Graduation Day

Five years ago, I embarked on a new adventure. 

For more than a decade I had worked as a radiologic technologist, and although it was a fulfilling career in many ways, there was a missing element in my life I couldn’t pin down. Everything changed one fateful day as I walked into work. 

It was April. A cold snap the night before had created a thin invisible layer of ice on the parking lot surface. It only took a few steps before I slipped and broke my ankle. The next six weeks were filled with bed rest and lots of time to think. 

I had always wanted to write a children’s book, and there seemed like no better time to do it—until I opened my computer and started typing. I had no experience with writing stories and felt largely inadequate to the task—even for a children’s book. 

In storytelling, a character’s journey is started off by an inciting incident and this was mine. 

My story continued as I walked onto Weber State University’s campus once more. I graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Advanced Radiology eight years prior. This time I was working toward a Bachelor of Arts in English and Creative Writing. My oldest niece started college the same day. It was not only fun and exciting to see her smiling face on campus, but also a reminder of my “years of experience” since my first days on the same campus.

The next two years were filled with the typical highs and lows of learning and academia. When graduation day came, a sense of accomplishment overwhelmed me as I walked across the stage. What I didn’t expect was the dark unknown chasm of what to do next. How was I going to use my new degree to make a career change? What would that even look like? 

As I looked back over my new education, I saw a huge gap in my instruction—fiction writing. The one thing I went back to school to study I never had the chance to learn. Before graduation I had considered graduate school and looked into several school’s programs, but none felt right. 

The summer after graduation radiated sunlight everywhere but my direction in life. Out of desperation, I googled online graduate programs in English. I didn’t even know if one existed but was pleasantly surprised to find several. In the end, I decided to apply to the first school I found and researched and started their Master of Arts in creative writing program that fall. 

During my first term, the school announced they were creating a fully online Master of Fine Arts degree in creative writing, and I was all ears. The idea of holding a terminal degree that I could teach with at a university intrigued me as well as the opportunity to learn fiction writing and write a novel as a thesis—all things that made for a promising career change. I applied and happily made the program change. The next two years of graduate school looked encouraging and exciting.

Queue life altering complications.

Not all complications are unpleasant, but they usually entail some shifting and adjustment. The crazy life changes that ensued next are worthy of their own story at another time but suffice it to say I had a lot to handle with a cross country move and two pregnancies all while finishing my degree and writing a novel. 

The start of the year 2020 beamed brightly. Significant events structured my goals for the new year—I would finish my last term of school in March, have a baby right after, attend graduation, and pursue all my goals of publication and teaching with intention for the rest of the year. 

Thankfully, the first two major events went off without a hitch, but as I witnessed graduation weekend pass by like any other spring weekend my heart longed for the resolution commencement promises. Why does graduation day mean so much to me? How was I to move forward and still feel the same grand feelings of accomplishment? 

I’ve come to realize that graduation day doesn’t signify the end but merely a mile marker along the road of life. Nothing in life stands still. We simply come to the other side of our complications and milestones and have the opportunity to enjoy the greener grass while we gear up for our next step on the journey through life. 

So here I stand. In the greener grass of a master’s degree. Looking back over all the hills and valleys of graduate school. And forward to the bright unknown future that lies ahead. 

Cheers! 

How to Deal with The Burps, Spit Ups, and Wet Rags of Baby Reflux

You come home from the hospital with a perfect, sweet baby but soon realize that sweet baby comes with a fountain of spit up called gastroesophageal reflux disease. Then you might ask yourself, now what? 

 FIRST, remember to consult with your child’s physician, because this is not medical advice just one experienced mama feeling empathetic for all those other reflux parents out there.

 SECOND, remember the basics:

·      Burp baby half way through feeding and at the end

·      Feed baby smaller amounts more often

·      Thicken bottle with cereal (with doctor’s approval)

·      Keep baby upright for 30-45 minutes after feeding

·      Consider elevating crib or basinet slightly (before baby can roll)

 3 MORE TIPS TO HELP DEAL WITH REFLUX INCLUDE:

 1.     Have enough burp rags and blankets

You can never have too many rags ready at hand. Consider sewing your own if you’re handy with a sewing machine. If not, the investment will be well worth it.

2.     Don’t place baby anywhere you’re not okay with spit up

This might seem obvious but once baby starts to roll and move around more he might not stay on the blanket you put him down on.

3.     Use cloth diapers as burp rags

Cloth diapers are meant to be absorbent avoiding the wet rags so prevalent with baby reflux.  

 LASTLY, just remember that this stage will end eventually so have faith and patience along the ride. WebMD states that most babies outgrow reflux by the age of one1. One year seems like an eternity while in the mix of baby reflux, but time does go fast. Use burst mode on your camera to catch those spit up moments—they will keep you laughing through this stage.

 

1. “Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD) in Infants or Children.” WebMDhttps://www.webmd.com/parenting/baby/infants-children#1

a dandy life

A dandelion starts as a small seed. First sprouting green and then growing into a bright yellow flower. As it matures, the yellow flower changes into a spherical globe of fluff, which is the end and the beginning. Those tiny seeds will catch the slightest of breezes and be carried off to new ground to start its journey of growth again.

Life is much like that of a dandelion—requiring growth, change, and the ability to pick ourselves up and start again. I can say that I’ve had my fair share of opportunities for growth and change and have been required to exercise grit to pick myself up again and again—just like most of you. I know I’m not alone in this crazy process, even though it often feels like I am. Each time I have been picked up by the wind and placed in new ground, it is an uncomfortable journey but, in the end, I have seen myself grow, bloom, and strengthen.

A dandy life filled with amazing journeys of transformation and evolution.