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Build Your Own Library!!

Build Your Own Library!!

March is Reading Month and we’ve got tons of great reading at our school and local libraries.  But what if you want to build your own library!!!!
Audio Books Now offers 50% off your first purchase, deep discounts, roll over discounts, exclusive discounts and offers and you can cancel at any time.  
What a great gift idea to give to those with reading disabilities.  Audio Books Now offers three gift giving selections.  Click below to see the top authors and best selling books available.

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What child doesn’t like getting mail? Book Roo has a Book Club for Kids! Make reading exciting!

Make reading exciting!

See their faces light up when the story is about them!! Let your little princess dream big with her own personalized book!

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Becoming My Mother

Becoming My Mother

Wal-Mart.com USA, LLCOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAAs I was walking around the pharmacy, waiting for my prescriptions to be filled, I came across a display of adorable kitchen towels. They all had clever sayings on them and I wanted to buy one of each – for decorating, not for dishes.  One in particular made me think.  It said, “Sometimes when I open my mouth, my mother comes out.”

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I’m blessed to still have my mom. She’s 84 years old and still on the go!  That’s great and I want to live a long time too so I hope I inherited the living long gene my mom got from her mom.  Grandma lived to be 98 and she wasn’t nearly as healthy as my mom is. But will I really become my mother?

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First Retirement Update

FIRST RETIREMENT UPDATE – GET OUT THE FUN STUFF!!

Every day that I went to work, I dreamed of retirement.  I retired in January from teaching 12th grade English Language Arts.  I never said I could afford to, I said I’d figure it out along the way.  Here’s a note I wrote to my teacher friends who were still on the job.  This is what my first few months of retirement were like.

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Stuff Happens, Life Goes On

Stuff Happens, Life Goes On

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LIFE WITH A STROKE SURVIVOR

Wal-Mart.com USA, LLCRog and I had been married 16 ½ years. We had our ups and downs and times when I thought we wouldn’t last.  He was a hardworking man and a good father.  He worked 60 hour weeks at the machine shop making ball screws, then spent weekends helping our daughters with their cheerleading  He was a pretty good cook and made dinner on the days I went to school.  He would always let me check my steak to be sure it was done enough before he turned off the barbeque.  He was always doing something in the garage or the garden or putting things together or fixing them.  He was a machinist and he loved his job. He loved tools and it seemed like most of his paycheck went for paying for tools.

When he changed employers he took his retirement money from the company and bought a  I was furious!!! We had enough money troubles, but instead of paying off some bills, he bought a $1000 swimming pool! He and the kids loved the pool.  Every year he set it up, took it down and maintained it daily.  In protest, I had nothing to do with the pool.  I never went in it and never did anything to help with it.  In fact, I never did anything to help with the yards at all.  I didn’t even know what my back yard looked like!

It was on a Saturday, March 8, 2003, when we were getting ready to attend a major cheerleading competition. My daughter Julia was the coach and Jackie was on her team.  Rog was in the garage having his usual black coffee, cigarette breakfast. He came into the house and told me he had a pain starting in his chest and running down his arm.  When he agreed to let me take him to the hospital emergency room, I began to worry, but I thought it would be alright.  We’ll go to the hospital, they’ll give him something to make him fart, and we’ll be on our way to the competition.  We told the girls we’d be a little late, but we’d meet them at the competition shortly, as soon as Rog was out of the Emergency Room.

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It turned out to be an aortic aneurysm, which means the main artery to his brain was about to burst and he would die. If this had happened a day earlier when he was at work, he would have waited until the end of his shift before he went to the hospital and he would have died.  We did not meet the girls at the cheerleading competition later that day.  Rog was taken by ambulance to another hospital with an extensive cardiovascular department to undergo an emergency surgery the next morning.  During the surgery he suffered four strokes and remained in the hospital for six weeks.  He couldn’t speak, he didn’t know his name, he literally cried because he thought I had left him, even though I came to see him every day.

Of the three hospital choices I had, I chose the closest to the school where I worked. I don’t know how I made that decision; I can’t account for my reasoning at the time, but it was the right one.  Every day after work, I went to see Rog, feed him his dinner, take him for walks in a wheelchair and get him ready for bed.  Once I finally got home at night after spending the day with 150 teenagers and their attitudes, and then going to see my suddenly disabled husband, I was exhausted.  I was told by the doctors not to take any days off from work because I would need all the days I could get to take care of Rog whenever he would be discharged and allowed to come home.  Finally at about 11 p.m. every night I sat in the living room and ate dinner and watched TV before I went to bed, only to get up the next morning and do it all over again. Every night I looked at his empty chair and prayed, “Please Lord, let Rog come home and sit in his chair and say something stupid.”

All of a sudden I became the “man of the house.” I did not want this job, nor was I qualified to do it.  My “work around the clock, do everything” husband now had to be cared for like an infant.  I had to do all the things he did and more.  You guessed it.  I assemble and maintain the swimming pool as it’s been a form of therapy for him (not to mention the grands have fun in it).  It’s been 13 years and I’m so happy to tell you that Rog has come a long, way.  Since this blog is about being grandparents, I’ll be telling you a lot of stories about Rog and his comeback from this near-death experience.  He does a lot now.  Sometimes it’s just like it was before he got sick and other times it’s like WHAT???? There doesn’t seem to be any rhyme or reason to what he can and can’t do.  Although he’s made a miraculous recovery, he still has some permanent disabilities that will never change.

Rog can’t work or drive or follow directions or write or read or count or cook or dial a phone or use a computer. He lost his peripheral vision and the vision he has left is impaired so that he sees duplicates of things and it looks like things are charging at him. His brain often tells him there is pain, where there is nothing physically wrong; therefore, there is no cure for the pain.

Our whole family has had to make adjustments, but he’s the best husband, father and grandpa I could ever ask for. We’re back to our usual routine of sitting down to dinner in front of the TV and watching reruns every night.  He has his beer and brings me my wine – yeah that’s right.  We have new chairs now and every night he sits in his chair and says something stupid.  And I say, “Thank you, Lord!”

Please share your challenges and situations with us and give us your advice.  We look forward to hearing from you!

debbie@grammyslittlehelpers.com

    Rules For Grammy’s House

    Rules For Grammy’s House

    rulesforgrammyshouse

    Yes, I said rules. When I was teaching, we had to change the “rules” to “expectations” as though that was going to change the students’ behavior.  That’s just silly talk.   So here are the rules (deal with it):

    RULES FOR THE GRANDCHILDREN

    • Remember your manners.
    • Be respectful.
    • Have fun.

    RULES FOR THE PARENTS OF THE GRANDCHILDREN (your adult children)

    • Don’t bring the kids over in their good clothes. We’re going to play, get dirty, and have fun. Remember, the clothes don’t make the child, the child makes the clothes. They look adorable in anything.
    • Do bring extra clothes, we’ll need them.
    • Don’t bring any food unless I ask you to.
    • Don’t act like I don’t know what I’m doing. I raised you and did a damn good job, if I must say so myself (your children will rarely, if ever, argue that).
    • If you’re going to be late picking them up, please let me know. They are welcome to stay  as long as you like, but I need to know so I can keep all the fun activities going.

    RULES FOR GRAMPY AND ME

    • Use lots of love and common sense and the rest will take care of itself.

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    debbie@grammyslittlehelpers.com