Wednesday, February 18, 2015

My Puppy Came

For over a year Zuri has been asking for a dog.  For over a year we put her off for one reason or another.  We had seriously talked about getting a dog last summer after my trip, and less than a week after I got back, Zuri was quick to remind me.   

Mom, you said when you get back from Japan that we could get a dog.  So I did, but the timing just wasn't right.

We were going to adopt a dog from a shelter (read dog, not puppy), because honestly I didn't want to go through the trouble of having to housebreak and do major training of a dog.  We continued to debate on the best time and had agreed (to a point) that later in Spring 2015 would be a good time to adopt.

Weeeeeellll, J has two sisters who own dogs.  One sister had a female, the other has an older male puppy--neither of them neutered.  Guess what happened?  That's right.  Puppies.  Puppies that neither sister wanted to care for.  The clincher?  They would be born sometime in December.  Oh, Christmas present anyone?

So J and I talked and decided to take one of the puppies.  They were an Australian Shepard, Black Lab mix, and most of them turned out all black with a distinguishing white spot somewhere on them.  We debated between two puppies: the one we got, and the other had a big white patch on her nose and going up her forehead and down her chest.  The second was the most distinguishable among the six puppies and we went back and forth on which puppy we would take.  Ultimately, we decided on our puppy because she wasn't as "shaggy" as the other.  With Kai, we didn't want a long haired dog (plus the extra maintenance of long hair).

Zuri got to meet the puppies for Christmas, and she knew that one of them would be hers.  She also knew that her puppy wouldn't be ready to come home until February.  We kept telling her right around Valentine's day, but we wanted the actual day to be a surprise.

J's sister (Alisia) who had been caring for the puppies (she's the one who has the dad), drove up to deliver the puppies all to their new homes (the puppies were all sold in under an hour once she put them up for sale).  She tied some balloons to our puppy's collar along with a cute fabric envelope that said Zuri's name.

J and I met Alisia and Rendall outside and rang the doorbell so Zuri would answer the door.  When she opened the door, she was in shock for a moment, then not sure if what she was seeing was true.  Her question was, "my puppy came?!"  When she realized her puppy was really here, she teared up and was so excited she couldn't wait to hold her.

It ended up being perfect timing because Zuri was off-track and could spend the time bonding with her puppy.  Hence the reason for my lack of posts recently.  Between having all three kids home, a new puppy, and Kai's surgery, I have been busy!  I'm hoping to get all caught up on everything by the end of March, so there might be some marathon posts coming up, along with lots of pictures of the newest member of our family!

Sunday, February 8, 2015

Surgery

Our Little Mister had surgery a couple weeks ago, and all things considered, it went really well!  Kai's cholesteotoma was much larger than the CT scan had shown, and had started to eat away at his bone.  His doctor said that the way it was progressing, it would have eventually eaten away at his brain!  So scary!

As it was, they were able to successfully remove the infection--or at least almost all of it.  There is the possibility that there is still some that is on his facial nerve, but the doctor didn't want to mess with it for two reasons.  First, the surgery was already in the four hour mark, and he didn't want to leave Kai open much longer due to infection risk.  Second, he didn't want to risk damaging the nerve and leave Kai's face paralyzed.  Again, scary! 

We have a follow-up CT scan in about six months to see how Kai is doing and to see if there is any residual cholesteotoma in his ear. 

In addition to removing the infection, they also reconstructed his ear canal and moved his eardrum.  They widened both ear canals and put tubes in his right ear.  

Since his surgery, Kai's mood has very markedly improved.  He is vocalizing more--doing a lot of the high and low pitches that we haven't heard in almost a year.  He even took his ballard and was running it alongside his bed wall (although it doesn't have the same stimulation as the crib bars).  Overall he has been much happier and content--definitely more like himself. 

I can't tell if his hearing has improved since the surgery, but he is more alert and seems more aware.  Whether that is due to better hearing or not being in constant pain (or both!) is hard to tell, but it is so good to have him happy again!

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