Happy Halloween
October 30, 2009 at 10:58 pm | Posted in Halloween | 2 CommentsThanks for this post goes to Creative-Type Dad. Thanks for putting me to work for three hours carving pumpkins. Actually, Creative-Type Dad provided the stencils for these jack-o-lanterns. Clare and I couldn’t agree on which one to carve, so we (read I) carved two. The Evil Queen wasn’t so hard, but Linus has some real tricky cuts in the face and hair. And I totally botched his hands.
Happy Halloween, everyone!




A Walk in the Woods
October 28, 2009 at 9:27 am | Posted in Autumn, Blogging, Nature, Weekends | 4 Comments“The rumors of my death have been greatly exaggerated.”
- Mark Twain
- Clare’s Dad
- commercial-free blogging
Can I even call myself a blogger anymore? Is there some authoritative panel that gets to determine that? Maybe the FTC? Or maybe the Blogher bosses (even though they refused to list dad blogs when I first asked four years ago)? Or maybe I should just ask Whit? He seems to be connected with every blog on the internet.
It is kind of shameful that I’m barely getting one original post up each month. In the past year or so, I’ve made some excuses about why I’m not blogging much anymore. More work. Too busy. Clare’s older and should have more privacy. But I think that Dan over at All That Comes With It may have hit on an even greater reason this week. In Blogging for Fun and Profit, Dan laments that blogging—and mom and dad blogs in particular—have become too commercial. I’ve noticed the ads and reviews too, of course. (I’m actually in favor of the FTC regulations.) I’ve been paid for links and have done reviews for free products too, but not within the last year (not that anyone has even offered in the past six months). And I’ve listed this blog on promotional websites and social networks for like-minded parent bloggers to connect. Somehow though, I didn’t realized where that was headed. Somewhere between the first blog promotions and today, blogging became less about connecting with other bloggers and more about “what can blogging do for me?”
Dan pointed out that four years ago I was able to include just about every dad blogger on my blogroll. After a year or so, it became impossible to keep up. I even deleted dad bloggers who no longer write or who have never commented or linked to me. With the explosion of bloggers, there are so many more who seem focused only on increasing the number of hits they get and trying to make a buck or just get attention. I miss the days when blogging was more about reaching out than trying to hook people in.
Don’t get me wrong. Some of the dad blogs I still follow have become more commercial. I have nothing against advertising or product reviews, but I don’t follow these bloggers because of that. If anything, I follow them despite that. I honestly respect the bloggers who have found a balance between personal writing and blog promotions. (I’d be surprised if many of them spend much time promoting their family blogs at all.) To those of you who do work hard to promote your family blogs, I have to ask: why are you blogging?
It’s a rhetorical question. You don’t have to tell me why you’re blogging. I’ve told you a few times though: I’m blogging as a record for Clare to highlight some things we’ve done, some things we’ve said, and what her world is like as she’s growing up. Keeping true to that purpose can be increasingly difficult in the new commercialism of blogging. But, like Dan, I’ll make the effort. There’s still a great community of dad and mom bloggers out there that I’m proud to be a part of. I won’t post daily, and maybe not even weekly, but I’ll make a renewed effort to be here.
When I started typing this post, I was just going to upload some pictures from a hike that Clare, Clare’s Mom and I took in a state park a few weeks ago. A walk in the woods. Walks like that are always good for getting back to basics and spending some time in thought. Maybe this post has been about a walk in the woods in a couple of ways.





Help Cure JM, or, Happy Birthday, Rhonda
October 2, 2009 at 12:01 am | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a CommentTags: juvenile myositis
This blog is nearly in retirement. Nearly, but not quite there yet. Even if it were over though, one thing I’d come out of retirement to do is help a fellow blogmigo. Kevin over at Always Home and Uncool has asked me to post this as part of his effort to raise awareness in the blogosphere of juvenile myositis, a rare autoimmune disease his daughter was diagnosed with on this day seven years ago. The day also happens to be his wife’s birthday.
Our pediatrician admitted it early on.
The rash on our 2-year-old daughter’s cheeks, joints and legs was something he’d never seen before.
The next doctor wouldn’t admit to not knowing.
He rattled off the names of several skins conditions — none of them seemingly worth his time or bedside manner — then quickly prescribed antibiotics and showed us the door.
The third doctor admitted she didn’t know much.
The biopsy of the chunk of skin she had removed from our daughter’s knee showed signs of an “allergic reaction” even though we had ruled out every allergy source — obvious and otherwise — that we could.
The fourth doctor had barely closed the door behind her when, looking at the limp blonde cherub in my lap, she admitted she had seen this before. At least one too many times before.
She brought in a gaggle of med students. She pointed out each of the physical symptoms in our daughter:
The rash across her face and temples resembling the silhouette of a butterfly.
The purple-brown spots and smears, called heliotrope, on her eyelids.
The reddish alligator-like skin, known as Gottron papules, covering the knuckles of her hands.
The onset of crippling muscle weakness in her legs and upper body.
She then had an assistant bring in a handful of pages photocopied from an old medical textbook. She handed them to my wife, whose birthday it happened to be that day.
This was her gift — a diagnosis for her little girl.
That was seven years ago — Oct. 2, 2002 — the day our daughter was found to have juvenile dermatomyositis, one of a family of rare autoimmune diseases that can have debilitating and even fatal consequences when not treated quickly and effectively.
Our daughter’s first year with the disease consisted of surgical procedures, intravenous infusions, staph infections, pulmonary treatments and worry. Her muscles were too weak for her to walk or swallow solid food for several months. When not in the hospital, she sat on our living room couch, propped up by pillows so she wouldn’t tip over, as medicine or nourishment dripped from a bag into her body.
Our daughter, Thing 1, Megan, now age 9, remembers little of that today when she dances or sings or plays soccer. All that remain with her are scars, six to be exact, and the array of pills she takes twice a day to help keep the disease at bay.
What would have happened if it took us more than two months and four doctors before we lucked into someone who could piece all the symptoms together? I don’t know.
I do know that the fourth doctor, the one who brought in others to see our daughter’s condition so they could easily recognize it if they ever had the misfortune to be presented with it again, was a step toward making sure other parents also never have to find out.
That, too, is my purpose today.
It is also my birthday gift to my wife, My Love, Rhonda, for all you have done these past seven years to make others aware of juvenile myositis diseases and help find a cure for them once and for all.
To read more about children and families affected by juvenile myositis diseases, visit Cure JM Foundation at www.curejm.org.
To make a tax-deductible donation toward JM research, go to www.firstgiving.com/rhondaandkevinmckeever or www.curejm.com/team/donations.htm.
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