Monday, February 25, 2008

Name Tag

I read Cori's blog this evening, and since no one else is admitting they read her post and are "tagged", I'll do this ditty. Take my middle name (ah ,which one says I..let's go with Averil) and from each letter, tell a word that describes me.

A- Affectionate. Yip, love smothering my kids with kisses & hugs. I think I also PDA with hubby too much as well sometimes LOL!

V- Vindictive. Oh yes, very much so when I want to be.

E- Effusive.

R- Restless. Lately yes, this is not something I would attribute to me, but I think spring fever has me going nuts.

I- Interesting. Damn straight.

L- Lucky. I look at my husband and kids every day and think so :)

There ya go Cori! But I never tag people to do things either, so it dies here :) Unless you are reading this, and if that's the case, if you don't do the same as I did, your luck will run out, your house will cave in, and you will be covered in burning pustules.

Soo Sweet My Teeth Hurt

Ok, this made Mike and I laugh,I've never heard a better version of Hey Jude! I saw this on ParentDish.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Xtina

From People...Christina Aguilera on the Ellen show. I heart Ellen. Watch the video its a good chuckle.

This week's PEOPLE cover subject Christina Aguilera is happy to chat about motherhood – every aspect of her new role, in fact. During an appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show scheduled to air Wednesday, the talk-show host playfully asks the pop star – who sported a low-cut shirt – "You look great. One question: Are you nursing?"

A blushing Aguilera responded: "I guess it's a little obvious," and DeGeneres quipped back, "It's going to be a healthy baby boy." (Watch the clip here.)

Aguilera, 27, did not demure when talked turned to her son's Bris. "We are not a very conservative couple," she told DeGeneres. "For decorations we put up penis balloons all over the place. It was really fun, it was really great." A stunned Ellen replied: "Really, they have penis balloons in a shop ... you can just buy them?"

Link to video

Friday, February 22, 2008

Just Don't

If you are going to a playgroup/indoor free gym, can you kindly NOT:

..ignore the no food/drink signs and let your toddler run around with a bottle, not only hanging out of his face while running, but also leaving a heave-worthy milk-trail all over the toys and climbers wherever he goes.

....be the other parent who ignored the same sign and give your kid a sucker, and let them race full tilt around the gym as well as zoom around on peddle cars, while the rest of us try to explain to our children loudly that there is NO FOOD ALLOWED and even if there were, there is no way in hell you run around with a sucker in your mouth

....ignore the fact that my son came up to you, asked oh-so heart-meltingly politely if he could have a turn with a car when your son was done, tell him "yah, when he's done" then let your child sit in it for 25 minutes. Asshole. Don't make my ass come over there and teach you how to share . Cause bitch, it will hurt.

....let your child keep crashing his pedal tractor into my kids, over...and over...and over....while I keep loudly telling my own son "no crashing please honey" Are you that stupid that you can't take a hint?



Ok that's done. Deep breath. Holy crap, what a morning. I am usually very tolerant of the different ways that people parent, tho of course, I am always right ;) but I just couldn't take it today! Too much. Those are literally only the ones that I can remember, I spent the whole 2 hours stressed out, watching my kids like a hawk waiting to see who's child was going to run them over, who's child was going to hit, if that kids was going to impale his freaking throat with a sucker stick... another deep breath.

I did, however, meet and talk to another mom who was there for the first time and told her to come back, that there's a few of us who go every Friday and we're kinda awesome. LMAO! She had mentioned she had a hard time getting to know people, and that everytime she tried talking to women at playdates they sorta mumbled an answer back and didn't converse. Nice! I also referred her to a website that I don't frequent anymore and said she could probably find playdates etc in her area of Clareview. I didn't go into the kwality of people there (like my ghetto quality with a k?) all present company who read my blog excluded, of course ;)

OOkkkk rant over. Holy stressed out mama this week. I think I need to go in to work tomorrow and take a break!

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

My Mad Little Scientist

I DO watch my kids, I really, truly do. I have no idea how Mr K managed to do this, I know that the margarine was on the counter, the rolling pin was in the living room because The Princess wanted to play with it.

I just walked by the table, and you know how you catch something out of the corner of your eye? Well the table was supposed to be clear...so I did one of those sloooooowly turn...sloooowly peek at what's on the table....and breathed a sigh of relief. Wasn't as bad as I thought.

What made me laugh is he was smart enough to get a tea towel and lay it down, so he could, well, I guess, roll the margarine out neatly?




It was either a poltergeist or Mr K, and upon asking him, he informed me that it was his experiment.

I don't know WHAT'S up with these experiments, I am sure its my fault somehow..we did the good old baking soda and vinegar "My-First-Experiment" experiment, then tried it with water, etc, to see which react and which don't. That was before Christmas. And now he's just experimenting with anything that he gets his hands on, whether I see the sense or not. (usually not, I don't get it, WHY would you roll margarine???)

I STILL don't know where I was when he did this!! I lost time......I have a small bump on the back of my neck....and just a new general cosmic awareness....

Ah my mad scientist...how he makes me laugh....and keeps me on my toes. Er, when I am around to parent, that is.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Long Weekend

Well, that's what happens when I get distracted with a long weekend, no blogging. Not that its a bad thing, I had a fantastic weekend! FAN-TASTIC. On Sunday Jen, who was up from Airdrie, and her mom Phyllis came and picked Mr K and I up, and we went shopping at West Ed. And I must have been crazy but I enjoyed myself. Like really had a good time.

Now I know for a fact a huge part is that Mr K is the most awesomest kid ever for shopping, he walked the entire mall for hours with us, held hands with Jens daughter and walked ever so nicely, didn't stray from me, we had lunch, it was great. He impressed Phyllis with how well he shopped, she was amazed, but then I reminded her that I was punished enough with the one I left at home with Mike. My karma came, baby, with The Princess. And that's ok. One day, she too will like shopping with her Momma. However, I forsee lots of arguments over clothes. I only pray she wants to wear combat boots because usually that means the matching clothes actually cover her body.....

I found a birthday present for the next birthday coming up, and a space book that Mr K just can't put down. I looked at all sorts of purses (yes, I have this purse fetish lately) and found the one I want. When you see me and my new purse, you will know that I hit a weight-loss goal that I am rewarding myself for LOL. We looked through all the kids stores, and I was horrified by the clothes in Old Navy, good thing I don't shop there. The "safari" theme this year is just grotesque for women, has anyone seen it? The colors are disgusting, all tans in awful jumpers that look like tour guide outfits, and that awful dull red color that doesn't look good on ANYONE. The whole store was dull and boring. The only good thing is the animal prints, I loooove me some animal prints!

I digress, I am not writing a fashion blog LOL. But I do need clothes so desperately. I did a Goodwill cleanse and I have NO clothes, I got rid of all my maternity wear, all the clothes that are too big now (not a hardship, not complaining here) and my closet is bare to the bones. I have a lot of dress shirts which saved my ass for work this last week, they matched my one pair of black dress pants and one skirt, but everything else is t-shirts and I have 3 pairs of jeans. Those I scored at the Goodwill lol...its a cycle...in and out...

But after a while everyone else decided to come to the mall, and it was the busiest I have ever seen it, talk about insane! We quickly left at that point.

The rest of the weekend has really, appropriately, been family time. We played and played outside, did lots of reading, played Wii, did some shopping all together, and it was just so relaxing and nice.

Hope everyone enjoyed their long weekend!

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Is It Spring YET?????

Someone needs to stop me from looking back on my blog and the kids and bemoaning the loss of summertime..its BAD. Mr K and I went through his whole blog, watching the vids and looking at the pictures... but I lingered on the ones of them outside....us putting the grass in.....my flowers (sniffle sob)...oooh I get so restless by this time of year. I am just DONE.

Its also the time I start my planning, and yes, I have my drawings scattered around the house of what plants I want, new designs for the flowerbeds (especially since I hated the front last year) new things I want to try, and to actually maybe finalize the backyard. I think I am a yard commitment phobe, I really like ripping things up and trying new things, BUT I actually placed a NAME to the style of gardening I like, after picking up some magazines. Now this may not seem like a huge thing, but it is :) To finally figure out that a "cottage garden " (English garden) is what I aspire to just clicked a light bulb off in my head. My love of white picket fences, and arbors and trellises with climbing vines.. yup, thats it by George.

I am the kind of person who planted her dill in with her asters, tomatoes with her pansies, and the whole point of a cottage garden in the olden days was to fill up the space with not only flowers, but herbs and vegetables as well for use in the home. Exactly my style of gardening.

So I am planning....and waiting....impatiently...sighing over the seeds in Walmart....buying gardening magazines to help (or maybe they're making it worse) stave off the longing for greenness.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Lipstick Jungle


Anyone else watching this? I made sure to tune in last week to catch the first one, and caught it again last night. It has received mixed reviews, but I think too many people are depending on it to fill the gap that Sex and the City left. Cashmere Mafia (don't ask) is one of the silliest shows I have ever seen (once, very, very briefly, I can't stand Lucy Liu) and other than that, there aren't any fashion parade, wild sex crazed women shows out there.

I loved this show from the first purse. Kandice will have a good laugh at this one. See said blue purse below? Well, while watching the show, I saw this purse and said WOW! I love that blue purse! Then we started talking about Manolo Blahnik and Jimmy Choo and Mike literally turned to us and asked us if we were speaking another language LOL.

I digress. What I meant to blog about was the fact that I have this innate, gold-digging talent to pick the absolute MOST expensive item and covet it, without ever peering at a price tag. Said purse? Retails for $1600. I was sitting here with Mike, and said "OH! I should google that purse while I am blogging about the show. " So I look it up, find out it's Jimmy Choo, (money warning bells started clanging in my ears at that point) and poked Mike "Hey, honey, watch this" went to the website where its sold, and showed him the price tag. His response was " How the hell do you DO that?" followed by "Who in their right freaking mind would pay $1600 for a PURSE!!!"


Oh, yes, and aside from the fashion...the plots are interesting ;). They are tho, I really like Brooke Shields as an actor, and she's really great in this as the working mom/movie exec. She really is doing a good job portraying the mom who's trying to do it all, and I like the plot with her husband being the one staying at home (hell, damn straight, you go mingle with stars while he stays at home). The whole nanny-expose book angle is interesting as well. I like the other characters, I LOVE that one is a fashion designer down on her luck, that should be very interesting and can go sooo many places. I don't like that once again, there is a character who's a high level exec with a magazine (isn't there another job in New York??? I know, that and fashion, nothing else to do there I guess) but I do love that she's having an affair with a gorgeous younger man.

Its just a darn good show with lots of fashion fluff, great actors, good storylines and I am so glad there is something on Thursday nights now instead of Survivor crap!

Er, Happy Belated Valentines!

Hahahaha I so can live without Valentines Day! I realized that yesterday, instead of well wishes and looove to you all, what do I post? The new Indiana Jones preview.

Ok, I DID send presents via Facecrack, but that was Hug a Dork with my wishes for you to survive the commercialism of the day. And I did make the kids their own valentines and make them pancakes with homemade sauce for breakfast. Then I raced home after my training for my new job, and took Mr K to the last half of his preschool party. THAT was a labor of sheer love for my children. Then came home and made Mike a fantastic dinner, with beer, followed by homemade cake. It doesn't sound like much, but let me tell you, after training and a preschool party, that also took some luv. But thats just kinda Mom/wife stuff anyways, y'know?

Mike was a sweetie and surprised me with a subscription to Canadian Gardening magazine, which is one I wanted. I had told him exactly what I wanted, my indoor greenhouse, but I told him not to bother right now because I am so busy, and I want to be able to relax, set it up, plan and enjoy it. So he went out and bought me my magazine instead, which was so thoughtful of him...only a husband would know that a gardening magazine would make me happy :) The girls at work laughed but I told them that I truly wanted that more than chocolates or roses, and the thought that went into it meant so much more.

I used to like getting flowers from Mike at work on Feb 14th, but I used to LOVE getting them when it wasn't Valentines Day. I adored when he just picked a random day and sent them, and everyone in the office oooohed and aaaahed and I was a wee bit embarrassed yet giggly pleased and lovey-dovey at the same time. It was nicer to get them because he didn't HAVE to give them to me because of the calendar date, and everyone else in my office knew that too, and that makes you feel special. When something is requisite, it kinda loses the appeal. Thats really how I feel about Valentines Day, I don't like that everyone is expected to do something on that one day for the person you love.

Then there's the fact that we celebrate the 11th as the anniversary of our first date, so we really lost Valentines Day, it has no meaning when compared to the 11th for us. So to turn around 2 days later and do something special again just because the rest of the world does to seems redundant. Perhaps if the 11th wasn't a special day to us, we might celebrate it more, who knows.

But that's just me and my humble opinion, and of course, I hope everyone else was romanticized and chocolatized and spoiled rotten!

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Jonesing for May 22nd

I CAN'T FREAKING WAIT! This will be what we take my Dad to for his Father's Day movie this year..but I will have to wait 3 agonizing weeks! I was incredibly glad to see Harrison all kicking some ass and being all Indy....hopefully Shia can measure up!

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Breastmilk Contains Stem Cells

Uh, I was rendered speechless at this, thank Karen for the article on her BLISS blog..I hadn't found that article yet. I mean, there really is just nothing to say about this amazing discovery, nothing. I wish I could go on forever, but I am speechless. (quick. make a note of the date lol)

The Perth scientist who made the world-first discovery that human breast milk contains stem cells is confident that within five years scientists will be harvesting them to research treatment for conditions as far-reaching as spinal injuries, diabetes and Parkinson’s disease.

But what Dr Mark Cregan is excited about right now is the promise that his discovery could be the start of many more exciting revelations about the potency of breast milk.

He believes that it not only meets all the nutritional needs of a growing infant but contains key markers that guide his or her development into adulthood.

“We already know how breast milk provides for the baby’s nutritional needs, but we are only just beginning to understand that it probably performs many other functions,” says Dr Cregan, a molecular biologist at The University of Western Australia.

He says that, in essence, a new mother’s mammary glands take over from the placenta to provide the development guidance to ensure a baby’s genetic destiny is fulfilled.

“It is setting the baby up for the perfect development,” he says. “We already know that babies who are breast fed have an IQ advantage and that there’s a raft of other health benefits. Researchers also believe that the protective effects of being breast fed continue well into adult life.

“The point is that many mothers see milks as identical – formula milk and breast milk look the same so they must be the same. But we know now that they are quite different and a lot of the effects of breast milk versus formula don’t become apparent for decades. Formula companies have focussed on matching breast milk’s nutritional qualities but formula can never provide the developmental guidance.”

It was Dr Cregan’s interest in infant health that led him to investigate the complex cellular components of human milk. “I was looking at this vast complexity of cells and I thought, ‘No one knows anything about them’.”

His hunch was that if breast milk contains all these cells, surely it has their precursors, too?

His team cultured cells from human breast milk and found a population that tested positive for the stem cell marker, nestin. Further analysis showed that a side population of the stem cells were of multiple lineages with the potential to differentiate into multiple cell types. This means the cells could potentially be “reprogrammed” to form many types of human tissue.

He presented his research at the end of January to 200 of the world’s leading experts in the field at the International Conference of the Society for Research on Human Milk and Lactation in Perth.

“We have shown these cells have all the physical characteristics of stem cells. What we will do next is to see if they behave like stem cells,” he says.

If so, they promise to provide researchers with an entirely ethical means of harvesting stem cells for research without the debate that has dogged the harvesting of cells from embryos.

Further research on immune cells, which have also been found in breast milk and have already been shown to survive the baby’s digestive process, could provide a pathway to developing targets to beat certain viruses or bacteria.


Original Article

Oh, I should add the picture wasn't in the article LMAO, it's one of my favorite sayings, and damned if it just doesn't suit the situation.


Monday, February 11, 2008

Happy Anniversary!

Happy anniversary to my honey! Today is the 9th anniversary of our first date. We don't usually remember most dates, to be honest, if you asked when Mike proposed I wouldn't be able to give you a date, just a month. But we remember this because Mike was irked that I was going away to Manitoba for Valentines Day, so he asked me out before I left instead.

Its also weird, but I started with Telus on this day 3 years ago too, and at the time newly unknowingly pregnant with The Princess...so I was VERY WEIRDED OUT today, that my first day of training at my new job was on this anniversary as well....and let me assure you we are not trying for a third LOL!

First Day

Well I made it through the first day of training, and let me again tell you how much I really would never want to go back full time days. UGH. I admire women who can get up in the morning, get dressed in office attire with hair and make-up done, (yah, no jeans for me, insert disgruntled face right about.....here) get your kids out the door and to whomever is sitting them then off to the office, and all usually BEFORE 8. I barely managed to get the kids to Melissa's for 8, to the university for 9, and that was with Melissa feeding my kids lol. All I did was get them up and dressed and teeth brushed and out the door. I wonder about those women who actually prefer going to work, rather than staying at home...they just can't enjoy the actual chaotic mornings before they get to work...just not feasible. They must breathe a sigh of relief once they are there. This morning showed me that I literally can't think of anything more stressful with more suckage than getting two very cute but generally very uncooperative (can you blame them? the sun wasn't even up) kids ready with massive time constraints, racing to the sitters, then barreling through rush hour traffic with all the rest of the lunatics, trying to find parking, getting into the office on time.... Shudder. I don't thrive on that kind of stress LOL! Its so different with two to get out the door, I can't believe it! I did full time (this is only 9-1) training when Mr K was 15 months, and I can't remember being this stressed out. You just get one dressed, and the other one has taken off her coat....you get the other boots on, the other one has taken off her mitts...one runs upstairs with her boots on. the other won't get his mitts on.... and on and on and seriously, ON. WTF, do you have to chain one to the couch in order to get two fully dressed children out the damn door? :)

But aside from my whining about what millions of moms do daily, and probably most without the whine, the job should be ok. And I say ok because like with Telus, its very overwhelming at first. But, like with Telus, I know that once you get it down, you can do it almost with your eyes closed. I just hate the process of getting there. But I remember when I started Telus thinking "eff, I will NEVER be that fast" yet you do and will and are eventually.

Tomorrow Uncle Wyatt is here, so now I need to go work on the list of what to do and not do and many, many emergency contact numbers, as well as how to change a dirty diaper, what knives my children can and can't play with, and where Mr K hides his matches. S'all good.

Saturday, February 09, 2008

Body Worlds

I was REALLY excited to learn that this exhibit is coming to the Telus World of Science, Mike and I had thought it would be fascinating, and I was jealous that it hit Toronto and Vancouver and not here. But its coming! They have posters up at the Science center announcing it, and I was doing a jig of joy when I read them lol.


See the human body like never before as TELUS World of Science™ - Edmonton presents Gunther von Hagens' BODY WORLDS: The Original Exhibition of Real Human Bodies, the most highly attended touring exhibition in the world. From individual organs to whole bodies, BODY WORLDS offers visitors a rare opportunity to see the complexity of human anatomy and physiology.

BODY WORLDS features authentic human specimens preserved through a revolutionary process called Plastination. This remarkable preservation technique replaces bodily fluids and fat with reactive plastics, thereby preserving human tissue in its natural state. Visitors who embark on this amazing journey below the skin's surface will view an extensive collection including more than 200 authentic organs, systems and whole-body displays.

Body Worlds

Its pretty damn pricey, $27 which includes general admission, but my desire to see this exhibit actually overpowers my cheapness LOL. I think we are going to co-ordinate with Kandice and Dan and go, I asked if it was going to Calgary and they didn't think it would. I think its too scarey for Mr K, if he was older I would take him for sure. I also would like to take the time sans kids to read and learn and poke around. They have evening ones, so I think we will buy tickets for one of those and have a certain Uncle babysit :)

I just read on the site that it takes 1500 hours to plastinate one body, no wonder its that expensive! That a huge amount of man hours and the cost must be insane.

Thursday, February 07, 2008

Chocolate Hotdog

I couldn't make this stuff up any better if you paid me to, I swear. Somedays its just a three ring comedy circus around this house! I was putting the Princess down for a nap the other day, when the door creaked open, and this little hand with a hotdog bun curled around the corner. Then Mr K whispered

" Mom!"

"Ssssh K! I am trying to get Ivy to sleep"

"But Mom! I made you a chocolate hotdog"

Oh crap. Now this I have to see, waking the Princess be damned. He tiptoed over and put a hotdog bun in my hand, which I opened to see:

"oh, um YUM, K, now let me get your sister to sleep. DON'T TOUCH ANYTHING ELSE DOWNSTAIRS!"

"ok mom"

So the Princess slept, I went downstairs and found this at the bottom of the stairs:
And this on the counter, the remnants of HIS chocolate hotdog, which he claims was fantastic.

So yes, my son literally had a chocolate hotdog for lunch on Monday. Parent of the Year Award, here I come! I shouldn't be surprised, he is very much into his "experiments" lately, (not sure why he calls them that) the last one was mixing Cajun seasoning with rice milk, then soaking a piece of bread in it. And he actually tried a bite. (gag)

Other than that, Auntie K, Uncle Dan and the girlies are up, so off to the mall we go today...and I think the Science Center tomorrow, that should be fun!

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Screwing Around..

And yah I am screwing around with the blog template etc so maybe one day I will finish it.

No link between autism and MMR vaccine

LONDON - A vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella does not cause autism, according to the largest study yet showing there is no evidence linking the childhood shot to the development disorder.

The study, published on Tuesday in the Archives of Disease in Childhood, found no evidence of any abnormal biological response from the shot that could point to a link between the vaccine and autism.

"This study really supports the view these are safe vaccines," said David Brown, a researcher at Britain's Health Protection Agency who worked on the study. "The evidence is now so solid there really isn't a need for further studies here."

In 1998, Dr. Andrew Wakefield of Royal Free Hospital in London and colleagues sparked a fierce worldwide debate among scientists and a health scare by suggesting the MMR jab caused autism. Outbreaks of all three diseases followed.

Autism is marked by a variety of difficulties in social interaction and behavior, from the awkwardness of Asperger syndrome to severely debilitating repetitive behaviors and an inability to speak.

The British study looked at nearly 100 autistic children, a group of 52 with learning difficulties and 90 who were developing normally.

All the volunteers chosen from a sample of 57,000 children in southern England had received an MMR vaccination but not everybody got both doses, said Gillian Baird, a pediatrician at the Newcomen Centre for Child Development, who led the study.

The researchers took blood samples from the children and found no abnormal immune response in any of them marked by higher antibody levels or presence of a measles virus still left in the body from the shot, Baird added.

Wakefield, whose research has been widely discredited, had pointed to these two factors as a way to explain the link but the latest findings do not back up that case, Baird said. Wakefield said in a newspaper interview last year he believed it was biologically plausible the shot could cause autism.

"There was no difference across any of the groups no matter how you cut them up," Baird said in a telephone interview. "The response to the MMR vaccine was the same in every group."

Before Wakefield's study, more than 90 percent of British children received the vaccination, a figure that dropped to 80 percent before recovering to a current 85 percent, according to government figures.

Baird said she hoped the findings, along with a U.S. study last week showing that a mercury-based preservative called thimerosal did not cause autism, would bolster confidence in the MMR shot.

"It is a big study and we hope people can have confidence in the MMR shot again," Baird said in a telephone interview. "Measles has come back again because people have stopped immunizing their children."

Original Article

I always find these articles interesting, I delayed the kids MMR shots till they were older than 2, actually, I still have to get The Princess in to have hers. Hmm should book that..... I think part of the problem is a lack of informed physicians, I had a wonderful pediatrician who told me that if I felt uncomfortable, then I could delay the shots, but he recommended that they had them before school.

I reasoned that autism can start showing itself as early as age one, but around 18 months (MMR time) the indications become pretty clear in most cases. There is an actual screening checklist that physicians can do at the 18 months checkup. So it wasn't as much the fact that I thought the shot caused it, but why not wait until you are in the clear for Autism, then proceed with the vax, your mind can rest easier.

I also left in the links above because the ones about chemicals in baby shampoos were interesting, go have a read. Actually, they are all interesting but I don't have time to post them all LOL. Today I have something to DO! Hurray for preschool!

Sunday, February 03, 2008

Love Actually..



I did a silly little movie compatibility test on Facecrack today, then of course, I had to see who was my movie match LOL. I looked at my favorite movie on the list, Love Actually, and was really surprised how many people did NOT want to even see it. Those who saw it, rated it 5/5, like myself. But a lot of people didn't even have it down as a want to see.

All favoritism aside (Alan Rickman, my acting god/old-man-crush, and Colin Firth, Englishman-who-makes-my-heart go-bumpity-bump) it has to be the best relationship movie I have ever seen. I laughed my ass off, I cried buckets, I loved the plots and I adored the characters.

The relationships aren't perfect, some are horribly painfully real, some are cutesy and fantasy-like. And if you like a movie full of vignettes that finally tie together in the end, this is the movie for you. Mike actually loved this movie as well, and now I have convinced him to watch it again with me this week sometime :)

Speaking of which, I really also want to see that movie Vantage Point. Not my usual fare, but I LOVE movies that piece together several points of view to come together to a shocking conclusion :) hehe I sound like a movie trailer. So see the actual one below.

Mother thanks her lucky star: Edmonton Journal

EDMONTON - Roxanne Follet sat in a wheelchair, clutching a bright red, heart-shaped pillow and a photo of her newborn daughter lying in a nearby neonatal intensive care unit.

Her voice cracked with emotion Saturday, as she talked about the miracle baby that saved her life.

Miracle Astra Alice Alfreda Follett was born prematurely, 35 weeks into the pregnancy, on Jan. 24 at the University Hospital. In a rare double operation, worthy of an episode of TV's Grey's Anatomy, she was delivered by caesarian section, moments before doctors started open-heart surgery on her mother.

Roxanne Follett gazes into the face of her newborn daughter, Miracle Astra Alice Afreda, at the University Hospital on Saturday after undergoing simultaneous open-heart surgery and delivery.

Roxanne Follett gazes into the face of her newborn daughter, Miracle Astra Alice Afreda, at the University Hospital on Saturday after undergoing simultaneous open-heart surgery and delivery.

It was the first such operation for cardiovascular surgeon Dr. Rod MacArthur and obstetrician Dr. Billy Wong, who both said it was so rare they don't expect to perform another one during their careers.

"There have been approximately 40 cases reported worldwide over the last 25 years and in only approximately half of those cases have both mother and baby survived, so it truly is an exceptional case," MacArthur said during a news conference at the hospital.

As far as MacArthur knows, it is the first such operation in Canada.

Wong said Roxanne Follett would likely not be alive today if she hadn't been pregnant because a tear in her aorta would probably not have been discovered otherwise. Within 24 to 48 hours an aortic tear usually ruptures and, 40 per cent of patients die without emergency surgery, MacArthur added.

The tear was discovered in Edmonton after Follett started struggling to breathe and doctors in Grande Prairie decided she needed to be seen by specialists here.

Doctors faced a Catch-22 situation: Follett likely wouldn't have survived delivery without the heart surgery, but her fetus likely wouldn't have survived the heart surgery, in which Follett's body temperature needed to be cooled to 17 C and the blood drained from her body. Doctors decided to do the caesarian first then the heart surgery, but opened Follett's chest first in case the aorta ruptured while the baby was being delivered. Approximately 12 doctors and nurses were involved in the operation which lasted approximately nine hours.

Follett, a nurse who works in the medical rehabilitation unit of the hospital in Grande Prairie, said she owes her life to her 10-day-old daughter.

"Astra means 'a star,' and that's what she is. She's my star, because if it wasn't for her I wouldn't be here."

The baby was conceived in vitro last year and was the only one of four embryos to survive "so there was a reason," Follett said. "She saved my life and I saved her life.

"I can't even express (what I feel) everytime I look at her. She deserves a million bucks every day for the rest of her life," Follett said, laughing.

Astra's dad, Doug said he feels like he's won a million dollars, "but I didn't get a million dollars. I got two lives."

Doug, who drives a cement truck, spent an emotional 12 hours in a waiting room alternately praying and crying during the operation. "The last time I cried so much, was when I was a baby looking for milk," he joked.

Roxanne said the couple, who are originally from Newfoundland, plan to donate a dollar for every day of Astra's life to the Heart and Stroke Foundation to give back for the miracle they were given.

Astra was scheduled to be airlifted to Grande Prairie hospital where she will spend up to a couple of weeks in that hospital's neonatal intensive care unit growing bigger and stronger. The baby currently weighs just over four pounds but must weigh 5.5 pounds for insurance purposes, before she can travel home in a car seat.

Astra's parents, and her maternal grandmother Alfreda Cunard, who came out from Newfoundland for six weeks to help Roxanne with the baby, were driving back home.


I found this more interesting than usual because Dr Wong is who did my c-section with the Princess. I guess I never really thought about how "high risk" a doctor he really was, holy crap, that's a crazy tandem operation.

Carseat Recall


Evenflo Co. issued a voluntary safety recall Friday of 1 million Discovery infant car seats after tests showed that the seat could potentially become separated from its base in high-impact side collisions.

VANDALIA, Ohio (AP) - Evenflo Co. issued a voluntary safety recall Friday of 1 million Discovery infant car seats after tests showed that the seat could potentially become separated from its base in high-impact side collisions.

The recall affects Discovery Infant Car Seat Models 390, 391, 534 and 552, made between April 2005 and Jan. 29, 2008.

"Evenflo has taken the appropriate action today in recalling the Discovery child safety seat," said Nicole Nason, administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. "Testing conducted by NHTSA and Evenflo has confirmed that these seats represent a potential safety risk to children in high-impact side collisions."

Rob Matteucci, Evenflo's chief executive officer, said the Discovery seat models have performed well to protect infants in side collisions, with no reports of any serious injuries or deaths since they were introduced. However, he said the company wants to take further steps to protect the safety of children.

Evenflo is providing owners of the seat models with a free supplemental dual-hook fastener to ensure that the seat remains attached in such collisions. Evenflo said consumers should continue to use their Discovery infant car seat and that it is not necessary to return the seats to retailers.

The privately held company, based in suburban Dayton, said it is also taking steps to improve future Discovery seat models. The updated seats will be available in the second quarter of 2008.

To order the fastener, owners of Discovery 390, 391, 534, 552 models should call Evenflo at 1-800-356-2229 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. EST or visit www.evenflo.com/Discovery. No shipping costs will be incurred, and orders will arrive in about three to four weeks, the company said.


Now the real pisser to this one, is that Consumer Reports FAILED these seats last year, then later had to recant, because they tested at too high of speeds, and came under fire for errors that they may or may not have committed. And now, gee, whoops, I guess they were right. What really chaps my ass, is that over one million of these units were in use for a WHOLE YEAR, possibly putting children at risk in accidents.

Moral of the story: Listen to Consumer Reports.