My Plan for the Year
I hope to post a story from our book, Seizure Mama and Rose, on Saturdays and then write a follow-up post mid-week for the next 52 weeks.
This is my “purge project.”
A year from now Rose will graduate and we both will move on with our lives.
I want to know that our struggles and victories are out there for others to find.
This journey has been long. It has made us both strong and fragile.
Do not worry “Other Mothers”, you will know where to find me.
Come along for our twenty-year journey “Diaper to Dorm Room” with me giving my take on things decades later.
Welcome to our lives…
Seizure Mama
Let’s Begin Again
Seizure Mama and Rose; 1994
Join us as we journey from diaper to dorm room.
Dear Parents,
I wish I could claim that this is a “How to” manual for raising a child with epilepsy. It is not. This is the story of raising our daughter Rose. We made many mistakes. Our family did the best we could despite our own fears and ignorance. We were never trained as parents, much less as medical specialist. Our job was to raise Rose, not to cure her. We found the best doctors and tried many medications, but a treatment is not a cure. We did what parents do. We flew by the seat of our pants with our hearts wide open and breaking.
I do not recommend you follow this twisted trail of breadcrumbs that I have left here for you to read. I only hope that you recognize your own struggles among these stories and realize that you are not alone. Someone else has been where you are now, as terrified parent, and survived to tell the tale.
Just remember you do not get to be the superhero in your child’s story.
Yours is a supporting role.
Your child is the star.
When they fall down, you help them up.
Eventually, they will not need your help to get back up.
Getting back up is the important part.
Your job is to get them strong enough to rise on their own.
Then you can stand back with pride and watch them rise.
This is where we are now…
Watching Rose Rise
GREAT VISUAL on Epilepsy
Who’s the Mama Now?
Rose called the other night.
I was upset about something.
She told me to drink some wine, eat some chocolate, get in my bed and do some Duolingo.
Who’s the Mama?
Flow
Stars for Navigation
This has been a year of upheaval and sadness.
Rose is trying to find her way in a world without her grandfather, Bop.
She is confused by the actions and beliefs of folks we thought we knew.
The internet has a plethora of misinformation.
This pandemic has isolated everyone.
Rose misses her international friends who were not allowed to return school.
She calls home a lot.
We cry, we laugh and we have long discussions about topics we never mentioned before.
We both are struggling to stay good and kind through our confusion and anger.
Neither of us are “sugar-coaters.” We are blatantly honest.
But we are also observant and thoughtful.
We are both learning to quietly wait and see.
Like floating in our ships while waiting for the clouds to clear
so we can navigate by the stars we know to be true.
Ignoring the flash and bang of the over-confident and ignorant.
Waiting for the dust to settle
and the phoenix to rise from the ashes of this catastrophe.
Steady Rose. Hold your course. Follow your star.
Mama
Her Own Advocate
Well mamas I think we are finally there.
I am still mama bear, but my baby can fend for herself.
She has a rather unusual curriculum this semester which includes two classes that involve physical activity.
A high heart rate is a seizure trigger for her. We know this from years of experience. We used to see her red face and tell her to rest. She now wears a fit bit to monitor this for herself.
She had to explain this to her professors. There was some doubt. I do not blame them. As a former teacher and biology instructor, I have heard outlandish excuses. We have to keep things fair.
Rose wrote to her neurologist to get a letter explaining the need for accommodations. She received a thorough letter from our hero doctor.
We have worked too hard to get her driving and living on her own to backslide.
Rose even trusts these instructors enough that she is sharing our book with them. I appreciate that she feels this level of confidence in herself, too. Our book is very personal.
I told her to handle this issue herself and she did. That is how it should be.
Someday she may have a boss who doesn’t understand her condition and she will have to be her own advocate. She needs to know how to negotiate.
This is what you want Other Mothers. A strong child who can handle their unique situations with confidence.
I am super proud of my Rose.
Flower
Rose is back at school.

I hope she stays safe AND has fun.
We will miss her, but she belongs there.
The elephant stayed hidden. I am proud.
Mama Bear
Hiding the Elephant
I have been known to bring home pets without permission.
Either the creature needed me or I needed it, so it came home with me.
Now, when I see an animal and say “It needs me.” or ‘I need it.”, someone in the family chants “NO MORE PETS” like a mantra.
Once, I had a long vivid dream in which I brought home a baby elephant and had to keep moving it around to hide it.
That is how I feel now, like I am hiding an elephant.
Its name is Fear.
Rose goes back to the university tomorrow. She is packing. I am sewing.
There is tenseness in the air. She knows I am anxious.
She has bags of mask to give away for her “Circle of Safety.”
Rose knows that I am a COVID nutcase.
I need her to be my ‘wingman’ on outings. I am fiercely afraid.
I fear the virus will find us. I fear it will take someone I need and love.
I have lost enough this year.
So there is Fear looming large, like an elephant.
I am trying to hide it.
I just need to keep it in check another day and a half.
Mama Bear is hiding her elephant from Baby Bear,
because Rose has her own elephants that she hides from me.
It’s a game we play, Hide and Don’t Seek.
I don’t need my elephant and neither does Rose.
Mama Bear
When Rose Goes
Rose is preparing to return to the university next week.
I am trying to be cool about it, but below the surface is…
FEAR.
Surprised? This must be your first visit to this blog.
Fear and I have a long-running feud going.
So what’s a mama bear to do when her cub leaves the den to go out into a pandemic?
My regulars probably guessed the answer…
SEW.
My strategy for handling this pandemic is to create “circles of safety” around my friends and family.
I call it “Operation COS.”
I figured they would be safer if the folks around them are safer.
So I sew. (Even my mail-carrier has my masks.)
Rose will return to school with many purple masks to share.
Male masks will be made today. I sewed in my sleep last night.

Two layers of cotton with two layers of polypropylene in the middle.
This is how crazy people get through the maze.
Seizure Mama and her sewing machine.
STAY SAFE and STOP THE SPREAD
