelia was able to go to camp on a scholarship and traveled because her dad worked for an airline. She and I had the great support of community and friends which filled our lives with much joy.

So, as we headed up for her second year, we stole away for a mother daughter moment as so many times before. We packed the car with her summer belongings, and with her IPod handy headed out. The drive is just over six hours. We talked about what she was hoping to accomplish this year and listened to great music. She and I both love how a song can take you back - holding memories. The Red Hot Chili Peppers were a favorite from her childhood, The Dixie Chicks and my western girl roots - Jack Johnson and Jason Mraz for the fun of it!

By the time we arrived, miles of highway and rain behind us, we picked up her keys for the house. No dorm living - Amelia had applied to the themed houses. This year, with two great friends, and about 15 other girls, she will share an old Victorian near the lake. When we arrive there is another family mov’in in. The dad inquires where’s the hubby? I say working - the story is too long. We will sleep in her room, so we start by moving furniture around for a couple hours – then exhausted we head out to pick up the sheets and blankets at her storage facility, get a bite and fall asleep to the quiet of the country life.

By noon the next day we have all her stuff piled up in the middle of her room. My daughter looks at me and I can see in her eyes – how will she get through it all and start to find her way. She says, “How will I do this alone”? I want to wrap my arms around her and tell her, “You will be fine my little chick. I will help and leave when the time is right.” Instead we head out to go grocery shopping and for a few items at Walmart. I reassure her I am not leaving right away.

Back at the house, a couple hours later we organize all her stuff and put it away. She is settled in. I cook for her one last time and share tips in the kitchen that I hope keep her nourished in more ways than just food for her belly. We eat grilled chicken and veggies made with one skillet and the pumpkin carving knife. The kitchen is not yet stocked. It is 10:00PM and I need sleep, and while more of the girls are arriving my time to leave is coming quickly.

I stir at 4:00AM and find it hard to go back to sleep. There is a breeze coming of the lake and I can feel the city and my own commitments pulling at me. It will be good for the house to wake with one less mom. I shower and pack my stuff up. Amelia wakes and asks what am doing…it is time to leave little one. She sits up and we both cry, hug, and say good-bye for now.

Now coming home for the holidays, I am so thankful for my daughter, and the many experiences we share that shape my life.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Cancer brings good things too! Round 3 Chemo August 19th

You have got to be kidding! I know that is what you're thinking. What good could possibly come from this?

Ah so much! Sad and true that when my life became threatened I changed, or at least I would like to think I am so much more grateful. That is a gift.

We have all heard about this. Recovered alcoholics thank their alcoholism for a better life. People who survive a near death accident suddenly leave jobs they have had for years only to start a new. Cancer is humbling and my mom came to take care of me.

Michael's mom Barbara and son Clayton had been visiting. Michael's son was going home now after a week and having driven back up with his dad. It was August 19th. I was going in for my third round of chemotherapy and Michael's mom was generous of spirit and taking care of me. Oh this seems light years ago, and the drugs I take to get me through each time take not only the edge off but the whole 3 days become a blur.  I feel I lose so much.

I remember Barbara sitting with me while I listened on my ipod to the meditation she had given me to help me focus when at chemotherapy. Days before, while on the beach over the weekend huddled under the umbrella, Barbara soothed my lingering pain with acupressure on the back of my neck. I thought of that comforting feeling when I was home with the pump on as Michael was leaving to take Clayton to the airport that evening - Amelia was here and my mom was coming tomorrow.

My mom had come right after my surgery and then went back to Mexico where she has lived for the past four years. I knew she had wanted to come back and was making plans. One day she called and asked, "How would I feel if she came for a longer period of time - say a couple months"? Oh how brave she was being. There had been so much history and lots of reasons for her to wonder if I would want her by my side. I immediately thought - please come, I need you. I spoke these words out loud and we both cried. She would be here on August 20th and stay until October 19th. Michael and Amelia picked her up at the airport and she watched me twist and turn with discomfort through my third treatment. From the bed to the cool tiles of the bathroom floor. Please take this shit off of me. I often cry and think this by the third day just before I have the pump disconnected. I don't fool myself and know that this is hard on us all...and my mom wipes my tears and tells me she loves me and all will be alright. Even if it won't these are soothing words that when spoken by a mom to her child, even when they are all grown up, is suave that can not be purchased or bottled...this is a suave of the heart.

Three things to be grateful for:

1) modern day transportation - airlines can bring your loved ones just when needed

2) Boyfriend's family - Jeff, Adrianne, Lola, Blake, Clayton and Barbara have loved me as much as my own family

3) Mothers and daughters - my own mom and the gratefulness I have for my daughter showing me how to be a loving mom.

All my love,
Jen

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Chemo 2 - Monday August 4th

Good evening all,

Just to let you know I am o.k - had to stop chemo yesterday as I have a leaking port. They instert the port under your skin as a temporay way to access your blood - very technical and is an "in and out" day surgery. So that damn thing under my skin that is serving as a main line for the pharmaceutical cartel is defective. Off to yet another surgery tomorrow AM - just a quick few hours to get a new one put in. Then back into the chair for my remains of the chemo and the lovely pouch I take home. I will keep you posted as I have many drugs this time around - steroids, Adavan, and special chemo triplets! So wish me luck and I will give you all the big heads up of how terrific all is going!

So the big three things to be thankful for:

1) Top of the list is the most amazing child I am blessed with who was most courageous and spent the whole day with her mom yesterday at doctor and hospital visits - had a quick rush to NY Pres to check on my faulty medical devices! Amelia is the stars and the moon and I can only thank the whole universe for just and amazing, amazing 17 year old (almost 18)

2) Faulty ports allow for extra day of a little shopping with my darling daughter who I have not spent much time with since she has been so busy wowing that crowd at William Smith and now off to Puerto Rico with dad for a family visit - lucky Joe gets to go! She deserves every bit of R&R - she wrote some amazing papers for her summer at college.

3) My William Smith Mom T-shirt that I now can wear to chemo and shout and brag about my darling daughter

Yup she gets all the grateful praises today - and there are no words that will ever tell her how much I love her!

Hugs to you all,

Jen

First chemo July 22 - friends and family note

Hi guys....Shit this is tough! All my optimism and praying went straight out the window after chemo last Monday and I found my ass laid out - or better yet sleeping in the bath tub Tuesday night. I also have to send a big thank you to the Cruz family as Dawn held my head and rubbed my back on Tuesday night while not even saliva would remain down in my system! God help me please and that is not a slight begging and pleading either!

I also learned how important staying in contact with the chemo nurse is - her name is Pat! Super Cancer Girl cannot go it alone! So after much re-hydration on Wednesday early AM and the removal of the 5 FU (emergency rush in at chemo central with nurse Pat) - and many many anti nausea drugs, angel Patty took me under her nook and loved me back to health! Then a big shout out to my burg pal Liz who came over with the first season of the Muppets, Top Ramon noodles and more liquids than stocked at Costco!  Joe (Amelia's boyfriend) stayed over to babysit Thursday night and finally a little french toast and fruit stayed down on Friday morning! Remember three things to be thankful - well that day one was french toast!  Oh and that Quiche - well let's just say eggs, cheese and pie crust are not favorite food flavors now and may never be again!

Val arrived Friday for the second angel swoop in and nurtured me with hugs, kisses, picnics and I got to swim laps in the big Astoria Olympic outdoor pool Saturday. Debbie G joined us and we had great laughs and all looked very sexy in our bikinis - the 40+ trio. The steroids for nausea kicked in and you would have thought my binge eating disorders had come back - excuse me sir could I have your baked potato right off your plate! We ate crepes and drank a beer with fries! It was more than what any doctor could have known to prescribe!

Sunday Val leaves after yet another wonderful day of togetherness (oh how I love my sister) Kel you toooo! And then we begin the 2nd colon cleansing - MoviPrep for Monday AM colonoscopy. What the hell is with that name! The whole process did not go so well and the vomiting started - emergency call to the doc and we end up going the old fashion route with over the counter Fleet products! TMI Uh!

O. k but here is the great news that you can all jump for joy - stand on your desks and sing the praises to the DNA, cell dividing universe "The rest of Jen's colon is clean and clear"! When I told Patty half sedated I cried me a river - a river of relief and thank you god for some good news! Something to be grateful for today - clean colon! Oh and the waffle and fruit I had 10 minutes later and was able to enjoy! So for this week the big push is work, last week was a bit of a set back.

The other is breath and enjoy, enjoy, enjoy life and be so grateful for all the love I have. Amelia comes home this weekend - YEAH and turns 18! Honey here is the biggest hug and kiss for you - smack! Her dad is taking her and Joe to Puerto Rico for her B-Day - WOWOOWOWOWO! I will be here holding down the fort with round two next Monday and my cancer possee all in place with lots of hydration and armed with new drugs to hopefully make all easier. Thanks for all the notes and support - Mom I can't wait to see you! Jo, I am coming to CT to drive you and Richard crazy in the pool for a weekend. See cancer let's you invite yourself to your friends country homes!


Oh - anyone interested in some inspiring reading check out http://www.crazysexycancer.com/ - my pal Stacy had it delivered to my door step this weekend and Val and I are now graduates of cancer college or at least enrolled. The young woman who wrote the book is amazing! See you Tuesday Stac!


Three things to be grateful for:

1) A great new GP and news of clean plumbing! This may be on the list everyday for a while!

2) A loving home to take an afternoon nap in after a hellish prior week

3) The best damn cancer posse a girl could dream of

4) an extra one - a mom who listens to you cry on the toilet when there is nothing left in you - literally

I am so grateful today for all of you! Hugs and kisses Jen

June 7th Day 1 post surgery "back to reality"

I was lucky my bed gave me a great view of the west side and the Hudson River.  I could sit in bed - propped up and let the spirit and energy of the City come in to my life and energize me.  I live in a city that refuses to give up....centuries have passed and in each decade within these centuries an extraordinary experiment has taken place.  People - nationalities and belief systems from all across the world come to reside here on this tiny island and her outer boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, and the Bronx.  

In my 25 years of living in New York I have experienced one community breakdown - Gavin Cato and his death brought broken hearts and anguish within the Jewish and African American community which resulted in rioting and the death of 29 year old Yankel Rosenbaum. There was much blame across the cultural divides - some which are still healing. The neighborhoods have come back to life.  Jewish and African American communities are alive. The only other tragedy was an attach on America with NYC as the focal point.  September 11, 2001 and the twin towers came down with over 3,000 people who lost their lives and their loved ones.   

NYC has a pride of living and working in peace with people from every continent in spite of bigger global political pictures. 

When I look out the hospital window - weak and broken down I think of our City and how she is picking herself up as each one of us lifts our own spirits and strength.  That is what she is made up of - each one of us and what we give to her and then in return she gives back to us....how can you not love this City!

So I drag my legs over the side of the bed and breath through the pain.  I have been getting a bit of Morphine and Vicodin  - I had to ask for it based on a scale of 1 to 10.  I am learning the pain management in the hospital is very tricky and that one must be clever to advocate for oneself. Speak clearly, be thankful for your nurse and reaffirm to the staff that you are not a junky and have a strong tolerance for pain - but when it reaches the time for relief - relief is needed ASAP!  On the floor there are a number of folks always jocking for the nurses attention. Dropping thank you notes when you leave is very good hospital etiquette - they remember the patience who understand their plight too.  We are all in this together!

Finally I find the strength to get to the bathroom - I need to get these bodily functions working so I can get out of here and they are not making the fluids and jello so appealing.  Finally a bit of urine!  Yeah!  Then I am determine to take a little walk around - another way of helping get the body to function.  It is a short walk - but one the day after surgery.  I want to set the tone of who is going to be in charge of this recovery!  Me not pain, not cancer....so I head back to bed and put on a clean gown and take a nap.  Michael and Amelia will be showing up soon and I get a bit teary eye thinking of my daughter and how much she needs me and how little I can give her right now.  I try to give her humour and optimism.

They show up very shortly after I lay down with a few presents - yes that is good, sick moms need pick me ups!  There are flowers and my own "build-a- bear".  Her name is Champ and proceeds from her sales go to kids in recovery at hospitals.  I feel a bit vulnerable like a kid. Amelia and Michael put much attention into building "Champ"and she even comes with a voice recorded message of love from both of them so I can here their voices when I am alone.   I am lucky to be so loved and lucky that my daughter knows how to share the compassion she was taught all through her life....oh how lucky I am.

I love you both and the strength you give me - the strength this great city gives me and I am so ever grateful
Mom /Jen

June 6th Surgery - no more delays

I woke on June 6th feeling better - hydrated, but in the hospital still preparing for this surgery that I could not get my head around. How did I get here? What was it they were removing? I had a bad feeling and just kept thinking "stay positive" it is powerful! Yeah right, and in the next breath I thought of all the things I could have, should have done different in my life. It was that innately "bad person" that got me here...smoking, eating fatty foods, living unconscious to the concerns of others! Oh, I thought I had some power - please god let me have some.

I was to wait out the day until Doctor T. was available. Michael and Amelia had come back to keep me company - it is all a bit of a daze when I try to think back on this day. I don't want to remember to tell you the truth.

Finally, the time came and I was put on the gurney and taken down to surgery. Amelia braided my hair - I took it out, it made me feel like a little girl. I am the mom and grown woman and I needed to feel like that. We all waited patiently for Dr T. My anastigiologist team and I joked - I do this when I am scared. Then they said it was time to go. I remember kissing Amelia and Michael. I will be back. I love you both so much.

I remember nothing - I was under. Then I woke and know the first words out of my mouth were, "Is it cancer"? My surgeon looked at me and said "yes". I cried. Where was Michael? He was right there. Shelly and Mark came in. Just 30 days ago Shelly and I were joking when I first found the lump. I told her I had the strangest feeling I was going to be in the hospital and she had to promise me that she would not let people visit me without my teeth in. I had had oral surgery and a denture to replace teeth and was very very self conscious. None of this mattered any more. I wanted to hold my daughter and survive! Again, is there a god? Whatever is there please, please let me make it!

Amelia came in and the lead resident on the surgical team - Dr. Rosen and I told her together. I was a bumbling idiot. She held my hand and was trying so hard to be brave. I don't remember what happened next....

The next time I woke it was night and I was in so much pain.

I have so much to catch up on and the re-writing is taking time, especially with such an emotionally charge and frightening environment. I will fill in all the blanks, but want to keep you up to date. I hope you enjoy all the post surgery experience and strength and keep looking back to see how I got here and looking forward for all the time I spend living!

Peace and love
Jen

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Surgery coming but we must prep first - clean the colon

We headed over to St Lukes / Roosevelt to check in on Wednesday June 4th for our preliminary blood test and the general check in before a big surgery. Holding hands with a loved one goes a long, long way when in this position - thank you Michael. Did I mention the importance of a health proxy! Moms, dads, friends without kids put one in place before you need it and the idea is not so frightening.

The hospital staff was great. I had a few minor interruptions. Organizing meetings via the ever reliable blackberry can keep one distracted...yeah I know turn that damn thing off, but work is a way to feel accomplishment when so little is in your control and contributing to some type of success is good for the synopsis in the brain. I did turn it off later....

We left the hospital in the afternoon to head up and see my darling daughter receive her end of the year awards - a senior heading off into the world! Oh I am such a proud mom! One for soccer and one for being a guidance counselor to her peers. Lucky...so blessed to have watched an extraordinary woman grow and take on her challenges with gusto and diligence - Amelia your mom loves you all the way to the moon and back down to the dirt!

O.k some of you have had a colonoscopy and I must say that the prep is absolutely horrible. Lime flavored salt solutions....sometimes I think we are so in the dark ages! My lovely sister explained that the body does not like an over load of salt, and when you drink 2 full 1/2 gallons of surgery prep for your colon a thorough flush is on its way -get prepared for a long night and a squeaky clean colon.

Check in for tomorrow - Dr T to fix me up!

J

Saturday, September 27, 2008

May 31, 2008 too much time to relect "devil is in the details"

It has been almost 4 months - and as I am trying to recall the moments that flooded me and paralyzed me at the same time...I understand why some people choose not to talk about their cancer. The nature of the mind is to dismiss that which threatens our mortality - put it all behind us quickly. What a magnificent mechanism to push on for one's survival. I go against my natural instincts and try to recall.

Michael and I met two years ago Memorial Day 2006 at Shelly and Mark's annual BBQ. Our relationship had become a modern day long distance affair, raising kids in our home states - he in Austin Texas, and me here in NYC with Amelia. We had spent the last couple years traveling back and forth every few months and a short stint of cohabiting last fall. Michael had missed the warmth of Texas and most importantly his teen son and went home after the holidays in 2007...I was not sure how this was going to work out. Selfishly I wanted love in my own backyard and at my convenience. I had been alone for far too many years. Michael tried to reassure me it would all somehow work out - I had sent him the quintessential "Dear John" sometime in March.

Michael wanted to visit. I was reluctant to easily roll back into our warm love affair. I suggested he come up for Shelly and Mark's BBQ and spend a little time (5/21 - 5/27) - come visit with friends. We cooked - Michael made his famous backed beans and we easily fell into the comfort of each other for the weekend. There was sadness too. On entering Shelly and Mark's we found out that a dear friend in the neighborhood had unexpectedly died the night before - a staph infection. There was disbelief in the air and many tears. I had quiet thoughts of my own and few new I was having tests. Sue's death made me think even more about how precious life can be and I took in selfishly the love her friends were all so generously expressing in their loss.

Michael and I talked about the lump I had found and tests. He was heading back to Austin and my CAT scan results would be in May 28th. Loved ones always reassure us - all will be alright. Michael headed back to Texas, but still somehow a piece of him stayed here with me.

It was now Saturday 5/31 and I had had my CAT scan results and met with the specialists...I looked out the living room window. Michael and I had spoken so many times and he was on his way back next week. How had this all happened? Amelia was graduating high school and going off to college. The next phase of our lives was about to jump right in front of us - this was not in the plan. I could not absorb what was happening, I did not want to...the phone rang.

It was Dr. T and my surgery needed to happen the upcoming week and we were going for Thursday June 5th. We discussed what he planned to do. He would be doing my surgery laprascopically and would be taking out the right side of my colon. I was in shock and his voice sounded more like - Hmmmmmmmmmmmhmmmmmmmmmhmmmmm than words. I stood in the living room alone and cried. I needed to come back to where I was - to prepare for an experience like I had never had and there were just days to go...

J

Thursday, September 18, 2008

FMI - Food Marking Show Las Vegas May 4 -7 2008


Ah Las Vegas - Via Las Vegas! Out at FMI to sell the Jim Beam licensing program....had some great meetings and dinner with a favorite client - Jeff Christensen from Jim Beam. The program is growing and the momentum is really starting to taking off. Retail components were coming into place and launching of new restaurant service products were kicking of new relationships.


I had just moved in to the food sector when coming on board at The Licensing Company and enjoying a whole new world. Many of you know my great passion of food and drink and friends and Beam was proving to fill all three.


Still feeling a bit under the weather and scheduled CAT scan when I get back to New York. Had my last burger poolside - need to focus on more fruits and veggies.


Amelia is graduating any day and the big transition to college is taking place - she selected Hobart William Smith and having been awarded a fantastic scholarship we are beyond proud of her - she leaves me speechless; which all my friends know is no easy task. She is loved and will be missed not only by her family but many great friends and her graduating school and teachers. I am proud that my daughter extended herself in so many ways - volunteering for her piers in guidance counseling gave her the opportunity to have a wonderful friend and mentor with her own counselor. She ends her high school years as captain of her soccer team and a division win as a junior. We know she will go on to have more poignant adventures both academically and in her great big life, and oh how I am enjoying watching - even if now by the sidelines.

Jen

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Saturdays - a day of rest

When I am alone the first thing I think of is "where is my daughter? how is she doing?" and then I start my moment or my day. I never expected this when I became a mom - the idea of such immediate and urgent consideration of another human being. I really don't know any mom who says, "oh, I knew all this was coming and never find any of it a surprise!" I would be intrigued to hear from one who felt that way.

Today my daughter is looking at a college she has been accepted to. She is still deciding on where to go and to her great credit has choices. I am preparing for a new stage, a next step in life as Amelia will go off to school and after 18 years my days will be of my own singular needs. There is a ray of surprise and unexpected anticipation at the thought, and a rainy grey as well.

What a strange idea to contemplate. I think I will enjoy life without the added dishes in the sink and a dual calendar to keep. My life was on hold in many ways. The needs and desires of my daughter have taken first place, and my satisfaction in being a mom gave me little choice in that philosophy and I hold true to it with no regret.
After I take a deep breath and think of the time I will have on hand, I think of our deeper intimacy beyond the day to day. There has been a miracle of watching another human grow and challenge her life. I think of the hysterical laughter at unexpected comments, both mine and hers, or the tears of the ups and downs. I know that a huge - no GIGANTIC hole is coming into my life and that I can only hope that watching from a distance will fill it in other ways. I will miss her.... Those words only give a hint to the grief of my upcoming empty nest feelings and I hold back the tears because I know there are new joys for her.

This too is a new experience - a public diary. I wrote in private journals over the last 18 years pouring onto pages the emotions of life. I wonder how this will be to share publicly with both fear and confidence of judgement. I look forward to a new endeavor and what it may bring.

What happened next surprised - I don't think that word gives full credence to what happened next.



Jim Croce - Time In A Bottle
Peace