Category Archives: Just Life

Posts about the good normal everyday life stuff: eating out, family outings, coloring, just living life and loving it.

Airplane spotting

I think airplane spotting is Carson and Josh’s new favorite. We drove to the airport, parked nearby, and watched the airplanes leave and take off. It was so cute to see these two doing something together that they both REALLY loved. I think we’re going to have to go back soon.

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Finding those gems on Netflix

So Netflix can be frustrating sometimes – seems like there’s tons and tons and tons of movies…but you’ve already seen the only 10 good ones out there. ;) But last night Josh and I found one that we really liked; it’s called Shuffle. It was listed under the Sci-Fi Thrillers, but I don’t know why, because it’s not really either. It’s a movie that you have to figure out, and it keeps you tense and guessing, but it’s definitely touching and poignant and reflective. We both really liked it.

Anyway,  after we watched it we found this Youtube short called Validation by the same writer/director and actor team. We almost liked the short better than the movie! (But we still recommend the movie.) They definitely have the same feel – but the short is much more feel-goody. So feel-goody, in fact, that I felt like writing this blog post and sharing it with all of you. :) If you’ve got 16 minutes to spare, check it out!

Teaching Carson about the true meaning of Christmas

Me: Carson, do we give presents for Christmas?

Carson: Ya!

What presents do you like?

A blue one!

Oh, a blue one. What do you want for Christmas?

Hot wheels!

Hot wheels, fun! Well, do you know who the most important person to give gifts to at Christmas time is?

Annelise?

No – Annelise is way up there, and Daddy, and Mommy too. But none of us are the most important. Do you know who is?

[silence]

Jesus Christ. We want to give gifts to Jesus Christ for Christmas. But how? Can we wrap up a present in a box and give it to him?

Ya!

No, we can’t. Because Jesus is in heaven. So what does Jesus want for Christmas?

Hot wheels!

Haha, no we can’t give Jesus hot wheels. Jesus wants–

Jesus not like hot wheels.

Haha, okay. But what we can give Jesus is–

Carson like hot wheels.

Okay. Now what we can give Jesus is service, like we talked about. Doing nice things for each other. That’s what Jesus wants for Christmas.

Carson like hot wheels.

Catch-up post: Carson and bronchiolitis

So quite a while ago, back in early December when we still lived in Denver, Carson went through quite the experience when he got really, really sick.

It started on a Friday night. Josh and I had gotten back from a date. Carson had been okay for the baby sitter, but she said he was sad and wouldn’t fall asleep on his own. That’s rare for Carson, but I figured he just missed us. But after Josh and I got home, we started to worry a little. He was coughing in his sleep a lot. We held him some, comforted him, tried the normal cold treatments. Then we went to bed – both me and Josh quite exhausted from a busy, busy week.

Around 4:30 AM things got really bad. Carson was crying, unhappy, coughing…and then basically he slept only in bits and pieces and only in our arms the rest of the night. He was coughing, breathing very rapidly, and just sad, sad, sad. In the morning when we couldn’t get him to eat or drink and he hadn’t improved, we figured it was time to call the doctor.

Our pediatrician’s office was great, and I was able to schedule an appointment for that morning. I was so grateful they got us in so quickly, especially on a Saturday. At the doctor’s, Carson was just miserable. He wailed and cried constantly through the initial check-up process with the nurse. Finally, shortly before the doctor came in, an exhausted Carson fell asleep in my arms. He had been breathing quickly and shallowly all morning.

When the doctor came in, the first thing she did was to test his oxygen level and listen to his heart. Both tests confirmed the same thing: Carson’s oxygen levels were dangerously low and oxygen just wasn’t moving through his lungs well at all. :(

The doctor was fantastic and made what could have been a terrifying experience for us first-time parents into something much more bearable. She explained everything so clearly, was so calm and in control, and helped us feel informed without feeling overwhelmed. Having such a great doctor really did help all of the other could-be scary things that started to happen pretty quickly, like finding out that Carson had bronchiolitis, hearing we’d most certainly be headed to the ER that morning, seeing Carson hooked up to an oxygen tank with a tube around his head and fitted into his nose, and having to give him a nebulizer treatment (basically like what’s in an inhaler for people with asthma, but for babies; it was to help clear out Carson’s lungs and make it easier to breathe). Carson hated the oxygen tube and nebulizer (especially the nebulizer; he screamed during the whole 10-minute treatment).

But, as much as Carson hated it all, the oxygen and the nebulizer really made a difference. He started acting happier again (meaning just intermittent fussing instead of constant screaming). He even began to talk and read some books with us. It was a relief to see him like that. When the doctor saw him, she was soon so pleased with how he was doing that she told us maybe we wouldn’t have to go to the ER after all. She said they could send us home with oxygen for Carson and we could just monitor him there, as long as his oxygen levels didn’t drop again.

And they didn’t. So we headed home.

Then we got all sorts of stuff: a tank of oxygen (with more to be delivered to our house that very afternoon), our own nebulizer, prescriptions for the medication to put inside. We were to leave Carson hooked up to the oxygen all the time at home. The doctor said to expect about 5 days of all this, and we made an appointment for first thing Monday morning so they could check up on Carson again.

The rest of that day kind of blurred for me. I felt okay (meaning in control and strong) in the car, but once we got home, things got tougher. I was sad for Carson; it was so hard to see him so sad and with a tube in his nose. I felt guilty for letting him get sick in the first place. And I felt overwhelmed: five days of this? How could we get through it? I spent the afternoon kind of in a discouraged daze. It probably didn’t help that I was super hungry (I think my diet that day had consisted mostly of brownies and a pear) and super exhausted. And, of course, still pregnant.

Later that day Dale and Heather (Josh’s parents) came to help give Carson a wonderful Priesthood blessing. I continued to feel overwhelmed, but seeing Dale and Heather really helped. The oxygen delivery man also came, leaving a huge noisy machine downstairs that pulled pure oxygen out of the air and sent it through a fifty-foot tube to Carson, and more back-up tanks of oxygen than we could use.

This is a picture of Carson on that sad, sad first day
This is a picture of Carson on that sad, sad first day

That night Carson was feeling better. He actually had a pretty good apetite for dinner. And we were able to read and play and sing, a little more like normal life. The night was long (Carson woke up sad when his oxygen tube came loose), but when the next day came, things started feeling much brighter. We got through the nebulizer treatments (which Carson still hated) by watching lots of Blue’s Clues. Carson got a bath, which he loved. And Josh and I got showers, which we needed. Feeling clean, listening to Sunday Christmas music, tidying the house, eating breakfast…things started to feel more normal again. And Heather brought us dinner and ice cream (thank you, angel mother-in-law!).

And those next five days, the rest of the time that Carson was sick, went better than I expected. He made an excellent recovery, and we went in for daily doctor’s check-ups, gradually taking him off the oxygen as he improved more and more. It was hard, for sure. A crazy, emotion-filled few days. I’m so so glad Josh took a little time off of work to help out. It was especially hard taking care of such a sick, sad Carson and being pregnant, too. I worried about the baby girl inside me: was I eating enough? Was I eating healthy enough? Was I getting enough rest? I felt so worn out.

But it passed. Carson got better! He made such an amazing recovery, the doctor was very impressed. We never had to go to the ER. Josh and I got through it, especially those first hard days, by counting our blessings: good healthcare, good doctors, money to afford it all, a child who was responding very well to treatments, not having to go to the ER, family who bring us meals, the Priesthood, and just the small tender mercies like showers and good food and sunshine.

Here's a picture of Carson a few days later - still on oxygen but doing a lot better
Here’s a picture of Carson a few days later – still on oxygen but doing a lot better

So that was our first experience with any illness in the family more serious than a cold or an ear infection. If it taught us anything, it taught us that our Carson sure is a champ.