we had slid back into complacency.
this morning when i looked at the calendar and realised jasper had a doctor's appointment, i actually rolled my eyes, instead of feeling icewater drift into titanic sized worries around my stomach. there was no nausea.
jasper even cracked the 45th percentile (asian) for height and weight. i was ecstatic. even looking forward to the day when there would be no more appointments.
and then we saw the doctor.
he asked jasper a few questions. and then he looked up at me and asked me many more.
1. did jasper run here
2. was he running in the waiting room
my answers were no and no. i wanted to say:
1. no, the waiting times are so long we could have crawled and still had time for a coffee afterwards
2. no, it is called the waiting room, not the running room. the running room is a shop.
but, i didn;t want to get "glib" so i stuck to just the facts, maam. and besides, i didn't want to interfere in the quality of my kids healthcare. but then the bad news started. jasper has a wheeze. how often does he have a cough? at least five days a month? yes? does he cough in the middle of the night? yes? doesn't matter if water can appease the cough...he does have a cough? and asthma runs in the family? he was the heaviest preemie? i see.
this is when i start to want to make comments about ITS ALL THERE IN THE FILE. but given that the file is taller than me, i didn't want to alienate the doctor. if he had read the entire file, we would still be in the waiting room.
jasper's lungs are in trouble. we're back on steroids 200 micrograms twice a day, and ventolin six times a day (two puffs at a go). the steroids have all sorts of long term side effects.
the irony is, the doctor told me that jaspers physical activities must be severely curtailed or else we are in danger of harming his lungs or passageways. (i am still uncertain as to what the technical term is). i have to admit, this part makes me laugh. what else would jasper like more than to have his physical activities curtailed? the doctor even cautioned me that jasper might even have learned to hide or fake his symptoms.
we walked home (slowly) and then jasper ran to the bathroom to do wees. he slipped and he hit his head, cutting open his face right below his eyebrow, so close to his eye.
he cried and cried and cried. wheezed and wheezed and wheezed.