Body Betrayed

The first time I felt the pain it was last summer.  It was under my right implant, and from my armpit a bit down my side.  The pain lasted a few days and then eased itself into a chronic state of discomfort.  I went from almost 4 years of barely noticing, and sometimes forgetting the silicone implants that had replaced the breasts in their earliest stages of cancer in March of 2012 to thinking about them all the time.

Now I knew the right one was there.  And it was bothering me.  For physical, and deeply psychological reasons.  It was getting in my head.  Messing with my focus.

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I went to see my plastic surgeon in November of last year.  I adored her.  I wanted her to make it better.  Her words were reassuring to a point.  The implant was intact.  There was some minor movement.  I should get it taken care of but it wasn’t an emergency.

Then there was the bombshell.  She was no longer accepting my health insurance.  I definitely cried right there in the office.  She cried too as she apologized, handed me the name of the doctor I needed to see and scurried out of the office.  I still adore her.  But, I’m sure I’ll never see her again.

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So, faced with the reality that I needed to start over, on a journey I wanted to forget ever happened, I did the logical thing.  Nothing.

I lived in a state of denial for months.  And slowly I started to restrict the activities I would do with my right arm.  Certain basic tasks would make it bothersome.  Fitness-wise, push ups, planks, weight lifting, and even the elliptical were out.  I no longer trusted my own body weight on that arm.

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One day in December I mustered up the courage to call the office of the new doctor.  It took a lot.  I trembled.  I had my calendar set up for January and February.  I was ready to schedule that consult.

“Late March…”

I heard nothing past that.  After I was told the earliest appointment I could get for a consult was late March.  I hung up the phone and did what I do when excessively frustrated.  I cried.

When I saw my breast surgeon for our annual check up in February, she noticed the subtle problem.  She asked who was looking at it.  She also proclaimed it, ‘not urgent.’  I told her about my experience trying to get an appointment with apparently the only plastic surgeon that does breasts and takes my insurance left at this hospital.  She vowed to have her scheduler help me get in.

I met with the scheduler.

I never heard from her again.

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March came and went.  Life was busy.  Meghan was in and out of surgery, Pop had been so sick, Grandma was struggling, we had the fundraiser…I found a reason not to call every single day.

Then I really wanted to work out my arms again.  Walking was getting boring.  I mustered up the courage in April to call.

July 18th.

I had to take it.  I cried again.  I tend to cry most in my life when I am frustrated.

I brought Mom with me to this appointment.  I never need another pair of ears.  I did this day.  I was a wreck.

The doctor was wonderful.  Kind.  Sensitive.  Funny.  Everything I feared he would not be.  I exhaled.  He said it was again, not an emergency.  But, he saw my issue, understood my discomfort and agreed at my convenience he’d try to fix it.  He ordered one test for a sensitive spot under my arm, and asked me to try some physical therapy when I could.

I talked it out with my mom.  I talked it out with my husband.  After waiting almost a year, I was ready to get it done and stop favoring my dominant arm.

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I called to make the appointment for the test.  Except it had to be done in the hospital.  And it needed insurance pre-authorization.  And I tried for one solid week to get in touch with this doctor’s office staff.  Three Emails, 2 phone messages and several canceled appointments, I finally got a human.

I got them moving quickly, and they got the insurance authorization immediately.  I scheduled the test, and it was fine.

Then I called to schedule the surgery.  I was thinking I could still make August.  I was wrong.

What about September?

UGHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I took out the calendar once again.  We have 4 days off in October…  No luck there.  No, he doesn’t work December the week I’m off.  And in February we have the fundraiser…

Looks like once I calm down I’ll schedule for Spring 2017.

When the time came to have the double mastectomy I opted for the quickest route.  I was out of the hospital with reconstruction complete in 28 hours.  I wanted this done.  I was so incredibly fortunate not to need treatment.  I was grateful.  More energy to focus where it mattered.

Except once cancer has lived inside of you there is this uneasy feeling that can not be explained.  There is this knowledge that somewhere in your body those cells did what they were not supposed to.  There is this feeling that you were violated and betrayed by your own body, from the inside out.  It damages trust deeply.  It’s hard not to trust your body.  It can really mess with your mind.  So understandably, I was interested in functioning without that thought process.  I had become adept at ignoring my scars and “nipple-free” implants.

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Until I started to feel them.  Every damn day.

This is minor.  This can be fixed.  And it will be.  Just not in a time-table anywhere close to my liking.

I picked up the free weights again today.  Really light.  In my chair.  What’s the worst that happens?  Really?  If it becomes an emergency they have to move faster.

Otherwise, I’ll balance that full-time job, that beautiful, active 8th grader, and a boatload of afterschool activities.  I’ll try to get out of my own head.

But, no matter how vigilant, or how confident…  thoughts of the potential renegade cell, lurking like a thief in the night never quite go away.

#beatingcowdens is a full-time job

Pathology…

About an hour ago I got off the phone with Meghan’s gynecologist.  It seems we dodged another bullet.

Mostly.

Once again we got to spend about 45 seconds in a deep breath as we were told there was no evidence of malignancy in the uterine biopsy from last Friday.

BUT…

There is always a “BUT…”  I’ve come to expect it now.  After she spoke, she paused.

I asked her why she sounded happy and hesitant at the same time.

“Well I just got off the phone with the pathologist…”  and her voice trailed off.

So much was what she expected when she spoke to us Friday.  But, it was still bothering her that there are polyps.  And more than one.

“It just shouldn’t be…”

Sigh.

We’ve heard this so many times before.  “It just shouldn’t be…”  But, in fact it is.

So the polyps were benign.  The tissue sampling was benign.  This is a good thing.  A very good thing.

Digitally generated My brain has too many tabs open

But, this whole situation.  The whole scenario that causes all sorts of conversations a 12 or 13, or even a 19 or 20 year old for that matter, should NEVER have to have, is just not ok.

There are thoughts, decisions, trade-offs, conversations, risks and benefits that make deciding on a high school seem trivial.  Strange that THAT will be the toughest thing most girls her age have to do this year.

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And as I look at her, it kills me inside the things she has to go through, and the thoughts she needs to think.  All I can do is thank GOD, that He trusted me with this beautiful, dynamic, witty, young lady.  And I promise to take good care of her until the rest of the world figures her out.

 (and really, for FOREVER. as we remain #BEATINGCOWDENS together!)

Counting… Our 400th Post!

“Count your many blessings, name them one by one…”  Grandma used to sing years ago when we would complain about nonsense.  She was a little tough sometimes my Grandma, and maybe that’s where I got it from.  But, many times she was right, whether we listened or not.  (Maybe that’s where I got that from too? ;-))

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I like numbers.  They are logical.  They are what they are.  In a world that often makes no sense at all, I find order in numbers.

Except sometimes I’m faced with the question of what to do when numbers become overwhelming in and of themselves.

This marks the 400th post on this blog.  While it’s by no means a masterpiece, when I sometimes poke through old posts I remember so much of where we’ve been.  It’s a definite roadmap of our journey, and Meghan and I take great pleasure when people from around the world reach out to us and cite the blog as a source of comfort and strength.

Cowden’s Syndrome is rare enough that it can be a lonely diagnosis.  Being able to reach people the world over has been a victory for us, and them.

With over 170,000 hits on various posts I know we are getting the word out.  Slowly.

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I might have wanted to celebrate this post.  I might have wanted to make it really special.  But, I’m counting something else today.

Today was the 17th time I’ve gotten off the phone with the nurse, giving me pre-operative directions for my daughter.  Today, I listened as I always do, reciting the directions in my mind before she spoke.  Really my only interest was the time.  The rest is routine.  I want to stop counting.  I want to just go with it.  I can’t give you an exact count on mine anymore – because once you’re a mom, well, you just focus more on what’s important.  And you become less important.  And that is a gift, denied to many, cherished and appreciated.

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Somehow though,  if I stop counting for her, it makes her struggle feel less valid.  The numbers give her strength.  A badge of courage.  Something concrete in this world of abstract.

My post last night was about “Patience”

https://beatingcowdens.com/2016/07/20/the-waiting-place-2/

And as I poked around the blog this morning I was taken back years, through so many similar posts.

https://beatingcowdens.com/2013/01/10/blessings-and-patience/

https://beatingcowdens.com/2012/07/02/the-waiting-place/

https://beatingcowdens.com/2015/05/06/hurry-up-and-waiting-rooms/

https://beatingcowdens.com/2015/08/28/losing-count/

Their similarities are uncanny.  I guess the story doesn’t change much.  Hurry up, wait, surgery, wait, recovery, wait, follow up, wait…

So I’ll leave this 400th post as unremarkable.  Nothing has changed.  Nothing will change.  And that’s the precise reason we keep counting, and keep telling our story.

Tomorrow, surgery number 17.  9:15 arrival.  As usual, prayers always appreciated.

#beatingcowdens 400th post!

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Justifying Our Existence

There was a post that showed up in my news feed this week from http://www.themighty.com.  Read The Secrets of People with Chronic Illness here

I can’t seem to shake some of the thoughts from my head.

chronic illness

As I write, school ended for the summer 9 days ago.  In those 9 days we have seen 4 doctors between us.  There are 9 more SCHEDULED in the month of July, including a biopsy for Meghan on the 22nd.

And, while I did take some time over the weekend to reconnect with some dear friends, and I have accomplished a few mundane tasks like routine car maintenance, the vast majority of every moment of those 9 days has been spent justifying my existence.

Fortunately, I have enrolled Meghan in a theater camp where she is from 10-4, spending some time with kids her age.  Of course, the wear and tear on her body, even after only 3 days is evident.  She struggles with pain so badly.  On her feet, determined to fit in.  Determined for me not to say too much.  Sometimes I have to let her go.  I have to let her try.  I have to let her decide.  But, it hurts.  It hurts her, and it destroys me to watch her battle with her body.  I watch her put that game face on in the AM, and not take it off until after swim practice follows camp.  No one will ever tell me she is anything but driven.  But, no one would ever know to watch her…

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Usually by this point in the summer my work bag is unpacked, washed and tucked away.  Often my lesson plans for September are mostly framed out.  I am yet to take the list I frantically formed as I packed my room the last day of school out of the bag.

Instead, the yellow legal pad sits near my computer.  I write, and cross out, and rewrite, as I call, obtain records, set appointments, and clarify tests required by various doctors.  I rearrange schedules to allow for coverage for Meghan as I trek to my own appointments at the most inconvenient times.

On the 18th I will meet a new plastic surgeon, as the old one no longer accepts our insurance.  I never imagined needing a new plastic surgeon only 4and 1/2 years post op from the mastectomy, but it seems I do.  I’ll wait until I meet him to elaborate on that…  Sometimes, although not often, I do feel like this…

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I can often count on 4 hours minimum round trip for the 10 mile trek.  Never mind the cost.  We just don’t even add it up.  Instead, we thank God for our jobs and the insurance we do have.

I received a phone call yesterday from a lab that was running insurance information to obtain testing for Meghan requested by one of her doctors.  Except it’s not covered at all.  $16,000 they said.  I, who denies my child nothing politely said, “we’ll find another way”.  And we will.  Because that is just insane.

I’ve sent 3 emails to the office manager of the office doing her procedure on the 22nd.  I simply want to know what date to leave free for the follow-up.  I know there will be one, and I want to plan a few summer adventures in the time that my fish will have to be out of water.  I also asked for the pathology from her December procedure.  For about the 8th time.  Just keep adding checks and dates to the list.

When things get really bad, like with the bills I’m fighting in collections, they get a folder of their own.  The SUPER troubling places, like the mail-order pharmacy, have a notebook.

We do our best to stay upbeat.  We count our blessings regularly.  We know it could be worse.  We know the anguish others suffer far surpasses our daily struggles.  But, no matter how much we focus on a positive attitude, and believe me we do, it does not decrease the pain, both physical and emotional.  The struggle is real.  Whether we like to admit it or not.

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I reached out to our genetecist this week.  Darling man said he would always help, and didn’t want us to waste a trip on him.  I told him I was having trouble with my voice.  I’ve been getting very hoarse for 8 weeks or so.  No infection.  Three allergy meds on board.  But, I do have Cowden’s Syndrome, that tumor growing thing I sometimes forget belongs to me too.  And I have a history in the neck.  A 3.5 pound lipoma in 1988, and multinodular goiter on the thyroid in 1993.  Both removed.  Both benign. But…

He referred me to a head and neck surgeon.  I finally mustered up the courage to block out at least one more day of summer, and call for an appointment.  I was met with the inquisition on the phone.  I never got past the receptionist.

“This doctor is a head and neck SURGEON.”

“Yes, I know he’s a surgeon, I was referred for consulation.”

“Well, he doesn’t just SEE people, you need a diagnosis and a referring doctor.”

“I have both.  C-O-W-D-E-N Syndrome.  A mutation on the PTEN gene that causes benign and malignant tumor growth.  I was referred by my genetecist, also a doctor at your hospital.”

“Well, what tests do you have?  He will want a report, a CD, something…”

Sigh.  I just don’t have the fight in me today. “Ok, you win.   I’ll find someone else.”

“Come back to him when you have a diagnosis.”

 

Whatever.  Just whatever.  Sometimes I get a little tired.

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Thats when I shake it off with a quick walk.

I emailed the genetecist back.  I’ll wait.  Again.

I have this pool in my backyard.  And plenty of people I’d like to reconnect with.  And some lessons I’d like off my plate.  And a book I’d like to read.

I’ll get there.  In the mean time, I’ll be at my computer.  Emailing.  Arguing.  Advocating. Communicating.  Researching.  Justifying my existence, and

 

#Beatingcowdens with whatever it takes.

“Stay Alert! Delays are Possible!”

stay_alert

I saw the sign Friday, somewhere along the Pennsylvania Turnpike.  I laughed, in spite of myself.

We were headed on a 400 mile road trip to West Virginia, a trip I was making for the second time, and Meghan for the first.  Last weekend in June to celebrate Alan’s birthday.

As we traveled through the hills of PA, I became somewhat accustomed to shrieks of joy, as the landscape at times was utterly breathtaking.  And, there were cows.  Overwhelming for a young city girl, not given too many opportunities to travel out of a small radius.  The camera barely stopped.


I was thinking about the list of things creeping into the month of July already.  There are 8 appointments and a surgery for Meg already scheduled.  I am annoyed, not so much at the surgery, as I am about the time constantly taken to try to stay on top of this cancer -causing, tumor-provoking, life altering nightmare called Cowden’s Syndrome.

Meghan’s next major procedure is Friday July 22nd.  The pathology on that procedure will determine what, if any, delays are possible in the future.

“Stay Alert! Delays are Possible!”

There wasn’t much traffic on the way to West Virginia.  The trip itself took us a little over 7 hours.  We arrived before 9, and blended right into easy conversation on the porch.  Alan, his family, and some friends, welcomed us warmly.  They greeted Meghan as if they had known her for years, and treated me as if I stopped by every few days.  All of this oddly comforting.  In reality I met them for the very first time last June, and Meghan was meeting them that night.

 

 

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img_7548Yet, we had known each other for longer in ways that matter.  These men, most of them, were Marines that had served with my Dad some 45 years ago in the jungles of Vietnam.  These men knew my father during a brief time in his life that undoubtedly changed and shaped the man I later knew.

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Alan was the first to reach back to me when I sent a letter to Dad’s 1st Amtrac Batallion, 3rd Marine Division brothers.  I was, at the time researching an incident that we felt may have warranted a Purple Heart for Dad.  I sent over 20 letters that week in January 2014.  I heard reply from every living Marine I contacted.  EVERY SINGLE ONE.  They spoke to me, and comforted me.  Those who remembered the incident wrote letters of support.  All told me that as the daughter of a Marine I was one of theirs.  I was to call on them as needed.  It seemed surreal.

But Alan stayed in touch.  Close touch.  We spoke, and still speak via text several times a week, and often by phone at least once a week.  As he worked every angle he could for a Purple Heart that not earned in the technicalities of the USMC, we grew in friendship.  And over time I came to realize that the relationship we had built filled a larger hole than any posthumous medal could have.I do not mean ever to saint my father.  Nor do I mean to make excuses for him.  There were some terribly rocky times in my childhood that can not be repaired.  But, we had time to make peace years before he died, and I started to understand a few things.  A few really important things.

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Now, we were in West Virginia, keeping time with 5 Marines who served with Dad.  They were wounded; physically, emotionally, or both.  They shared stories.  They shared PTSD.  They shared tales of failed relationships, and difficult feelings of guilt.  They verbalized what Dad couldn’t.


And Meghan, oh did they take her in!  One by one, as if helping my father make up for lost time, they spoke and laughed and listened.  They got to know her.  They cared.

Saturday morning Alan’s grandson took time out of his day to teach Meghan to shoot a compound bow.  It was something she had always wanted to do, and circumstances had not allowed.  So, here we were in the hills of West Virginia.  And there was her lesson with the bow.  Arrows on target.  Success.

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A few hours later we were on a farm with the Marines.  We rode a “side by side” through the farm and got to take in views we would not have otherwise seen.  Then, Meghan was invited to shoot a rifle.  With a little hesitation she was guided.  And I watched as her tense face turned into a smile.  There were 4 paper targets 100 yards away.  She fired several times and hit paper repeatedly.  First try, “Oddly relaxing,” and successful.

Maybe because we live in the zone of “Stay alert!  Delays Possible!”  that seizing the opportunities as they present themselves is even easier and more logical.  I didn’t shoot a bow or a rifle, so I can’t be sure.  But, she is clearly not shy about learning new things.

The birthday party ballooned to over 50 people in the driveway and garage of this beautiful home.  There was mingling and talking, mostly with people I barely knew.  Meghan found the time to chat with each of the Marines.  She asked questions.  She got answers.  And, in some cases more questions.  But they each took time to speak, honest, and frank, about their experiences, and about her Grandpa.

I stole away some time to lay on the front lawn and appreciate the flags while enjoying the relative quiet of a “busy” street.


Meghan was met with generosity of tangible items, and generosity of kind spirits.  She now has a money clip and some Vietnamese money from the era.  She also has some special paintings, and a walking stick.  The latter two were gifts from “Uncle Moe,” who was a bit older than the rest.  After 3 tours in Vietnam, and 22 years as a US Marine, he had some tales to tell.


When she  asked what she should know about the Marine Corps., she was told “Brotherhood”.  The simplicity and depth of that answer was playing out over the weekend, and it made sense in concept and in real-time.  These “brothers” trained to never leave a man behind.  And in our case, that included his children and grandchildren.
The weekend went too fast, and before it was time to leave we even sneaked in a visit with some pigs down the road.  City girls have to make the most of things when they are around!

 

Preparing to leave on Sunday was harder than logic says it should have been.  But, we had spent the last 2 days enveloped in a Marine Corps “sandwich” of unconditional love and support.  We know now with these Marines there are no “goodbyes,” only “see you soon!”

As we drove I don’t think either of us spoke for at least 75 miles.  The enormity of it all was tough to digest.

She held the walking stick in one hand and the money clip in the other, wanting to make the weekend longer than it had been.

I cry often.  Meghan, not so much.  Yet, both of us were choking a bit.  It was the kind of experience that changes you.  The simple beauty of just fitting in.  Just because.

“Stay Alert! Delays Possible!”

Not just traffic delays, but real life ones too.  As we began the 400 mile trek home we contemplated Monday’s appointment in Manhattan – a quick toss back into reality.


I pondered whether it was right to show Meghan this world, and then take it from her so fast.  But, I knew it was.  It was a part of her.  A part of her history.  A part of her life.  It was something that I do not fully understand, and yet I needed to expose her too as well.

Dad was not a saint.  But, he loved us. Deeply.  There was never a doubt about that.   Even as he began to heal, he often struggled to find ways to express it.  It was a battle in progress, and he was winning.  But, he was called home before he could quite finish.

So, he left it to his “brothers,” his Marines.

And they did a good job.

This weekend was for the soul.

There’s plenty of time for

#beatingcowdens 

this week.

 

Punched in the Stomach…

…over and over and over again.

punched

Sometimes that’s the best way I can think to describe it.  There are days, so many days, when it’s like a sucker punch that takes your breath away.  It’s not going to knock you to the floor.  You’re stronger than that.  But, man, it knocks the wind out of you.

First, it’s the drive.  The traffic.  The hours spent headed to the appointment.

Then it’s the “hurry up and wait,” as you strive to be there for your 2PM appointment that COULD NOT be changed to later.  Only to wait until after 3 in the waiting room.

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After that it’s the news.  No matter what the appointment is, a Cowden’s Syndrome appointment rarely ends with overwhelming optimism.  Well, because they are all so unsure.  So they are afraid.  And I get it.  But, then they tell you the parts they DO know, and you sometimes just want to sit in the corner and bang your head.

THEN after all that GOOD fun, is the drive home.

Usually all in all about 5 hours roundtrip.  Whether it’s Manhattan or Long Island it doesn’t really matter.  It’s 5 hours at a clip that you’ll never see again.  Plus hours and hours analyzing…

About the only GOOD thing that comes from all these is the time spent chatting in the car.  Because my kid is pretty cool, and I enjoy her company.  I just wish we had more time to be together, at the beach, or a concert, or somewhere fun…

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Today it was the orthopedist.  He operated on Meghan’s knee in May of 2015.  It was the 6th surgery on that knee, all ramifications of a pesky AVM (arteriovenous malformation) wedged somewhere under the meniscus.  After the surgery there was PT, then a 6 month follow-up.

In November he released her from PT, and asked for another 6 months.  In April he was so bothered by what he saw he brought us back in 2 months.  He was troubled by her muscle spasms, and her generally being unwell.  The conversation that day led us back to the hormone she was on after the December d&c, the one with the precancerous cellular changes.  The medicine that was supposed to help keep the uterus in check.  The medicine that seemed to come up an awful lot in April as the source of many problems.  We labored over the decision and consulted almost every doctor, but ultimately decided to ditch the medicine and hope for the best.

Today the muscle spasms were gone.  Evidence that they were caused by the hormone.

But, there was another pile of information to digest.

Sometimes it’s so hard, because you ask questions, and you just don’t always get the answers you want.

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What about that right leg, will it ever match the left in strength?  Do you think the foot will catch up?

No, it’s not likely.

Impact activities, even walking over a half mile, cause knee pain.  Will this ever resolve?  Can she do anything to help it resolve?

No.

So, what do we do when we have to walk far distances?

A wheelchair.

And the conversation continued like that.  He is actually quite well spoken, but today his words hurt.

He is a good doctor, a good surgeon too.  But, he is honest.  Necessary,  And painful.

We got some suggestions for strengthening.  And a script for a refresher with our favorite PT.  Progress will happen.  It will just be slower.  It will take longer, and harder work than any of her peers.

We don’t use the word fair anymore.  It’s all relative.  Nothing is really “fair.”  But, some days it’s harder to find the bright side than others.

Some days, even when the doctor tells you it’s not right that someone your age should have so many limitations, it doesn’t make it any easier to hear.

Because the reality is what it is.  There is both gratitude and pain in the mobility she has.  Her drive, her focus, extends beyond limitations.  She wants to be free.

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Yet, somehow even on the toughest days, I have solace that there is a plan.  And it will continue to unfold for both of us.

Tonight we recover from a few sucker punches with chocolate cookies and coconut milk ice cream.  Tonight is not for the bright side.

Tomorrow will be different.  Tomorrow is school.  Full of people who do not know, or who are virtually unaffected by the realities of Cowden’s Syndrome.  And tomorrow is drama.  And tomorrow is swimming.  Tomorrow will be too busy not to press on.

Tomorrow will be for working on ways to keep moving forward.

Tonight will be for resting.

Tomorrow is for

#Beatingcowdens

In a Dark Room…

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I’m thankful that some nights she still invites me to chat with her in her dark room

Late

After she should be asleep

I’m thankful that we can relate to each other

Different – incredibly different

Yet so much the same

Yesterday I hurt a lot

An unusually extra tough day for me

But I looked at her and I kept on plugging

She knows no other way and leaves no other option

I hate that she bears this burden

There are days it could destroy me

But it doesn’t

She simply motivates me to keep going

She pushes me to be a better person

A better mother

A better human

Often without saying a word

Sometimes in her dark room we’ll share

What we worry and wonder about

Sometimes we tell things we’d never tell another

Sometimes we laugh

Sometimes we cry

Mostly we learn things

Still after all this time we learn things

Like yesterday when I told her that I am luckier because I have her to keep me going

And she looked at me quizzically and wondered aloud

Why do you think I keep going?

And in that moment there was even more clarity

Daughters and Mothers

Mothers and Daughters

We worry and wonder

We argue and spat

We chat and share

We battle

Not each other

But this disease

Together

Different but the same

Pain, surgery, worry, wonder, loneliness, anticipation, anxiety, and sometimes terror

I hate every moment of this road she has to travel

But I am selfishly grateful for the quiet, determined way

She keeps me balanced and focused on what matters

So we can help each other

And remain

#Beatingcowdens

FOREVER

daughter 2

Aunt Em, Arista, Albany, and (Almost) an Ambulance

THAT would be the alliteration to sum up the week that was, Thursday May 5th – Thursday May 12th.

Sometimes I get annoyed at myself that this blog gets neglected.  Then I realize it’s because sometimes I have to LIVE the life, before I can write about it.

It was a rocky month leading into the much anticipated school play.  Her health was questionable.  She spent most of Spring Break recovering from some random illness.  Attendance at swim has been spotty, a true sign she’s not herself, but after attending the Swim Team’s annual banquet the night before, she was ready for “The Wizard of Oz Jr.”

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Meghan with the drama teacher that helped her find a piece of herself.
Meghan knew she liked the stage.  She didn’t know  until she met her drama teacher in 6th Grade, that she also enjoyed acting, and singing.  Her father and I were stunned when we heard her for the first time.  Thank goodness for teachers… she may never have found this outlet.  And it has been such a wonderful thing.  She has met some really great kids, and has had fun along the way.

She was so excited to play Aunt Em in this year’s play, and even more excited because “Dorothy” was being played by a trusted ally, a rare commodity on Meghan’s life.  It made the role easier to get into, and to play with her whole self.

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Meghan and her friend “Dorothy”

Four shows in two days tired them out, but the standing ovation to almost a packed house at the Intermediate School Friday night showed all their efforts to be worth it.

Meg slept almost all day Saturday. This is how it works.  We play trade.  For those of you familiar with the “Spoon Theory,”  (http://www.butyoudontlooksick.com/articles/written-by-christine/the-spoon-theory/)  we often borrow off the weekend “Spoons.”  We don’t get out much, but it keeps things working.  She woke some time around 2:30 PM Saturday when I roused her.

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Sunday was Mother’s Day.  We visited some special mothers, caught up on some homework, and finished a project.  Monday was school as usual, followed by her second year induction into the National Honor Society, (Arista) followed by preparing for Tuesday’s trip to Albany.

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Mother’s Day 2016

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Arista 2016
Some time over the spring break I was contacted by the office of Senator Andrew Lanza.  Apparently, every year, every Senator gets to select a “Woman of Distinction” to be honored at a special ceremony in the Capitol in Albany.  We were amazed, and humbled that he had chosen Meghan.  The youngest to ever receive the honor, he was attracted to her spunk, her determination, and her “can do” attitude.  He liked that she didn’t wait to grow up to start doing something.  He liked that she was 12 and making a difference now.

So on Tuesday morning, Felix, and Meghan and I set out on the 2.5 hour journey to Albany.  The trip was smooth, until we got a tiny bit lost in Albany, but we were easily saved and set right by the Senator’s staff.  Nancy had us in the right direction in no time.

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Every “Woman” had a bio on the wall. We also got a beautiful book with all the bios inside!
We got to the Senator’s Office and enjoyed a wonderful lunch.  We got to sit on the Senate floor, and watch some of the Senate in session.  We walked around the building, and enjoyed the afternoon.

The ceremony began at 5:30 and probably my only regret was that I couldn’t record every moment to replay in my brain forever.  It was one of our proudest hours as parents.

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https://www.nysenate.gov/initiatives/women-distinction

(If you click the blue link above, Meghan is on Page 44.)


The reception that followed allowed for some conversation with Senator Lanza.  An incredibly intelligent, down-to-earth, “regular,” guy kept Meghan chatting for well over an hour.  We took pictures, laughed, and she even secured an internship for the summer after her freshman year in High School.

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Meghan and Senator Andrew Lanza
The drive home got us in the door around 11.  We were asleep by 12 and ready for school and work the next morning.  Tired, but determined, she even made swim practice.

Thursday I dropped her at school regular time.

By 8:20 my phone was ringing with the school nurse’s number.  She was not well, and they were frightened.  They wanted to call an ambulance.  Knowing where that would lead I begged her to wait.  I went into automatic, and with an incredibly understanding group of colleagues and administrators, I was at her school in under 10 minutes.

When I arrived the color had begun to return to her face.  She was weak, but able to focus on me.  I told them I could take care of it, and I signed her out while they wheeled her to my car.  Once in the house I waited a good 3 hours.  No sign of a problem.

Rice noodles and flat ginger ale did her in inside of 20 minutes.  I can honestly say in her 12 years I’ve never ever seen her that sick.  She was in so much pain, periods of time were missing from her memory.  I was terrified.  But, foolishly or not, I held out.  She was hydrated.  I wasn’t taking her to the hospital here.  Not again.  And I knew we were meeting a new GI in the city Friday.  If she could just hold on…

And she did.  Because for almost 24 hours I just didn’t feed her.  She slept most of it anyway.  But, I’ve decided hydration wins, and food can wait.  It worked.  By Friday night she was almost back to herself.

Yesterday she swam in a CYO meet.

My head spins.  And the tales I tell here are simply HER end of the week.  Add in the routine, and the mundane, and…  it’s been a long week.

I have work to do.  Lots of it.  It’s in a big pile right here next to me.  There were plenty of things that “should” have been done that weren’t.  And you know what?  We’re OK.  The house is in one piece.  The Board of Health isn’t coming to inspect my extra dog hairs on the floor.  The laundry isn’t folded.  But it will get done.

Tonight I put me first for an hour, and putting me first is getting the week out of my system right here.  Just me, my thoughts, and a glass of wine.

Cowden’s Syndrome – you’ve got some good fight in you, but we are stronger.  We will take you every time.

We are #BEATINGCOWDENS!

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A Letter to Me as a “Mommy-to-Be”

Dear 30 Year Old Me on Mother’s Day,

Listen up.  Yes, you – acting as the general contractor; living through and participating in your house overhaul, while carefully moving your pregnant belly out-of-the-way.  Do me a favor and sit down a minute.  You don’t sit much, but you focus better when you do.

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Life is hectic, I know.  You’re working full-time, working on the house full-time, and trying to wrap your head around this Mom thing.  You have a lot to do.  I get it.  There are papers to process, contractors to fight with, lessons to plan, furniture to order, walls to paint, and tests to grade.  There is this small, ok, large human growing inside you.  There is so much to think about, but there isn’t time to stop.

Do me a favor, and make time?  I mean it.  Force it in.  Make time for you and your husband to just be.  Make time to laugh.  Make time to rest.  Make time to get in the car and drive the not so far distance to see the handful of friends that have always had your back.  Because, believe it or not, your new life will make this chaos look like a day in the spa.

Those friends, they are high quality.  And you will always have each other’s backs.  But, they will have husbands, and children and houses, and obligations of their own.  Before you know it you’ll be keeping in touch with each other’s lives via Facebook and blog posts.  (Yes, you’ll have a blog, but I’ll explain that later.)  You’ll regret not seeing them more.  Not sneaking in a few more dinners out, or some drinks and dessert.  The time for that will come again, but it’ll be much later.  And sometimes you’ll get lonely.  Really lonely.

While you’re still sitting down, reign in some of those day dreams about the smooth way everything is going to go once the baby joins you.  Broaden your definition of healthy into a “spectrum.”  Refocus yourself onto the important jobs of motherhood; guardian, advocate, supporter, guide, confidant, conscience, role-model, nurse, doctor, therapist, just to name a few.  Don’t bother looking at Pinterest.  Your life doesn’t work there.  Actually, MOST lives don’t work there.

That baby inside of you isn’t going to stay there forever.  One day it’s going to make its way into the world in grand fashion.  And she, (yep, you’re wrong, it’s a girl) will change your life in ways you could never imagine.  By the way, if you can get through to that doctor before the induction, try to save yourself the bags of Pitocin and the HOURS of labor.  She’s got a big head just like you.  The C-Section is inevitable.

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And, she’ll be the biggest baby in the NICU.  Right from the start you’ll hear about her feistiness.  The nurses don’t lie.  Right from the start you’ll have to change your perceptions of how this mothering thing was going to go.  From the very first hours you’ll have to learn to go with the flow because you’re about to set down a path you could not have imagined.

For about 18 months you will sleep rarely.  She will cry and scream and yell in ways that your family will forget, but you will remember for life.  You will learn how to function on raw nerve.  You will use the baby pouch you got skillfully to sneak in an hour or two of sleep without dropping her.  Because you know she’s not “spoiled” even though she only rests on top of you.  You know it’s more.  You know it’s her belly and you will hang on when others want easy answers and excuses.  You will fight for her because you are her mom.  And THAT is what mothers do.

By the time she’s one there will have already been a week-long hospital stay and a surgery that left the doctors “perplexed.”  This is only the beginning. Dig in hard and sharpen your instincts.  Trust yourself.  Ask tons of questions.  Learn early that doctors, and therapists are a dime a dozen.  Settle for nothing less than the best.

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Because those therapists, those Early Intervention therapists, and the Physical Therapist you’ll pretty much use for life, will have some of the greatest influence on your parenting, and on the health and growth of your girl.  They will change your world.  Listen carefully and learn.

This girl is going to get stuck like a pin cushion and shuffled from specialist to specialist.  She’s going to confuse them, and amaze them.  She will start to retreat into herself.  All of a sudden she’ll be two, and not making a word.  Hang on and don’t let her go.  She’s not autistic, and never was, but she is medically complicated and she is not well.  You will try as hard as you can.  You will read, you will frantically research.  You will seek out expensive alternative specialists.  You will even record her agony for your husband so you can press on for her care as a united force.

You will fire pediatricians, doctors and specialists alike.  You will slowly find your confidence.  You will become a master record keeper.  You will try things that are “different” just to see what happens.  You will step over your toddler for two weeks as she tantrums on the floor when you take away her milk.  You’ll worry that she’ll never eat again.  You’ll get angry when you realize that the food she’s eating is making her more unwell.  You’ll learn about the immune system and the GI tract.  And by the time she’s two and a half you’ll get a whole lot of babbling.  By the time she’s three and a half the speech therapist will cut her loose.  Her belly will be flat.  She will be much calmer, and she’ll be in a regular preschool with some “transitional and sensory issues.”

Her baby sitters will be tortured by your need to have every detail written down.  Because, like a detective you will spend nights poring over things to make connections.  You will have volumes of daily diaries, and binders of lab results.  You’ll never leave and office without uttering the words, “Can I have a copy of that?”

She’ll grow physically and intellectually.  You’ll cherish every moment extra, because you’ll know from where she came.  She’ll have surgery after surgery, and a few more hospital stays.  There will be scans and specialists to check that knee pain, the joint pain, and every other bit of chronic pain that will plague her young body.  It will hurt you to watch, but you will be strong for her.  You will not give up.  You will not give in.  You will press on.

And then in third grade there will be that genetic diagnosis that will turn life on its ear again.  “Cowden’s Syndrome,”  a “PTEN Mutation.”  And you will start to study genetics.

But while you are studying you’ll learn about the health risks and you’ll focus on solutions.  You’ll try desperately to wrap your head around the realities of this tumor provoking condition.  You’ll hear the word “cancer” more times in reference to your girl then you’ll care to count.  Then, you’ll get that positive test result too.  That day when guilt takes over for a while.  That day when you realize she doesn’t just have your hair and your smile.  She also had this syndrome because YOU have it too.  Don’t hang out in the pity party for too long.  It’s not good for either of you.  Trust in the grand plan.  

Oh, and those relatives you love so much, the parents and grandparents, they won’t be around forever.  I know that’s hard for you to imagine, because there are so many, and they are ALWAYS there.  But, one day it will end.  Do me a favor and take a few extra minutes and cherish each of them.  Even if you’re really tired.  Swing by.  Say hi.  Pick up the phone.  You’ll be glad you did.  I promise.

Days will blend into weeks, and weeks into months, and months into years.  You’ll blink and wonder, but there will be no time to catch your breath.

Because it won’t be long before you’re in surgery for a double mastectomy.  Yep.  With lifetime breast cancer risks in the high 80%s, and your own history of 7 biopsies, this PTEN diagnosis took the decision from your hands.  Don’t stress over it for too long.  You’ve got good instincts.  The double mastectomy with immediate reconstruction will be one of your best decisions ever.  Get home to the angel that saved your life.  The pathology report will confirm cancer was lurking in the breast proclaimed clean by MRI a month prior.  You don’t need perfect breasts.  You need vigilance.  This beast will nip at your heels through a complete hysterectomy weeks later.  It will swipe at you.  Take care of yourself.  Recover quickly and completely.  Lose some weight.  Fill your body with excellent nutrition.  This is going to be a battle and you’ll need all your strength.

One day you’ll count and realize there will have been 16 surgeries for your girl.  There will have been 16 times when she was walked into an operating room, and put to sleep.  16 times when you’ve prayed harder than you’ve ever prayed in your life, and 16 times when you know the pure joy of gratitude when you see her awake for the first time when it’s through.  And you’ll know in your heart 16 is only the beginning.  But don’t get caught up in that.  TRY to stop putting it all together.  TRY to just breathe, and enjoy the moments as they come.  

One day you’ll look at your baby, all strong and determined.  She’ll be taller than you and you’ll wonder how it went so fast.  She’ll be mature, and so smart.  She’ll be talented and compassionate.  She’ll still be feisty and competitive too.  She’ll be as athletic as her body will allow.  She’ll swim and sing and be active in fundraising and outreach work too.  She’ll be passionate about raising awareness for Cowden’s Syndrome and other rare diseases. She’ll encourage you to tell the story of the struggles you two face.  Even though she’ll have a deep understanding that everyone has something, the rarity of this syndrome will cause her to implore you to get a real-time record out in the world.  You’ll blog diligently, as often as you can, making sure to have her edit most of your work.  

She’ll struggle sometimes, and so will you.  Sometimes you’ll even argue.  But, it’ll be the most amazing relationship you can imagine.  You two will spend more time together than most other mother-daughter duos.  Most of your time won’t be on “fun” adventures, but you’ll have hours and hours to talk and get to know each other.  You’ll realize she’s spectacular.

If I had to pick the most important advice, it would be to tell her she is enough.  Be sure she lives and breathes the reality she is loved.  Deeply, and sincerely.  Make sure she knows deep in her heart that she is enough, and all she ever has to be is who she is.  Middle school is tough work, and she’ll need to believe this in her heart from the very beginning in order to remain true to herself during those years. 

It’ll be a busy 13 years.  But, every single moment will be so worth it.  Trust yourself.  Love each other.

Mother’s Day is really every day that you are hugged, loved, and respected.  If you put the time in, it will pay dividends later.

I’m not sure what the rest of the journey has in store for us, but I’m sure we’ll be just fine.  We’ve got a pretty awesome kid, and we are #beatingcowdens together.

With love,

Your 42 Year Old Self

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“Hey, I follow you on Facebook…”

There we were in the back of DSW looking for a pair (or two for accuracy sake) to fit the feet of my girl for “Aunt Em” in her school’s performance of “The Wizard of Oz” next week, and a woman approached us.  She was happy, and friendly, and it seemed excited to see us.  Meghan and I had never seen her before in our lives.  But, she seemed to know an awful lot about us.

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“Hey, I follow you on Facebook!.  I am amazed by your story.  And you guys stay so positive all the time.  Such an inspiration!”

I’m not sure either of us knew quite what to do, so we smiled politely and said our thank yous.

Then we looked at each other.

Did someone just recognize us?  Like we matter?  A complete stranger?  Wild.

There are times I write, or we write, and I feel it is simply a therapeutic output into cyberspace.  Yet, we receive messages, some from all over the world, confirming our story is getting out there.  We know all about digital footprints.  But Wednesday, well we finally saw our own – face to face.  In the shoe store.

Why do we tell our story?  Why do we keep at it through the mundane and the heart-stopping?  Meghan says, because the truth needs to be there.  When someone looks, they need to find real people like us, getting by, every day.

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I guess she’s right.  She often is, although I don’t make a practice of TELLING her that…

Spring Break 2016

It sounds almost funny to say it.  But, we are ALMOST used to it. See, there ARE no breaks.  There just aren’t.

Doctors appointments take time.  On average 4 hours roundtrip to Manhattan considering wait time and traffic.  I have work.  Meghan has school.  We miss more than we should of each.  Routine appointments are for days off.  That’s how it has to be.  But, then you add in a flu-like virus from who knows where, and you insert about 3 extra visits to the pediatrician, on top of a cardiologist, just to be safe, well by the time you get to the routine sono of the thyroid bed (where the gland was removed to check for regrowth,) and the dermatologist, and the endocrinologist, and the traffic, and the very fair school project…  There is just about enough time to switch a closet or two, wash a few windows, and about HALF the curtains you intended to, while sneaking in one LONG trip to the grocery store.

We spent the early part of the break watching a few movies on Amazon Prime.  This is a real treat for Meghan because I am ROTTEN at sitting still.

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And somewhere in between “Ferris Beuller” and “Annie” we grabbed a few lessons.

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From “It’s a Hard Knock Life…”

“Don’t if feel like the wind is always howling?
Don’t it seem like there’s never any light?
Once a day, don’t you wanna throw the towel in?
It’s easier than puttin’ up a fight..”

Sometimes when I come into the house I love, instead of feeling calm and relaxed, my heart starts to race.  I think of the papers, and the phone calls, and the bills, and the scheduling, and the terror of missing something, and the compulsion to keep up with the basics, and I just want to sit on the floor and cry.  Sometimes I even do.  Sometimes I even get grumpy for a while.  Then, usually when no one is watching I’ll grab a dog and rub a belly, or do something silly to try to shake off the enormity of it all.

I remind myself it’s about every little piece.  It’s about one day at a time.  It’s about counting the days with no headache instead of always the days with knee and hip pain.  It’s about looking at the pile, neatening it up.  Making a list, and leaving it there to go for a walk.  Some days I get it better than others, but I’m a work in progress.

Yesterday, we did well with the pediatrician.  He drew some more labs, but feels she’ll be well enough for full activity Monday.  The dermatologist, routine Cowden’s Screen, was without incident too.

Today, the new endocrinologist (only our second visit) proved himself to be a wonderful addition to the team I am so desperately trying to form for Meghan.  I DREAM of the day I get them all together, assign a captain and let THEM help me.  But, for now, he is bright, inquisitive, and willing to toss out the “rules” when he treats Meghan.  So the hormone that we had to ditch, the medicine that was out to save the uterus that now has to save itself, well that medicine can mess with T3 Uptake, one of the thyroid hormones.  Meghan has a hard time converting T4 (Synthroid) into T3, so we actually supplement with T3.  Most doctors have no idea.  He said lets raise it and check her in 2 weeks.  Works for me.  Feeling like a validated human is priceless because this child is so exhausted all the time, it’s just not ok.

He scanned that thyroid sonogram report, reassured us about a renegade “reactive node,” and moved it to the “watch list.”

The next few weeks are set to be a whirlwind.  I can only pray her body is up for the task.  Lots of good, and happy things on the agenda.

It’s a busy life.  I wanted to see some people this week.  I wanted to reconnect with at least one friend.  I know they are out there.  And yet again, the week didn’t allow me any advance planning.  Can’t expect people to wait around for me.  So my music and my computer keep me company, with the laundry and the dishwasher, while Felix and Meghan celebrate at a Sweet 16.  It’s good for them to get out together sometimes too.

#Beatingcowdens

requires focus, stamina, and its own brand of mental toughness.

We’ve got this.