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Entries in Guest Post (18)

Thursday
Jun302011

Fathers Discuss Diabetes

Sanofi Aventis put together a thoughtful diabetes blog some months ago and since then I’ve had the opportunity to speak with and get to know Laura Kolodjeski quite a bit - she helps run the blog, ‘Discuss Diabetes’ and she’s good people! 

 

Laura contacted a few of the Dads in the diabetes community and asked them to write a blog for her Father’s Day series... the first blog went up today and I hope that you get the chance to check it out. Come back here each day this week and I’ll post a link to the next blog - I hear that the week ends with a little something from yours truly.

 

Okay, get going!

 

Friday

Wrapping up the week with Laura

 

Thursday

My favorite memory with Arden - by me

 

Wednesday

Time moves quickly - George Simmons

 

Tuesday

Bennet Dunlap really likes being a dad!

 

Monday

Up first, Manny Hernandez

 

**

The following are archived comments from this post. You can post new comments below.

Scott - I cannot begin thank you enough for sharing your favorite memory with Arden. It still makes my eyes well-up. Have an awesome Father’s Day! Best, Laura
Thursday, June 16, 2011 - 05:34 PM
Scott
You're welcome... gonna make me blush.
Friday, June 17, 2011 - 01:58 PM

 

Tuesday
Jun282011

My Favorite memory with Arden

The following is a Father’s Day blog that I wrote for Discuss Diabetes. I’m posting it here in it’s entirety for those that missed it. I hope you enjoy!

 

Today, we’re featuring Scott Benner, a.k.a. @ardensday, as part of our Father’s Day Tribute series. Scott has been a stay-at-home father since 2000. He’s been blogging about what it’s like to be the parent of a child with type 1 for the last four years. Thanks Scott for being part of our Father’s Day Tribute series and for sharing this beautifully written, sincere post that literally left me with an empty tissue box.

 

Q. What’s your favorite memory with your daughter?

When I received the topic I knew immediately what I’d write about, that is, I do have a favorite memory with my daughter, Arden, but writing about it in an interesting and meaningful way, well, it took me a number of days to understand how to do that.

My wife, Kelly, and I were married in the summer of 1996, we have two children. Our son, Cole, is 11 and our daughter, Arden, is 6. Arden was diagnosed with type I diabetes a few weeks after her second birthday.

We are a family that takes a lot of pictures and the last time that I looked we had nearly 45,000 images in iPhoto. Most every one of them has been filed in my mind as pre and post diagnosis. I don’t know why and I certainly don’t have this thought purposely but I do find that it happens quite often — I’ll see a photo and I think, “Arden wasn’t diabetic in that picture”.

It happens with most every photo except this one…

 


This photo was taken on Cole’s first day of kindergarten by Kelly. We were waiting in our front yard for Cole to arrive home from school. Kelly had taken the day off to be there when Cole got on the bus and she stayed home to welcome him as he got off.

 

This seemingly innocuous moment is my favorite with Arden in part because this day was a perfect day. This moment, these 20 or so minutes that we spent waiting for the bus to arrive and playing in the grass, was the apex of the day. I remember now, just as clearly as if it were yesterday that I felt perfect inside. I think that even if you don’t know me, you can see on my face the sheer joy and pure love that I have for Arden, Cole and Kelly. It was all but pouring from me as I looked into her big eyes. I should stop for a second, I just realized that I’ve never thanked Kelly for taking what has been, is and may well forever be my favorite photo of Arden and me. Thank you so much Kelly!

 

Before. I bet that every parent of a child with type I just read that word and knew what I meant. Anyway, before Arden was diagnosed I didn’t understand life. I thought that I did but circumstances have leant me a unique perspective and that perspective has clarified what it is that I’m to take from and give to a day. Thanks to this clarity, I see the beauty in things that may well to most, be unworthy of a second glance.

 

So that’s my favorite moment with my daughter, Arden. It happened at the end of a perfect day, a day that I spent with Arden and my wife just feeling good about life, excited at the world of possibilities that existed for our family. It culminated in that patch of grass somewhere between watching Arden holding on to my wife’s leg as she learned to walk and the exact second that that photo was taken. In that moment my heart was as full and as happy as any of us could ever hope for – and I am lucky enough to have a picture of it so that I can never forget what perfect feels like and who makes me feel that way.

 

I hope that your child’s life with type I opens your heart to what really matters and that you are able from time to time to forget that there was a before and just take in the wonderment of now. I know all too well that much of your lives are filled with stress, worry and a constant and nagging sense that something bad is waiting around the bend. I know the failure that a high BG makes you feel and that the guilt of that reading lasts too long. I know that with diabetes comes arguments, extra costs and a prioritization that is often unfair to you, your spouse and others in your family. I know all of that and still I choose to believe that there are more perfect days ahead for my family and for yours.

 

My heartfelt best to you and yours. You are not alone.

 

Scott – I cannot thank you enough for sharing this incredibly personal moment between you and Arden (and Kelly). I wish you and yours a very Happy Father’s Day!  

All the best, Laura K.

 

Disclosure: This blogger received no compensation for this post. All opinions contained in this post reflect those of the blogger, and not of sanofi-aventis U.S., its employees, agencies or affiliates.

 

This entry was posted on Thursday, June 16th, 2011 at 5:00 am and is filed under GeneralLifestyle. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

 

Wednesday
Jun222011

My diabetes365 interview

 

The website www.diabetic365.com invited me to be part of their ‘Diabetic Heros’ interview series. The interview took place on Father’s Day and was posted just the other day. Diabetic365 was kind enough to allow me to repost it here at Arden’s Day. 

 

I think that the information that was revealed during this 20 or so minutes is worth the time it takes to hear it.

 

The interview is in two parts, I hope that you take a look. Please also take a moment to check out diabetic365.com.

 

part I

 

part II

 

Monday
May092011

Diabetes Blog Week year 2, day 1

The list of things that I am not good at is extensive, it’s embarrassing really and it includes writing for Diabetes Blog Week. Here’s the honest thing... I don’t read other people’s blogs very often and these topics always have to do with other people. I wish that I did read more of what is out there but I don’t and for many good reasons. They are:

 

I don’t have time...  I don’t like to read... I’m afraid that my grammar is atrocious and that I’ll figure out just how bad it is when I see good writing. But mainly...

 

I want my blog to be as unique as I can make it and I’m afraid that I’ll be too influenced by all of your amazing writing and begin to lose my voice. Goofy? Maybe. High-minded and over-thought, perhaps but I promise not in a uppity way and it is a real fear.

 

Don’t get me wrong. If I follow you or you follow me I’ve read your stuff and there are a number of blogs that I make my way back to rather frequently. I think of it like when a therapist goes to a therapist. You have all helped me in so many ways that I could never properly say thank you. That said and I know how strange this will sound but when I started Arden’s Day I had never seen a diabetes blog, forum or even spoken to another parent of a T1 child. I was all like, “look at my honest blog about parenting type I kids, why hasn’t someone else already thought of this? I’m going to make a YouTube video... Look out Chris Columbus coming through!”, or something like that. Then I realized that you were all out there and I felt like I left England to find the New World but it was 1974.

 

I almost stopped blogging once I realized how many people were out there. I thought that this world that I “discovered” didn’t need another voice. I was especially worried that I seemed to be the only father in a rather large group of wonderful Moms and I felt out of place. So I began to just use the blog to hock people for Arden’s JDRF walk. Then one day I got the first of what now is countless emails thanking me for writing about Arden’s day. People were being helped by my want to be transparent about diabetes. The first email I ever got said, “your website saved my life in the first months of my son’s diagnosis” - you can bet that made me cry. So I stayed. I worked on my writing and I found enough courage to be even more transparent. 

 

Now back to Diabetes Blog Week. What a great idea and thanks to Karen at http://www.bittersweetdiabetes.com for making it happen again this year! Don’t be like me, head over and check out the other writing... all promises to be better than this contrived crap I just spewed out.

 

My post has nothing to do with the topic again. I can’t write from a prompt, my brain just doesn’t work like that. So, okay that’s the difference that I admire in all of you. Ugh, I’m being too literal with the topic aren’t I? 

 

Let’s end like this... there are a ton of thoughtful people out in the world living with some really terrible shit, a hand full of them write about it on the internet, something that I do and have a great amount of respect for. I’ve seen blogs come and go, this August will be my fourth anniversary and I hope that you all keep it up and that others continue in this tradition. You never know when you might write something that will save another person from losing their grip - funny thing is it helps you as much as it helps them. Good stuff!

 

Follow me on Twitter @ArdensDay. If you do I promise that I’ll do better on Day 2 of Blog Week. It’s letter writing day, free form baby... I can do that!

 

**

The following are archived comments from this post. You can post new comments below.

I've had to distance myself for months from reading blogs, it goes in ebbs and flows.  But there is a strength to be aquired from the power of "same."  

You should give yourself some more credit, you have a voice, and it needs to be heard!  :)
Monday, May 9, 2011 - 05:19 PM
The way I see it, we all have a story to tell and someone out there will connect with us when those stories cross. That is what I love about this community. We can learn so much from one another.
Monday, May 9, 2011 - 09:57 PM

 

Tuesday
Nov092010

D Blog Day

Today is D-Blog Day and this is my addition to the blog topic that everyone is writing about...

 

Topic: Six Things You Want People to Know About Diabetes.


  1. 1. Everything

  2. 2. See Above

  3. 3. See number one

  4. 4. Refer to number two

  5. 5. and on

  6. 6. and on...


I want (rather wish) that everyone knew everything about diabetes even though I realize that isn’t possible.  Heck in a world where I can’t trust that everyone knows how to merge into traffic, walk on the right side of the grocery isle and not spit on a sidewalk, asking to be as immersed in this world as we are is, of course, ridiculous - doesn’t mean that I don’t wish that it was possible.  


If you read this site you know that it has a few goals; pass on what we’ve learned, be a friend to those in doubt, raise money and awareness by supporting the JDRF but mostly I want to bring transparency to type I diabetes - it’s my way of sharing 6,000,000 things that I wish people knew about diabetes.


In my mind there are a ton of D-Bloggers making these lists today and they will all likely make them better then I could.  So I want to take this opportunity to say this...


I don’t feel as though I have the right to be disappointed when a stranger asks Arden if she, “should be eating that”, angry at the school lunch lady that referred to the rest of the student body as, “the regular kids” or expect the Superintendent of our school district to be completely versed on type I the day he meets us.  It’s just not reasonable to expect.  My best friend (when I was younger) had type I and I quickly realized when Arden was diagnosed that I didn’t understand diabetes half as much as I thought I did.  I wondered why I didn’t know more and soon realized it was because he didn’t want me to.  All of this is not to say that I can’t hope that the people in our lives will take an interest but trying to “teach’ them is a plain waste of time, I’d rather show them.  I treat diabetes education the same as parenting - I teach by example.


We test in public, speak openly to anyone that is interested and generally just don’t hide any aspect of this disease.  What I’ve seen is that people start to catch on when they are exposed a few times.  That exposure builds interest, the interest spurs understanding and just like that I’ve created an advocate for Arden (and hopefully your children too).  Moreover, the exposure creates another person with the knowledge of how to fight a low blood glucose, choose a healthy meal, look for signs and symptoms and all of the rest of the stuff that comes with having diabetes.


That’s all I have - be transparent even if it’s embarrassing, even if it breeds “stupid” questions.  You never know, one day Arden may need help and one of the people that this fantastic community touches may be there to lend a hand.

 

**

The following are archived comments from this post. You can post new comments below.

Thank you for your perspective, it's given me something to think about when my first reaction is frustration and ager about ignorant comments.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010 - 11:03 PM
Scott
Shannon,

I'm really grateful that you took the time to read my post.  I understand your reaction and I'm glad that you are reconsidering it.  I've had it myself in the past but it's so emotionally based that it does no one any good.  Best of luck to you and your daughter!
Wednesday, November 10, 2010 - 10:26 PM
I love that you are "transparent." We too test in public. We don't feel there is anything to hide and try to make it as much a normal part of our lives as possible.

Thanks for the D-Day post today!
Thursday, November 11, 2010 - 05:19 PM