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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

In Which I Discuss My Dog's Broken Jaw

14 comments:
I've been posting updates on my dog to my personal Facebook since last evening (1/7) but realized I was excluding folks in my other networks - my author friends, blog followers, Twitter, G+, etc. - and so wanted to come over here and share my story.

(This post is live on both my personal in-real-life-name blog and my author pen-name blog.)

Yesterday afternoon, I left my house at around 2 PM to go to my tri-weekly shoulder physical therapy appointment. At the same time, my husband, who is off on Mondays, laid down with our 4-year-old and 2-year-old for nap time. When I got home, we all immediately left together to run a few quick errands. We believed our dogs were in the backyard, where they have the run of a large open space and a large covered patio. Afternoons are their time to go outside, play, run, and get some air.

What really happened...
Samson
Nov. 2012
Our puppy, 9-ish-month-old Samson the gigantinormous yellow lab, at off the bottoms of several fence slats and then dug out of the yard. Our older dog, 10-year-old Missy, faithfully followed behind. She's big on friendship, low on independent thought.

Having gotten loose, Sammy went looking for trouble, and Missy came along for the "fun." In actuality, Sammy "broke into" a backyard that was home to two pit bulls. They weren't enthused at their uninvited guests. The homeowner called animal control, who came and rounded up our two escapees...but not before Missy got hurt.

In the meantime, we came home and discovered our dogs were gone. Chris drove the neighborhood and I shouted for the dogs. We ate dinner. Then we all piled back in the car and searched again. It's a spread-out area with the houses having much larger yards than is the norm in suburban DFW, and we also have coyotes and all sorts of other delightful wildlife. In addition, we live less than a mile from the intersection of two very busy highways. I feared the absolute worst.

We didn't find the dogs. I searched for animal control to see where I could call to find out if the dogs had been taken to a shelter. I discovered that the city shelter puts up a picture of newly found dogs when they are taken in. In short order, I'd found the mugs of both of my dogs. Unfortunately, the shelter was closed for the evening and I could do nothing until wait for morning.

Daughter Cate and Missy
Feb. 2011
This morning, I got up with the kiddos and after breakfast and baths and the like, we headed out to rescue our friends. Since toddlers move slower than a geriatric snail, or approximately inverse to how fast you're trying to get them to move, it was late morning by the time we reached the shelter, 2.5 hours after they'd opened for the day.

We signed in and got taken back right away. I described the dogs to the kind worker and she took me right to them. Sammy was kenneled with the other large dogs, and Missy was in the clinic, bloody and battered. The vet tech said she thought Missy had a broken jaw and advised that I take her to the vet right away to be evaluated and treated. After filling out a ton of paperwork, paying the impound and boarding fees and waiting....waiting....waiting....we were finally able to leave.

After dropping the big dog at home (it was already difficult to manage two kids and two dogs at the same time, with a still-weak post-op shoulder), we got to the vet near our home. By that time, it was afternoon and the kids had eaten the bags of food I'd brought for them, downed their drinks and napped in the back seat. I left them there and went it, and they took us in right away (I'd called from the shelter) and checked Missy out six ways from Sunday. Not only did the vet note that the dog's jaw was broken, possibly in multiple places, but she also found that Missy's entire back half of her body and back end were bitten up and inflamed.

I was running laps between the exam room and my car, so I could keep an eye on my poor puppy and my sleeping kids. Thank God it was warm enough today to leave them in the car. A parrot that wouldn't stop squawking nearly drove me out of my mind, and I had to remind myself constantly not to be irritated at how long her exam and intake were lasting. Finally, I signed a release and they took her back to be sedated, shaved for further examination, and x-rayed. I left with the kids and we shared a very late lunch. By the time we were done, my husband was home from work and I headed back to the vet alone.

(The rest of this post is a copy with minor modifications from my last update to the FB thread about Missy's injury. I just don't have it in me to rewrite it. And in any case, most of you who read it will not have seen it there.)


So here's the overall scoop on Missy. First, she has been an absolute angel for the vet - is being completely docile and cooperative, despite being in a ton of pain. Next, the x-rays of her jaw showed a bit different story than we first thought. She has a break on either side of her jaw, about an inch back from the end of her mouth/jaw. This means the front part is completely unconnected from the rest of her jaw and is literally hanging on by skin alone. Where they thought there was a break farther back is actually just a little bit of dislocation where her jaw hinges, and it's bilateral. Should heal on it's own, apparently. The theory is that the other dog simply took her lower jaw in its mouth and bit down...and we know that pit's have a very powerful bite. Her jaw will be wired on both sides while the bones fuse back together. If they don't fuse, she'll need the front of her lower jaw to be amputated. *I know.* That horrifies me as well.

Now, on to the rest of her body. They had to shave her completely from mid-body on back, both top and bottom. If this wasn't a horrific situation, she'd look like she was mooning the world, especially since her tail is still so fluffy. The shaving revealed that the entire area is inflamed, bruised, and has bite marks all over it. Below her butt is one especially large spot, and has a torn perineum. The vet theorized that one dog may have mounted her while the other dog broke her jaw. I suppose if she were human, we'd call that rape. After surgery, she'll need to do hydrotherapy every three hours for a few weeks to keep that spot and several others moist as they heal, to avoid infection.

How about some good news? Her upper jaw is intact. Her legs/feet are fine. Her neck is fine. The doc found no evidence of injury to the front part of her body. She's a good weight, has a strong heartbeat, is otherwise 100% healthy, is just 10 years old, is able to come (and cling!) to me, and has retained her sweet disposition. She's in a large kennel at the vet and they let me climb in and sit with her for awhile after the vet met with me this evening to review her results.

Going forward...Missy's jaw surgery will be at 7 AM tomorrow morning, barring anything weird coming back on her bloodwork. Both our vet and the senior vet at the clinic will be involved. She'll be under full anesthesia, have a nerve block, and have a canine version of lidocaine to numb her mouth. They'll wire her jaw back together on both sides and then repurpose some of her gum tissue to cover the holes that are now allowing her jaw bone to stick through. Afterwards, she'll be sedated and on morphine most of the rest of the day. Depending on how she does, she'll be sent home either Thursday night or Friday night. At that point, she'll be on four medications: a pain med (same as I take, ironically - ultram), an anti-inflammatory and two antibiotics. She'll also be on a liquid diet for three weeks (1 part soft food mixed with 3 parts water) and will do hydrotherapy at home for her wounds. At that point, if healing is progressing nicely, we'll be able to start introducing solid foods again and she'll get back to "normal" life.

Finally, a note on pit bulls. Listen, they get a bad rap. 99% of pit bulls are fabulous pets. But, like any population, it's the 1% that ruin it for them all. And my dogs were in the wrong on this, and I know it. Sammy chewed and dug out and the ever-faithful-but-not-intelligent Missy followed along. Sammy then broke into someone else's backyard, and that someone else happened to own two pit bulls. Those dogs were defending their turf. Perhaps violently, but it was their yard. Sammy wasn't hurt...he was probably a lot larger than the pits. But Missy is smaller and weaker and thus became the one attacked. Her injuries, thank God, won't kill her. Yes, she needs a very expensive surgery to try to fix her jaw, and yes she's in pain with the other issues right now. But she's otherwise healthy, fairly young, and has a strong constitution. After she recovers, she'll regain most, if not all, of her quality of life. She's in great hands.

That's all I got for now. It's been an incredibly taxing day emotionally, physically and on my (now-depleted) bank account as well. I need to rearrange my work week since today was a total loss and snag a few more projects to pay for all of this mess. Thank you for all ya'lls thoughts, prayers, texts, and calls today. I'm thankful for them. I'll post something tomorrow when we know how it goes, and the vet said I could come sit with her again tomorrow evening.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Anne M. Carpenter is the Next Big Thing

3 comments:
Happy 2013, friends!

Several months ago, the lovely Julie Elizabeth Powell tagged me at the end of her Next Big Thing blog...and here I am, finally participating!

Without further ado... <insert cheesy daytime game show announcer voice here>

Anne M. Carpenter is the Next Big Thing!

The rules of the challenge are:

1. Answer 10 questions about my current WIP (Work-In-Progress)
2. Tag five other writers and link their blogs so we can all hop over and read their answers.

The questions are:

1. What is the working title of your book?
2. Where did the idea come from for the book?
3. What genre does your book fall under?
4. Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?
5. What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
6. Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
7. How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?
8. What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
9. Who or What inspired you to write this book?
10. What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?


Anne says...

1. My current work in progress is THE MOMMY LETTERS. It was supposed to go up a year ago. And then six months ago. And then four months ago. And then last month. I keep tweaking and rereading and changing a word here or there and tweaking a bit more. I have, however, have a come-to-Jesus meeting with my partner...and now realize that I'm editing the very life out of my baby. That means that I'm right now in my very last read through before publication. COMING SOON, I promise!

2. Back in 2006, a few months after I got married and combined households with my (new-at-the-time) husband, I had one of the most vivid dreams of my life. For those of you who later read my book, I'll just mention now that the dream centered on the church scene. Now, when you get to that part, you'll understand  why it compelled me to start writing.

3. THE MOMMY LETTERS is a missing child mystery with a dash of paranormal and a hint of romance. Oh, and some fun small town politics. Whee! We see the book unfold from three point of views - (1) the mom, Sarah; (2) one of the big sisters, Katie; and (3) the mom's first husband, Shawn.

4. Were THE MOMMY LETTERS to become a movie, I'd envision...

  • Demi Moore as Sarah (Robin's mom, Rockingham Selectman),
  • Tom Cruise as Shawn (Sarah's first husband, Rockingham police detective)
  • Matthew McConnaughey as Jason (Sarah's second husband, Robin's dad)
  • Ariel Winter as Liz (Sarah's oldest daughter with Shawn)
  • Bailee Madison as Katie (Sarah's younger daughter with Shawn)
  • Mia Talerico as Robin (Sarah's daughter with Jason)
  • Meryl Streep as Dr. Kimball (Sarah's therapist)
  • Angela Lansbury as Grace (Sarah's mom, Sam's Ferry resident)
  • Reece Witherspoon as Dina (Rockingham mayor)
  • Denzel Washington as Lieutenant Dave (Sam's Ferry police officer)
  • Billy Bob Thornton as Ben (Rockingham handyman, Sam's Ferry resident)
  • Frances McDormand as Mary Ellen (Sam's Ferry postmistress)
  • Diane Keaton as Dr. George (child psychiatrist)
  • Georgia Engel as Louise (Sarah's secretary)
P.S. I think we'll need to mortgage Alaska to pay the tab on this all-star cast!

5. One sentence synopsis of THE MOMMY LETTERS: Sarah is beginning to pick up the pieces with her older daughters after her youngest's disappearance when a letter arrives that will shock her to her core and drag decades-old secrets out of the closet.

6. THE MOMMY LETTERS will be published by KLG Press, a company I co-own with romance author Patti Ann Colt. It will be the 30th title published by that house.

7. It took me 5 years to write the first draft of THE MOMMY LETTERS - on and off and on and off and on and off and on and off and...

8. I would compare THE MOMMY LETTERS to a Mary Higgins Clark-type mystery. While writing, I also often thought of such YA/MG titles as THE YEAR WITHOUT MICHAEL and THE FACE ON THE MILK CARTON. I think lovers of any/all of the above will enjoy THE MOMMY LETTERS.

9. THE MOMMY LETTERS was born of a dream and that dream is still nagging me!

10. Fun fact: Katie, Sarah's middle daughter, "knows" things - she has dream-like communication with her missing sister, envisions situations before they occur, and has hunches on par with a seasoned detective - her father! But in small town New England, this is a bit hard to grasp, making her "talents" difficult for her family to believe in. Luckily, she's spunky and determined and, with big sister Liz's support, becomes a key player in bringing home their littlest sibling, Robin.

TAGGED: If you've read this, consider yourself tagged. Half the world has already done this meme, so I know if I use specific names, they'll probably already have done it.

Have a fabulous day!

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Why I Became an Indie Publisher

1 comment:

Happy 12/12/12, ya'll!

I've been dying to talk about how and why I became an indie publisher for quite some time now.

But before we get to the meat of today's post, remember that the publishing company (KLG Press) I run with fellow author Patti Ann Colt is part of Intuit's Small Biz Big Wishes campaign. We'd love you forever if you'd hop over there for a minute and vote for our entry! Mwah! CLICK HERE!

Also, before I forget, KLG Press is running it's last 3 free days for HOW TO ROAST A TURKEY IN 10 EASY STEPS today thru Friday. Go pick up a copy! CLICK HERE!

And now, to the post!

I've always been a writer and a communicator. I know many of you can relate to that. I started writing a school newspaper in first grade; wrote my first fiction "novel" in fifth grade; edited my middle school newspaper and high school yearbook; anchored my middle school news broadcast; worked as a Top 40 and Classic Rock DJ in college; wrote for several corporations through my full-time jobs with them; and now make my full-time living as a freelance writer. I've also blogged here, there and everywhere for years, and started more novels than I could count. Plus, I've won a number of short story contests, typically in flash fiction categories.

So that's nice and all...but where did the leap occur to take me from professional corporate writer and fiction dabbler to an indie publisher who will have published almost 40 titles before year's end?

That's a funny story. Glad ya asked.

Patti and I are related by marriage; she's my mother-in-law's (much!) younger sister. She's also the only family my husband has living in our area. As a result (and, naturally, because she rocks) we spend a lot of time together.

And that was our setting on New Year's Eve, as 2010 was about to become 2011. My kiddos and I, plus she and her grandson, were gathered to hang out that night.

She'd long since invited me to join one of her writing groups and we commonly chatted on blogging topics as well. We had also co-authored a cooking blog for over a year at that point. She was a multi-published romance author, I was knee deep in more manuscripts than I could count and struggling to finish just one.

And then...lighting flashed, bullets zinged and a brainstorm was born.

We'd create our own company! We grabbed her handy dandy Flip Dictionary (don't have one? it's a thesaurus on crack!) and brainstormed a company name, purpose and foundation.

Voila! KnowLinkGrow was born. A year later, we'd complete the legal paperwork to become an LLC.


We toiled away at joining our plethora of blogs together in early 2011, figuring out designs and writing schedules and such.

And then, I had the first of my three shoulder surgeries, to remove a malignant golf ball sized tumor that filled the top of my right humerus. My husband, a cop working night shift, didn't have much time available to take off work, so Patti, with her grandson in tow, showed up at my house to take care of me for the first week or so. I had a 7 month old child at the time and could use one of my arms. Clearly, that meant I needed help.

Patti and I fell into a series of late night and early morning chats on taking writing to the next level. We both had Kindles and then, after another volley of lighting flashes and zinging bullets, brainstorm number 2 came about.

We'd publish eBooks!  We took months to learn the process and the craft, doing every single thing on our own. I still worked full-time, so we'd meet online at night after our kiddos were down, and on Friday nights and all day on Saturdays. We published a bunch of books that first year - almost a dozen - consisting of cookbooks, devotionals, romances, and short stories. Some took off. Others piddled around. But we were making some money and feeling happy.

Fast forward a bit and I quit my full-time job in early 2012. Then, we really worked our butts off. I finished a manuscript, finally...the one you're all tired of hearing about and I'm finally getting tired of making stupid tweaky little changes to. We published another two dozen books. We explored markets, neglected our blogs, ran campaigns, Twittered, Triberred, and more.

So here we are today! Hope you enjoyed the story of our journey. It's just the overview, really, but it's been a fun ride!