The Chit Chat Chit Chat Thread

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
I told a friend about my irregular heart rate during my surgery. She told my grandson's girlfriend that I had "Heart Disease". Poor girl spent all day today worrying about me. Cheyenne is my grandson's girlfriend, and she is a real sweetheart. She has lost both of her two grandmothers recently, and now calls me "grandma". I told her what happened to me during surgery, and she now understands. I assured her that I am going to be checking with my regular doctor in the very near future about this event. I'm pretty sure I eased her mind. It's funny how some people jump to the absolute worst conclusions from the mention of a problem. Not funny at all when they pass along that false info to another person.
Oh my...It's like a really bad game of "telephone" where you whisper something to one person, and they have to whisper it to another, and so on, until the last person says it out loud and everyone laughs at how far it was from the original message. I'm guessing no one is laughing about this one!!! At least you got it straightened out.
 

Figgy1

Well-Known Member
Yea! I like Mrs. Ferret, and you both have the right idea. I'm in! Look--neighboring homes--we could be besties!

kakslauttanen-arctic-resort-kelo-glass-igloo_3.jpg
upload_2017-10-26_5-41-50.jpegNo snow in sight:D
 

Figgy1

Well-Known Member
My goodness, you're already setting plans for Christmas dinner?! I haven't even figured out yet where we're going for Thanksgiving dinner. Just been so busy at work that I'm drained. Although, I did call one restaurant but they had a ridiculous fee ($100) they'd charge you, if you didn't cancel 6 days ahead. Heck, anyone could get unexpectedly ill, etc., and I flat out refused to agree to those terms. Then I tried another restaurant, but they were already booked solid. At this rate, we may end up at McDonalds for turkey nuggets. . . :rolleyes:
and that is why we already have our plans in place:p
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
Oy. Out of all the ER trips we never had to have the kids have surgery. Stitches, butteries, casts you name it.

Over the course of 15 years (my kids being 5 years apart) I was labelled as a frequent flier with my kids in the ER Rooms. To the point that I alternated between 2 hospitals. I actually took accident reports with me because all but one time the injuries happens while in school, sports or daycare.

Only once was it my fault and in my care. Somewhat. My DD a toddler. I let the Pup in, closed the kitchen door and dead bolted it. Turned around to see my DD with her silently screaming (non verbal kid) She poked out from the other room adjacent to the kitchen and stuck her fingers into the hinge portion of the door while open. Who the heck knows why? Face red as a tomato. I unbolted the door and her fingers were flat as she pulled them out. Tight fitting Oak Door, 60 year olds and then watch her fingers pop round again. Neighbor took ManChild, me off to the ER room. Nurse taking basic info. Me: 'I did it. 'I slammed her fingers in door jam.....blah blah blah'...between sobs. That time they didn't question the incident, I guess my sobbing confession laid it out pretty clearly. Every other medical issue I dealt with I was calm and collective. When I dead-bolted her fingers-just a mess.

Memories that stick.
Aw....poor mom. Probably harder on you than on her because you still beat yourself up over it. DS has always cried at the drop of a hat and he has this way of screaming bloody murder that you think he's dying when it might just be a papercut. So one time, he was playing and there was a piece of paper that had fallen out of the bookcase onto the floor. DS was running around and slid on that piece of paper, foot into the side of the bookcase. I figured he just stubbed his toe, I couldn't see it because there was a couch between us blocking my view. He's on the floor screaming and we always tried to remain calm and distract him because he got himself so worked up over little things and our experience told us it was never as bad as he was carrying on. So I calmly told him to come let me look at it, and he wouldn't move. So I went over and picked him up...you couldn't see anything. The whole day, he crawled everywhere..he was 4. He wouldn't walk. We had a party to go to that night for DD's Godmother's birthday. So we pack the kids up, we were staying at my in-laws' for the night and they'd watch the kids while we went to the party. We're at Oma and Opa's and he's still just fussing up a storm, so we take him to the on-call doctor and she looks and says she really can't tell...his toe MIGHT be fractured, but she's not positive. She gave us a referral for an x-ray, but told us if he wasn't fussing not to worry about it...if he got worse, we had the paper so they'd get him in. We go to the party and get a call just before midnight...DS can't sleep, we need to take him to the ER and get an xray. We got stopped by police for a routine alcohol test, being a weekend night, but my MIL was driving, and she explained the situation and they made her do a quick breathalyzer and let us go. We get to the ER, do an xray, and sure enough, it's broken. I felt SOOOOO bad. I had ignored it thinking he was just exaggerating as usual, and we had all been trying to get him to walk instead of crawl.
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
My goodness, you're already setting plans for Christmas dinner?! I haven't even figured out yet where we're going for Thanksgiving dinner. Just been so busy at work that I'm drained. Although, I did call one restaurant but they had a ridiculous fee ($100) they'd charge you, if you didn't cancel 6 days ahead. Heck, anyone could get unexpectedly ill, etc., and I flat out refused to agree to those terms. Then I tried another restaurant, but they were already booked solid. At this rate, we may end up at McDonalds for turkey nuggets. . . :rolleyes:
Is this where @figmentfan423 jumps in and reminds you about this new invention called an oven that lets you cook the food you want yourself so you don't have to pay ridiculous fees or eat food barely suitable for human consumption?
 

Songbird76

Well-Known Member
JHMO but i think having him with kids closer to his own age may be better for him. My ds was in a group with several levels of academic ability and they each got their own academic work as the years progressed geared to their needs and abilities. From what you're describing that program works the same way so relax until Monday but take a list of all your questions just to be certain. Prayers and pixie dust
Well, they are the professionals...I'm sure they know what they are doing, and a lot of the problems HAVE been caused by his being so much younger than his classmates, but being cognitively more advanced...they don't understand him, and even teachers have a hard time reconciling the two parts of him...the part that breezes through the difficult school work vs. the part that cries because his pen is out of ink. It's hard...and I know this IS the best place for him because they understand those differences and have the training to help him. It just doesn't seem fair to make him redo stuff he's already done and done well because of his chronological age. I want to make sure that's not what will happen.
 

MySmallWorldof4

Well-Known Member
Hard Frost Warning. Too early for Hard Frosts.

Florida anyone?
Expecting frost here for tomorrow morning. Ugh!:banghead:
Oy. Out of all the ER trips we never had to have the kids have surgery. Stitches, butteries, casts you name it.

Over the course of 15 years (my kids being 5 years apart) I was labelled as a frequent flier with my kids in the ER Rooms. To the point that I alternated between 2 hospitals. I actually took accident reports with me because all but one time the injuries happens while in school, sports or daycare.

Only once was it my fault and in my care. Somewhat. My DD a toddler. I let the Pup in, closed the kitchen door and dead bolted it. Turned around to see my DD with her silently screaming (non verbal kid) She poked out from the other room adjacent to the kitchen and stuck her fingers into the hinge portion of the door while open. Who the heck knows why? Face red as a tomato. I unbolted the door and her fingers were flat as she pulled them out. Tight fitting Oak Door, 60 year olds and then watch her fingers pop round again. Neighbor took ManChild, me off to the ER room. Nurse taking basic info. Me: 'I did it. 'I slammed her fingers in door jam.....blah blah blah'...between sobs. That time they didn't question the incident, I guess my sobbing confession laid it out pretty clearly. Every other medical issue I dealt with I was calm and collective. When I dead-bolted her fingers-just a mess.

Memories that stick.
Our kids learned early about fingers in the door hinge area. Dh and I would always yell at them about fingers and doors don't make good friends. We still had accidents, not like your dd's though. I think each kid had a finger and door run in. :(
 

MySmallWorldof4

Well-Known Member
Well, DH called someone else. It's all VERY confusing to me. I guess there's a chain....the old school notifies the district that they can no longer handle a situation. The district either signs off on the child going to a different school, or looks for another school under their jurisdiction that CAN handle it. If they find one under their jurisdiction, they won't sign off on moving said child to another type of school. You have regular school, special circumstances, and cluster 4, which is basically special education. The school we are moving him to is a cluster 4. So because the district found another school under their jurisdiction who said they thought they could handle it, the district wouldn't sign off for a cluster 4 school. We bypassed that by enrolling him in the cluster 4 school ourselves and then the cluster 4 school asks for all the information to give to an admittance committee that reviews it and decides if they agree that school is the right place for him. If they had said no, we'd have had to look at other options. But they said yes, they agree...so then THEY pass it on to a board and if everybody says "yes, that's fine" then he can go to the school. We're waiting for that board. BUT, the gal said the district changed their mind and said no, they couldn't offer him a suitable place, AND we enrolled him ourselves, so they got TWO applications for him, PLUS they gave him urgency because of certain circumstances. She said it's never happened before that the board has said no if the committee has approved the application and recommended admittance. So the chance that he would be the first ever "no" is slim to none, AND she said we don't have to wait for that answer for him to start, because the answer will be yes anyway. So we have an appointment Monday with the school to do a sort of intake and so he can see the school, and with any luck, he can start the next day.
The only thing we are worried about now is that because of his age, they want to put him back a year so he's with kids his own age and stage of development. Because of his birthday, he finished kindergarten a year sooner than most kids, so he went to 1st grade when he was 5. He's been in 5th grade this year and he's 9. Which would mean he'd only be 11 when he goes to jr. high. BUT, he's in all the advanced groups for math, reading, language. He's working at a 6th or 7th grade level, though chronologically, his age is 4th grade. The old school purposely didn't let him skip a grade because of his age, even though he's capable of doing the work. So the new school wants to put him in a group based on his age, and they said that even the 5th graders aren't doing 5th grade level because most of the kids just aren't cognitively that strong, so they are giving him advanced work anyway, and it doesn't matter whether he does that work in a classroom with kids his own age or a year or 2 older. Which is true...if he's not doing the same work as they are, then it doesn't matter so much where he does it, and it WOULD be nice for him to be with kids his own age for a change, instead of a bunch of kids 2 years older than him, since at his old school, half the kids in his class had been held back a year. BUT, where do they go from there? If he finishes the elementary curriculum, do they make him pick his nose for a year or two until he's jr. high aged? Do they give him jr. high level material a year or two early at the elementary school? And if they do that, what happens when he gets to jr. high and has already done that material? And if they DON'T, do they skip him over to the jr. high when he's a year or 2 younger than most of the kids? I get the impression this doesn't happen a lot and it's going to be a tricky thing to navigate what is best for HIM, because it's not the standard situation where the kid is working below grade level and just fits right into the class as is. I guess we have a lot of questions for Monday.
Complicated business that shouldn't be complicated. Good luck and hope everything will work out in ds's favor.
They way I read it, you leave your door unlocked for them...what's to stop ANYONE from coming in and helping themselves to all your treats in the kitchen?
I think that you are supposed to have some sort of electronic lock on your door that works with Alexa or something. The delivery person gets notified that they can enter and the lock opens for them. I still think it is a bad idea. I would never agree to something like that. Way too intrusive for my taste and things are intrusive enough. I hate when I get a notification from gmail telling me I have an appointment. It is all just overly creepy with what these information systems know. That is part of the reason I won't do Facebook. Won't buy an Alexa or any of those things either. I can turn on my own lights and tv thank you very much.
 

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