Friday, August 9, 2013

Camdyn 3.0

I made a joke last week that our Camdyn is a new and improved version of herself since surgery.  She's got more energy (from increased oxygen) than she knows what to do with, and her appetite is....well, let's just say that for the first time in her life EVER (consistently), she actually HAS ONE.  Seriously, the girl can now pack it away, and then ask for more.  Without a fight, she'll devour a half sandwich in 10 minutes, flat...then ask for something else to eat.  Chalk it up to faster digestion from 12-15% more oxygen in her little body than she's used to.  It's Camdyn, but on "supergirl steroids."  It's "Camdyn 3.0."

Why 3.0?  I figure the three-stage, three surgeries must be counted.  She couldn't have had one without the other two.  

She's more energetic and rambunctious than ever.  We've spent so many weeks this summer telling her to be calm, settle down, take it easy, take a break.  She's only 7 weeks post-surgery, after all.  Following her last cardiology appointment, she felt like she had been given a free ticket to finally begin using up her energy.  The kid can run!  Granted, she still runs "with her elbows" a bit (picture a tame version of Phoebe Buffet), but after a ton of running around with her friends after church on Sunday morning, there was not a cough to be heard.  Normally with too much activity, she would begin coughing because she couldn't catch her breath fast enough.  And then she would have to take a break and sit with us while all of her friends continued playing.  

With all this running and dancing around, we have been watching her like a hawk.  We've been trying to let her ease back into normal activity rather than going full-speed ahead.  We barely allowed her on her bike for the first time yesterday in months (she'd been practicing her riding in the spring).  There hasn't been a single issue.  But we're being cautious (overly cautious?) because that's how we roll.  Why mess with (or mess up) a good thing?

All this issue-free activity certainly hasn't come too soon, seeing as how school is back in session on Thursday.  Yep, my big first-grader will be back into a routine (as will the rest of us).  It will be SO GOOD for her.  She's pretty young for a first-grader (she could've done transitional kindergarten last year instead of the "real deal"), but I think she does best when challenged...and her vocabulary has always been ridiculously mature, even though she's itty bitty, physically.  Do we worry about her being on the playground with second- and third-graders?  Naturally...but her daddy won't be far, and it was totally and completely God's intervention that she even attended public school (vs. homeschooling her last year), in the first place.  We couldn't have arranged that line-up even if we'd wanted to.  So, yes, we worry...for a few seconds...before remembering Who orchestrated the setup.  

And she may be itty bitty (she's only 32 lbs), but she packs a punch in that little body of hers.  Don't underestimate this girl because she WILL surprise you.  She's the epitome of those sayings..."She's whiskey in a teacup" and "Let her sleep, for when she wakes, she will move mountains."  God has something special planned for her...something that will utilize the fierce, strong spirit He has created in her.
Waiting at her pulmonology appointment for her breathing test.
Summertime comes to a close.  We love summer, and the end of it is always bittersweet, but in our house, our favorite season is fall. We're looking forward to cool, crisp air, and lots of fun spent outdoors.  It's the start of another new school year...summer begins to fade into the past.  We anticipate the color changes of the leaves and our sweaters come out from hiding for the last 6 months.  Fall is on it's way, friends.  Though it almost always takes longer to arrive than we'd like, we'll soon begin soaking in all its beauty.

We are thankful for the changing seasons...in weather and in life.  They mark a time to move forward onto new or different things...or sometimes onto old things that feel like a familiar, warm blanket wrapped around you for a time.  Sometimes, we trudge through the current season of our lives hoping to survive it, and sometimes we wise up and embrace it for what it's worth, good or bad.  This summer has been great, considering all of our circumstances, but we are ready to bid it farewell and move onto a different kind of calm than we've felt in a while.  Yes, we're ready for the warm blanket.

2 comments:

  1. Great news! I'm a heart mom too and I am thrilled for you and Camdyn!!

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  2. Thank you, Karen! How old is your little one with a heart complication?

    ReplyDelete