Making his entrance – Part 1

Itโ€™s crazy how much guilt one simple thing โ€” like when and how the baby comes โ€” can bring with it. Originally, baby boyโ€™s due date was September 3. Then the doctor told me at some point September 1 was more accurate, but it never got changed in the computer โ€” so September 3 it... Continue Reading →

Her worst seizure week ever ๐Ÿฅบ

I keep thinking, โ€œRight. Today is going to be better than yesterday.โ€ Then it isnโ€™t. To give you a bit of context of โ€œnormalโ€ seizures for Eloise: Worst seizure control time (pre correct meds): December 2021 โ€” 51 seizures Best seizure control time: May-July 2022 โ€” 1 seizure total August โ€” 12 seizures September (she... Continue Reading →

18 months โ€” what a ride

July was our first month where both Brian and I were back at work. It was also a big month for so many other reasons. It was the month we took our first big family trip (a work-cation to the southern Estonian city of Tartu)the month Eloise developed some strange movements that took us to... Continue Reading →

15 months: Digging roads for Eloise

Back in December, when seizures were still new to us, I remember a phone call I had with our doctor in Tallinn at the time. "How's Eloise's seizures?" "Well, she's having anywhere between 5-8 per day." "Okay. Well, contact me if it gets worse." I remember feeling stunned. But, Tartu? "I want you to contact me every time Eloise has a seizure." "Wait. Every time? I'll be writing you a lot." "Yes, every time. I don't mind." And that interaction basically sums up how different the care feels in Tartu versus Tallinn.

I’m not the mom I’d envisioned

Sometime during my years growing from a child into an adult, I internalized the idea that I was never doing enough. Besides that -- I decided back then -- whatever I did do was never good enough. If I had a school project, it couldn't just be "good enough," it needed to be over-the-top amazing.... Continue Reading →

59 weeks: Rested, teething, but happier

Russia (okay, well, Putin) still bombards Ukraine every day. And we still have a kiddo who needs our full attention. So we move on with life -- with teething, with trying to get her to nap, with doing everything in our power to make sure she's growing and developing. We're privileged to be in a place right now that we can do that, so we will. Because life will not always be this peace-filled for us. In the meantime, we'll just hope that the Estonian military experts are correct -- that Russia isn't strong enough to take Kyiv.

Strategies to thrive for when life sucks

Life with Eloise is an absolute and utter joy. Until it isn't. We will find a way to take care of this kid and take care of ourselves and take care of our relationship. And we won't accept a life of merely existing in pain as an option. We will thrive while we do it. We're not there yet, but we've made a lot of progress. This is that progress. Part 2 of "Time to re-learn Teamwork".

Hospital miracles and redemption

We returned last night from our planned Tartu inpatient hospital stay. So. ๐Ÿ‘ Much. ๐Ÿ‘ Good. ๐Ÿ‘ News. ๐Ÿ‘ There's no way to easily explain it all in an instagram story or a tiny facebook post, so blogpost here we go!

55 weeks: 17 days seizure-free

Between Eloise's tooth still coming in and her practicing all kinds of new skills, we have been so encouraged this week. Yet like most parents, we've still been pretty worn out by all of her crying and not sleeping. Thankfully, though, her fussy period shouldn't last much longer. At least we hope. ๐Ÿคž๐Ÿพ๐Ÿคž๐Ÿพ๐Ÿคž๐Ÿพ

52 weeks: We โค๏ธ our virtual village (you)

Unlike probably many parents in similar positions, you could say this statement is true of us, "As the parent of adorable Eloise -- who is definitely very disabled -- I am so thankful every time I hear, 'Have you tried [insert unsolicited advice here]? It has saved us so much heartache and pain, and I think it will continue to. We wouldn't have made it without our virtual village." At least at this stage in Eloise's life. So many many many many things we have learned and been able to help Eloise with so far have all come from suggestions from those who read this blog -- many of whom began as total strangers to us. So let me just say a huge thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

50 weeks: Hospitalized. Again.

We always expected that Eloise's 16 day seizure-free streak was only temporary. What we did not expect, however, is that her seizures would come back and almost immediately send us back to the hospital. All seizures suck. But SCN1A-related seizures are especially brutal.

49 weeks: Setting dreams and goals

With a 16-day pause from seizures (although today they came back ๐Ÿ˜ฅ), it gave Brian and I some time to start thinking about our own needs, planning for her future, and enjoying the fact that she is still developing.

Operation: Keep Eloise (Well)

If you're new to our blog, in addition to a bunch of other issues related to her chromosome deletion, Eloise started having regular seizures right after she turned 9 months old. As best as we can tell, not only will it (likely) be hard to control her seizures, but we are going to need to do far more than just keep trying various medications on her. So that's why Brian and I sat down this week to come up with this: Operation Keep Eloise (well).

Our 2022 word just might change our lives

I canโ€™t remember the last time I made a New Yearโ€™s resolution. And I never really understood that trend to pick a โ€œwordโ€ for the next year. Yet here we are. With a word to help guide our lives in 2022. But it means way more than Iโ€™d ever imagined. And I think it has the potential to change our lives.

45-46 weeks: Still much to celebrate

You know, living with her seizures do suck, but we are determined not to let them steal our joy. This little munchkin is still adorable and incredible. So it's time for an actual update, even if it is two weeks rolled into one. Because I want to celebrate the great stuff that's been happening, too.

40-42 weeks: Treasures from trials

To say weโ€™ve had a few rough patches over the last weeks may be an understatement. In case you missed recent events I posted about on Eloise's facebook group and the stories of Eloise's instagram page, I'll recap it. And then move on to those treasures I mentioned. The very short version On Saturday, November... Continue Reading →

Control is an illusion

She's mostly not eating. Again. These last few days, increasingly it's felt like we've moved backwards in time to a few months ago when it was a constant struggle to get her to eat. When we needed to try every trick in the book to coax her to get close to enough milk in her... Continue Reading →

33 Weeks: A real life telenovela

Gosh this has been a week of extremes for us. Some massive victories and some frustrating setbacks. On the food front The great After last weekโ€™s post, a few people sent me to an Estonian website where you can order freshly prepared, purรฉed, and deep-frozen single ingredient organic baby food. It turns out that they... Continue Reading →

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