My Wish

What would I do?
What would I do?

I have been quiet this week.  That in and of itself is unlike me.

I am tired – well bordering on downright wiped out.

There are a few more weeks of summer to go, and aside from a well planned Disney Trip, set in place in January – there seems to be precious little to look forward to.

Meghan has a short list of “have tos” which I plan to do EVERYTHING in my power to work out for her, but really every effort I made to keep this summer better – to “streamline the doctor visits” seems to have failed miserably.

Today she began her summer homework.  While it is reasonable, it is one more thing on a list of “have-tos” for a kid that just wants to be a kid.

There is no camp for Meghan.  It is all doctors appointments – all the time.  And when it is not her appointments it seems to be mine.  She is swimming three nights a week on a new team, at least she is LOVING that – but we have barely been inside our previously overused pool.

Wishes 1

And its funny, while she and I have both had appointments of almost equal number in the last few weeks, I feel so much less stress about mine.

The geneticist  the endocrine surgeon, the gyn oncologist, the abdominal MRI, the plastic surgeon, and the oncologist.  The spleen survived its next cut – and can live for another 9 months.  The 3.5 cm roundish lymphangiomas are stable.  That’s all we ask for now.  The thyroid lymph nodes – not suspicious enough to biopsy.

The plastic surgeon, well the LOVELY woman offered me a boob job to correct the “asymmetry” caused by me shoving the reconstruction all into one day.  Not this year, but thanks.  Good to know the offer stands indefinitely.  For now, I have other things to do.

So I have only one more of my appointments lingering, a late July follow up with the breast surgeon.  I thought of blowing it off and then realized how dumb that would be – for so many reasons.  So, I will go.

But Meghan’s appointments, those are the ones that keep me up at night.  Those are the ones that strike fear and anxiety in the core of my soul.  My heart beats outside my body in this little girl.  I can not sum up in any number of words the depth of my love for her.

So to say this summer, and especially this week has been sheer hell would be the understatement of the century.

worry 2

Her appointments began the day after school ended.  The lengthy thyroid sonogram bought us another 6 months.  The pituitary function test was a train wreck, but the call this week claims the results were OK.  I want to feel more relieved.  But its hard.  I am waiting to read the report myself.  “Doubting Thomas?”  Maybe.  Realist – probably.  Something is not quite right, but at least its not SO wrong it has to be addressed today.

The geneticist began to speak of carnitine issues, and I am waiting to hear of a possible muscle biopsy.  In the interim I bought carnitine.  Lets see if we can cut that one off.

The vascular surgeon examined the wrist, painful since early June, and the knee.  He wants an orthopedist on board, but wanted me to consult with the rheumatologist about the wrist, and then scan the knee that had the 4 surgeries, because its been over a year.  The rheumatologist concurred on the MRI studies, so we went forward with the wrist first.

Saturday, as I wrote about previously was hell on earth.  I have been through a lot of MRIs with this kid, and the behavior of the two techs scared me to my core.  I was assured upon exit, that the results would be available to my doctor Monday that passed.  Well multiple calls, over the course of Monday and Tuesday led to a promise the results were being released Tuesday.  “It’s a complicated read Mrs. Ortega.”

Wednesday morning  – still nothing at the vascular surgeon’s office, only to find the CD and report left by courier at 10 am.  They will make it by 3 I was told.

A return call to the surgeon’s office at 4:15.  “They just got here, but the doctor is gone – emergencies.  He should be able to look at them tomorrow.”

Some time around 4 AM my daughter climbed into bed between my husband and I.  She had been awake long enough to finish her book, but she just couldn’t settle over the pain in her wrist.  At about 6:15 this morning she nodded off.  I tried desperately to find my peace.

God's got this

And all day today, again, I held my phone.  We skipped the pool in between the “have tos” of getting the oil burner cleaned and our annual trip to the dentist (normal stuff.)  I refused to be far from my phone.  But as minutes became hours, my hope dwindled.

A call to the office at 4:30, “Sorry, he never made it in today, but Meghan’s chart is on top of his desk.  He has office hours tomorrow.”

Six days.

Unnecessary torture.

Six days.

Wondering, worrying.

Even if the report – by some freak of nature reads “normal” I can’t even be pleased, because the pain is not normal.  It is real, and it is consistent, and it has gone on too long.

I wish for a lot of things in the world.

I wish for children and their parents not to suffer with illnesses or adversity of any kind.

I wish for relief for those in physical, mental, and emotional anguish.

I wish for peace in the hearts and minds of the caretakers of those who struggle.

But today I also wish something else.

I wish that EVERY SINGLE medical professional who performs a test – from what is perceived as insignificant, to critical recognizes the power of their words, and their actions.  I wish that EACH of them understand what it is like to be on the receiving end of cryptic messages, grossly extended tests, and precious little reassurance.  I wish that EVERY doctor who receives a call from a patient panicked about their results be PROMPT in their response.  I wish that EVERY one of them, who goes to work each day and forgets that our child, parent, sibling, loved one exists will at some point in their life be on the waiting side.

I WISH for every one of them – from the techs, to the couriers, to the office staff, to the doctors- to have the opportunity to await the results of a test from someone they love dearly.

Then MAYBE, just MAYBE they will understand our torture.

Hang on Meghan.  Summer is coming.  Hang on.

summer

 

I believe…

I believe that there are lessons to be learned from every event in life- especially the ones that don’t turn out like we plan.

I believe in looking for the positives; when plans change without warning, when people disappoint us, when we are thrust onto paths we never wanted to travel and into circles we never knew existed.

I believe that our indoctrination into the world of Rare Diseases came with an invitation to sit back or step forward.  We choose to step forward.  I believe we will make a difference.

hope its in our genes

I believe in prayer, and God, and miracles, and angels – and I am not ashamed or embarrassed to say so.

I believe in a God that doesn’t plan for bad things to happen, and who cries with us when they do.  I believe that same God will give us the strength to get through the trials and tragedies and all our adversity – if only we ask.

god helps us handle

I believe in angels, and speak regularly of my cousin Meghan, our guardian angel.  But, I also believe there are armies of angels around us.  I am thinking especially today about the father and his 4-year-old daughter that were hit by a fire truck at the same intersection I had my accident in November.  Nothing short of angels pulled them both from the car – shaken and banged up, but very much alive.

crash

I believe in miracles-large and small.   I have witnessed at least one large one,  when my sister’s beautiful niece pulled through a very scary life threatening virus 2 years ago.  I believe that miracles happen every day – all around us.  But every day I witness miracles, as the flowers bud, and the birds fly, and the children grow.

life is like a bicycle

I believe that adversity can only define us if we let it.  Our struggles surely shape us, as we grow each day – but how we handle them affects us, and the people around us.  I believe that Cowden’s Syndrome – through my daughter’s diagnosis, saved my life.  I believe that PTEN mutations, and broken tumor suppressor genes are scary – but not “hide under the bed” scary.  They are more like “you can try that roller coaster you don’t like” scary.

A roller coaster ride!
A roller coaster ride!

I believe we are allowed to be frustrated and sad and angry and mad.  Every single one of us – sometimes.  I believe that life can be very, very, very hard.  Overwhelming at times.  But, I also believe in doing my best to channel that energy, and teaching my daughter to do the same.

life is not a measure of days

I believe in smiling more than frowning.  I tell Meghan that she will draw more people to her with a smile on her face.  She listens.

I believe that good things can come from unexpected change.  New friendships and old ones become more solid when tested.  People you never expected can go to bat for you – and look out for you.

I believe in surrounding myself with people who are “real.”  Who say what they mean, and mean what they say.  I believe in surrounding myself with people who have all types of beliefs, as long as they have a kind heart and are true to themselves.

I believe in speaking out about my own life, and my own experiences; whether they are medical, allergies, emotional, physical because keeping them inside doesn’t help a soul.

I believe writing helps me channel my own energy into a productive outlet.  I believe I will spend every day on this earth in some way thinking, addressing, or working through a medical issue for Meghan or I.  I believe – if I stay focused it will not consume me. (Although from time to time I may need some help!)

toxins

I believe that people who are only in this life to gossip and spread lies and false information are toxic.

I have made a pact to rid my life of toxins.  I believe with a lot of determination it can be done!

 

Moving Forward

May 16th for years has had a special place in my heart.

In 1985 my cousin Meghan was born.  I was in the 6th grade and giddy to get to know her.  I never could have known at the time that her life would be tragically cut short after a more than 4 year battle with leukemia.

"Angel Meghan" - 1987
“Angel Meghan” – 1987

Her feisty nature,  her smile, her spirit, and her strength have always been an inspiration to me, and it was an honor years later, to be able to name my daughter after the spirited young girl who became an angel at 6 and a half, on my 18th birthday.

My daughter carries so many of the characteristics that endeared my cousin to me.  She is the same kind of spirit, who lights up a room, and makes everyone smile by being around them.  She endures medical procedures sparsely batting an eye, and accepts the reality of her life with grace.

My Meghan - Spring 2004

Last year on May 16th I was at NYU hospital, just 10 weeks after my bilateral mastectomy, undergoing a complete hysterectomy.  I knew that day I had the prayers of my family, and the strength of my angel by my side.

I have a “thing” for dates.  I remember numbers.  Maybe this is how my love of math shows through.  I like answers, and things that are absolute, or make some sense.  Maybe my recognition of dates, and anniversaries is a way of marking time – or maybe its a way of celebrating.  These anniversaries that I remember – some sad, others bittersweet, have shaped me as a person.  They are all pieces of that every evolving puzzle.

I thought about the surgery this morning.  I thought about it being a full year since all my “girl parts” were officially gone.  I thought of the perils of the hysterectomy recovery and how in so many ways this was a tougher surgery for me.  Then I thought about my relief, and how much less of a cancer risk I am than I was a year ago.  And I got dressed with a smile.

happy hysterecomy

I thought about Angelina Jolie.  I thought about how happy I am for her – that she was able to make an empowered decision to get out in front of her breast cancer risk.  I thought about how happy I am that she has brought genetic testing into light.

But a few things have really bothered me.

PTEN mutations (Cowden’s Syndrome and the sister disorders) carry with them the same imminent breast cancer risk.  I myself had been tested for BRCA1  years before I ever knew of PTEN. I was negative.  The genetic counselor who tested me did not even have PTEN on her radar screen.  I know its rare – I do.  But I have to believe this is the opportune time to at least educate the medical professionals, if not the public, on the reality that there are other genetic mutations that carry imminent cancer risks.  I am sure there are more that I haven’t learned about yet.  Let’s use this opportunity to raise awareness not only of the “popular” genetic mutations, but of the others as well.  Had my daughter never been diagnosed, by the well educated geneticist – it is likely I would not be here to write this today.

I am also bothered by the haters.  You know the haters.  The “Monday morning quarterbacks.”

They have crept out in quantity and I have a few words for them too.

BUTT OUT!

butt out

If you don’t like the idea of a prophylactic mastectomy – then don’t have one.  Plain and simple.

If you don’t like the idea of a complete hysterectomy at 38 because the alternative was 4x a year – yes you read that right- 4x a year SURGICAL uterine biopsies, then don’t have one.

When you live with the Sword of Damocles hanging above your head every day, when you have to go about your business, and work, and raise a child, and pay bills, and shop and function with the feeling of impending doom that is sometimes hard to shake – when you have a diagnosis of a genetic mutation that is not going away no matter what you do.  Then, maybe then you and I can talk.

damocles

Until then,  wish Angelina a good long healthy life.  Look up “genetic mutations that cause cancer” or “The Global Genes Project” or “The National Association for Rare Disorders.”  Get a feel for what we go through every single day of our lives.

You probably wouldn’t know us if you passed us on the street.  We are some of the strongest and bravest and smartest people you will ever lay eyes on.  We stop and smell the roses.  We hug.  We smile.  We laugh.  We get how fleeting life is.

May 16th will always be a significant day for me.

But, moving forward -so will every day.  The first year is over.  Now on with the rest of our lives!

************************************************************

In case you are interested…

http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/a+sword+of+Damocles+hangs+over+head (Sword of Damocles)

http://globalgenes.org/ (Global Genes Project)

http://www.rarediseases.org/ (National Association of Rare Disorders)

https://www.facebook.com/ptenworld?fref=ts (Facebook Page for PTEN world)

Thinking outside the box

iep5

 

And so began the week that was.

A “simple” annual review – not so much.  But that’s OK.  Mamma Bear remained calm.  I am most strategic that way.

I am however exhausted, and facing another battle.

It was a bit of a struggle to keep the chin up this week, as I often felt like her:

frustration.jpg.scaled1000

But, I didn’t act like her.  Not even once.  (Well once I cried – but I got yanked past it.) And that’s about all of that story I can share here, for now.

But these last few weeks  months, have left me with a lot of questions.

See, there is this constant battle to do what is right, or what I perceive to be right, as I advocate for Meghan, and for my family.  But inevitably, because I am so introspective – I am left with a ton of questions at every fork in the road.

questions

 

Last week when we took her to 4 doctors and an ER about her shoulder, I ended up being told I went to the wrong ER – that we didn’t belong there.  But it is a cancer center, she is already a thyroid patient there, and my child grows things.  While we are blessed that none have been cancer yet – I am not of the “wait and see mentality.”  But, still I paused and wondered if I had done something wrong.

In the end, the rheumatologist gave her a muscle relaxant.  We began rehabilitative PT and I am seeing progress.  The shoulder and neck remain wickedly sensitive – but she has back almost full range of motion.

Still we watch the lump behind her shoulder blade, in hopes it continues to decrease in size and doesn’t turn out to be the “soft tissue tumor” we were advised to look out for.

what if

Really – no one has even a bit of a clue.  And it is often just downright exhausting.

Physical Therapy this week was refreshing.  At least I deal with professionals who have made themselves aware of Meghan’s needs and focus with a goal of eliminating, or severely managing, her pain.  Thank God we found them.

Because of them, Meghan will swim in her meet tomorrow.  No freestyle – it hurts the neck.  But that was OK with her.

i love backstroke

Backstroke seems by far to be her favorite. I love watching her swim.  She seems so at peace.

It gives me a time to break from all the questions.  The wondering.  The worry.

It is easy to doubt yourself sometimes when so many things are changing at once.  Whether you are precipitating the change, or reacting to it out of necessity, when there is so much at once I think it is normal to wonder.

We are not super difficult to get along with.  Yet we go through doctors like a toddler goes through shoes.  We have very few close friends – confidants to be trusted.  Those who will be honest and open minded.  We spend a lot of time alone.  We get along really well – thank goodness.

I think what we look for is doctors, friends, associates, people who can practice:

Thinking_Outside_The_Box_by_mclelun

 

I just wish there were more.  No one really fits in a box.  And that’s not just us, and our “rare disease.”  Everyone is unique, and special.  Everyone needs to be looked at with a fresh pair of eyes.  Everyone needs to be viewed through the perspective of the other person.  Only when we start to look at things through someone else’s point of view do we solve anything.

It is the outside the box thinkers that solve IEP problems, medical problems, friendship concerns, desires to make the world better…

Daring to think outside the box is risky.  It is hard.  It is necessary.

Especially in this season of “test prep” where I have seen this scenario one too many times…

test prep

 

Mine, yours, all of them – they are individuals.  They have specific needs.  We should never be discouraged when advocating for them and their needs.

In many cases – we are their only voice.  We MUST think outside the box for them.

 

Happy Birthday to my boobs!

Remember where you were a year ago?

I do.

A year ago this evening I was pacing the floors.  Making sure Meghan was packed for school.  Triple checking my hospital bag.  Planning my last meal by midnight, and pacing the floors – quite sure I wouldn’t sleep.

I was right.

I hadn’t arrived at that moment in my life by accident.  It was the result of years of breast biopsies for suspicious masses. MRIs, sonograms, mammograms – and a mother who was a bilateral breast cancer survivor.  Not to mention my diagnosis of Cowden’s Syndrome that had been confirmed only months before I met the warm, caring, and decisive surgeon that was about to remove part of my body.  Don’t wait till the summer – she somehow convinced me.  March 5th.  Get it done.

one_year

One year ago, on the morning of March 5th 2012, after vomiting repeatedly from terror, my husband and I left and headed to NYU hospital for my “prophylactic bilateral mastectomy.”

We checked in by 6 AM.  I can remember every detail of the morning.  It is imprinted in my subconsciousness.  It may fade over time – but for now…

My brother in law called my cell phone by six.  We prayed together.  Then, I just focused on breathing.

Checking in takes forever.  Everyone stopping in.  Lots of waiting.  I paced that small room so many times I swear my footprints are probably still there.

run-clock

And my husband – my pillar of strength – just waited with me.  When I wanted him to pay attention – he stopped and held my hand.  When I wanted him to ignore me, he dutifully read comics on his iphone.  I would not have wanted to be him.

I had to explain to the resident filling out the paper that I was not having “tissue expanders” put in.  Well this was not an easy concept for him.  Apparently that is just what everyone does.  The expanders are placed during the mastectomy, and then “filled” until the tissue expands to the size you would like, and then the silicone is placed.

Well I had already had a long talk with my plastic surgeon.  I had no desire to have giant boobs.  Nope.  I was sure.

She can keep her award...
She can keep her award…

At 38 years old, and the mother of a nervous 8 year old, all I wanted was to leave the hospital and not have to return for another surgery.  (The sweet irony of that wasn’t realized until I returned 10 weeks later for my hysterectomy… but anyway)

I had convinced the plastic surgeon to use whatever silicone implant she could – and put them right in.  After a lengthy discussion, she agreed.  It was more important for me to get right home to Meghan.

This resident was having a hard time wrapping his head around this, but finally we got the papers right.  They were to put in whatever one of these fit best – preferably a matched pair.

fake boobs

Finally it was time to head to the operating room.

I have had lots and lots of surgeries, but the thought that I was engaging in such a major procedure “prophylactic-ally” was literally making me weak at the knees.  Fortunately I managed to hook up with an absolutely awesome surgeon/plastic surgeon team.  Two women who are talented, compassionate, and understanding.  They gave me the peace of mind I needed right before the anesthesia.  The last words I recall before I woke up – “You’re doing the right thing.”

They expected a “clean easy procedure.”  After all I had had an MRI just a month prior to confirm I was cancer free.

Recovery from anesthesia isn’t my forte, although I have improved with experience.  I got to visit with my sister, and enjoy my husband.

The peace I felt after this surgery can not be understated.  I was so relieved.  The storm had been calmed.  It was done.

jesus_storm_calms_4

I left the hospital about 28 hours later on March 6th.  I couldn’t wait to see my girl.  The drains were still in place and they would stay for another week, but the hardest of the hard work was done.

So, on March 5th – my boobs are officially a year old.  At least that’s the day I adopted them.

And what a year it has been.

A roller coaster ride!
A roller coaster ride!

A week after my “prophylactic” mastectomy, I held in my hands a pathology report that clearly stated I had DCIS – early stage Breast Cancer.  Among the other “precancerous” conditions embedded in that report was the reality that I no longer had to be concerned with the “what if?”  It was done.  I was OK.  By the Grace of God alone – the cancer was out before it was ever a problem.  And, whenever I doubt, or get angry or frustrated by our Cowden’s Syndrome journey, I am reminded of that moment.  Without Meghan, and without her diagnosis.  I would have never proceeded with such an aggressive surgery.  God gave me my little girl, and spared my life.  We will use that gift as often as we can.

helping others

The weeks of recovery went smoothly, with lots of help from mom.

And then it seemed – no sooner was I back at work, that I was being told by another surgeon that I NEEDED a complete hysterectomy – now.  So, in May we went back.  This time at least everything was benign.

This is the year that included 2 surgeries for Mom and a thyroid biopsy for Meghan.  It included a car accident that I am still healing from. (And the very first thing I checked after I realized I had been in an accident was that my silicone was intact!)

I really did love my Hyundai
I really did love my Hyundai

It included Grandma’s fall, and ongoing recovery.

It included circumstances that caused me to step away from my church, and blessings that led me to a new one.

This year I laughed deep laughs, and I cried gut wrenching tears.  I got re-acquainted with old friends, and I met new friends in support groups online.

This year I learned there are some benefits to small silicone boobs… (with no nipples!)  I got to go bra-less for the first time in YEARS!

This year we vowed to make a difference,

This year we gave out over 2,000 denim ribbons, and taught a whole lot of people about Cowden’s Syndrome and Rare Diseases, and the Global Genes Project.

This year was only the beginning of the rest of our lives.

One year without my old boobs.  One year with the new and improved CANCER FREE version.  One year of countless blessings.  One year of boobs that will never sag!

getting over pain

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO MY BOOBS!

one

Anxiety- an after effect, or a symptom?

An interesting “conversation” in one of my online groups this week, regarding increased levels of anxiety and depression conected to PTEN mutations.

This is really how I view the race against Cowden's Syndrome
This is really how I view the race against Cowden’s Syndrome

One of those conversations that make you wonder if it is better to be validated or to fight the idea that this perpetual anxious feeling is actually hardwired into your genes.

I looked up the articles too.  I love to read for myself.  The experiments are done on mice.  I suppose there aren’t enough of us to get a controlled group for a good study, (although there is a drug called rapamycin being studied on humans – but that’s for a different day.)  But, among other symptoms the mice in their mazes did show marked increase in anxiety.  Although.  I have to imagine if I was a mouse in a maze I might get nervous too…

???????????????

Now I have a lot of throughts on this.

I have always been a worrier – highly anxious about most things.  Anyone who knows me knows that to be true.

But, conversely – throughout large portions of my life there has definitely been something to worry about.

CartoonV9991 ChickenOrEgg copy

So, as the chicken/egg thing goes -do I worry because anxiety is a part of Cowden’s syndrome, and even before my diagnosis I have had Cowden’s?  Or do I have acute bouts of anxiety because having Cowden’s gives me so much to be anxious about?

The best answer probably is – both.

I am a rational person by all rights.  Even in the middle of my worst anxiety I can stop and think and KNOW that my fears are irrational.  I can have the absolute belief that God will continue to care for the situation, and for my loved ones, yet still it is often like a crushing weight on my chest, making it hard t0 think, breathe or move.

worry

What I have on my side is that I was raised to keep on keeping on.  Thanks Mom, and Grandma and Pop especially… when the going got tough, we were taught to keep going.  So while I comfort myself with verses about tomorrow having enough worries of its own, and while I am faced with horrendous tragedies of things that cannot be controlled, I am able to press on.

So I can function, and the anxiety does not cripple me.  And, I know the “nature vs. nurture” reasons to explan it. 

But I do know that my daughter suffers too.  Not just with a PTEN mutation, and Cowden’s Syndrome, but also with anxiety.  She is a worrier, “just like her mother” they say.  Yep.  Maybe she is like me because of genetics, or my example.  I can’t really know for sure.

So what to do?

For me, the first step is just acceptance. 

I am a worrier. 

Regardless of the cause, and allthe logical justifications I can give myself – I will remain a worrier.

Then, find an outlet.  I am still working on this one.  I am thinking I like to write – so maybe that will help some.  I would like to get a few minutes to myself now and again.  I used to love to walk.  Maybe one day there will be time for some nice long walks.

I meditate a bit on the bright side.  Be grateful for the “good” that comes with a chronic illness like Cowden’s Syndrome.  I am not referring to the pain, and the surgeries, and the cancers looming, but rather to the “warning” system built in.  Parents would do anything to protect thier children.  How blessed am I that even among the strain of ceaseless appointments and hours waiting at offices and for results, we have a warning system.  I am confident that if we are vigilant, the Cowden’s won’t “get us.”

warning

Stay organized.  Don’t let the bills, the list of phone calls, the shredding, or the sorting to pile up.  It will just keep coming.

Stay ahead of the school projects.  You never can tell where tomorrow is going to land us.

Laugh.  Often.  It is deeply good not only for the anxiety, but also for the soul.

lsughing dog

Recognize you have lots to smile about.

Acknowledge the pain of others and “Pay it Forward” when you can.  I find that  NOT dwelling on our lives here, helps make me less anxious.

Did the Cowden’s cause the anxiety?  Is it hard wired into who I am as a person?  Is Meghan destined to be forever wondering and worrying?  Or, did a life of doctor’s appointments, pain, chronic disease, and general worry, create the anxiety? 

It really doen’t matter because it is here.  It is part of me, and to la large extent – us.  I doubt it is going anywhere.  I think its just my job to control the beast the best way I can, one day at a time.

Anxiety and the Morning Rush Hour

energy to be normalAnd that is how the day began.

Anxiety in full swing before 7 AM.  Never a good sign.  Especially when the panic attack is coming from your 9 year old.

See, I have a problem with this.  And maybe it is where some of my anger comes from.  I don’t have a problem with Meghan.  I am not upset with her, or her anxiety.  I am really just PISSED OFF at the cause of her ceaseless worry.  It is against the balance of nature that a nine year old should have to have this much to be concerned about.  It is absolutely unnatural that I have to soothe her fears while desperately making sure my words don’t form any type of lie.  She is too smart.  And her memory is way too good.

Sometimes, on mornings like this one.  I have precious little to say.  So, I hold her, as my stomach lands somewhere around my ankles, and I have a tremendous desire to (as an online support group friend suggests) lay on the floor and throw a massive fit.

It's not fair - Tink

And while she is crying about the huge overgrowth that on her gums where she lost her last tooth.  I am trying to convince her that maybe, if we brush like the orthodontist said, it will go away.  (“LIAR”  I hear my inner voice scream..)

Once, a few months ago, soon after the braces were on and the gums were flaring in the full on overgrowth of Cowden’s Syndrome, the kind orthodontist made a general statement in the room where Meghan and I were.  He said he was not familiar with Cowden’s, but (thankfully) he believed Meghan to be carefully caring for her teeth.  However, if the overgrowth continued she would need to see an oral surgeon to have her gums cut back.

Yep.  He is a nice man.  But, he obviously doesn’t know my daughter doesn’t miss a beat.  She was all over that comment for weeks on end.  We already had her gums cut once in 2008 for an odd thing that grew over her front tooth.  She may not have a solid memory of the day… but she remembers enough to know she never EVER wants to do that again.

So, what is a Mom to say, at 7:15 AM when the anxiety is impossible to manage?  I need to soothe her AND get her in the car (as the NYC School Bus Strike continues) in the next 15 minutes.

keep swimming

At least she laughed.  It’s nice to have a smart kid.  One who can respect that there just isn’t anything else for me to say.  Some days we have to push on.  Even when we are worried and scared.  Even when we don’t want to.  Even when it’s not fair.

Doesn’t change the fact that she is scared, and I am mad, and the permanence of this whole Cowden’s Syndrome thing really just stinks.

So she got to school and I kissed her and wished her luck on her math test, and she took her aches and pains, and her heavy heart, and her big brave smile, and headed off into school.

They are nice to her there.  Really they are.  But I cried on the way to my school, just a few minutes away.  I am in a rut. I have to get past this anger… for both of our sakes.  But lately I just feel mad.

Of course that’s not who you see when you meet us.  You don’t see worried, and mad.  You see our smiles.  See we get life. Both of us do.  On different levels of course, but we get it.  We know there are so many people who suffer.  We know how blessed we are.  Our prayer list is endless.  But some days we just “keep swimming…” and…(we)

refuse to sink
I got the message at about 12:45.  Meghan’s school nurse had called.  I called her back to hear the familiar voice that I have come to trust tell me that Meghan “didn’t look right.”  She was complaining of lights in her eyes.  She was “off.”  After 5 years in that school, I have received limited phone calls.  When they call – I answer.  So, with permission I headed out early.

I got my girl home.  We sat in the dark room.  I rubbed her eyes.  She had a bit to eat.  Eventually she tarted to perk up…the anxiety had gotten the best of her.  All the makings of a migrane at 9.  DAMN this syndrome.  Leave her ALONE!

And as we wrapped up for the day.  Much calmer than when we had started, there was happy chatter of girl things, and talk of sleep overs and normalcy.  With a kiss and a smile she headed to bed.  God, I love that little girl.

I got in the car to check in on my grandparents.  The phone was off the hook.  This is an ongoing event, and one we share lots of laughs about.  I arrived to find them in their recliners, watching TV.  The phone was in Pop‘s pocket – on.

I asked about their night and Pop told me the story of how he “pulled over a mat and snaked the toilet, a little bit at a time.”

“How old are you?” I asked.

He winked and smiled, and told me he forgot.

I guess it didn’t matter because everything was working just fine.  But some days I feel like I might as well be 93 and he, 39.

As I drove home I thought about genetics, and environment and all those biology classes I hated in high school.  I may not have inherited their PTEN gene, but I grew, and learned, and was taught in their environment.  I grew up in a climate of a “can do” attitude.  We did… because that is what needed to be done.

Still, at 92 and 93 my grandparents do what needs to be done.

I decided while I did not gain all their good genes, I gained their drive and determination.  Their faith,stamina, and hopefully some of their wisdom.

I will get out of this rut.  Cowden’s Syndrome will not own us.  It will not win.  We can do it, and we will.

WE CAN!
WE can.. and we WILL.  SO there! 

One step at a time

Tonight, we celebrate the small victories because we are fully aware how important the little things are.

I get to keep my spleen for 6 more months. (And maybe even longer!)

celebrate

The surgeon said that the hamartomas are there.  They are large, but they are stable.  Stable is a nice word.  So, because they are stable it implies they are benign.  This is another nice word.  The game becomes seeing if they remain stable.  So, in 6 months I will have another MRI.  If they have changed – it comes out.  If they haven’t we can continue to talk about keeping it.

6_months

Makes me wonder when keeping our organs became cause for celebration.

That is definitely in the “Post Cowden’s Syndrome” world.

You know I have wondered on and off how you actually “beat” Cowden’s.  Is it by coming through with the most organs still intact and cancer free?  This is such a strange, relentless disease.  It’s research, while still in its infancy is coming.  But,  I have to wonder how much more they will know a year, or 10 years from now.  And, whether I will like any of it.

We are waiting.  And we know that we are not alone.  We are waiting for Meghan’s results, and its nail biting, agonizing waiting.  But, Felix and I talked tonight and wondered what news would make us happy.  There was no easy answer.

please wait

See, last year – January actually – when we transferred the slides from her November 2011 biopsy to Sloan Kettering, the endocrinologist whose team reviewed the slides told us the cells were precancerous.  They had scored a 3 out of 5 on some scale they use.  He told us they would turn.  We just couldn’t predict when.

So, in June when he called and said he wasn’t thrilled with this nodule (one of many) on the left side we were anxious.  But he said, having reviewed her sonogram she could wait 6 more months to be scanned again.

So, here we are 6 months later.  Tomorrow will mark an agonizing 2 weeks since we went for this sonogram.  Waiting.  Worrying.  Wondering.

what if

When they tell you its “when,” not “if,” it changes things.  No matter what they tell us there will be an anxious, uneasy feeling attached.

This is the game with Cowden’s Syndrome.  It’s almost like a time warp.  A terrible cycle of wait, test, worry, results… Wait 6 months and repeat.

time-warp

Six months seems to be all you really get.  Well, now what I have lost a few organs, I get a year on those follow ups.  But everything else is 6 months.  For both of us.

I tried to sync them up.  So that maybe the worry wouldn’t seem continuous.  But it hasn’t worked yet.

I try not to think too far ahead.  You know what Mom says about planning anyway.

I-plan-God-laughs And to think about this in constant 6 month cycles, well… forever.  It’s a little too much to manage sometimes.

So, we take it one day at a time.  Sometimes one hour.  Or, on this never ending road we call Cowden’s Syndrome – one step at a time.

neverending road

What a Day!

I am getting a bit fatigued by all the positive stories I tell myself.  All the ones where everything works out just fine, and we get a bit of a break from doctors and surgery and chaos and worry.

I think I am getting tired of them, because I am starting to doubt if they are true.

The waiting room in the pediatrics department.
The waiting room in the pediatrics department.

We began the day at radiology at MSKCC in NYC.  The thyroid sonogram took longer than it should have.  I knew that.  I also knew when the doctor of radiology asked to speak to me alone that the news wasn’t great.

The nodule they were concerned about in June still has them worried.  Despite there being MANY other thyroid nodules, this is the one that is of concern.  I have every reason to believe it is the same nodule that caused concern when we had the horrendous biopsy at the other hospital a year ago.  The doctor told me right there it had to be biopsied.  She didn’t even wait for us to see Dr. S.  (See the appointments are set up so you go to radiology an hour and a half before you go to the doctor.  Then the doctor usually reports on the findings.)  I knew this was out of order, and it spoke to the seriousness of it all.

I explained that Meghan‘s biopsy last November was the most traumatizing experience of our medical lives together.  We have been through a lot, but watching that radiologist YELL at her to be quiet, and then BURN her neck with the numbing spray… well it was too much for any of us.  She will need to be sedated I said.

We went upstairs for our appointment with Dr. S.  Before that Meghan met with one of the Child Life Specialists, and gave over 2 shopping bags full of toys.  The woman was in awe, and I was just so proud.

We checked in for our visit with Dr. S. and we waited.  While we waited I spoke.  Candidly.  I had to be the one to tell her they were looking for cancer.  I had to tell her they were going to biopsy again.  I had to tell her I was TRYING to get her sedation, but I couldn’t promise.  She swallowed.  She stared at me.  She took it all in.  Then she reminded me I should try REALLY hard for sedation with the biopsy.

We saw Dr. S.  No new information, except that she grew a few inches and lost a few pounds since June.  HE said she is OK right now, but he doesn’t want to see her lose any more.  I chuckled at the school notices I always get home calling her obese.  Dr. S.  reexplained what I had heard in radiology.  He reassured us that  even if the nodule is malignant it is small, and not likely to need more than a thyroid removal.  Some comfort… but not a ton, for my girl still growing.  We were advised to take the first available biopsy appointment.  And we will.  I should know in a day or so when that will be.

american girl

Once we checked out it was on to the American Girl Store.  WHAT A CROWD!  Not being crowd people, either of us, we navigated the store and Meghan picked up some essentials – like a backpack and an allergy safe lunch for her new doll.  The doll got her ears pierced, and we were out the door.

Daddy at work.
Daddy at work.

We headed up to see Daddy at work.  We got a close look at the New Year’s Eve ball, and the view never gets old, no matter how many times we see it.  Meghan LOVES seeing Daddy at work!

Family shot in front of the New Year's Eve Ball.
Family shot in front of the New Year’s Eve Ball.

45 minuted to get the car out of a midtown lot.  We arrived home to 2 dogs that just weren’t able to wait until we got home.  Upstairs floor cleaned.  Two glasses of wine gone.  Some type of leftovers for dinner.  And tomorrow we get to wait by the phone again.

Good thing we are always ready for a fight!
Good thing we are always ready for a fight!

Maybe in January the Ortegas should resolve to lose a thyroid and a spleen?  One each?  Really???

Tonight Cowden’s Syndrome, I will thank you for my gray hair, loss of appetite and generalized anxiety.  Cut us a break… please?

Reality Check

It is not the critic who counts;
not the man who points out how the strong man stumbled
or where the doer of deeds could have done them better.
The credit belongs to the man
who is actually in the arena,
whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood;
who strives valiantly;
who errs and comes short again and again;
who knows great enthusiasms,
the great devotions;
who spends himself in a worthy cause;
who at the best, knows in the end the triumph of high achievement,
and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while
DARING GREATLY
so that his place shall never be
with those timid souls
who know neither victory or defeat.

Theodore Roosevelt
26th President Of The United States

I intended to write something entirely different tonight, but when I started searching for words of encouragement, to ease my overwhelmed soul, I came across some that were worth copying here.

Most of the important things in the world have been accomplished by people who have kept on trying when there seemed to be no hope at all.

  Dale Carnegie
American Author

The whole idea of living with a chronic disease really just stinks.  I mean there are a lot of things, in a lot of people’s lives that just stink, and there are ever so many that I would never for a moment trade places with.  But, that doesn’t change the reality that this genetic disorder, this PTEN mutation, this COWDEN’s SYNDROME, is now part of our “real life,” and I would like to send it back.

Well meaning people, people I love with all my heart, and people I am indifferent to, ask me all the time how we are.  I know they would love to hear that we are great.  They’d like to hear that all is well.  I could tell them that  there are no deep dark fears of tumors or cancers, or surgeries keeping me up at night.  I often lie and say, “great” forgetting to mention the scary headaches, the joint pain and the anxiety that hide behind the beautiful “braces covered” smile of my little girl.  I sometimes say, “we are hanging in there,” which some days means we won’t spend three hours at a doctor’s appointment today, or I am not waiting for a phone call, or a nerve-wracking test result.  Some days it means my heart is in my throat – but I don’t know how to tell you.

I remember when I used to love to eat.  Lots of food – carbs, junk food, candy.  I used to have an appetite, and enough energy to exercise too.  I remember several sizes ago when I had a closet full of clothes.  Now I have enough pants and shirts to get me through.  I remember when my old boobs filled out my tops. 

I sometimes think to myself, “this is not my real life.”  Raw fatigue.  Nerves.  Stress.  Balancing a full-time job, and the normal demands of parenting with the full-time job of managing this disease.  Has it really only been a year that life has been this complicated?  There were always issues.  But a year since the diagnosis.  The confirmation that these risk factors belonged to us.  That they were real, and pressing. 

And yet to look at us – you would never know.  You wouldn’t know of this other life we lead.  This “elephant in the room.” 

Everyone has something.  I have said it a million times before, and I will say it again.  It could ALWAYS be worse, and there is ALWAYS something to be thankful for.  I am grateful for that reality check.

When I don’t call you back for a few weeks.  Or, when I start sending cards late, and losing track of dates.  Don’t worry too much.  We are treading water here.  We will get by.  Just cut us some slack.  Some days it just doesn’t all fit, and some days there is just not enough wine.