Sunday, September 27, 2020

Welcome to Kindergarten, Lydia Rose!


Kindergarten has been great so far!  Lydia marched right in and ran right out, full of so many things to tell me.  She loves her teacher and tells me every at home learning day that it is better at school. 



At home learning with mom on Monday and Tuesday consists of letter, number and math worksheets, digital boom cards, online story time, sight words and reading, a zoom call and a specials class.  Lydia works at her desk and does PE in the living room.  Recess is spent walking the neighborhood, playing in the clubhouse parking lot or kicking the ball around in the driveway.  


Lydia and Dad do virtual school on Wednesdays which has a lot more online activity including 3 zoom calls with the whole class, one live specials class, and many online activities to complete. We are all pretty worn out by Wednesday night!


All in person learning starts October 5.  
16 days from the time of writing this.  
Who is counting?  I am!


 

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Congratulations, Lydia!




A little painful to take out the button because she was upset and it always tugs a bit, but it is out.  

It is out for good! DONE.  

July 1, 2019 we started our feeding tube weaning journey.  October 1, 2020 we stopped using the feeding tube for food all together.  Lydia lost 5 pounds and regained 6 between October 1 and April 1.  

Way to go Lydia!  

It wasn't just eating orally, it was a mental switch and real education to learn how to eat, what foods and textures tasted and felt like, and new brain synapses to know she was hungry.  

Once again, Lydia is amazing.







 

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Growth Hormone Simulation Test

8:00  Dan takes Lydia to her appointment at Broadway Clinic.

8:15  All checked in, Lydia's charming the room, all is good.

8:45  Can't get line access.  Not in her arm or hand.  Call Vascularl

9:00  Dan takes Lydia to CMH downtown for vascular to put in a line.

10:00 Back at Broadway Clinic to start the test.

Every 30 minutes for 8 intervals they put the tourniquet on, take Lydia's blood pressure and take a sample of Lydia's blood. 

2:00 Lydia can finally eat and leave to get a Happy meal, of which she is most deserving.



Here is an email I wrote while silently crying over the keyboard on Saturday, September 5 to Lydia's Endocrinologist. 

Dr. Feldt,

The test is done, not fun, not a good experience in that office. I'm not sure if you have any influence in that regard but I'd like to share the experience. The people were are all nice and pleasant enough, just couldn't get Lydia's line started, bruised her up and down both arms. Had to take her to Adele Hall to vascular to get line access, then back to Broadway. The test started 2 hours late. Needless to say I have thoughts on having clinics that need line access without nurses that can give it effectively.  Maybe Lydia is exception and for all the other kids and parents that have to go through this I'm hopeful that we are the anomaly.  

I'm anxious to hear Lydia's test result, though I'd rather not know them, truthfully. I'd rather brush it under the rug and love her for the complete beautiful child that she is. I believe she is made exactly how she is for a reason and that I've given her only the things that are necessary to save her life, and so far, that's been a lot. I don't know that growth hormone injections will save her life. I'm not sure they will better her life unless there is a absolute medical need for them. If it's only so she is a "normal" size and is as tall as the other girls, to me that sounds vain. I don't care if she's competitive at sports, let her be a musician or an artist or a chef. 

I just need to have this dialogue open with you. I promise I'm a reasonable parent that will choose what is medically best and necessary for my child. I am asking that we exhaust every possible alternative, do every possible test that could lead us down a different path, talk to other parents that have and have not chosen growth hormones, involve Lydia's pediatrician in the discussion, and get a 2nd opinion. I don't know if it's normal for a mother to be writing to you like this but this is what I need to do right now. 

Maybe the test will show that things are okay and she doesn't need this but I am a mother that plays out the scenario to the worst possible conclusion I know to exist.  My daughter has had 2 open heart surgeries and needed a feeding tube and trach to live - I have played out the worst possible outcomes too many times.  Her heart is repaired, not normal, and it's forever in question.  The trach is gone and the feeding tube is being removed very soon.  That was supposed to be our last hurdle, that was it.  Then we could be normal and typical and not worry anymore.  And as we were starting to celebrate that we were hit with this.  This test upset our celebration so I just need to hear from you about the results so I can know what to prepare for. 

Thank you for reading all this. I've had to handle a lot in regards to Lydia's health.  I can handle this if it's what we need to do, please know that. 

Kinsley Riggs

Thursday, September 10, 2020

August - just the fun parts

Do you like my cake hat?

At work with Mommy!

Do you like my Happy Meal hat?

Playing the color game from our Vacation Bible School packet.

Bubbles!

Just another day wearing the usual.

Climbing mountains.

Tie Dye from the St. Louis girls!

Must wear reading glasses to ride.

After this bite she just wanted the cone.

Trying to paint herself like the Genie in Aladdin.

Being goofy at the park.

Make our white t-shirts into tie dye!

 

Inside Out: Lydia's Version

Anxiety - yep, about most things. Envy - uh huh, and wondering why she's different. (scars, treatments, growth hormone shots, CPAP, IE...