Sunday, January 21, 2018

The Shafferland Shuffle

Can we just pause and yell PLOT TWIST!?!?!? Because that sure as goodness has been our week. All normal plans flew out the window and I spent the majority of the week on Mo, trying my best to get well. Whew!

But let's back up to Sunday, shall we?

* One of the couples in our Sunday School class invited us to lunch after church on Sunday, so we agreed and enjoyed getting to know them (and another couple) a bit better! Once we got home, it was scrapbookin' time for this girl. Finished up my last book from 2017 (vacations excluded) and was quite happy with that! Other than that, keeping up with our Bible reading plan was about all we accomplished!
* Monday was MLK day, which in our city means a school holiday. I was THRILLED, because the theme of the day was snow and ice, ice and snow, snow and ice. Sigh. I was just working inside all day, though, so I got to enjoy the view, complete with robins looking for food. (They gave me hope of spring.) Before Ryan got off work, I wanted to go shovel the driveway - to surprise him. Unfortunately I do not own snow boots, so I wore my dress boots to shovel. Quite a sight. Sloppy warm up pants that are two sizes too big with dress boots underneath. Bless me.
* Tuesday morning I woke up to the SHOCK of my life: school had been canceled for the extreme cold. This NEVER happens for our system, and yet it happened twice in two weeks. What in the world? I gladly accepted the additional vacation day and worked on my projects at home. Unfortunately, as the day went on, I felt worse and worse, and by that evening, I was pretty sure I had the flu. Fever, chills, skin that hurt from top to bottom...yuck! Ryan was a gallant gentleman and went to the grocery store for us. He came home with chicken and soup for dinner, and I spent the evening shivering on the couch.
* Wednesday morning, it was clear I was too sick to drive for carpool, so I stayed on the couch and tried to look pathetic. I watched a lot of TV, tried to nap, and read part of The Long Winter. (It seemed an appropriate book for this part of our life. And by evening, I actually wanted coffee. (Yes, I was so sick I didn't want coffee earlier in the day.)
* By Thursday, the flu part of the sickness had gone and a cold had settled in. (These are n.e.v.e.r. e.n.d.i.n.g. for me, so I was miserable just thinking about it.) I did pull myself off the couch long enough to make bacon and eggs for lunch, I drowned myself in oils, and in the afternoon, I actually (gasp) took a shower!
* Friday was a mix of feeling better and feeling even more miserable. I had more energy, but the cough would not go away! Maddening. I tried to cook meals, and I spent the rest of the day resting as much as I could (with Braeya's help.) Of allllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll the weeks for this to happen, we had a step challenge for insurance this week, so even though I was down for the count, I had to get in 12,000 steps every single day. Ryan was running short on them Friday afternoon, so he tried to pull a Bekah and finish them in the living room. LOL.
* Oh my goodness. We were up almost the entire night Friday night into Saturday because I couldn't stop coughing. (I'm not kidding. It's no joke.) Finally, about 4 in the morning, Ryan got up and logged into an online clinic so I could talk to a doctor. He called in some prescriptions for me, and I dragged myself to the pharmacy as soon as it opened that morning. I did feel better throughout the day, even well enough for a Starbucks run and car wash that night. (Oh, everyone in the county was out on a car wash date.)

So that's been our week. I am eager to put Mo up in regular couch fashion this week and FEEL BETTER. I have much to do

Saturday, January 20, 2018

The Saturday Six


One.
A few days ago, I wrote a post exploring how we lived before we had the internet at home. (LOVED the comments, by the way. You all thought of things I forgot!) But then I found this article which compares life fifty years ago to life today. Interesting stuff in here!

Two.

My friend Kari thinks Ryan and I need to take this trip someday. I've never heard of such a thing, but I agree it's pretty cool! It's an Air BnB in Scotland that allows vacationers to run a bookstore for two weeks while living in an apartment above it. I will admit it makes my heart skip a few beats! :)

Three.

You know I love Holley Gerth and her wise words. For those of you who might be feeling weak and weary this week, read this post. Brilliant and encouraging.

Four.

Heart-shaped quesadillas? What a cute idea for Valentine's Day! Doesn't matter if you're cooking for kids, a significant other, or yourself. Cute food can make you smile!

Five.

I made this Dashing Dish recipe this week (literally one of the only things I got off the couch to cook) and we both loved it. Yes, it's Brussels sprouts. I know those aren't for everyone, but we loved them, and I have to add - EASY!!!

Six.

Last week, I read The Sound of Rain by Sarah Loudin Thomas. Though it's not Sarah's first book, it was my introduction to her.

Set in the mid 1950's,  The Sound of Rain tells the story of Judd Markley, a young Appalachian coal miner who survives a mine collapse that takes his brother's life. Once Judd recovers from his injuries, he decides he can't return to underground work - it's too literally and figuratively suffocating. His late brother had a dream to see more of the world, so Judd decides to see if he can follow that dream, even if in a small way.

Judd heads to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, where he finds work at a thriving timber company. The boss's daughter, Larkin Heyward, is pretty and mysterious. Clearly outgoing and full of life, she seems driven by a dream to do more than just volunteer at the local hospital and dance with her friends on the weekend. She can't understand why Judd doesn't jump at the opportunity to help her pursue her dreams of helping the people of Appalachia.

After a hurricane ravages Myrtle Beach, Judd and Larkin find themselves pulled together with a desire to help those in need...and maybe even a bit more than that!

It's been a while since I read a book set in the 50's, so I enjoyed a visit to this time period. It's always interesting to realize how different life was in another time period, even one not so long ago! When we live in a world of up-to-the-minute weather forecasts and instant reports from every part of the country, it was fascinating to read what life was like when forecasts weren't so accurate and news didn't arrive so quickly after major events. 

It was also interesting to learn more about mining, the timber industry, and the early days of the candy striper program in hospitals. (I love learning history through fiction!)

The book was a good, steady read, with interesting characters and a story line that wasn't entirely predictable. It wasn't suspenseful, but some parts of the story definitely didn't resolve the way I thought they would, and I appreciated that! 

* Bethany House provided a copy of this book to me at no charge. All opinions are my own. * 

Friday, January 19, 2018

If You're Confined to the Couch...

Yesterday, Maria was kind enough to say she was impressed that I was still blogging even though I was sick. I confessed the posts may not be meaty in any way. And today's may be proof that. Bless you all for reading.

I'm not a very good patient. (That noise you hear is Ryan shouting his agreement.) Some of it is because I'm just kind of pitiful, but the bulk of it is because I hate letting people down. And when I'm down on the couch, not working, I'm letting people down. I'm not driving kids to school, I'm not volunteering, I'm not cooking, I'm not cleaning and other lives are affected because I'm moaning on the couch about how I hope no one is ever as sick as I am. (Hey, Jenny! Tell Jeff I stole his line.)

So I do my best to be productive from the couch. I did my devos, I tried to work on some writing, I read in my book, but I did watch a lot of TV. Some new stuff, but it was also my chance to watch some vintage TV. So today...vintage TV is on my mind!

* I know there's some new version of this show out now (and I've not seen it) but did anyone else ever watch Rescue 911 back in the day? I loved that show when I was a kid. I had no idea William Shatner had any kind of acting other than hosting Rescue 911.

* We've watched about 800 episodes of Family Feud this week. That may be my favorite gameshow because it's the one I stand a chance of actually guessing some answers. My sister loves Wheel of Fortune, and Ryan has told me he can't believe I don't like that one. The only reason I don't is because if I see a (wrong) phrase in my mind, I can't clear it to make way for the right phrase. For being a word person, I'm surprisingly terrible at all word games. Do you have a favorite gameshow?

* Speaking of gameshows, Ryan and I also watched the documentary on the guy who outsmarted Press Your Luck. Did you see that or hear about it back in the day? I remember watching Press Your Luck when my mom used to clean houses, and I'd tag along. I would watch TV while she cleaned, and it was one of the shows on at that time of day. I loved yelling NO WHAMMY! Anyway, apparently there was a guy who studied tapes of the show for hours on end and learned the patterns and ended up winning an insane amount of cash and prizes. It was interesting!

* I watched a bunch of old episodes of Diagnosis Murder, too. I used to love that show. Do you remember it? It starred Dick Van Dyke and his son, Barry - and they played father and son on the show, too. Dick played a doctor who had a side gig of consulting for the police department. Barry played a detective in the aforementioned department. The two worked together to solve homicide cases. I loved the original Dick Van Dyke show, and I loved this one too.

* I'm not sure if it was on the same channel as Diagnosis Murder, but there was also a show called Sue Thomas, F.B.Eye. Seen it? It was based on the life of an actual woman named Sue Thomas who worked for the FBI by reading lips for them. (She was deaf, but a brilliant lip reader.) Oh! And there was another one on the same network (I think) called Doc that starred Billy Ray Cyrus. I loved that one, too.

* Though I didn't see them this week, back in my high school and college days, I also loved Little House on the Prairie (but I think you knew that) and Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. Apparently prairie shows were my thing! Anyone else with me?

Like I said, this may not be the most earth shattering post you've read this week, but I've taken a lot of cold and flu meds and bathed in a lot of oils, so thanks for your grace in knowing this is all I've got for today. And tell me your favorite TV shows of yore!

(I just typed "your" instead of "yore." Clearly very medicated.)


Thursday, January 18, 2018

Flu: 1, Bekah: 0

Whew. That was unexpected!!

Two mornings ago, I woke up with a bit of a sore throat. Maddening, but not altogether surprising since Ryan has been fighting a cold since New Year's and pretty much all his co-workers have been sick with some version of the same thing too.

But then 2:30 in the afternoon came and went and I realized I'd missed my 2:30 snack. Worse, I realized I didn't care. Whoa. Stop the world. Bekah missed food and doesn't care? This is serious.

By the time Ryan got home, I didn't care about anything at all. We were supposed to go grocery shopping, but he told me to just give him the list and go rest on the couch. I didn't even have the energy to argue.

He even found a rotisserie chicken and some soup while he was out so we could have something to eat when he got home! And ice cream. Because ice cream fixes everything.

It was a long, long evening. I had a fever, horrible chills, and at one point, my skin hurt so much that I kind of wanted to just peel it all off.

It's not weird for me to get a cold every winter, but it IS weird for me to get anything that resembles the flu. It's been a long, long time since something like that hit me!

I tried to sleep in bed, but I was so restless that I came out to the couch for the second half of the night. When morning came, it seemed my fever was down, but I was so wiped out that I couldn't keep my eyes open. And I didn't even want coffee. WHOA.

Ryan called me in sick for carpool duty and went to work, and by lunchtime, I had a grand total of 241 steps on my Fitbit. (That's bad news when you're on a weeklong insurance challenge for 12,000 steps a day.)

I tried to rest well all day, getting up a couple of times to get in those pesky 12,000 steps. (That wore me out, by the way.) I read 100 pages of The Long Winter, which I feel is the story of our January. I did my devos and watched a lot of DVR'd shows.

A thousand husbandly points to Ryan for taking care of me (and the house, since I've been a housewife failure while down for the count) for the past couple of days. I'm not what I'd call well yet, but I do feel better. If I could remember to REST a bit better, I'm sure that would move along more quickly! :)


Wednesday, January 17, 2018

Walk a Mile in My Shoes Wednesday: Dave Freelan on Living with Moebius Syndrome

Today's Walk a Mile in My Shoes Wednesday post is going to look a bit different, because chances are, you won't ever actually walk this mile. You may never even personally know anyone who does, unless you know my dad. :)

In the decade (plus) that I've been blogging, some of you have asked why my dad never smiles for pictures. I've thrown out quick answers, but this is not something he hides, so I asked him if we could just feature it on the blog today! My dad has Moebius Syndrome, which is an extremely rare craniofacial/neurological disorder that only affects somewhere between two and twenty of every million people. (Or at least that's what researchers estimate. Clearly it's rare enough that I imagine research isn't easy!)

There is actually a website with some really great information if you'd like to read more about it, but the quick explanation is that this disorder's main symptom is facial paralysis. The site states that those with Moebius cannot smile or frown and typically don't have the ability to move their eyes side to side. (I actually had to ask if Dad could move his eyes that way. Almost forty years in the family and I didn't know! He can, but apparently most cannot.)

Some people have pretty severe complications that can include cleft palate, club foot, skeletal deformities, respiratory issues, hearing loss, poor eyesight, autism, and more. Dad doesn't struggle with most of that. (Well, my Mom would tell you has hearing loss, or selective hearing at best, but he is 85, so hearing loss kind of goes with the territory.) He does wear glasses, but I don't think his vision loss is atypical. Lots of people wear glasses!

I spent some time talking to Dad this week about what he'd like you to know about life with Moebius. I don't have bullet points for you, because Dad isn't really a bullet point kind of guy. (If you've had him for a teacher, you're probably nodding vehemently right now - HA!)


Let's start by talking about his eyes. Part of the facial paralysis includes his eyelids. He can't close them. For real. He has them and could pull them down over his eyes if he wanted to prove they exist, but they are permanently open, and he can't blink. This causes a number of issues for him that you might not think about unless you tried keeping your eyes open for an extended period of time. One of the big issues is sensitivity to light. Think about it! When you go outside and it's bright, what do you do? You squint. Or you close your eyes. He can't do either. So when he walks out and it's super bright, it's painful! This is why he always wears sunglasses when it's bright (inside or out) and sometimes he even wears two pairs.

(An example from my wedding day. The sunset was ahead of us as he walked me down the aisle, so he kept his sunglasses on and looked down. To be honest, I needed sunglasses too! I look pretty angry in most of our wedding pictures because of the squinting!)

Another issue is his inability to protect his eyes from irritants in the air. Like I said, he wears glasses, and has for many years, so that protects his eyes a bit, but if dust or grass or any such thing flies around, he can't stop it from getting into his eyes. (This has not stopped him from cutting and chopping wood for the last fifty years, however. Sawdust for days!) As he has aged, his eyes have gotten very red and watery, and several years ago he actually had his lower eyelids lifted because they were drooping so badly. (I called it his facelift, but he didn't like that term so much. HA!)

He told me (and this was news to me!) that his eyes kept him from military service. He was drafted for the Korean War, but when he went to Indianapolis for testing, he failed the physical exam (before he even got to the exam) because of his eyes. Not because of his quality of vision, but because he couldn't protect his eyes from dust and dirt, which would impair his ability to be a soldier. He said he still has a card that shows he was classified as a 4F for the military.

One good thing about not being able to blink? Can't lose a staring contest. He's won every single staring contest he's ever had. :)
(Dad and Mom on their wedding day in 1954. This would have been when he was about 22 and not long after the military physical.)

Another part of the facial paralysis that you might not think about is his inability to move his lips. He can move his jaw, but not his lips. He said when he was a kid, if he wanted a drink of water, it would run out the corners of his mouth because he couldn't form his lips around the cup. Also, back in the day, cups were either glass or tin. Plastic and paper cups did not exist. He had to teach himself to maneuver his jaw to fit the cup so he could drink and if it was a glass cup, he would sometimes break it while trying to drink.

He had to learn to speak clearly (which I actually think he does very well), and that was not overly easy either. Letters like B, M, and P are formed with lips closed, and he couldn't get the letters to sound right. Again, he had to teach himself to speak clearly by moving his jaw in certain ways to say those sounds.

I'm not sure when speech therapy was invented, but it was either after Dad was a kid or his family couldn't afford the luxury, because he didn't have any sort of therapy as a child to help with things like speaking clearly or drinking successfully. Because he didn't know life any other way, he just figured out on his own ways to compensate as necessary.

Interestingly enough, Dad doesn't remember anyone ever pointing out to him that he was different. I asked him if he was ever bullied, and he said back then no one even knew what bullying was. He figures someone probably made fun of him at some point, but that was just part of growing up and he never gave it a second thought. He never remembers his mom or any family member - or any teacher, for that matter - mentioning that he was different. He said perhaps a teacher said something on the side to his mom at some point, but he never knew.

Obviously over time, he figured out something was different though, and he was a college student at Ball State University when his mom arranged for him to meet with a doctor to be examined to find out what was wrong with him. Yes, that's right. He was in college - for a masters, no less - and he did not know what this condition was called. The doctors could not diagnose it, but they did write a report stating he had a genuine medical issue. (He presented that at his exam for the military so they would know he wasn't just making up this weird excuse about not being able to close his eyes. I mean, who would believe that? That was how he ended up failing the physical exam before it even began.)

As I mentioned earlier, Dad decided to be a school teacher, and he went all the way through college and student teaching without anyone mentioning his differences. He said right before he was done, a professor stopped and asked him if he really planned to be a teacher. When he said yes, the professor asked if he thought maybe this facial issue might be a problem. That was the first time Dad had ever been approached about this being a limitation in his life. He didn't blink (literally) and told the professor it was not an issue. Dad didn't see it as a problem because no one in his life had ever made it a problem. And that was the end of it.

Dad did indeed go on to be a public school teacher for over 30 years, and he frequently filled in as a guest preacher and singer at area churches. He's also hosted a radio program for almost fifty years. Clearly he has not allowed a facial paralysis to stand in the way of being a strong communicator, and I think that is pretty amazing.

Every year, on the first day of school, Dad would explain to his students about his paralysis, so they didn't spend all day every day wondering why he looked the way he did. (Apparently he preferred their brain power to go toward learning the actual subjects he taught.)

Most mind-blowing of all, Dad was seventy years old before he had a name to put with this condition he'd had his entire life. At seventy, he met a gentleman named Ken who has Moebius Syndrome, too. It marked the first and last time he's ever met anyone in person who has this. Ken's symptoms are more severe than Dad's, but he finally had a name to put with a condition and a friend who actually understood the issues he faced.

According to the Moebius website, it's unknown what causes the condition, and at this point, they point to environmental and genetic factors for the cause. No one else in our family, before or after Dad, has had it. (And he used to tell people his mom suffered a scare from her mother-in-law while she was pregnant with him, and that's what caused it. Ohhhhhh, Dad and his mother-in-law jokes. NOT TRUE.)

So that's my dad's 85 year journey with Moebius. Most of us who see him all the time are used to it and just forget he has it. (And for the record: he can make the appearance of a small smile if he tries really hard. I am the only person who requires that when taking photos. And I always forget when I'm taking group photos with my timer and tripod. That's why he rarely "smiles" in group shots but usually looks a bit more smiley in individual photos.)

vs.

My mom added that one other benefit of Moebius is never having a facial wrinkle. He's 85 and has perfectly smooth skin on his face. No crow's feet, no forehead wrinkles...nothing! (Not that she's jealous...)


I know this was long...thanks for reading. Hope you learned something new today! If you'd like to see the rest of the Walk a Mile in my shoes posts, go here!

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

Shafferland and the Ski Slopes

Stories, stories everywhere!! It's podcast Tuesday, so we have stories from our weekend there and even more stories on the post below. I tried not to duplicate them so you could have double the fun!


If you visited here yesterday, you know that we did a county tour over the weekend (Dearborn County in southern Indiana), and we spent the bulk of the day at Perfect North Slopes. As I said yesterday, Ryan loves to ski, but I think we can all agree it would NOT be a good activity for this girl, so it was lodge day for me!

For the record, Ryan has skied at other resorts before and said this one is his favorite so far. He really liked it and has already toyed with making this an annual adventure. (My prayer life increased just hearing that news.)

Since I don't ski, we invited our friend Shawn to go along and hang out with Ryan for the day. Shawn had actually never gone skiing before, but that's nothing a few YouTube videos can't fix, I'm told. (Do you see why I have gray hair? I have to worry about these guys!)

Here are some views of the slopes as we approached:

I talk a bit more about my day in the lodge in today's podcast, so I'll try not to repeat too many stories! When we arrived, I grabbed this picture of the guys with their slopes behind them:
We went inside and tried to find a place to settle me for the day. The lodge was enormous! There was one smaller room that was already full (sadness, because it would have been SO PERFECT for a whole day of hanging out) and three ENORMOUS spaces for people to spend the day. I never saw a single couch in the entire lodge, which both surprised and saddened me. There were, however, rows and rows of tables with folding chairs. It actually felt very much like an airport in there. An airport at Christmas. LOL!

I started out downstairs, but it was so so cold there with all the doors constantly opening for people to go in and out. So I went upstairs, which was specifically earmarked for groups. When I arrived, it was pretty empty, but that didn't last long. Here's a terrible picture of me (it was so bright) that shows the tables behind me. (Mom requested a photo that showed where I spent the day, so that's why this thing even exists.)
The guys signed their lives away and suited up in warm clothes and rented boots before heading out for their adventure!



We had arrived early enough that I was able to get a table right by the window, so my view for the day was pretty spectacular. :) I could only see two of the slopes really well, and they only actually went down one of the two I could see, so my abilities to get action shots were pretty limited.

See? Not a bad view! The area right in front of me was private: no rentals allowed, so they didn't ever ski that one. The slope to the left was the biggest one, and it was icy, so they never did that one. The one to the right, which is actually just out of view of the above photo, was the one I could see them ski. They did it a few times at the very beginning and were done with that one for the day.

Ryan did a great job helping me document!
 They're on the middle lift in this picture.
 That's my Ryan!


Shawn did really well for a first-timer, Ryan said!
The view from the lift...
 Ohhhh the things people do that create the need for signs. (Also, if you've not seen one before, the big cylinder at the top is part of the snow-making machine.)
 My hands get cold just looking at this.
 LOL! The sign! (Ryan did say he found the couches, though. They were in the trees!! No kidding!)
After a couple of hours of skiing, the guys came in to have lunch with me and give me a bathroom break. (No way would I have trusted walking away from our stuff, so I didn't leave my perch unless they were there.) I had a cup of hot chocolate because I felt like that's what I should do in a ski lodge.
Things really picked up at lunchtime and throughout the afternoon. a HUGE youth group showed up and descended upon my space. The lines to the lifts grew long, and I had to resort to prayer and Stress Away oil a few times to keep from having a full blown panic attack. (I'm not kidding - the teens didn't really know about personal space and were hovering all over me as I tried to read and write.)


Whew! The lodge had WiFi, but it was so overloaded that I couldn't actually access anything online. So by the end of the day (when the above photo was taken) I was out of activities. I'd read my novel, written as much as I could, and I moved to people watching. :)

The guys, though, were still having a blast!

They went to the top of the big hill - see them up there?
But the top of the slope was so icy, so they decided not to risk it. I was grateful for their moment of clarity. (I'd been listening to intercom calls all day for people to report to the medical area and did NOT want my name attached to any such call.) Ryan took this picture from the top of the slope. See the little itty bitty lodge at the bottom? That's where I was!
They stayed out until their pass expired. They could have purchased an additional four hours, but that would have had them skiing until ten, and then we would have had our 2.5 hour drive home, so I was grateful they stopped at 6:30.

They turned in their gear and limped toward the car, but not before one final picture:

Pretty sure they were both sore the next day, but they both adored the day, and I was so glad! We stopped for dinner at Skyline Chili on the way home and got home about 11:00. (Felt more like 3:00 in the morning, though, when the alarm went off for church and we felt like we'd barely slept!)

Fun day, fun slopes, fun memory. :)