Rhymes With Fuchsia

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Happy Birthday, Miss B!


See that cheesy grin? It's 11 years old today. (Thanks for the crocs, Aunt Ellen! Everybody should have an aunt like you.)

Also, in other news...


Spring has sprung.


And about freakin' well time.

And more news... well, actually there is no more news, and you have no idea what an awesome thing this is. All the good wishes for Taz are very, very much appreciated. He seems fine.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Saturday Sky: Sleepless in Boston

(or, how to freak out a neurologist without really trying)

Please bear with me: there is a sky picture, really, to celebrate the happy ending of this post.

The second half of this week has been a definite improvement over the first half, in the sense that not much has happened since Wednesday. The story of the first half begins on Monday, when I get a call from Taz's school nurse. His teacher has noticed that he is smiling on only one side of his face and has asked the nurse to check it out, and she has confirmed that the smile is indeed lopsided. I call his neurologist, Dr. P, and leave a message for his nurse, but she doesn't call me back. (The woman I speak with says she knows nothing medical so there's no point in my telling her, but I probably should have.)

Tuesday morning, smile still lopsided, I email Dr. P. Very quickly I get a reply: bring Taz to the ER at Children's to get this checked out. I call again and, with a minimum of persuasion, get Dr. P himself on the phone. I presume you mean now, I say. No need to drag him out of school, says Dr. P, but bring him in today. He tries to find us a clinic slot so we don't have to come into the ER, and, failing, alerts the ER to expect us.

I wrap up what I was working on and drive home. Taz's van is late, naturally, but it finally comes, and I transfer him to our van and begin what proves to be an easy and speedy drive to Children's — until we get off Storrow Drive, that is. It is freaking opening day at Fenway Park, which is conveniently located half a mile from Children's, and the Sox are winning 14-1 in the ninth. Go Sox, of course, but that means a lot of the fans have left the park already, and it takes us a good twenty minutes to go five or six blocks. Finally we make it to Children's; by now it is 5:30, so at least we don't have to go too far up the parking garage to find a spot.

The ER is jammed. I'm relieved to find that they are indeed expecting us, so we get to cool our heels for the next eight hours in an exam room instead of the waiting room. I talk with an assortment of medical professionals, and, luckily, Taz is awake and in a good mood, so they all get to observe the lopsided smile. An ER doc tells me Neurology will want to see him, but they'll want the results of a CT scan first. I point out that unless we get very lucky he will need to be sedated for the CT scan, after which Neurology won't get anywhere trying to evaluate him as he will be asleep. She allows that I have something there and goes off to call Neurology. Meanwhile, the nursing shift has changed, and a very hot nice young man comes in and announces himself to be Justin, our night nurse. He takes Taz's vitals and eventually puts in an IV for the CT-scan sedation. It's been almost eight years since Taz last had chemo, and he's no longer a nigh-unto-impossible stick (chemo weakens the blood vessels); Justin gets the IV in on the first try, for which we are all duly thankful.

Around 10:00 we are visited by a neurologist, Dr. Y. He goes through the story with me (this is roughly the sixth time I've explained why we're there; apparently they have all read Taz's chart but want to hear me tell it anyway), shines a light into Taz's eyes, ears, and mouth, and tells him to smile. Taz of course just looks at him. Finally I get Taz to smile by playing peekaboo with him. Dr. Y looks quite impressed; he says we'll wait for the results of the CT scan.

Around midnight Justin accompanies us to the CT machine. He says let's try it without sedation. I am somewhat skeptical, but too tired to argue. Taz is still awake but apparently too tired to move, as he thwarts my expectations by lying still while the technician lines him up and does the scan. Justin tells us it will take about 45 minutes for the scan to be read, and we go back to our exam room. Taz dozes in his stroller while I debate with myself the ethics of commandeering the gurney in the room for a nap. Justin pops in to take Taz's vitals again and tells me to go ahead.

I am out cold for about half an hour before a neurosurgery resident appears. One possible cause of the facial weirdness is a malfunction of Taz's internal shunt; this guy, whose name entirely escapes me, asks Taz how old he is and how many siblings he has. I tell him Taz can't answer questions like that; it's probably a good thing that I'm too groggy to bother testily adding that even if he normally could, sleep-deprived people don't track too well. I can't get Taz to smile for him; I don't feel much like smiling myself, even when he gets around to telling me the CT scan was clean. He says he doesn't think it's a shunt malfunction.

Venturing out into the hall on my way to use the facilities, I overhear Justin on the phone trying to get us a bed on the neurology floor. Eventually he hangs up and tells me that there are no beds to be had at the moment, but we'll soon be out of there. I experience a wild moment of hope that he means we'll be sent home, but it develops that he means out of the ER: it's still jammed, Neurology has decided to admit Taz, and ER wants them to do it already so they can turn over the exam room.

We finally make it up to Taz's room at a little after 2. I put Taz to bed and fold out the parent chair into a not-at-all-comfy pseudobed. I manage to sleep until around 7:15, shortly after which the room fills with a whole packet of neurologists, led by Dr. K, the attending physician on the floor. He tells me they want Taz to have an MRI and an EEG, and that they will be keeping us one more night. I wince; he asks if I would prefer to leave that evening. No, I say, I would prefer to leave now. I manage just barely to err on the side of grumpy humor, and they all laugh. Dr. K says it will depend on the tests, but he'll see what he can do.

The rest of the day passes in a blur of tests and blood draws, none of which finds anything. Having ruled out all the scary stuff (stroke and/or tumor recurrence), Dr. P says the half-smile may have something to do with a recent dosage change in Taz's anticonvulsant, which we upped because he was having frequent seizures. Dr. P is thinking of lowering the dose again or possibly changing the meds, but wants the epilepsy team to weigh in. They turn out to be still on the floor, doing away with the last danger that we'll have to stay a second night, and they opine that if the meds are causing the lopsided smile but also controlling the seizures, that's a good trade.

Bottom line: never mind, carry on. We are discharged with a follow-up appointment next month with Dr. P. We get home around 7:30. I've missed all three Wednesday knitting groups, but Kay's socks now have heels (you didn't think I made it through all that without my knitting, did you?), and sunset over pine woods never looked so beautiful.

Sunday, April 08, 2007

Nonbinding Resolution

My friend Kay has just been through her third round of chemo and surgery, and is celebrating clean margins and a good recovery so far. She is blessed with a church full of incredible people who have taken wonderful care of her. Since I don't live near her I haven't been able to be of any practical use, and I've been glad and grateful that she has such amazing friends.

In her last update Kay mentioned that while she's had a fairly easy time of it this time around, the chemo has done real number on her feet. Her toes are very tender and her ankles often swollen. Because her feet are on the big side to begin with, she's been unable to find comfortable socks: men's socks may be long enough, but they're almost never wide enough, and stretchy nylon doesn't cushion her toes from her shoes.

You know where this is going, right?


Of course you do. I'm knitting all my healthiest thoughts into these socks in Esprit, elann's knockoff of Cotton Fixation. (Esprit is one of my favorite yarns btw, indistinguishable as far as I can tell from its pricier twin.) They will be nice and soft, stretchy and thick, and they won't bind her feet. I'm so happy I can do something that she really needs and will like.

The First Knitter didn't make two socks at once on two circs, and she definitely didn't use periwinkle-blue Esprit. Still, I feel like she's holding one end of a long, long skein of yarn, and I'm holding the other, connected to the primordial essence of knitting. I'm making a necessity that can't be bought.

Friday, April 06, 2007

Do You Want Charts With That?

The pattern for the lace scarf is up, with a link in the sidebar. Unlike its predecessors, it gets a fancy name, because I enjoyed making it so much, not to mention because I managed to think of one. The scarf went home from the auction last Saturday night with Bernadette.


She really liked it and was kind enough to model it for me, even though, as she pointed out, it didn't go too well with the bandanna (the auction had a cowboy theme this year).

It dawned on me as I was writing out the pattern that I really don't know how to write patterns. I live in fear that I will be unmasked for the fraud that I am, or, worse, that some poor innocent, by faithfully following what I believe to be a scarf pattern, will end up with a felted badger.

I'm therefore taking an informal poll: what information do you expect to find in a pattern? Do you prefer charts or written-out instructions? If (as in this case) the pattern consists of several stitch patterns side by side, do you just need to know what the stitch patterns are and how to arrange them, or do you like everything spelled out?

It further dawns on me that I am still in possession of some sock yarn I've been trying valiantly to give away for some time now, so I will randomly choose one lucky poll respondent to as its new owner. (I'm probably making it sound like I'm trying to palm off some dreadful scratchy acrylic, but it's really perfectly respectable yarn, Wildfoote in the Ragtime colorway.)