Mother-To-Be or Mother-Not-To-Be, that is the question.

our struggles with infertility

July 22, 2004

HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS

And I must admit, my heart is in our new house. I hope no one finds it annoying that I continually post pictures of the progress on our new house, but in a way I feel like it is my baby.

Literally.

Every single little detail in this house was hand picked by me and Anthony (but mostly by me). Every inch of it meets our exact, precise specifications, based on what we've always wanted in our "dream house." I have so much of my heart and soul invested in this house. I can't wait to move, I can't wait to live there, and I can't wait to fill this house with babies.

I am still certain that I will be a mom someday, and if the frequent posting of house-progress pics is any indication, I am going to be one of those annoying parents who is always showing total strangers pictures from every single waking moment of her baby's life. "First smile," "first tooth, "first poop." You know what I mean.

Anyways, here is the only baby I have right now, almost four months away from her "due" date, December One. I am sorry, but it is so nice to have something in my life that gets me excited and hopeful and happy these days. It is nice to have something to look forward to. I'd trade it all in the blink of an eye for a baby, honest to God. But in the meantime I'll take the house.

My house

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HINDSIGHT IS 20/20

 I should have seen it coming.   I should have known, long ago, that I would struggle with infertility issues.  In fact some days I feel like I had it coming all along.  There were signs everywhere.  How could I not have known?  

As soon as I was married, I asked my doctor, due to the fact that I have been on medicine for asthma my entire life, if this could hinder my chances of getting pregnant in the future.  She said yes, it very well could.  And foolishly at that time I didn’t really let that information sink in, or even really consider the importance of this news since, at the time, I wasn’t “ready” for a baby.  

I unthinkingly asked one of my married friends, almost four years ago, “So when the hell are you guys going to have kids?”  To which she responded by crying.  Open mouth, insert foot.  “Oh Dawn,” she exclaimed, “it doesn’t always just happen.  Sometimes you try and try and it keeps NOT happening.”  Boy did I feel like an asshole.  How ignorant I was back then.  I still cringe when I remember being so naïve and so inadvertently thoughtless to my friend.  (She now has two babies.)  

My father’s initials are “DES.”  My initials (before I got married) were “DES.”  My mothers initials are “PMS,” and one of my closest friends for the past 27 years has the initials “STD.”  I don’t know what this means, but it can’t be good.  

I was with my ex-boyfriend for over seven years off and on, and truth be told we were “careful” about .001 percent of the time.  I considered myself “lucky” that with all our carelessness I never found myself pregnant.  

I started decorating the spare room in our current house in “nursery” style about two months before we decided to start trying to conceive.  I assumed I’d be putting a baby in that room 11 months later.  In fact, I thought of it as a foregone conclusion.  

I postponed “starting” to try to conceive until after my sister’s wedding.  Once again, I assumed that conceiving would happen the very second we decided to begin trying, and at the time I was so selfish that God forbid I needed a maternity bridesmaid’s dress, or worse, God forbid I couldn’t drink at her wedding!


If I only knew then what I know now.  Better yet, if I had only paid attention to the signs….




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July 21, 2004

FREE ASSOCIATION

Lots to say tonight, and also not a whole lot to say.  God, my brain has been so disjointed lately.  What is UP with me?
 
Doug Flutie
 
Let me preface this post by saying that,  if you are from Boston (like me), and especially if you attended Boston College (like me), you pretty much think that Doug Flutie is God.  Which is why I was stunned to learn a few years ago that Anthony sort of knew Doug.  Doug is apparently close friends with some of Anthony's close friends, which by default makes them casual acquaintences.  I have not benefitted from this in any way, shape, or form whatsoever, which sort of pisses me off.  (A simple introduction would suffice, he's a friggin' NFL quarterback!  A former Heisman trophy winner!  THE GOD-DAMNED HAIL MARY PASS, THE MIRACLE IN MIAMI!)  Sorry.  See?  We get a bit carried away here in Boston when it comes to Doug Flutie.
 
So Anthony called me a few weeks ago on his way home from his softball game to tell me that they had acquired a new teammate.  Apparently Doug had been added to their team roster, and although his attendance would be sporadic at best, he would be playing in some more games throughout the season. 
 
It was no coincidence that at that moment I started to attend Anthony's softball games.  And Anthony noticed.  Fortunately, he isn't the jealous type!
 
Doug hasn't shown up yet since I have been going to games, and that includes tonight's game.  But I still have faith.  I think he actually needs to head back to San Diego soon, since football season starts in like six weeks (yay!).  But I will keep going to the games, hoping that he'll show up again, and maybe I can get an introduction.  That's all I want.  ;-)
 
Flying Blind
 
So today is day 18 of my cycle and I don't know if I ever ovulated.  I used my last testing stick this morning which still indicated that I have not ovulated.  And I refuse to spend $50 on another box of sticks when I am 18 days into my normally 25-day cycle.  So...who knows what's going on with me.  It doesn't really matter.
 
It's not like I expect that we're going to get pregnant on a month that we're "taking a break" from treatments.

"You can't say 'nuclear,' that really scares me"
 
So funny.  Loving this.

http://www.jibjab.com/
 
Bag Lady
 
Okay, I realize I owe a few of you some bags as I promised a couple of weeks ago.  I will work my hardest to provide more concrete information to those of you who expressed interest by Friday.  I have recruited my pregnant sister to help me work on some bags tomorrow night.  I think she feels a little funny about the fact that she is pregnant and I am not, so I can pretty much guilt her into anything these days.  WHOOPS!  Did I say that out loud?
 
If anyone is wondering what the hell I am talking about here and is interested in finding out more, email me at: dawn_corrado@hotmail.com
 
My heart breaks…and breaks…and breaks…
 
…for getupgrrl.  How much more can one person, SHOULD one person, endure?  If God has a plan, and if things happen for a reason, then please (somebody, please!) tell me what the plan or reason could possibly be for all of her pain.  Oh, and God?, if you do in fact exist and if you are in fact listening.......ENOUGH ALREADY!  Have some compassion, some mercy.  Please.

And if God is not listening, I hope that grrl can take some degree of comfort in the fact that 185 (and counting) commenters are listening...and caring...and grieving...and praying...and we are all crying with her today. 


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July 20, 2004

DNC = DO NOT COMMUTE

Ok, so more of my rant on the wonderful world of Boston politics.
 
When they announced that the DNC was coming here, they may as well have announced that the 2004 Summer Olympics were coming here, because it makes about as much sense.  We are not a city capable of hosting "stuff."  Not in any way, shape or form.  We have the Big Dig going on which is all-consuming.  We have an airport that you cannot get to because it is on an "island."  Or is it an isthmus?  Anyways, to get to Logan International Airport, you have to go on Route 93 (where the Big Dig is) and then take one of 3 tunnels, 2 of which are 1 lane wide.  The tunnel that is multi-laned you need to have a special sticker (like a cab, for example) in order to use it.  So when airport security measures dictate that you need to arrive two-hours before your flight is scheduled to depart, and you are like me and live a mere 11 miles outside of Boston, you need to give yourself another two hours of drive time.  Unless it is rush hour, then add another two hours.  You think I am kidding, I know you do, but I swear this is true!  You can NEVER, EVER assume that luck will be on your side when it comes to driving to or through Boston.  (And I will save my rant on Logan Airport for another day and spare you all.  One rant at a time!) 

Another reason we would not be a good host city is because Boston is a city made for getting lost in.  It was deliberately, intentionally built that way.  I have lived 11 miles outside of Boston my entire life - I worked in downtown Boston for six and a half years and drove to work every single day - and I don't know how to get around the city.  It is not me being an airhead, I swear, I am actually very nagivationally savvy.  But Boston is an enigma.  The original streets and roads, most of which still exist today, were built for the very purpose of confusing and evading the British soldiers.  Just look at a roadmap of Boston, it is a fucking jigsaw puzzle.
 
So, we are five days away from the DNC.  Let me explain some very "typical" Boston things going on because of the convention: 

I-93 will be closed.  CLOSED!  This is because I-93 runs right next to the Fleet Center, the location of the DNC.  As a quick side note, let me mention that after it was announced that the DNC was coming here, miraculously the new bridge was completed and the inbound AND outbound roads getting to and from the heart of downtown Boston were finished "two months ahead of schedule."  Um.             If the project is five years behind schedule then how can you possibly claim to be ahead of schedule?

We have a brand new, beautiful, HUGE convention center that opened last month that is located nowhere near the mess that we call I-93.  This facility will be unused during the convention.  Did I mention it is a BRAND NEW CONVENTION center?

If you work in Boston and normally drive to work on I-93 (which is essentially the only way TO get to Boston), the city has urged you to take a vacation week and not come to work that week.  I kid you not.

The city of Boston has encouraged businesses to close that week.  Except any places where they may need to get their morning coffee or a sandwich at lunchtime, I presume?  If the point of hosting the DNC was to show off what a fabulous city this is, why are we encouraging the city to all but shut down?

If you still need to come to work that week and choose to take some sort of public transportation such as the bus or commuter rail, the city of Boston has requested that you bring no bags with you.  As in ZERO.  If you do, you will be automatically subjected to full searches.  If you carry a laptop to and from work as a part of your job, you WILL be searched, as this constitutes carrying a bag.  You must be prepared to show two forms of ID, including a picture ID, and you may be asked to show these at any time for any reason.

Did I mention the brand new CONVENTION center?  It is quite lovely, it extends the length of three football fields placed end-to-end, and is the only building easily accessed from Logan Airport.  But nope!  Not using it.

If you commute to work via commuter rail, this means the trains bring you in to one of two stations - North Station, or South Station.  North Station is closed next week.  CLOSED.  It is closed, because the Fleet Center sits on top of North Station.

The new convention center does not sit on top of a train station.

If you normally take the train into North Station (like my sister, who HAS to work next week), you need to get off a few stations sooner and hop onto the maze which we call the "T" - our subway system.  Here you will definitely encounter many more personal searches.

Some parts of I-93 which extend far beyond the city (nowhere near the DNC), like near my house, will also be closed.

 

Many of these points I have listed have a lot to do with post 9/11 paranoia mixed in with crazy Boston Logic.  But here are some more points of interest which just have their own unique Boston charm:

 

The Boston Police Union is on strike.  They are picketing outside the Fleet Center, and for weeks have been preventing workers from enterring the site to, you know, set up the convention.

All Massachusetts State Police, including my friend's husband who serves in Western Mass, are required to work mandatory overtime during convention week.  So he'll be pulling double shifts an hour and a half away from the Fleet Center, and get paid handsomely to do so.  I don't even want to tell you what overtime pay is for state troopers.  (Although, this is actually money I consider well spent, provided the troopers are working to protect us from this "probable" terror threat that the city has so carefully prepared for). 

The mayor pulled some strings to get an emergency arbitration going to resolve the contract disputes immediately so that next week the police can....police.....during the convention.  Which we REALLY need them to.

The Police Union claims that this emergency arbitration is unlawful and therefore they are protesting and threatening to sue.  So there are now protests regarding the protests.

Many, many politicians that are supposed to attend the DNC said they will not cross a labor picket line, and if the Police are still on strike they will not attend the DNC.

For a solid two weeks approximately a month ago, John Kerry was toying with the idea of NOT formally accepting the nomination at the DNC so that he could have some more fund raising time to try to catch up to the fund raising efforts of George W. Bush.  So there was a two-week period where ALL THIS CRAZINESS was potentially for a pointless convention.  Kerry's advisors quickly realized that if he tried to pull this shit he would not get ONE VOTE from anyone who lives in his home state of Massachusetts.

 

Hmmm.....what else?  Is that not enough for you?  The sad part is, I know there is more, but I just can't remember it all right now.  This is typical example of Massachusetts politics in action, and it makes me sick to my stomach.

I am so glad I no longer work in the city.  But my husband does.  And my sister does.

And with all the chaos and road closures and checking the id's of every local trying to get to their job and all the picketing and lack of police presence, I get scared.  I get very, very scared.

My Western Mass friend told me that her husband (the trooper) has already been informed of some potential terrorist activity that has already taken place at the convention site.

I am so scared that everyone in charge is going to be so caught up in the politics and bickering with one another that we won't see a real act of terror coming until it is too late. 

And one side note - the Republican National Convention is next month in New York City, at Madison Square Garden, which is smack dab in the heart of Manhattan.

It will be business as usual in NYC that week.

I love my city so much, but sometimes she just makes it SO DAMN HARD to love her.

 



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OH, OH, BOSTON YOU'RE MY HOME

I love Boston.
 
Boston is absolutely beautiful.  Granted, I am extremely biased.  I have lived here my entire life.  And I have not seen many other big cities - in fact I can name the other cities I have been to on one hand - New York, Honolulu, Montreal, umm...  Maybe not even on one hand.  But I just love this place, and I am the first person to start gushing about my beloved city when I meet someone - on an airplane for example - who has never been here.  "Wait until we come in for a landing," I will exclaim, "you'll never see anything quite so pretty."  Except maybe for Vegas, which oh yeah is on my list of cities I've been to.  The architecture, the harbor, the shopping, the college scene, the night life, Boston has it all.  It feels like home to me and there is no place I would rather be, or would rather have grown up.
 
But there are a few things about this city that absolutely make my blood boil.  And at the tip top of that list are politics in Massachusetts.  Every single thing is so freakin' convoluted and tedious and so completely lacking of ANY common sense whatsoever that it is almost laughable.  Laughable to all except for those of us who have to live with it.
 
Let me give those of you NOT from around here a prime example: next week's DNC. 
 
I'll never forget a mere couple of years ago when it was announced on the news  that Boston won the bidding wars to be the location of the 2004 Democratic National Convention.  As most of us watched our mayor pumping a celebratory fist in the air, as if to exclaim victory, we actually thought it was a joke and couldn't understand why this was a good thing.
 
For starters, you CANNOT DRIVE ANYWHERE in Boston unless you give yourself, oh, say, six hours to get there.  Regardless of what time of day it is, or what day of the week it is.  Over fifteen years ago a little highway renovation project known as the Big Dig was underway, to convert the main branch of I-93 which goes through the heart of the city from a 6-lane to a 10-lane highway, all in an effort to reduce traffic congestion.  The problem is, to do CONSTRUCTION on THE road to get in and out of Boston means that, for the duration of the project, traffic will be ten-times worse than before.  The project is something like 5 years behind schedule, and 14 or-so BILLION dollars over budget.  And not only are we, the Massachusetts taxpayers footing the bill - so are all of you.  Yes, that is right, federal tax dollars are paying for our road.  I laugh when my friend in Western Massachusetts complains that she is paying for a road she never uses, because my dear, people in Kentucky are paying for this road, too, and they use it a lot less.  (Oh yeah, I've been to Louisville.)
 
Shit - my parents are here to drive me down to see how my new house is progressing (since I am still without a car) - damn, just as I was starting to get into a groove.  I will definitely post some more on this topic in a few hours.

 


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July 19, 2004

THE VENGA BUS IS COMING

Does anyone else just completely crack up watching that Elmer-Fudd dude hip-hop dance in front of the red bus in those Six Flags Commercials?  Too funny!  I laugh EVERY time it is on.
 
Yeah, okay, NOTHING going on worth writing about AT ALL.
 
 
NOTHING!
 
Except the fact that I still haven't ovulated this month.  Or so my monitor tells me, although I feel otherwise.
 
Anyways, I am absolulely brain-dead and won't waste valuable blog space with inane drivel.  You're welcome!

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July 18, 2004

RAINBOW BRIGHT

This weekend I saw five - yes, FIVE - rainbows.  Four on the drive home from Connecticut yesterday, and one on the drive home from the beach today.
 
Five rainbows in one weekend.
 
That's GOT to mean something, right? 
  
 

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DOWDY DAWN, AND OTHER RANDOM SUNDAY EVENING THOUGHTS

It is weird, being "on a break" this month from formal infertility treatments (every time I say that I can hear Ross Gellar shouting "WE WERE ON A BREAK!!!"), I don't really feel as though I have that much to blog about these days.  Aside from just a recap on my daily activities, which I admit is pretty boring to write about and I can only IMAGINE is much more boring to read about.  However, I still am finding that blogging has become extremely therapeutic to me, and therefore continue to blog I will, even if the subject matter sucks.  If anyone stops reading at this point, I don't blame you one bit.  I don't spend my days jumping out of airplanes or hiking Mt. Everest, so to read about the monotony of "a day in the life of Dawn" can tend to become a drag.  I'm sorry about that.  I wish my life were more exciting, but it just ain't.
 
Anyways, I have a bunch of random thoughts and I don't know where to start, so I guess I will just list them out one by one.  Yeah, this post REALLY sucks.
 
Saturday - Yesterday was pretty good.  Anthony and I drove to Natick to his Dad's house.  The four of us (his dad & stepmom, and us) were going to visit Anthony's younger sister G at school.  Yup, school.  On July 17th.  I could NEVER!  I mean, it is summertime for Christ's sake!  Anyways, she just started a PA (physician's assistant) program at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, CT, and is studying her ASS off.  It is a two and a half year program with no breaks - thus the summertime semester she is currently totally consumed by.  We thought she would welcome a quick study break, so a visit from us and lunch out at a restaurant ought to do the trick.  Afterwards, she took us on a tour of the campus, which was very nice, and then we went to tour Yale University, which was pretty cool.  Both G and I share the same "I was gonna apply there just to see if I could get into an Ivy League school, but at the last minute decided not to" story, so we bonded a little.  It was nice to see the campus of the school I had a remote outside chance of attending - I even bought a nice comfy "Yale" sweatshirt at the bookstore.  We kept teasing C, Anthony' stepmom, for saying we were walking in the footsteps of many US Presidents.  She was right, but her comment was for some reason very funny and cute at the time, so we kept giving her a hard time.  C and I always end up being easy targets for the men when we're all together, but neither of us really mind, it is all in good fun.  Long day, but a nice day.  I really enjoy spending time with Anthony's family.  I know that probably makes me sound like a nutjob, but it is true.  His sister is so cool, I am truly in awe of her energy, her intelligence, and her dedication.  She is going to be a huge success when she graduates, no doubt.
 
Dowdy Dawn - Sometimes I wonder what the fuck happened to me, how I became the person I am today.  I don't even closely resemble the person I was a mere five years ago, and I don't get it.  I am talking about the superficial stuff - the exterior.  I am more or less the same person spiritually that I have always been, but my appearance has changed so radically that I don't even recognize myself half the time.  This was more glaringly apparent to me today than it has been in a while.  While the external changes have been gradual, they have a way of sneaking up and one day just bitch-slapping me in the face with a dose of harsh reality.  The first such occurance was this morning, when I went to my friend C's newly purchased condo in Quincy for a brunch.  I was the first to arrive, and felt awkward the second I got there.  It was a casual brunch, so I dressed casually.  Black capri pants, a tee shirt over a bathing suit (was headed to the beach straight from brunch), flip flops, my wet hair tied in a ponytail under a baseball cap, and no makeup whatsoever.  CASUAL.  As C greeted me at the door and one by one the other girls started to arrive, I realized how out of place I looked.  They were all impeccably dressed.  They all had bothered to both blowdry AND style their hair.  They all wore makeup.  They all looked fabulous.  And I looked (and felt) like an asshole.
 
The truth is the way I was dressed today is pretty much the way I dress EVERY day - even for work.  But for ME, this is highly unusual.  I used to give a shit.  I used to dress flawlessly.  I used to NEVER leave the house without makeup on, even just to go get coffee.  I used to wear designer skirt suits and high heels to work EVERY day.  In fact, I have a closet that has 35 designer suits in it, all collecting dust.  35!!!!!  I usually styled my hair with hot rollers, and would never even CONSIDER going to work with wet hair.  I took pride in the way I looked - I tried to be as high-fashion as I could on a small budget, and was usually slim and very put-together looking at all times.
 
Fast forward a mere two years and I have become nothing short of a slob.  A slob who doesn't care one bit about how she looks.  The last time I wore makeup it was because I was going to a wedding.  I have let myself go in every sense of the word - with my looks, my wardrobe, my weight.....*sigh*.....and the strange part is I don't know why.  Is it the marriage-thing?  I mean, honestly, am I that much of a cliché that I have become the attractive, thin girl who got fat and frumpy after she landed a husband?  God, I hope not.  I mean, I guess it makes sense, the one thing that distinguished me from EVERYONE ELSE at the brunch today was my marital status.  Hmm....poor Anthony.  I am going to have to think about this further.
 
I tend to think that it is more likely a simple reflection of my mood, due to all this baby-making stress.  It is an indisputable fact that I am depressed.  I know I am.  It is understandable why, but knowing why doesn't lift the depression cloud from my head.  There definitely is a distinct correlation between the slippage of my outward appearance with the length of time we have been trying to conceive.  Twenty-five months ago, I didn't look too bad, and I took pretty good care of myself.  Now, I don't give a shit about any of it.
 
Although I do.  I care enough to complain about how I look and feel, and enough to feel bad for myself.  But no matter what, complaining does not qualify as a form of exercise.  It just doesn't.
 
After the brunch, I met up with Anthony, R (again) and B, Anthony's best friend (and best man at our wedding) at the beach.  I was there for only about two hours when I started to feel self-conscious again.  I have always been extremely comfortable just hanging with the guys - many, many of my closest friends over the years have been men - but sitting on the beach reading my book, I suddenly was keenly aware that I was using my big belly as a bookshelf, and I got flustered.  Noticing the giant expanse of purple spandex there before me (yes of COURSE I wear a one-piece) I suddenly was extremely embarrassed with my overweightness, and decided I needed to leave.  I didn't want to sit there, with Anthony and his friends, prominently displaying to everyone the total extent of just how much I have let myself go.  Off to the mall, I thought, because naturally what do I do when I am feeling depressed?  I shop.
 
But here, my friends, here is the thing that hit me the hardest today.  I am in desperate need of some more summer clothes, so I decided I would stock up on some pants and tops.  But after I had an armful of clothes I developed a major feeling of "ick."  What the hell was I buying here?  Elastic waist pants?  XL frumpy tee shirts?  What the fuck?  First of all, elastic waist pants should have no place in my life UNLESS I am pregnant, and that is final.  I put them down the second I came to my senses.  Get something with a real waistband, no matter how much more comfortable the elastic would be on my fat belly.  I mean, really!
 
I used to dress "cute."  I used to wear miniskirts and adorable dresses and, most of all, I used to look good in them.  I used to have what I considered to be pretty good taste, a pretty keen sense of style, and a very cool wardrobe.  Is it my age, my weight, or my depressed attitude that has caused such a major shift from "cool" to "as comfortable as possible?"  Not that there is anything wrong with buying frumpy, unflattering, comfortable clothing.  But the thing is, I feel like a fraud.  It isn't me.  At least, it didn't used to be, and I don't want to be like this.  I like clothes, I like having fun with clothes, and I like looking good in clothes.  Ugh....
 
I grabbed my shopping bags and headed to the exit of Macy's and caught a glimpse of myself in the glass doors.  Who is that fat girl?  She doesn't look like Dawn.  And she sure looks sad...
 
I made an unofficial pact with myself right then and there that I am not to buy myself any more clothes until I have, at the very least, dropped a dress size.  Or, until I need to buy maternity clothes, whichever comes first.
 
CLEARBLUE EASY - My $250 ovulation-predictor test is broken.  Either that or my body is not functioning properly.  I *always* ovulate.  I have never, in 18 years, NOT ovulated.  I usually ovulate on day twelve or thirteen - thirteen at the very latest.  Today is day 15 and the damned thing still claims that I have not yet ovulated.  I suppose it is not entirely outside the realm of possibilty that the thing is correct, but I just can hardly believe it.  We've had sex, simply because by body feels like it already ovulated, but I don't know.  I spent a lot of money on this stupid thing (I realize I harp on this fact, but it stings a bit still), I would like to at least have a LITTLE faith that it works properly.
 
SUNDAY BLUES - I hate Sunday nights.  I have always hated them.  Only because Sunday night signifies the end of the weekend and the beginning of the work / school (insert whichever is currently applicable) week.  Most of all, it signifies that Monday, my most dreaded day of the week, is only hours away.  I like my job more than I have liked most jobs I have held in the past, but I absolutely HATE Monday mornings.  Lately, Monday mornings equal one thing for me at work - that our company's email service will be "down," and I haven't been trained on how to fix it.  People know that I have no clue about the email, but that seems to be irrelevant, because not only am I in the "IT" department, but I am also the first person from "IT" to arrive on Monday mornings. 
 
I am no longer greeted with "hello" or "how was your weekend?"  All Monday morning means for me lately is that fifty people will attack me when I walk through the door, telling me that email is down, and when I tell them for the millionth time that there is nothing I can do until someone else gets in, I am then met with a groan and a roll of the eyes.  I completely understand the frustration, but from a mood point of view and considering my constant fragile state of mind these days, it is not the tone I wish to start each and every work week with.  But, at least for the moment, it is unescapable.
 
Enough random thoughts.  Sorry this is so long and boring.
 
Wait until tomorrow morning when I tell colleagues that the "email" guy is out on vacation this week. 
 
*sigh*...I hate Sunday nights. 
 

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