Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Trudging through another week.

Kim's best friend is currently in Ohio visiting relatives (she lives in Germany with her folks still).  Kim and BF came up with a 'great' idea for them to be able to spend quality time together.  Going to a concert in Ohio.  Guess who gets to drive these kids to the concert? 

I'm making Kendra go with them to be a chaperone, but I'll be doing the driving. We're making a weekend of it so that Kim and BF will have time to talk as well as listen to the concert. 

The concert is the weekend of 17 August.   A perfect way to spend the last weekend of the summer (they go back to school on the 23rd of August.) I'm checking out Mapquest so I can get there with the least amount of detours. :)

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Adding to the growing population

This is one of those "phenomenoms" that keeps me busy with the quilting. After deployments/separations (even when war isn't involved) military families increase in size. Here at our current assignment many of us have come from separations  (24 married couples, 2 babies have already been born and 6 others are pregnant). Whenever you know you are going to get a year together, you want to take advantage of it.
 
Military Bases See Baby Boom
Associated Press  |  July 26, 2007
FORT CAMPBELL, Kentucky - Army Spc. John Luckey and his wife, Kerry, already had five children and no plans for more when he came home from a year's duty in Iraq. But there was romance in the California air when the entire family went on a vacation to see the giant redwoods.

Nine months later, Kerry Luckey gave birth to a daughter, EmLee Rae.

Apparently many military couples at Fort Campbell celebrated like the Luckeys when about 20,000 Soldiers with the 101st Airborne Division came home last fall, because the military hospital here is now seeing a baby boom.

The hospital expects to deliver 210 babies a month soon, nearly twice the usual number of deliveries, and more are expected at other nearby hospitals in Tennessee and Kentucky.

"You go around town and there are these big bellies everywhere. It's kind of fun to have all the babies around," said Kerry Luckey, who lives in Clarksville, near this Army post.

A temporary increase in births is not uncommon after Soldiers return, but the boom this year is the biggest the post has seen in decades, said Lt. Col. Diane Adams, chief of women's health at Blanchfield Army Community Hospital.

The base is seeing "a lot more folks with family on the mind when they returned this time around," Adams said.

About 19,000 Soldiers returned to Fort Stewart, Georgia, in the first months of 2006, and the hospital there saw a baby boom nine months later, delivering more than 100 babies a month, compared with 76 per month the previous year. Fort Hood in Texas saw deliveries peak at 289 in March 2006, well above the 213 average.

Lt. Trena Buggs, a labor and delivery nurse at Blanchfield, got pregnant herself not long after her husband, a Special Forces Soldier, returned from Iraq in early 2006, and she gave birth in May. She knew what to expect when the 101st Airborne came back between August and December of last year.

"We knew that any time the Soldiers are deployed, we knew the one thing they liked to do best when they come home is get a little bit of loving," she said.

In many cases, the father was back in Iraq by the time the baby arrived; many Soldiers have heard their children's first cries via cell phone.

The baby boom at Fort Campbell is expected to continue through December, which also happens to be when three units from the 101st Airborne are set to return to Iraq. Another three units are scheduled to leave for Afghanistan early next year.

About 20 percent of the new mothers at Fort Campbell are active-duty Soldiers themselves, Adams said.

New mothers are exempt from deployment for four months. But after that, husband-and-wife Soldiers have to arrange for child care if they are both sent overseas. Often, relatives or close friends take care of the children.

Many Soldiers at Fort Campbell have been sent to Iraq three times already. Back-to-back tours can play havoc with family planning.

"When you're in your first deployment, if you haven't started your family already, you think, 'Well, we'll go ahead and do that after the first one,'" Adams said. "They've put it off long enough, and now they want to get going on getting the family situation straightened out."

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Kids say the darndest things!

I received this note from my niece (who now has two daughters of her own).  I laughed so hard.. I had to share this.  Hope you all enjoy.

Answers given by 2nd grade school children to the following
questions:



 Why did God make mothers?
 1. She's the only one who knows where the scotch tape is.
 2. Mostly to clean the house.
 3. To help us out of there when we were getting born.


 How did God make mothers?
1. He used dirt, just like for the rest of us.
 2. Magic plus super powers and a lot of stirring.
3. God made my Mom just the same like he made me. He just used  bigger parts.


What ingredients are mothers made of ?
 1. God makes mothers out of clouds and angel hair and everything  nice in the world and one dab of mean.
 2. They had to get their start from men's bones. Then they mostly use string, I think.

 Why did God give you Your mother & not some other mom?
 1. We're related.
 2. God knew she likes me a lot more than other people's moms like me.

 What kind of little girl was your mom?
 1. My Mom has always been my Mom and none of that other stuff.
2. I don't know because I wasn't there, but my guess would be
pretty bossy.
 3. They say she used to be nice.

 What did Mom need to know about dad before she married him?
 1. His last name.
 2. She had to know his background. Like is he a crook? Does he get  drunk  on beer?
 3. Does he make at least $800 a year? Did he say NO to drugs and YES to chores?


 Why did your Mom marry your dad?
 1. My dad makes the best spaghetti in the world. And my Mom eats a lot.
 2. She got too old to do anything else with him.
 3. My grandma says that Mom didn't have her thinking cap on.

Who's the boss at your house?
1. Mom doesn't want to be boss, but she has to because dad's such  a  goof ball.
 2. Mom. You can tell by room inspection. She sees the stuff under the bed.
 3. I guess Mom is, but only because she has a lot more to do than dad.

 What's the difference between Moms & dads?
 1 . Moms work at work and work at home & dads just go to work at work.
 2. Moms know how to talk to teachers without scaring them.
 3. Dads are taller & stronger, but Moms have all the real power
'cause that's who you got to ask if you want to sleep over at your friend's.
 4. Moms have magic, they make you feel better without medicine.

 What does your Mom do in her spare time?
 1. Mothers don't do spare time.
2. To hear her tell it, she pays bills all day long.

 What would it take to make your Mom perfect?
 1. On the inside she's already perfect. Outside, I think some kind of plastic surgery.
 2. Diet. You know, her hair. I'd diet, maybe blue.

 If you could change one thing about your Mom, what would it be?
 1. She has this weird thing about me keeping my room clean. I'd get rid of that.
 2. I'd make my Mom smarter. Then she would know it was my sister who did it and not me.
 3. I would like for her to get rid of those invisible eyes on the
back of her head.

 

Monday, July 23, 2007

Graduation Pictures

Here's Kendra all dressed up and ready to graduate.  Kendra has a very pale complexion to begin with, but I think our white walls are really washing her out.

Here are the proud parents with their graduate.   The sibling set, from left to right.. Kimberly, Kendra and Mac (Kim's slouching again <eye roll>)

 

The school made it VERY clear that we wouldn't be able to get up close to the stage to take pictures, but they did have a photographer to take pics of the graduates as they received their diplomas.  I need to order a copy still.

The school had an awesome after grad party at the rec center on post for all the kids.  I was really happy that we didn't have to deal with the whole after grad party issue.  (the do we let her go because they might drink aspect). 

Monday, July 16, 2007

At Long Last- Prom Photos

These did not end up in the order I meant for them.  Ah well.  I'm learning. :)  At least I got them down in the main area where I intended them to be. In this first picture, Kendra, Kim and Tina are being helped into the Limo by their driver.

This is Kim in our living room.  Notice the totally white walls?  A common problem in military housing.  Kim, however looks beautiful.

Here are the girls in front of our apartment building, we live in the upper right apartment.

Here is Tina and Kendra in the Limo.  This thing was pretty cool.

Kimberly on her side of the Limo.  They were all so thrilled to have this luxury.

Kendra and Kim, before Tina arrived, in our living room.

I got a little fancy with this one, and turned it black and white.. this of course is Kendra.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

The youngest "wounded"

This story caught my eye this morning and I feel compelled to share this with all of you.  Although, we are blessed with a soldier that returned home whole, both in body and mind, I know so many families that aren't.  These camps were available for the kids of deployed parents while we were in Germany and I do think for many kids, they are a blessing. My children never attended because they said "Mom, we have you to talk to, we don't need to talk to a stranger."  I'm glad that they feel they can share with me (and believe me they did and do) their fears about their dad's career, but I understand a lot of kids don't want to add to their parents perceived "burden".  I hope more of these camps become available.

 

At camp, military kids bear scars of their own

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Calif. — Twilight fell over the mountain camp as the group formed a circle to trade war stories: the nightmares of battle that wake them in their sleep. The fighting. The pain. The surgeries. And always, the sudden mood swings.

"Sometimes, we feel like we have to run away," Alex Cox says.

"The military's stupid!" Adam Briggs declares.

Alex, 13, and Adam, 12, have never been to war, but they are no strangers to the ravages it can inflict. Their fathers were injured in Iraq. Like 13 other boys and girls ages 7 to 14 at an unusual summer camp this week for children of injured troops, they are in a generation indelibly marked by war.

Nearly 19,000 U.S. children have had a parent injured in the military since Sept. 11, 2001, the Pentagon says. They are lucky compared with the 2,200 kids whose parents have been killed in Afghanistan or Iraq. But as the U.S. approaches its sixth year at war, the impact of battlefield injuries and frequent deployments on troops' families — not justthe troops themselves — is increasingly clear.

"Wounded servicemembers have wounded family members," says Michelle Joyner of the National Military Family Association (NMFA), which runs the camp.

In some ways, the camp in the Cleveland National Forest — which includes 61 other kids whose parents are serving in the war — was like any summer camp: a place for kids to be kids. After arriving Saturday, the campers went swimming, climbed trees, rode horses, sang silly campfire songs and ate parflesnarfs, a gooey concoction of melted chocolate, marshmallows and popcorn.

But at this camp, there were shades of the military lifestyle. Cabin groups were named like military companies: Alpha, Bravo, Charley. On Monday, the kids went to a beach luau at nearby Camp Pendleton, where Marines let them climb into amphibious landing crafts and handle machine guns.

And each day, there was "quiet time," a chance to sit and talk about the problems each child is here to escape.

Unlike at school or at home, "kids don't have to explain themselves," says Joyner, whose group received permission from the children's parents for them to speak with a reporter. "They're with a group of their peers."

Camper Savannah Jacobs, 11, came to camp from the Marine base at Twentynine Palms, Calif. She says she is "sad" that her stepfather, Marine Sgt. Jose Ramirez, hasn't been able to ride a bicycle with her and her sister, Sierra, 9, since he was injured in a helicopter crash in Iraq last December.

However, Savannah says, talking with other campers about "stuff that happened to their dad makes me feel like I'm not alone, and the only one who's suffering."

Such sentiments come pouring out again and again: the war, through the eyes of children.

To a young child whose father loses an arm in combat, that means no more playing catch or tummy tickling, says Kent Deutsch, a Marine veteran who is a family therapist and one of three counselors at the camp. Deutsch says that when parents return from war injured or having "seen and done things that go against their inner being, the child gets a parent back who wasn't the parent who went away."

At a time when the Pentagon says as many as one in five returning servicemembers suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or other psychological problems, many of their children are struggling to grasp what happened to make their parent so different.

"What about the traumatic brain injury where before, daddy was really smart but now the 12-year-old has more intellectual functioning than dad?" says Kuuipo Ordway, a mental health therapist who works with military kids here. "How do you adjust to that? What's the long-term effect on a child?"

Children of servicemembers who have lost limbs, spent months in rehab and undergone repeated surgeries are prone to depression and feelings of being overwhelmed, Ordway says. "They've become caretakers. Before, they were the ones being taken care of."

Camper Chessa Lara, 14, says she "wasn't a nurse — technically" for her father, "but I was always there to make sure he was OK."

Army 1st Sgt. Peter Lara was shot in the jaw and shoulder in Iraq in 2005 and has undergone "a lot" of surgeries since then, Chessa says. He also suffers from PTSD.

Chessa, her sister Tauntiana, 13, and brother Julien, 11, arrived at camp in an RV with their parents and five dogs after a two-week drive from Fairbanks, Alaska. When camp ends today they'll move on — as so many other military families do each summer — to their next deployment, at Fort Jackson, S.C.

The constant moves have been hard on the family, but the children say their father's injury may have been harder. "Sometimes when he's in pain, he cries and stuff," Julien says through watery eyes.

Chessa says her father sobs for a buddy who died in the firefight in which he was wounded.

"I wasn't used to seeing him cry because he's a man. He always said dads shouldn't cry," says Chessa, struggling to hold back tears.

Still, she sees a silver lining.

"Now that he got injured, he says since God gave him a second chance, he wants to spend more time with us. He says he doesn't want to lose us," Chessa says, adding that her father's ordeal has made her "more responsible."

Program may expand next year

The camp for children of injured servicemembers is a pilot program that is part of the NMFA's network of camps for military kids. The group hopes to expand it next summer.

DubbedOperation Purple — militaryspeak referring to all branches of the armed forces — the camps will host nearly 4,000 children of servicemembers at 34 sites in 26 states this summer. Camp is free, supported by private groups, including the Sierra Club and the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation.

Little research has been done on kids of injured servicemembers, Ordway says, adding that "we've got to figure out their needs."

Many military children have "anger issues" and stress over being separated from their parents, says camp director Gene Joiner, who has run Operation Purple camps in North Carolina since the program began in 2004. But the ones whose parents were hurt have additional pressures.

"The 'wounded children,' you can tell there's something more," Joiner says. "There's a gap with these kids on how to relate to each other. They stand off a little bit more."

Jennifer Allman of Spring Valley, Calif., says she has seen that in her children since their father, Army National Guard Staff Sgt. Corby Allman, suffered back injuries, partial vision and hearing loss and PTSD after his convoy was hit by an "improvised explosive device," or IED, in Iraq in 2004.

Brandon Allman, 12, is "distant," his mother says. Jacquelyn, 10, is angry and blames herself for her father's disability. At 7, Cheyanne appears, at least for now, just happy to have her daddy home.

"It's hard because they don't understand why he gets upset really quick with them or why he can literally forget a whole conversation in two minutes," Jennifer Allman says. "I wanted them to come to camp to be with other military kids, to get counseling and to know that they are not alone."

Brandon says his father's injuries mean "he has to relax all the time" and can't go out to play. Brandon says he now fixes his sisters' bicycles and reads the numbers off a credit card when his father uses it to buy things by phone, because his dad no longer can see the numbers.

Jacquelyn, who like Cheyanne came to camp with pink streaks in her hair, says their dad "gets stressed out more and gets headaches." She says when her brother gets frustrated with his father's condition, he yells a lot and sometimes locks himself in his room.

"There's usually a lot of crying by family members."

Children mimic parents

Patients with PTSD tend to be "hypervigilant, irritable and always looking for danger," Ordway says. She says initial studies of their children show that many "model" their behavior after their parent's and become more anxious, more depressed and less able to sleep. That can lead to shorter attention spans and behavior problems.

For some veterans who saw Iraqi or Afghan children die, it often is difficult to come home and face their young relatives.

"When he came back, he didn't seem right," camper Andrew Steinhoff, 12, says of his brother, Army Spec. Ryan Hice, 19, who returned to Fayetteville, N.C., from Afghanistan in April suffering from seizures that his mother, Therese, says are caused by anxiety.

"His attitude changed a lot," Andrew says. "His whole personality is just different."

Most painful of all, Andrew says, the big brother with whom he used to hang out now can be reluctant to be with him.

Andrew says their mother told him that "there was this kid who reminded (Ryan) of me, who died" in Afghanistan. Now, when Andrew tries to talk to Ryan, "He says, 'Not right now, Bug,' " says Andrew, using his brother's nickname for him.

In an interview, Ryan Hice says he has been diagnosed with PTSD, traumatic brain injury and seizures caused by anxiety. He says little about his time in Afghanistan but does allow that "they say you have a twin everywhere. Well, my brother had one over there." Hice says that when he first returned home, "I wasn't even able to look at my brother because of stuff that happened over in Afghanistan. … It's a work in progress. I'm now able to be in the same room with him, so that's a beginning."

Hice adds that "I know it's been hard" on his little brother. He hopes Andrew made friends at camp and that "maybe they can somewhat explain to him not to take it personal."

Therese Steinhoff says her younger son has become withdrawn and feels guilty.

"He thought he did something wrong, and he didn't," she says. She sent Andrew to camp because "he needs to be around others who are affected by this war."

Every kid at the camp has a military connection, but "the wounded kids don't want to talk about the military that much," says Katherine Joiner, 18, a counselor here.

Ordway says that as more camps for children of injured servicemembers are opened, they are likely to emphasize small group discussions to encourage kids to express their feelings.

At this camp, Alex Cox didn't need much encouragement to speak his mind.

One of five children of Navy hospital corpsman Robert Cox from nearby Oceanside — Alex's sister Holly, 11, and brother Nick, 14, also came to camp — Alex talked angrily about his dad's seven deployments and problems since his shoulder was torn up in a mortar attack in Iraq in 2004.

When Ordway asked what the children would want to tell their parents, Alex yelled, "Get over it, man!"

Alex's mother, Monica, herself a Navy veteran, says her children have suffered from "bad grades to stomach issues to anxiety and depression" because of their father's deployments and injury.

She says Holly has become "clingy," and Alex was suspended from school for hitting another student. Their father says Alex and Nick argue all the time.

"I've seen my share" of combat, says Robert Cox. But when it comes to his children, "It just tears you up. It's a tough deal for them."

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

A final note on Kendra's surgery

myspace layouts, myspace codes, glitter graphics

 

I want to thank everyone for their very kind words. While I wish that Kendra had allowed the surgery to happen, I certainly respect her choice to not do it at this time.  I do believe we'd have done a lot of harm to allow her to have the surgery when she was so totally scared.  I do think that people can create self-fulfilling prophecies if they put too much thought into it (for good and bad).

A couple of things I wanted to clarify from my first entry.  When I re-read that, I realized that it sounded like we kept Kendra up til 3 am, trying to convince her to have the surgery. LOL.. that is not what happened.  Walter Reed is a good two hour drive from our house.  For us to make the 5:30 AM show time, I had to be up and moving by 2:30 (shower, eat, etc) so we could be on the road by 3:30.  We talked with Kendra about her thoughts and the dream until I had to go to bed.  We did all the pre-op stuff that we were supposed to do at home "just in case" she changed her mind.  When I woke up at 2:30, she was still up, watching T.V. and we talked again.  Paul and I were left with the feeling that the only way she'd do the surgery would be if we forced the issue.  And I wasn't comfortable with the idea of us pushing her into something she was so against.

Besides, as they are so fond of telling me at the hospital, now that she is 18, she's the one that signs the consent forms... not us.

When Dr. Cartwright called at 7 AM, Kendra got on the phone with her, presented her case very well and all was left in good order.  Dr. Cartwright is totally on board with waiting til Kendra feels ready to do this.  Paul and I have been asked (by Kendra) to not nag her, but wait til she approaches us when she's ready.

So, for now it's a done deal.  She is happy and content with her decision and I think that is the most important thing.  For me, each day that passes allows me to let go of my feelings of regret (for her).  This surgery will happen when she is ready and that is really the best time for it.

And now for something completely different...

This meme came to me by way of my dear friend Connie.. the one I hold responsible for getting me hooked on polish pottery!
 
Two Names You Go By:
1. Estela
2. Annie
Two Things You Are Wearing Right Now
1.  University of Love t-shirt
2. shorts (I'm hoping that here soon I'll start exercising) 
 
Two Things You Would Want (or have) in a Relationship:
1. Love
2. Trust

Two of Your Favourite Things to do:
1.  Reading a book that is so good, I get completely lost in it
2. Quilt when I get time
 
Two Things You Want Very Badly At The Moment:
1. To be on vacation with my sister.. I'll miss our sister trip this year
2. Energy to get things done that I need to do.

Two things you did last night:
1. Went to dinner with Paul and the girls
2. Watched two episodes of Enterprise, but I fell asleep during the second one.
 
Two things you ate today:
1. strawberries
2. spinach tortellini
 
Two people you Last Talked To:
1. Lisa
2.  Mac
 
Two Things You're doing tomorrow:
1.  Going to see Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
2   Laundry
 
Two longest car rides:
1.  Virginia to Arizona
2.  Southern Maryland to Florida

Two Favorite Holidays
1.  Halloween
2.  Christmas

Two Favourite Beverages
1. dr. pepper (especially non diet)
2. sun tea
     
Two Things About Me! Things you may not have known.
1. I worked as a seamstress/costumer for a summer play in 1978
2. I am a procrastinator in the worst way.

Two jobs I have had in my life:
1. Intake secretary for a home health service
2.  portrait photographer
 
Two Movies I would watch over and over:
1.  Grease
2.  The Truth about Cats and Dogs

Two places I've lived
1.  Phoenix, Arizona
2.  Illesheim, Germany
 
Two of my Favorite Foods:
1. Spinach Tortellini
2. chicken sandwich with honey mustard

Two Places I'd rather be right now
1. Illesheim Germany (I miss my old stomping grounds)
2. Poolside with the kids

Feel free to join in and play.. just copy and paste the questions into your journal andanswer them. Leave me a note so I can read them too. :)

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

You want to WHAT???

Kendra came to me last night around 8 pm and asked to cancel her surgery.  She had a dream Sunday night in which she was put under anesthesia and when she woke up she wasnt in the recovery room.  Instead she found herself with her Grandpa C.  She asked him where she was and he told her she was in heaven with him, that she died on the table.  He told her that God didn't want her to have this surgery at this time.

Paul and I spent the rest of the evening trying to understand why that dream made such a big impact on her.  We talked with her, cajoled, debated, cried...  but we couldn't get her past the idea that she's not supposed to have this surgery right now.

I held out as long as I could, but when 3 AM came and she was still not going to go.. I had her call the surgery room and give them the information. 

The phone has been ringing off the hook since 6 am.  Each person along the way has been calling to find out what happened. We've yet to hear from Dr. Cartwright, but I'm sure she'll be next.

I am just sick that this isn't going to happen for Kendra.  It was all elective surgery, save one aspect of it.  But none of it really HAD to be done now. I just don't know when it can be done again.

Monday, July 9, 2007

Tomorrow's the big day

Kendra's surgery is set for tomorrow morning.  We have to report to the hospital at 5:30 am (which means leaving home around 3:30).

The doctor is anticipating a 3 day stay after the surgery.  I'm not sure if I'll get a chance to post again before we are home for good.

At least this time around Paul is here to be with the Littles, so if I can stay with Kendra at the hospital overnight I don't have to worry about Kim and Mac.

Kim is being "susie homemaker" for me while we are dealing with the hospital.  We've come up with three dinner plans for her to make for her, Mac and Daddy while Kendra's in the hospital (even if I do have to come home every night, I doubt I'll be back in time to make dinner).

I did get most of the laundry caught up since we've been back from Vacation.  :)

If I don't get back before, I should be back by Saturday.  

Friday, July 6, 2007

Just a Quick Hello

I nearly killed someone today.  But no one seemed particularly interested in giving me a target! LOL.  Frankly, I'm pretty proud of myself that I didn't take out the not so innocent.

We arrived home last night/this morning at 1 AM and we were all in bed by 1:30.  Paul, Kendra and I were up and out the door again at 8 AM because we had to do the final pre-op stuff at Walter Reed (a 2 hour drive from our house).  All went well until we spent three hours in the pre-op clinic. Finally I started hunting down someone that could tell us how much longer it was going to be.  I suspect that we had been forgotten (along with another family... we were the last two sets of people there at 4 pm). 

FINALLY!!! released at 5:10 pm and then we had the two hour drive home (through DC traffic).  We arrived home at 8pm (okay, so there was a quick dinner break....we didn't get a lunch!)

The vacation was great.. I'll tell more about those shenanigans later... Just wanted to stop in and say "Hi" and vent a bit about the long (much too long) wait at WR.  I want a job there, so I can light a fire under a few of those asses.