Friday, September 12, 2014

Back to school

The girls are attending an international school, and so far so good. They use the same British curriculum their school in Taipei used, so that hasn't been an adjustment. The Chinese curriculum is quite rigorous (which is why we chose this school over some of the other international schools), but I am very impressed with the teachers, and the girls seem to be keeping up. Chinese and English homework combined is over an hour a day, so that will be a challenge, but so far, good attitudes have prevailed. There are lots of other kids in the neighborhood that go to the school, so they have lots of friends already. Sylvie hasn't been able to ride the school bus yet, which has meant drop off and pick up, but we are hopeful that she will be able soon, and life will feel a bit more manageable.

The school had a welcome BBQ and did face painting:
our little tiger

pink cat

puppy dog

fierce tiger


Sunday, September 7, 2014

Broken Leg

On our fifth day here, the kids were jumping on the trampoline in our yard, and I heard Sylvie screaming. She was curled up in fetal position in the middle of the trampoline holding her left thigh. She said her leg hurt, but she wouldn't let me look at it or touch her. Finally, I called a neighbor who helped me move Sylvie inside, screaming and still refusing to move her hands so we could look at her leg. I didn't think it was broken because I think of a fracture being caused by impact, and she hadn't fallen off the trampoline. I let her rest there a few hours until Jonathan got home. She finally moved her hands, and we could see her femur was bent. We moved her screaming onto a make-shift stretcher (a closet shelf), put her in our friends' van, and J took her to the emergency room. Luckily, there is a very good hospital with Western-trained physicians very close to our house.



She had somehow landed funny when jumping, and the x-ray revealed a spiral fracture in the middle of her femur. An orthopedic surgeon was able to do surgery that night, inserting two long titanium nails through two slits on either side of her knee into the shaft of the bone. No cast, no plate, no screws. The nails stay in for 6 months and then she'll have another surgery to remove them.
Sad Sylvie
Wild Bedhead

The doctors made it sound like an easy recovery, saying that she could move her leg right away, be up on crutches within two weeks and walking with a limp by four. Well, whether or not these things were physically possible didn't matter to Sylvie, as fear kept her from trying much of anything. We stayed an extra night in the hospital because she wouldn't get into a wheelchair or use the bathroom. She spent the first week with her leg in the same position it had been in since the fall. A lot of screaming (mostly at me) and whimpering, so it was hard to tell whether or not she was still in pain. Even changing the band-aids on her knees involved her screaming and my coaxing and ultimately, a lot of crying. She did get used to the wheelchair and let me carry her to the bathroom. She was upbeat enough by the start of school two weeks later that she was willing to start on time.

It is now a month later, and she still isn't using the crutches, but she went swimming, which she liked, and she hops around a lot using walls or chairs to support her. Her quads in her left leg have definitely atrophied, so it will probably take her longer to walk normally, but we'll get there...eventually.

A side benefit of the surgery was that the breathing tube further loosened her already loose front teeth, so those came out within a week, and she has a new smile.
Halloween Face

Fun Place for My Tongue

Monday, September 1, 2014

Easy Move

It was our easiest move yet. We had about a 15 minute ride to the small airport in Taipei around noon and hardly had time to eat our lunch before the plane was descending into the small airport in Shanghai, which was just a 10 minute ride from our new house. Friends picked us up, showed us around and had us to dinner. We went to bed at a normal time.  No grueling flight, no time change, no jet lag.

Now the adjustment since then has not been our easiest yet, but I'll leave that to other posts...