Why Target?

Target.

I don’t know what it is about Target.

Every time I go to Target alone, I get super emotional. There are moments my body seems to freeze up and time feels as though it is standing still. I walk by the sweet mamas talking to their sweet babies while their cute little legs are dangling out of the cart. My heart is happy for them and hurts at the same time. I think about how grateful I am I was able to take my first three sweet babies to Target. Sam has never been to Target or in any store for that matter. Or I go to the baby food section and the only thing I buy is green beans. I don’t buy anything else because the only thing, besides formula, we pump into Sam’s gj-tube (feeding tube) is green beans. For a moment, I envy the other mamas who are buying other baby food flavors. Stupid, I know. Then I tell myself to buck up and feel grateful for nurses and feeding tubes and life.

Suddenly, it hits me.

I figured it out.

PTSD. Post-traumatic stress disorder.

Yep, kind of weird, I know, but it’s a thing and it can happen to anyone who’s been through a trauma.

When Sam was “living” in the hospital, I basically lived there too. On the rare occasion I did leave, it was to be with my family or quickly pick-up some toiletries. We lived in twelve different rooms in the seven months Sam was there so I learned to live very sparingly. Guess what store I went to on my rare trips out of the hospital? Yep…you guessed it…Target.

I vividly remember standing in the checkout line at the Target closest to the hospital during an extremely grim time for Sam. I felt like I was the scene in a movie. I looked at the person in front of me, behind me, and everywhere around me wondering what their story was. An overarching question constantly on my mind still to this day…“What’s their story?” I remember failing to fight back tears as I stood in line. I quickly wiped away the small tears as I came closer to the checkout. It didn’t help there was a proud daddy with his little boy who couldn’t have been more than a year old in front of me.

It’s crazy how sounds, smells, and/or certain places can bring back vivid moments in your life. Whether they were moments of peace or fear, they were real to you. It’s those moments of fear that seem to hit us the hardest. Fear can wrap around you so tightly, it can almost feel hard to breath. It can happen even if you haven’t experienced a trauma. I’m guessing we have all had moments like this. When you can stand in faith and know fear is a liar, your happiness can’t be taken. That grip of fear slowly releases and a peace that passes all understanding sets in.

Still almost three years later, I have to fight with myself anytime I step foot in a Target alone. Some days there is more fighting than others, but every time I walk out those sliding glass doors, I choose to smile, remind myself, it could be so much worse, and ponder the MANY things I am grateful for.

Swallow Study Cancelled

Well, I guess I was right to wonder how a swallow study is done on a kid who doesn’t eat or drink anything by mouth. My question lead speech, the specialty who performs a swallow study in combination with radiology, to talk with Sam’s ENT. They decided we have to do feeding therapy before they perform the swallow study. Bummer, but it’s okay. 

Yesterday was not a good day in our house. Let’s just say, the cancelling of the swallow study was not the only, nor the worst, of our bad news for the day. When it rains it, it pours, BUT there will be a rainbow. And, like I have said in the past, it could be so much worse. 

Again, don’t just keep Sam in your prayers. Each time you pray for our Superman Sam, pray for the hearts of me, Sean, Will, Abby, and Ryan. My kids lives have been turned upside down over the past two years, and to say all of this hasn’t affected them, would be silly. Someday, I will write about the other half of our story, but for now, I can only ask for prayers. 

Thank you for continuing to follow Sam’s story. I’m so thankful to the nurse at Children’s who encouraged me, so long ago, to start a CaringBridge site. You have no idea how much therapy I get from writing and reading previous posts and comments. I find myself going back and reading things I would have never remembered had I not journaled Sam’s story. Sometimes, if I’m having a bad day, I read past comments and my heart smiles again. Thank you for your encouraging words. They go a long way and are not forgotten. 

Pray

Do you know what it’s like to have your entire world stop while everyone else’s keeps going? I do. While I’m worried about what I’m going to make for dinner, someone else out there is worried if their two year old son will survive a fall from four stories high.

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Please pray for sweet little Mateo. He lives in Mexico and fell from four stories onto concrete today. In their world right now, seconds feel like minutes and minutes feel like hours.

At this point, hope is their only option. Please pray for little Mateo, his mommy and daddy. I cannot imagine their pain and sheer terror right now. My heart is braking for them.

I do know, I believe in power of prayer. I am fully convinced it worked with my son on many occasions. The staff at Children’s would tell you Sam should not have made it home and claim he had “certainly impossible odds”. Well, although Mateo’s odds are impossible at the moment, I believe in a God who can do the impossible. So, like I’ve asked for my son in the past, whether you believe in prayer or not, pray for Mateo.

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