Friday, January 18, 2013

Closing the Chapter of the Hellish Year of 2012


Hi.  So, it’s been a couple of months since I last wrote (SSSHHHH….don’t say the actual number of months out loud…you’ll make my blog mad).  Who knew how fast time flies when you’re going to a hospital every week.  I don’t think that was in their “Welcome to Chemotherapy” pamphlet, but they should definitely think about throwing that into their FAQ section.

With that not-so-subtle segue, gentle reader(s? Yeah, no.  I think I’m down to just me and the internet crickets that chirp on neglected blogs), let’s wrap up the health saga that is known in my house as the Hellish Year of 2012.  After going every week to have my blood checked, starting birth control again to see if it was a pituitary gland thing and then having good weeks (I got down to 8!  8, people-sorry-person! It’s a pituitary gland thing!  Huzzah!) and then bad weeks (I went back up to 15…and then 18…and then 19….what happened to you, 8??  You were such a nice number!  I guess you are not a pituitary gland thing!), avoiding the doctor for a month because I wanted 8 to magically reappear (hope can be tricky sometimes, in the sense that it tricks you into prolonging the inevitable), I finally gave in and accepted my fate. 

I received my first chemotherapy shot of dactinomycin, which is a stronger chemo drug compared to the methotrexate I received in January and April, on November 22nd.  Incidentally, I rushed to York University right after so that I could teach my second to last class of Consumer Behavior.  It was an awesome day, to say the least.  I received injections every two weeks after that, and just received my hopefully last injection last Monday.  In total, I received four injections of the stuff, but happily (really, this is a BIG happy), my numbers have been <1 since two weeks into this experience, and have stayed there since.  Unless my numbers rise in the next six months or so, I should be in the clear.  The second big happy is that I only have to go once every month to get my blood checked, which is a huge relief considering that I have gone to a hospital every week for probably 46 out of the 52 weeks in 2012.  I only wish this was an exaggeration.  So, as of today, it looks like the Hellish Year of 2012 is not going to be spilling over into 2013.  I am afraid to be optimistic at this point, but in the deepest part of my heart, I really hope that this whole “learning” and “growing” experience has run its course and that I can close this chapter of my life…and while I’m at it (just to be thorough, of course), metaphorically rip it into itty bitty pieces, burn said itty bitty pieces aided by a whole bottle of lighter fluid, and bury the ashes from the itty bitty pieces in the deepest, darkest hole I can possibly dig.  J 

With all that said, and this is more for me than for updating people…person…*ahem* crickets… on how I’m doing, I’m going to talk about what it’s been like being on the chemotherapy, just so that I don’t forget the details of the experience as I move emotionally past this.  And since this is a blog, you can read it, too, if you so desire, and learn things that you hopefully will never experience in your own life from what I had to learn.  My only disclaimer is that while you read this, please note that I fully recognize that the chemotherapy I received was a relatively small dosage compared to what you normally go through for cancer, and so my experience is nowhere near as trying as those strong, brave men and women who have those types of chemo experiences.  However, it is my experience and is important to me, so here we go.

     #1. Chemotherapy sucks.  It sucks whatever energy you have, your time, your appetite for food/life, and so on.  It just sucks.  Plain and simple.  I was really scared with Injection #1, because I didn’t know what to expect in terms of side effects and I was worried that it wouldn’t work.  What I found out is that chemotherapy (and more so the side effects) are physically and emotionally draining, but that you can do it.  As long as you know that it is just going to suck for a while, you can accept it and move on. 

     #2. Side effects are not peripheral or on the side, regardless of being called side effects.  They are front and center.  I felt physically sicker than I have the entire year while I have been dealing with my disease (gestational trophoblastic disease is what it is called) following each treatment.  Here’s how it went down.  After each chemo injections, I would have about 8 hours until the side effects kicked in, and I dreaded that moment of when I started to feel queasy.   I was on two different types of anti-nausea meds and steroids (to keep infections down??), and I don’t even want to think about how I would have felt without the meds.  Thankfully, I didn’t throw up, but I also didn’t eat anything stronger than toast or mashed potatoes for about four days straight, and I wouldn’t eat a normalish meal until about a week after each injection.  And then I would overeat to compensate for not eating normally and to celebrate food being appealing again, so I really didn’t lose any weight overall (yeah, that was a bummer).  For the first four days after each injection, I really didn’t do anything other than sleep, drink copious amounts of water and Gatorade, and watch whatever I could watch on TV that I could sleep to.  Chemo also messes with your digestive system, and that’s all I will say about that.  I would slowly work up to going outside, to the library, grocery shopping, picking up the Mister, and so on…but once again, it took about a week until I felt more like “me” again.  Even with that said, my energy would only really return a couple of days before the next injection.  So – really.  Chemotherapy sucks everything out of you.  I lost December (except for one extremely happy week when my mother came to visit) to the effects of chemo.  I can’t get that time back.  I also missed my bed – I slept on the couch so as to not feel sicker by being jostled when my Mister moved during the night.  While I love my couch, I do love my bed more! 

      #3.Losing your hair while on chemo is no laughing matter.  I knew that there was a chance I would experience some hair loss with the chemotherapy, but oh my laws.  I was not prepared for the ickiness and sadness of it.  First off, it’s gross.  I can’t run my fingers through my hair without multiple strands falling out, and for someone with long hair, I do have to flip my hair over my shoulder or put it in a ponytail or get knots out throughout the day, which leads to little piles of hair accumulating where I’ve been. And showering?  Oh heavens.  I won’t even go into how many times I clean our drain a week from the amount of hair that gets caught.  ICKY.  The hair loss wasn’t bad with the first injection, but it definitely kicked into gear by #2 and hasn’t slowed down since.  I’m told that the hair loss will stop once I’m done receiving treatments (hello, universe!  I’m done!  Can my hair please stop falling out now?? K, thanks!).  I haven’t gone bald, but for a person who always had fine hair without a lot of volume, it makes me incredibly sad to look at myself in the mirror and see the limpness that is now my head of hair.  I’ve tried using baby shampoo, which really hasn’t seemed to reverse the depressing trend, and I’m only washing my hair once every two days so that I’m not as hard on the hair that is left, which, ugggh.  You just don’t feel as clean coming out of the shower if you haven’t washed the hair!  I also went probably 95% of the time just not doing my hair at all (which, if you know me, I do not do.  My hair looks scary without some divine intervention) during this whole experience.  I think this added to me not feeling like me, because I look in the mirror and I didn’t see well-groomed me.  I feel my ponytail now, and I just….it’s hard.  I might go get a haircut once the gross-factor goes down a notch so that it’s not so long and sad, but…yeah.  Bye, hair.  (NOTE: The one upside to losing hair and stuff – shaving my legs was a breeze!)

      #4. Chemotherapy can leave lasting physical effects.  Injection #2 occurred in my right hand, and about three days after, I had a pretty wicked rashy red thing that ultimately turned into three burn spots on my right wrist.  Two of the burn spots are small, but the mother burn spot in the middle peeled and scabbed and itched and hurt until it eventually died down to what it is today: a noticeable, circular red scar about the size of a dime.  Now, I know.  Dime size is not HUGE, but it’s still pretty significant when you have small wrists, and when you had previously unblemished wrist skin.  Apparently what can happen with the chemo injections is that if your veins aren’t big enough or they don’t put enough saline along with the injection, it can “leak” outside of your vein and burn you.  So that’s what happened.  Thankfully my left wrist veins were much more accommodating to chemo injections, so I just have the right wrist burn scars.  Goodie!  I think this is hard for me because it’s a literal, physical reminder of this awful year.  The last chemo nurse I saw told me that it will eventually fade, and by eventually, she clarified as “years.”  My wrist is therefore my badge of chemotherapy that I will wear for years to come.  I’ll be honest here – I wish I didn’t have it or need it.  

      #5. Getting the actual chemotherapy injection is easy peasy.  Waiting to get the chemotherapy injections is evil.  On the day of your chemo treatments, you have to do five things: (1) get your blood drawn and a full CBC thing done, (2) meet with your doc so that he/she okays the chemo treatment for that day, (3) check in with the chemo nurses when they call your name to go over your CBC results and okay your treatment, and (4) wait for about an hour to two hours for the chemo to be mixed and delivered, so that you can then (5) get injected with the poisonous stuff around your appointed chemo time.  Step 5, for me, usually took about 15 minutes total, from being set up with the saline line to being injected to getting the saline afterwards to being released.  Easy peasy.  Step 1 is also easy, if you get there early enough, and all of the blood tech lab people at Sunnybrook know me by now, so at least I get to chat with them while they poke me, and since I’ve been poked once a week for the past year, I’m so over being afraid of needles.  It doesn’t bug me in the least anymore, so Step 1 is an easy check mark.  However, Step 2 is the kicker for making it either a pleasantish or a truly horrible experience.  Case in point:  Injection #2 (same one where I got the wrist burn from – it was a cursed injection, methinks) was going fine with Step 1 being completed right on schedule, if not early.  My doc appointment time was at 9:45, and my check in for chemo was at 10:45.  My doctor got delayed within the first hour BY an hour because he had to do a “procedure”, and as such, I didn’t see him until 11:15.  So I missed my chemo check in time.  By 30 minutes.  It took all of 3 minutes for him to okay my chemo treatment and see that I wasn’t having any serious ill effects from the treatment, so we were out of there by 11:18.  We skeedaddled over to the chemo nurses, and then proceeded to wait an hour to be called by the nurses.  And then after I was okayed, we waited another two hours to be called back for the chemo treatment.  We finally got out of there by 2:55.  We had been there for over 7 hours.  All because of Step #2 being delayed put me at the end of the chemo pack, setting back every other step.  This really was not so fun, because neither the Mister nor I brought food with us, because we thought we’d be in and out in under 3 hours.  HA.  But I will say that getting the actual chemo was no biggie. It just looked like apple juice being injected into my arm.  And I really liked the heating towels they wrap your hand in to get your veins to pop.  They were strangely relaxing.  Maybe I should go to a spa someday?

      #6. Coming down with a cold and getting chemo is no bueno.  Injection #4 was received when I was feeling slightly under the weather with a sniffly nose.  However, I was cleared and received the injection.  When asking the nurse about whether I should be concerned about a sinus infection while getting chemo, she told me that I should go to a doc IMMEDIATELY upon thinking that I was getting a sinus infection, because your immune system is compromised when receiving chemotherapy, and any small infection can be magnified to the point where people get hospitalized.  Scary stuff.  So I went to a local walk-in clinic right after getting Injection #4 and got antibiotics and inhalers, to make sure that my sniffles didn’t transform into the now-much-scarier-possibilities of a sinus infection and ultimately bronchitis.  Even taking the medicine, however, I am still getting over the sniffles and coughing, and it’s been two weeks.  And I’m here to tell you that feeling nauseated, weak, AND sniffly with gung in the lungs is a recipe for one really depressingly sick week.  Upside:  I got to play hooky from church two weeks in a row to take care of my health, and no, I’m not a bad person for enjoying those two weeks.  J

All in all, I’ve tried to stay positive as I’ve tackled each aspect of my chemo experience.  It’s definitely been emotionally easier now that my levels are where they should be.  If this DIDN’T work…oh boy.  That would be…ugly.  For me.  And my doctor.  Because he would hear about the ugly, see the ugly, and get the ugly.  But, thankfully for him, he’s been spared the ugly.  I hope that I never have to have another chemo injection/treatment/poison administration again in my life, but I will say that I’m proud to have gotten through it and been able to laugh about it most days.  Now all I can do is hope that my levels stay down and that 2013 is a heck of a lot better than 2012 ever was.  If you crickets get a spare minute or two, can you hope with me?  I need all the good mojo I can get! Thank you!!!

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Chocolate and Cake > Cancer and Chemotherapy

Chocolate has been considered an aphrodisiac, a stimulant, and a go-to gift for Valentine's Day.  But, in cake form, chocolate form has healing properties that fill the heart just as much as it fills out the hips.  And as I ate chocolate cake for dinner today, I felt a little bit of the happiness that a delicious, smooth chocolate cake can bring...and for just a few minutes, I forgot about the other "c" words that are populating my life these days.

So I went to see the cancer doctor last week.  Thankfully, he didn't once mention the words "cancer" or "tumor" or "infertility."  That felt like a small victory in of itself, considering what the conga line in my head had been dancing to the days preceding the appointment and in the 45 minutes waiting in the cancer center (or centre, as Canadians call it).  However, any enlightenment I had been hoping to receive as to why I've been unable to get un-pregnant for the last 7 months was not to be had during the appointment.  Rather, the straight-forward doc told me that I have either (a) tissue leftover from pregnancy #1 that was embedded in my lady parts and needed a couple good visits from Aunt Flo to finally leave me the heck alone, (b) a partial mole pregnancy, or (c) a full molar pregnancy.  Thankfully, these options were not indicative of anything that should reappear in future attempts of producing a little one. However, he did not know which one of the three it was.

After throwing around medical lingo for a few minutes, he said that I would need to have my blood checked weekly at their cancer clinic (note: it's about 45 minutes to an hour away from my apartment) while they performed a biopsy analysis that would take three weeks to complete.  Depending on the results from all these tests and depending on if it was Option A, Option B, or Option C, he said that they would either wait for me to get back to normal and just keep an eye on me (in other words, what they have been doing the last six months) or give me a stronger dose of chemotherapy to eradicate the unwanted cells. He then said that the chemotherapy option is not one they prescribe lightly, and that they would most likely only do it in the event of my hCG levels rising over the time I'm being monitored by them.  Given my history (see the last blog entry), I was not super hopeful that my levels would cooperate.  It appears that I was smart in tempering my hope.

I was able to sign up this morning to check my medical records online (yay for medical advances that allow such handy tools!) and low and behold, there was my hCG level from last Wednesday.  It was at 61.  The previous week it was at 47.  The week before it was at 45.  So....if you're a mathematician or just a normal person like me, you can see that the recent trend is going in the direction OPPOSITE of what is necessary to avoid chemotherapy.  Oh goodie.  The handy online tool also included the letter the cancer doc wrote to Early Pregnancy doc about his visit with me, and included the name of the chemotherapy drug that they would prescribe in the event of such stupidness occurring.  I did what any Google veteran would do and googled said type of chemotherapy.  Holy horror show, people.  Holy. Horror. Show.  Things like this chemotherapy can kill tissue around its injection site, can cause complete hair loss, and you have to wait a year after your levels go back to normal to be able to try to get preggers again...among other scary side effects.  Yikes.  YIKES.

So what did I do post the traumatic Googling session?  I ate chocolate cake.  And for the record and all the mathematicians out there: Chocolate and Cake > Cancer and Chemotherapy.  I go back tomorrow for another blood test, and will do so each week until July 18th, at which point I'll meet with the cancer doc again and determine the course of action for getting un-pregnant.  Although I'm not a fortune teller or a prognosticator extraordinaire, I'm guessing that I will be eating chocolate cake on July 18th.  Thank heavens for the little happies in life that outweigh (even if for just a little bit) the uglies we encounter.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

The Quest for Normalcy and the Spectacular Failure

Being normal is not overrated.

I found out I was five weeks pregnant 3 days after I defended my dissertation proposal in early November 2011. I was thrilled. I was one step (granted, a 300 page step) away from graduating with my Ph.D. and was starting my family. Due in July, I would be able to take maternity leave for fall semester, and then return to school with a six month old in time for me to defend my dissertation and graduate, ready for the next adventure my little family was going to have.

Less than three weeks later, after a small amount of bleeding and a ridiculously long E.R. visit and then a referral to an Early Pregnancy Clinic, I found out that I was in the process of miscarrying, and that there was no way for the pregnancy to be saved. Heartbroken and numb and crying one of those truly ugly cries, I listened as the doctor said that I would need a D&C surgery that Friday in order to complete the miscarriage. One painful surgery later (seriously, why did no one tell me that the little pills they give you before hand would cause my body to stage its own mini-revolution?), armed with a box of doughnuts and rice pudding, I was ready to move on from this depressing turn of events.

Christmas was enjoyable, as the Mr. and I were able to go to Utah for a couple of weeks and spend time with family and away from the hurt that permeated our lives back at home. I returned to Toronto, ready to teach and to rock and roll again with my life. I went to a follow-up doctor's appointment, just to make sure things were returning to normal as they should, because, you know. After the painful surgery, how could things NOT go back to normal?

Apparently, my body doesn't do normal.

At the first doctor's appointment, after peeing in the cup and doing the litmus paper preggers test thing they do, it showed that I was pregnant. Yay. Wait. No. Not yay. WHAT? This was not a possible result. So. The not-so-knowledgeable family doc sent me to get blood work and to have an ultrasound done. I returned armed with these results: my beta levels (HCG/preggers hormone) were at about 1100. Normal = 0. Preggers = doubling every day. Not Normal = Hovering around 1100.

The doc told me to get myself to an urgent care clinic/ER, in case this was a new pregnancy that was not going well, such as a molar pregnancy or an ectopic pregnancy. After another nastily long E.R. visit (8 hours +), we were told by the OBGYN on call that he had no idea what was wrong with me, but that it was probably one of three things, and that I should come to his personal office in three days time. Being the good girl that I am, I did. He did a biopsy (OWWW. Run if you ever hear an OBGYN say you are getting one) and then said that it was either a molar pregnancy, ectopic pregnancy, or tissue left over from the D&C that was causing trouble. In any case, I should not be pregnant and was not going to be delivering a kid any time soon. However, in order to get my body back to its regularly scheduled programming, I needed to get my beta level to 0 and get rid of said preggersness that was going on in my body. He referred me to the Early Pregnancy Clinic to get the necessary miracle drug that would do this. The same clinic where I found out that I was in the process of miscarrying. Delightful, really.
I go there, and after talking with another OBGYN and the happy nurse, Heather, I was told that I needed to go for an ultrasound, just to make SURE that something else wasn't going on down there, other than the three options. Note: This was the 4th ultrasound (and not of the more pleasant variety) in a 4 day period. I had to return two days later to meet with ANOTHER OBGYN who finally had the guts to prescribe a form of chemotherapy (methotraxate) that kills preggers tissue and returns women's levels to 0 usually within about a month. Only hitch? I couldn't try to get pregnant again for 6 months. Color me sad. But, what was I supposed to do? I was and was not pregnant. Those two things do not go together. So I had to get un-pregnant. And that required the chemo shot. Three days later, after my beta testing I found out that the shot was working and my numbers were going down. YAY! There was hope on the horizon.

Remember: my body doesn't do normal.

It's now June. Almost July. My levels have gone down most weeks, but up others. Not to the point where I would be pregnant, but just enough to be a nuisance. And to require another methotraxate shot in April. (Yes, that meant that the six month clock for trying to get preggers again started over, which, for any of you keeping track of dates, would mean that I could start trying again ONE YEAR after first getting pregnant). My levels as of last week had gone from 45 to 47. I stayed to talk with the OBGYN at the Early Pregnancy Clinic (where, like "Cheers," everybody knows my name because I have been going there for 6 months straight, like clock-work, once a week). He said that I seem to have particularly aggressive and resistant placental tissue and that in order to eradicate the thing, he thinks I might need a new drug. Or something else surgery or otherwise related. It's like I have an alien down there, just kicking it in my body, who doesn't want to leave. Where's Will Smith to blow this alien right back to outer space when you need him? This whole new drug or treatment required going to another clinic in the Greater Toronto Area that specializes in molar pregnancies and what nots. My appointment is for tomorrow with the doctor that I was referred to. Upon Googling his name (like any internet savvy person would these days), I found out he specializes in gynecological cancer. Cancer.

I have had numerous breakdowns over the last six months. I haven't been myself. I haven't wanted to talk about it to anyone, really, because if I do, I just cry. And so I just don't talk to many people anymore. It's like a scab that I think gets healed over or at least is starting to heal, and then I get more news that my numbers are going up, or that I need a new drug, or that I have to go visit with a freaking cancer doctor, and the stupid scab just opens wide up again. (Irony of the whole thing: I wanted to be an oncologist when I was growing up. Maybe I should have, and then I wouldn't be so terrified to meet with one tomorrow). I have wondered why my body (on its first try at getting pregnant) had to fail so miserably as to have a miscarriage, and then to be so stubborn as to stay pregnant long after it was necessary to be so. Had I stayed pregnant, I would be due any time. And yet I am still not un-pregnant. It has been 9 months, people. And now I'm going to see a cancer doctor. I wish I knew what all this was supposed to teach me. I thought I was learning patience, humility, trusting in a plan that is greater than my own, learning to be happy for women who were normal and got and stayed pregnant, but at this point, I'm honestly feeling like this is bordering on the territory of cruel and unusual punishment. After staying up all night last night (all nighters are so not for those over the age of 25, let me tell you), crying on and off about everything (because, remember - I've been hormonal for 9 months...just with nothing to show for it...my poor husband deserves a medal of honor and long-suffering, I'm here to tell you. Or some lemon bars. He loves lemon bars.), I don't have any answers.

I always thought I was special. Don't we all? We're told from an early age that we're all special and unique and that we should celebrate our specialness. After meeting with so many doctors I honestly can't remember how many I've met with at this point, however, I have decided that being normal is not a bad thing. I would love "normal" right now. Or to just have one thing be normal in relation to this whole un-pregnancy fiasco. But there are other things in store for me, apparently. Cancer-doctor-requiring things. I think it's safe to say that my quest for normalcy has been a spectacular failure.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

One year, seven months, and ten days later....


Hi.

So a fantastic friend politely asked me last night why I don't blog anymore. I didn't have an answer. And HRH has been kindly suggesting for many a blue moon that I jump back on the blogging train. Well, turning one year older yesterday may or may not have made me wiser (time will tell if that is in fact the case), but I do have a few resolutions of mine that I want to pursue for the coming year of my life. So with that spirit of perseverance, penance, and plenty to say, I stretched out my finger muscles, did a few warm up typing exercises (Hello, Twitter and as my Dad says, "tweetering"), and I believe I am ready to say hi and to reacquaint myself with my poor, neglected blog and with all two of you who still have me in your feeds. :)

To not spend too long trying to inadequately capture everything that has happened since I blogged last, here's the cliff notes version:

In the last year/near future, I
(1) still live in Toronto
(2) passed my comprehensive exams
(3) met and married a Torontonian man
(4) grew my hair out
(5) fell in love with the public library system
(6) am teaching an Intro to Marketing course next semester,(7) successfully mastered the art of baking a multilayered cake
(8) bought a Christmas tree and its ornamental fixings.

Okay, so some of those things are a little more awesome or life-changing than others (*ahem* like buying a Christmas tree - nothing says you are an adult like purchasing your own tree and ornaments), but that's life as I know it right now. Married, living on a student budget, sitting under the lights of her Christmas twinkle lights, with the public library to keep me entertained when I need a break from the studying/class prepping, and lots of sugar to keep me up while I work on the evil thing that shall not be named on this blog. (Hint: Starts with "d" and rhymes with missertation...which is derived from the root word of miserable.)

So, I don't know what has/will take you to my blog, and I don't know what I have to offer you to keep you entertained on a consistent basis (which, if you do want some day-to-day happies, check out TheShoeologist.com or Pinksuedeshoe.com - two blogs by two amazing friends of mine who also happen to be twin sisters, and I don't think it's a coincidence that they both rock. I read their blogs daily and find much to enjoy!). I'm not crafty, though I want to learn how to be. I'm not a fabulous photographer, though if I could pick a hobby that I would totally rock at, that would probably be it. I'm not a fantastic chef, though I do love to bake goodies that bring smiles and happies to those around me. I'm not the girl who can do it all and be it all, and by so doing, share the secrets of successful living, though if I could, I would share every secret with you without reservation. I don't have adorable children that I can show doing adorable things, though if I did, I just might be tempted to sing their adorable praises.

I may not be all the things that I wish I could be and by extension relate the coolness of my life with you. But what I can do is just be me. And so what does that mean for you and what you can expect on this blog? Here's the recipe. (see? I'd love to share recipes. But I need to learn and use them first. So hold that thought and hope for the best for my culinary pursuits):

ME =
* a heaping tablespoon of honesty* a teaspoon of witty neuroticism
* a dash of self-reflection and ponderings on life's oddities, twists, and pitfalls
* 1/4 of a cup of giggles
* 2/3 of a cup of questions that I have yet to answer for myself
* a pinch of cultural references
* a heaping portion of parentheses (because that's just how I roll)
* a sprinkling of gratitude
* with everything baked in a pan of random nonsense

I can't guarantee what the next year will bring in my life or on this blog, but what I can promise is that I will be me, and I will do my best to consistently share mewith you. And if your recipe of life being similar to mine and as such you jive with me, or if you just want to join in the randomness that so often besets life, I hope you come back and visit.

And so....with that....let's begin.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


'Tis the season to be jolly! If you aren't in the Christmas spirit and find yourself relating more to the Grinch than Cindy Lou Who, I suggest watching "The Muppet Christmas Carol." It's a delightful rendition of the classic Scrooge story, with hilarious one-liners, catchy tunes, and one scene that makes me laugh every year without fail. This scene is one you will miss if you're not careful - but is worth the price of the movie all by itself. When the Ghost of Christmas Present takes Scrooge to the streets of London to sing about how it feels like Christmas, there is a street missionary band playing along...and one of the little players whacks another one in the face with his bell. The poor "belled" player falls over, and when he gets up, he has these "angry eyes" that mean business. He proceeds to chew out the other player and then takes it up a notch and begins to head butt him until the scene is over. Classic. Love it. Watch it here, with the aforementioned scene starting at the 1:57 mark. My family has watched this show together every Christmas for probably the past ten years, and have lovingly dubbed him as "Angry Eyes." And if I somehow fall asleep while watching it during the season, I will rewind specifically to that part. Is that somewhat silly of me? Perhaps. But when I need to get into the spirit, this scene in particular and show in general is a surefire way of bypassing the caroling and crowds and jumping into the joy of Christmas. So cheers for the Muppet jolly, gentle readers!

And with that, I leave you with a question/plea for help. I'm celebrating my first Christmas with my husband and I will not be going home, and I don't want to spend the holidays curled up in a corner wishing I was home with my family. So I need Christmas cheer and Christmas traditions to start in my new family. Which leads me to my question:

What are your Christmas traditions that you couldn't live without that inevitably invite the Christmas spirit?

Friday, May 1, 2009

Ooh...pretty

A friend of mine is hosting a give-away on her blog, http://sherbetblossom.blogspot.com/2009/05/pandora-giveaway.html. I highly suggest checking it out, because the bracelet is totally girly pretty!

Saturday, February 7, 2009

The Bittersweets.



Sometimes, around this time of year, you just need a good laugh, with a hint of sarcasm, an a twinge of truth, a pinch of an alternative perspective, and something for the sweet tooth. Thank you, despair.com. Really. Thank you.