Saturday, October 23, 2010

Saturday night



Since last Saturday night:


Sunday, 1:15am - ER visit with Ryan
Sunday: Morning Worship at Church
AWANA

Monday: 1st Doctor Appointment for Ryan
Weight Watchers meeting

Tuesday: Substitute at Middle School

Wednesday: Drive to Russellville in the morning
Go to library
Doctor Appointment with Ryan
Physical Therapy appointment with Ryan
Visit new baby in hospital
Thursday: Work at Simply Sam, children's store
Take Lauren to soccer practice in Russellville

Friday: Work at Simply Sam
Sr Night at Football game (where it rained and we didn't have umbrellas)

Saturday: Sheridan's soccer game (she scored twice!)
Work at Simply Sam
60th Anniversary Dinner for friends at church
8:41pm: Right now Sheridan and I are snuggled on my bed watching the food channel. The girls are watching a movie at the neighbors' house. Ryan and Richard are watching football in the front of the house.

This is the week the Lord has made, I will rejoice and be GLAD in it.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Staphylococcus aureus


Two weeks ago the staff at church participated in the Sr Adult Talent Show. They called themselves "Staff Infection." They performed a VERY HUMOROUS lip sync version of "For the Longest Time," by Billy Joel. The pastor was on a gurney in a hospital gown, the other members of our esteemed staff, in lab coats and wigs singing into their stethoscopes.


That was not the last we would hear of that particular infection this month. Last Thursday Ryan complained about a bite on the top of his foot. On Friday, he had the coach tape up the bite as it was irritated by the seam of his cleats. On Saturday afternoon, after all-region try outs, he took his tennis shoes off as soon as he got in the car around noon because it hurt. Saturday night, about 11:30pm, when he got in from an out-of-town concert, his ankle was swollen to twice its normal size! This bite had taken on a life of it's own and it was now causing pain from Ryan's calf to his toes.


We checked into the ER about 1:30am. The doctor on duty lanced it, pushed on it and sent the findings off to be tested. He told Ryan to elevate it, gave him a shot of antibiotic in the backside, and gave us a prescription of antibiotic to fill. Sunday Ryan stayed down most of the day, his leg hurt and the bump on his foot continued to grow.


Monday morning...doctor appointment... she decided to open the wound. It might have been a boil, not a bite. She cleans out a lot of " bad stuff." Cut about 1/2 inch deep (I watched) but didn't want to hit the tendon and wouldn't go any further. She sent us home, but wanted to know if it got worse.


Tuesday morning...I get called in to sub...Richard takes Ryan, who is in A LOT of pain, back to doctor. She sends them to an orthopedic doctor (because of the tendon issue). When this doctor looks at it he immediately says they have to go much deeper and get the infection out of the leg and heel. Get this...he didn't have powerful narcotics in his office. He numbed Ryan's skin, and went to digging. I will not go into what they have shared about the extraction, but Richard admits he had to sit down when he saw it.


Who knows how this built up? Now it is day three of packing the wound, cleaning the wound and physical therapy to clean out the wound in a whirlpool bath for his foot. At least 4 days of no school this week has got Ryan worried. He reconciled on Tuesday that football would be out on Friday. Now he wants to know where he's going to be during the game (sideline, stands, press box, or home).


This kind of thing is no stranger to our locker rooms. We found out this week that one cheerleader, one basketball player and another football player have been diagnosed with the same thing. Hopefully all their tests were like ours and it isn't the "bad," hard to treat, kind of staph.


Ryan has a good attitude. His XBox team has won a few extra games this week, and he's not been put in the hospital. It could have been much worse.
Counting our blessings...

Monday, October 18, 2010

The DBack Effect

Please do not copy any pictures or content from this post without permission. Thank you.
It's taken me a few days to get my thoughts together for this post. We have buried a 16-year-old friend in the last week and it is not only hard to understand but hard to process. Tyler was on the same traveling baseball team with Ryan from the age 7 to 13. The team was the Diamondbacks and played USSSA ball, but played for a year as JCBC (Boys Club) when we played Cal Ripkin. However, we always refered to ourselves as the DBacks.

Ryan was homeschooled when we first started playing, so we were thrilled for his chance to get to know some new boys and get to play his best sport more than just in league. Now, the idea was for him to get some extra playing time. Our only boy has always loved to throw and hit a ball! We had no idea how this decision was going to effect our lives.


During pre-game and at the end of all practices the boys said, "DBacks." For the last four years they said, "FAMILY!" This is not a traditional pump up cheer for a group of 11 year old boys, but it fit and it stuck. And again, we didn't know what it meant for us all at the time.

It wasn't long before our familes started sharing rides for our kids, taking group orders from the concession stand, bringing toys for the younger siblings to share, passing our sunblock around for everyone to use, and wearing matching t-shirts. It became the standard for us.

We began hosting big ball tournaments so we could raise money to travel to tournaments during the summer. We spent 48 hours at a time tending a concession stand, fixing fields, umpiring games and handling teams from all over the state. We did this so we could spend weeks of the summer together in places like Oklahoma City, Kansas City, Saint Louis, Orlando, and Gulf Port. We also played tournaments in-state and cheered our team on in everything from 100 degree temperatures to tornado-like weather. We ate at restaurants with ALL of our families, wrote our team names on our car windows every tournament weekend, and watched each other's families grow up before our very eyes.

Jordan, Trenton H, Ryan, Jalen and Tyler 2003

Ryan, Tyler, Jalen, Andre and Chance
Oklahoma City - 2002

Our other children became friends too. I mean, 7 years of ball games makes for hundreds of hours of free time for the siblings. They shared snacks, toys, and parents for lots of weekends, in lots of places.

Erin and Hunter
Oklahoma City - 2002


In 2005 we attended our first funeral together. Zac's grandmother died. Inez came to as many of our games as she could. She was in poor health the entire time we've known her, but Zac was her grandson and she wanted to be there. She talked to all the boys and knew all their names and positions. When she died, the boys were in 5th grade and the funeral was scheduled for the morning when most of the boys were going to VBS. They decided to wear their jerseys and skip out of part of VBS and go to the funeral for a 80+ year old lady. Over the years, several of our families have lost grandparents and some of us have gone to those funerals. It was important and the right thing to do because we were FAMILY.

In January 2004, Richard had the distinct honor of baptizing Tyler. He was the first DBack to give him that honor. That same day, he baptized our daughter, Erin. Since then, he also baptized Chance and Trenton. On the same day Trenton was baptized, so were his parents. FAMILY.

The DBacks had a fair measure of success on the baseball diamond. Our boys have many trophies, plaques, pins and tournament tshirts. We all have highlights, the boys can still tell you about over-the-fence homeruns and double plays. We all have ball equipment in our garages and an assortment of uniforms that no longer fit. Many of our families have scrapbooks of pictures from trips/vacations taken around ball tournaments in places with beaches and amusement parks.

At some point during our years playing, it became more about being together than winning ballgames. We practiced on a field beside the coach's house, we cheered at games, we travelled all directions, spent hundreds of dollars on motel rooms and restaurants, had cookouts and pool parties, and loved it all. We like each other! Not all of us are best friends, but we certainly would consider each other good friends.

Sometime around the time our boys went in 9th grade a few of our players decided to change schools. One went, and then another, and then another, and another. Each had his own reason and although the boys saw each other less, they still were in contact. The last time I saw Tyler, he and some of the Lamar boys came over to an afternoon baseball game in Clarksville. They sat with us (dressed in orange), talked about what they were up to, and caught us up on what was going on in school and ball for them.

On August 11, Tyler collapsed after summer football practice. He was rushed to our local hospital and then flown to Arkansas Children's Hospital. His body temperature was up to at least 108 degrees for much too long. For two months he was given the best care and his body was given a chance to repair itself and heal. He was alert for some of the time, giving a "thumbs up" when asked, getting irritated at nurses poking on him, blinking when asked questions. However, on Monday night something was wrong with his color. Doctors determined his blood vessels weren't going to be able to work correctly and his body wasn't going to be able to recover.

We were texted messages while at a football game, a prayer vigil had been called. A church in Lamar, where a DBack family is heavily involved, was going to be open for people to come to. When we arrived one of our DBack moms (and Tyler's parent's best friend) was rushing out the door after a message from the Davenports asked her to come right away. Kyle was also on the way. Jason and Richard left about 9:30pm. Tyler died at 2:46am. There were 7 DBack parents there and two of our boys (as well as their family and some school officials). FAMILY.

Tina asked Richard to take part in the service. It was one of the hardest things he's ever done. As he was preparing, the DBack Effect was becoming obvious. He realized that the DBack Effect was important not because of baseball, but because of the impact our families had on one another. It was about dads cheering for their boys, playing in swimming pools, taking them to ball games, wearing their numbers...FAMILY. We didn't plan this support, it just happened. He shared this at the funeral and it made perfect sense to me.

There were many moments in the funeral that took my breath away, including the procession of the hundreds of guests who didn't have a seat in the sanctuary. They came one by one through the middle aisle and had an opportunity to view Tyler for the last time. I choked up when I saw two boys and their parents from Ozark who played ball with us for a few years. They cared and they knew about what we had. Two boys who moved, but started the team with us, were also there with their parents.

I went through the line after almost everyone else but the immediate family. When I got to the casket I saw something that I'll never forget. One of the DBack boys had laid a team shirt on Tyler with DBack pins and a signed baseball from the boys on it. It was folded with the back showing.

Our last shirts had one word on the back: "FAMILY." That explains almost everything about the DBack Effect.

Alma - 2004



Jalen and Tyler - 2004



Paragould - 2003



2003



Spring dale - 2003

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Elvis goes to High School


I love watching Lauren march in the band on Friday nights. The halftime show is a tribute to Elvis with 4 or 5 of his most popular songs. Lauren starts a trio...with a solo on Jailhouse Rock. I'm happy for her as she earned a first chair spot during her sophomore year.

She doesn't think she'll pursue music in college, but she's definitely enjoying it now, and that's the way it should be for the hours she puts in.


Thank you very much...Grandpa and Grandma came to watch Ryan and Lauren on Friday night. The football game wasn't executed well, but halftime was!

Pregame picture...by Sheridan:



Sheridan and Parker before the game:


Sheridan, Parker and Anna Grace enjoying a Homecoming Night Funnel Cake:

Friday, October 8, 2010

Soccer for Sheridan


They call themselves PINK POWER!


Sweet girls, U10 soccer....


Silly girls, and their coaches...

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Great Read


Now that my business season is over, I've gotten back to reading. While in BA we were located right beside a great used & new book store. While Jane (my dear friend and also a voracious reader) was there helping me, I sent her over to scout out the store and find us some new books! None of our favorite authors have written a new book in awhile...Dee Henderson, Kristin Heitzemann, Lori Wick.

Finding Anna is the story of Anna and Gates Spafford who survived the Chicago fire, helped thousands of survivors rebuild homes and lives, had 4 children, and were friends of famous evangelist D.L. Moody and his wife Emma.

It was a story based on their lives and the tragedy that they experienced after the fire and through the rebuilding of their lives. I don't want to spoil the story for you by telling you what Mr Spafford is famous for, I had heard of this man several different times in my life and because I knew the ending I was looking for it.

This family had their faith tested several times and the book was written showing them as human and real.

I finished the book today and have been a little melancholy since. I'm saddened by their story and yet encouraged by their faith. It's a great read and I encourage you to find it.

It is perfect for teen readers too.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

I love this season


I'm pretty sure I've posted on this topic for the 3 years I've had a blog...but I can't help myself.

I LOVE FALL.

I love fall colors.
I love wearing a sweatshirt and long sleeve t-shirts.
I love it when trees change colors.



I love sunny, windy days.
I love football season.
I love leaving the windows open at night.
I love cool mornings, snuggling under quilts.
I love the rich color of pumpkins.


I love soup weather.
I love the sounds of leaves blowing across the yard.
I love Thanksgiving.
I love the way my neighborhood looks when I drive down the lane to our house.
I love the fresh air of fall.