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Category Archives: Family Therapy

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Join Us for the March Quilt Dash!

Quilt Therapy Posted on March 17, 2014 by TK HarrisonMarch 17, 2014

I always have so much fun designing the patterns that are offered for free, once a Quilt Dash member completes the Quilt Dash!  This month’s quilt is called “Memories of Mike” and it is a super-special quilt to me.  Mike was my older brother.  When I was 19, I was a pretty lost soul.  I had lived in four different foster homes and had no true sense of myself.  Then, I was offered a job by a cousin, and a chance to live where my brothers had grown up (they were raised by an aunt and uncle after our folks died), I jumped at it.  As we created new sibling relationships as adults, Mike and I became best friends.  I truly ‘found’ myself with that relationship.  Unfortunately, I got a phone call that will forever be etched in my memory – Mike died at the age of 34 – of a brain aneurysm (our dad died of a brain aneurysm at the age of 36 in 1976…Mike’s death was in 1997).

This quilt design has two of the elements that are actually carved on Mike’s headstone – four log cabin blocks and a number of mountain blocks.  Mike’s biggest dream was to move to Colorado and live in a log house on or near mountains.  He never got the chance to do it.  But, now I will always have this special quilt pattern to remind me to dream big!

MemoriesOfMike

Please join us at Quilt Dash this month!  If you are not a member, just create an account and start Dashing!  Once you complete the Quilt Dash, you will be emailed an email (within 24 hours) with the link to this free pattern in the body of the email.

Help me keep the Memories of Mike alive!

Posted in Family History, Family Therapy, My Memories, Quilt Dash, Quilt-Spiration | Leave a reply

How MS Affects this Woman and Her Family

Quilt Therapy Posted on March 14, 2014 by TK HarrisonMarch 13, 2014

Although it is not time for me to post my yearly MS update, I felt the need to write a little more personal story about how my MS has affected not just my immediate family but also my relationships with extended family as well as friends (near and far).  And I want to be very clear that no two people have the same MS symptoms.  It is an unknown disease, regardless of how much money is thrown at the researchers.  There is no way to predict where the lesions may appear in the brain and hence, how it will affect the person who has lesions.  My symptoms are mine – and that is what this personal revelation is about.

I am broken.

MS

This image signifies SO much of what I deal with on a daily basis – a crack in the “M”, which would be ME.  I am broken.  I am suffering daily.  Nothing thus far has helped with my MS symptoms.  Nothing has regained any of my facilities that brain lesions have destroyed.  Even some of the brain lesions still show up as great big white holes in my brain, on CT scans and MRIs.  No medications have helped stamp out my MS.

I am broken.

MS

And when the wife is broken, the husband becomes the primary caretaker of not just his bride but also our children.  My husband works sunup to sundown taking care of the responsibilities that I used to at least share with him.  He is a trooper though he occasionally needs a break from his duties to regroup and come back rejuvenated.  He holds me up when I cannot walk.  He lotions my feet after a shower because I am too dizzy to do it myself.  He drives me to and from my medical appointments and helps me make sense of what the doctors are trying to tell me.  And he holds me when I am hurting (emotionally and/or physically), letting me know that we are in this MS fight as a team.

I am broken.

MS

My children are the next in line for suffering through my MS.  I can no longer handle their chaos, noise and drama.  I am no longer the Mom they once knew.  They can tell me things and just a few moments later, I forget what they said.  They are distancing themselves from me because they do not like what MS has done to me…better to hang onto a positive (their dad) instead of a negative (me, their mom).  Each day, I lose a bit more of my former self and if the kids can find a way to get away from me, so they do not have to deal with it, they will do so.  The kids make fun of me quite a bit.  I know it is their way of trying to get a handle on their mom with MS, but it hurts my heart.

In the beginning of my MS journey, my husband and I agreed to keep the communication lines open with the kids.  What we knew, they knew.  We talked about the side effects and symptoms often with them.  At this point, we are thinking perhaps we gave them TOO MUCH information as they worry about me way more than any child should have to worry about their parent.

I am also unable to participate in many of their extracurricular and/or fun adventures.  This spring break week is a prime example – my husband is taking my kids to a state park for three days and two nights of backpacking and camping.  I cannot go.  I cannot hike the distances.  I can barely walk, most of the time…which means my husband would not only be carrying a 60 pound backpack, he would also have to help our youngest daughter (whose backpack is pretty heavy for a first-time backpacker) and then hold onto me so I could walk.  But, even just going to the store makes the pain in my feet pain-med worthy…so, backpacking just a half of a mile would mean I would be down for the count.

I am broken.

MS

At this point in my journey, I have already failed four MS therapies/protocols.  From the most common drug to the strongest drug…none of them have helped me and have, in fact, made my MS symptoms worse.  I have been referred to a different neurologist (known as a MARC neurologist – MARC standing for Medical Arts & Research Center neurologist) and she has run a number of tests.  She is of the belief that I have something else wrong with me such as another autoimmune disease – something that would explain why the MS therapies have failed me.  Unfortunately, I cannot get in to see her again until April.  And her office refuses to fax us the results of the tests until she has a chance to go over them with us.

Next week, I see a neurotologist.  She specializes in dizziness, which has plagued me ever since diagnosis in late 2010.  Perhaps she will have some answers and give me relief from this most debilitating symptom.  Nothing my previous MS neurologist was able to do.  Yes, answers would be nice.

But, I am still broken.

MS

The loneliness of MS is probably one of the top five repercussions of having this disease.  Since I do not do well in crowds, I am better off at home.  Going to our local quilt group, where I was totally in my element for four years before MS, is a thing of the past.  Even visiting with one or two friends is difficult for me.  I am unable to think as quickly as I used to and therefore, unable to articulate or even participate in a conversation/discussion.  Talking on the telephone falls in this category, too.  Extended family comes to my mother-in-law’s house…my husband and kids go up to spend time with them…and I have to stay home or else I would end up in the bed for a day or two.  I just cannot handle it anymore.

I am broken.

MS

And what I am doing to my kids is foremost in my mind.  They deserve a ‘whole’ Mom.  They deserve more than they get from me.  They deserve to be kids.  And they deserve escape from the MS that has turned their mom into someone they do not recognize.  They deserve so much more than I am able to give.

I am broken.

Posted in Family Therapy, Living with Multiple Sclerosis | 3 Replies

Flashback Tuesday: Quilted Card Wallet

Quilt Therapy Posted on February 25, 2014 by TK HarrisonFebruary 25, 2014

We have four children.  I was either nursing a baby or pregnant for eight straight years.  My diaper bag, at times, was a backpack, other times a large tote bag.  At one point, my husband and I were changing the diapers of three kids. When our youngest child was finally potty-trained, my husband and I calculated we had been changing diapers for 10 years straight!  I can assure you, we called our usual date-night dinner companions and went out to celebrate over that milestone!

Once the kids were in school, I swore I would NEVER carry a purse bigger than absolutely necessary.  My shoulders thanked me.  My back thanked me.

My purse is big enough to hold the bare essentials…and if the kids want to bring along anything in the auto, I make them carry it themselves – either in a purse or in a backpack.  I am *done* being their pack-horse.

Fast forward a few years to 2007 when I made this Quilted Card Wallet for my very small purse and am still using it, to this day, seven years later.  The fabric is an old line of civil war reproduction fabrics…and the plastic is from a huge fabric store in Oregon during our family’s camping adventures in the summer of 2006.  I’m pretty sure I still have some of that plastic left in my stash :-).

Quilted Card Wallet
Free Pattern from BOMquilts.com

Posted in Family History, Family Therapy, Flashback Tuesday, Miscellaneous Therapy | Leave a reply

Charity Quilt-a-Thon

Quilt Therapy Posted on February 6, 2014 by TK HarrisonFebruary 3, 2014

The wonderful and tireless ladies at our home church began their two-week Lutheran World Relief (LWR) quilting today…and they will quilt for two solid weeks.  Many of them will be at the church from early in the morning until late at night.  ALL of them are dedicated to a worthwhile cause and our church is always so (sew?) pretty when their two-week LWR quilt-a-thon is finished as they hang all of the quilts over the pews, the communion rails and anywhere else they can find to hang them so the congregation can enjoy their beautiful colors before they are boxed up and sent to their new home.

I have never been able to join them while they quilt.  First it was because I was the main breadwinner in our family and then, once I was diagnosed with MS, there is no way I can handle the hustle and bustle, chaos, movements and noises from the group.  So, I felt compelled to help in SOME way that would not affect an exacerbation of my MS symptoms.

I decided I could donate fabric to the cause!  I already had one LWR quilt sewn but had lost it in my sewing room and recently uncovered it so that went into my donation box along with some fabrics.  Then, my MIL was going to our little town’s quilt group a few weeks ago and she mentioned my request to the ladies in the group.  And, as with most things that have meaning and quilted hearts – the word spread like wildfire and the next thing you know is I had over 200 yards of fabric for our home church LWR ladies!

IMG_1178

Donated fabric filled up the back end of my Suburban.

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A few of our church quilt ladies and one of the men who helps his wife.

ALL of the ladies were very appreciative of the donations – downright GIDDY, actually!  And I was happy that I could do what little I did to help them along in their LWR quilt-a-thon journey.

Posted in Charity Quilts, Church Therapy, Fabric Therapy, Family Therapy, Living with Multiple Sclerosis, Quilt Donations, Quilt Fabric, Quilt Stash, Quilt-Spiration | 1 Reply

Friday Funday: Who Can Grow the Biggest Cabbage?

Quilt Therapy Posted on January 10, 2014 by TK HarrisonJanuary 7, 2014

Our local elementary school works in conjunction with the local garden club to bring education and fun, through gardening, to the fifth and sixth grade classes.  I believe they have changed their schedule and only cater to the fifth graders now, but both of my younger children got to enjoy gardening for both grades.  Once the end of their time is reached, the kids earn a junior master gardener certificate.  Those instructional gardener days are priceless – leaving the kids with the knowledge and ability to grow their own food and bring it home to eat it!

Earlier this fall, my husband issued a challenge to our youngest son and daughter – who can grow the biggest cabbage?  Our son wasn’t interested in the competition (but he has helped maintain the garden around the produce), but that youngest daughter is full of the competitive gene and she rose to the challenge!

She and her dad planted 96 cabbage plants.  Yes, you heard that right – 96!  My husband makes his own sauerkraut and it’s in high demand in these parts, so he wanted enough cabbage to carry out his smelly delights.

As I went out to inspect the cabbage competition, I noticed something had been dining on the leaves.  Since these are completely organic, there’s not a lot to be done to keep the hungry bugs away – but he did inform me that the bugs only ate at the leaves and had not gotten to the cabbage heads.

IMG_0957

This cabbage above?  That would be our 12-year-old daughter’s cabbage.  Her PhD (in an agricultural field) dad’s cabbages didn’t have big enough heads on them for me to photograph.  🙂

There is more than a month remaining in this contest….may the best cabbage grower reign!

Posted in Contest, Family History, Family Therapy, Friday Funday | Leave a reply

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