Status Update…

We met with the surgeon for Meghan’s follow-up visit yesterday. He was so pleased with her, and with how incredibly hard she is working to recover. He is amazing, her orthopedic surgeon. He is humble, skilled, and focused, yet he speaks directly to her, meeting her questions with sincerity and validating her in ways that are literally life-changing.

You can go ahead and read that again. Validating her in ways that are life-changing. I use words to express myself and to tell our story, but I had gone largely quiet for a long stretch. You run out of words to reiterate pain. You run out of ways to explain to people that she is not better. You end up in a place where you are essentially making apologies for the discomfort your situation causes other people. You find yourself hiding.

There had been medication trials, embolizations and cryoablations, and an angiogram to attack this tumor. There was some lessening of the pain, but no relief for any real time. The pain always came back with a vengeance.

She stepped away from one thing after another in her life. Who can socialize in pain like that? Walking was excruciating, and driving was a formidable task since even sitting was painful. The pain wrapped her up in a tight ball. It mangled her hopes and messed with her dreams. It left her physically ill and a shell of herself. She put every ounce she had into maintaining her grades and surviving. People, some patronizing and some incredibly well-meaning suggested everything from her “just being depressed” to her being dramatic, to her needing to just push more. I’m confident not a single one could have managed an hour in the body she was dealing with.

When we went to see this doctor in mid-May (he’s been in the rotation since about 2015 and has done a few of her knee surgeries so we are not strangers) I expected he’d prescribe Ibuprofen and send her on her way. Instead, he sat at the MRI images on his screen and described the debilitating pain that the images he was seeing must be causing. He talked in detail of numbness, burning, pain with any movement, muscle spasms that this thing must cause… it was like listening to someone else tell me all the things she had been saying, and sometimes pleading with anyone to listen to. Validating her in ways that are life-changing. There is a power in being believed that cannot be understated.

The decision to remove this tumor was not arrived at easily. As a matter of fact, in 2019 we were told it was essentially inoperable as he would need to open close to 10 inches of her leg. The tumor at that point was 5.5cm. We needed the embolizations and the cryoablations to shrink it. And they did. But, they also left behind little pellets from the embolizations, and excessive scarring from the cryablations. That sent the pain into high gear as her body has never taken kindly to ANYTHING extra, however, those necessary steps took the tumor down to just under 2cm. But every time there was a surgery and she didn’t feel better she felt like a failure. My girl doesn’t like to fail at anything.

This time it looks like we are finally on the right path. The 2 square inches of muscle hollowed out of her leg included all sorts of things that just like Meghan, “don’t fit in a box.” But by removing them, and getting a clear margin on this benign tumor, the surgeon was able to close her 4-inch opening from the femur back up to the skin and leave only healthy tissue behind to do its thing.

The days following her surgery are chronicled in the last few posts, and etched permanently in my soul.

But there has been progress. There is a fresh new Physical Therapist who is working hard to ensure that the scar tissue Meghan’s body loves to overgrow does not get out of hand. There is an increased range of motion. She can walk some distances unassisted on her best days. On the others, she’s furniture-dependent, but we’ll take it.

There are still muscle relaxants, but less of them. Some days the Advil is at 400mg doses and other days 800mg. She started sleeping in her own bed (upstairs) this week! šŸ™‚

Some days are better and some days really stink. There are ups and downs. There is Physical Therapy three times a week. There is the EMT course three nights a week that she, by her grit and raw determination is still making happen.

So I leave you with this progress note. And thanks to those of you who have consistently checked in and followed us through this dark time. There is nothing like sitting in the depths of despair to shed clarity on who your people truly are.

#beatingcowdens

One thought on “Status Update…

  1. Good morning,

    Thinking of you always and sending her lots of warm hugs and you as well! šŸ’—šŸ™šŸ’—

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