Monday, December 3, 2012
PKU Awareness Day
Today is National PKU Awareness Day. I embrace anything that provides an opportunity to educate more people about PKU, especially because it is so rare. Most of the people in my life and others I come in contact with have NO idea what PKU is or have even heard of it. I had only read about it in a book while I was pregnant. I never dreamed it would become a part of my every day life. I really want people out there to be able to learn more about my boy Carson's experience and know what kind of restrictive diet he has to be on and just to be a little more sensitive and aware. I always try to put myself in other people's shoes and I just ask the same courtesy of those around me. There are a select few people out there who do make things more difficult, not knowingly, but they just don't think about others. I also think it is great to raise this awareness up to our insurance companies and the government. In some states there is a good bit of assistance, while others are lacking. Here in Alabama, my husband and I both work, so we do not qualify for any government assistance due to our income. My insurance covers Carson's formula, but we have to pay 30%. It is still very expensive. We get ZERO assistance on his special foods. I have to pay all of that myself (except when we are so blessed to share with a friend!). This is also very expensive. We are managing fine now, but what about the future? How are we supposed to save for our own retirement? for our children's future? These are difficult times and difficult questions for everyone, even those who do not have to consider special medical expenses.
If you are one of our loved ones, family or friend, or anyone who just wants to know more info about PKU, please take a look through my blog archives and read about our experience. I am SO swamped with work right now that I do not have time to write more, I just wanted to raise some awareness for my boy. And also check out my friends, the Austerman's, who have a blog listed on my Favorite Blogs list. She also posted about PKU Awareness Day. If you know of someone with PKU, share their experience today! Tell them you are thinking about them and their struggles. And feel free to write your representatives and senators! Have a blessed day!
Thursday, October 4, 2012
There's Always Somebody Else
One morning a couple of weeks ago I woke up feeling fine. I felt more awake than I had in a couple of weeks. I felt better physically than I had the last couple of weeks. But by the time I got to work, I didn't feel fine anymore. I can't explain why. Perhaps I got up too early and it just caught up with me. Or perhaps I was given the news by my well-meaning significant other that we received an email that someone we know just found out their new baby has PKU. Well, my question to myself is, why am I so emotional about it?
I shed more tears that day than I saw clients or got phone calls at work. I don't know why, but the start to that day just put me into emotional overload unsuspectingly. Here I would like to hash out the reason.
I shed more tears that day than I saw clients or got phone calls at work. I don't know why, but the start to that day just put me into emotional overload unsuspectingly. Here I would like to hash out the reason.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Carson's Third Birthday...with Friends
Wow! I can't believe Carson is already 3!!! Carson's third year of life was yet another year of ups and downs. During this year, Carson presented with a delay in his speech and had to go through much testing. He had his hearing tested, his speech, language, and cognition tested, and even a blood test on some of his genes. The only action being taken at this time is that he was enrolled in the Early Intervention program to receive speech therapy. A therapist came to our home and worked with Carson every 2 weeks until his recent birthday. Now we are waiting for the school system to take over his therapy on a weekly basis.
Monday, July 9, 2012
"I AM WOMAN..."
...hear me ROAR!" (Helen Reddy, 1971)
Although it was Father's Day weekend, that weekend carried a very strong theme for me about the empowerment of women. Strange, yes indeed, yet very powerful and inspirational for me. It all began with an episode of Andy Griffith. The TV show ran during the 1960's, which was when the Women's Liberation Movement, or Second-Wave Feminism, began. In this particular episode that was on Saturday night, Andy was meeting with a lawyer about a case, and the lawyer happened to be a woman. Andy was very shocked to discover this, and so was his girlfriend Helen! There were many comments made throughout the show about how unusual it was for a woman to be a lawyer. Helen even commented that there were only about 2 or 3 in the whole state. That made me begin to think about how far our society has come, how drastically and quickly things have changed. I could name several female lawyers right now off the top of my head. Women do just about everything. I can't imagine living in that world when it was rare for a woman to do any job.
Although it was Father's Day weekend, that weekend carried a very strong theme for me about the empowerment of women. Strange, yes indeed, yet very powerful and inspirational for me. It all began with an episode of Andy Griffith. The TV show ran during the 1960's, which was when the Women's Liberation Movement, or Second-Wave Feminism, began. In this particular episode that was on Saturday night, Andy was meeting with a lawyer about a case, and the lawyer happened to be a woman. Andy was very shocked to discover this, and so was his girlfriend Helen! There were many comments made throughout the show about how unusual it was for a woman to be a lawyer. Helen even commented that there were only about 2 or 3 in the whole state. That made me begin to think about how far our society has come, how drastically and quickly things have changed. I could name several female lawyers right now off the top of my head. Women do just about everything. I can't imagine living in that world when it was rare for a woman to do any job.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
PKU Awareness
Since today is the last day of PKU Awareness Month, I wanted to do a blog post and share it on facebook to remind everyone I know and just get the word out about this rare occurence and how it affects real people...people you know. If you have time please be sure to read as many of my posts about PKU as you can, as well as the description on the right side of the page. Even if you've already read it, read it again. Everyone who cares for my Carson or anyone else with PKU needs a reminder once in a while.
I want to reflect for just a moment on the purpose of this blog. When I first started writing on this blog a few years ago, I was desperate for a connection, to find anyone out there with whom I could relate because I felt like we were so alone. That was a successful endeavor. I have happened upon several blogs of people and families who also deal with PKU. One of the first people to send me a message was Shane Austerman. He and his wife and son live in Iowa, many miles from my home here in Alabama, and their son, only 4 months younger than Carson, also has PKU. I have connected with this family, with Jackee, I follow their blog, we have communicated by email and send Christmas cards each year. For that, I am so thankful. To have other people's experiences to read and to share means so much to me.
Friday, May 11, 2012
Ten Years...One Amazing Life
Ten years ago today I met the man of my dreams. God heard my prayers and my pleas from heaven and He finally saw fit to send me my heart's greatest desire. This time ten years ago I was taking charge of my life and evaluating what I really wanted. I was in a relationship that was not what God wanted for me. It was not what anybody wanted for me. I knew it already, it just took courage for me to finally admit it. At that point I began searching my soul for what it truly wanted. I wrote a beautiful journal entry all about it. I wrote out on paper exactly what I wanted in a man. I had begun reading a book God lead me to at the bookstore called "Boy Meets Girl". I cannot find that book anywhere in my stuff! It was written by the same author who wrote "I Kissed Dating Goodbye". Ironically I did not agree with the first book at the time it was written. Just like the author, God changed my heart. That book helped me see inside myself and realize what I wanted. And on this date ten years ago He saw fit to send that precious gift into my life.
This anniversary is even more special to me than will be our tenth wedding anniversary next year, for when we got married I already had what I wanted. This date, May 11th, is the most special day that changed my life forever. This date always reminds me of God's faithfulness to answer prayers and grant our heart's desires and reminds me how much I have to be thankful for. God orchestrated this part of my life so perfectly there was no doubt it was meant to happen this way. Neither one of us had a clue what life had in store for us that day.
About a week before this date ten years ago I was sitting in the parking lot at a gas station waiting to go in to visit an old friend. I was on the phone with my girlfriend Kara, informing her that I had ended my previous relationship. I had been in this relationship for 3 years and we were engaged to be married. It was a pretty serious deal. Yet she already was trying to set me up! Before we hung up she told me she and her granny had somebody they wanted me to go out with, someone I didn't even know existed. I told her I did not want to be set up and it was too soon and I just needed some time to be single and find myself again. She was disappointed. On May 11, 2002, I called her while I was in town again and asked her what she was doing. We had no plans together and had not talked. She said she was in Walmart doing some shopping for Mother's Day. Ironically, I was in the parking lot at Walmart myself! We agreed to meet inside and make plans from there. As we were leaving the store, she saw someone waving at her from across the parking lot. She said to me, "Hey Jennifer, that's the guy I told you we wanted you to meet! Let's go talk to him!" I was furious and declined. I did not want to be set up. She argued with me that we couldn't be rude because he had already seen us and waved, so we had to go talk to him. She was right, of course. We walked across the parking lot toward him and the rest, as they say, is history. His name was Marty Rice, and he is the man I married. That night we ate at Buena Vista with him and some friends, then we went bowling. He and I even went back into Walmart later to get his mother a gift. When I got home that night, I wrote the last entry into my diary that God had given me hope that there were good people left in this world. That was all I needed to say. I thought he didn't exist, and yet there he was! The reason I shared this story is so everyone would know it wasn't planned by us, it was a divine accident, divine intervention. God meant for it to happen. It was His perfect answer in His perfect plan in His perfect time.
I'm not saying everything is perfect or ever was, but he was and is perfect for me. When I look back over these last ten years I have more to be thankful for than I ever imagined possible. God has truly blessed us with ONE AMAZING LIFE together.
Together, Marty and I have been on TEN cruises! Traveling has been one of our favorite memories of our life together. It is our favorite hobby.
2002: Bahamas
2003: Honeymoon in Puerto Rico, St. Thomas, St. Maarten, Antigua, St. Lucia, and Barbados
2004: from New Orleans to Jamaica and Cozumel
2005: Grand Cayman, Cozumel, Labadee
2006: Spring: Western Caribbean again
Fall: HAWAII!
2007: March: Southern Caribbean, including St. Kitts
October: SPAIN, FRANCE, AND ITALY!!
2008: Bahamas, our farewell to the ship where it all began, Sovereign of the Seas
2011: Alaska
We got married on September 27, 2003, at 7:00pm, the perfect date.
Together, we built our house and moved in on February 29, 2004. Leap day! Which occurred again this year.
We've also lost together. We've lost loved ones. We've lost a baby. We've lost jobs. We've lost pets. We've survived snow, hurricanes, and tornadoes. We've faced the challenges life has thrown us together.
Together, we have created two amazingly beautiful babies! Carson Allen was born August 16, 2009. Maggie Amelia was born March 16, 2012.
Marty found a new job. I finally realized my dream of graduating from college.
So far, we've made it through a lot together.
Together, we're going to experience much more. I am looking forward to it. I am so unbelievably grateful for my husband. I can never look back and doubt that I made the right decision for my life partner. God basically made the decision for me by handing him to me so obviously! I love God for doing that for me. Without Marty, I would not have the wonderful life I have today. This has been the most amazing ten years of my life. I hope they keep getting even more amazing from here. Thank you God and thank you Marty for the last Ten Years, and our most unbelievably, inexplicably, undeniably, breathtakingly wonderful AMAZING LIFE! I love you! Happy Anniversary of the day we met!
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Things That Bug Me
Right now, being 9 months pregnant, I am very certain I am suffering from a temporary form of ADD. I cannot sit down and take the time to finish all these LONG blog posts about Thanksgiving and Christmas and Valentine's that I'm so behind on. It just takes too much effort and thought and energy. So instead, today I want to share a typical mommy rant. It seems to be the thing to do lately.
Currently, we check Carson's blood phe level every 2 weeks. We prick his finger with a little lancet and put blood in these 5 little circles on a lab slip; the same lab slip they use on every newborn at the hospital. Our clinic supplies us with these slips. We do this at night before bedtime, usually on a Tuesday night. Carson likes it now because he likes "finger painting" in the cirlces. He's such a big boy! He sticks out his finger just like it's nothing. It must not hurt him as much as it does me when I get my finger pricked! lol Anyway, we have to let the paper sit overnight to dry, then the next morning one of us drops it off at the Post Office to be mailed to the State Health Department Lab in Montgomery for processing. Once they process it, they call our clinic at UAB with the results. When I mail it on Wednesday morning, I almost always hear from the clinic on Friday. Well, this past Friday, I never got a call. Monday I was at home with Carson for his speech therapy. Later in the day I realized I still had not received a call, so I called Lauren, our nutritionist. This was after I had talked with Julie and found out she had to call for Noah's results too, and that his didn't have enough blood on it. I was worried about this too because we only did 3 circles and he wasn't bleeding very well so they weren't full. Anyway, Lauren said apparently the lab was behind because they were just getting results from the days before I mailed his. So we kept waiting. She finally called me on Tuesday, yesterday, a full week after we had taken the blood from his little finger, and his level was over 8, which is higher than normal. The normal range is 2-6. Since we only do it every 2 weeks, and then it was late, Carson's level could have been high for the last 3 weeks! I am not happy about that. Carson and I had a cold the week before we took his level, so I imagine that's what pushed it up, so it could have been high for about 2 weeks. His blood phe tends to only go up when he is sick or teething (which he is done with now, I guess).
Now we have to do what is called a washout for 2 days. This means Carson can only have as little protein from food as possible. Most foods Carson eats are higher in protein because he has a good phe tolerance right now. He can have up to 325mg of phe per day. His diet usually consists of dry cereal for breakfast (his fave being Chocolate Cheerios), bananas, sweet potatoes, tater tots, potato chips,applesauce, broccoli, and cauliflower. His special eating out treats are tater tots, Mexican food (rice and chips and salsa), spaghetti squash with marinara sauce at Ruby Tuesday, and homestyle potato chips at Logan's, with broccoli as a regular staple anywhere we go. The low protein foods he has been eating include pancakes, homemade lopro chocolate chip cookies, homemade bread, grilled cheese sandwich, pizza pockets, and pasta. For today and tomorrow, this child can only eat the low protein foods. This is getting more difficult than ever. He is getting so picky now. He is no longer eating the pizza pocket, but just picking out the inside of it and leaving the bread. The same thing with grilled cheese. He's just picking out the lopro cheese. He won't eat green beans or carrots anymore, which are lower in protein than broccoli, cauliflower, or potatoes. He won't eat any fruit other than bananas and applesauce. One banana has 47mg of phe in it, so applesauce is his low protein choice. If he has a fit for a banana we will give him one, because it's his fave right now, but that will be the highest thing he will eat. He will have lopro pancakes for breakfast, and no cereal. Lunch will be the most trying time, because it is always a higher phe meal. Supper is easy because he usually will eat lopro pasta or rice and a veggie. It may have to be some cauliflower, which is lower than broccoli. It's his favorite anyway.
It would just be SO much easier if he would eat like he used to! He used to eat green beans and carrots and squash and mixed fruit and all that good stuff. I am SO frustrated! Why do kids have to turn SO picky?! Especially those who can't afford to be so picky. The most important thing is that he drinks his formula, which provides him with all the protein he needs without phe. At least, thank God, he still likes that. Hopefully, he will use that to fill him up, since I know he's not going to eat much. It just makes me feel so bad for him. I used to think it was not such a big deal, because he liked so many lopro foods. But it's just getting worse. I guess it's just bugging me today. But I will never let him see that. He should and will always be made to feel like everything is perfectly normal and no big deal.
Just like now how I am feeling sorry for him when his baby sister arrives. In just a few weeks, our family gets another plus one. I feel like poor Carson has no clue how his life is about to change. He is totally the center of attention right now, and I'm afraid this may be difficult. But he is such a loving little boy, I think he will enjoy having a little baby around to love on and help take care of. Carson is having trouble with language right now, so it can be difficult to discern how much he actually understands. We started him with speech therapy through Early Intervention a couple of weeks ago. A lady comes to our house twice a month and tries to help us learn what he needs to do to learn to speak and understand better. He can say alot of words, mostly names for things. He is learning a few more verbs now, but still no real phrases or sentences. He can follow most directions we give him, and he seems to understand quite a bit. But it is hard to know just what he understands because he can't communicate very well. I worry about him being able to express his needs and feelings to us with words we can understand. And I think it gets worse, like it has seemed the last 2 weeks, when his phe level is high.
Now I am able to start actually noticing the signs when his blood phe level is high. I was not surprised by this last result. He gets sleepier, and actually started taking naps with me at home this weekend, which he hasn't done in months. And he's been sleeping through the night a little better, except when I leave him. He has become VERY clingy to me, especially at night. He wants me to sleep in his bed with him and he cries for me. It breaks my heart. I think it may have been worse this last couple of weeks because of his phe level being high. He seems to lose his focus sooner. He can name all the letters and numbers, but he is more hesitant with them lately. He also has been more obsessive with his tasks, while at the same time getting frustrated more quickly and wanting to give up on things like pushing things all the way closed or taking his clothes off by himself. He has also been screaming at bath time. Once he gets in the tub and starts playing he's fine and laughing, but he hates getting water in his eyes and face. He is more irritable, and I think it all has to do with his level being high. Once it comes down, I bet we will notice a marked difference in him again.
It is so frustrating because I wish we could have known to do something about it sooner. It makes me want to go back to checking every week. And I wish they would finally come out with a home test, like they have for diabetes, where we can get results immediately. It was announced in our PKU Newsletter last year that a test would be available in the spring, but it never happened. From what I have read, it is still in a trial phase, so something must have gone wrong to delay it. I cannot wait for the day when this part of life can be made just the slightest bit simpler. It will help Carson so much, and I know as we all grow into this more we will also learn better ways to handle it. I guess everything about raising a toddler/preschooler just gets more difficult than it was before. Sigh. The terrible twos.
Now to do a 180. While I felt like sharing all that is frustrating me, I want everyone to know that I am still thankful. I'm grateful we can even know what the problem is to do something about it. I'm thankful there are tests and low protein food alternatives. I'm thankful for our families that spend their time watching Carson while we are at work and make it much less worrisome on us that he is being properly cared for and happy. I'm amazed that Carson has learned so much already, from the alphabet and numbers to how to do household chores and follow directions (and how to press play on his DVD remote! lol). I'm also grateful that we have a program where people will come and give Carson the help he needs at no cost to us and little inconvenience because they come to our home. I'm thankful for the internet, which also allows convenience for me to order special foods for Carson and have them shipped right to our door. This world we live in, while very maddening at times, is just so amazing. We are so blessed to live in this time when we have so many things that make life a little easier for us. We have so much to be thankful for.
So next time you feel like you want to rant, feel free to do so. After you get something that's bugging you off your chest, it makes you feel better. Sharing these things might help somebody else who has been feeling the same way and you didn't even know it. And then after you read it yourself you will realize how blessed you are and thankful that even though you feel frustrated, you have a mode through which to vent your feelings freely, with the freedom to share them with others. And after you realize how many things you have to be thankful for, you will notice your frustration has kind of melted away a little.
That's what's bugging me. What's bugging you?
Currently, we check Carson's blood phe level every 2 weeks. We prick his finger with a little lancet and put blood in these 5 little circles on a lab slip; the same lab slip they use on every newborn at the hospital. Our clinic supplies us with these slips. We do this at night before bedtime, usually on a Tuesday night. Carson likes it now because he likes "finger painting" in the cirlces. He's such a big boy! He sticks out his finger just like it's nothing. It must not hurt him as much as it does me when I get my finger pricked! lol Anyway, we have to let the paper sit overnight to dry, then the next morning one of us drops it off at the Post Office to be mailed to the State Health Department Lab in Montgomery for processing. Once they process it, they call our clinic at UAB with the results. When I mail it on Wednesday morning, I almost always hear from the clinic on Friday. Well, this past Friday, I never got a call. Monday I was at home with Carson for his speech therapy. Later in the day I realized I still had not received a call, so I called Lauren, our nutritionist. This was after I had talked with Julie and found out she had to call for Noah's results too, and that his didn't have enough blood on it. I was worried about this too because we only did 3 circles and he wasn't bleeding very well so they weren't full. Anyway, Lauren said apparently the lab was behind because they were just getting results from the days before I mailed his. So we kept waiting. She finally called me on Tuesday, yesterday, a full week after we had taken the blood from his little finger, and his level was over 8, which is higher than normal. The normal range is 2-6. Since we only do it every 2 weeks, and then it was late, Carson's level could have been high for the last 3 weeks! I am not happy about that. Carson and I had a cold the week before we took his level, so I imagine that's what pushed it up, so it could have been high for about 2 weeks. His blood phe tends to only go up when he is sick or teething (which he is done with now, I guess).
Now we have to do what is called a washout for 2 days. This means Carson can only have as little protein from food as possible. Most foods Carson eats are higher in protein because he has a good phe tolerance right now. He can have up to 325mg of phe per day. His diet usually consists of dry cereal for breakfast (his fave being Chocolate Cheerios), bananas, sweet potatoes, tater tots, potato chips,applesauce, broccoli, and cauliflower. His special eating out treats are tater tots, Mexican food (rice and chips and salsa), spaghetti squash with marinara sauce at Ruby Tuesday, and homestyle potato chips at Logan's, with broccoli as a regular staple anywhere we go. The low protein foods he has been eating include pancakes, homemade lopro chocolate chip cookies, homemade bread, grilled cheese sandwich, pizza pockets, and pasta. For today and tomorrow, this child can only eat the low protein foods. This is getting more difficult than ever. He is getting so picky now. He is no longer eating the pizza pocket, but just picking out the inside of it and leaving the bread. The same thing with grilled cheese. He's just picking out the lopro cheese. He won't eat green beans or carrots anymore, which are lower in protein than broccoli, cauliflower, or potatoes. He won't eat any fruit other than bananas and applesauce. One banana has 47mg of phe in it, so applesauce is his low protein choice. If he has a fit for a banana we will give him one, because it's his fave right now, but that will be the highest thing he will eat. He will have lopro pancakes for breakfast, and no cereal. Lunch will be the most trying time, because it is always a higher phe meal. Supper is easy because he usually will eat lopro pasta or rice and a veggie. It may have to be some cauliflower, which is lower than broccoli. It's his favorite anyway.
It would just be SO much easier if he would eat like he used to! He used to eat green beans and carrots and squash and mixed fruit and all that good stuff. I am SO frustrated! Why do kids have to turn SO picky?! Especially those who can't afford to be so picky. The most important thing is that he drinks his formula, which provides him with all the protein he needs without phe. At least, thank God, he still likes that. Hopefully, he will use that to fill him up, since I know he's not going to eat much. It just makes me feel so bad for him. I used to think it was not such a big deal, because he liked so many lopro foods. But it's just getting worse. I guess it's just bugging me today. But I will never let him see that. He should and will always be made to feel like everything is perfectly normal and no big deal.
Just like now how I am feeling sorry for him when his baby sister arrives. In just a few weeks, our family gets another plus one. I feel like poor Carson has no clue how his life is about to change. He is totally the center of attention right now, and I'm afraid this may be difficult. But he is such a loving little boy, I think he will enjoy having a little baby around to love on and help take care of. Carson is having trouble with language right now, so it can be difficult to discern how much he actually understands. We started him with speech therapy through Early Intervention a couple of weeks ago. A lady comes to our house twice a month and tries to help us learn what he needs to do to learn to speak and understand better. He can say alot of words, mostly names for things. He is learning a few more verbs now, but still no real phrases or sentences. He can follow most directions we give him, and he seems to understand quite a bit. But it is hard to know just what he understands because he can't communicate very well. I worry about him being able to express his needs and feelings to us with words we can understand. And I think it gets worse, like it has seemed the last 2 weeks, when his phe level is high.
Now I am able to start actually noticing the signs when his blood phe level is high. I was not surprised by this last result. He gets sleepier, and actually started taking naps with me at home this weekend, which he hasn't done in months. And he's been sleeping through the night a little better, except when I leave him. He has become VERY clingy to me, especially at night. He wants me to sleep in his bed with him and he cries for me. It breaks my heart. I think it may have been worse this last couple of weeks because of his phe level being high. He seems to lose his focus sooner. He can name all the letters and numbers, but he is more hesitant with them lately. He also has been more obsessive with his tasks, while at the same time getting frustrated more quickly and wanting to give up on things like pushing things all the way closed or taking his clothes off by himself. He has also been screaming at bath time. Once he gets in the tub and starts playing he's fine and laughing, but he hates getting water in his eyes and face. He is more irritable, and I think it all has to do with his level being high. Once it comes down, I bet we will notice a marked difference in him again.
It is so frustrating because I wish we could have known to do something about it sooner. It makes me want to go back to checking every week. And I wish they would finally come out with a home test, like they have for diabetes, where we can get results immediately. It was announced in our PKU Newsletter last year that a test would be available in the spring, but it never happened. From what I have read, it is still in a trial phase, so something must have gone wrong to delay it. I cannot wait for the day when this part of life can be made just the slightest bit simpler. It will help Carson so much, and I know as we all grow into this more we will also learn better ways to handle it. I guess everything about raising a toddler/preschooler just gets more difficult than it was before. Sigh. The terrible twos.
Now to do a 180. While I felt like sharing all that is frustrating me, I want everyone to know that I am still thankful. I'm grateful we can even know what the problem is to do something about it. I'm thankful there are tests and low protein food alternatives. I'm thankful for our families that spend their time watching Carson while we are at work and make it much less worrisome on us that he is being properly cared for and happy. I'm amazed that Carson has learned so much already, from the alphabet and numbers to how to do household chores and follow directions (and how to press play on his DVD remote! lol). I'm also grateful that we have a program where people will come and give Carson the help he needs at no cost to us and little inconvenience because they come to our home. I'm thankful for the internet, which also allows convenience for me to order special foods for Carson and have them shipped right to our door. This world we live in, while very maddening at times, is just so amazing. We are so blessed to live in this time when we have so many things that make life a little easier for us. We have so much to be thankful for.
So next time you feel like you want to rant, feel free to do so. After you get something that's bugging you off your chest, it makes you feel better. Sharing these things might help somebody else who has been feeling the same way and you didn't even know it. And then after you read it yourself you will realize how blessed you are and thankful that even though you feel frustrated, you have a mode through which to vent your feelings freely, with the freedom to share them with others. And after you realize how many things you have to be thankful for, you will notice your frustration has kind of melted away a little.
That's what's bugging me. What's bugging you?
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