Sometime in mid-May, I finally felt confident that summer had arrived in Minnesota. Being outside in shorts and a tank top felt marvelous, even when the humid air left my hair a frizzy mess and dirt stuck to my sweaty skin as I hauled mulch, turned over garden beds and dug holes for new shrubs. The rest of May was devoted to bringing life and color back to our yard and on the last evening of the long Memorial Day weekend, I sat on the front stoop, tired from days spent in the sun, and watched the kids ride up and down the sidewalk on their bikes and wondered, had winter really been that bad?
Spring brought a number of firsts for the season - outdoor swimming, park playdates, attempts at getting back into running form, mosquito bites, bike rides down to the river to splash in the fountains, the farmer's market, ice cream at Grand Old Creamery and adult rec league softball games. As spring quickly gave way to summer, we settled into a new routine that involves going to bed way too late since the sun isn't setting until after 9:00 p.m. and letting housework slide since we'd rather be outside instead of staying on top of laundry and dishes.
As is always the case, summer weekends are so precious and few that they fill up fast. At the beginning of the summer, Chris and I looked at our calendars to see if there was a weekend night we could take advantage of Andy and Danielle's offer to watch the kids so we could get out of town just the two of us. We didn't find one weekend that would work! We conceded defeat and asked Andy and Danielle if we could take a rain check for the fall.
But then again, we have an unusually busy summer and the craziness hasn't even fully gotten underway. Renovation of our house starts in mid-July and by the time the contractors finish sometime in the fall, we'll have a brand-new master bedroom with walk-in closet and master bath, laundry on the first level and a mudroom. But until we get the finished product, we're going to see the roof and ceilings torn off the back half of our house and we'll end up bunking with the kids for part of the renovation.
We also have an au pair arriving from Germany at the end of the summer. He (yes, he!) has agreed to come to Minnesota and be our au pair. More so than simply being willing to sign up for a winter in Minnesota, he was undeterred about our unknown adoption timeline and knows that when he arrives our house will be a construction zone. We were ecstatic when he said yes and are looking forward to his arrival.
Kiera, Matteo, Oliver and Soren
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Sick Kid Dilemna
Soren was playing outside a few night ago and was seemingly happy as could be. He helped water flowers and biked with Chris and Oliver over to his aunt and uncle's house. It wasn't until I changed him into his pajamas to put him to bed when I noticed that he felt warm, well, actually, really warm. Turns out, his temperature was 102.5. I gave him some Ibuprofen and he quickly fell asleep. He gets sick so often that I hoped maybe this was just a fluke and he'd wake up happy, fever-free - and well enough to go to daycare.
Intellectually I know young children get sick a lot. As us parents reassure each other, it's just a part of childhood. But my gosh, between two children, I don't think a month goes by when one or both haven't gotten sick. It seems like one illness blends into the next and I find myself asking, "Wasn't he just sick?"
One of the many hard parts about being a working parent of young children is trying to balance work and taking time off when your kids get sick. Luckily I have a very understanding boss, a flexible leave policy and enough sick time to cover me for for the days here and there my kids or I need to stay home. Yet still, I always worry about whether I'm taking too much time off or whether I'm leaving my co-workers high and dry. And then I feel guilty about not giving my kids what they need when they're sick and that's a chance to stay home and lie low. I remember when I was in second grade and got the chickenpox and slept in the back of my mom's car while she worked because she and my dad couldn't take time off. If my mom could have legally sent me to school, I think she would have pumped me up on medicine and sent me to school.
Soren's illness worsened later that night. He woke up crying and with a fever of 104, which then caused him to vomit all over his bed. A load of laundry and two hours of consoling a feverishly uncomfortable little boy later, we fell back asleep. We wouldn't have to decide who was going to stay home with Soren the next day since Chris's mom happened to be coming over to watch the boys since their daycare was closed for a staff development day.
It was the next day that the sick kid dilemma really rose. Soren was feeling a lot better than he had the day before, but was still sick. Like many daycares, our daycare requires children to be fever-free for 24 hours before they're allowed to return to daycare. I felt that a dose of Ibuprofen would be enough to bring Soren's low-grade fever back to normal and that he'd feel fine as long as the medicine was still in effect. But we also ran the risk of having the medicine wear off, have the daycare call us in the middle of work to come get him and then have him banned from daycare for another 24 hours. I decided to keep him home.
Even though Soren was fully back to his old self by that afternoon, I know that as much of an inconvenience as it was for me, it was the right decision. We dropped Oliver off at daycare and then Soren and I had some rare one-on-one time, so being home sick had its upside. He took an extra long nap and woke up feel of energy and finally healthy.
Should you be surprised to know that Oliver woke up the next morning complaining he wasn't feeling well?
Intellectually I know young children get sick a lot. As us parents reassure each other, it's just a part of childhood. But my gosh, between two children, I don't think a month goes by when one or both haven't gotten sick. It seems like one illness blends into the next and I find myself asking, "Wasn't he just sick?"
One of the many hard parts about being a working parent of young children is trying to balance work and taking time off when your kids get sick. Luckily I have a very understanding boss, a flexible leave policy and enough sick time to cover me for for the days here and there my kids or I need to stay home. Yet still, I always worry about whether I'm taking too much time off or whether I'm leaving my co-workers high and dry. And then I feel guilty about not giving my kids what they need when they're sick and that's a chance to stay home and lie low. I remember when I was in second grade and got the chickenpox and slept in the back of my mom's car while she worked because she and my dad couldn't take time off. If my mom could have legally sent me to school, I think she would have pumped me up on medicine and sent me to school.
Soren's illness worsened later that night. He woke up crying and with a fever of 104, which then caused him to vomit all over his bed. A load of laundry and two hours of consoling a feverishly uncomfortable little boy later, we fell back asleep. We wouldn't have to decide who was going to stay home with Soren the next day since Chris's mom happened to be coming over to watch the boys since their daycare was closed for a staff development day.
It was the next day that the sick kid dilemma really rose. Soren was feeling a lot better than he had the day before, but was still sick. Like many daycares, our daycare requires children to be fever-free for 24 hours before they're allowed to return to daycare. I felt that a dose of Ibuprofen would be enough to bring Soren's low-grade fever back to normal and that he'd feel fine as long as the medicine was still in effect. But we also ran the risk of having the medicine wear off, have the daycare call us in the middle of work to come get him and then have him banned from daycare for another 24 hours. I decided to keep him home.
Even though Soren was fully back to his old self by that afternoon, I know that as much of an inconvenience as it was for me, it was the right decision. We dropped Oliver off at daycare and then Soren and I had some rare one-on-one time, so being home sick had its upside. He took an extra long nap and woke up feel of energy and finally healthy.
Should you be surprised to know that Oliver woke up the next morning complaining he wasn't feeling well?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)