NICE-cream!

Hello, hello! Guess what I made today? Sugar-free, vegan ice-cream! I had a whole recipe book that I began when I was 13 years old, in preparation for my future family. But then I went plant-based and then only one or two of my carefully handwritten recipes worked. I made a yummy kiwi fruit ice-cream and then I lost the book in a move back in 2011.

Thanks to my Kindle Unlimited Membership, I was able to hatch up a plan for our resident ice-cream eater. Woolies vegan dessert/ice-cream contains sugar and it’s expensive! I’ve never had an ice-cream maker machine so I knew I could use my blender. But would I find the right recipes? Are people still making homemade vegan ice-cream?

I decided to test a recipe from a book titled N’ice-cream by Virpi Wikkonen. I had no idea how it would go. I’ve never used cashews for an ice-cream recipe before so I made just enough for four small servings in case it’s unpalatable.

Mine is the white (vanilla) one and the other is the store bought caramel. You can see which one my non-verbal angel devoured FIRST. I can’t explain why she has two spoons. Vanilla flavoured with coconut milk, cashews and maple syrup or any other sweetener you’d have.

Everyone began with it because they said they liked it. You have no idea how excited I am. A few tablespoons of maple syrup, a can of R34.00 coconut milk, a portion of a bag of cashews, a few drops of vanilla essence do not cost as much as one carton of the full of sugar one does! But the excitement is that because big girl is here to cook, and I didn’t have to teach, the only things that caused more pain than normal were talking laundry in and out the machine, hanging them and bringing them back in. I ironed five items and rested. And I could make dessert!

I haven’t made dessert from scratch in a long, long time! I made my children smile. 🥹All of them. With their varied tastes, that was never going to be a given.

I am lying here and typing in order to prevent pain! Not because I’m suffering.

I am so thankful. 🙏🏾

Distraction Time

I stupidly tried to sleep on my tummy. Bad mistake. My neck doesn’t like being turned. Nightmare woke me as usual as the pain reached a crescendo. Hey, it’s better than when I forgot to take the pillow away. I woke up with my right arm down to fingers paralysed, totally convinced that the arthritis in my neck had now permanently damaged my nerve, imagining having to tell the rheumatologist and get more testing.

I’m tired of the testing.

Then I couldn’t sleep. (It’s currently 3:47am) I, even more stupidly, then read the news. An obese journalist died young. Was she dealing with thyroid problems or other health issues that caused her to be obese? She’s younger than I am… Then again, look at me. I had foolishly (See a theme?) hoped I could stop my anti hypertensives but nope, after a few days of not using them, the Rinvoq induced high blood pressure returned and I had to start them again yesterday. So maybe we are both as unhealthy as each other, thanks to AS. My children’s dad did say so helpfully on Sabbath, “You’re going to die. I’ve been listening to a book about sleep. You’re going to die young. You’ve never slept in all your life.” Yeah, very cheering. Especially as it was after I came across research stating that just three NIGHTS of bad sleep raises heart attack risks.

Change topic.

Oh, but now I can’t breathe well. Why didn’t I use my inhaler last night? I’m just tired. Tired of all the medicines fighting the disease. Tired of the medicines fighting the medicines fighting the disease- including the esomeprazole fighting the anti inflammatory impact on my sick ravaged eaten away stomach lining. Tired of the Rinvoq constipation making IBS worse so now I take Soflax tablets for THAT.

Tired.

Then I saw how many people have been shot in the past week in our city. The innocent children, the baby, the taxi passengers, the gang violence that is so endemic.

Shared a status about how THAT triggered the “It could have been me” feeling I had when I was about 11 or 12 years old. The Mowbray Golden Arrow Bus Station was close to the taxi rank. Depending on how long the taxi line was, whether my taxi was there, how long the bus queue was and what time I’d arrived there in Mowbray after walking from school in Rondebosch, I’d then choose whether to take a minibus taxi, or the bus.

One fateful day, I decided to just take the bus I was tired. It was there as I arrived. I didn’t feel like going further down to see how full the taxi was or how available it was. Then the bus kept stopping to let people off and on. So much slower than the taxi. But then, as we drove towards Gugulethu, passing through Gatesville, one of the taxis I usually took was stopped. Nobody was moving around. Shops quiet. The driver was hanging out the door held by his seatbelt. The middle passenger had been someone’s relative. Now she was a dead lady with a beautiful perm and an ugly bullet hole in her head. Head blown backwards by the force of the bullet so we could all see the entry wound from our high vantage point in the bus.

Silence.

Fear.

Heartache. I imagined that she was a kind loving mom and now her children would be wondering where she was. I will never forget that scene. It is as imprinted on my mind as the fear when at 16 as I walked to my cousin’s funeral, a gangster who’d been shot in the head, a youth holding a gun came out a house in front of me and I had to walk behind him in abject fear that he’d suddenly turn around and shoot me dead.

Ok. The news was not a good idea.

No sleep.

Too much pain

Chest wheezing.

Time to think about something better. Ok, before that, let’s get the inhaler! I did promise Ammy that I was taking care of my lungs. She had a bad night two nights ago because she heard an ambulance in the night and then thought about me dying and couldn’t sleep again. What compounded her fear was her imagining my collapsing, having a heart attack and dying. Somehow, she links that with the most recent SI joint infiltrations (those deep injections they do into your SI joints) that had – by the time I had driven myself home all the way from Durbanville- made my legs numb so I was stumbling and falling and all three little ones had to hold me up to get me to my room and bed. That traumatised her. She was scared I would fall down a section where we have two steps, and die.

Ok, yet another reason not to try those injections again. Plus the mild pain reduction wears out and they ARE bad for the joints they penetrate.

Ok… That’s again not a positive thought! Hey, the inhaler is working now. Less wheezing but chest sore.

Ok… Really time to dig deep and try pretend I’m not in pain. And no loud noises from my spasming intestines. What can we think about?

School!

My crazy five year old!🥰

I came out the bathroom where I’d been convinced I’d heard her father shuffling around, and went to the front to go start her sister’s braidlocks. Yep, I am trying for the very last time, to get their locs re-started now that their hair is more grip-able. I’ve begged them to never cut their locs ever again. I’m tired. Loose hair? My natural (read-EXPENSIVE) hair potions are used up in a day. My cheap ones, mixed with water for some reason! Put their hair in cornrows? Ammy fidgets with her hair and it looks terrible within a few days. Do wool braids? They style and re-style and do such tight styles that there’s way too much pulling and they’re too young for the traction alopecia nonsense. The missing hair line… Injibhaba in isiXhosa. (Don’t ask me how to type that. The only Xhosa reading I did was the Bible and the hymn book. Those don’t talk about missing edges!)

Got out there, and Nalo called me back to the bedroom to show me what she’d been doing while I was in the bathroom.😅Back I went, leg and hip burning. She was so proud of herself. “I did Maths! Come see! I did Squeak and Scratch!” (Two squirrels who needed five acorns each.)

“See!? Look! I sat down and I did three plus two! It’s incredible! It’s so amazing!”😂😂😂😝😝

“And then I did THIS dangerous thing! The chair was shaking when I was holding on and my feet were up! Ooooh!”

She killed me with cuteness. She is in love with maths. (For now!) Like many children, she loves kinestethic methods of learning. But she loves numbers in general.

I wish we could bottle up her joie de vivre! It would give us so much energy and joy! Life is good for her. She eats, she does school, she talks and sings a LOT during school, sometimes singing the words she’s meant to be reading, or singing the numbers she’s counting…

We could all do with such happiness! We need it.❤️

Creating Awareness?

Creating “awareness” is so that people who might suffer the same condition know where to get help, and to educate others not to expect the impossible from you, now that they know what you’re fighting against.

Do others “create awareness” for the rest of their lives or do they ever sit down and say they’ve done their part?

I was diagnosed in 2023. I think know it’s time I retire. It was so major, having a name for symptoms that started in childhood and just got worse and worse. More importantly, it was a disease I’d never heard of. So I knew most of my people didn’t know of it either. If it had been common, I’d not have even begun with “awareness.” Those who are in my world don’t have AS nor its symptoms. And too many of those who are in my world find it very hard to be empathetic. To put themselves in my shoes. You’ll find an asinine comment like the following after I celebrated being able to work till later than normal, “Don’t forget, we also get tired.”

Ma’am, we’re fighting inflammation. We are always tired. We don’t get tired, we just get WORSE as the hours pass. And we’re fighting constant pain and stiffness in large bones. We’re fighting the conditions the disease has caused too. It’s very different to a very healthy person with only one child. If you can’t extend mercy and understanding, then awareness has not worked. You’re still unaware.

And so, my awareness campaign has stopped. It’s now left to those who ask specific questions to be aware and to leave me happily aware that the ‘campaign’ made a difference. One even remembered I am also fighting too, too early menopause yesterday!! That meant so much to me! That’s when I realised I could truly hang up my gloves. Those whose hearts are big enough, have retained all the information. I can count them on one hand, but .. there are people I can count! Some literally have NOBODY at all in their personal lives. I have some who check on me and remember what AS and other conditions do to me! Even when I’ve been silent for months about it.

My awareness creation has ended with the awareness that I am in some people’s minds. They’re aware. And they care. I am GRATEFUL.

What was the trigger for this post? This random image above that appeared on my wall, by Positively Rheumatoid. Fighting my pain and fatigue all day, every day, is part of my life; pretending all day that I’m not getting WORSE as the hours pass. I used to post when things changed, when I’d seen the rheumatologist… But one day when I celebrated working too much and for too long in the night, a very healthy person with only one child shared that they had done the same. It’s NOT the same. If they’d been aware, they’d have never compared their healthy body working late, with mine, which suffered badly the following day. Someone telling you with fatigue as a huge burden you and your pain are constantly fighting that “we also get tired” shows they understood nothing of the things they were to be aware of. Instead of celebrating that for once I was a bit more normal, they think it’s nothing. Purely because it’s nothing for them with their healthy bodies. Also because they didn’t gain from the awareness shared, what an inflammatory autoimmune disease is. And so, they helped shape future AS posts. And this blog helped too. And more the two sisters who ask the specifics are enough.

I’m in a global village and I’m thankful. I can also come across people far away who understand each symptom because they are living it. Again… I’m grateful.❤️

Long Live Mom, Viva!

(For context about my principles and faith, and what my husband and I used to believe together, picture the most conservative Muslim couple you can. Do they show their arms, legs? Do they were tight clothes? Do their children do swimming or wearing typical western gym wear? Do they admire gymnasts or ballerinas or go watch them? Do they hug members of the opposite sex? That is who we were. That is who I still am.)

My friend has observed a few things. My ten year old daughter, Amarissa, has observed a few things. This very evening she asked me in front of her dad about those different principles she’s noticed in her dad that made her ask if I’m more Christian than he is.

See, years ago, he used to teach that racing, running against other people, etc aren’t necessary. (As taught by our founder. Probably the same principle as the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ no ‘competitive sports’ rule.) His whole theme was that in the God game, there are many victors and nobody feels anyone is superior in strength, power, ability etc. And as my oldest said last year, “What I remember so clearly, is dad asking the church if they could ever imagine Jesus in His long robes taking part in a running race, or in a soccer game.” Paul also taught against vainglory, emulation but rather about being helpful and viewing each other as on the same team.

As a lover of our founder’s writings, I still live by those principles. Unlike my husband, I don’t hug members of the opposite sex. In terms of earthly relationship, I put our family first. He puts his mother and siblings first. (I left and cleaved) And so, with all the things she has noticed, my girl asked in front of her dad, if I would join him in a race if I was well. I told her, “ No WAY!!” I have better (nobler) things I could be doing. Things that are still exercise but not in a competitive spirit and more importantly not surrounded by males who are immodest. If you believe it’s wrong, you’re not going to choose to be in a sea of it.

She then asked if I agree with her dad for running the races. Again, I said no. She then asked how we (She and I!) will stop him. Her first suggestion was to “take his money” so he can’t pay the entrance fees for these marathons. He then asked if she’d seen him pay anything this year. I told her his foot was sore so that’s why he hadn’t done a race this year.

A friend had remarked on this discrepancy amongst other issues that are different from what used to be taught by him, (Which are sadly, the things that drew me to him as a godly man of our faith) and she said she hopes I don’t die else our faith would die with me. I had to hope along with her.

See those fluffy pyjamas in the photo? Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA) is extreme anxiety that sees the person needing to exert some bit of control over their life so they don’t lose their mind completely. The first and major thing you’re taught as the caregiver or partner of one with PDA is to give them choice. Make them feel as if they are making the decision.

Instead of my saying, “Nalo, here are the pyjamas you must wear” while her ADHD brain and body dawdled with getting undressed to bath, I asked her if she wanted any specific pyjama. She grandly told me as if conferring a hrest privilege upon me, “YOU can choose any. It’s ok. YOU can decide.”🤣

No crisis. No being made to feel powerless and even more out of control. No anger. No sadness. No telling them what to do. Letting them choose. Letting them ask for help if they want it. And giving freedom for things that aren’t important. Like them rearranging their bedroom without asking.😆

But dad doesn’t get it. Maybe he doesn’t know how to speak and ask. It’s not like I myself ever feel any tenderness in speech so maybe it’s just not possible for him. And children are fragile. So to have dad come out the room and he’s immediately barking instructions while the children are busy with something else, “ Go tidy up your room. Now! Go!” does NOT work even for adults. We want love. We want to be seen and valued. We want to know that you care how we are instead of the first greeting being, “Go tidy up.” Now especially as children, and children with ADHD nogal, is there a need for understanding why the room is in a mess, for checking what they are currently busy with, and suggesting that in X minutes, the floor being made tidy… Then the bed… Like that. They need directions one at a time because it’s overwhelming to get there and have a mountain of work. And because you have executive functioning disabilities (planning, coordinating, decision making…), you truly have no idea where to start so your brain freezes or panics and gets overwhelmed and your body does nothing.

And tone, for PDAers is everything. It’s the difference between peace and a huge meltdown and feeling like you’re hated.

And so, I don’t want to die. My friend doesn’t want me to die. And my children don’t want me to die. But I didn’t realise this was a FEAR of theirs till today.

Amarissa has harbored a fear all this time, that I’m hiding my impending death from them. 💔🥹She asked today if I’m sure the doctor didn’t tell me I’m dying and I just haven’t told them. This was after the three of them thanked me for their breakfast and then as I hugged them, she said it. “Are you sure you’re not hiding that you’re dying? What did the doctor really say? Please don’t die.”

I told her that according to my tests, I’m not dying. (Kidney function only went down by two units. Still waiting for test results on the pus she swabbed that was still coming out the abscess. Rheumatologist is scared the GP’s antibiotics might not be treating the right pathogen and it could be some other bad one so she dug inside and took some pus to send for testing) I told her I must still use my inhaler and she knows I am, so my lungs are not any worse. So no, I have no knowledge that I’m so sick that I’ll die any time soon.

So now I have a few more mom reasons besides being the only one who knows their school status and vision therapists and OT and exercises. To help keep the children seeing in living example what I read and study with them, to be their safe space, to understand their varied conditions and the best way of making them comfortable in a world not designed for children like them.

Abscess pain still there. Still no Rinvoq till I’m done with my course of antibiotics so the nights, pain, stiffness are getting even worse. I woke with my neck and head so sore I could barely see from when I woke up permanently, till maybe two hours later. (Don’t ask me how they are linked) But I can still love.

But hey, I have an ally! Our helper told our girl that she should go with her to Malawi when she goes to see her children so that I can rest. As you can tell from the video below, she’s the chief instigator of all the mayhem. So, not only physical rest from her wet bedding, school work, finding urine deposited in random places, (It’s a thing. Many of us moms in the ADHD group lament but have no real solution) but mental rest too. She came in at school time, “Mommy? Can you believe what Aunty Violet said? She said she will take me to Malawi so you can rest! And then when I’m naughty, she will send me to a FARM!! No way!!”🤣

Ahh the joys! It honestly is HARD. The number of anonymous parents sharing their despair in the groups and it’s over the exact same things I live my life despairing over is heartbreaking but so helpful. We’re all at see. If we were to tell what happens every ten minutes, people would accuse us of what a certain mom was told when she dared to TELL THE TRUTH about her ADHD son.

“You complain so much. You clearly don’t love your son.”

It’s such a prevalent response that even if I had anyone who asked how my parenting day was, I’d never tell them the lows and lows. You see it on disclaimers tired parents give (And don’t forget our non- speaker who is absolutely miserable today and I have no idea why. We’ve done all we can. Taken her on multiple drives, given pain meds, given extra to eat, let her watch jumping dolphins. She attacked me earlier for not discernible reason. Those too are things we don’t bother sharing because only those who live it even think of it as a possible part of your day, and because it’s again … Who wants be reminded that life can have the joy sucked out of it in different ways every half hour? Like my daughter’s eye lid cyst which is NOT gone despite surgery? It is on and on. Your heart resides in your children and when they are miserable, so are you.)

I digressed! I see it so often with mothers and caring, hands on fathers, “We love our son to death, but we are tired. He doesn’t listen to anything we tell him. It’s just fight after fight and my wife and I were left in tears last night.” 💔

What a life. And I’m meant to outlive the very ones who do bring joy, yes, but oh, so much heartache. So much money gone. So much time. And so much thought. I only had ‘breakfast’ at 15:00 today and that was meal one of the four I’m meant to have before each two capsules of antibiotics.

We have to live long.

But nobody takes care of us so we can care for our children in a healthier physical state so we can be strong when they are weak. (The irony of that sentence with an AS diagnosis.)

All of us are survivors or surviving. Long life to us and here’s to a hope of better.

Oh, I Want My Amazing Coloured Coat Too!

We sang this in school. It was one of my favourite choral productions- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat. We sang a lot from there, a show I’d never seen but knew was done by someone extremely famous, Andrew Lloyd Webber. We sang a LOT of his songs in our choir.

My friend told me of how she blacked out this week and got injured. The world no we chronically sick people live in is such a parallel world. We are constantly suffering while everyone rose lives their day hot by hour unconscious of the pain, while the moments that allow the sick one to forget the suffering are minimal. I blacked out once at school. Found myself at the bottom of the steps with my friend extremely concerned and wanting me to go to the sick room. But I didn’t want to miss choir, so given I was feeling ok, I pressed on. I didn’t even think to tell my parents. As always.

This is the same school friend who would tell me I’m walking “like a granny” when what we now know are AS flares started up. The pain in my feet would burn so bad and I’d try curl my toes so they don’t hit the floor hard. My toes and finger so swollen I could barely hold my pen to write and sometimes just listened after showing my teacher why I wasn’t writing. I’d get home and make a mug of cocoa but my fingers couldn’t even curl to hold the handle of the mug.

I don’t know why, but I woke up this morning and as I tried to psyche myself up to get my pain tablets but the pain so bad I didn’t even want to move, I remembered this song. It was sung at the beginning and end of the play. For me, it represented Joseph in prison. Alone and sad. Weeping while the world slept. Forgotten. Sold by those he loved. So alone in his innocence. Just like me when I was a child.

What memories does this little one have hidden behind her smile? Nights of pain. Nights of lying on the bed she shared with her parents rolling around trying to figure out why her legs hurt so much, night after night. Doctors claiming it was growing pains. I’m still waiting to grow, then.🥹The stomach pain bringing her first colonoscopy two years after this photo. The daily burning abdominal pain as she walked to the train station with her daddy after school.

When we were still newly wed and living in Kenya, they had the production going. Joseph and His Amamzing Technicolour Dreamcoat. We’d stopped watching most shows by then but this I just had to see. My husband had also done it at his school, so it would have been nostalgic for both of us.

As I sat and watched, the tears just flowed for so many reasons. Nairobi, Kenya was the first time I knew that Black people (not just a few here and there, but almost an entire cast!) did theatre. It was amazing watching all these Black people singing songs we sang in our very British schools. Just seeing them so energised and hearing those lyrics coming from their lips was emotional. I don’t know how many black people TODAY in South Africa know the works of Webber.

Singing the lyrics as they sang all these songs we’d sung in school, took me back to school. The choir was my safe space. Music always took away emotional and physical pain. It was there too that instead of insults about my looks or body, I was told I could do something well. Very well. So well the choir teacher would tell the first sopranos that I was carrying them and they were flat so I should keep quiet and they must learn to sing the right key. (I can see where I got my absolute distaste of bad singing😩🫣 It’s jarring to my ear. There’s a church that has a very flat woman who leads with a very loud voice. It’s unbearable on top of how many don’t stick to the actual tune which we at our Xhosa churches grew up singing because we sang the notes as they are in the hymn book.) I digress. Beautiful music was my healing place.

I could forget myself and be the person singing the words. I could be Joseph. Betrayed by those who loved him. I could be Joseph, seeing how God allowed the bad to lead to great good. A good better than his past. I could see God better when I sang to Him. Even in normal assembly.

God appears vividly coloured when I sing, just like when I’m reading His word. I can forget the pain I’m in. I can forget that yesterday my ten year old wanted me to go back to bed as the flare began again. I can forget the neck pain, headaches, deep sore in my gum preventing me from eating ok and brushing my teeth (Rinvoq side effects), hip and leg pain when I’m lying here crying over lyrics from decades ago.

I too wish I could have someone “give me my coloured coat, my amazing coloured coat.” (Last line of the song) I just want to be ok. Joseph wanted to be ok. And the God Who eventually led his bones to the promised land, will heal mine one day. But oh, I close my eyes and know the someone far away who is weeping, is me. And maybe Flydah in Kenya, far away. Thank you for reading my heart ramblings and encouraging me.

By the way, I saw THIS version below first when I looked for the song so I could sing along to it. I felt so stupid as I watched. It took me ages to figure out why the lead singer was wearing a colourful ‘dress!’ Ankylosing spondylitis brain fog. Even Ammy quotes “brain fog” at me when the cloud caused by AS messes up by memory or my speech. I love the mix of singers. THIS video is what made me realise how BIG this song is. I truly never knew even though people have acted the entire story. 🤦🏾‍♀️Maybe the blacking out and falling down the stairs knocked some brain cells out.

The First Frisson of Fear

Haha, I was looking for a picture of a skeleton and this one reminded me of first year speech therapy and audiology. We were each given a human skull to take home or to res to keep reminding ourselves of the bones of the inner ear etc. My husband-to- be thought I was creepy. I didn’t even think about it being human. It was more real cutting open the corpses in the hospital basement. But even then, I just wondered if the corpse I was working on was one donated specifically for us to cut up as some people do (Leaving their body for research or students) or if it was the corpse of an unknown homeless man whose body was brought in for students to mangle learn on. Those were two of the main places the university for corpses from.

Back to why I’m posting today. The chronic issue that gave rise to the name of this blog. I am starting to feel my skeleton and the first frisson of fear has begun. Unlike Enbrel which started working on my AS symptoms after four months, Rinvoq started in the third week. And the difference was much more obvious than with Enbrel – until the flare started last week. But even then, I didn’t have the usual, “God, this is no life. Please kill me,” request.

Until today. In the same way Rinvoq works fast, if you’re just an hour later than normal, your body starts acting up. Now it’s been three doses missed and the cystitis symptoms are still there and instructions from the rheumatologist were clear. “Do NOT resume the Rinvoq until all symptoms are gone.” And they’re not. I still have the pain. And honestly, I wouldn’t want to take it until I am healed. Who would want to change a hopefully easily treatable situation into a potentially kidney function threatening (As if my kidney function needs to get worse as it is), if not life threatening, situation?

So, I wait. But, as I just told my mother in rural Zim who asked how I am, my bones are crying now. I am in extreme pain and the fatigue has returned. Even my sternum is reminding me it exists. My children obviously see it because they kept telling me to go rest when I was tidying their dishes and plates up.

The new fear doesn’t end there with just the fear of an infection that won’t respond to the first antibiotic and will need longer treatment. Remember the ‘many months long’ paronychia when I was on Enbrel? WILL this infection heal soon? But also, what if more infections keep coming and it turns out I can’t keep using Rinvoq because it might kill me, like the way we had to stop using Enbrel? I’d be bereft. This has helped me more than any other attempt.What if the next infection damages more of my lungs? What if the next treatment attempt after having to quit Rinvoq will be like Cosentyx? Useless to me?

As I said, never in my life do I recall having cystitis. I just knew I had it because of my symptoms matching it, not because of experience. The test just confirmed it. By the way, I’m thankful for Intercare that always has appointments available to book online for the following day. I’d also never had a paronychia till Enbrel.

So now, I actually have to pray about these extra possibilities. All along, I’ve been masking up to try avoid those kinds of infection. But as the finger and now my bladder have reminded me, there are infections you can’t prevent. Enemies you can’t predict. Things I don’t think of as threats when I’m praying to not catch a cold or flu. And now my minor blood pressure worries have truly become minor. I guess because I knew that there are anti hypertension medicines but there’s no other way but to stop if I keep getting sick.

And with the improvement I’d started to feel, that’s a big problem. My daughter even asked how I keep making my bones crack when I get up. She thought it was on purpose! Like when people crack their knuckles. I wish!

Ankylosing spondylitis has reminded me who’s boss. It’s still that same incurable, progressive (ie it gets worse or treats you worse as time goes) inflammatory autoimmune disease. As if the leg that’s permanently painfully limping if it has to walk for over two minutes straight or try to exercise wasn’t already reminding me.

Chronically Yours signing off.

The one whose club you don’t want to join and to which if you belong, you wish you could get out of.

And don’t forget my children. My ten year old said she has always remembered my telling them never to play with fire. But, she thought the BLUE flame on our gas stove wasn’t fire. She touched it. It hurt. She was surprised.

She’s turning 11 this year.

As I’ve said. I need many of me to watch them and keep them safe.

My heart sank. At least she’s stopped self harming with needles and scissors. But yes, this life is extremely unpredictable and WORRYING. Their angels are working over time to keep them from permanently leaving this life. She’s promised never to climb up here again.

She can’t ever struggles to keep her promises.

Hmmm

Morning Has Broken

Autism and ADHD aren’t famous for helping their ‘victims’ sleep well. I have three out of four who don’t go to sleep well, don’t stay asleep, make hectic noise… Some mornings I don’t get to study my Bible because noise woke me and continues. Sometimes there’s boredom and one wakes the other. It’s just constant awareness of ‘something will disturb the night and/or early morning.’

And then when you wake up, you have my chubby five year old and her driving commands. On weekends, her dad takes her on a few of the drives. At first he’d tell me, “Just say no!” when he’d see me reach for my car keys. Now he sees why I don’t. The screaming and crying destroys everyone’s peace. Agreement leads to peace. And added pain for me in my bad leg.

So, we have Violet who comes in too often. The agreement was Monday- Friday and two Sundays till 1pm a month, but she tends to come in on more Sundays than she should! And my nine year old doesn’t help. I cringed one Friday when he said to her, “So we will see you on Sunday??” And she agreed with him! I reprimanded both of them. But, they’d made their agreement!

Some days, I want to cry. Since yesterday, I’ve been in a flare. Bones aching, fatigue back, almost didn’t reach my 10000 steps. Morning has broken and my problematic right hip is not giving me s break despite my 200mg Tramahexal. And that’s on top of the tongue that has two sores on it that are so bad I’ve asked the rheumatologist for help so I can eat.

I agree with the rheumatologist. The stress must be causing fibro issues. But wow, it took three full months for my tongue to obey my brain. It was scary. So I’m never touching Lyrica again. Which means that though I’m already on an antidepressant because it helps with nerve pain too, I wake up with a sinking feeling or am woken up by someone that will cause a sinking feeling that lasts throughout the day.

Why?

“Another day has begun. What will I be putting my body through today? How many times will I reprimand fighting children? How many times will I have to deal with my two PDAers demands and my ten year old’s struggles and my non-speaker’s demands? How do I get out of the multiple drives?”

Violet tries so, so hard. A few times, my girl comes to me saying, “car..car…” and then she is content to play and Violet watches her to ensure she doesn’t hurt herself. Other times she pulls her brother onto a scooter (really meant for younger chosen but her likes to ride on it anyway) and he has to keep riding around. One time, that ‘play’ caused her to speak! I was in there watching them just before I made lunch, and every time he stopped riding, she would pull the scooter. At one point, she shouted, “Good job!”🤣

Sadly, more often than not, she can’t be distracted or doesn’t allow herself to be distracted from her driving urge. And so, if I don’t go, if I try rest, or if I try continue working, it will descend into screams which cause her twin to cover her ears and ALSO scream. And then she and Micaiah complain to me that “she’s making noise!” And if I am in the loo (my bladder etc issues are back and I refused to catheterise myself daily so I have trouble with that aspect- taking ages to relieve myself) she will become so upset that there reaches a point where even when I am now driving, she can’t regulate anymore.

So..I’ll have to do it and have to when she wants. This morning, I’m truly dreading this day. But also, thankful that for a few hours, I’ll have someone in the house who wants to take the burden away.

My children’s photographer when they are at the playground.

Good job indeed. Earned me a few minutes’ rest and time to make their lunch without Little Princess pulling me or pulling plates or dishes out my hand because I’m not going to the “car.”

Special School at Home and the SHOP!!

By my ten year old (washable, don’t worry. I use washable markers so I can get some hand strength going on when they wipe it off besides the positives of writing on an upright surface anyway)

It’s the little things. The little things that mean so much to us mothers of special kiddies. It’s like when your neurotypical baby takes its first steps or suddenly reaches a milestone they hadn’t yet reached. I used to praise my babies for “sitting without falling!! Good job!” Or “You got off the chair without Mommy helping! Well done!” To which my husband would respond, “Look! I just got up. Why can’t I get praised too?”

You can imagine the withering glance I gave him.

All new moments are worth celebrating. And so, when the same moments took longer for our next ‘set’ of two, it brought slight worry. (Amarissa crawled and walked later than normal and never crawled typically, but her babbling was ok but more importantly, her brother who we adopted nine months after her, was VERY obviously not ok that her small late milestones were ok.) That was a mouthful between those brackets! I was just glad I COULD also celebrate that she was walking.

With our fourth, our second of the second ‘set,’ it was the lack that was glaring. It was the sudden realization that it wasn’t ME who was suddenly unable to bond with him which meant I was a bad mother, but it was his inability to look me in the eye. It was HIS looking anywhere but at me as I held him, bathed him, fed him. It was his leaning away that meant I could not hug him to myself that caused the lack of closeness.

Fast forward to this week. It was his lack of engaging when I read a book, that meant we had no joint mother and son moments at all. The lack of babbling, the lack of turning when I’d call his name but perversely, the screaming cries when I coughed in a different room. The idiot doctor who didn’t listen to me about what we came to confirm was sensory processing disorder and global developmental delay and autism. and coldly told me, “He’s fine. There’s nothing up with him. But if you’re worried about his hearing, you can get him tested.” Despite my telling him how sound caused him to wail.

He was my first autistic to not enjoy being read to. But it’s my last autistics who have forced me to go about reading to them in a totally different way.

Like this below. How gratifying that the same boy who didn’t utter a word more react to a word, has words that he voluntarily speaks today. The one who didn’t react to anything, has “favourite” parts.

Yesterday morning, this one below came to me, “Mommy! Let me ask you a question. I was saying my vowels in bed today. Listen, a, e, i , o, u!” I haven’t had the heart to tell her how often her questions are actually statements. Not in that moment of great excitement about VOWELS, of all things.🥰

This special needs parenting job has hard times. I’ll focus on just one aspect for now. You seriously want to bang your head against the wall every single day, multiple times a day. I have FOUR children with ADHD bad enough to be medicated. But that doesn’t exactly strip them of their wonderful personalities, nor of their tormenting creativity. “Let’s cut this thing that shouldn’t be cut. Let’s paint with proper adult paint wearing our cream dresses that we will splatter with said paint. Let’s use the hair dryer and cause smoke to come out. Let’s use the toaster but instead of leaving it where mom said we should, let’s turn the temperature up to the max so that mom comes out her room wondering why there’s smoke everywhere. Let’s walk around outside on brick and thorns wearing only our pantihose. Let’s catch bees after having been warned multiple times, then stress our mommy when the stinger has to be removed from a finger and it stays swollen and sore for two days. Let’s argue about whose doll should be called what. Let’s tattle about who said what yesterday/five weeks ago or just now.”

It’s relentless mental strain. It’s so tiring keeping calm when you just want to scream. “They can’t be left alone.” They don’t WANT to be left alone sometimes, anyway. Not only once, my talking five year old has knocked on the toilet door then screamed and cried because I was “taking too long” for HER liking.

So, every positive is a huge bonus.

My girl who can’t say what she wants but couldn’t reason much either, is starting to understand at last. Remember how she spent over a year pulling me to do something impossible then attacking me because it was impossible? Those days are over at last. She doesn’t want much that’s impossible. When she wanted to try on her sister’s shoe – smaller than hers- it didn’t fit and she didn’t throw a tantrum, she just threw the shoe gently away. No tantrums. No violence!

And..she’s planning more and seeing how she can get things to work instead of being angry it’s not working out and then attacking me if I’m too slow (for her liking) to help her.

Speaking of “angel.” My ten, nine and five year olds who talk didn’t know why I call them angels when they age human. I tried T explain… Micaiah said this week, “I think I see why you call us angels. You’re trying to say we are nice like angels.”

But of course, there’s more to life than learning from books and play.

There’s also life. And so I leave you with the reason I’m now in bed with terribly aching feet and bones.

She played out in the garage for 31 minutes. No coming in for supper. So I kept sorting out the three that were indoors with their supper and medications, and had to go up and down doing the same for her! Meds, water with a bit of fresh juice (Still can’t get her to swallow water unless I give it in a syringe), meds again, grapes, meds, banana. In and out. I went from 9000 steps to 13458!

This is what she was doing in the garage. This is why I was going in and out. My life is crazy but sometimes it’s a good crazy.

The SHOP

I haven’t taken ALL the small ones to the shop alone. Not without the teens. Never, ever. I’ve gone with my talking three. But today when our minimally talking twin said her infamous, “Car. Kayi” I took them for her required three times a day drive and decided to just take them in to get treats.

I won’t do it again. I forgot that she’s a runner so I’d need to put her in the trolley. She also wanted to walk ‘funny,’ not facing forward but sideways like those crabs you sometimes see on documentaries. It was cute, but stressful because she also wanted to step over certain lines, so into the trolley she went. Which meant I broke the biggest rule my rheumatologist had for me. No LIFTING!!

We got out in one piece but I almost lost her when she tried to go running off as soon as I put her down after lifting taking her out the trolley.

But all’s well that ends well. I didn’t lose any child and they had fun. My BP which Rinvoq has raised properly shot up even more. On that note. I’m worried. The leaflet in the box states that strokes and heart attacks are “frequent” side effects. I emailed the rheumatologist about how my diastolic numbers (and sometimes my systolic rises above my norm but badly) have gone up. I expected the type of response I’ve seen other doctors give to their Rinvoq patients which is to either put them on anti hyper intensives like my nurse cousin wants her to, or to stop the Rinvoq.

My rheumy doesn’t believe it’s the Rinvoq. So instead she’s changed my anti inflammatory. I’d WANT it to be caused by the old anti inflammatory as that would mean I continue seeing if Rinvoq can put me in remission. But I’m not convinced. Especially given I then sent a WhatsApp to the Rinvoq NURSE who said it’s not common but it is definitely m a side effect of the Rinvoq.

So here I am. It’s been over a month of a raised BP. From a normal range of 68-74 diastolic (lower number) to this below and hoping it is the anti inflammatory though not sure. And it’s not like I’m taking my BP every day. Maybe it’s gone higher. She said I should continue monitoring it. It’s just too long , having an elevated BP and doing nothing, especially with the headaches that aren’t the bone pain.

We shall see! In this family, the entire school – teacher included- is special.🫣

I Know what I Want for THIS Mother’s Day(s)

I want to do more! You know how it is. All the things you want to do and only remember when you’re busy with something else…

Like noticing how untidy the garage is when you’re busy hanging damp washing in it.

As every mother knows. Well, mothers who don’t have live in nannies, that is. As every mother knows, mothering is your calling and job. So when you have four little ones with autism, ADHD, intellectual impairment and nobody else to talk to and plan activities for them, you don’t have time to do those things that irritate you.

Add active AS, and you don’t really have the ability to fix those things that irritate you either.

So what I want is to go into remission. There are people in my Rinvoq (My newest treatment attempt) group who are in remission. That means no pain whatsoever and they’ve almost halted the disease completely. The CEO if the large retailer, Shoprite said in his book that he’s been in remission for 30 years!! And he knows that when the AS starts being active again, he can find other treatments. I can’t imagine having no pain for the next 30 years!! By then I’d be 75! Better now than never, right??

I want to stir food and not be in pain. I want to lift light shopping and not have my husband ask what’s wrong because I forgot he was there and so didn’t hide the grimace the pain in my shoulders put on my face.

So I tried to do one thing I wanted to do.

I put the kiddies to sleep first. The first one to go to bed is this non-speaking angel who threw a very tiny fit because I took her for a drive that was too short. (third drive of the day) I put their soy yoghurt, peanuts and raisins and peeled and separated tangerines on the table and RAN away so she would not pull me. She stopped her half hearted crying! And by the time I came back out to finish off medicating them, she was happy again.

This was sent to me last Friday when I was hiding from having to do the second drive of the day. (See a theme?) She did the arranging of the soft play therapy toys plus her now too small car seat on the treadmill ☺️☺️

I want to enjoy more of that. Her crazy creativity and moments of peace.

I got a lot of ‘crazy’ tonight. She was in her room laughing and laughing on her own! For 25 minutes straight, my girl laughed and laughed! Then she slept.

The next to go to sleep was her twin.

I set up her electric hot water bottle, turned on her walk heater, tucked her in and told her I loved her.

Two to go.

I forgot about their meds. I hope their dad medicated them. I got busy! But I did give my ten year old an activity book to do before lights off. Then I went…

And I’m now lying here putting my hot water bottle on my very sore shoulder and then putting it on my lower back. All because I did something else I’ve been wanting to do.

I went to the garage, knowing I’d already done grocery shopping and breakfast and lunch. And knowing I should therefore REST! But then, the washing was getting damp in the waning afternoon as dew fell on it so I had to drag my sore body out.

And then I saw it.

The thing I always want to sort out but only notice when I’m busy with something else.

The garage

I focused on this area with the box full of damp books. Damaged books. Damaged by the children. And broken toys and some that could be salvaged. I took all the moldy books and papers out to the fire pit outside. Threw away all broken prams, flat balls nobody uses, all of the stuff that irritates. Kept the dirty cups for sand play. Sorted the “stuff” out. Typical and normal night.

It was fun. Earbuds in so I could listen to music without having my son (Who always comes on the drives his sister asks for) asking me what this word means or asking what language I am listening to while I’m trying to sing along.

I want to be able to do this every day, and not suffer afterwards. Not to have to choose between putting my hot water bottle on my shoulder vs on my lower back. I want to be able to work and know that tomorrow, I will NOT be in worse pain.

I want to be able to use the extra energy Rinvoq has given me without fear of what using that energy means to my pain levels.

I want to be much better.

I want to be able to do all the movement activities I plan for the children but don’t get round to because teaching and doing vision exercises are too much as it is.

I want to be a mother in the way I used to be. I want my day as a mother to be as full or as empty as I choose for it to be. I want to stop doing something not because if I do more then I’ll be in worse pain for more days, but just because I feel like I’ve done enough.

For now, I’ll be thankful that I at least had ENERGY to get rid of everything in here and that was in front and around it.

But I want more.

Is that too much to ask?

But also, I want to be thankful that most nights since I started this ‘not so good for my heart’ treatment, I’ve slept better than I have in 40 years. Counting from when the bone pain the GP said was “just growing pain” started keeping me up at night.

I want to acknowledge that somewhere in this horrible world, there is beauty.

Hahaha Too Dramatic!

Nobody ever tells me (unless a friend or two catch a photo of me like a friend did who saw this photo on my profile) I look good. So I fight the past on my own. If I like my look, I take a photo of myself. My ten year old (and her siblings) used to visit my parents. Heard the snide comments, the yelling..and could feel the dislike emanating from my mother who didn’t accept her and our other adoptee. She asked me maybe three weeks ago, so randomly! “Mommy, how come you are so kind and loving? Where did you learn? How did you learn to be nice when your parents weren’t nice?

So you see, even though she never heard the comments about how ugly I am, about my forehead being bc too big and my lips being “embarrassing as if I’m a drunk,” she knew.

And it felt awesome knowing she feels great. That I love her and she knows it.

So..call this a late lesson in loving myself. But honestly, I took the photos because I can still stand up straight. AS hasn’t taken that away from me and I’m so grateful that if I’m just standing still and not walking and limping, nobody would know I have a disability. I will photograph every moment of normality when I feel I look nice in my eyes, in case it ends one day and I only have photos to show me who I used to be externally.

But, that’s not the aim of this post! Because I’m sick, the minds of my family are a bit… I think they carry trauma!

Exhibit A. The week the teens came home on holiday, they had turned on one of the educational videos I put together for the little ones. As I walked towards the TV, a song was playing, “Circle, circle, can you draw a circle?”

As I watched the perfect circle being drawn, I replied to the question, thinking of my not so great circle drawing, “No, not well actually …” My teens both exclaimed, “Oh no!” and “ Oh, sorry mom!” I asked why in the world my poor circle drawing would elicit such responses!

They said they thought I’d said, “I’m not well, actually!” And became worried.😅😅😅

Exhibit B. This morning, I read in an AS group that we ‘should be’ dyeing our hair blue next month for AS awareness. So I tell my husband, “I’m meant to dye my..” He interrupted in shock. You’re meant to DIE?? Why??

I cracked up again! He was truly wondering why I had a “I should be dead” idea going on😆

Behind the laughter, is the wheezy chest I haven’t told them about. I am faithfully using my pump but I don’t think my body is reacting as it should. (YET) It’s the body so sore and so tired that I literally feel like I am dying. It’s the fear that while I’m waiting for the Rinvoq to start working, it could be killing my heart or liver. Two of our members were hospitalised this week with blood clots in their lungs thanks to Rinvoq. The side effects that are happening almost daily to our group members are so bad I’m not telling them about them. So I actually AM living with a fear that I’ll die. After all, what happens to the members who DO die from blood clots? We won’t exactly hear from THEM. How many are there?

And so, I ignore all the anxiety and laugh at my poor family that thinks I’m “not well actually” and think I’m predicting my death. We all laughed. And we need every moment of lightness possible.