03 October 2010
02 October 2010
When It Rains...
you are special to me
a friend more than a daughter
the best one could ever hope for
you are brighter than any star in the sky
every time you flash a smile
and when your burdens get too heavy
always remember that i am here for you
not just as your mom
but as your best friend as well
© Bing (PinkLady) 2010
There's a monster in my family. It has surreptitiously crept into our genes and has now hit my teenage princess.
Last Tuesday, my daughter Jazzy and I went for a walk. Since she usually runs or jogs instead of walking with me, I got the chance to look at her from afar.
"Oh dear, I have to do something about her posture," I remember telling myself. And when I finally caught up with her, I told her how bad her posture was and how I hated it. She just smiled at me and promised to be more conscious about it next time. The same promise she gives me every time I tell her "don't slouch!" or "stand up straight!" or "watch your posture!"
We all know how teenagers hate to be criticized. So I tried to make it up to her and passed on my treasure chest- classic blouses and cool shorts I was hoping to fit into again when I go back to my old form (I have given up on that now). As she was excitedly trying them on, that was when I saw it... a deformed spine.Why did I not see it before? Was I so blind? Or have I just lived in denial? The bad posture... I understand now... I wanted to take back all the scolding I gave her. It was not her fault. In fact, I am blaming myself now for not paying attention.
Scoliosis is the medical term for curvature of the spine. Genetics are believed to play a role and my daughter's condition appears to be congenital. The fact that I myself (as well as my mom's sister and her daughter) suffer from mild scoliosis (non-progressive 20 degrees thoracic curve) should have put me on "red alert" with my daughters as it is more often diagnosed in female members of the family (which I learned only now).
Last Thursday, I brought her to two doctors- a rehab medicine specialist and an orthopedic surgeon who specializes in spine surgery.
The diagnosis: not just single but DOUBLE curve- thoracic (upper spine) curve of 40 degrees and lumbar (lower spine) curve of 60 degrees. For someone her age, progression is 5 degrees per year.
The recommendation: immediate spinal surgery that could last for 10 hours or more. And we are talking here of my 14 year old princess.
Oh nooooooo, not my princess!

Image from Photobucket
Posted by: Bing Yap at 11:54 AM 15 POINTS OF VIEW
Labels: daughter, depression, don't mess with my kids, fears about future, fears about the present, kids' future, poetry, scoliosis
29 September 2010
Stress (Sensational Haiku Wednesday)
half our lives we rush
there's always not enough time
until time runs out
stop for a minute
feel the breeze, inhale deeply
that moment is yours
seize the day, they say
but we let the day seize us
we live on the edge
♥♥♥
one day at a time
that's how it should always be
take control of LIFE



Image by David Roberts
Posted for Sensational Haiku Wednesday
♥♥♥
stop for a minute
feel the breeze, inhale deeply
that moment is yours
♥♥♥
seize the day, they say
but we let the day seize us
we live on the edge
♥♥♥
one day at a time
that's how it should always be
take control of LIFE
© Bing (PinkLady) 2010

Image by David Roberts
Posted for Sensational Haiku Wednesday
which is hosted by Jenn of You know... that Blog?
Next week’s theme:WAVES
Posted by: Bing Yap at 8:17 AM 26 POINTS OF VIEW
Labels: haiku, poetry, sensational haiku wednesday, strength, stress
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)



