Grandma Gen

My friend in Australia reached out this week.  My “blogging buddy” sensed the silence meant things had gone awry.  Continents away; she knew.  She was right.
Writing is my release, my sanity, my way of keeping Cowden’s Syndrome and the fast paced, quick changing world around us in check.  Writing keeps me “honest” as they say.
And over the last two weeks there have been things to write about.  There have been CT scans and fears, and mishaps. and pain, and hunting down doctors and bickering over erroneous bills. But, for the last few weeks most of those things have taken place hastily, in transit.   I had some place else to be.

On Wednesday I got the call that Grandma Gen had died.

And as I sit here more than 48 hours later, I am sure it hasn’t sunken in.  Not really.

Even as I look out the windows at the changing leaves, and I am brought back to last October, as Dad was getting sicker, quickly, I can not really process.

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Gone too soon…

I sometimes feel like so much goes on so fast that sometimes the brain just has to protect the heart for a while.

I have an odd connection to numbers, so it struck me that Dad had died on a Wednesday too.  46 weeks ago.  And as we approach what was sure to be some challenging anniversaries, my family will gather this weekend to remember again, a life well-lived.

Wednesday was my cousin Christie’s birthday.  23 years old.  I so hope that she found her cake.  Because Grandma would have never let a party pass without some cake.

Mom Bday 04b

Wednesday was my cousin Kim’s birthday too.  30 years old.  One to be filled with joy.

I know girls.  I really do know.  A piece of my heart died forever on that November day, my 18th birthday when we lost Angel Meghan.  And last year, on my 40th, Dad and I went to the VA for a really tough appointment.  And then to get the legal papers signed.  And as he signed he said, “It’s your birthday!”  And I said, “There’s no one I’d rather spend it with Dad.” And there wasn’t.  And I don’t regret any of it one bit.  And in the end, that is what matters.  No regrets.

So to my cousins whose birthdays will never quite feel the same I can tell you to focus on the connection.  We all got a really strong angel in Grandma – but you girls… well you have something no one else has.  I’d love to tell you “Happy Birthday” doesn’t still flip my stomach a bit, but I don’t much like to lie.  What I can tell you is focus on the “happy” that was Grandma.  Eat your cake.  Always.

And Kim.  The wedding will be December 6th.  The shower is tomorrow.  So compassionate. Not just to Grandma, but to everyone.  Something unfair about the timing of it all.  But, I can tell you I have a good feeling heaven will be tossing SHOWERS OF BLESSINGS your way.

It’s almost impossible to sum up my Grandma Gen to someone who has never met her.

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Grandma was beautiful.  Not only in a physical sense, but inside as well.  One of the stories I never tired of hearing was the one of her and Pop’s first date.  And because there is no way I could do it justice here, I will simply tell you she told it often, and rarely did a detail change.  Decades after Pop’s passing, and 60 or so years since that date, her eyes showed the love in her heart.  And even in her last weeks whenever we talked about Pop she would say, “God gave me such a GIFT when He gave me your grandfather.”

They were parents.  Busy parents.  Grandma was the Mom to nine children – 8 boys, and a girl.  Most of us shudder at the thought of trying to raise 1, or 2, or 3 children.  For Grandma there were never enough babies.  Each one was a true gift from God.  So for 20 years she had her own, from my Dad to my Uncle Gerry, and everyone in between.  And then, just about three years after Gerry, my older sister Lisa was born.  There was never a break.  The house was always busy, and happy.

siblings

 

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All nine (1 of 1)
They took this shot as often as they could…

 

As a young child, the cousins just kept coming.  There was always a baby to play with, and Grandma ALWAYS had a smile on her face.  I believe between 1980 and 1990 – the core of the cousins, 13 if I have the numbers right- were born.  Some just a few weeks apart.  When all was said and done she boasted 27 grandchildren.  There were busy Christmas Eves on Kingsley Avenue for a long time.  There were swims in the pool, and dogs to guard the door instead of keys for the lock.  There were trips to “Bud’s” for milk, and always a sweet treat.  There were green mashed potatoes on St. Patrick’s Day that at the time just amazed me.  The little things.  So many, really, are the big things.

Older Grandkids (1 of 1)

 

When I got to call Grandma and tell her that she was going to be a Great Grandma, she let out tears of joy.  She was thrilled beyond words. 2003 was a good year – 2 grandchildren and 2 great-grandchildren.  9 more great-grandchildren have followed Meghan and Luke.  And she never resisted an urge to tell friend and stranger alike about how proud she was, of all of us.

The first "great grandchild"
The first “great grandchild”

Maybe one of the most special things about Grandma was that everyone had their own “one of a kind” relationship with her.  When you spoke to her you were the most important person in the world.  And we were all perfect.  In case the rest of the world missed the memo, or noticed a few faults along the way, you must have been mistaken.  Each of her children, her grandchildren, and her great-grandchildren could do no wrong.  And while in reality, we know we are all far from perfect, there is no denying that that kind of unconditional love felt awfully good.

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Uncle Paul and Aunt Rita’s 25th Anniversary

Grandma had a firm, strong belief in God, Jesus, and she adored The Blessed Mother.  She would often tell me, if you REALLY needed to get a prayer answered to pray to The Blessed Mother.  She’s get word to Jesus, and He’d never deny His Mother.

Motherhood was her core.  From her days playing with her baby dolls she prayed to be a mother.  And boy were those prayers answered.

And through the years as the family grew, and changed, Grandma could be found smiling somewhere.

Mom & Gerry O Johnny & Barbara (1 of 1)
Grandma with Poppy Hollywood and Barbara and Gerry O
Grandma and Aunt Shirley
Grandma and Aunt Shirley

I can say with confidence, that for all the years I knew my Grandma she never acted with malice in her heart, and always had the best of all intentions in all she said and did.  Somewhere along the line I became a middle aged grown up, and I’ve picked up a few things.  That pure heart, that is what defines people.  At the end of the day it is the knowledge that they did the best they could with what they had where they were at all times that really separates the pure in heart.

And as sure as Jesus said, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God…”  I have no doubt my Grandma was welcomed into Heaven-warmly.

Because even after the stroke that was to be the beginning of the end, she was the most polite, well-mannered patient you ever could have imagined.  In the hospital, in the nursing home, to anyone who did anything for her, “Thank you.”  “They’re so good to me.”

Even as she waited for visitors, she stared at the picture of her children on the steps at Dave and Margie’s wedding, and she spoke with pride about each of them, and how their hugs warmed her soul.

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Sometimes when I was visiting her alone she would tell me about the places she had been.  Of course these were voyages of the mind, but I listened, as we all did, with intent excitement. These last few weeks were interesting, because you truly never knew who had been in before you, or who came after you, but we all had our times to listen and chat.

She and my brother used “FaceTime” so he could chat with her from Texas, and she sure knew it was him, somehow coming through my phone.  Shane may very well be the first Thompson male to have his facial hair approved of by Grandma.  He booked the first dance with Grandma at Kim’s wedding.  And without fail as the call would disconnect, she’d say, “Shane, I love that kid!”

And there were days my Dad must have visited with her when she was lonely, and her brothers, and some others who gave her comfort, because we heard all about them too.

Even as her mind took her farther from reality, she smiled.  She regaled us with tales of how we were all going to gather for family dinner.  She told me one day she was buying 2 houses to there would be enough space for all of us.  She would talk about the family being close, and how my cousins from Washington were coming with their families too! (We can dream!)

So this weekend we will gather together again.  This time for the first gathering without our matriarch.

And we will spend Saturday showering Kim and Nando with blessings for their upcoming wedding.  Because Grandma, who believed so much in weddings, and marriage, and love would have had it no other way.

Then Sunday we will get together in Harmon Funeral Home again.  And in Irish fashion we will have a loud celebratory wake for a woman who lived a full, happy life.  And we will look at pictures and tell stories, and we will laugh and smile.  Together.

On Monday we will travel, and bring her back to Pop.  21 years later they will be reunited again, a love story never ended, simply interrupted.

Together again - together forever
Together again – together forever

 

Then the real work begins. It’s our job now.  We need to stay focused.  We need to stay connected.  We need to stay together.

For so many of my cousins Grandma Gen was their last grandparent.  I have a guilty amount of good-fortune, and celebrate three grandparents still.  But. the significance and the importance is not lost on me.

In the end it is really only about one thing.

In our loss, we must remember their freedom.  In our loss, we must remember the gifts they left behind.  In our loss, we must remember they are never truly gone if we keep them alive in our words, thoughts and actions.

I miss my Dad.  I miss my Grandma.

Their physical bodies are gone.  Their energy, their spirit, their love remain.

Grandma Gen we’ll do our best to stay “on the right path,” as you so often said.  And at every dessert table there will be an extra piece of cake or a “dollie” shared for you.

Enjoy Pop, and Daddy, and Angel Meghan, and Bo, and all the rest of those you love so much.  No worries.  When the time is right we’ll all be together again.

Until then, it’s remembering – the Irish way.

Rest in Peace Grandma Gen!

May-the-Road-Rise-to-Meet-You

 

 

Wrong list…corrected and redirected!

It wasn’t too long ago in conversation with my husband that we started to talk about all the things that have gone on in our lives in the last 2+ years.

The life changing diagnoses of Meghan and I and the correlating surgeries and appointments. just about took control there for a while.

And Felix studied for and ultimately obtained his electrical license through the drama, and extensive, ridiculous hiccups in the process.

It all just blurred in and we never properly celebrated that accomplishment.

Meg changed schools.  Well, twice now.

We changed churches.

And the car accident, and the back trauma.

The rotted bay window, and the pool with the hole in the liner.

The loss of my father after a brief, battle with pancreatic cancer that had life changing ripple effects everywhere.

I actually sat down to write a list at one point.  Maybe I felt, albeit temporarily, the need to justify the un-returned phone calls, the missed dates with friends, the chaos shoved behind closet doors, and the overarching feeling of disorder in my life.  I wanted a way to explain why I felt like I was existing, not living.  Why every weekend was faced with catching up, and why we were missing each other.  I wanted to explain to the world how I was nutritionally healthier and stronger than ever before, and excited about my new products, but I was/am struggling to get out of my own way.

But this year has served up some intense wake up calls and I am trying to give them my full attention.  Because if any reality resonates clear it is the one that there is no guarantee of tomorrow on this earth.

I am not trying to be morbid.  Quite the contrary actually.

It is that very realization that caused me to shred that list I was making.  It’s counterproductive to dwell.  We must press forward anyway.  So why stay stuck in the past?

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There is a point in your life where you have to stop.  And look around.  And focus on the blessings around you.  This paradigm shift, while far from perfected, is a work in progress.

We have taken steps to transform the house, even if that stands in the way of clearing off the credit card bills.  Because, we are not extravagant, and never will be, but living in a neat, clean, organized house, when done well, is easier to maintain, and therefore an investment in our time together

We have family.  And lots of it.  At 40 years old, I can boast 3 grandmothers and a grandfather.  I am becoming more aware each day of the depth of the value of those relationships.  In addition to those 4 great -grandparents, Meghan has 4 grandparents of her own.   I am beyond thrilled that Meghan, now 11, has had the opportunity to have created life long memories with all of them.

And sometimes it is within thoughts of those closest to us, that we remember what is the most important.

remember who you are

 

And if I really remember who I am, I have to speak of my grandparents, most especially today Mom’s parents.

Early in my life, when things were jostled around and life was uncertain, they were there.  We lived in the first floor of their 2 family for the most formative years.  They fed us breakfast and met us after school.  They took us to sporting events and school activities while Mom worked 2 jobs.  They were just always THERE.

And Pop was there to fix things, and Grandma to play cards and cook with.

There were summers in Ocean City, New Jersey – the best summers of my life.

There was a whirlwind trip to Disney, and so many more adventures.

veterans day pop and gigi

I remember them as a young child, watching them.  They never separated, even for a few minutes, without a kiss goodbye and an, “I love you.”  This practice, perhaps formed after a lengthy service in WWII, and a full career in the FDNY seemed rooted in their deep understanding that we need to appreciate each other here.  Now.

And when we moved into Mom and Ken’s house there was the summer Pop and Grandpa Al sided the house.

And in my own house the woodwork.  The beautiful labor of love that is each piece of trim, each windowsill, each doorframe.  In his 80s when I bought my house Pop trimmed each piece, and even helped Felix put in the front door.  He shared his craft with my husband, and did so with patience and ease.

So much of the last 40 years of my life revolve around Grandma and Pop.

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Never a task too difficult.  Never say no.  Always giving.  Always sharing.  Always loving.

When I think about my list that I had started to write, and then I think about them, I get a bit embarrassed.

Born in 1919 and 1920 they have seen more changes in their lifetime than any other generation.  They lived through the Great Depression, and participated in World War II.  They spent years apart, in touch by letter, only to marry a few weeks after Pop’s return in December 1945.

They built a family, my Mom and my Uncle, and the family branched out.

Pop worked in the Fire Department, and at Zion.  Grandma took care of everything else so that there was never a thing out of place.

During their life transformations like – no phone to cell phones, and no TV to HD flat screens, and so many more have happened and they persevere.  Pop Emails and surfs the internet, and even carries a cell phone – though it’s rarely on!

Times have changed and things slow down a bit.  But it’s still a huge highlight to stop in for a visit and chat.

And when he can, Felix still picks Pop’s brain for suggestions of things he’s about to try.

All my life I remember them doing.  For everyone.  All the time.  They are the ultimate lesson in “pay it forward.”  They are for me the ultimate reminder of those vows we make before God and family and friends on the day we marry.  Regardless of the wording used, the sentiment is the same.  They promised to love each other, in good times and bad, in times when there was a lot, and in times there wasn’t, in times of sickness and in health, and to stand by each other for as long as God gives them life together.

Love my Grandparents!
Love my Grandparents!
Christmas 2009
Christmas 2009
Grandma's 90th birthday on 2010
Grandma’s 90th birthday on 2010
At Pop's 90th birthday in 2009
At Pop’s 90th birthday in 2009

And even in the toughest hours, they make it look easy.

That is almost 69 years of marriage as God intended it.

There are so many things I share.  And there are some that just aren’t to be shared.  But make no mistake about this.

I’ve  learned how to be a better person, and a better Christian from my grandparents.  I learned how to be a better wife, from my grandparents.

This doesn’t detract in any way from the love of all the other influential adults in my life, including my own parents.  We learn different things from different people at every place in our lives.

But today, it’s about Grandma and Pop.  And how their selflessness and pure love never cease to amaze me.

I pray that though all adversity, my husband and I may set the same example for our daughter.

We are deeply, thoroughly, and completely blessed.

And when making lists its far best to make lists of your blessings than your struggles.

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Soft Lock Downs and other things that shouldn’t be…

I spent the weekend with my college roommate.   She was the one I lived with the longest.  She was the one who introduced herself to me the first day.  She held me 2 months later as I was wracked in sobs at the loss of my cousin Meghan on my 18th birthday.  She learned how to drive in my Toyota.  We had fun, shared friends, and life, and got to know each other in deep ways saved for long term friends – or ones you’ve lived with.  We gathered enough good dirt on each other to be sure we’d be friends forever.

friends-are-forever

The last time I saw her was in December.  She and her husband showed up at the wake for my Dad.

The time before that was when I made it out to the wake for her Mom.

Somehow we find each other…

And this weekend we hugged first on Friday, in that room in New Jersey, miles away from each of our homes.  We cried, and hugged and pulled it together.  As the scene was replaying itself again.  But this time it was far worse.

College Graduation - 1995
College Graduation – 1995

It’s not right that we don’t see each other.  And it’s no one’s “fault.”  And I have a few dear friends I am in the same situation with – whose kids I’d barely recognize if it weren’t for Facebook and Instagram.

We stood together for a while, just the two of us.  Interrupted only by people trickling by.  We spoke about his fight.  His strength.  His battle.  I told her how much I respected all he did to fight.  I told her I was so privileged to have shared a few email exchanges after he took to this blog.

But, from where we stood, in the out of the way corner that defined her comfort zone, we might have even forgotten why we were there.

Although the reality became apparent through the greetings, and the hugs, and the “I’m so sorry…” sincerely sent in her direction, over and over.

Her little brother had died.  Her “little” brother was little in age, not in height or spirit.  He had a presence about him 20 years ago when I greeted him in our dorm room.  When he spent time with us.  His charm, and sincerity, and personality resonated even then.

Her “little” brother was 36.  Diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer months ago, he fought with every fiber of his soul, through every treatment and surgery presented.  He fought for his family, for his wife of 10 years, and for his two handsome young sons.  He fought out of zest and a love of life.  He fought for his siblings and his Dad.

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I remember when she and I spoke this summer.  I remember the conversation because she asked me a question I didn’t want to answer, but one I had needed to ask myself months earlier.  She asked how long it had been for my Dad, from the time he was diagnosed until the end.  And as I choked over 10 weeks, I instinctively tried to fill that statement with stupid things… “he’s young, there are things he can do…”  But, she had heard a number.  Just as I had when I had asked the question months earlier.

And I kept an eye on the calendar as I checked in on my friend.  And every day I thought of her.  I prayed often for her brother, and the family.

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Sunday came the text that he wouldn’t make the week.

Tuesday came the one that said he was no longer suffering.

Friday rolled into today, and we sat.  Side by side in a standing room only funeral parlor.  We hung onto each other’s hands and friends and family alike shared stories, and memories of a guy who seemed to have been larger than life.  And my favorite story of the day came when they said he went back to college after he had his boys.  And he got his Master’s Degree too.  Not for financial gain, but because, “How can I hold my boys to a higher standard than I hold myself to?” Class.  His spirit filled the room.  There was an abundance of support, and love.

And then we were at this backyard party at her brother’s house.  And to the naked eye it could have seemed like any end of summer gathering.  But it wasn’t.  People were eating, and sharing stories, and passing time together.  And two handsome blond boys ran about with their friends.

And then there will be tomorrow.  And this young woman, now a widow, will need to press on for her boys.  And those boys will slowly come to the realization that Daddy is never coming home.  And his sisters to the reality that he won’t be at the next gathering, and his Dad to the realization that his son and his wife have now gone on before him – leaving him with lots to take care of.

36 years old.  Father of 2.  Dead from Pancreatic Cancer.  Illogical.  Incomprehensible.  Insidious, painful, horror show of a disease.  It just doesn’t make sense.

At all.

And there have been so many things that don’t make sense.  Ever.  They pale in comparison to the horror of a son and a brother, and a father dying out of order, yet still they are the things that keep me wondering about all things.

I think it was Wednesday at work.

I had a first grade class.  And the loudspeaker went something like this, “This is a soft lock down drill.  Please take all proper steps.”

And just like that 28 first grade students instinctively went to the back corner of my room.  The stayed low and quiet as I shut the lights and the smart board and locked the door.  They got themselves out of sight of the glass window on my door.  And they sat.  Silently.  And I was stunned.  I think it was the 10th day of school.  They range from 5 to 6 years in age.  And they never moved.  They looked to me for a reassuring face.  I faked it.

Truth is as necessary as I know they are – I HATE those things.  And in this post 9/11 world, littered with countless nonsensical school shootings, and deaths, I get it.  And I take it seriously.  And the reality that one day we COULD be a target of chaos doesn’t escape me.  But that doesn’t mean I have to LIKE it.  I don’t like that we need to scare the crap out of these little ones just in case.  They are growing up in a wild world.

So wild that when Meghan’s Social Studies homework became to be aware of the news every day, (something we actively have tried to hide her from because there is just enough CRAP in her life) one of the first stories to come across was terror threats in Times Square.  She gets things very quickly.  And she is stellar at context clues.  Dad’s in Times Square every day.

These kids are growing up in a tough world.  Grown up worries.  Grown up realities.  Young minds.  It’s so hard to make any sense of it at all.

And so when the ones who are supposed to help -just don’t, well that seems to make things worse.

In the middle of the renovations that swallowed the end of August, Meghan broke her foot.  A stress fracture to one of the superficial top bones.  I am absolutely not getting “Mother of the Year”” for this, because I was in full on “suck it up we have things to do” mode for the first 36 hours after she banged the foot hard into a misplaced shelf in the basement.  That was a Thursday night.  And by Saturday of Labor Day weekend, we found ourselves in Urgent Care with a “suspicion of fracture.”  Of course being a holiday that simply meant ice, rest and elevate till Tuesday when we could get to the podiatrist.

meghan boot 2

And we brought the X-ray, and the report.  And everyone was very pleasant and we were told that the X-ray abnormality didn’t exactly line up with the point of severe pain.  So, clinically it was appropriate to diagnose a stress fracture, put her in a boot, and have her repeat the X-ray in 2 weeks.

So she began middle school days after getting her braces off, with this giant black boot on her leg.  And she plugged along for two weeks, and we got the X-ray repeated as we were told to.  So, when we returned to the office for the recheck we gave them the disk and the report.

There was some grumbling about the  radiology place we went to writing the “worst” reports (but no one told us where to go,) and some discussion in the other room about things on the film that were “probably nothing.”  (Doctors should learn some moms have rabbit ears.)

So he came into the room after having had Meghan take off the boot.  There was a surgical resident in tow.

“How does the foot feel?”

Meghan, “Much better.”

“Great, there’s no evidence of fracture on the x-ray.  You must have healed.  Let’s transition you off the boot.”

meghan boot 1

Please know during this whole exchange he NEVER EXAMINED HER FOOT!

Me, having already read the X-ray report, ” What about the report talking about “bony bridging and bordering sclerosis.?”  Does that mean anything?”

“Well, it’s not causing her pain is it?”

Me,”Well she doesn’t have foot pain, per se, but, there is chronic joint/muscle/bone pain that we work on.  Could things being out of order in the foot trigger some of this?”

Me,”I guess really what I’m asking is, is anything on that X-Ray consistent with Cowden’s Syndrome?”

“Well does Cowden’s Syndrome cause bony overgrowth?”

Me, “You’re the doctor, I am asking you.”

“But you are far more familiar with the syndrome than I am.”

Me, in my own brain, Thanks to Google University, and then out loud, “Are you seeing this? (pointing to the extra bone that juts out of her left (and right) feet) on the X-ray?”

317152-google-library

http://www.orpha.net/consor/cgi-bin/OC_Exp.php?Lng=GB&Expert=201 ( You may have to cut and paste the link)

(THAT IS A PAGE FROM A WEBSITE, reviewed by a doctor at the cutting edge of PTEN research.  It took me less than 10 seconds to find.  It verifies bone cysts connected to Cowden’s Syndrome, and had anyone asked I would have been able to tell them about the “non-ossifying fibroma” in the left femur that scared the crap out of us when she was 2.)

“I don’t think so, but you should probably have a specialist look at that.  I don’t need to see her again.”

GOOOOOOOOOOD THIIIIING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

And I turn to see the tiniest tear in the corner of Meghan’s eye…. “Mom, he never even touched my foot.  He has no idea what the problem really is.  What’s the point of wearing the boot?  I have to trust my own body cause they don’t know anything.  I think its healed and the boot is hurting my knee.”

Fair enough.

She’s the closest I have to a doctor, and the thing that has made the most sense all week.

When you have a diagnosis that leaves you prepped for cancers of all types at all ages and in all places, there are things that rock you to your core.

Sometimes living with PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome is like living under the constant threat of a terrorist attack.  But the terrorist is cancer.

You get to live in fear, or live your life.

You get to try and make sense of things, or run with them anyway.

With the motivation of those – not connected to us by Cowden’s, but connected to us by life – who have fought the good fight, I try to stay focused.  To live life instead of hiding in a corner, or some days under the bed with the lights off…

So many things, so many tragedies will never make sense.

confused

But it’s less about making sense, and more about being sensible.  It’s about instinct.  And love, and compassion.  And cures.  I am a big fan of cures.

Tonight, wherever you are in your life. Whatever is rattling your world, I ask you to stop for a minute.

Say a prayer for those two little boys who will begin to know that Daddy is never coming home.

Say a prayer for a family who lost a 36 year old high quality man too soon.

And please.  In this world that makes no sense.  Do something logical. And kind.  For someone.  Cause we ALL need it.

 

Random Acts of Kindness

 

random-acts-of-kindness-1

With the recent ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, we have seen ingenuity lead to a spike in funds and awareness for a horrendous disease.  Fundraising for the organization is at an all-time high.  I hope, sincerely and with my whole heart, that this influx of funds is well-managed, that it gets into the hands of researchers, and that is yields major steps towards a cure for this heart-breaking syndrome.

All this awareness raising got to me this week.  We donate what we can to our church, and various charities near to us, but this week I got reflective.  I donated to ALS and three charities that were not ALS, and have nothing to do with PTEN.  My donations will not impact the world in an earth-shattering way, yet it felt good.

I’m getting my gold porch light ready for September – Childhood Cancer Awareness month.

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Other people suffer, and all of us – disease specifics not to be debated, could stand to have a cure around

But, regardless of your opinion, I think this ALS Ice Bucket thing did more than raise awareness for ALS.  I think, it increased our awareness of humanity and other people’s struggles.

random-acts-of-kindness

A few days ago in Costco I had over estimated my strength.  And as I wondered how I would get the chair into the car, two gentlemen came from nowhere.  Different places I might add, to work together to fit the chair into my car.

Then I received a card in the mail.  It had a check enclosed for us the for a charity of our choice, or something fun.   The handwritten note told me that Meghan and my story was impacting at least one life.  The need to keep sharing was renewed.

rak card

rak card2

 

And I connected on Facebook to a man who we met in Disney last year.  He and his wife and Meghan struck up a conversation on a long bus ride.  He had a service dog.  She was enthralled.  She was raising awareness of Cowden’s Syndrome.  He tried several times to send me a link to a song that made him think of Meghan.  He was finally able to get it through.  I cried.  My little girl is making a difference and this man took the time to let us know.

In the mail was a package from a friend, a former student, with a “big sister” type of compassion for my girl.  There was a letter (which wasn’t for me to read,) and a key chain for Meghan, and one for me too.

rak keychain

rak keychain2

None of these people could have known I was having a pretty tough time.  I don’t so well in chaos, and the house was absolutely upended.  In the year that everything broke, the bay window was being replaced, the house needed new… lots of things, and the leak in the pool was becoming evident.

Random acts of kindness.

random-acts-of-kindness-2012

That’s why they matter.  So much.

We try to pay it forward as much as we can.  So special to be on the receiving end as well.

Whatever the cause.  Whatever the reason.  An increased awareness of others will make the world a better place.

Do something nice for no reason.  With no expectation of anything in return.  Just because.

pay-it-forward-2014-random-act-of-kindness

“A tranquil mind is not a little gift…”

Growing up I didn’t spend a lot of time with my father.  Despite some really fun day trips, I didn’t really know him well at all.

My Mom married an incredible guy when I was in high school, and there was this love and support that was there every day.  We got to know each other quickly and well.

And that’s my tale of two fathers.

Ken has been a constant in my life since I was 15.  He loves me like his own, and has treated my as such, without fail, and in all things.  I adore him.

Dad struggled after Vietnam, after horrors that I can only imagine.  He struggled to find his way, and to find the balance.  He married twice, and had three kids, then he spent 10+ years in a long relationship.  He lived all over.  He worked to add his charm and personality to nightclubs all over NY.  He knew how to live on top of the world, and at its bottom.

Several years ago life brought him back local, and for the first time that I could remember, he wasn’t working nights.  We spent more time together.  He came to dance recitals and swim meets for Meghan.  He came to my house for gatherings, and just to be with us.  We liked having him around.  All of us.  Even the dogs.

I got to have two “Dads.”  While one is called Ken and one was called Dad, the terms are synonymous.  Two very different people.   Very lucky girl.

And I used this time to catch up with Dad.  We would talk on the phone a lot, about anything.  Sometimes he would talk.  And when he did, I listened.  When he really talked about old stories I sometimes even took notes.  Because I didn’t want to forget anything.  I don’t think he would have loved that idea.  I suspect he would have thought it wasn’t worth my time.  But, it was.

Lots of times I would talk.  He was a really good listener.  He knew when to interject and when to stay quiet.  He knew when I needed to hear advice, and when I just needed a sympathetic ear.  Sometimes I get overwhelmed.  And I just need to offload, without judgment or solution.  I called every Friday that I grocery shopped.  Sometimes we talked for hours.

And the years saw a transformation as he was being  treated finally for the PTSD that had tormented his every move since the war.  He didn’t talk much about it, but every once in a while… it was my turn to listen carefully.  And I did.  Gratefully.

Then the conversations started to include talk of him being tired.  Looking for energy.  Millions of excuses listed, tried, tossed.  Then there was the jaundice.  And the blockage.  And the pancreatic cancer.  And within about 10 weeks my sister and brother and I said goodbye to our Marine.  “The few, the proud…”  to the very end.

Dad was a philosopher.  Sometimes I was right with him.  Other times we didn’t quite agree.  But, it never mattered.

And in the weeks before his death I became his healthcare proxy – because I do healthcare all the time.  And I got his medical records,and put them in a binder, and Dad laughed because he somehow knew I would – and so did my brother and sister,  and my siblings and I took him to the fancier hospital.  And we asked some questions.  And we talked a lot.  But, it was done.  In the end it was just time for it to be the end.

But I was not, and am not ready to let go.  Maybe that’s unhealthy.  Or maybe that’s keeping the memory alive.  Whatever.

Dad, stopping by?
Dad, stopping by?

It took weeks to clean out his small apartment.  I touched every paper.  I read, and sorted, and filed.  I made more binders, and file folders.  I shredded only with great care at my own dining room table.  And as I sorted I found little scraps of paper.  Little random thoughts.  Notes.  Scribbles of Dad’s.  So I gathered them all together and I taped them onto large sheets and I saved them as a PDF for my brother and sister.  And I laminated the originals for me.  And sometimes on quiet nights, when my mind is busy and I can’t sleep, I peek through those notes.  Almost like a chat with Dad.

Tonight I flipped open to the words, “A tranquil mind is not a little gift.”

And I paused.  And I smiled.  Dad’s mind was not always tranquil.  But in the end it was even through physical torment.  He had lived enough emotional torment to know “A tranquil mind is not a little gift.”

I am a worrier.  Not a shock to those who know me even a little.  But, also not unfair, all things considered.

This was a light week here for doctors.  Only 2 appointments and one argument with a disrespectful office manager that led to a formal complaint.  Oh, and one random really large pathology bill that was clearly not done right.  The appointments were fine.  One was annoying in the leaving at 7 for an 8:30 to be taken at 10:40 to get home around 2, but all things considered it was smooth.  The other was with the gastro doctor who wants another visit to the ENT to peek down at the esophagus.  (If only I could get a scheduler to do these things…) And the fight of course was with my doctor.  The office staff of a vascular surgeon for a procedure I definitely need soon.  I’m in the market for a new vascular surgeon.

But since we had some time, and we were looking for some light entertainment, we replaced the bay window in the front of the house.

So after a slightly tumultuous, but altogether fun trip to Disney, we returned very late Tuesday, slept most of Wednesday.  Did lots of laundry, sent my husband to help out at my sister’s on Thursday, and Friday got ready for the new window.

Not that we WANTED a new window.  We just bought the other one 14 years ago when we moved into the house.  But about 2 years ago there was this little black spot that kept growing.  And we called the company to look at it, but it turned out there was a class action lawsuit we had to participate in and I filled out miles of paper and it took almost a year to get someone to the house.  By the time they came the little black spot was large and clearly water related.  So the nice man took pictures and the conversation was about replacing the center of the window.  Until they called the next day and said the black spot was in the wrong places, and the window would have to be replaced.  But since the window was over 10 years old we’d get a percentage off the cost for the window and installation.  Um, well that price was so wild we bought the window ourselves.  And Ken and Felix and his friend John got it to our house, and finally Saturday all the planets aligned to put it in.

It was supposed to be a half day job.  It was supposed to fit right in.  And Felix, and Ken, and John, and Bobby, and Brendan worked their bottoms off.  But, there was some cutting of walls, and by the time it was all back together on the outside it was well past 11 pm.  That wasn’t the inside.

bay window

bay window 2

I like the house neat.  Actually I need the house neat.  And you can tell me whatever you want about how it doesn’t always happen like that, or I have to give it up.  But I can’t and I won’t.  Because it’s a control thing.  I know it.  I’ll own it.  I can not control Cowden’s Syndrome, or any aspect of why Meghan feels cruddy so much of the time.  I can not control random illnesses or natural disasters, or unscheduled hospitalizations and surgeries, or any other obstacle that is going to come into my way.  But, through much experience I have found it markedly easier to handle every single crisis with a clean house.  Something about having order in the home, gives me some sense of peace when the waters are very rocky.

So, at 11 on Saturday night I looked around and began to freak a bit.  That’s when we decided to paint.  It was time anyway, and the house was on its ear so to speak.  So I prepped the room and there was paint.  And the living room and dining room are back together, but the hall needs a coat too… and you get the idea.

living room chaos

Not to mention that a few weeks ago Meghan began the move from her room on our floor to the upstairs of our cape.  There are two rooms with that peaked roof and lots of floor space.  (There have to be some perks to being an only!) She has a bedroom, and a room with a desk, and all the things she loves.  It has taken 4 weeks to clean out and move her, but we finished today.  And as I sat in her room I cried a little.  I remember distinctly being 9 months pregnant and crying in that room (see a pattern?) I was so scared.  I was right to be scared.  Some scary things have happened in the last 11 years.   This time I know the move upstairs will be far less painful than the one she’s sure to make just a few short summers from now.

megs empty room

It was a good time to move.  Junior High starts in just a few days really.  A whole new school.  A new chapter.  Turning point.  And as she decided what to keep, toss, and donate, her personality began to shine through.  With just a few pictures left to hang, she has created an atmosphere that is representative of her.  Now to keep it clean and clutter free… 🙂

But nothing is without event, and there is no time when I am fully at rest, as I frantically tossed my flip-flops off when I heard her cry out,” I NEED YOU!”  I arrived at the top of the stairs to find her crouched over grabbing a leg that has been giving her trouble for days.  One too many trips up the stairs, or on the floor sorting things?  Who knows.  Just like the headache that’s been around one day too many.  Sinuses, allergies?  God, I hope so.

At some point I’ll have to go to sleep tonight.  And tomorrow will be for more appointment making, and dealing with random bills.  The side of the house is littered with trash.  There are 10 bags being donated Saturday morning.  The clutter and dirt are disappearing simultaneously – with LOTS and LOTS and LOTS and LOTS of work.  But my sanity is being restored.

And while this is far from how I would have chosen to spend this week – so close to the end of summer, Meghan got some time in with some friends so it was in fact a success.

So much flux.  Moving Dads things in earlier in the year jostled the basement.  Moving Meghan upstairs caused some purging.  And slowly everything is coming together as it always seems to.

I think of how many times I would have called my Dad this week.  The number is too high to count.  I miss him every day.

He told me once to keep writing, to just keep letting it all out no matter what I thought of it.  So I do.  And I think about how he would have respected my need for order, while encouraging me not to sweat the small stuff.

Tonight I think calls for a glass of wine, and some reflection.  Gratitude for an almost “normal” week with largely “normal” problems.  Feeling grateful that my mind, while always a flutter, is somewhat tranquil, and…

“A tranquil mind is not a little gift…”

tranquil mind

Thanks for the chat Dad.  I miss you. A whole lot.

 

Finding my “Happy Thought”

It was a few months ago.  I can’t quite recall the date.  It wasn’t my finest hour. (or day, or days…)

I was grumpy.  Worried.  Angry about the struggles my girl was being forced to endure.  Twisted about a future of doctors appointments and surgeries.

I had noticed she seemed extra down, and I took it as my cue to worry harder.

At some point, I broke down, expecting a clear answer to the question, “What’s wrong?” so I could continue the business of worrying some more, and searching for answers.

But the answer wasn’t even close to what I expected.

“Mom, you need to find a “Happy Thought” because you being like this all the time is really affecting me.”

Neverland happy thoughts

Um, ouch.  Wow.  And she sure told me.

She wasn’t being disrespectful in the least.  We have worked on honest speech and clear language, for survival – and to help us prep for the teen years.  She was doing exactly what I asked of her.  She was telling me what she was thinking.  And she was right.

Years of parenting a chronically ill and allergic child have left me in a permanent hyper-vigilant state.  The “other shoe”  has been known to drop without warning, and there is a constant need to search, study, learn, and discover whatever I can about whatever is plaguing my girl.  I am her advocate.  I am her voice.  We have between us undergone at least 17 surgeries in the last 11 years.  That doesn’t include countless hospital stays, tests and procedures.  There is always a pile to contend with, whether its bills to fight or file, prescriptions to order, reports to hunt down or appointments to make.  Life is very busy.

Neverland-HOOK

There was a time I used to walk for fun.  Hours on end with my music in my ears.  I would walk for miles.  I would walk everywhere.  There was a time I would read for fun.  Not medical books.  Just leisurely reading.  I used to watch “Law and Order.”

Now between working full-time, parenting full-time, chauffeuring to appointments, trying to make swim practice, keeping food in the house, keeping some semblance of order, including clean laundry, clean curtains, and clean cabinets – it was easy to get swallowed up by obligation and forget the joy in my life.

To be quite honest with you, there isn’t much I would change.  Do I sometimes miss those long carefree walks?  Definitely.  But, would I for one second trade one bit of my beautiful, tenacious, funny, stubborn, intelligent little girl?  Not a chance.

Hook movie

We watched “Hook” a few months back.  It was a rare occasion when I sat to watch a movie.  It is one of my favorites.  And for those of you who might not be familiar, it’s a “Peter Pan” spin off where Peter ended up all grown up – a lawyer.  He forgot his magical youth, and the story takes him back to Neverland to find it again.

I am sure this is where she got her admonition for me to find my “happy thought,” as Peter needed his to remember how to fly in order to beat Captain Hook.

I thought and I thought, long after she had said the words.  I was tempted to compare myself to other adults, and justify my grumpiness.  But I resisted the urge.  These words weren’t spoken to another adult.  They were spoken to me.  And what a gift she had given me.

peter-pan-best-quotes-sayings-faith-trust-good

Transformations don’t happen over night, but I have forced myself to become aware of the things that give me pleasure.

I love to write.  And so I have been trying to give more attention to my blog.  Therapy on a keyboard.

I have taken my feet instead of the car wherever I can, and wherever time allows.  I can’t walk for hours, but I can appreciate the short walks and relish them more.

I am realizing that a happy Mom is some of the best help I can give.  I won’t know all the answers.  I can only give her the same honesty I ask of her, and I can only do my best.

And while we focus on being positive, and its something I ask of her all the time – it’s not fair to ask it and not model it.

So we are all a work in progress.

And when I really soul search for what makes me happy, my pleasure really lies in seeing other people happy.


I am constantly telling Meghan that Cowden’s Syndrome does not define us.  But, in fairness, actions speak louder than words.

It’s been months since I was told to find my “Happy Thought,” and I hope I never forget that day.  While we still have our ups and downs it serves as a reminder for me that I am no good to those I love unless I find happiness myself.

Meghan and Felix – they will always be my happiest thoughts.

But I love my family, and God, and exercise, and nutrition, and cool breezes and music, and flying birds, and summer…

I strongly encourage you to find your “Happy Thought.”  It’s tough to start looking when a 10-year-old calls you out.

Loving my heart - outside my body- my biggest happy thought.
Loving my heart – outside my body- my biggest happy thought.

Portrait of Courage

You-Are-What-You-Think1

We have a short window of time from the point we meet someone to make an impression on them.

Think about it.  It happens all the time.  You pass by countless people, on line, in the grocery store, the receptionist at the doctor’s office…  And often, within moments you either remember a rude interaction, or you forget that they even existed.  The brain has to protect itself to some extent.  We can’t remember everyone.

But then there are some people you can’t forget.

I met her in the jewelry store a few months back.  I was buying a bracelet for my girl on a particularly tough day.  We struck up an easy conversation.  She was young, bright, and articulate.  She was friendly. She asked about my daughter and I shared.  I explained Cowden’s Syndrome and some of our most recent endeavors.  Then she nonchalantly told me she was a cancer survivor.  Melanoma she told me.  She was 22.  She told me she planned to be a teacher.  I imagine she will be a great one when it’s time.  At some point I brought up our trip to Disney, and how it might be time to take a break, and save some money.  She told me – wise beyond her years – that the bills will always be there.  Go.  Enjoy.

hope and spoon

Wednesday night I went into the jewelry store again.  I struck up an easy conversation with another employee.  I wanted to get a necklace repaired for Meghan.  It had a “hope” ribbon and a spoon.  She asked about it and I explained again about Cowden’s Syndrome, and the Spoon Theory.  When she brought me the necklace she wouldn’t take any money.  Instead, she offered me a “pay it forward” opportunity.  She showed me a “gofundme” page on her iphone.  She explained that this young girl, now 24, was battling stage 4 malignant melanoma, and if I felt so inclined, I could contribute there.

My heart began to race.  I recognized this girl.  She was the one, the cancer survivor who had helped me months prior.  I asked a million questions, rapid fire.  The kind woman answered them.  I was stunned.  A melanoma survivor, she found a lump a few months ago, which led to a CT and PET scan, and the determination that the melanoma had spread.  There will be treatment.  She is tough.  She will fight.

24 years old.

My sister is 25.  My brother is 25.  My cousins are right about that age.  They are all at various points of setting up their lives, not fighting for them.

She could have been anyone.  This girl in the jewelry store.  But she was dynamic.  Because apparently that is who she is.  She is the person that sticks with you.

Read her story here. http://www.silive.com/sports/index.ssf/2014/06/college_of_staten_island_to_ho.html#incart_river

And if you are so inclined, do what you can to help.

be the change

That is a conversation Meghan and I have all the time.

Life is not easy.  It is often unfair.  Frequently she feels like crap, and always she seems to hurt.

Yet, I tell her all the time, you have a short window where people will make a judgement about you.  It’s not fair either, but it’s true.

And when you live your life chronically ill and/or in pain, you may sometimes feel like you have to lie.

But I am helping her find the balance.  Ways that she can still be honest about what she’s going through, and say what she means, with an upbeat delivery.

i am one

Meghan has been blessed with a beautiful elementary school experience that spanned  6 years and 2 schools.  And although we elected to change schools at the very end of fourth grade, she can reflect and see the positive experiences gained in both places.  It seems everything happened as it should.

And in third grade, one of the roughest years of her life, she was met with one of the most compassionate women I will ever know.  A gifted teacher who cared so much more about the child than the curriculum.  And this year, when there was loss, deep loss, and surgery, and more major struggles there were several excellent women in her path as educators, and sources of strength.  And again, there was one with a sick child of her own, who just “got it” from the beginning.  My gratitude knows no limits.

to teach

Today we sat for a beautiful moving up ceremony.  Everything was perfect.  The length and content of the ceremony carried out through the careful precision of true professionals.  The children were calm and well-behaved.  Everything was smooth.  They all made it look easy, but I know all too well that its not.

Thirty years ago I walked across that same stage.  Today a lot of things came full circle, and after 17 plus years of teaching in my school, I sat in the seat of a parent, and I could not have been more proud.

She received two medals for school service, and she was beaming.  Then they called her name for the “Portrait in Courage” Award.  And the tears flowed.  Mine – not hers.  So touched by the time it took to match my child with an award that was a perfect fit.

See I always knew she had courage.  And I think most people who meet her would never deny it.  But lately, struggling with the pain, there have been some dark days.

couraqge 1

So we talk alot.  And I hope and pray that my words get through.

I tell her what a gift she has, that people view her has positive, and courageous.  I tell her that just because I happened to agree doesn’t mean the responsibility ends there.  When people view you this way, they look to you.  They feed off of your energy.  You inspire them to be better people.

It doesn’t mean you have to be positive all the time, because we all have our days – but it means most of your work has to be upbeat.

Today she hurt.  As she always does.  And I could see it.  But she never said it.  Tonight I felt her knee, and that all too familiar pulsing seems to be finding its way back.  She asks me not to hug her.  Especially in the morning – because my touch hurts.  There are dark circles under her eyes.  But we went out all day today, as a family.  And she was amazing.

She held that plaque in her purse.  She wore her medals.  She smiled.  She looked people in the eye.  She spoke.  She lit up rooms.

Danielle, from the beginning of my story, has never met Meghan.  Yet to me there are so many similarities.  I told Meghan all about her.  She gets it.  She gets a lot of things.  And as I struggle to help her find the gentle balance at 10 years old, of being positive and honest – I see role models for her in our small community.

“Portrait of Courage” indeed.  As her teacher said, she has endured more in her first decade of life than most, and is a force to be reckoned with.

meg awards

For Meghan, for Danielle, and for the others who we cross paths with every day – you inspire.  You lead by example.  You ARE changing the world.

Thank you.

Building Bridges…

It’s been a while since I’ve written.  If I have my way I’m about to get so focused that you’ll get tired of hearing from me.

Life has become a bit overwhelming.  And some days all of this, this whole chronic illness thing, is just too much to handle.

There are days the path looks like this.

broken bridgeThere are days when it is easy to wonder, “What now?”  or, “What next?”

But that is the very mindset that can find us in a heap of trouble.

So we are trying to work on shifting our focus.  Instead of panicking when the bottom feels like it’s falling out, we are working on reinforcing the structure.

We all need a bridge, a support system of sorts.

With two members of the house who are the 1 in 200,000 unique that comes with having a RARE Disease like Cowden’s Syndrome, it’s so easy to let the illness try to creep into your identity.

I don’t talk too much about me.  Mostly because as any Mom, my needs are second to those of my girl.  But, I too get overwhelmed.  And when I feel like Cowden’s is trying to choke me out – it’s time to pause and reclaim.

I am more than the paperwork and medical records.  I am more than the bills and prescriptions.  I am more than the scheduling and the appointments.  I am more than the mastectomy scars.  I am more than the synthetic thyroid hormone.

I am a mom.

hope stone

I am a wife.

hope stone

I am a friend.

hope stone

I am a Christian.

hope stone

I am a teacher.

hope stone

 I like music.  I like reading John Grisham. I enjoy Law and Order.  I like to laugh.  I CAN’T get by without my Isagenix, and my Ionix.  I appreciate photography, and I really, really like to sleep.

And with each piece of my identity, the pieces of my foundation get stronger.

 

There are things I have to do as a person with Cowden’s Syndrome.  There are things I have to endure.  There are an unnerving amount of tests and appointments and the constant nagging notion that things may spin out on a dime.  But if I am honest – isn’t that what life really is – for everyone?  While the issues may not always be medical, the reality is that despite our best efforts, we have no control.  So, we do “the best we can with what we have where we are.”

And as I get my foundation in place.  As my stones are strategically placed – so they can be stepping stones along the way if needed, I can work on helping Meghan build her bridge.

wooden bridge

I figure once I have it together enough that I can catch her if she falls… she’s free to establish her own pace, and find her own way.

We will forever do outreach work.  We will forever share our story.  We will forever create fund-raising opportunities for research.  That will be part of our lives.  Cowden’s Syndrome will be part of our lives.  But it will not BE our lives.

My daughter has seen more in 10 and a half years than most adults see in a life time.  She has been medically poked, prodded, and cut.  She has been in and out of hospitals.  She has seen doctors hired and fired.  She has been listened to and she has been ignored.  She has had arteries ablated, and a body parts removed.  She has vomited pure bile from a stomach torn apart from pain medicine.  And she has pushed each day through that pain.  She tries to be like the other fifth graders, but she struggles.  She struggles to be understood and to fit in.

But, from my stones, my own developing identity,  I can see her clearly.  Perhaps more clearly than she sees herself some days.

I don’t profess to know all things.  She’s a bright preteen.  There are things I’ll never know, and that in and of itself is OK, and normal, and even healthy.

What I see when I look at Meghan is not Cowden’s Syndrome.

I see a beautiful smile.  I see a kind heart.  I see compassion.  I see love.  I see competitiveness.  I see a swimmer.  I see a singer.  I see a reader.  I see someone who loves to play hard, and relax just as hard.  I see raw determination.  I see high standards.  I see someone, a young woman who makes me proud to be her mom.

This summer we are going to work on building.  I want to be able to provide her stepping-stones.  And then I want to help her build her bridge, with a healthy mix of guidance and independence.

I want her to see she has Cowden’s Syndrome, but it does not have her.  It is an inconvenient part of our lives – but not our entire lives.

We are going to make memories.  We are going to create situations that have nothing to do with doctors or hospitals.  We are going to laugh and play.  We are going to continue to “Live Deliberately.”

And we are going to write it down.  It sounds so silly to think that we have to write down having time for fun, but we do – for now.  Maybe one day it will become so automatic that life’s adventures will become common, and our medical world will fit in the empty spaces.

It’s not going to happen all at once.  There will be days we have to remind each other.  But, we will get there.

And along the way we will slowly build the team of medical professionals who look at us as people, and keep our best interests at the forefront of their practice.

Because as we become empowered, we will be rid of the others.  Positive influences only.  We deserve that.

She made swim practice tonight.  No small feat.

The pain – evident, but managed.

applause

Endocrinology consult Thursday.

Hopeful.

A balanced thyroid certainly would help a few (dozen) things…

 

Live Deliberately

Live deliberately.

From time to time, as I am working hard to get out of my own way, the words of Henry David Thoreau creep into my subconscious.

thoreau-i-wished-to-live-deliberately

 

Live deliberately.  On purpose.  With a purpose.  With goals.  With faith.  With belief that it all matters.  Not just in this world, but in eternity.

There are countless things in this life that are running out of control.

outofcontrol

 

Last week in church, I held the hand of a woman who is trying to establish her life here in the United States while her family originates half a world away.  I know very little about her, but I cried with her as she was enduring the loss of 6 family members who had all died in a car accident.  Out of her control.  Immeasurable pain.  No words.  Just prayer that she arrive safely to be with her remaining family.

Then there is my internet friend in Australia, whose daughter has endured more brain surgeries than I can count.  This week things went badly.  The surgery was aborted.  They had to make a new plan.  Her daughter- beautiful, 20ish, and full of life.

And another story I follow closely, of an acquaintance whose mom became septic in December after routine surgery.  The trials cause my heart to ache.

We could all list stories here.  Heck, I could go on for pages, the old friend whose brother is battling cancer… and so on.

I could fill this page with the struggles of my daughter this week.  Battling the demon that is Cowden’s Syndrome – and whatever else has crept into her body to accompany it.  I could write about the nights spent holding, and wishing, and praying that the pain be gone, or that God help us make some sense of her agony.  I could continue in frustration about the thyroid hormones all askew.  And the general lack of knowledge that greets us at most facilities.  But I won’t.  At least not today.

Today I am reflective about Thoreau’s words.  Today I am thinking about what it means to live deliberately.

I can not control tragedy.

I can not control pain.

I can not control sickness.

I can not control sadness.

I can not control life’s twists and turns.

I can not control the course of Cowden’s Syndrome or any other aspect of our lives.

No matter how badly I want to.  I can’t.

And, I also can’t make sense of most of it.

So, I have a choice.

I can sit here and mull it over.  I can feel everyone’s hurt and pain.  I can reflect on the unfairness of it all – or I can live deliberately.

I choose to hug my husband.  Because I don’t do that enough.

I choose to rub a dog’s belly.  Because it’s good for both of us.

I choose to eat well, and get and stay as healthy as I can.

I choose to be involved in passionately sharing my love for good nutrition and the products helping me find it.

I choose to take a deep breath when I am stuck in traffic.

I choose to deliberately try and turn lemons into lemonade.

I choose to use my grief over the loss of my loved ones, and channel my energy into the most positive outlets I can find.

I choose to get involved in raising awareness – of Cowden’s Syndrome and other RARE diseases.

I choose to get involved in things I feel passionate about, and not in things that bring me down.

I choose to advocate tirelessly for my daughter, and any other that I can help along the way.

I choose to always make sure I have an extra spoon for my daughter – or a friend in need.

I choose to laugh – at myself as needed!

I choose to pray.

I choose to be a friend.

Because to live deliberately doesn’t mean life will be easy.  It doesn’t mean life will go well, or the way we want it to.  It means making a choice to find what you can, dig deeply for the beauty that is abundant in the joys, but also hiding in the sorrows.

To live deliberately doesn’t mean I won’t be sad, or mad.  It means I will have ALL the feelings – on purpose.  Because to truly appreciate life I must experience all things.

happiness is a butterfly

 

I choose to do one thing I enjoy every single day.

And today I choose to take a walk.

How will you live deliberately today?

 

Freedom IS NOT Free!

This Memorial Day, re-blogging my own sentiments from Veteran’s Day last fall. This Memorial Day I remember 2 grandfathers, and my father. All veterans who are forever with us in spirit. Their sacrifices never forgotten.

beatingcowdens's avatarbeatingcowdens

When I taught Social Studies I most enjoyed the curriculum that allowed me to teach about the United States.  It made me sad on Friday to overhear conversations about this upcoming weekend, and never once feel there was an understanding of Veteran’s Day.  When I was a fifth grade teacher the children wrote about their “Rights and Responsibilities” as American citizens.  That was a long time ago.

I was raised to answer the question, “Where are you from?”  with, “The United States.”  Growing up, that aggravated more than one person who was looking to learn where my ancestors had traveled from to arrive in America.

Precise language.  They learned to ask the question they wanted to know the answer to, or not to ask.

veterans day 4

I am the proud daughter of a Vietnam Veteran, and the grateful granddaughter to 3 WWII veterans.  Although 2 of my grandfathers are no…

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