Thursday, December 14, 2006

Been A While

On August 24th, 2006 we found out my husband had cancer. On August 29th, 2006 he was hospitalized. He was having trouble breathing due to the tumors in his chest. At first, we thought it was Testicular Cancer. After the biopsy, we found out it was Large Diffuse B Cell Lymphoma. He was in Stage 4, there was not stage five.

The key word in that last sentence is was.

Almost four months later, he is winning his battle. It has been a very long, hard, enlightening, inspiring, fearful four months. If you want to learn more, please go to www.artnagle.blogspot.com, where, as usual, I have used my fingers to work though all the difficulties and the joys.

Fear not though, I will be back, becuase well....once a mother, always a mother!

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Failure

15 days ago my 6 yr old daughter was hit by a car. Everyday since 7:15 p.m. on Tuesday, August 8, I have struggled with my failure to protect my child. It is destroying me.

We, my husband and I, were standing across the street in the driveway of a neighbor, engrossed in conversation, adult talk. But that is a lie, for every mother knows the only time you can be engrossed in conversation is when your children are asleep in bed, or being cared for by someone else and NOT in eye shot of you.

Our children were across the street in our house. Two were in the backyard playing, the third and youngest was on the other side of the street. I had my eye on him while trying to maintain a conversation that entailed finishing coherent and complete sentences. I was multi-tasking a conversation.

Suddenly, my daughter is moving towards the end of the driveway, on her scooter wearing a helmet. I do not see her, my husband does. He watches as she looks to her right, but not to her left. He sees what she does not see. He sees the car. He is yelling, “Stop! Stop!” Each successive yell louder, and more forceful, each filled with increasing fear. I see that it’s too late. She is looking at us, eyes big, working our alarm down from her ears to her body trying to obey. She meets the front of the car and disappears from view.

I am screaming “Oh My God! Oh My God!” over and over and over again. I turn my back to the scene. I am bent over, hugging myself looking for a way to run. I want to clutch myself into oblivion. My husband and my neighbor are gone, having disappeared also around the car. I walk into the bushes of my neighbor’s house wanting only to go away from her, the daughter that has disappeared.

The others have reacted differently. I do not see them run towards her. I, unable to escape finally turn to face the car. Observing my daughter as her blood leaves her body or as she lays rag-doll like on the ground is something I cannot do. I just simply cannot do it, even if it means missing her last breath. I know later, if she dies, I will regret that decision. It doesn’t matter. I can do nothing in this moment. I am one of the useless hysterical mothers we see on t.v. and I am filled with shame.

I run around the back end of the car, into my house, to the phone, averting my face. I can only utter “My daughter has been hit by a car,” before the woman is telling me to take deep breaths and that she can’t understand me. I remember hearing my daughter shrieking. She is conscious, that is good, I think. That is good. I am trying to breathe deeply so I can impart valuable information to the woman on the phone who is trying to help me. The expression “a scream that wells up inside” is accurate. I am impressed by its precise description. My neighbor is unexpectedly here in the kitchen with me, holding me and the anguish subsides enough to tell the dispatcher everything she needs to know.

I am breathless. My heart if it is not broken is trying hard to burst from my chest. I cannot help her. I see my 6’6” husband sitting on the stoop, cradling and rocking her. My daughter is sobbing. He and I look at each other. “I am sorry” I say in my mind. “I cannot help you.” His eyes hold the terror of not understanding what just happened. I cannot bear the site of her blonde-brown hair hanging over his arms.

At that moment, when I passed the doorway, unable to approach her or him, I felt that I had failed my mother test. The image of mother as the great protector was not my reality. I was not careful or watchful enough to protect my daughter. And worse, I was in the middle of a “selfish” act, talking to a neighbor, filling up my emotional tank when the accident happened. Good mothers are careful of where they stand when they talk to neighbors. Good mother do not turn to Jell-O during a crisis. A good mother faces her child, bloodied or not and comforts her. I didn’t comfort. I broke.

There is this myth that we, as mothers, can shield our children completely. That if we are all-vigilant and all-protecting, our children will never have to deal with sexual predators, bullies and cars driving down a road. And while we understand logically it’s impossible, it doesn’t stop us from passing judgment on others and ourselves for failing in this arena. The myth of motherhood, with its unrealistic expectations and its supplementary public demands is a trap. There is no space to be human, to err, only space for guilt about making the “wrong” choice. Being a good mother is synonymous with the being perfect. I was and am not perfect. And somehow, in my imperfection, I deal with the idea that the accident was my fault and is due to my failure as a mother. That is the most dangerous thought of all.

Follow up: Pallas is ok. She did slow down enough to hit the side panel of the car and not the front of it. The drag marks from her scooter are 30 feet long. They are still visible on the street in front of our house. She was wearing a helmet, a habit we have fought with our kids about. It might have saved her life. At the least, it saved her many stitches.

Monday, June 12, 2006

Hypothetically Speaking

When the powers that be said that the average child witnesses approximately 16,000 murders on T.V. by the time they are 18, did they mean different murders or something else?

Say, hypothetically of course, it's a weekend and you're tired and need some down time. Say your husband needs the same. Theoretically speaking, you let your kids watch, oh, I don't know, Star Wars VI five times over the course of a weekend. Now, let's just say there are twenty murders in the movie, not including the big blow up scenes where countless numbers die.

Is the number of murders witnessed twenty? Or is it twenty times five, the number of murders multiplied by the number of times the kids have seen the movie? In this highly imaginary scenario, my kids might have witnessed 100 murders in a forty-eight hour period. I'm just wondering, of course. Not that I would let my kids do anything like that. Heavens, no.

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Bill Cosby

Bill Cosby once said “If the kids are alive at the end of the day, I’ve done my job.”

Well, my kids are alive and today, that in itself was an accomplishment. I deserve a frickin' gold medal.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Fear This

Conversation between my studly husband (here in known as SH) and L, my oldest son.

Place: In the car, on their daily commute to school

Time: 7:30 am

Provocateur: A bumper sticker that says “FEAR GOD”


L: Why should you fear God?
SH: Some people believe that God will punish you if you do bad things.
L: Well, God forgives you when you do something bad. It should say “Fear Santa Claus.” He'll leave coal in your stocking if you do bad things!


___________________________________________________________________

Great news! Want to know whenever I post? You will need to have a newsreader (ie a personal My Yahoo page, AOL, MSN ) Click the SITE LINK to the right and add it to your content. This is so exiciting that I gotta go peee!

Sunday, May 21, 2006


L taken by 4 yr old E, moments before he fell off the the spinning stool.

Patience

I am amazed how much patience I actually posses. I hear mothers-to-be express their fear of not being patient enough, as if they were talking about breast milk. Will I have enough? What will I do if I run out? How will I know if my baby’s getting the right amount? There is only one question that cannot be put in both groups. Breastfeeding mothers never worry if their lack breast milk will produce the next Jeffrey Dahmer.

Patience is endless, that is, if you can remember to breathe. When I discovered I had it, it made me feel like Cinderella after her Fairy God Mother turned her rags into a beautiful ball gown. I danced around, hugged myself, looked at my beautiful, patient face in the mirror and thought, “Oh, how lovely!”

Today, however, I forgot to inhale….deeply…..several times…to find my patience. I’m not sure it would have worked anyway. It was 9:00 at night, an hour and a half past bed time. My daughter, overtired and over-stimulated, was sobbing in her bed. She wailed over our dead dog she never knew. Sensitve? Maybe, but at 9:00 all I could think was the damn dog died 5 years ago. My daughter is 6.

In that moment, my patience was nowhere to be found. It is a good thing however, that I have discovered another “emotion” equally, if not more important, but barely talked about. This emotion too flows in abundance. The best part of this emotion is that you don’t have breathe in or tke as many times breaths to tap into it. You just need to let go.

I go in, pick up and hold my mourning, sobbing daughter. I make an attempt to hide my hysterical laughter.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

And Now for Something Completely Different

As many of you know, I'm a triathlete. And while that has it's pluses - eatin' more than my husband, and having legs that even I like -- it has it's down side like, finding a toe nail polish regiment that will keep my toes looking cute after 3 pool swims a week!

Toe nail painting season is upon us. I have broken out the old sandals and flip flops for more than just getting to and from the pool. But last year I found myself re-applying polish ever third day due to the chlorine. I am not a spend-time-on-my-feet kinda gal. I'd rather spend it writing, of course. What's a girl to do? Has anybody found the perfect non-chipping nail polish or perfect polishing system to ensure a good swim time AND cute toes? Please let me know.