Monday, June 13, 2011

FREE THERAPY

There's a noise in my head.  It's sadness and tears; it's concern and caring; it's singing and dancing; it's giggles and laughter and the shout of "BUNKO"!

When the twins were two and Jillian five, my good friend, Ginger, asked if I would like to become part of her Bunko group.  For those of you who have never heard of Bunko, and therefore must have been born on another planet, here's what Bunko is.  Bunko is a game of dice played by twelve people sitting at three separate tables in groups of four.  There’s a “head” table; a middle table and “the pits”.  A "game" consists of rolling the dice counting and adding all the one’s first and when the head table reaches twenty-one the first round is over.  Winner’s move to a higher table and losers go to the pits.  Then you play for two’s and so forth up to the sixes - end of game one.  A Bunko is when you roll three of a kind and score twenty-one.  Bunko is completely mindless and fun.  The way we play is each person puts in five bucks and at the end there are cash prizes.  For those of us unemployed…..it’s payday, so in my book a win at Bunko is a big month for me!!!!!!!!

Anyway, when my friend Ginger asked me to join Bunko I was curious and excited to meet eleven women I’d never met before and participate in this game I had only heard about from just about every woman I met.

But let’s back up.  I met Ginger at the same real estate office that I met the Scotsman back in 1986.  She’s a petite red-head and one of the sweetest, funniest, brightest and most charming people I’ve ever met.  Ginger says, "I've never met a stranger" and she's right.  Everyone she meets loves her.  The girl from St. Louis is exciting to be around!  Before Ginger was an amazing realtor and many years ago, she was a kindergarten teacher.  That tells you something about her doesn’t it?  If you have the love and patience for children and children love you in return, then you are somebody really special.  Who doesn't love their kindergarten teacher?  She's one of my favorite people in the wide, wide world and we spend time in our gardens together and hiking and just, well, playing!

Ginger as a "flapper" for Halloween!
So there I was at my very first Bunko at Ginger’s home meeting my new best friends for the first time.  Little did I know how these friendships would grow and change over the next eighteen plus years.  Let me tell you about the girls.  The names have been changed to our "alter-ego" names.  My alter-ego name is Sophia!.

When I was asked to “audition” for Bunko (which unbeknownst to me that’s what I was doing) another gal was auditioning too.  Her name is Victoria.  She’s an accountant which translates to left-brained, exacting, brilliant, logical and beautiful.  In other words, everything I am not!  Victoria’s got the most fabulous head of blonde-wavy hair you could ever want to see and  lives in an amazing home she has decorated beautifully with her fireman husband and two adorable, polite, children....a boy and a girl much younger than my own.  Victoria enjoys guide-dog training and usually has a couple of these beautiful dogs around the house.  She's quite the package!
Victoria looking like a western barmaid!
Then there’s Trixie!  What a kick.  Trixie’s down for a good time ALWAYS smiling and laughing and sweet. Trixie is a terrific listener and good advice-giver.  She's a petite brunette – sometimes and sometimes a blonde!.......Or maybe...let's just see at the next Bunko!  She’s got this quirky side to her in her hair-dos and style of dress that I love!  She's employed in a nine-to-five but her real love and passion is design.  Trixie makes beautiful mosaic tile stepping stones, mirrors, wall hangings, etc.  She has a true artist's eye.
 
That's Trixie and her daughter Audrey on the left.
Trixie’s daughter Audry is also a Bunko "babe".  Audry is tall, model-thin, gorgeous and FUNNY!  She LOVES to laugh and have a good time (but who doesn't right?).  Like her mom, she’s got the best attitude and always comes from a good place.  Audry is quite a few years our junior but fits right in with us oldies.  We share a love for music and technology bringing our IPODS and dancing to parties!  Her husband is a real sweetheart and their kids?.......Dogs!  P.S. You shoulda seen her in a thong by the pool in Vegas!  Yowza!

Crazy dancing fun!
Then there’s Roxy.  Roxy is a very petite dynamo from Australia and don’t kid her about her accent!  I'm serious!  Roxy is always down for a laugh and has the best attitude....even in the face of adversity she finds something to laugh about.  She owns her own business, landscape design, and is always out there having new adventures and exploiting new ideas.  She's a wonderful mother to her only son, a high school student, and a great friend.  We can usually find Roxy on a garden tour, at the nursery, or perhaps having a late afternoon Bloody Mary while working on her YouTube videos!
Roxy with Jani while Jani was undergoing treatment.
Pele' is another realtor in our group.  Pele' is Hawaiian born – absolutely beautiful, dark skinned and dark hair.  She makes me pee my pants laughing with her funny stories.   She's got a fantastic home which she and her husband have remodeled up in the hills above a beautiful valley with stunning views!  Her dining room with it's gigantic table is to die for!  A wonderful mom and a grandmother - we love her and her sweet sweet husband.
Pele' and Ginger!
Athena.  Just like her name.  Tall, blonde, fabulous.  Athena is also a brilliant realtor who’s made a very good living buying and selling real estate.  She lives with her handsome Greek boyfriend and together they make a stunning couple; him dark and exotic, her fair, lithe and elegant.  Athena would give the shirt off her back to help you AND she’s a very confident and competent cook to boot!  Bunko's at her home are an exciting, culinary delight.....especially Thanksgiving Bunko!!!  Athena has one daughter and claims her S.O.'s two children too!

Gorgeous Athena!
Bobbi Jo from Alabama.  Yea, say it like you really want to. With the strongest possible southern accent you can muster!  She's a fire cracker!  The queen of zingers.  Bobbi Jo is sexy and funny.  She tells the best stories that keep you in stitches!  Bobbi Jo has a beautiful sense of style and her home is spectacularly painted and decorated.  And the girl can cook a southern dish!  Just recently married with no children Bobbi Jo IS a southern dish!
Our Southern Belle!
Gypsy is our curvacious sensual girl with long dark hair.  She's a very talented aesthetician and all-round queen of making you feel good at the touch of a finger.  Literally!  Gypsy owns her own successful day spa in our little downtown.  A real business woman she is funny and sweet always with a big smile.  Gypsy is married to a cutie-pie sweetheart of a fireman and they live in a charming home that's quaint and inviting by a little creek in the woods.  Gypsy can make some mean Mexican food too.  Spicy!
I'll bet you can figure out who Gypsy is based on my description!

Isabella is our newest member and someone I feel a real affinity with because unlike all the other women in Bunko, we have children about the same age and we are going through the college experience together.  With beautiful brunette chin-length wavy hair Isabella is one sharp cookie with insightful business acumen and she makes me laugh!  AND she sings!  She can get a group of girls into singing and dancing (wine helps) and a BLAST is had by all!  The girl fits right into our Bunko group so nicely.
Ms. Isabella!
Uma, our tall drink of motorcycle-riding mama!  She's got about the curliest black hair I've ever seen on a white girl! and a smile that's ear-to-ear and a giggle that's infectious!  She can use the F word in a sentence more times than a sailor and make you laugh the whole time she does it!  She always has great stories about her boys, the grand kids and her own grand adventures on the back of her husbands' motorcycle.  Hot-tubbing at Uma's house is a must!
Uma in her sexy motorcycle outfit!
Lydia is someone I got to know pretty quickly after joining Bunko.  She would do anything for anyone.  No questions asked.  Lydia has a very distinct style that completely suits her and owns about a thousand pair of earrings to complement every outfit!  Lydia’s a freakin’ trouble-maker though!  She's full of ideas and somehow pulls off making EVERYONE else fulfill her ideas!  For instance, if she doesn’t like the way a piece of furniture sits in your home…she’ll rearrange, or better yet, get everyone else to re-arrange every item of furniture you own.  And she’s usually right!  All the while she’s sipping her vodka and Redbull with that gleam in her eye and we're sweating like dogs!  I guess you'd call that the power of persuasion?  Lydia and her husband have two grown children and three grandchildren!
Lydia, Margarita and me in our pool.
Lydia’s former business partner came to join our group shortly after I did.  Her name is Margarita and when you same her name, please roll the R’s and after you say it you have to say AY-YI, YI, YI, YI, YI!   She's a hot tamale'!  and I pretty much couldn’t love anyone more.  I felt an instant chemistry with our Portuguese Margarita.  When we are together we laugh – end of story!  She’s completely bright and a former model who has still got it!  She’s hysterical; she dresses impeccably and is one of the nicest people I’ve ever, ever met.  She’s had quite a life too.  Margarita has lived all over and traveled all over the world.  She owns a home in Cabo that she has graciously received me in and shares with everyone.  She's a wonderful mother to her only daughter and lives about two and a half hours away in a lovely home in the mountains with her significant other.  Any day with Margarita is gonna be a blast!

Margarita's birthday!
And some of the girls with tickets to go to Margarita's Cabo Villa!
Candy.  What to say about Candy?  She’s perfect!  She’s another one of those really good listeners who offers wonderful advice.  Completely non-judgmental, our down-to-earth Ohio girl, fits in everywhere.  Candy could have dinner with the flippin’ President sipping wine and talking politics and he would love her - probably find a cabinet position for her!  She could sit in a bar in the middle of the desert with a bunch of truck drivers drinking beer and have a blast.  She’d beat them at poker, pool and corn-hole too!  Blonde, beautiful and married to a dark, handsome French Man, Candy is unfailingly polite, funny and a dear, dear friend who successfully raised two grown men ("her boys") both attorneys.
Check her out!
And last, but most certainly not least is Christina. Christina is my oldest friend in California.  We met in 1979 just six months after I moved to California and Christina and I had an instant rapport.  We enjoy “styling” our homes and anyone elses home that will let us!  We love gardening and art and fashion and cooking and gardening and wine-tasting and music and gardening and mountain biking and games and hiking and traveling and well, everything!  Did I mention we have gardening in common?  We’ve vacationed together with our spouses and always have an easy companionship. There was never any doubt that Christina would fit right into Bunko.  What’s not to love about Christina?  She and her husband raised two beautiful and talented women and live in a lovely home with a spectacular garden on a hillside close to the San Francisco Bay.
Ginger, Christina, me and Roxy on a garden tour!
Did I name them all?  No.  There have been women who have come and gone from Bunko.  Like Susan, Joan, Roni and Penny.  Women grow and change.  Some never really feel comfortable with our group.  Others just feel the need to head in another direction.  No worries.  Some have to move like our sweet Debbie (WHO I MISS SO MUCH!). And then there are those we’ve lost.

Trixie’s best friend Joanie (her real name) was in Bunko when I first joined.  The girl from Texas with the long grey beautiful mane.  Joanie had a natural look about her that was really quite stunning.   She could spin a yarn and have us all on the edge of our seats laughing joyfully!  There are Joanie-isms we still say today!  I’m speaking about Joanie in the past-tense because she passed from emphysema almost ten years ago.  Joanie was sweet and funny and very kind.   A tiny Texas-two-steppin' girl with a big heart, big smile and gracious way about her.  She is missed and will always be fondly remembered.

I love this picture of Joanie
And Jani (her real name).  Jani was my best friend.  She died of metastatic breast cancer in 2005 after an incredibly brave battle of five years.  Talk about a woman who could make you laugh?  She could do it.  Jani had the best sense of humor and had everyone in stitches!  We spent a LOT of time together working in our children's school and carpooling.  Jillian is the same age as her middle child, Lauren, and the girls were in classes together from elementary through high school.  In fact they "walked" together at graduation just weeks before Jani passed.  Her son, Jackson, is the same age as the twins and we were room parents for their kindergarten class.  We taught P.E. to that Kindergarten class too and laughed constantly planning activities for the kids.  Our kids were all on the same swim-team.  We hiked and shopped and mountain biked with our friend Christina.  We traveled together as families to the beach and a cabin at a lake in the mountains.  We shared a couple of Thanksgivings together; we picked out our Christmas trees together.  Our beloved dog, Gracie, was born at Jani's home and fostered by her and her family.  Jani graduated from the California Culinary Academy and taught me so much about cooking and especially baking.  I never bake a single thing without thinking about her.  I miss her so much.  She was a soul-sister to me.
Jani and her daughter, Jessica, with me at the Lake beach
Jani had filled Joanie’s spot in Bunko and needless to say, we have never, ever said that we were filling that spot again.  These two women were real blessings in our lives and through them we learned a lot; first about living and then about dying.  We were so fortunate to have known them.  They had such generosity of spirit and kindness of heart and are missed.  We think about them and talk about them and laugh about them and cry about them still.  The picture below was taken at Candy's house at Joanie's last Bunko and one of Jani's first.

Back row:  Athena, Lydia, Jani, Audry, Victoria and Pele'.  Front row: me (Sophia), Candy, Ginger, Trixie and Joanie.

If you are counting then you've counted more than twelve beautiful, fabulous women.  You see, Bunko has pretty much turned into one giant, noisy, therapy session.  FREE THERAPY!  In fact in the last several years I can only think of maybe three times that we've actually played Bunko!  It's only an excuse now (like we need one!) - it's where we're headed every third Thursday of the month.  Or maybe to Vegas together or the mountains or Cabo!

In Vegas baby!
We have dinner, we drink, we smile, we giggle, we laugh.  We listen, we support, we grieve, and we cry.  We dance, we sing, we celebrate and occasionally we'll break out the dice and play Bunko!  But mostly we love.  We love each other like sisters.  Sisters from other mother's that's what we are.  Soul sisters.  How lucky are we?

Just hanging on a sailboat.

Silly girls!

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Finding our New Normal

The week of Jillian's due date, which was the last week in July, my mother and Aunt Sis came to California to visit.  I thought it would be lovely to have two of "my mothers" present at my first child's birth and their help during that first week would be wonderful.  Much to everyone's dismay Jillian didn't show up until August 6, 1987.  More than a week after my family left!

When I was pregnant with the twins my father and my step-mother, Betty, came to California to visit and hopefully be present when the girls were born.  Betty was not a particularly good flyer.  She was uncomfortable sitting for long periods of time and she suffered swelling in her lower extremities when she flew.  She actually spent the first couple of days of her visit in bed recovering.  We couldn't exactly pin-point when the girls might show their little faces but I didn't want my Dad and Betty to suffer the same fate as my Mom and Aunt Sis.  All that way for nothing!  So a few days into their visit and with no signs that I might go into labor, I was off to the store to purchase the Castor Oil!

When I made the middle of the night call to the doctor he told me to meet him at the hospital at 9:00 a.m. the following morning.  At 10:40a.m. on April 24, 1991, I was in the operating room ready to deliver my babies by caesarian section AGAIN!  Alison had turned into position for delivery but poor little Natalie didn't have any room to flip around therefore her feet were still down, below Ali's head and dancing on my bladder, leaving out a normal delivery.  Natalie was pulled out first.....feet first and screaming.  What a set of lungs on her!  Apparently she liked her little snug home nestled up to her sister.  Alison's turn came one minute later fast asleep and not interested in being awakened.  After a little time they got her to "wake up" and breath on her own.  She still doesn't like to wake up before 11:00 a.m.!!!

I can't believe I'm going to tell you this but I entered the hospital that day at 192 pounds.  Within three days I had lost 45 pounds!  Alison weighed 6 lbs 6 oz and Natalie weighed 5 lbs 14 oz - both big for twins and actually a good size for singletons thanks to the steroids!

After the girls were born the doctor told me there was one placenta and they wanted to test it to determine if the girls were fraternal or identical.  Fraternals are two separate eggs and two separate placentas - identicals are one egg split and they share a placenta.  They had to freeze the placenta and then section it to test and this process would take 24 hours.  But I knew immediately that the girls were fraternal.   When they were side by side they did look a lot alike - both tiny and bald on top!  But when I held them individually I could tell by the shape of their eyes and the length of their fingers and toes that they were fraternal.  Alison's hands and feet were like my own and Natalie had the Corsie's long fingers and toes - same as Jillie.  The doctor eventually reported that the placentas had fused together making one placenta.  I was not surprised to learn they were simply two babies conceived and then born at the same time.

Betty with Natalie and Dad with Alison the day they were born.
Jillian got a new baby too!
My next two days in the hospital were spent juggling nursing the babies and trying to sleep; the first difficult, the other impossible!  The staff had given me a private room right outside the nurses station and nurses are noisy and busy all night and sleeping was impossible plus I had the babies in the room with me most of the time.  The doctor said it was okay to stay at the hospital an extra night but I was ready to go home and sleep in my own bed.  What was I thinking.....that I'd actually sleep?
Leaving the hospital April 27 with Natalie and Alison.
When I came home Jillian, who was just three, continued on like nothing had happened.  She still brought piles of books into my bed and a bucket full of little toys and insisted that I read to her.  I was recovering from surgery, literally exhausted and felt horribly guilty about not having the energy to spend time with her.  I was just so tired.  Dad and Betty and Gordon were doing all they could do to help out but I insisted on nursing both babies exclusively so the feeding came down to just me and the babies fed constantly.  I remember one afternoon that was particularly horrible.  I couldn't get Natalie to settle - the girl had some lung power and was screaming/crying for a long time.  I couldn't take it any longer and took her to Betty who was resting in her bedroom.  As soon as I handed her over to Betty Natalie stopped crying.  I crouched on the floor next to them and Betty and I both stared at her.  Both girls were absolutely perfect - their tiny hands and feet so delicate and cherubic.  Natalie had the most perfect, gorgeous oval fingernails; like tiny porcelain doll hands and Betty and I marveled at them.  Beautiful little Alison was more content and slept longer and when she fussed it was a softer cry compared to Natalie's performing quality voice!  Both girls were jaundiced, particularly Natalie and she had to be taken to the hospital every day for almost a week to have a tiny pin-prick of blood drawn.  The girls spent a fair amount of time in a tiny bassinet side-by-side taking in any direct sunlight they could until their billirubin count was normal.

Letting the sun shine in!

Natalie and Alison doing her best Judo chop imitation!
Soon it was time for my father and Betty to leave and I knew I was facing a week without help, other than Gordon, until my sister Sandy arrived.  I had arranged play-dates for Jillian virtually every day but that left me alone with two preemie babies (the girls were born three weeks premature).  Gordon was now sole provider for his family of five and was gone from the house working feverishly to support us!  I think his working out of the house served a dual purpose for him; aside from the obvious need to make a living, being away from the house offered a break from the everyday madness that had become our lives; our new normal.  Neither of us were sleeping because the twins were feeding about every two hours, waking each other up, feeding and burping at the same time.   Complete exhaustion was the name of the game.  I don't know how he got up and found the energy to actually get dressed and go to work.

That week alone was brutal for me.  I remember sitting on the couch in the family room just nursing, burping, changing diapers and crying.  I was beyond tired and wasn't eating and now I know I was suffering from postpartum depression.  The thoughts going through my head were terrible.  I was used to dressing up and going to work and using my mind.  Adult conversations and going out to lunch were the old norm.  I was now a stay-at-home-mom and the transition wasn't going well.  What had I done?  I couldn't see past the next moment and there was no enjoyment of the moment I was in.  I hadn't slept more than an hour in over a week and I was mentally and physically drained.  It wasn't a good scenario and a weaker person may have fallen into despair.  I wasn't far from it.  I remember thinking about leaving and checking into a hotel, closing all the blinds, cranking the air conditioner and just sleeping not telling a soul where I was.  How Vivi Abbott of me!  I also remember sitting in the twins room staring down the street willing Gordon's car to turn the corner and head home, "please come home Gordon.  Please."  It all sounds so dramatic now but at the time it was VERY real.  Sleep deprivation is a form of torture!

I don't even remember Sandy's arrival or much about her being here.  It was all work and the time was a blur.  She would get up with me in the night to help me manage the nursing so Gordon could sleep.  When you nurse twins you have to manipulate their little bodies so each can "latch-on" either in a "football hold" or across your body or a combination of both.  Sandy called me Dairy Queen.....and I would moo!  You need either two sets of hands for burping or be on a couch where you can lay one off.  I thought about trying to change their schedules so they didn't need to nurse at the same time but that would mean I wouldn't even get a two hour break at night, plus I would have needed to separate their rooms.  With a lot of sensitivity Sandy was able to convince me that it would be okay to supplement the girls with a soy-based formula to give me a break and allow other people to help with feeding.  THANK GOD FOR SANDY.  We went to the store, picked out the formula and mixed it up.  It wasn't long before Natalie began to settle for longer periods.  She was finally getting enough food.  Alison wouldn't take a bottle and insisted on being nursed exclusively.  We did a little better during the day but they were still feeding just over every two hours and throughout the night.

When Sandy's week was coming to an end we realized that we would need continued help and a decision was made for all three girls and I to go back east with Sandy and stay with her and her husband, Doug, for a while.  I stayed just under one month and while Sandy worked from home Jillian and the girls and I continued our feeding and burping and changing but with visits from family and friends too.

In Virginia with Mom and the three girls, June 1991.

When I came home to California I brought my niece, Sandy's daughter, Lisa, home with me.  She would spend the next month with us - feeding, burping, washing, changing and playing with babies and Jillian.  Her help was indispensable and we all thoroughly enjoyed our time with Lisa.  I was beginning to get a few more breaks but still not sleeping through the night.  The girls were now eleven weeks old.  When Lisa's stay came to an end....another  was beginning and Gordon's Mum, Isa, was arriving for seven weeks!

That poor woman! Grammy Isa's shift was brutal!

One of the things I insisted on, but later changed my mind over, was cloth diapers!  Do you have any idea how many diapers two babies can go through?  The laundry felt insurmountable and endless.  Poor Isa spent her day at the laundry line hanging diapers and taking diapers down.  And cooking - we began making all the babies first "real" foods. And walking the girls in their BIG deluxe carriage!  And feeding and burping and changing and starting all over again the next day!

Isa looking fresh...........and tired!


Isa's seven weeks here were draining on her too.  Having two infants and a child under three requires constant effort and although Gordon, Isa and I were even odds against the three girls.....they still won.  They had youth on their side - and a good nights sleep.  We did manage to laugh a lot though.  It was that hysterical "what am I laughing at" kind of laughter that you might expect from a  mentally disturbed person.  It was a funny farm here for sure and there were three inmates!

Of everyone in the house, Jillian seemed to fair the best.  She has always been a very content person, enjoying her alone time.  I attribute that to her wonderful, vivid imagination.  She played for hours by herself with her little ponies and horses and corrals and fences.  She was in her own wonderland and seemed happy to be left alone.  I did wonder if the shift in focus from her to the babies affected her in any adverse way but there wasn't anything I could really do about it.  It seemed as though every moment I tried to spend with her was disturbed by a need from one of the twins.

Our attempts at a normal life, like going out for a bite to eat ended up with screaming babies and leaving early.  When I tried to take them all out to the movies there was a poopy accident and I had to get up and leave.  Twice I tried to manage a trip to the mall and while every one went out shopping, I was left in the ladies room at Nordstrom nursing fussing babies!  At least there was such a room I guess!

And still I hadn't had a full four hours of sleep.  Just one R.E.M. cycle was all I was after.

When Isa left I was determined to get that sleep cycle.  The day Gordon took her to the airport I was in dismantling the guest room and making it into our third daughters' room so I could separate the twins.  That night each girl was tucked safely in their own rooms. At 10:00p.m Gordon and I executed our new plan.  The plan was to pick up the twins from sleep at 10:00p.m. and give them one final feeding.  In we went, Gordon with a bottle to feed Natalie and I nursed Alison until they were full to STUFFED.

It worked!  After five months they slept. They slept soundly throughout the night from that point on.......And finally so did I.

We had found our new normal.

Of course this whole blog sounds like a terrible negative adventure.  I'm sure after reading this that not one of our daughters will want children but I promise once I had four hours of straight sleep things changed.  Anything was possible and the noises in my head were all sweet dreams. We were filled up with love and contentment that pulsed throughout our household and into our garden and filled our world.  We were having fun!  The happiness that came from those little-bitty babies and our now four year old was quite remarkable.  It still is.

Alison, Jillian and Natalie late summer 1991.