Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Processor is Down

I began with the intention of adding multiple pictures I have of exhausted or stunned-looking fellow med students who have been finishing med school this past month and who will be graduating on Monday. Okay, I'll still add a few.
Surprised, stunned, and mesmerized.
The past month of classes - "Capstone," it's called - has flown by. Capstone did a great job of revealing the some of the great mysteries of residency. We learned how to do a great sign-out, how to teach med students effectively, how to institute some ways to care for ourselves (24 hour gym and autopay were biggest suggestions) during residency. We learned how to declare death, to do a skillful and kind death disclosure, and how to find the lab.

Most lessons of residency cannot be taught ahead of experience...which explains the necessity of residency. I am excited, but also terrified.
A bunch of people I love all in a row
I am thankful that my curriculum includes this practical segment. The simple act of consideration of residency in adequate detail makes it more real. My informal survey of classmates sampled mostly people who are proud to be finished with this phase, but very cognizant of the new challenges inherent in the stage that awaits.
Beautiful in spite of themselves.
Most people are moving very far away. Many, like the two women above, are getting married in the next month - in addition to graduating. Over four years, these people have become my colleagues and my best friends. I will miss them more than I can currently consider (without crying) when they disperse.
These amazing women and men have been friends not just to me but also to my children...and those are the best kinds of friends. My kids have made them their playmates, their jungle gyms, and their role models. My friends have graciously poured out love and affection on my kids. So many hugs, so many games of chase, so many dinners, so many genuine inquiries of, "How are YOU doing?"
Waves of sadness - I will miss this immensely.
I will absolutely be at our med school reunions, hugging and crying. 

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Things we all made

Drawn by Richie, painted in oil by Mug...so pleasing (it's Mug and Hannah's house).

KidV on her way out the back door of Hannah and Mug's

KidM jumping the bulb hedge for the zillionth time. She "Had energies."

Five kids and three adults managed to get this many boxes white in 1.5 hours. These will be buildings for KidV's class's Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs float.

All the airplanes Grandpa made for us on one neat mobile. You can take them off and fly them.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Lately


Cindy applying makeup - so pretty.

Campsite at the Cartoogechaye

Determined sisters meet chilly April snowmelt

Mug, R, Hannah. Discussing lyrics.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Little pictures

Gap tooth gum chewer. This is a new shirt for KidV. The girls got into the summer box one day when I was still on surgery, so I couldn't micromanage the outpouring or use of new-to-us summer clothes. They've integrated the items into their wardrobe fabulously - and with no help from R or me. The girls wear the same size so they divided the clothing according to complementariness with their skin tones. Nice job, girls!

About to chew gum. Gum is a big deal around our house. It's like cigarettes in prison: currency. Our kids get paid in gum and sometimes I get into their gum stash and have to pay them back double.

Best Baby Doll Ever: "Elisia." KidM had another version of Elisia when when she was under two, but she left that Baby Doll at a hotel. Its name was just Baby Doll. She cried so much that we called Grandma and asked her to send another Baby Doll, and that's how we got Elisia. KidM says she loves how Elisia is always looking to the left - so alert.

Fun times with friends...so fun! The five kids in this photo were cracking each other up at the dinner table the moment before I took this. My friend (the other mom) and I just relaxed into a moment of mutual joy to see them have so much giggly fun.

Teacher appreciation week has come and gone. Here are three mixed kid-collected / parent-purchased flower arrangements for our class's three staff members. They turned out pretty!

Friday, March 29, 2013

A Day in March at South Fork

Investigating

Found a giant Y

It's even more impressive in real life.

I fell in.

We ran into old friends.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Happy late-winter

KidM's actually trying to look stunned for the camera - KidV's all CHEESE!

Match day dinner at Stormin' Burrito!!!!

KidM Planning something woodsy

A difficult hike - KidV was actually getting sick and we didn't know it.

Dressed up in lead outfit for Interventional Radiology...very heavy. Also very warm.

Friday, March 22, 2013

A few photos

Dismantling an old Punch Card Time Clock

KidV and a mysterious gypsy

At the South Fork

Happy Night with Lovebirds

Axial abdominal MRI with contrast.
Of note: KidM asked for a shoulder-length haircut. Never thought I'd see that one. R is working from home. KidV is so TALL. I am finishing my last week of surgical oncology sub-internship...think 15 hour days and lots of colon. Our family is staying HERE for my Emergency Medicine Residency (woohooooo!). That's all folks!

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Giant cupcake pirates


Two pirates and their giant cupcake. NB: clinging lemurs around the ankles

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Do pillbugs go toward different colors of light or do they choose the dark?

KidM in full "Ta-da!" mode with her science fair project just after finishing it the night before it was due. KidV is searching for signs of her involvement in running the experiments. She had been co-light-operator.

On the wall when we walked into the gym on science fair night

One of KidM's friends giving her a sweet congratulations hug

KidV positively overcome with excitement about one of the other projects

KidM got a crazy-nice gift! She loves it and is already making ample use of it.

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Lost in translation: Thrift store

On KidV: Rock star glam wig by Party Central and Linen flower dress by Bonnie Jean via Thrift Store
M and V using Nana's collection to get beautiful. On KidM: Violent Red lipstick and glitter-velour top. On KidV: the remains of Violent Red lipstick and vintage SSI-emblem top supplied by Patty C.
Our friend Jenn S after submitting to "The Salon." On Jenn: hairpiece by Gap via LJ Miller, hand-crafted origami pinwheels, wooden-bead bracelet supplied by Beth A, and hair accessories by Goody
A friend at KidM's birthday party in impromptu "Captain Bucket-Head" attire. On Jo-Jo: bucket supplied by Cousin Trisha
KidV and our awesome Liverpool/Johannesburg ex-neighbor. On KidV: Tie-dye from cousin Rachel and Madras shorts from Gymboree via Thrift Store. On Janice: Own Collection





The above is to demonstrate that we are All About Dressing Up. Any observation that The Gunns may possess or may be able to obtain a certain type of outfit is most likely correct.

What follows is a really old post from two years ago. Janice and Jenny have left our neighborhood, and we miss them immensely.

Yesterday, one of my neighbors knocked on the door we never use. Peeking through the slits of the blind, I spied a female figure but couldn't place her, so I asked Vivi: "Who's that?" "Mama, that's Janice and Jennifer's mom!" Janice and Jennifer's family moved into these apartments two months ago from Liverpool, UK. Before that, they had lived in South Africa. The father is Anglo, the mother originally from China. Janice and Jennifer are beautiful little girls who look half-Asian but speak in little Liverpool accents (or are they South African? My American ear doesn't know the difference). I swear, we live in the most culturally diverse American locale south of Brooklyn. But I digress.

I undid the chain and deadbolt and pried the sticky door open, then greeted J&J's mom, Jane. Three kids crowded around her - one was Janice. Jane began in heavily-accented English, not a Liverpool accent, but an Asian accent: "Do you have a...Sheep Suit?" I'm calculating. Did she really say Sheep Suit? If I start talking about a sheep suit, will this create more confusion? So I reflect the question:
"Do we have a SHEEP SUIT?"
"Yes. A SHEEP SUIT."
Okaaaayyyy. I jump to cultural inaccuracies, like, maybe they have a lot of sheep suits in Liverpool...or South Africa. Not likely. Maybe we are so materially extravagant in America that maybe it makes sense to a newcomer that we could have...lots of...suits? I DO actually have a lion suit, a leopard suit, a boys' suit even though I have no boy, a flower suit, a weed suit, and numerous movie star suits. Okay, the assumption that we could potentially have a sheep suit is a reasonable assumption.

"I'm sorry, we don't have a sheep suit." Just then it occurred to me that this may not be a Halloween endeavor but a school musical endeavor. Every year at our kids' school, each grade performs a musical. So I suggested: "Oh! Does Janice need to be a sheep for the school musical?" Janice instantly replied, with feeling, "November eighth!!!" Okay. So this poor mom who has just moved here is trying to muddle through the packet of instructions on how to build your kid's outfit with rest of us confused native moms. So I asked, "Are other kids in your class sheep, too?" I was banking on using their ideas. Janice told me that there were foxes, and frogs, and owls...etc. Usually it's a group effort that some creative and generous parent in the class organizes and batch-orders because usually everyone's the same thing. But apparently Janice is to be the only sheep.

So then Jane said, "Is there a store where I can buy a sheep suit?" Hmmm. Not so much. So I begin somewhere:
"You could try Party Central, but I'd look up the phone number on the internet and call before going there because it's a long shot. But we usually have lots of luck with the Thrift Store on North Decatur - Last Chance Thrift Store. Do you know which one I'm talking about?"
"Thrift Store?"
"Yes..." How to explain thrift stores. My Australian friend once drunkenly demanded I bring her a "serviette," and I had no idea what she was talking about. What's the Liverpool / South Africa equivalent of a thrift store?  All this cultural equivalence talk does not even begin to approach the fact that Last Chance Thrift Store is an extremely busy establishment that one must brace oneself to enter, and use all one's creativity to achieve a goal within. In fact, the best way to go to the thrift store is with nothing at all in mind, open to the possibilities of the universe. I give up and offer directions and encouragement instead:

"It's a great big thrift store about two miles that way [gesture East]. You can look for big white things there, even for furry things." To explain my reasoning on this point, I had recently heard an exuberant teenage Last Chance rummager roar, "YETI!" while clutching a faux fur to his torso. That incident had occurred the week prior, while I had been rummaging through the racks at Last Chance and using all my stamina and creativity to produce a "Weed" costume for KidM. Perhaps the Yeti-like item was still there? And sufficiently sheep-like?

For consolation, I added: "AND, there's a fabric store right next door if Last Chance doesn't have what you need." This is completely true, but one will pay quadruple at Hancock fabric store, even during their perpetual half-off sale.

Jane looked bewildered, but with fresh direction. Unfortunately, there is an amount of bewilderment we all must face in our own way when it comes to creating school musical costumes. The results can range from spectacular to what-is-that-kid-supposed-to-be. I privately hoped Jane had a knack for improvisation in the sheep suit department. Jane thanked me politely and departed with the three kids.

Addendum: We saw Janice in the school musical. She was unmistakeably sheep-like (not to be confused with sheepish), though the Yeti item had apparently not been available. Janice looked great, though. Wish we had a picture of THAT.

Friday, February 8, 2013

scroll down for hidden cat pic

KidM getting weighed before surgery

KidM in pre-op: happy

You can't see Cindy. She's not there. Also, you are a bird.

Creek crossing

Every once in a while, we have a DATE!