Saturday, June 23, 2018

One week plus a day

I have decided that I am going to start to focus on what I am thankful that I can do instead of what i cant do... like walk. I am going to try to do at least one thing for my morale everyday.  Today, it was a big one and it has improved my morale by about 100%!!  I was 99% independent in taking a kinda sorta shower! 

I am still thankful for my family and all our wonderful friends who have been so kind and loving.  I am thankful for my dogs.  I am thankful I have a job that I like with health insurance.  I am thankful for summer vacation.  I am thankful for my clean house.  I am thankful for Marco Polo...if you dont know what it is, download the app and you can video chat with your friends.  Lastly today, I am thankful that I was able to dress like a person and not a convalescent today!  Tomorrow, I may be back to my tank top PJ's but today, I was able to put on real clothes, and take a ride in the car with my mom to get lunch at Chick-Fil-A.  

Today, has been a good day. 

Bored

I have been so bored.  I am thankful for my dear friend Lynn who I Marco Polo with many times daily.  She is in the same boat as me but slightly different...left foot, 4 screws and a plate.  She had her surgery a week before I did. 


I think I have officially gone stir crazy!  All I wanted to do less than a month ago when I was teaching is come home, sit on the couch and sleep...and this is what I am actually doing right now!  I sit on the couch or recliner with nowhere I have to be and no schedule.  This blows!    I have learned that sitting around all day gets you sore. 

Heaven and Hell

Heaven = being able to kinda sorta take a shower and half-way move around the house
Hell =  not being able to do anything on my own or without assistance

Being able to kinda sorta take a real shower was absolutely wonderful and heavenly.  I'm sure its wasn't the prettiest of scenes, but I did it with Mom's help.  I am having to shower/bathe in the spare bathroom as I am having to use a lovely shower chair.  Because I am paranoid about getting my splint thingie wet, I am using "Press and Seal" wrap on my top portion of my splint, wrapping a garbage bag around my entire lower leg, then taping the garbage bag to my leg as I need it water tight!  You really don't know how much you use both your legs in everyday life until one is taken away!
  

To help my own personal sanity I am wanting to try to stay as independent as I can.  Things I can do independently now are:
*Get off the couch
*Get somewhat dressed
*Take a kinda sorta shower and wash my hair
*Take a "Circus Bath" with baby wipes...probably TMI, sorry!
*Dry and "fix" my hair
*Roll on my knee roller
I am also trying to keep all my essentials in a shoe box within reach or in the basket of my knee roller.  My essentials include, dry shampoo cause I cannot stand greasy hair, hair pic, hair scrunchies, meds, crackers, bottle of water, chapstick, pen, notebook, cell phone, extra charger, iPad, and my Chromebook sits on the table.  

I am already tired of being stuck in the house.  My follow up appointment with Dr. Vineyard is not until July 3.  I am looking forward to being able to do things on my own again and actually be helpful with things around the house.  As for now, I pretty much am useless.  I sit or lay on the couch or recliner.  Overall, recovery has been what I thought it would have been except I have had far less pain than I expected.


Days 2 & 3

Challenge -  this is my key word.

Everything I do is going to be a challenge.

I came home on a nifty little ambIT Pump, which is pumping whatever is in the lovely iv bag attached to the pump by one little hose and also attached to my leg by a little hose.  At G.W. Carver, we have two fantastic nurses...Nurse Nancy and Nurse Sheri, who are BOTH dear friends.  I was lucky to have BOTH nurses offer to pull my pain pump on Sunday.  Nurse Sheri, who brought us a yummmmy dinner, got the honor of pulling my pump out of my leg.  I feel so much better since this has been done.  I did have to start taking my pain meds though.


Here is my sweet little Izzy...she has been a good companion along with Griffy, Boozy, and Monk Monk.    Thankful for Troy, Mom, Dad, being able to "KINDA" take a shower on day 3, and all our sweet friends who have checked in on us and brought us dinner these first three days.

I'm back!

Life is officially having to slow down for me, I had Haguland's Deformity surgery on June 15, so I am pretty much confined to my couch/recliner and non-weight bearing on my right foot until July 3.  What a better time for me to start blogging again.

Update on pups...Thomas is doing great!  Last year, Troy and I raised a wonderful Fox Red Labrador Retriever named Amos.  Amos is doing great and HOPEFULLY set to graduate with his forever person within a few months!  I will update when this occurs.  Our pup that we are raising this time around is a Black Labrador Retriever named Griffy.  We love him dearly and he is wonderful!

So, I guess this blog is going to be a bit about this "journey" I will be on for the next year...yes, one year from start to finish and be fully recovered.  At this moment in time, Troy is taking over training for Griffy until I can get "back on both of my feet".

Haglund's Deformity is basically a calcium build up on the back of your heel.  This calcium build up is often referred to as a bone spur.  You can see my before x-ray below.  My bone spur decided to break off at the top and lodge the broken part in my Achilles Tendon, which was already weakened from a previous injury two years ago, of which, the insurance would not fix.  The said it was "cosmetic".
I had my surgery on June 15 as soon as I could get out of school.  They took the bone spur out of my foot and cleaned up my heel bone,  & repaired my Achilles Tendon, THANKFULLY without having to take a tendon from my big toe.  Here is my new x-ray.  My heel looks great and I have a lovely $6000 "anchor" in my foot that is holding my Achilles Tendon to the bone and allowing it to heal properly.  This is why I'm non-weight bearing until July 3.

This is my view now!  I have to be honest, I am turning some of my journals into blog posts, so this is not the only post that will come up tonight.
 



Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Thomas the guide dog puppy is not a puppy anymore!

Thomas is officially W-O-R-K-I-N-G!!!!

Thomas does not have the career we originally thought he would...While in college, he had a change in majors...he did not like wearing his leather guide dog harness, so he career changed to the Veterans Service dog major, where he branched off and went into a Facility Therapy Dog Major!  

As a Facility Therapy Dog, Thomas has been assigned to work in the Joint Intelligence Center (JIC) at United States Central Command (USCENTCOM) at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida. Thomas lives and works primarily with his trained handler Brooke, but does rotate throughout the JIC so that he can work with other trained dog handlers in order to provide comfort and general happiness to the military members and civilians. Thomas was been specifically chosen and trained by Southeastern Guide Dogs to work as a Facility Therapy Dog because he had the outgoing and empathetic qualities that they strive for.  Thomas has a wonderful, peaceful demeanor, affectionate mannerisms, and welcomes interaction from strangers.

We are super excited about Thomas' career as he was named for a Veteran who served our country, fought in WWII as an Army Air Corp Navigator...survived WWII and volunteered to fly a relief mission over Hiroshima the day after WWII ended.  It was during this mission, Thomas lost his life when his plane, that was flying low dropping relief packages, encountered a fog bank and went down. This 2 legged, human Thomas, was my Dad's Father.  My Dad Thomas, was 4 days shy of turning 3 years of age when his Dad was killed.  

What a fitting job for our boy Thomas!  Needless to say, we are extremely proud of our boy!!!  

Thomas!

Thomas and an F4Phantom on MacDill AirForce Base

Thomas and his "Mom" Brooke.  

This is the picture that Southeastern Guide Dogs takes of our pups in harness.  
  


Friday, July 8, 2016

24 hours


My heart is broken after watching TV all night last night and experiencing the protectors and heroes of the great city of Dallas, the city I call home and grew up in, coming under attack with senseless violence during a peaceful march and demonstration.  With the sensationalism of the news and rapid fury gained from the deaths of citizens this past week, in my opinion, it is understandable to protest or rally for the protection of all people. But, the idea and act of killing people just because they don a uniform and badge is  wrong.  When our protectors, cause harm, justified or not, all sheep should be watchful and cry out for injustice. However, sheep should not wear the fur and fangs of a wolf and cowardly attack for senseless blood. We are all people

As a 2nd grade teacher in a large school district in Texas, I teach ALL races of students.  Heck, I honestly don't care if they are green, purple or blue...if they are in my class, they are MY kids.  We are a family. 

I spend lots of hours working with my kids each year.  In addition to educating my kids with normal school subjects, I try to give them a little more.  On a daily basis, I teach my kids right from wrong, explaining with why it’s not okay to yell and call their friends "stupid head, cry baby, or booger eater."  I remind my kids to hold the door open for others, greet people with "good morning" or "good afternoon", ladies first, don't interrupt, use your manners when you eat, say yes Mam, no Mam, excuse me, please, and thank-you. I greet my students with a handshake every morning...unless its flu season...we do the elbow bump because nobody wants to spread any flu germs.  When we shake hands, I expect them to look at me and I will look at them.  This sometimes becomes a game to see who is going to say good morning first with some of my kids.  Just like most teachers, I want my kids to be well-behaved and well rounded little corn nuggets.  I often find myself explaining the difference, repeatedly, between an inside and outside voice and how it's important to keep things nice and not destroy property.   Harnessing their energy and directing it towards good things is a goal of mine.  The word bully was a word that came up lots this year...especially if a little nugget had watched the news and saw some of the political bickering that we all know so well now.  Thanks to our politicians, my kids now remind each other that they need to be kind to each other and not say mean things and basically try to include everyone in their little social groups. This past year, we really recreated a tight nit group in our class.   We considered each other a family member in our class and often used the word "O'hana" from Lilo and Stitch.  O'hana means family and in a family, nobody gets left behind or forgotten.


Everyone who knows me knows that I am a puppy raiser for Southeastern Guide Dogs.  My dogs come to school with me.  I promote that it's ok and a real good thing to give back to others.  It's ok to cry and feel emotion when our puppy is returned to school in Florida.  I hope that my kids learn about what it means to volunteer and receive slobbery, wet puppy kisses and a sense of pride from helping someone gain their independence in return.  Believe me, my kids help make all my pups well rounded happy dogs and what's even better, my kids know their help is valuable.  A person can come into my classroom and ask about the guide dog puppy in training and my students would jump at the change to tell the person about our puppy and the super hero he was becoming.  They are making a difference with their help.
  

As a teacher, I feel that I MUST do something to help change the path our world heading down.  My school is in a suburb of Dallas.   Late Thursday evening, four Dallas Police Officers lost their lives, one DART Police Officer lost his life, and seven other Police Officers including one civilian were wounded by a sniper during a peaceful protest.  Y'all this is ridiculous! This senseless act of violence occurred, about 30 minutes from our school.  This is in my backyard.  This hits home and quite frankly, it's a scary thing for an adult...I cannot even imagine how it makes children feel.  

Two men from other states were killed within a weeks time frame... Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.  As of right now, I know what our news has reported.  I also know that investigations have not been completed and the truth will come out.  What keeps popping into my mind is, what am I going to tell my kids when they ask about this?  Believe me, 2nd graders ask and want to talk about EVERYTHING.  Often times, teachers joke about what their students would tell them.  The truth is, I probably know MORE than you would EVER want me to know about your family, your lifestyle, your house, and what your child sees and hears daily.  Trust me, if something happened the night before at home, your child's teacher and at least 21 other students are gonna know about it.  Its subjects like this and things that a child experiences or sees that become the questions that they always tend to ask...and teachers often tend to sidestep.

So where do I start and how do you even begin to explain about ALL the lives that were lost?  I know that school does not start for another month and seven days, and after teaching students for over twenty years, I know it will be brought up.   I can't just say that sometimes people die because they are black.  I almost vomited on these words because they are so sickening and wrong.  Sometimes people die because they are white, tan, peach, yellow, have different religious backgrounds or sexual orientations.  None of this makes sense and I’ve remained silent. But I won’t remain silent anymore. Thank you Ron Clark of the Ron Clark Academy in Atlanta, GA.



It is impossible for any single human being to fix the issue of social injustice, I believe it is our responsibility to think about what we can do within our own tiny spot of the world. I am a teacher and my kids are my tiny spot of the world.  I believe in each of my kids and I do believe that I have an impact on them and can put kindness into their hearts and try to teach them to love one another and do good things for others. Believe has always been a key word I live by...its even tattooed on my right wrist.


Today, I’ve decided that in addition to teaching my kids right from wrong, manners and the obvious reading, writing, math, science and social studies, I will teach them and the truth.  Your race, color, gender, sexual orientation, or religion does not and should not define who you are or how you are treated by others.  This is what people aren’t getting. Injustices continue to run rampant in our world. I may be only one teacher and my kids may be small, but their small actions and voices are our future leaders.  If we start small, changes in our society can be monumental.  Injustice is worth fighting for. Injustice is worth spending time and energy to correct but not with violence and death.  These changes have to begin somewhere...our future depends on this.  

I am ending this blog with a powerful quote to think about.