School Christmas Program |
Mount Rainier (August 2011) |
Olive's prematurity and medical complications, especially her feeding tube, used to be our daily existence, but they are now so far in our past that it seems like a different lifetime ago that we had a kid who was so fragile. We occasionally talk about it, but it's not something I even think about daily any more. You would truly never know where Olive started if you met her now without knowing her background. Six years old was a wonderful age. She is fascinated by natural disasters, inquisitive about all things unknown and obsessed with squishy toys. She will giggle to no end when she writes the word "butt" on anything and everything. This is definitely the sweet spot of childhood. Olive is easy and delightful and still thinks her parents are the coolest people in the world.
It has been almost three years since we undertook our tube wean, and I am happy to report that Olive is an amazing eater. She would prefer to subsist on chocolate and cheese, but she happily eats almost anything we are serving. She eats most of her lunch at school and is getting close to being brave enough to try hot lunch. Over the past year she has finally figured out her own hunger cues, and we no longer have to monitor her intake at all, which is the greatest blessing. She's still small (weighing in at less than the first percentile) and may be in a booster seat when we roll up to junior high, but she's perfectly proportional and following her own little curve. She is healthy and happy, and apart from her NICU follow-up research study, we no longer need to schedule appointments with any sort of specialist or therapist.
First Grade Photo |
While she doesn't seem to notice, academics continue to be a struggle for her. We've resigned ourselves to the fact that they always will be, and we're prepared for the long haul ahead of us with extra patience, lots of work at home and summer tutoring. She's a fantastic speller, but reading and math are tough. Her attention span is short at school, but she's the most creative little person. She can spend hours creating superhero suits and art installations in her room. She has needed some accommodations, especially for testing, and she'll probably face an ADD/ADHD evaluation at some point. She's statistically more likely to have every sort of learning disability based on her early start in life, but as with all of the challenges of life, we'll take it as it comes.
Today is her seventh birthday, and it brings up a lot of big emotions. It's thirty degrees below zero in Minnesota today, and school is closed. She wasn't supposed to be born during the middle of the winter. I was due in April. I didn't get to meet her on the day she was born. I was in intensive care myself, and it took a few hours for the nurses to wheel me over to see her in my hospital bed, pushing the clock to January 31. Dain, and my mom and my best friend (who happened to be in the hallway at the right time) all got to see her before I did. As I tell Olive often, life isn't fair. But that doesn't mean it isn't incredible. We are the incredibly lucky ones that have this girl in our lives. Happiest of birthdays to our sweet, sweet seven-year-old.
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