Family Status: All seven children with chicken pox. One husband making minute steps toward recovery which we hope will be three to six months from now. The older girls have the pox in their eyes and we have learned a lot about chicken pox in the eye from a skilled opthamologist. The eye has a mind of its own and the disease progresses and heals at a much slower rate than the rest of the body. Today we came down with the suspicion that although I am mostly recovered from the pox, that it has also gone into my eyes. Now, before everyone sends me emails about being scrupulous about hand washing and laundering, please let me mention that the tops of my hands are raw from handwashing, and that my washing machine has been going constantly since New Year’s Week when illness first visited our home. Pox is both airborn and skin to skin contact. I just am not keeping up with all the teeny germs.
My little caboose (at the very new age of six years old since she just had her birthday) is the most recovered and is giving her siblings plenty of advice. We have had a polka dot competition and so far the tally is … Karen 400 plus, Kathy 500 plus and the most ill, Matthew zero as he just came down with it today, Emily 300 and rising, Annie 6 since she is new to the game and in waiting, Abigail 300 and rising by morning to a suspected 400, and Kimberly 200. Kathy had the high so far, but I had the low … 40. I believe this was God’s mercy on me that an adult case would be moderate enough for me to stay on my feet for the most part.
So, the January classroom … lots of math. How many dots were sent to our house altogether? What is the ratio of adult spots to children spots? Can we make a bar graph of spots delegated to each family member? History. Do you know that chicken pox is an ancient disease and was prevalent in Rome? Don’t forget foreign language. Varicella is Latin for chicken pox. As for science, medically the disease was suspected but not proven to be connected to shingles until the 1900s because no lab animal can be given the virus. Only humans can get it. (Boy, have our pets been glad.) So what they did was take the shingles virus and inject it into human children to see what would happen. Yep. They came down with CP. CP is our abbreviation for the disease, hence, English spelling. CP also stands for descriptions of the disease. Crummy prickles or creepy porcupine. And shingles has nothing to do with our roof, but is the French word for belt, since most shingles cases go halfway around the abdomen in an area similar to a wide belt.
This CP disease is worse than what I had thought. Over the years mothers have said to me rather lightly, “Oh, my child had the pox and it was not so bad.” Maybe I see it not as lightly since I have seven children that are going through the disease in a 17 day period as of tonight. (Yes, it is 2:00 am and I’m up with a little person who can no longer sleep through the headache and itch.) The first part of the illness, as in high fever-headache-neck ache-altered perception seems to be just as bad as the second phase of continued fever and itchy rash that I’ve learned is more than a topical thing. It is actually the nervous system going haywire. Kinda like putting one’s finger in an electrical socket for a couple of days. Or pins and needles on the scalp. Well, enough of description. It’s worse than I thought.
The January Classroom has taught me much prayer for ample financial resources to cover the illness, for patience and energy for one very sleepy mother, and for insight into how to comfort the sick. I am grateful to the Lord that our second frig, now 23 years old, that quit the other day is back on. With all the nutritional juicing needed for James it is needed for all those extra fruits and veggies. I can not say that the toaster oven is doing too well but I’m praying about it too.
Amazingly enough, throughout five weeks of illness where things have gone a bit topsy-turvy, each child independently completed a full unit in math and read a rather large stack of library books in addition to computer projects and music. Crocheting, beading, robotics, weaving, and spinning have been tucked into little spaces of time. Somehow I have done all the laundry and meals and have accomplished 30 minutes organizational projects all over the house. Organizing is rather therapeutic to me when everything is going haywire. That kind of therapy has been interrupted however by two bouts of labyrinthritis. The vertigo has halted me in my tracks too frequently where being organized anywhere is a total joke. I’d just be thankful if my perception of the floor would organize itself into one stable and solid surface.
I think I’ll sign off now at 5:00 a.m. The bathtub has been drained and cleaned from an oatmeal bath, an unhappy son wrapped in many blankets to warm the chills of fever, Emily is tucked into a recliner with a frozen smoothie for her pox throat, and Abigail is calling from the sofa if Mommy could watch a DVD with her. This illness has been further practical proof to me that mothers belong at home taking care of their families. It takes time and attention to the home in order to nurse a family.
I look forward to the sunrise when His faithfulness is new every morning. And, I look forward to sleeping in my bed some night. I’ve missed it over the past five weeks but do not think that I will visit it anytime soon. James needs a quiet, very warm, and undisturbed room. Post herpetic neuralgia is a highly painful condition and he sleeps little each night. We are hopeful that he can get enough rest to continue working several jobs.
We are popping the “Winged Migration” DVD in. It is a beautiful documentary with no words, only music, about birds all over the world. The sights of God’s creation all over the world, the beautiful music, and the variety of bird sounds make it a pleasant and soothing film.














