One of the (many) things I find especially frustrating about having Eleanor in the hospital is how passive it makes me feel as a parent. While we wait to figure out what her condition may or may not be, there is so little I can do for her. I want to be her voice, to advocate for her. But, at this point in time, there isn’t much to advocate. The tests and consults have been ordered and run, she’s already getting the finest medical care around. Questions we have asked have been answered by the doctors and nurses as thoroughly as they are able. We’re just sitting here, waiting.
Oh, sure. I can go to the hospital any time I would like, I can hold her as much as I want when I’m there. I can change diapers, give her a little sponge bath, take her temperature. And that’s all well and good, I’m glad she’s so stable that I don’t have any restrictions (other than the length of the wires and feeding tube) as to how I can handle her. But changing diapers is not the thing I’m missing. I miss having some real say on what her/our day is like. I want to take her for walks, I want to put her down for naps, I want to feed her when she’s hungry. I want her home, in my world. But, for the moment, that’s just not in the cards.
For right now, we wait and wait and wait. M and I are passengers on this train, with zero control over where it’s going and when it stops. We are Ellie’s visitors at the hospital, instead of the ones running the show at home. The nurses are wonderful and all, but I can’t wait until I never, ever see them again.
Unfortunately, I don’t feel totally in control when I’m home, either. My in-laws were here for the last three weeks, and by necessity have been in charge of a lot of the things at the house for much of that time. They flew home this afternoon, and my mom comes up tomorrow with a one-way ticket. Without the grandparents, getting downtown for our hospital visits would be about 100 times more complicated. With them around, the kids get some extra attention while we can take a little bit of time with our visits. Not to mention the fact that my laundry is always folded and the dishes are always clean (a clear indication that M and I are NOT the ones in charge right now).
But even when we’re home, it’s like I’m barely here. I’m always going upstairs to pump, or trying to rest, or coming from or going to the hospital. My time with Daniel & Becca is limited, and much of the daily grind of meals and naps and rules is left to someone else. It’s a big adjustment for someone who has been in charge of ALL of it for the last 3.5 years. On the one hand, my inner control freak is screaming, “ugh, just move over and let me do it!” But, then, I can’t be rude to the people who are loving my kids and keeping my family afloat. And, truth be told, I literally do not have the time and energy to do half of the things I would normally take care of. So I step back, I withdraw a little, to avoid conflict. And then, there I am again, in the back seat instead of driving.
It’s all temporary, I know. The time will soon come that I am completely overwhelmed by being on my own with three kids, I will wish for the days of constant grandparents. In the meantime, so much of this really is out of my control for now, and I need to just accept it. But it’s so counter to my natural state of being, it’s a daily struggle. I don’t like not being in charge, I don’t like not knowing what’s coming. It’s a little too scary and chaotic for me. I want to grab hold again.





























