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August, 2009

  1. Housekeeping

    August 18, 2009 by Louise

    1) I (and by “I”, I mean “Rob, at my request” as usual when it has anything pertaining to the design of this blog) moved my blogroll links to another page. Because it was getting super long and unwieldy and I couldn’t handle it anymore. Sadly I had to take off a few blogs that haven’t been updated in over a year.

    2) My bi-weekly request: If you are someone who reads this, and you have a blog, please tell me! Because I am constantly in search of new reads. I swear, I spend half an hour every single morning reading blogs. I could probably use that time to do altruistic things for orphans in Ghana, but I don’t.

    3) I got re-tweeted by Chris Gorham. You know. The guy who plays Betty’s (ex) boyfriend Henry on Ugly Betty. And Henry the gory killer on Harper’s Island. What did he retweet? This. I am 33 and need to not get so excited about this type of thing.

    4) Accidentally running the dishwasher with cold water doesn’t yield quite the horrific results you would expect. Not that I have personal experience with that or anything.


  2. Bullet points (but no gun)

    August 17, 2009 by Louise

    ->Today’s temperature was a bit lower than the other day’s – but with the humidex it was about 37 degrees. I was so grateful for our air conditioner today that I joked that I was having an unnatural, adulterous relationship with it.

    -> Rob figured out that it’s been nearly 7 years since we met (Aug. 26th, 2002). Then he counted the days. Today is Day 2548. Our wedding anniversary (3 years!) is on Wednesday. I have never loved him more than I do right now, and I will love him more then than I do today.

    -> I desperately want and need one of these or (preferably, because of the nozzle) these but Amazon.com won’t deliver to Canada anymore, and I can’t find one on Amazon.ca. I’ve been looking in all the stores here, and no luck. The reason I so want it: My wig is getting really shabby, and I can’t buy a new one for awhile. This would be a much quicker way of defrizzing it than my usual method which takes an hour at least. So I don’t technically NEED it, but oh it would be nice (is it sad that I’m also very reluctant to spend the $20 on something just for me? Because I am. It’s not in the budget).

    -> I am watching a reality show from the UK and one of the contestants is named Science. Like, his parents named him that (he says). SCIENCE. SCIENCE! I guess it’s better than “Home Ec”.

    -> My father-in-law’s phone keeps texting the same message to me over and over again. So far, I kid you not, I have received “Thanks!” 14 times. Either he’s really grateful or he is sitting on the “send” button.

    -> If you’re ever looking for a boost in your self-esteem, log on to Yahoo! Answers and read some of the questions put up there (I prefer the Pets and Health categories). Questions like “My dog has been throwing up for a week and is bleeding from every orifice. Should I take him to the vet?” and “I haven’t taken my birth control pill for the past three months, really, but my boyfriend told me there’s only one day a month that you can get pregnant so that’s fine, we skipped that day. My problem is that my clothes are all getting smaller and I don’t know why? Am I gaining weight because I went off the Pill?” Guaranteed, you’ll feel like the most intelligent person in the world after a brief 10 minutes on there.


  3. With apologies to Martha

    August 15, 2009 by Louise

    Not Great Things:
    - So hot today. SO HOT. 32C (about 90F? But HUMID).
    - My sister’s motorcycle. It was supposed to be on our patio for a week at the beginning of July. Is it gone? Nope, it’s still there. And no one has plans to pick it up. Everytime I ask I get another excuse. And so we haven’t been able to fix the patio like we’d planned, and thus we haven’t been able to USE it, all summer. There are two weeks left before I go back to work, and I guarantee that I won’t have had the chance to sit out reading on the patio once.
    - Canada Games! No, I’m not against national sports competitions. I *am* against the athletes jogging by my house at 6 am, screaming their team cheers, which makes the dogs go insane and try to join them on their jog (most of the athletes are staying in the hotel next to my house). I am also against them blocking off roads I need to use. Of course I realize that it’s just a temporary inconvenience but when your roadblocks are standing between me and the dairy bar, expect some grumpiness on my part.

    Good Things:

    - Sprocket & Doozer finally walking on the leash without freaking out (because I’m not going to continue their “you can be free in our yard as long as you don’t try to leave the yard” training until there aren’t as many moving targets to tempt them).
    - Doozer has finally learned to jump out the back door.
    - Spending two hours this afternoon reading in the (air conditioned) bedroom.
    - Going to the beach at about 6 pm (after the horrible heat had gone down to 29, and the beach was no longer crowded). Laying in the water with my cute husband. Talking about things. Talking about how much we love each other. Feeling the crabs nibbling at my toes.

    - Coming home, showering off the sand, putting on a cool cotton nightgown, and snuggling up with Rob and the pups to watch Big Brother.

    So today has been more good than bad. That’s what I will concentrate on.


  4. Before I buck up

    August 14, 2009 by Louise

    This morning I went to the basement to put some laundry on, and saw something that broke my heart a little more.

    Just before our wedding, this came up on Freecycle. I immediately emailed asking for it, thinking “We don’t need it this second, but we should soon enough, maybe”. We picked it up and I had Rob put it down in the basement “for now”.

    Well, it’s been three years, and we’re never going to need it. And I think that now it’s time to let it go, too. It just shatters me to do so.


  5. Randomnicity

    August 12, 2009 by Louise

    The new look – it’s all Rob. I don’t know how to deal with anything more complicated than putting up a blog post. So when I say “Oh I would like to change what my blog looks like” that is a hint for Rob to send me to the WordPress website (or wherever his little heart desires), and for me to pick one out. Beyond that, he does the theme changing and the plugin magic. It’s kind of like he’s my sugar daddy. He hands me the credit card, sends me out shopping, and he does the work to pay the bills.

    When I am depressed – like deeply, profoundly sad, wanting-to-curl-up-in-bed-forever sad- I do one of two things. I eat until I’m ready to barf, and then I eat some more, or, conversely, I stop eating altogether. Sadly for my BMI, which has been begging me to find the best fat burner for years now, I’ve been living the former for the past week and a half. Rob’s birthday cake is half gone and it only got cut into last night (four-layer devil’s food with cherry filling and cream cheese icing? Yes please). I had a chocolate bar and two eggs for breakfast this morning.

    I’ve set myself an ultimatum. I will give myself until this Friday to wallow, and then that’s enough. Yes, I will still be sad, and yes I will still probably weep and wail here on the blog (sorry) (and how come so many words for being sad start with w? I don’t think I’ve ever noticed that before) but I will stop with the not taking care of my body. I haven’t been walking in more than two weeks. I’ve been eating like a beast. I’m already fat for reasons beyond my control. I don’t need to add to that.

    My friend wants to come over this evening to watch Sunday’s episode of True Blood. I just kind of want to hide under the house and be antisocial, but there will be none of that. Forcing myself to act happy might bring on some actual happiness.

    Add to that the fact that I hate myself when I’m like this and hopefully things around here will start looking less maudlin in a few days.

    (PS – a mosquito is in our house. It is buzzing around Sprocket. He is trying to catch it – good luck small dog! It’s hilarious.)


  6. We are having leftovers tonight because I made too much food last night. Ta-daaaaah!

    August 11, 2009 by Louise

    I mentioned that yesterday was Rob’s birthday. He and I are now the same age (I’m 2 months older than him! He’s always sending me links to what he says are the best wrinkle creams in order to remind me of that fact).

    I feel sort of badly that he didn’t get any gifts from me on the day, but I’m sticking to our deal. Our deal was that the mega super sweet computer that he got for Christmas (which he knew about beforehand because he picked it out, I wouldn’t have known what to get really. Probably would have chosen a Hot Wheels computer if left to my own devices. Of course I would! It has flames on!) was meant to be his Christmas and birthday gift. And the two dogs? Also partially his bday present (the parts of the dogs that are his gift are the back ends).

    It still doesn’t keep me from feeling guilty that I didn’t have anything to give him on the day, though. Aside from special makeouts and a yummy supper. I didn’t even bake him a cake (because he said that he didn’t want the cake yesterday). He is getting the cake today though, because I have been feeling guilty all night.

    Hey, how do you feel about super-boring blog posts?


  7. Does anyone remember that movie with Patricia Arquette and Gabriel Byrne? I totally thought they should have made out at the end. Except, you know. He was a priest.

    by Louise

    Remember back in July when I had a misadventure with a facial scrubber? I threw out that scrubber. I didn’t use the other one. I got on with my life.

    Yesterday was Rob’s birthday. I think I made it into a pretty good day for him. I cooked his favourites, we hung out, I did “dog duty” all day (until the night and it was time for me to sleep). But at one point while I was cooking I freaked out because I couldn’t find the salt. Seriously, I had had the box of salt in my hand not 10 minutes before. Now it was gone. Absolutely gone. Not anywhere in the kitchen. I felt that it was crucial that I have salt for my delicious potatoes (recipe to follow), or I may as well throw them out. After about 10 minutes of my tantrum (“I’m wrecking your birthday because I can’t find the salt!”) I found the salt shaker and made do with its contents. And every little thing turned out right. Except I think I overcooked the steak. But only a little. I’m not great at steak.

    ANYWAY. I have no recollection of it, but at some point during my tantrum I must have gone buckwild and engaged some random cat in a showdown, because when I went into that kitchen, I looked like regular me. When I came out, I looked like this:

    Seriously, wtf?

    Seriously, wtf?

    What. The eff.

    Didn’t feel it happening, whatever it is that happened. They’re not deep scratches, but if I poke at them they’re painful. And being me, I poke at them often.

    Yeah. So now I go around like this. And Dear Jesus, if I have face stigmata, please also let me start having visions. The Virgin in a waffle cone, at least.
    (more…)


  8. I cannot tell a lie

    August 10, 2009 by Louise

    First of all: Happy birthday to my favourite husband ever. Your gift is… me! Aren’t you lucky?

    Before I start, I have to say that I was overwhelmed with the kind responses to my last post. Thanks to every single one of you who read and offered support. I tried to email each of you individually; if I didn’t manage please know that what you said absolutely made a difference.

    I didn’t know what to do next. After that type of post. I don’t know what to say. Life must go on but I don’t know what to write on the blog. I decided to fall back on that old standby, the meme. This originated on Facebook. I don’t ever do these things on FB, because they’re a pain in the ass, I have a hard time trying to figure out how to write a note, and I don’t like tagging people. I’m doing away with the Question: Answer format, too, because it’s 7:14 am and a dog is licking my ankle. As good a reason as any, I say.

    (more…)


  9. Probably TL;DR, for sure TMI, and definitely a pity party. If you already think that I whine too much, then stop reading now.

    August 7, 2009 by Louise

    At 7:30 am on July 31st, we dropped the dogs off at my mother’s, making sure to give her all the instructions we could think of. “Feed them at 8 am, noon, 4 pm, and 8 pm… we should be back by 4 though. Anyway they eat every 4 hours. Leave the food down for 10 minutes then pick it up. Don’t give them any people food. Doozer will bark at the door when he wants to go out, although he might not do that when he’s here here because he doesn’t know your house… Sprocket just sits staring at the door or the window so you have to watch him more closely. If you’re in doubt, just put them out every 45 minutes or so. They’re only 10 weeks old so they can’t really hold it that long.” She hugged us and told us she loved us.

    By 7:45, we were on the road. I drove, because I’m better at directions than Rob (only because I’ve lived here all my life, he’s lived here for 4 years). At about 8:45, the cellphone rang. Rob answered; it was the hospital. Were we going to be there soon? It was more than likely that Day Surgery could fit me in sooner than they’d thought, if we got there within the next half hour. Luckily (even though I took a wrong turn – I was nervous!) we were there within 20 minutes. I registered and got my two bracelets put on (the regular hospital one and the one to tell what I’m allergic to aside from pollen and pets and grass – which is salmon. I don’t know why they need to alert the hospital of this. I wasn’t getting salmon implants). The nurse weighed me (STILL FAT THANK YOU) then took me to my little … what is it? A cubbyhole? A cargo bay? A stall? Three walls, and a curtain. They asked me to take off my clothes and dress in the jonnyshirt and robe thing. There was a locker for my clothes and shoes, and a gurney for me to lay on. Two nurses came in and asked me all the same questions as I’d been asked during registration. First one nurse asked the questions, and then the second nurse asked the exact same questions again. They were in the same room. Standing next to each other. Did they think I was going to lie about anything? Surprisingly, I still weighed the same as I had 20 minutes earlier. I still was allergic to salmon. I still hadn’t had any major surgery since I was 13, if you didn’t count my wisdom teeth (which I don’t). Guess what? I still have asthma, yes my lungs both collapsed when I was 21 but I haven’t had anything like that since, and I still take Symbicort and Zantac. Since the last time someone asked, 20 minutes ago.

    When they left, Rob was allowed to come in and sit with me. We talked about nothing in particular, just trying to keep our minds off things. After about half an hour, the surgeon came in. He’s an OB/GYN who does gynaecological surgery. We’d met before, after my HSG went tits up. He explained again what the surgery entailed (at least two incisions, four at the most, and cameras going in through each incision to see the outside of the reproductive organs, as well as one being put up inside my uterus, and blue dye being pushed through my uterus and hopefully out the ends of my Fallopian tubes). He said that it would take at least two hours, but it could take longer if he found anything inside that he thought he could fix, like endometriosis or a bent Fallopian tube. He asked if we had any questions. I said no. Rob said “If you find anything weird in there, like action figures, let me know. There’s a bet riding on this.” Dr. F said “Oh, I’ll definitely let you know, and it will be all over YouTube”.

    Rob and I were left alone for another half-hour, then the anaesthesiologist came in. It wasn’t the same guy I’d met with back at the end of June; in fact it was a lady. She had a medical student with her. She asked me… the same questions as the nurses had. Fourth time. The medical student just stood behind her and listened. I told her about my alopecia and asked if I had to wear the little hospital beanie or if I could just leave my bandanna on. She agreed that the bandanna was fine. We were all finished with her by 10:30 am.

    My surgery had originally been scheduled for 11:30 am, but we had been told it would probably be earlier. Guess what? It definitely was NOT earlier. Rob and I sat in our cubbyhole nervously making jokes. We heard that there was another Louise right across from us (kind of hard not to hear, with just a curtain to separate us), but she was 84 and was there to have her goiter lanced or something. She went off for her procedure at 11:15. When it got to be 12:30 and we were still waiting, I began making inappropriate jokes about how The Other Louise was going to wake up to a surprise to find out that they’d been doing fertility testing on her 84-year-old Fallopian tubes. I’m not right in the head.

    The OR nurse finally came to get me at 1 pm. In the intervening hours, I had been trying to convince Rob to sleep (he hadn’t slept much the night before), and reading (pretending to read. Actually read the same sentence over and over again, and it didn’t register. I haven’t touched that book since). When it was time, I walked down to the OR, where I hopped up on the table and they hooked me up with the blood pressure cuff and the heart monitors. The anaesthesiologist and her student came in and started trying to find a spot to put my intravenous drip. Unfortunately, I have terrible veins that hide from the slightest poke. It took the med student four tries, and then the anaesthesiologist took over. It took her two attempts, and instead of in the usual place (back of the hand) it ended up on the inside of my wrist. Very uncomfortable.

    Then the surgeon (Dr. F) came in, said hi, told me everything would be fine. He asked the anaesthesiologist if everything was ready. She said “I’ve got the Propofol all set,”. I said “Propofol?” she said “Yeah, you’re getting the star treatment. The same stuff as Michael Jackson used!” The funny thing about being hooked up to a heart monitor is that everyone can hear when your heart speeds up because oh holy lord, they’re using the Death Juice! Dr F chuckled and said “Don’t worry, we know what we’re doing. Can you moonwalk?” I was asked to count down from 10. I got as far as 8 and woke up staring at the overhead lights in the recovery room.

    A nurse came over and asked how I was doing. I felt around at my stomach and said “What? No lipo?” and he laughed. He told me that Dr. F would be in to talk to me soon, that he was over talking to Rob right now. I asked him what time it was. “About 3:45,” he answered. “You’ve been in here for about 20 minutes”. That’s when I knew that the surgery had only lasted two hours, and that if they had found something in there, it wasn’t repairable.

    A few minutes later Dr F came in, sat down, and asked how I was doing. “I’m okay,” I said. “What’s going on in there?” No more joking. He explained that when they put the camera in through my bellybutton, everything looked normal from the outside (so it’s not unicornuate like they’d thought after my HSG). But when they put the camera inside my uterus, he could only see the left side, and it looked really small (in his words, “A normal uterus is like a balloon… yours was like a tube”), and when they put the dye through, “it didn’t go anywhere” (in a normal situation it would go up through the uterus and Fallopian tubes, and come out through the ends). I was still slightly high from the anaesthesia so I’m pretty sure I uttered something profound like “Weeeeeeeeeeeeeird”. He went on to say that he’d never seen anything like it, but that from what he could tell, the way things were in there, IVF wouldn’t work, and since we’ve been trying for three years to get pregnant and it hasn’t happened yet, it’s 99.99% certain that it wouldn’t happen on its own, either. I shrugged and said “Bummer” (I am very eloquent when under the influence). He told me that he had been in to speak to my husband, and told him the same things he’d told me. He asked if I had a followup appointment with my regular fertility specialist, and I said yes. He said that she might decide that this was the end of the road, or she might send me to Halifax to the other specialists there, who might do the same operation and know better than him what was going on. I said “Thank you.” He got up to leave, came back, sat back down and took my hand, and said “I am so, so very sorry.” I said “It’s okay!”, even though it wasn’t. He left. I closed my eyes and hummed “La Bamba”. Don’t ask.

    I guess they got tired of my vocal stylings, because they finally wheeled me back into my little cubbyhole. The first thing I did was reach for Rob’s hand and tell him “I’m sorry, love”. He looked at me and he had tears in his eyes. He slipped my wedding and engagement rings back onto my finger. I of course had to do my Dancing Monkey routine and told him “They found all kinds of GI Joes up in there!” He laughed a little. “Did they find the Millenium Falcon?”

    They gave me a pamphlet that told me how to take care of myself after surgery. I can’t jog. FINE BY ME. I said I was thirsty. The nurse gave me some ginger ale. She told me that I should only have tea and toast for the rest of today. I was like “Screw that, I’m starving! Let’s go to A&W!” Rob said “No, just tea and toast!” I nearly murdered him. Luckily I had forewarned him that I get very, very grouchy and very hungry when waking up from any kind of anaesthetic (when I was 13 and had my eardrum replaced, I yelled at the nurses until they a) let me go to the bathroom on the regular toilet instead of trying to go in a bedpan and b) gave me some Kraft Dinner because who wanted to drink an OXO cube in a cup of lukewarm water?) He promised me that when we got home I could have some real food, including the vegetable stew he’d put in the crockpot the night before.

    They gave me a prescription for pain meds. The nurses told me to ONLY TAKE ONE! ONLY TAKE ONE, EVERY SIX HOURS! NOT EVERY FIVE AND A HALF HOURS! SIX! SIX HOURS! DID I UNDERSTAND? SIX!
    I understood.

    We left for home. We did not stop at A&W. We got to my parents’ where we picked up the dogs. I actually made us stay there for awhile because I wanted my mommy. We explained to my mom (and my sister-in-law, since they live in the same building) what had happened. Showed my nephew (who is 5 and wants to be a doctor) the bandage on my belly button. He said “ooooh, ouchy”. He is an excellent diagnostician. My other nephew (4) told me all about how my dogs were at his house and they were just little puppies and he loves them and they didn’t pee in the house, and then Sprocket proceeded to pee in the house. I was in a lot of pain by then so we left. Rob went into the pharmacy to pick up my prescription and I waited in the car. While I was waiting Rob’s mother called. I explained as best I could what was going on. I don’t really remember that conversation. I do remember that there was a squirrel running around the parking lot beside the car.

    We got home at 7:30 pm. I was all set up on the sofa. I got the remote control (90000 episodes of Family Ties and Punky Brewster, at my service!) and a glass of lemonade and two puppies to snuggle my feet (they like that) and pretty much fell asleep immediately. I never did get any vegetable stew that day. Foiled again!

    I was in a great deal of pain for the next couple of days. Barely able to move. Check my tweets from that time, or even the blog post I wrote, and you’ll see what state I was in. I tried sleeping in our bed on Friday night, which was fine, but then I had to make it downstairs to the bathroom. Stairs were not my friend. I spent the next couple of nights on the sofa.

    TMI COMING UP NEXT SKIP IT IF YOU’RE A DUDE OR SQUEAMISH

    On Monday I realized I hadn’t pooped since the Thursday before. This was not a good thing. I went and tried, and there it was, but it wasn’t coming out. I will spare you the details of what I attempted next, except that it involved a rubber glove and tears on my part, and my husband on the other side of the bathroom door saying “WHAT ARE YOU DOING IN THERE? Why have you been in there so long? Why are you crying? Do you need me to help you?” “NO GO AWAY NOW”. And it didn’t really work. Sorry, overshare. The dilemma was solved with an overdose of psyllium fibre capsules and about 2L of water. I got what I thought was my period on Sunday, but it only really lasted a day, so I don’t know. There had been bleeding (and blue dye) on Friday, but it had all ended within an hour. I *should have* gotten my period sometime this week, though, and it hasn’t come, so who knows what’s going on in there. I know I sure as f don’t.

    TMI OVER! YOU CAN START READING AGAIN

    I’m still in some pain, especially when I move, or jostle my belly. It’s been a week and I’m resuming normal activities including putting the dogs out and bringing them in (which involves bending down to pick them up, since Doozer is still very upset with the steps and will sit and bark at them all day, but won’t attempt to actually walk down them), and loading the dishwasher (boooo). I’m surprised that such a relatively small operation (2 incisions, not 4 – have I mentioned that I’m not right in the head? I put pictures up on Flickr) has had such a physical effect on me. I have stopped the pain pills because although they made me sleepy and robbed me of all motor control, they didn’t actually take away any pain. I’m fine when I’m still, but if I move, oh boy.

    Mentally, well, I’ve been trying to ignore it. If I ignore it, it’s not true. If I ignore it, I won’t have to admit that I’m devastated. I’ve been reading infertility blogs for years and years, since before I started blogging 6 years ago. I thought that I’d be prepared for anything that happened. I thought “Well, these women have been going through it and they’re so strong – I shouldn’t be a crybaby about it”. And I feel like I shouldn’t complain or talk about it, because it makes other people uncomfortable and they don’t know what to say.

    That right there is tricky.

    People have asked me how the surgery went. I’m not sure what to say when they ask. Do I tell them the truth? Usually when I do they either a) just don’t say anything or b) change the subject as quickly as they can. Sometimes they say other, well-meaning things. “Well, you can have one of my kids. Just pick one! They’re getting on my nerves today!” “Don’t be sad, if you’re sad it will make me sad!” “I would totally be your surrogate mother and donate my eggs to you, if it wasn’t so expensive”. “My cousin and her husband tried for years to get pregnant, and they had finally given up and started adoption proceedings when they found out they were having twins!” “Oh, you must hate me, because I have babies” “Now I feel badly because I’m pregnant”. “Well, you have a doctor’s appointment at the end of the month… she will probably figure out how to fix everything”. “I go to Church every Sunday! I’ll pray that you get pregnant soon!” “Well, you’ve got two dogs! They can be your babies!”
    I’m not going up to random strangers on the street and telling them the news. Strangers aren’t saying these things to me. It’s family members. Close friends.

    And I don’t know what to say, how to respond to remarks like that. Really, at this point, I don’t want people trying to help me by suggesting possible solutions, unless they are qualified physicians. I understand that they mean well. They’re not saying these things out of malice. But you know what? I don’t want to hear stories about miraculous pregnancies. Surrogacy and adoption are not in the cards for us right now (or probably ever), because hi, very expensive, so mentioning them doesn’t really help. Yes I realize that 40 years ago when you adopted, it was free, but it’s not like that anymore. Telling me not to be sad isn’t something that you can do – of course I’m sad, and I think I have a right to be, don’t I? Not only do I have a condition that keeps me from ovulating and makes me fat (okay, the chimichangas might also be making me fat), but even though we’ve figured out a way around that, now it turns out that my uterus is so messed up that even if something could get fertilized in there, it couldn’t ever live, even if you prayed over it every hour of every day. Yes, I have a doctor’s appointment. I’m enough of a realist to understand that when you’re told that it’s something they haven’t seen before, and that it’s messed up, well, it’s messed up. No, I don’t hate you because you have kids. I don’t hate you because you’re pregnant. I am very happy for you that you can, and do, have children. I’m just sad for me that I don’t. There’s a difference. At this point? I just really want sympathy. Someone to say “I’m sorry,” or “That really sucks.” or “This must be really hard for you”, and actually listen when I want to talk about it, instead of not responding at all or saying “Oh well! Hey look, a bird!”. And in real life, only my husband has said any of the things I’ve wanted to hear, and only my husband has listened when I’ve needed to talk.

    I understand that hearing this kind of news from someone can be really uncomfortable, and I hate making people uncomfortable. Which is why I feel like I should just keep it to myself… but then we’re faced with well-intentioned relatives and friends asking us when we’re going to start our family. I’m not going to go around wearing a giant dayglo orange “ASK ME ABOUT MY INFERTILITY” t-shirt, but when people ask, shouldn’t I be able to tell them? I don’t know. And I feel really really badly because my jacked up ute and the rage/pain/sadness it has caused are probably going to feature on this blog fairly often for awhile, which is probably boring.

    Okay. So now I’m just rambling. Sorry this is so long. Rob and I are both devastated. And hurt. And sad. But we will be okay. He is lovely. Hey, we have two dogs who can be our babies! Wheeeeeee! /sarcasm

    Kind comments would be greatly appreciated (you don’t even know how appreciated they would be), if anyone actually still reads this, but please don’t feel obligated.

    EDITED TO ADD: Hi – if you’re here from the Twitter (where Y was kind enough to link to this post, because she’s a wonderful lady), I just wanted you to know that I’m not always like this. I’ve been blogging for six (seven?) years, and am usually kind of funny and nice. Sometimes I’m actually a good writer, and am generally not a giant sissypants crymonkey.


  10. Still stalling

    August 5, 2009 by Louise

    I’ve been putting off writing about my surgery and the results, because writing it down makes it real, and makes it permanent. At first it was easy to delay, because HELLO PAIN PILLS! How do you do? You love me, don’t you, Pain Pills? Well, I kinda love you too. In a platonic sort of way. Oh heck, who are we kidding? Come to me. Oh yes. Come here to me. It’s okay. Rob will never know.

    But eventually you’ve gotta get off the pain pill train. I’m mainly there now (still taking a couple a day, but that’s less than four). I can’t do a whole lot of anything yet. I’m fine when I’m sitting down or standing up, if I’m perfectly still, but any kind of movement makes the ‘scrutiatin pain shoot through me. We went to the grocery store yesterday and after about 20 minutes I was sweating and shaking and ready to just be still for awhile. Had to find something else to distract me.

    So mainly, I watch old TV shows (Punky Brewster and Family Ties have been on heavy rotation), or go outside with the dogs, walking very, very slowly (and trying not to jostle my huge gut), or read (Ms. Deirdre sent me a bunch of books, and I’m plowing through them), or watch movies. I enjoyed Funny People, even though it was long. The longer the better! That means less time spent consciously trying to cram myself into a state of denial! The exception to the “Long Movies are A-OK with Me” rule is Meet Joe Black. That sucker is LONG, and it seems like most of that time is spent with Brad Pitt wearing a tuxedo and eating peanut butter. Then again the last time I attempted to watch it was about 10 years ago. Maybe I’m more mature now and can handle it better. I’m not going to try and find out, though.

    So! All this just to say: I’m not ready yet. I will be. Soon. Just not right now.