Greg brought a cold home from Milwaukee and gave it to me (isn’t he sweet?) and it’s taking me awhile to get over it. I didn’t leave the (very hot) apartment all day yesterday, choosing instead to lie around in my lightest cotton nightgown and finish Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell (which was excellent, if very very long and very very dense - but it really picked up in the last 200 pages). Today I feel very tired despite a decent night’s sleep but that could just be the heat. Which is back. It’s going to be 92 today, 88 tomorrow, and 87 on Wednesday, and then Thursday we get the heck out of this sweatbox and journey to the glory of the air-conditioned Doubletree International Plaza hotel for Toronto Trek. I am working as a guest liaison (like a personal assistant for the weekend) to an actor from Stargate: SG-1, a show I have never seen, and Greg is doing…well, we don’t yet know what Greg is doing. Going into Toronto for the day at least once, that’s for sure.
We are winding down our time here. Saturday we saw The Fantastic Four and it didn’t suck. It wasn’t amazing, but it was fun and because it’s all big and explode-y it was worth seeing it on the big screen. We’ve been eating most of our meals at home because we have food left over and don’t want to waste it. We did go out for decent pizza once, and Friday night after we tooled around the Jazz Festival for awhile (where we saw no actual jazz, but some very good African music) we had superb cake at Kilo (seven-layer chocolate cake for Greg; chocolate cake with Skor mousse for me), but mostly we’ve eaten at home. Tonight, though, is the closing dinner for the program here, so we’re going out to an Italian restaurant. Tomorrow I think we’re going out to the botanical gardens and the Biodome, and then Wednesday we are packing. Packing! Whee! Soon I will sleep in a bed that will be long enough so my feet don’t hang off the end! My hatred of this apartment knows no bounds.
(Sue, is the luau Saturday the 23rd as I had heard rumored? If so, we’ll be back in time!)
I am sad to be missing Harry Potter release day at the bookstore. Very sad. We are having a midnight party! Look - here’s the proof! I have a special Harry Potter tshirt and everything, but it is probably sitting in its delivery envelope on my dining room table at home and I won’t even be able to wear it on release day. Sad. I cannot wait to go back to work. I miss my job.
It has been nice spending all this time reading adult books, though. I have to read so much for work that it’s hard to find time to read books that aren’t children’s books or young adult. I can’t believe I finally finished Jonathan Strange. I also read the absolutely superb The Wonder Spot, by Melissa Bank. It’s a set of interconnected short stories about a woman named Sophie who’s looking for life and love and love of life. The amazon.com reviewers didn’t seem to like it much but I loved it; I read the whole thing late last night and first thing this morning. I also read Sheila O’Flanagan’s Too Good To Be True last night, which was decent British chick-fic.
The last book I read yesterday (I told you I didn’t leave the apartment!) was Coming To Term: Uncovering the Truth About Miscarriage, which I read quickly so Greg can read it before we begin trying again. Most of you know we lost one pregnancy last April; many of you probably do not know that we lost another this April as well (April sucks). We are trying once more with my ob before she sends us to a specialist; we have no idea why I can get pregnant but not stay pregnant. She has run many many tests on me and everything has come back fine, so so far there is no underlying medical problem. According to the book, which was very carefully researched by a man whose wife had four miscarriages in between successful pregnancies, most miscarriages happen because the cells are chromosomally abnormal; if this is the case with us then it is a very good thing that I lost them both. However, we do not know if this is the case. We do not know what the case is, and we may never.
I’m putting this here because we do not talk about these things, “we” meaning the world, and as a result when it happens to people like me, well, people like me are shocked. Shocked, because nobody tells you that at least fifty percent of all pregnancies end in miscarriage (and the percentage is probably higher, because often you never even know you were pregnant) and if you’ve had one, the odds that you will have another are very high. Shocked because you never hear anyone else had one until you have one yourself, and then all of a sudden everyone has had one. We stay very quiet about this subject. I know that the grief of others is hard to deal with and this grief is especially hard, because there’s no person to grieve for, there is just the idea of what you thought your life would be like by now - but it still needs to be talked about. I have made a point of telling the statistics to my female friends (97% of whom were stunned) so that if it happens to them, they will be shocked - but not because they didn’t know.
Anyway. Greg and I are fine; the first was much, much harder because we didn’t know and because we stupidly scheduled the first ultrasound on my birthday and that’s where we found out. The second one we’d only known about for 12 days when I lost it. Now we just want to move forward, whether with a baby or to a specialist, and we’re hoping for better news as we move into this new round of trying. As I said before, many of you knew about this already, but it’s on my mind because of the book and because we’re cleared to start trying again. Wish us luck, okay? Just - please don’t say “just relax” or “it’ll happen” or anything like that, because we are as relaxed as we can be (which doesn’t make a difference anyway) and it might not happen, and we are prepared for that. Just think good thoughts and send us some hope and we will, as always, keep you posted.
Okay! That was longer than I intended. Lunchtime.