And everything is fine. Every day that passes I grow easier with the Bug's condition. Don't get me wrong, some days are harder than others, some days I want to do nothing more than cry all day and go to bed early, hoping the next day I will wake up and somehow it is all some sort of dream and everything is okay in the sense that it is normal. Instead, I wake up and feel that everything IS okay and everything IS normal. It is our normal.
We fall into routines we don't even think about, a bib coming on means it is meal time, a washcloth in her hands means it is bath time, hands on the side means it is time to be picked up. It has begun to change the way I myself look at the world. I have become aware of things I would have never thought about before. The sounds of the motor on the refrigerator kicking on when the door is open, the different sounds the knobs for hot and cold water make, the cool temperature of silverware when pulled freshly from the door versus how it changes after it has been used over the course of a meal. Maybe, just maybe, we as people with full vision are the ones who are missing out on what the world has to offer.
Things aren't just okay. Things are fucking fantastic.
You are such a strong momma. Bug has such a bright future because of the hard work you do for her! I know she will be just as fantastic as her mother.
ReplyDelete~Jessa
Adena, you are an example for me and I love you very much! Mom
ReplyDeleteHello,
ReplyDeleteI became father on march, my son has bilateral MGDA.
I would like to share with you my experience and know more about yours.
Please contact me at melograno85(at)yahoo(dot).it