Dog Days Of Summer

Blogging is an amazing thing. A few months ago I was watching clips of the Listen to your mother show on youtube and eating my breakfast. As I came across Diane LeBleu and watched video of her reading I cried into my cereal bowl. Her writing is so touching and captivating.

I never had a guest writer before, but I am honored to share with you Diane’s latest post. Her blog is very personal and hidden to public but her words should be read, her story heard and her kind of funny shared. Enjoy!

DOG DAYS OF SUMMER by Diane LeBleu

It seemed like a good idea at the time …

1. Getting a dog

2. Having shaving cream ‘summer fun daze’ on the trampoline

3. Allowing a raccoon carcass to bake in the back yard’s 100+ degree Texas heat as buzzard bait in a failed ‘Witness the Magnificent Food Chain!’ biology lesson for the kids

4. Leaving the dog in the back yard (see #3)

5. Starting a business

The dog thing, I can kind of explain. We’ve always been cat people but Travis has been hounding me since he first saw the picture that ‘came with the frame’ of a little blonde boy and a giant golden lab smiling cheerfully in a Father’s Knows Best mirage of family bliss. He had been fantasizing about a Lassie relationship since he could walk and well, a breast cancer diagnosis can cause the ‘life is short’ mantra to be misapplied sometimes. Woefully so, I’m finding. Forget that now – when told on punishment of death or no screens for a week that he MUST walk the dog, we are met with the hostility and cold stare only a 10 year old can muster.

Starting a business, on the other hand, with no time, no money, and absolutely no experience should have been the siren cry for my friends and family to wave the checkered flag saying “Whoa, lady, you have enough on your plate! Might want to rethink this!” Starting a business in this day and age is no small thing, whether it is an internet e-commerce startup or a mortar-and-bricks manufacturing enterprise or even a kiosk at the local mall, it really can only compare to raising a child. Thankless, back breaking work (especially in the early years of childhood) and endless worries in good health and poor. Why would anyone ever procreate or start a business, I now ask? My office and house is a disaster. As a mother of four and a new business owner, I am a walking cautionary tale.

“Gee, you really know how to make things hard on yourself.” These were the encouraging words of my twin sister, Denise, upon hearing the news that I was pregnant with my third child. Travis (#2) had gotten out of diapers only six months earlier. You should have heard what Denise said when I told her I was pregnant with Caroline (#4) when Sabrina (#3) was only 5 months old.

There’s something about the truth though, that gets under your skin. She’s right. I do this to myself over and over again. I must have been out of my freaking mind to think I could start and grow a business in the summer months when all four of my children were underfoot, bickering, and asking hounding me about their next meal (ramen noodles and bananas).

It seemed like a good idea at the time to capitalize on a breast cancer diagnosis with a new, innovative creation that would solve a problem that has been vexing mastectomy patients for years. Make lemonade out of lemons. I love every time I get a new order for my ‘Pink Pockets’ patient pockets to hold drains and the testimonials from my customers warm my heart. And it’s not just because I am making money because I am not. I am awash in an industry of competing non-profits who pay themselves first – donation money, whatever there is, goes to the ‘administration of the nonprofit first’ and what is left over, goes to beneficiaries of the charity. When you are a for-profit endeavor – you pay yourself LAST – until you can generate a profit or go out of business. Or lose your sanity, whichever comes first. I’m sorry to say that there are a few (not all) non-profits in this space that give tireless effort to cure breast cancer or other diseases a bad name. Beware the cancer carpetbaggers preying on the great generosity of the US citizen.
I drive my 12 year old daughter to and from swim team every day and I’m always encouraged as I make this hour round trip at all the small businesses I pass along the way. Storefronts and vehicles with small company names painted on the side. I point them out and am encouraged by the fortitude and hard work I know now has gone into the life’s blood of the people I don’t know that have scrimped and saved or loaned and risked to make and grow a business. It’s a really humbling experience to dive into the unknown and most days, what I am learning about sales tax remittance and SEO and product packaging makes me feel dumber rather than smarter, which is not a great confidence builder at my age.

When I’m feeling my lowest, though, I just recall a conversation I had with my husband a few years back. We were talking about me taking a new job and what resume-speak phrases I ought to avoid and what experiences to highlight when our daughter Sabrina, then 4, asked what we were discussing. I told her that I was thinking about taking a new job and she said to me “But Mom you already have a job. You take care of us.” I just need to remember that whatever happens, being a mom really is my most important job and I’ll have it the rest of my life. Who knows where and how long my job as President and Founder of Surgical Drain Solutions, LLC will last but I’ll always be Mom-In-Chief (to quote First Lady Michele) to Danielle, Travis, Sabrina, and Caroline. While I’ll never get paid for this work, the return on investment is too great to measure. And the dog? Well, I guess she can stay as long as she continues to earn her keep scaring away solicitors and ding-dong-ditchers. Her bark, like mine, is definitely worse than her bite.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Editors note: If you know of anyone who might need help recovering after surgery, please click on bellow link and order them a pink pocket or two. Every little helps.

This entry was posted in The good life and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

13 Comments

  1. Posted August 4, 2011 at 07:23 by Kim | Permalink

    Thank you to you both for sharing this video and post; I have tears streaming down my face as I sit here in awe of what humans are capable of achieving through grace and compassion. This is an amazing story, one that will help touch many hearts, including mine. It gives me courage, so thank you!

    • Posted August 4, 2011 at 14:06 by Diane | Permalink

      Thanks Kim for your kind words! We writers are one needy group of people and an encouraging sentiment can go a long way! I really appreciate it and big thanks to my other ‘sister’ from up the west coast, Northwestmommy. I’m green with envy at your cooler temps!

  2. Posted August 4, 2011 at 08:40 by Linda Medrano | Permalink

    Thank you for sharing this amazing video and post! I love the strength in Diane. And I adore her sense of humor. What an extraordinary woman!

    • Posted August 4, 2011 at 14:07 by Diane | Permalink

      Thank you Linda! Best wishes to you!

  3. Posted August 4, 2011 at 12:00 by Polish Mama on the Prairie | Permalink

    Twitter:
    What a great post!

    Ewww about the dog and the racoon carcass, by the way.

    I am sharing the link about the pink pockets on my private fb and wish you lots of luck in your endeavours.

    • Posted August 4, 2011 at 14:11 by Diane | Permalink

      Polish Mama – you will be happy that I didn’t include any colorful descriptors about the smell of said carcass. Or the size of the vulture perched on my fence. You just can’t make this stuff up. Thanks for your encouragement!In my limited experience in the world of breast cancer, a diagnosis can come completely out of the blue. This is just my little reminder to people that early detection really is key!

  4. Posted August 4, 2011 at 16:08 by jacqui | Permalink

    Twitter:
    Very inspirational story! I wish you much luck with your business endeavors…it’s a really great idea! Unlike the trampoline thing and the raccoon thing.

  5. Posted August 4, 2011 at 17:36 by Ally | Permalink

    Twitter:
    Inspiring and touching! (Except the raccoon. Eww.) Such an encouraging and uplifting story to share. Thank you.

  6. Posted August 5, 2011 at 07:04 by May | Permalink

    Sigh…..perspective. It is so easy to get caught up in the momentum of the day to day stuff. It seems I require reminders about keeping things in perspective so much. Slow learner I guess. I really appreciated the video and post.

  7. Posted August 5, 2011 at 19:45 by Sarah @ This Heavenly Life | Permalink

    Twitter:
    I’m so…impressed?…awed?…by your resiliance and dedication and heart. Yes, we moms have a built-in job, and it will always be there. And anything else we can manage is pretty darn awesome. Three cheers for your passionate fortitude, Diane :)

  8. Posted August 8, 2011 at 19:38 by Ash | Permalink

    Twitter:
    Holy cow Diane – I will never complain about juggling it with just my two ever again. I’m in awe! Can’t wait to watch the LTYM video in morning. Hubs is asleep next to me :)

    Love the shaving cream idea – fantastic. Not loving the Texas heat. I swear you can hear the roadkill sizzle flying by at 60 mph. Uncle!

  9. Posted August 9, 2011 at 05:54 by Ash | Permalink

    Twitter:
    I adore your words. So true. I’m sorry for the medical challenges of it all (seriously, nurse?), but perspective is the greatest gift. So glad you came out the other side healthy and blessed.

    • Posted August 9, 2011 at 10:28 by Diane | Permalink

      Thanks so much! I need all the perspective I can get these days – a mountain of work and 4 bickering kids (I’d send em outside but in this 107+ daily temps, that’s practically child endagerment). Counting down less than 2 weeks to a new season of my life – all 4 of THEM in school, all day every day.

2 Trackbacks

  1. [...] Read More: The good life » Blog Archive » Dog Days Of Summer [...]

  2. [...] Dog Days of Summer: Northwest Mommy hosts guest blogger, Diane LeBleu, and her discussion of starting a business, getting a dog, breast cancer, and other bad ideas. [...]

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

CommentLuv badge