I know some of you are jealous of my ultra glamorous
life. And rightfully so.
I have four really awesome boys.
They are fun, and handsome and everything a mama bear could
want.
But we have our adventures like everyone else.
You know, sometimes things happen out of nowhere that are no
ones fault whatsoever. Things that are
totally out of our hands and are what smarter people than me have deemed “par
for the course.”
One of those moments happened this morning.
This kind of thing so ultra rare, a blog post like this
should be worth millions. I mean it’s
THAT rare. Stuff like this n.e.v.e.r
happens around here.
This mother is so prepared for everything, that something
like this happening just doesn’t happen.
Well, you know…maybe once in a blue moon. Or maybe once every other leap year.
Practically never ever.
(I’ll let you figure out for yourself which words above
these words here, are truth or fantasy.)
Anyway, back to the story…
This morning I dropped the boys off to school and as 11-year-old
B was jumping out of the car he said, “Oops.
I only have 1 unit of insulin left in my pump.”
Now if I believed in tough love I would have been all, “Well
it’s your fault mister! You’ll just have
to do without all. day. long. And think
about what you’ve done!”
But I’m a softy.
Looking at the clock I saw I had 30 minutes until I absolutely
had to be at work and thanks to our entire city being under construction, I was
20 minutes away from home.
As veteran D Mom
problem solving scenarios were flying through my swelly brain at light
speed. The first logical one was going
home, filling a reservoir and sending it back with my 18 year old.
“If I send a reservoir, can you go through the steps to
prime it and get it done? You can just
attach it to the old set and after school I’ll insert a new one.”
((Blank stare)) He’s
done it a few times along side me, but he’s unsure.
“I can try.” He says.
Okay. Better plan!
“Give yourself that one unit of insulin to cover the missed
basal and give me your pump. I’ll get it
set up and your brother can bring it to you in less than an hour.”
The game was afoot!
Now this next part has nothing to do with the end of the
story. The end of the story is M drives
the pump to B. He gets it and his sugars
end up being brilliant all day long. You
don’t have to keep reading, it’s ok. But
I just need to get this off my chest.
The traffic. You know
that feeling when you’re in traffic and you need to be somewhere ASAP? I’m assuming you do, because every other car
on the road apparently felt the same way I did.
Which logic then dictates you’ve been there too and know exactly what
I’m talking about. Anyway, I was feeling
that feeling, hard.
The city has an entire section of roadway under construction;
so three lanes must merge into one lane and go 2 miles an hour until allowed to
again spread into two lanes again.
Everybody knows what is going to happen ahead. Everybody KNOWS. But there are the few that think their lives
are more harried than everybody else’s, and they go into the lane that is
obviously closing RIGHT ahead, just to get four cars ahead of everybody
else. You know these people. They don’t make eye contact. They pretend they didn’t know the lane was
closing. But it’s been a month
people. We know you know.
And as I sat in my lane doing all the right things, I was
forced to accommodate these leaches who suck out my happiness to take off an extra
minute from their commute. And the worst
part of it all: I almost always catch up to these offenders a couple lights
ahead. All of their A-holishness is for
not. We are at the same place. Turns out they never even gain a minute, they
gain seconds.
Pile onto this the fact that the construction company people
set up for their roadwork at exactly 8:00am, when we are trying to get our kids
to school, and get to work. They have to
know that the majority of the city population starts work at 9am. If they waited just one hour lives would be
changed, people might actually like the city again, and this D Mom’s head
wouldn’t explode every livelong day.
I looked at the faces of the people cutting in and almost
hitting other cars, and I tried to understand their lives. I tried to make up stories that made their
actions ok. I tried to pretend they have
children with medical issues too. Or
they can’t be late or they’ll be fired.
Or something.
But then I looked at myself in the mirror, and there I was,
following all the rules…and still…nothing is easy.
Even though I’m always prepared! (Sarcasm font. Where is the sarcasm font button?)
I’m doing the best I can.
I’m trying to be a good person.
I’m trying.
But even though everything in front of me says chaos, (see:
traffic metaphor,) I can’t shake the feeling that one day the sea will part and
there in front of me will be redemption.
I don’t know how it’s possible. In fact if I think about it, all I can think
of are reasons for it not to be possible.
It’s hard not to doubt good things lie ahead.
I heard a quote recently that struck that handy “truth chord”
I have in my soul, and that quote was “Doubt your doubt before you doubt your
faith.”
So I’ll keep following rules, and trying my best, and maybe
even try to be a little more prepared, spiritually and diabetically, and I’ll
let the fates take care of the rest.
Because (as I say over and over again,) I can’t do better
than my best.
And that my friends, is apparently what passes for a blog
post these days from moi.
(DEEP BOW)
I *LOVE* when the rude person winds up next to me at a light. But they are too self absorbed to even have noticed me/my car during the rudeness, at the light, or ever.
ReplyDeleteI can SO relate, in every single way! Shocker, I know. :) Damn those people! Funny, I bet we all ponder breaking the rules, but in the end we know exactly why we dont. LOL Love ya Meri!
ReplyDeleteLove that quote.
ReplyDeleteYour posts are always brilliant!! And I love the deep bow. So glad to hear the day's numbers turned out well, despite the traffic madness!
ReplyDelete