Archive for Russell

Kindergarten!!

And so it begins. The “school” frenzie. I only have one child in school…and it’s only for 2 1/2 hours, and I already feel like a taxi driver! Well, that is partly cause Justin also got some calls to sub, and with one vehicle, I had to take Justin to school, then Russell, pick Russell back up and then get Justin. But now we are borrowing my in-laws car, so it won’t be like that anymore, thank goodness! I do realize that as more of my kids start school and everything else that life will get crazier and crazier…I’m just glad we get to ease into it. I do actually like the routine we have for the mornings now, and my day doesn’t seem to drag on and on as it has in the past. And I’m also working on lining up different activities for me to do with the younger two while he is at school, such as baking (if Asher is napping cause Bryn loves to help with that), or learning sign language, or exercising, things like that. We’ll see how it goes.

First Day of Kindergarten

First Day of Kindergarten

Ok, back to Russell. All summer I dreaded the end of summer! I’m not one to like being away from my kids…not even for a few hours. I was also worried about Russell having a hard time going to Kindergarten – worried that he’d cry when I left, and have a hard time adjusting. Well, I don’t want to speak too soon, but so far so good. I think he was even excited to go! His first day of school was quite funny actually. When I went to pick him up after his first day, I went in to get him and he had this really sad look on his face. I instantly got really worried, tried to talk to him hoping I could cheer him up about his day, but his face stayed solemn. As we walked out to the van I said, “So? Did you like it?” With his head down he sadly shook his head “no”. I was so worried, and after I got him into his seat in the van I said, “Russ, you had fun today, didn’t you??” Then…he burst out laughing! He was totally messing with my head! I couldn’t believe it – what a kid! So he did have fun, and he’s just fine going. I’m sure we’ll have our ups and downs, but he’s doing really well so far.

The jokester after his first day

The jokester after his first day

We went to a Welcoming School Pot Luck down in the River Bottom earlier in the month and talked with some of his teachers. Apparently he is doing well and actually cooperates and participates in things! Woohoo! Oh, and one of the teachers told me that they were quote “flabbergasted” when Russell drew out the entire Solar System on the ground outside with chalk and knew the names of all the planets. If only they knew what he knows about space! He comes home most days with maps he’s drawn – maps of Waterton, Edmonton, Calgary, Magrath, or Russia. He’s also learning some French and informed me on the way to school the other day that “I think that after I learn a bunch more words in French, I will probably switch languages.” I don’t think so Russ! He tells me that his favorite part of school is playing on the playground, but whenever I ask him about his day on the way home from school, he tells me that he “didn’t play on the playground today…I sat with the teacher.” Well, whatever he does, he has a fun time.

The other day there was a field trip planned to the Fire Hall. The previous day when I had talk with Russell about it in the van (trying to get him excited about it), he burst into tears and didn’t want to go. He said, “Please, please, please don’t make me go!!!” So, the next day I talk with his teacher about it and asked if it would be ok to go along with them. They thought that was a great idea, and Justin was home that day, so I went. Eventually I got him calmed down and we walked with the class to the Fire Hall. When we arrived, Russell started to get nervous again and so I said, “Not yet Russell…don’t get scared yet! He said, “What??” I said, “I’ll let you know when you can be scared.” He said, “Well, when is that?” I said, “When there’s a scary part coming!” He agreed, and obviously there were no scary parts and he did fine. He was a little extra clingy but I managed to get these pics with my cell phone camera:

A fireman helping him out of the Rescue Truck

A fireman helping him out of the Rescue Truck

Fireman Russ

Fireman Russ

He admitted later that he did have a great time, and has been playing firman/rescue truck a little more too.

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Russell turns 5!

Birthday Boy

Birthday Boy

I can’t believe I have a five year old!  Where did the time go?  I’ve done a lot of reminiscing the last few days, about his birth – everything leading up to it, and everything that has followed.  And then I look at Russell and just feel amazed at what an amazing boy he is!  He’s got such a great personality and sense of humor – he’s so much fun to have around.  We think Russell is pretty smart too, but then again, we are his parents!  He’s a decent reader, loves math – he can add, subtract and is now catching on to multiplication…he understands and can tell time, is grasping the concept of money and the worth of all the coins, and loves to measure everything.  Lately he always wants to take a meter stick and pen and paper to the park to measure all the equipment.  He also loves learning about the Human anatomy, and is really into learing about world geography as well as the solar system.  So, for his birthday we got him a measuring tape (which he loves), some posters about the human anatomy, and the phases of the moon, a book about constellations (that glows in the dark…it’s pretty cool), and a kid microscope type thing…oh and a shirt.  The grandmas and grandpas gave him a globe and some walkie talkies (both very popular gifts as well).  He also got some other games and toys and books that he really likes.

Opening Presents

Opening Presents

When I picked Russell up from school (there will be a post about him starting Kindergarten at a later date) that day, he said that all his teachers had wished him a happy birthday and that his class sang happy birthday to him in English AND French!  He also said he got to pretend he was Earth and walked around the sun (a candle) five times.  He must have left out some details, cause to me that doesn’t make much sense…oh well.  After school, I took the kids to the new Henderson park, which was kind of a treat cause we’d only been there once before.  While there the kids made some friends (a brother and sister around the same ages), and had a great time.  Actually, I was in on the fun and had all five kids laughing hysterically…it was fun.   Apparently Russell got a little motion sick at one of the things at the park (coulda been partly Justin’s driving on the way home too) – he didn’t feel so good on the way home, but we got him feeling better before everyone arrived for his party that night.  As usual, we had both sets of grandparents AND some great grand parents there, as well as my brother and his family and our Hill friends.  I never thought we’d be able to fit 20 people into this little place (and if you’ve ever been in here you’d wonder how the heck we managed that), but we did, and it was fun!

Cramped Quarters (Looks like the kids were all outside eating)

Cramped Quarters (Looks like the kids were all outside eating)

I had a hard time deciding what to make for his cake this year…I knew I wanted it to be “space” themed, but didn’t actually know what I was going to try to do until the night before.  Here’s the final product:

Jupiter and Saturn Birthday Cakes

Jupiter and Saturn Birthday Cakes

The top one, Jupiter has it’s “great red spot” and it’s four main moons (it has 63 total, but that’s a lot of cupcakes!)…Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.  The bottom one is obviously Saturn, with it’s moon Titan.  I think they turned out ok…that ring on Saturn caused me some grief though!  Had I thought of this idea before the midnight before his birthday, I could have made sure the cake I used to make the ring was frozen better…BUT I didn’t, so I had to do the best I could with a partially frozen cake.  It worked.  Russell loved it…that’s all that really matters, right?

Russell with his cake

Russell with his cake

Blowing out the candles

Blowing out the candles

The poor boy had a heck of a time blowing out those candles!  It probably took a good 3 min for 5 candles…and I think his cousin even blew one of them out!  It was actually quite funny, though I’m sure all our guests didn’t think all that spit on the cake was too hilarious!  Oh well…they ate it!  I hope he had a really fun day…Happy Birthday Russell!

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Comparisons

So I dug out my photo album the other day and started flipping through it.  It was great to see all my “I can’t believe they let me go in public like that” hair do’s and clothes.  Oh well, I survived.  I was also trying to see if any of my kids look at all like me when I was their age.  Here are my findings…

Russell-Me

Russell-Me

My brother is going to kill me if he sees that I put this pic on the internet! (Sorry Darren…if you see this!) And it would have made sense for me to crop him out of the pic…but I just couldn’t bring myself to do such a thing!  The tiny red shorts…the stylish hair-do…even the classic plaid couch he’s sitting on.  It was my birthday that day I think (hence the balloons I’m holding that you can’t really see) and I think I wanted a picture with our bird, but I was too chicken (or I guess too “budgie”) to hold him myself.  (Although I did eventually grow out of that stage.)  That bird, Bernie, was the coolest pet ever.  We taught him to whistle and say quite a few different phrases…he was a family favorite.  Then one day we came in the house to find his cage tipped over and feathers strewn on the floor from the cage to the door….appearantly a cat got in the house.  It was a sad day for the family.  But anywho…I don’t know if Russell has any of me in him, but I think that I am about his age in the pic, perhaps a little older.

Bryn-Me

Bryn-Me

Bryn will be three next month.  Any resemblance?  Cute headband Bryn…courtesy a great friend of mine!  I love those smurf pajamas I have on!  Now days they only sell hockey ones…  (Oh, and shouldn’t the cake say “Happy Birthday TO Alana?”  haha)  Our personalities are not the same at this age…that’s for sure!  Bryn can’t walk…she has to hop everywhere.  Me, I walked attached to the back of my moms leg at this age (and for several years after)!

Ash-Me

Ash-Me

All I’m going to say about that pic of me is, “sweet sandals!”  (The socks could go, but hey…)  I’m beginning to think that kids now a days are a lot cuter than they used to be way back when.  Maybe it’s the quality of picture…nah – Ash is just plain cuter, that’s all there is to it!

Maybe 95% percent of the people are right….”They all look just like their dad!”

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The Worst Mother EVER!

Ok…sometimes I lose patience with my kids when they whine and cry and fight and end up going against my entire parenting belief system and resort to threats (usually bed, that I never follow through with).  I know how I want to parent, but it doesn’t always happen…It’s hard work!   Usually at night I will feel horrible for not showing more love and patience and understanding during the days events and I’ll really resolve to do better the next day.  And I think that is legit, as I’m far from the “perfect parent” and have only been in the business for coming up to 5 years now.  

However, tonight I feel a little like….oh, pond scum.  The kids were being really whiny and they wouldn’t stop fighting over everything – it was really ridiculous.  I could sense that both Justin and I were running on “fumes” as far as our patience supply went, so I decided I needed to just go in there (to the Living room) and make them laugh.  (Yes, I was actually trying very consciously to be a “good” parent!)  So I went and got down on the floor with the three knuckleheads and said jokingly, “OK guys…the next kid I hear whining is gonna get a swirly!”  

(Of course I would NEVER actually do that, and growing up I had uncles and aunts that would threaten to give me swirlies…so I thought I’d just carry on the funny tradition!)

Well, as soon as I said that, Russell started laughing so hard – he thought it was the funniest thing ever – and him laughing made Bryn laugh really hard too.  (So here I’m thinking “Yay…it worked – look how much fun we’re having!) Then Russell, through his laughter said, “Hahaha…a swirly…what’s that??”  I said, “A swirly is when I take ya upside down, stick the top part of your head in the toilet and flush!”  This is when it backfired.  Russell stopped laughing, thought for a minute, and then started crying and said (in a really sweet pathetic voice), “But I just want to be together with my family!”  

Aaaah!  I felt like the worst mother EVER!!  He actually thought I would flush him down the toilet!  I said, “No Russ…I wouldn’t actually flush you all the way down!  It would just be the top of your head…your hair, and it would go like this when I flushed”…and then I grabbed some of my hair with both hands, stood it straight up and moved it in “swirling” motions. He stopped crying and we were all good, but holy cow!  I know he’s a super sensitive boy, I need to be more careful with what I say – even jokingly!  Maybe I better make sure tomorrow he knows that I wouldn’t ever put any part of him in the toilet…he’ll have nightmares tonight probably – poor kid!  Bad joke.

Also the other day, Russell was reading his bone book with Justin and they were looking at the ear and all the different bones and parts of the ear.  Justin, wanting to teach him not to put things in his ears, said something like, “If you put something too far in your ear, you’ll hit the ear drum and won’t be able to hear any more.”  They kept talking about things and after they were done Russell got all teary eyed and looked scared and I was like, “What’s wrong Russell?”  He said, “Well, Daddy just told me something that makes me really really sad!”  I hadn’t heard the whole ear conversation, but Russell started telling me what his dad said and said (as he’s crying), “I don’t want to not be able to hear!”  Well, it took a good 20 minutes to ease his mind about the whole thing and that we just want him to be careful what he puts in his body.  I had to go on a whole, “Do we put marbles in our nose?  Do we put sticks in our ears?  Do we put rocks in our mouth” spiel.  They enjoyed that little conversation so much that it had to continue when I layed with them at bedtime.  That’s when Bryn piped up and said, “We don’t put boogers in our mouth…just food!”  That’s right Bryn!  Lets practice that now!  

Anyways, Russell still gets all nervous every time I clean his ears now and keeps saying, “Be really careful!!”  the whole time I’m cleaning them.  Which is too bad cause him and Asher always need their ears cleaned!  Hmm…maybe I should enter the candle business…

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Hide and Seek

A few months ago, Russell was playing Hide-and-seek with the neighbor boy.  I don’t think he really understood the concept though – here are some of his hiding spots:

Behind a tree

Behind a tree

This wouldn’t be a bad spot, IF the seeker wasn’t counting from behind him!  Oh, and if there wasn’t a big gaping hole between the tree right where he is standing.  

Whenever I play hide and seek with him I’ll say, “Russell, where are you?!”  Just for the effect of looking for him.  But he always answers, “I’m right over here!”   Then I tell him he’s not supposed to tell me.  Kids must get so confused.  We parents say, “Answer me when I call you!”   But then sometimes we tell them not to (like if we’re playing games).  We tell them, “Don’t take candy from strangers.”  Yet once every year we dress them up and tell them to go and actually knock on the strangers door and ASK for candy! So confusing to be a kid.

Uh oh, I think I just got sidetracked again – where were we…

Another Tree

Another Tree

Trees were really the only thing in the yard to hide behind, but he’s kind of got the wrong concept.  Here he looks like an environmentalist instead of someone hiding.  Again here, he simply needs to walk around the tree a little further.  

 

and another tree....my favorite.

and another tree....my favorite.

 

 

This has to be my favorite.  This is an actual hiding spot he picked…and what is really funny about this pic is the look on his face.  Like he’s thinking, “Oh, there he is…I don’t think he will find me here!  I just need to stay really still!”  

 

We’ll have to work on this.  He’s still got plenty of years before he plays with the professionals in his youth…I’m not too worried.

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Bones

I’ve been going to the Chiropractor for years.  Way back in well, a year I can’t even remember…it’s probably been a good 10 years anyways…I sprained my back at work.  No, I wasn’t a cashier.  I was a “grocery clerk” meaning I put the groceries on the shelves – and that involved a lot of lifting. 

Here I go getting sidetracked again…but this reminded me of something that I just have to say.  You know how everyone always says, “Lift with your legs, not your back!”  I really hate that phrase.  Sure it’s a great idea and may actually be better for your back in the long run, but seriously….who ACTUALLY does it?  First of all, lifting like that looks totally unnatural, and secondly, when you’re in a hurry to get a job done and your pay scale and job are on the line, it’s not something I’m willing to do.  Maybe it’s like sitting up straight – sure you look like you left the hangar in your shirt and have  a stick glued to your back, but it’ll save your back in the end -I think it takes a lot of practise and getting used to. 

Ok, so I was doing a lot of lifting and this case of peas I lifted onto a higher up shelf was the “straw that broke the camels back” (assuming I’m the camel).  It was pretty painful and I once I got home and layed on the floor I was unable to move.  Anyways, so I’ve had quite a bit of problems with it, and can’t sit for long periods of time, or lift too much or whatever.  (Actually, a few years before this happened, there was another incident that may contribute to my back problems as well.  It was New Years Day and my uncle was pulling me and my brothers and cousins (a few at a time of course) around on a tube behind his truck on the icy streets of Stirling.  Well we rounded a corner this one time and hit a little pile of snow and I went flying and landed on my back.  The uncle driving the truck happened to be a chiropractor, but I was in too much pain to let him do anything.  True story.  I wish I had pictures to prove it all.

Back to the original point of my post…Justin and I went in last week for our regular check-up at the chiro (ok, Justin has only been maybe 3 times) and he suggested we bring the kids in for a checkup.  So that’s what I did.  Bryn was a little hesitant but she did a great job…even though she looked at him the whole time with complete distrust.  Asher did fine, as long as he could see me.  Russell was the most excited.  Mostly because the office if full of bone pictures and artifical bones.

Russell mostly, but Bryn too, likes to do this for fun:  He’ll get his childrens encyclopedia and turn to the bone and body page and just look at it.

Bone & Body Book

Bone & Body Book

  Sometimes we’ll get on the computer together and look up the bones and learn the names of a few new ones.  At night before bed we used to tell different stories like the 3 little pigs or something like that, now we have to talk about bones and what organs they protect in our body. Whenever the Russell falls or something, he says “Oooh…I hurt my humerous! (or whatever he hurt). My mom went to the dollar store and found some puzzles, and the kids love them.  The skeletal system and the digestive system foam puzzles.  

 

The popular foam puzzles

The popular foam puzzles

What weird kids I have!  Russell (who rarely dresses himself and usually asks for help eating) can do the digestive system by himself and most of the skeltal system, and Bryn can do the skull, hands and feet of the bone one. Sometimes they will take a piece of the puzzle and wave it around and I’ll say “Hey!  Careful with my spleen!”  Or “Russell, don’t bend my instestines around like that!”  They think it’s hilarious every time and about fall over laughing so hard.  Pretty soon though, the puzzles turn into frustration and fights (much like most other activities) and I quickly re-assemble them and put them out of sight.  

….I guess Bio class wasn’t such a waste of time after all!

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Poke Shop

Yesterday I had to take Russell to get another “poke.”  Usually he just “loses it” when our number is called and we are sitting there waiting in the chair.  This time he cried as soon as I told him we were going to get one, all the way to town, and as we walked into the “Poke Center” as he sometimes calls it.

Oh that reminds me, quick story:  Last week we tried to take him to get his poke but the nurses were operating in “super slow” mode, and with the other two kids in the van with Grams I wasn’t about to wait another hour, so we left and decided to come back next week (yesterday).  ANYWHO…before we had even got there last week, we (grandma and I) were trying to help Russell stop crying, talking about the sticker they always give him after and things like that.  Grandma said, “You know what Russell…when I went and got a poke, they never gave me a sticker!”  Russell, his face a little perplexed said, “What poke shop do you go to?!” I had never called it a “poke shop” before…it’s not like we get to shop around and pick the one we like the best!  So now it’s the “poke shop” or “poke center”.  

Ok, where was I…oh yes, we had walked into the “poke shop”, took a number and sat down.  Russell was still having a hard time, drawing all the attention to us.  The nice lady sitting beside us asked if he would like a candy and offered a mint mento.  I politely declined, telling her he doesn’t like mint.  Russell continued with the sobs and this lady pulled a loony out of her purse and said, “Here, you take this and buy a little treat afterwards.”  What a sweet lady.  So I thanked her and took it (Russell was being shy) and put it in his coat pocket.  

Well, we waited and waited and he had calmed down a bit and we were playing and laughing, and Russell would say, “I’m going to cry though.”  And I would say, “that’s ok, you’re allowed to cry…just not yet though ok, cause we’re not even in there!”  Russell said, “ok, tell me when.”  I agreed.

Our number was called and he started to cry again…really hard (without my prompting him to)!  He was practically going berserk and I figured they’d have to sedate him just to take a little blood.  The nurse pulled out a teddy bear and gave to him, thinking that would calm him down.  I chuckled to myself knowing how many stuffed animals he’s gotten from that place and that they hadn’t done a bit of good in the calming department.  (That’s ok though, Bryn always likes the animals.)  He continued to spaz, but they managed to get what they needed and then let him pick something out of the prize box, AND gave him sticker!  

Moral of the story:  The bigger the fuss, the bigger the prize!

So today our Cardiologist called to tell us the results…and the good news!  As soon as I got off the phone I said, “Russell, guess who that was on the phone.”  He shrugged and I said, “It was Dr. Harder (the most amazing Dr. we’ve ever had, I might add…) and guess what she said!”  Russell’s eyes widened, not knowing what to expect and I said, “She said ‘No more pokes for Russell!!’”  I wish so badly that I could have his reaction on video!  He gasped, raised his arms in the air and jumping up and down yelled “woo hoo, woo hoo!!!”  He was so excited…and so was I! 

By Christmas he gets to be on aspirin and off those awful little pink pills that caused us so much grief in the beginning.  I really hate those things!  I’d like to dump a bunch on the table and take a really sharp knife and stab them to bits!  But that would only do two things…make me look psycho, and wreck my kitchen table…so I don’t think I will. But now you have a visual of just how much I hate them, which was my point.

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Budding Artist

Russell has been surprising me lately with his printing and drawing.  We were going to go get groceries the other day and Russell wanted to make the shopping list.  So he got a paper and pencil, sat up to the table, and asked grandma how to spell “chocolate milk”.  

chocolate milk

chocolate milk

He didn’t do too bad, a few of the letters are backwards.  He started on the second row there and worked his way up and around and back down again.  Technicalities, that’s all they are.  He can also print his name, except for the S’s.  I usually have to draw a dot-to-dot S and then he’ll trace it.  A little practice and he’ll be doing it with no problem.   

Then yesterday he drew people for the very first time – I was pretty excited.  

first people drawing

first people drawing

I’m sure you’ll agree that those people look a little odd. What’s with the scribbles under the long line from the head?  What are those lines in some of the heads (some have more than just smiles)?  So I asked Russell to explain them to me and then I labled them as he directed.  

Russell has been really interested in bones and how the body works.  His interest of bones started from watching a Curious George that we have, and once in a while he’ll get a paper and just draw all the bones in his body.  We’ve been helping him learn the bones, and we’ve also been teaching him about his body and how it works – starting with his digestive system because of his present problems with that.   Now he’ll say things like “I’m so hungry…my intestines need food in them!”  (We probably shouldn’t consider home schooling, eh!)

labeled drawing

labeled drawing

So, those little scribbles at the bottom of each long neck are the stomach, intestines, and bum! And the lines in the heads are also bones.  The funny thing is that he only drew bones in Grandpa and Daddy’s head…the two boneheads I guess!  Oh, and that dotted line and solid line coming from my neck is supposed to be my skull.  We did tell him (again) that the the skull bone is in the head.  He’ll catch on soon I’m sure.  Not bad for the first time drawing people!  He did forget the arms, but eventually realized that and added them on (How do you remember intestines but not arms??)  Oh well, it’s a start.

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Pills and Pokes

Once a month, Russell has to get blood work done.  Since his open-heart surgery last November, he has been going quite often to get his INR checked.  That just means that they are seeing how fast his blood clots.  One of the meds he is on is Warfarin (or Coumadin)…also known as rat poisoning.  Appearantly it is the most effective blood thinner out there. Russell has come a long way as far as taking meds is concerned.  In fact, he hasn’t gone a day in his life yet without taking something!  I’d have to say though that he has been pretty amazing at taking his meds without too much fight.  Prior to Nov surgery, he would take his two pills and just chew them up and swallow!  As a baby he did not too bad with all the gross liquid ones.  We would hide it in his milk when we could, but that has not always been possible.  So he has done quite well, up until he had to take the Warfarin, that is.  

pills

pills

 

These little pink nightmares have caused us a lot of grief!  They taste too horrible to chew up, and even crushed and hidden in food wouldn’t work…he’d gag and throw up most of the time.  We tried crushing it and smothering it in chocolate syrup, which worked maybe twice, but that just wasn’t our answer.  We tried everything but couldn’t think of any more tricks.  But after a lot of prayer…pleading for the Lord to somehow help him take these really important pills, we used our last resort.  We said “Russell, just put it on the back of your tounge, take a drink and swallow…don’t bite it!”  So he did, and it worked!  What a blessing!  We thought that was pretty impressive for a three year old to know how to swallow pills! I don’t think I even learned how till I was like 12.  

Taking his meds.

Taking his meds.

So now he takes them every night, but it always has to be with chocolate milk!  The pills have to be lined up in a specific order (does this sound obsessive compulsive?) with the white one being first (white is his favorite color).  Then the half pink one and the whole pink one come last, as shown in the above pic.  We usually have to say the “eenie meenie miney moe” thing so he can see which one to take first.  The thing is though, he’ll point to his two pink ones back and forth until we get to “moe” and then he’ll point to the white one, cause he always has to take that one first!  Funny kid.  

I think he likes white because it looks “clean”.  He hates getting dirty, and sometimes I even have to feed him his jam sandwiches because he’d rather just not eat than    

Down the hatch!

Down the hatch!

risk it dripping onto his fingers…heaven forbid!  Sometimes he’ll just ask for plain bread so there’s no chance of getting anything on his hands.  In his November surgery, while he was still in the ICU, the nurses offered him a pbj sandwich.  He said no, but we continued to offer. Finally I asked him why he didn’t want one and he said, “Because that will make my hands dirty!”  I was thinking, “uhh, that’s the least of your concerns right now little buddy!”  (As he layed there all attached to tubes and wires.)  What a kid.

Back to the pokes.  We always give Russell warning when we are taking him to get a “poke”.  We’ve always given him the heads up about things like that so as to maintain his trust with us.  He usually panicks and cries a little, but then after we assure him that we will hold him and be right there with him, he calms down again until he is sitting in the hot seat.  Then he’ll scream and cry until it’s over.  Generally we’ve had some pretty good nurses…they know how to work with kids.  But we’ve also had our run ins with the insensitive jerky nurses (pardon my language).  Like the one that yelled threateningly at my crying boy to stop crying and hold still, then proceeded to hold his arm so tight there were fingernail imprints in his little arm!  I was not impressed – and she knew it!  I will not be letting her near Russell any more!  

We have to make sure we tell the nurses “NO BANDAIDS!”  He hates bandaids, and will cry even at the mention of them almost as hard as when he has to get the actual poke!  That’s something we have to be very careful we tell Dr.s and nurses at every checkup and procedure he has…if it’s at all possible – don’t use or mention bandaids, or even try to refer to them as “stickers”.  The fact that it has Lightning McQueen on it doesn’t change things…he doesn’t want anything sticking to him.  This is all very understandable, as he has had so many “dressings” and things all over his body through all his surgeries and procedures.  

It’s interesting to watch Russell play Dr. now days.  Russell and Bryn always give us “pokes” and Russell does it with precission, the way he has it done at the hospital.  Sometimes he checks to make sure the name on the form is spelled right…he’ll spell his name out to me and wait till I confirm it.  He then wipes my arm with “cold stuff”, puts in the needle (then he waits for a min, obviously waiting till the vial fills with blood), puts a cotton swab on my arm, and gives me a sticker!  Sometimes they give him knitted finger puppets…I think we have enough of them now to restock the clinic!  They are kind of cute, and somewhat useful as they occupy some of Bryn’s attention at church. Here’s a small sample. 

 

Finger Puppets

Finger Puppets

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4 Year Old Miracle

 

Happy 4th Birthday Russell!!  

Russell is my miracle child.  He was born with a serious heart defect called tricuspid atresia (in English that means the right side of his heart doesn’t work).  It was detected on my first ultrasound with him half way through my pregnancy.  When I was about 7 months along, we had a consultation with Dr.s and specailists in Calgary to talk about the condition, what he would need to have done (should he survive after birth), and other related options.  I think I remember this experience so clearly because they suggested that day that I abort the pregnancy!  Without even giving it a second thought, or even looking at Justin for that matter, I said “No, definately not!”  (Of course Justin completely agreed with me!)  I shutter and cringe every time I think about that!  I can’t even begin to express just how horrible of a decision that would have been to abort…everything about this amazing little guy that we’d have missed out on!  I can’t even bear to think about it!  

Well, on Sept 22nd 2004 – Russell came into the world!  Here’s a picture of the first time I got to hold him:

 

First Hold

First Hold

I only got to hold him for about 5 min because they had to rush him to the UofA hospital as they thought he’d need surgery right away.  I love this pic.  All the fear, stress, anxiety, excitement, and worry of the 4-5 months leading up to his birth, and it all gets put on hold for just a moment as I get to hold him and look at my little boy for the very first time!  The tear running down my cheek says it all.  

He was no doubt prepared for the trials he’d face, but we’ve had some trying/defining times.  He started out like this:

Only a few days old and not able to breath on his own.

 

On oxygen at about 3 months old

On oxygen at about 3 months old

Three major heart surgeries, 5 or 6 cardiac catheterizations, a stroke, and numerous other obsticles and heartaches later, he miraculously turns into this:

 

I’d have to say that I’ve learned more during his lifetime than I have in mine.  And though it’s been the toughest years yet, he’s no doubt worth every minute of it!  

So, I hope the birthday boy had a fun day today!  He deserves it! 

Happy Birthday Russell!

Happy Birthday Russell!

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