Life

A journey

by Veronica Foale on April 22, 2010

in Life, Navelgazing

Grief is a journey they tell me. With stages and progression. You walk the path and tread the steps of thousands of people before you and you come to accept that this is the way things are.

That is what they tell me.

What they don’t tell me is how some days, there is no forward progress. Some days, all you can do is plant your feet, lean into the wind and refuse to move backward. Some days, waves break over you until you can’t breathe.

That is what they don’t tell you.

Time heals everything they say.

I don’t doubt that it does.

I am certain that time will take away my hurt, my pain. It will fill the wound left behind by death.

Time will cover the hole left behind, until a scar is left.

But,

I doubt,

that time will heal the missing.

Scars will form and the pain will lessen.

But, I don’t think the missing will go away.

Because even as it would be nice to not feel the longing and the wanting,

as long as I still miss her it proves that she was here.

Once.

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More than a mother

by Veronica Foale on April 14, 2010

in Children, Life

My son stands up and starts to walk.

But he’s the baby I think. Who gave him permission to grow up?

He stands, laughing and clapping and walks the length of the room to get to me. I scoop him up and spin him in a circle, before he bites my shoulder and gets put down with a thunk.

He laughs again and stands, walking towards the other side of the house.

Wow. That time flew.

I swear, I only gave birth to him a moment ago. Not that long, surely?

***

They are screaming and I am stressed. Grabbing my camera, I escape the noise. Heading outside, I leave them to their father and disappear to reclaim my sanity from the other side of a macro lens.

I find bugs and flowers and then I return, wind chilled and flushed red – but happier. Always happier.

I adore my children with every ounce of my soul, but I scream to be more than a mother.

I want to be a photographer, a writer, an author, a blogger.

But my children are young and they’ll only be this small for a short amount of time.

I put aside my own wants and needs and make time for them, to roll around on the floor and nibble toes and elbows.

However, for 20 minutes a day, when I am in front of my computer immersed in words, or outside taking photos,

I am more than a mother.

And that makes me happy.

Pretty in pink.

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Not here

by Veronica Foale on April 7, 2010

in Life

I have words and stories, but my hands are refusing to co-operate and since I’ve not yet learned how to magically publish my words straight from my brain, we’re going to have to wait until my fingers get better again.

Until then, I’m dreaming words and frequently getting frustrated at my lack of time for writing.

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Not

by Veronica Foale on March 26, 2010

in Life, Me

Three weeks ago when my period didn’t show up, I was certain I was pregnant. When I vomited for the first time and my breasts leaked colostrum and my nose was oh so sensitive, I was certain I was pregnant. When my blood pressure dipped and I almost passed out and I was exhausted and sick, I was certain I was pregnant.

I took a pregnancy test.

Negative.

But. Is that a hint of a line? Honey, can you see that? It looks like it’s catching at the top, just a little, is that a line? Am I imagining things? Never mind, it’s too faint to tell. Oh wait, it’s fading, it probably wasn’t a line. I’ll just test in a few days and see then.

And so, I waited a few days and took a second one.

Negative. Starkly, whitely, negative.

I counted cycle days and added things up on my fingers. I remembered the last time I lay next to my partner, our skins slick with sweat and I counted back to then.

fifteen

sixteen

seventeen

days

It’s early I told myself, I’ll just wait a little longer.

I waited almost 10 days.

My breasts stopped leaking.

My nose was less sensitive.

I didn’t feel heavy anymore.

I continued to be sick however.

Still, no period.

Another test. Plenty late enough to show what needs showing. But it’s negative again and despite the sickness, I am as positive now as I was then, that I am not pregnant.

Whether I was in the first place or not is debatable. But I know my body and I know me.

In my future I see blood tests and probing ultrasound wands. I see doctors visits and questions of why is my body not working again. I see shaken heads and no answers.

And it’s funny, but I don’t remember stepping back on this rollercoaster.

***

As an aside, I am fine actually. Rather ill, but at this stage, and with 3 negative pregnancy tests behind me, my nausea would be Ehlers Danlos and progesterone related. I’m trying to get in to see my doctor but someone has forgotten to switch the phones to the other clinic and so I keep getting the answering maching. Grumble grumble. And I know, this isn’t normally what I write about here, but bleh.

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Circles. Round and round in circles.

by Veronica Foale on March 3, 2010

in Children, Life

My hair falls out, great handfuls tangling themselves around my fingers as I run a brush through it. Stress I assume and hormones. Something, I’m not sure anymore. It’s no great loss.

My son hands me a handful of half chewed pasta. Wrapped around his fingers are more strands of my hair. All the vaccuming in the world never picks it all up.

I have a lot of hair.

Or should that read I had a lot of hair.

***

The hospital rings me while I am in the car. I strain to hear her voice over the top of the traffic sounds and my children, whining, contained in the backseat.

‘We’ve got the children’s genetic tests back.’

‘Okay, have you got the results?’

‘I’m sorry. I can’t tell you over the phone, you’ll need to come in and see us.’

‘Oh. Why is that? It was only meant to be looking for the gene that causes coeliacs, surely it’s just a yes or no answer.’

‘The test results are quite involved and complicated. You need to discuss them with Head of Paeds.’

‘Oh.’

I feel sick and cold all at once. It was only meant to be a genetic screen for Coeliacs. It’s not involved or complicated. Yes. Or. No.

‘You have an appointment in June don’t you?’

‘Yes, that’s right.’

‘Well, ideally we’d like to see you sooner.’

‘Yes, that would be good.’

Sooner is never good news.

‘But, as you can imagine, we’re heavily booked. I’ll see what I can do for you.’

June is a life time away. I’d like to see them tomorrow, but that’s not possible. What else have they turned up, that she can’t give me the results over the phone, when I was told that I could ring to find out whether the children have a coeliacs gene or not.

‘Are you sure you can’t tell me if they screened positive for the Coeliacs gene? That’s all they were testing for.’

‘I’m very sorry. Like I said, the test results are rather involved and you need to see Dr. B about them.’

Dr B. The higher up of higher ups. The Paed we never see, whom our regular paed leaves the room to consult with occasionally. The one in charge of all the major decisions. Him.

‘Okay then.’

‘Okay, we’ll try and get you an appointment sooner.’

Inside I panic.

Outside, I rely all this information to my partner, who has listened to one side of the conversation while he drives.

We’re worried now, they were only meant to be checking for Coeliacs, nothing else. Nothing that would warrant an appointment with the higher ups.

***

I sit on this information for over a week without thinking about it, pushed down to the bottom of my mind, until it bursts free this morning, leaving me stressed and strung out.

My mind spins in circles.

They were only meant to be testing for coeliacs. Nothing else. EDS wouldn’t show on a genetic screen, not enough information has been compiled for doctors to know which gene is broken in EDS.

***

I turn the music up loud and sing, badly.

Anything to make my mind switch off.

Because I’m worried. Really worried.

And to be honest, we’re already dealing with enough fucked up genes, I’m not sure I can take much more.

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