Monday
The Plan: D&C at OB's office ; Recover at home while watching The Wire
Reality: D&C at OB's office ; Recover at home while watching The Wire
Tuesday
The Plan: Teach courses, write tests and quizzes for week, take a mid afternoon walk to deliver books and stretch legs.
Reality: Teach courses, write tests and quizzes for week, have walk interrupted by call from Baby M's center. Baby M is vomiting. Run back to car. Leave frantic messages on J's cell in case he is closer. Get Baby M. Take home. Get vomited on twice (it is me or the rugs and I am easier to clean). Take shower twice. Trail Baby M with towels and catch next five retching episodes. Rugs OK. Watch J walk in door with Little E. Inform him that Baby M is in bad shape. Watch in disbelief as J leaves to go to the the track because his Tuesday run is "very important" to him. Stew.
Wednesday
The Plan: Go to office and work on conference presentation; contact caterers for undergraduate conference I am chairing; go to gym.
Reality: Stay home with Baby M who is no longer vomiting, but who is having issues at the other end. Attempt to entertain Baby M and work on aforementioned presentation. Get call from Little E's teacher. Little E is lethargic, running a temperature of 104 and complaining of headache. Call J who is able to get her. Go downtown after hours to pick up tests and quizzes. Realize that student worker only copied ten tests because I neglected to tell her how many to copy. Curse. Loudly. Copy 80 tests and quizzes. Go home. Bathe children. Stay up all night with Little E who is miserable.
Thursday
The Plan: Give tests and quizzes; present research to my faculty committee; meet with independent studies student.
Reality: Take Little E to doctor where she tests positive for flu (despite having had the flu shot). Hand her off to J who had stayed home with M who is vomiting again. Get to school late for first quiz. Give test to second class. Get very annoyed because one idiot freshman takes an extra 15 minutes on test. Call chair of committee and tell her to put me on the agenda for the next meeting. Go fill Little E's prescription for Tamiflu. Tell J to give her the Tamiflu before he leaves for work. Watch J force liquid down her throat. Watch E vomit on him. Laugh. Am treated with silent treatment for the rest of the day.
Friday
The Plan: Arrive at office early, polish conference presentation; finish travel grant; clean deask; have lunch with friends; grade quizzes and tests.
Reality: Stay home with sick children AND sick husband (who has caught the stomach thing). Change diapers too foul to discuss. Listen to children and husband whine. Contemplate running away. Notice that own post D&C cramping is getting uncomfortable.
Saturday
The Plan: Go shopping for fabulous boots; clean house; declutter 15 minutes; relax
Reality: Children and husband still ill. Own cramps becoming nearly unbearable. Light bleeding turns heavy, turns to near hemorrhage. Pass golf ball to fist size clots. Call doctor and am told to go to Labor and Delivery. Am dropped at hospital by J and sick children. Call L, my oldest friend, and ask for a ride home for later. Sudden gush of blood gets me to front of line and I am admitted. Call L to tell her to take her time as I will probably need surgery. Ultrasound confirms "junk" in uterus. Am prepped for proper D&C. L arrives and we laugh and catch up as we wait for OR. Best time I have had in a week. Finally wheeled into OR. South American doctor with lovely accent gives me "medicine so you won't care." Informed after surgery that the pregnancy was possibly molar. Too blissed out from drugs to be concerned. L finally takes me home 7.5 hours after I was admitted. Realize this was the first night that I haven't nursed Baby M at bedtime. Too medicated to care.
Sunday
The Plan: Screw it. I'm over planning.
Up up and away
11 years ago
5 comments:
Oh goodness. The plan never does work, does it? I'm sorry, though, that it failed just so dreadfully and hope that you are feeling better today.
Em that is by FAR the worst week I´ve ever heard a friend describe. I´m so sorry. I really wanted to jump through the computer and help you while I was reading that. I hope things are getting slowly better.
Em that's horrendous. Hang in there. Thinking of you.
Jeez, Em, what a week! I really hope that things improved after that. And that you're doing and feeling alright.
Crap. I'm so sorry.
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