Thursday, November 27, 2014

Happy Thanksgiving!

We are so thankful for all of the amazing people, things, and experiences in our lives. And thankful that our sweet A is growing up to be such a kind, beautiful, and clever little girl. She is so fortunate to have so many people who love her so much.



We had a wonderful time visiting Aunt Kris, Uncle Neil, and Cousin Avery today. We had a delicious  dinner and desserts and so much fun chatting and admiring their amazing Christmas decorations. I think Kris decorates with the best of them; I can't think of a house that I like better than my sister's.

I did a series of November thankfulness posts again this year. This year included: health/happiness/love in our family, a toddler who was unaffected by DST, modern medicine, amazing grandparents, my mentor, an easy commute, Chad's job, the car we recently sold, Chad, fall colors, veterans, kind people, sweet A, DVR and the internet, chuckles on grumpy days, November snow, tiny little voices, thoughtful graduate students, being finished teaching my graduate personality course, cute viral videos, Chipotle, helpful grant consultants, Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, internship interviews, Oklahoma sunsets, the glorious smells of holiday cooking, and of course, our wonderful family and friends.




Thanksgiving always reminds me so much of my sweet little Mamaw. It was my very favorite holiday. We went to their house every year and I miss them so much. Mamaw and Papaw would love Miss A to pieces and I'm so sad that she doesn't get to spend the holidays with them.

I am tremendously excited about getting our tree up tomorrow. I've generated a list of possible things to do during the "25 days of Christmas" which is really exciting for me. I tried to put a mix of things to do at home/away, less/more time consuming, and include more kindness tasks (I can't wait to share our 'kindness family' of elves here!). I am aiming to at least post a picture every day between December 1-25. In the next month we also have my lab party, a visit from Nana, a visit from Papaw, work holiday parties, and a whole lot of craziness at work (including 5 more job candidate visits and reviewing files for personnel decisions and for graduate admission on top of the end of semester busyness!). I'm trying to just hold on tight and enjoy what I can and not dwell on the craziness! Our holiday activities will definitely help keep things fun! I don't want to overwhelm myself or A so we will just select things off the list that seem manageable. She is already excited for Christmas, even though I know she doesn't really understand the fuss yet. I am currently teetering on the line of helping the season's magic really shine and recognizing that, at 2.5, she likely will not consolidate these memories. However, I will. :)





Saturday, November 22, 2014

Candyland

Truly unsurprising things occur when you allow your 2.5 year old girl to choose the Christmas decorations for her room.







Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Worry...Leave my mind alone


Well, as I predicted, several people contacted me after the blog that I wrote for Dr Psych Mom (dealing with postpartum anxiety and my experience). There were a few common questions so I figured it was worth trying to answer them here. Once getting through them, though, I realized that this seems like a really weird and self-focused post. So forgive me for that!

I get why you didn't but...why didn't you call/tell me?!?! 
This is tough. I mentioned this in the original post; it was a Catch-22. It was difficult to feel the anxiety but I also felt like all of the things I was worrying about would come to fruition by talking about them. Again, this is a tricky place to be as a psychologist because I fundamentally recognized that this was anxiety's irrational trick. But it was quite the hurdle. I feel like I occasionally left little bread crumbs in conversations but I wasn't able to come right out and describe it and my little nuggets were so vague that no one really could have followed them to see what was going on.

How did you "get over" it?
I definitely wouldn't say that I'm completely over/through it (more about that later); however, I hit a turning point in March. I really hadn't been sleeping, A had recovered from another stomach virus, and her cough suddenly was bad again, particularly in the middle of the night. One night, it was particularly bad so I woke Chad up and explained what I had been experiencing. Although I had been feeling completely overwhelmed with the feelings of panic, I had been functioning fairly well. I went to work every day; I didn't talk about the anxiety; I was teaching and doing research, writing 2 grants, and keeping up with the house. So no one had noticed the anxiety but I was irritable a lot at home (I don't think that had gone unnoticed). So Chad was quite surprised to hear what had really been going on and he agreed that it didn't sound typical, or like something I should struggle with on my own. The admission alone lifted an enormous weight. It allowed me to recognize this was a problem and I needed support. I slowly started admitting it to other people, while also looking for resources. I blurted it out to my friend who is an anxiety researcher, on the way to lunch one day. I felt like just saying it, outside my house, needed to be done. And it was great. We talked about potential exposure exercises, mindfulness activities, and acceptance strategies and why they hadn't been working previously. I mentioned it to one of my mentors at lunch the next day and got lots of validation and suggestions for other ways to cope. Those three 'moments' of admission are what seemed to turn things around for me.

How are you doing now?
The most common question I got from those that contacted me was concerned with wanting an update on my current functioning. I'm doing quite well. Baby A has had several viruses since the spring (yay, daycare!) and I have handled it pretty well. I definitely have had my moments, though. Once we took A to OKC to play with Ben, Grace, and Avery at the water park and A vomited in the car. It turns out it was just car sickness but this set off several hours of concern that it might be a bug that would get the other kiddoes sick and lead to missing work. I have had to stop drinking caffeine entirely. Prior to graduate school, I could drink a mountain dew and then go to bed and sleep soundly. However, I stopped drinking it (as well as soda more generally) in 2008 for health reasons. Over the years, I started having an occasional Ale-8, sweet tea, or coca-cola and noticed that it really negatively impacted my sleep. Within the last year, though, caffeine would bring on a full bout of panic symptoms. Caffeine-related anxiety is fairly common. So I just avoid it. Again, a job hazard is recognizing these pit falls (technically, shouldn't I drink *more* caffeine so that I can engage in interoceptive exposure?) along with a number of safety behaviors I've picked up (I'm embarrassed to admit that taking A's temperature daily became a thing). But now I am better equipped to recognize thoughts as thoughts, and can notice them without letting them have such an impact. Like many parents, I've been pretty hypervigilant about EV-68. Recently I had one evening of heightened concern but, given A's history of breathing problems, I think this is actually pretty good for me to have kept it fairly under control. Admittedly though, I did engage in some reassurance seeking behaviors. I knew what I was doing when I did it, though.

Why did you decide to share this?
The unspoken question here is "Weren't you afraid of how people would perceive you?" and I think the answer is yes. Samantha had indicated some folks were interested in hearing thoughts about postpartum anxiety and she needed someone to write about her experience. So I said I would do it. The thing about mental health stigma is that we all say that we want to reduce it--as long as it doesn't touch us or our close family. Because I ultimately decided to keep this a public blog, anyone can see it. I often share it on Facebook for friends and family because a few have requested I make it easier to see new posts (here's my plug for subscribing to an RSS reader or email subscription!). This means that, if they were so inclined, colleagues and former students (& professors!) can see my posts (& it seems they do, given the comments and likes that I occasionally receive from them). So, on the one hand, I want to help to educate others and share my experience, but on the other, I didn't want it to negatively impact my professional persona. I'm pretty sure that's more evidence that we aren't where we should be in terms of stigma. In a sense, it was a little impulsive when I agreed to it. But I think it was an okay decision.

Funny enough, in my mind, I just knew that there would be other questions. There were a few that I 'feared' coming, which I think means they need to be addressed. ;)

Why didn't you get treatment? 
The fact that I described postpartum anxiety symptoms but didn't go to a psychologist for therapy or a psychiatrist or PCP for medication almost caused me to question talking about it at all. It seemed professionally irresponsible. Frankly, I don't know if I actually could have been diagnosed with PPA (or any disorder) but treatment likely would have been a good idea. At one point I looked into it and saw that there are only a handful of potential providers here in town that I could be interested in seeing. Of those, I personally know or am professionally connected with 75% of them. I actually don't have a PCP (though I'm working on this as I finally have scheduled an appointment with a doctor for a well check!) so medication seemed out, without a lot of work. I really did consider it and do grapple with my feelings that it seems irresponsible to tell others that they should seek help when I didn't myself. At least not in a traditional sense.

What do you mean prayer/exposure/mindfulness didn't work? Does that mean it/they don't?
I thought a lot before I included that statement. Nothing worked for me in those moments of panic but now they are really helpful. There has been evidence of the effectiveness/efficacy of each of these strategies and obviously I am a firm believer in evidence [and of course, I was trying to use them on myself which is probably pretty ill-advised for the therapy strategies]. It's still how I what I would recommend for a client if they presented with anxiety.

I thought you weren't anxious?
Me too. 

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Superhero Mom

I saw a blog post on Momastery about how she had to make homemade play-doh for her daughter to take to school and it made her feel like a total rockstar. I totally know that feeling! One of her comments was that, for the first time, she had to buy flour and salt at the grocery store (her husband usually shops and they don't often bake). It made me realize how fortunate we all are to have our own talents and that we should cultivate those rather than bemoaning the things we can't do well. I am so incredibly impressed by the moms who can sew, in particular. Some days I think I would like to learn how to sew but honestly, I think I am too impatient and can't imagine being able to do it. I'm also impressed by moms who vacuum every day, actually scrub their floors, or go running. If you've been to my house or know me, you know that's not what I do well. In my house, I am a good baker and I am good at validating and am fairly patient. Outside my house, I am pretty good at my job and I am magical at finding things on the internet. But none of those things make me feel like a superhero. Those superhero moments come at the funniest times. I imagine moms of multiple kids have them much more often. Here are times I felt like a superhero:
  • My first lunch date where I drove with a baby in the backseat. I drove. After a 6-week hiatus. And I had a tiny human in my backseat. We made it to Chili's alive.
  • The first time I roasted a whole chicken. Any time I magically *also* am able to carve the chicken in a way that doesn't look like a wild animal got a hold of it before it hit the table.
  • The day that I went to work, took A to get her flu shot, and made it back to work on time.
  • When I made baby food in the food processor.
  • Putting together toddler toys and furniture by myself.
  • Packing a tornado bag and getting a baby and 2 dogs out the door when there was severe weather.
  • Chad's first full week working out of town.
  • The moment right before the first guest walks in to a birthday party.
  • One time when every towel in our house was clean at the same time.
  • Almost every time I'm leaving the grocery store with a child who isn't screaming or crying.
  • Whenever a teacher or administrator suggest I am doing something right.
  • Those moments when A wants a snack or needs a wipe from my purse and I have one!
Thinking about these made me smile and also made me realize that I need to focus on them more in the moment! I mean, who doesn't want to feel like a superhero?

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Halloween

I totally should have made multiple Halloween posts this year as this one is a little picture heavy. We seriously had such a blast last week. On Tuesday we went to the celebration downtown. Interestingly, USA Today included it as one of the 10Best Halloween costume parties. I don't know about all that. As usual, this was one of those events that was better in theory than in practice. But A got to wear costume #1--a ladybug ("Lainey"bug!!) from her cousin Avery.





After the festival, we went back to the house to work on her trick or treat bag for Friday's costume.







We also had lots of fun Halloween themed shirts but I forgot to take a picture of most of them. :/






We made candy corn magic bars for my class on Thursday.





They were delicious.



We also put together her favor bags for her school's Halloween party.





The Halloween party was crazy cute. For this party she got to wear an adorable bumblebee costume from Ricki's cutie pie niece, Jaylah. Funny story about the bumblebee--initially A wouldn't even get near the costume. She said it was "scurry" so we did a little graduated exposure until she was actually asking us to put the bee on her. She was very angry (as you will see below) when it was time to take it off to go home.













A's costume was so much fun. We used the high chair tutu that Ricki made for A's first birthday, her rainbow leggings, and a shirt that I ironed on a rainbow patch to make the cutest little rainbow brite ever. I haven't decided if I like this costume or the Cabbage Patch Kid better. Chad's favorite is still the cupcake. I guess next year is when she will start having more input on what costume she wants. It will be fun to see what she comes up with!










A's favorite part of the night, though, was handing out candy. She kept getting excited and saying "more friends? more friends coming, too?" and she was really disappointed when it ended.







This is the first year I have ever decorated for Halloween. It wasn't much but it was a lot of fun. Baby A especially liked reading off the letters on the signs and pointing out the bats, spiders, and pumpkins. Decorating holidays may become one of my new favorite things!

Look at the awesome wreath my sister, Sarah, made!