“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.

 

Life begins… at the edge of your comfort zone…

 

Roller Coasters

Nope, not us.  No way.  No how.  Terrifying.  Not going to happen.

Until last week.

Something clicked inside her head, and she decided that she had come to conquer.

There was a pit in my stomach when she first declared she was going to go on Space Mountain.  Roller Coasters have never been my thing either.

But, she even decided who was going to sit in front of her and behind her.  No getting out of it for me.

She told me that she had been through a lot in her life.  And that she shouldn’t be scared of a ride.  True.  There was that quote by Eleanor Roosevelt we had read, and referred to so many times.

No not the other quote, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” – FDR

This one, “You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to say to yourself, ‘I have lived through this horror. I can take the next thing that comes along.’ You must do the thing you think you cannot do.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

The first time we were both a little scared.  Then there was the second time.  And by the third time she owned it.

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_DSC2818“Rocking Roller Coaster!” she declared.
And so we headed to the Aerosmith ride that wasn’t even on the consideration list a year ago.  Twice.  I went too.  And I really didn’t mind.

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“Life begins at the edge of your comfort zone…”  Words I am learning to be truer each day.

And so in the week that was, we rode Space Mountain, Aerosmith, Big Thunder Mountain, Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Test Track and even the Barn Stormer together.  I did Star Tours too, but virtual reality isn’t really agreeing with me anymore.  Maybe too much reality?

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So she went on Mission Space with her Dad – twice.  Once on the beginner level, then on the advanced.  And they rode Splash Mountain too – just because.

It makes me happy to see her conquering fears.  There are so few of them, that I am hopeful nothing like a roller coaster ever stands in her way.

And as I reflected on the idea that this kid, this amazing kid had brought me past a fear that had plagued me for decades, I found myself hopeful that she will always dance…

“Never settle for the path of least resistance… I hope you dance…”

“I Hope You Dance” – Lee Ann Womack

I hope you never lose your sense of wonder,
You get your fill to eat but always keep that hunger,
May you never take one single breath for granted,
GOD forbid love ever leave you empty handed,
I hope you still feel small when you stand beside the ocean,
Whenever one door closes I hope one more opens,
Promise me that you’ll give faith a fighting chance,
And when you get the choice to sit it out or dance.I hope you dance….I hope you dance.

“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly…”

There is something about having a kid who struggles, whether physically, mentally, emotionally, or in any other capacity, that forces you to open your heart and mind to things you may never have “seen” otherwise.

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We are blessed.

We have a beautiful, witty, articulate, charismatic and spunky young lady.

She knows pain, and she knows it well.  And some days that pain is like plowing through a stone wall, while others its like walking across a pebbly yard barefoot.  But, there is sparsely a day with no pain.

She knows competitiveness.  Although she would like to be the fastest runner, she is starting to work towards a more reasonable goal in a no impact zone – the pool.

She knows intelligence that book smart children know, and she knows the perspective that few adults can master.  She can look at other people and want to talk to them.  She can wonder about them.  She can empathize with them.

She knows what its like to be sick.  And in surgery.  With IVs, and needles, and scars, and recoveries.  She knows what it’s like to never be “well” only watched.

She is learning, step by step, that “well” is more of a state of mind, than a state of being, when each week is peppered with some type of appointment.

Yet, she knows that even at the depths of her own Cowden’s Syndrome battles, there are others.  With and without our syndrome – who fight a battle unbeknownst to us.

Meghan doesn’t use a wheelchair at home.  For this I am grateful.  Although as I teach my daughter about homelessness, and how we can never be too sure from where they came, or whether it could through a series of unfortunate events, become us.  We practice a deep understanding of reality in Disney World.

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Meghan’s pain, so much of it, stems from repetitive motion.  Too much walking, any running, too many stairs, too much kicking or pulling in the pool… all of it has repercussions.  So Disney, by it’s very nature, and its wide landscapes requires much walking.  And, as we try every year, even with a little here and there – the pain is deep and inevitable.

So for that week every summer she gains an even greater perspective.  She lives in a wheelchair.  With all the inconveniences that come along with it, in an effort to save the needs from irreparable pain, and the trip from being a wipeout…she rides.

And on the first night after the vomiting I watched from a distance, as Felix helped her onto the handicapped ramp on the bus.  And there was a knot in my stomach as I watched my girl get strapped into the bus in the wheelchair.  This beast, this Cowden’s Syndrome we fight.  Well we fight to win.  But who can know?

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I stop myself from wondering too far ahead and I reflect.  On the old me.  The me who used to look at people in wheelchairs riding buses as an inconvenience.  A delay in my precious time.  The me who used to judge and try to guess why they would need a wheelchair.  The same me who used to judge a lot of things.

We will unpack.

The wheelchair will be stored.  Hopefully for a very long time.  But, it will be there, in the basement.  In case.  In case we need it for anything.  Because the pain, well it’s always there.

Fortunately, she is in a position where her stubbornness still has the power.

And I will think, as I drive her back to swim practice in a few weeks, about the other mothers.  About the ones who wish their child’s wheelchair use was temporary.

And I will think about the phone call I got this week.  The one about the AVM growing in the knee again.  Timed on the same day she was vomiting in the hotel room.  And I will be grateful that we don’t need surgery right now.  And I will be grateful that it is not in her head, or any other life threatening spot.

I am humbled.

By her grit.  By her stamina.  By her determination.

I am grateful.

For the opportunities afforded to my girl.

We will find the balance.  We will pay it forward.

I don’t even really remember the judgmental me.

I am too busy working on

BEATINGCOWDENS!

 

First Pitch!

We don’t watch many sports in my house.

Meghan’s sport of choice is swimming.

So it came as a little surprise when she was asked by the Borough President if she’d like to throw out the first pitch at a Staten Island Yankee Game to help draw attention to her platform and continue to raise awareness of Cowden’s Syndrome.

Meghan's friend has been a great support in so many ways.
Meghan’s friend has been a great support in so many ways.

She didn’t hesitate with the “yes,” although she admitted not being too sure of what she had gotten herself into.

Thankfully my very good friend has 4 boys.  And among them they were able to locate some gloves and some baseballs for a few impromptu pitching lessons.  And I have to say they did a good job.

Leaving for the game she had quite a nervous stomach.  Once we arrived she was focused on a “practice pitch.”  Once that was accomplished we had a few moments to take in the magic around us.

60 of our friends and family had taken time out of their lives on a busy Wednesday night to support Meghan, and our need to raise awareness of Rare Diseases.  In addition, it was team night for Meghan’s Swim Team, so there were many of them cheering as well.

When we had first set the date, I wasn’t sure how public to make the event.  I didn’t want to put people out.  So I posted it on my Facebook wall a few times.  I was floored.  And intrigued.  My cousin Kim asked me to order 23 tickets for her.  I didn’t ask too many questions.  My family is big enough that cousins have to trust each other.

We were greeted by Kim, and there were T- Shirts.  It took me a second or two to process.  Then I read it.  Looked around.  Choked back a tear and threw it over my head.

Absolutely touching!
Absolutely touching!

The pitch went off without a hitch, and the announcer crammed so much information into a minute it was amazing.  It’s hard to hear, but trust me!

PRESS THE ARROW…

The night was just fun.  Exactly how summer nights should be.  The weather was perfect.  The company was outstanding.

And, even as the crowd began to dwindle, we sat to watch the game, with the Yankees down 4-1.

And in the bottom of the 8th as it neared 10 PM, Felix and Meghan made a deal.  If the Yankees scored in this half, we could stay till the end.

Four runs later, they pulled off a beautiful “come from behind” win.

And as we walked to the car we stopped at the “Postcards 9/11 Memorial” and we remembered how very lucky we are, even in the midst of chaos.

That first pitch, symbolic of overcoming challenges.  Of conquering fears, and of new beginnings.

That win the Yankees had just pulled seemingly out of thin air, was the result of a refusal to quit.

They worked like a team.  They made it happen together.

A perfect ending to a perfect night.

Here are pictures of SOME of our team.  There are just so many more that support us each and every day.

We LOVE you all.  Thank you for helping us tell the world.  We are …

BEATING COWDENS  together.

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There are not enough photographs, for those at the game, and for those who are ALWAYS with us in out hearts.  There are not enough words to express our gratitude for the love showered on us so regularly.

It is only with your support that we continue to push on.

MUCH LOVE TO ALL!!!

 

Compassion Saves the Day!

Instinct.

I don’t know why I second guess her instinct.  Maybe one day I’ll learn.

We arrived in Manhattan early.  We dropped Mom off so she could get to her appointment.  We parked the car at a better rate than I expected.  We walked a few blocks nice and slow.  And we arrived at our 9 AM appointment by 8:35.  Paperwork completed – we were sent down to the waiting area for MRI.

An empty room, and a few minutes to spare, I stepped into the lady’s room.  No sooner did I get in there than I heard Meghan speak.  “Calling us already?” I wondered.

I joined her in the waiting room and the shell-shocked look on her face was a mix of horror and confusion.

“Mom, I don’t want him to stick me.”

“Relax, you don’t know.  He might be very good.”

“I’m telling you Mom, this is NOT going to go well.”

And, as I tried desperately to calm her rising anxiety, we waited.

We got called back and locked our things in our locker.  The technician sized her up and decided her carefully planned outfit would work and she didn’t need to change.  Then I asked him if I had to remove my jewelry.

“You can not go in.”

Calmly, ” I am sure I can, she has had countless MRIs and I have stood beside her for every one.”

“I will have to ask my boss.  And, we have to see if the braces are OK.”

“But, I told them about the braces when I booked the appointment.”

“Well this is a very strong magnet.”

And with that he led Meghan inside towards the machine and she promptly backed away.

“Mom, my braces!”

To which the technician replied, “You’ll have to reschedule.”

And then the anxiety took hold and my girl began to shake.

“I am very very angry,” I began in my “not so nice” voice.  “You have no idea the amount of planning that went into this, and the amount of worry that has been expended by my daughter.”

“I understand…” he began, in his patronizing, not very helpful voice.

And I honestly don’t recall if he got in another word, because Mamma bear was loose.

mama bear

I can’t even quote myself, because I was that flipped out by this man who dared to tell me he understood.  See,  I can be reasonable.  I really can.  You can tell me you are sorry.  But you can’t tell me you understand.  Because just like I don’t claim to understand anyone else’s life – no one should flippantly tell me they understand.  At least not until they have seen their child through at least 11 surgeries, countless procedures, ridiculous numbers of blood tests, multiple hospitalizations, and countless sub-par phlebotomists.  Not until they have sat awake at night calming their child’s trembling fears by touching them – just so they stop shaking in their sleep.  Not unless they know what its like to have candid conversations about pathology reports and the virtually insurmountable malignancy fears.  Unless they have heard their young girl ask if her children will one day carry this mutation that has caused her so much heartache.  Unless they have heard their 10-year-old consider whether its worth it to have their own children… one day.

See sometime two weeks ago we went for a routine follow-up at the vascular surgeon.  He did a sonogram of the AVM that caused so many years of heartache, and surgery in 2009, 2010, 2011, and has been blissfully quiet since the last surgery there in February 2012.  And he saw some “spongy” spots in there that needed to be looked at.  So we scheduled the MRI, knowing that we “saw this coming.”  The Celebrex had been destroying her stomach and controlling her knee.  The ultimate catch-22.  So the worry was about the MRI, and the needle for the contrast, and the wonder about WHEN, not IF the next knee surgery will be.

And all this was bottled up inside of me and came spewing out at this man who dared to casually tell me he understood what it meant to”reschedule” an MRI that had been deliberately scheduled based on time and location to correspond with a trip to the oncologist, and spare her an unnecessary day wasted at a doctor’s appointment.

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And as I cried for a supervisor, Toni came flipping around the corner.  She sized up the situation, gave Meghan a blanket, sat her down, and told me she was going to fix it. And she did.

I have never in my life seen a supervisor in any capacity who was beyond competent, and extraordinarily compassionate.  She got INTO A TAXI WITH US, and took us across town.  She walked us into the facility, the entire time reassuring Meghan that she had a special nurse who would handle the needle.  I saw the look in Meghan’s eye that said, “That’s what they all say.”

But Toni didn’t lie.  Within minutes of walking into the facility we were greeted by Allison, and Manny.  Both talked to Meghan.  They looked at her arms.  They told her a blind person could catch her vein.  They told her it would be a butterfly.  They told her no IV.  They let her pick who would do the contrast dye and did it in such a reassuring way that she knew neither would feel badly if she picked the other.

MRI Dog (Rocky) always helps too...
MRI Dog (Rocky) always helps too…

Then Michelle and Chad made her feel like an old friend.  They were so warm and comforting.  They positioned her just so, and reassured her in such a way that she took this incredible deep breath.  And when Allison came in to give the contrast dye, Chad held one hand, and I held the arm and she never even felt the needle.  Chaos turned into probably the most successful MRI to date.  Sweet relief.

We had NEVER been in a machine like THIS before!
We had NEVER been in a machine like THIS before!

But we left the facility only for me to realize we were now clear across town without our car.  I held my breath and hailed my first cab. (Put that on the bucket list, and took it off in the same day!)

An hour with the oncologist, always plays with my mind a bit, but there will be time to process her recommendations for vigilant screenings necessary with Cowden’s Syndrome.

We left at almost 1, feeling quite like we had already lived several days.  Then there was this matter of the “Treat Shop” on the upper West Side.  I had planned to go because it was so close to the first MRI site… but not too close to our car.  I walked, she limped by the end, and I am sure I will pay for this for days, but we made it.  A small store full of glorious Gluten Free treats.  And there were 6 dairy and soy free options as well.  Heavenly – and my daughter said, “worth the pain!”

treat house

An afternoon playing with a friend from school, and the sound of girls giggling, made the horrendous morning, and the most unforgiving traffic I have seen in recent memory begin to leave my neck and shoulders.  As the tension began to release I found myself reflective.  Hopeful.  But still unsure.

Watching her at ease on the couch I am reminded not to plan.  I am reminded to trust Meghan’s instincts.  I am enjoying the cool breeze, and for the moment the uncorrected mess.

I am grateful for Toni, and Manny, and Allison, and Chad and Michelle.  If only everyone took their jobs so seriously.  Healthcare, and the world for that matter, would be in a much better place.

Even if just for today they made BEATINGCOWDENS a little easier.

Scars…

There are days I forget.

I forget that it’s not just Meghan, but also me with this rare disease.

As a matter of fact, it’s actually uncommon for me to remember.

Maybe it’s survival.  Maybe it’s maternal instinct.  Maybe it’s denial.  Maybe it’s some combination.

But then there are days that it smacks me right across the face.  And it stings, no, actually it’s more like a scalding burn.

I post mostly about Meghan.  She’s my hero.  She’s my inspiration. She motivates me to be a better person, every day.  But,  if I really want this blog to be transparent, and I really want the truth about our experience living with and beating Cowden’s Syndrome to be out there, sometimes I have to allow my own inner self to be exposed. 

I feel good.  I really do.  Aside from a little lag from my thyroid, I am feeling better and stronger than I have in years.

But there are the scars.  They hide behind my clothes like a little secret.  Cause people forget.  And that’s what I want, because most of the time I forget too.

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But then I look in the mirror, and I see the scars across the implants replacing the diseased breasts removed in the nick of time.  And my shirt doesn’t sit quite right.  And it’s probably my own fault, as I refused the tissue expanders necessary for a proper reconstruction.  I didn’t have the time, or the energy, or the desire, or the stamina to put myself through the frequent fills, the repeated pain, and the additional surgery necessary for the sizes to be equal.  It just wasn’t worth it to disrupt our lives longer.

I saw the plastic surgeon last week.  My two-year follow-up.  Hard to imagine.  She gently reminded me again that she could even things out whenever I was ready.  No cost thanks to the positive pathology for breast cancer, and the genetic mutation.  No monetary cost.  I’m not ready.  Yet.

I saw the breast surgeon last week too.  I see her every 6 months, so she can make sure nothing sinister is growing behind those implants.  The reality and the reminder that as fortunate as I was – I still had breast cancer.   And once you know for sure that those malignant cells had life in your body, you never look at things quite the same.  “No lumps or bumps,” she happily reported.  “See you in 6 months.”

I can’t wait.

scar 3

And there are the lymph nodes in my neck.  They were checked last week too.  Sonogram.  As long as they stay stable, we can leave them alone.  “But, if they grow…” she reminds me every time.  Six months for her too.

And my legs.  Fitting into the smallest size they have ever in my life the veins are protruding again.  The PTEN diagnosis, known for enhancing vascular issues, perhaps the explanation for the vascular problems that have caused 2 operating room visits and 5 in office procedures since I was 23.  But, it doesn’t really matter I guess.  The legs start with a familiar heaviness.  Then there is the throbbing.  The last thing I feel before bed, and the first thing I feel after the alarm gets shut down.  And the pulsing – like I can feel the blood moving the wrong way through the broken veins.  And the giant bulging, from groin to ankle, that makes it a little less fun to buy the shorts in a size 2.  I switch to “Bermuda” length and some sundresses.  I wait for the word that GHI has approved another vascular procedure.

Not to mention I saw the GYN Oncologist too.  Everything ramped up a notch with the “Cowden’s Syndrome” label.  There are no “regular” visits anymore.  Even with that benign pathology, it’s a forever commitment to the “Clinical Cancer Center” of the hospital.  Two years since the hysterectomy too.  Time marches on. You can barely see the scars from the laproscopy.  But I know they are there too.  A few inches under the implant scars.  Reminders of the year that changed my life.  Our lives.

The week finished with genetics.  Our geneticist – found by an incidental internet search at the recommendation of our physical therapist, is a gem of a man.  He greeted me with a hug and a smile, and exclaimed that I looked better than I did at my diagnosis.  Then he drew my blood.  More genetic testing.  This time not because of the Cowden’s Syndrome.  This time, it is to fulfill the wishes of my father.  Wrapping up a genetic counseling visit I completed in April, and after consent was received from GHI, the vial of blood was drawn to test for the markers for pancreatic cancer, the killer of my father, and paternal grandfather, as well as about 15 other markers I probably don’t want to know about.  We both said a silent prayer that the test yielded a whole lot of nothing.  We hugged again.  It’ll be about 6 weeks.

So this morning my shirt didn’t fit quite right.  The indentation on the right side was causing the shirt to fit lopsided.  And the vein bulging out of my right leg, especially just above the knee was a little too much for me to take.  I struggled with my tears, trying desperately to hide them from my extraordinarily observant soon- to- be -11 year-old.

This is the reality she knows we share.  Yet, I want so badly to help her maintain some of her youth.  Worry free innocence taken with the words, “You have a mutation on the PTEN gene…” and years of her own surgeries have stripped her of some of the privileges given only to the young.  There is something about 11 surgeries with no real end in sight, that can leave you a bit anxious.

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It only took a minute.  Although it seemed longer.  A hug from my husband.  My ever patient, loving soul mate, who makes me feel beautiful just by the smile in his eyes when we kiss.  And it was time to shake it off.

 

But not without first acknowledging that maybe that was quite a few appointments for a week’s time..

When we got in the car to head to the doctor, the Christian station was playing one of my favorite songs, “Fix My Eyes,” by For King & Country.

There are no coincidences.

And as we sang along, I looked in the rear-view mirror.

“Fix My Eyes”

“Hit rewind
Click delete
Stand face to face with the younger me
All of the mistakes
All of the heartbreak
Here’s what I’d do differently
I’d love like I’m not scared
Give when it’s not fair
Live life for another
Take time for a brother
Fight for the weak ones
Speak out for freedom
Find faith in the battle
Stand tall but above it all
Fix my eyes on youI learned the lines and talked the talk (everybody knows that, everybody knows that)
But the road less traveled is hard to walk (everybody knows that, everybody knows)
It takes a soldier
Who knows his orders
To walk the walk I’m supposed to walkAnd love like I’m not scared
Give when it’s not fair
Live life for another
Take time for a brother
Fight for the weak ones
Speak out for freedom
Find faith in the battle
Stand tall but above it all
Fix my eyes on you….”

Click the image to hear the song…

We spent Friday looking for sites for a fund-raiser for “Rare Disease Day 2015.”  We met a lovely woman who was surprised we weren’t raising money for us specifically.  We explained that we were grateful.  I feel well enough to work.  We have good medical coverage. There are so many not as fortunate.
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When it gets to be too much, I know to fix my eyes on things far beyond the mirror.  I have a greater purpose right in my own house.  And WE have a greater purpose.

We are BEATINGCOWDENS… together!

Coaches Change Lives

I know that teachers have the power to change lives, but as my girl gets to the middle school years, I am really starting to think the power is with the coaches.

I have always wanted my daughter to be an athlete, and truth be told, THAT didn’t take much convincing.  She is a natural competitor.  She loves the thrill of racing. competing, and performing.  She has done some time in soccer, with some fantastic coaches, who worked to nurture her.  She loved her time dancing.  But, her body, much to her chagrin, was not made for pounding.  The knees, and hips, and major joints couldn’t handle the impact.

So we headed to the pool.  Her first experience with any competitive swimming came at the age of 9, on a CYO team we were connected to through a friend.  Soon after that season she tried out, and was accepted to join a 12 month team.  She began with them in July of 2013.  And, while the desire to compete was always strong in her, it seemed there was constantly something standing in her way.

some days

We started the year with the goal of making 2-3 practices a week.  But, in the fall things took some wild turns, and there were migraines, and neurologist visits, viruses, and fatigue, and strep, and one obstacle after another.  There were weeks one practice seemed like a feat.  Meghan had a hard time finding her place, because she wasn’t there much.  And the cycle continued.  During the fall my father became ill and passed away quite suddenly in December.  That set her into a bit of a tailspin.  Then in the end of December a routine thyroid appointment told us there was much to be concerned about, and that she’d need her thyroid removed.

coach

Ironically this is about the time she started to enjoy going to practice.  The coaches were intelligent, and compassionate.  The kids were all finding their way.

Meghan responded so well to the two young women who coached her most often.  They understood her medical trials, but treated her no differently.  They pushed her just enough, but never too hard.  They listened when things hurt, and gave her ways to work through it.

She mustered the courage, and stayed healthy enough to make it to her first big meet in January.  She was awed by the whole experience, and truth be told, I don’t even remember what she swam.  Like so many firsts, it was about getting it done.

Thyroid surgery in February sidelined her for a few weeks.  And, long after her body had healed physically, her thyroid hormone levels never seemed to take to the synthetic replacements.  An emergency room trip in February – 10 days post op, led to an overnight stay and the elimination of the synthetic calcium from her diet completely.

But, by the beginning of March she headed back to practice.  Her coaches welcomed her, encouraged her, and built her up.  She started making regular practices, and swimming CYO at the same time.

Then, in May her body quit again.  Severe gastritis landed her in the local hospital for 6 days.  She missed her last CYO meet.  She underwent extensive testing, and the blame for the erosions in the esophagus, and the inflamed, bleeding ulcerations in her stomach lay with the Celebrex – the very medication that was allowing her to function through the chronic pain that plagues her.

Coaches-change-lives

Crossroads.

The elimination of Celebrex, and the discoveries of the damage it had caused in her GI tract, led to changes.  Her already Gluten, Dairy, Soy free diet, became also free of beef, spices, chocolate, and the other tastes that had carried her through.  Then there was the pain.  The constant awareness of pain in all her major joints was playing mind games with her.  The pain – very real – could be fed nothing to control it.  Oral pain meds were, and still are off limits.

Weak from her stay in the hospital, it took another week home before she could even consider a return to practice.  And when she did, she was angry.  She was angry at her body for the pain, and angry that she couldn’t keep her old pace.  She was just angry.

But the coaches, they were supportive.  They let her take the lead.  They let her take her time.  She rested when she needed to. She left early when she had to.  And finally, just about 3 weeks ago she started making full practices again.

The pain is a daily battle.  One she is fighting with mental power to overcome, and the best nutrition we can offer to her.

Last week she made 4 days of swim camp with the varsity swimming head coach at the local college.  6 hours a day.  She slept well.  She was sore.  But she was determined.

So, when we set off for the meet upstate yesterday, my expectations were low.  I was hoping she would finish without disqualifying.  100m of butterfly is not for the faint of heart, especially in a 50 meter pool.  But she did it.  And closed in with a time .67 seconds away from qualifying her for Junior Olympics.  Junior Olympics, the best of the best swimmers in her age group.  An honor just to make it in the door.

We went back today to give it one more try, but it wasn’t meant to be.  This year.

Close doesn’t cut it.  This I know.  Except when you consider that she got THIS close, despite all odds, it’s something to consider.  Meghan’s synthetic thyroid replacement is not working.  It’s just not.  At our last appointment we found out her TSH level – the Thyroid Stimulating hormone has increased by over 300% in 6 weeks.  Post operatively it remained about a 10, it took a brief dip to 6, and then over a 6 week span increased to 20.5.  ABNORMALLY HIGH is what it says on the lab report.  That, combined with her low levels of T4 means that the work of the thyroid, that can not be done by the gland that was removed, is not being done by the medication, which has just short of doubled since February.  The endocrinologist is baffled.  I’m concerned, but not shocked.  He agreed to research alternative medication, but he has, “never had to prescribe one before.”  For those of you not thyroid patients, you are considered hypothyroid, once the TSH goes above 5.  Most people feel human between 1 and 3.  I function best when mine is .5.  At 20.5 you would likely not find me out of my bed.  You would certainly not find me at swim practice.

“Mind over matter,” we say.

“Everyone has something,” we say.

“Show the world you are better than Cowden’s Syndrome,” we say.

And she does.  All the time.

On the way home we talked a lot.  We talked about obstacles, and overcoming.  She started to set goals.

swim_coach_journal

And then, there was this text from her coaches.

“”Hi Mrs. Ortega.  (We) just wanted to send you guys a text and let you know how proud we are of Meghan.  She is such a pleasure to coach and is always looking for ways to improve and be her best.  Swimming isn’t only about the times, it’s about the people and having the opportunity to create and share memories, good and bad.  Meghan has so much drive, and goes through more than we can even imagine.  She is truly amazing to go through everything she does and still push her body in the water.  Today was just the first time.  We know there will be plenty more opportunities for her to make cut times, and we know she will.  She has limitless potential and we want her to know that.  She is truly an amazing person, and we are lucky to be able to coach her.”

inspired-life

And in that moment, everything was OK.  Coaches have this incredible power.  They can motivate and heal and push in the same breath.  They are gifted with selflessness like no other.  My heart is grateful for these women who will continue to shape my daughter’s future.  May they always know the impact they are having on a life full of bumps, twists, and turns.

Groundhog Day

“Groundhog Day” – who doesn’t remember the movie?  There have been plenty of days I have thought of it.  I may need to watch it again soon.

Groundhog_Day_(movie_poster)

Pediatric Endocrinology is a ridiculously small sub specialty.

There is this web of interconnections, and all sorts of people who have lost sight of the patient.

web

Ultimately I may need to head out-of-state to try to get a clean opinion.  But, I have to take that and so many other things one step at a time.

But, after the travesty on Thursday, I was left with little choice but to keep me appointment with the surgeon at our current hospital.

You remember the surgeon?

He’s the one who did a great job on the surgery.  The one who said, when we went for the follow-up, that he only needed to see her ever again if she felt anything in her neck.  And when she did feel something in her neck I had to jump through 12 hoops to convince him he should see her.  And then when he saw her, he proclaimed the lump a salivary gland and told us to return “one more time” in a few weeks.

But then there was that horrendous week in the hospital.  And while she was being treated for gastritis, a hematologist felt her neck and said, “It’s a lymph node.”  So they sent her for a sonogram which said it was a lymph node.

So when we went back to see the surgeon and brought him the sonogram report he got annoyed and ordered his own ultrasound, which we got to wait 3 hours for.  And then he called me to tell me everything was fine, even after the 45 minute exam where the tech measured the lymph node in her neck.  So we were good to part ways until I asked for a copy of that report too.

confused

And 10 minutes later my cell phone rang telling me doctor “I am sure it’s fine, but just in case,” wanted to see her again.  So after some haggling we arranged for June 16th at 1.  Which was ok.  Until they called me Friday to tell me I could come in at 9:30 or 10:45.  “How about 1, like you said originally?”

So the appointment was set for 1, and I punched out of work at 12.  We got to the hospital at exactly 1 (a 20 mile drive) after some typical traffic, and a near miss of a three car accident in front of us on the highway (thank you angels) on line for the parking garage.  I called up to let them know we’d be a few minutes.  And we sat.  And we sat  And we sat.

Finally we began to inch forward just a bit.  Then there was just one car in front of me.

And he was not paying a bit of attention, as a large black SUV cut right into the front of the line.

Now at times like this I try to focus.  Maybe there was a medical emergency. Maybe… Maybe…

So as much as I wanted to get out of my car screaming, I held my composure and talked about all the reasons they might have done that.  Until a hospital employee, likely late for work, surfaced as the driver.  He left his car across the sidewalk, took the ticket from the attendant and raced into the hospital.

It was 1:35.

And then I noticed some scurrying.

I thought the car was stuck.

It turns out the self-important line cutter had taken his keys- blocking the entrance and causing the line of 20 cars behind me to continue to grow.

The car was booted and moved.

We got to the appointment around 2.

As usual...
As usual…

The doctor spoke to Meghan.  He asked her how she was doing.  She told him about her pain.  And about her throat clearing.  And about how tired she is.  She mentioned working hard to get so swim practice.

I don’t think he heard a word.

He felt her neck and proudly proclaimed he felt nothing.  By now I was so tired of this I just wanted to get out.  I figured we were done.  I was glad he could feel nothing.  If only I trusted him.  Truth be told, I haven’t put a hand on her neck in 4 weeks.  There is just no point.

“I want to see her at the end of the summer.”

WHAT?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

3 visits ago he never wanted to see her again.  Now he has ultrasound and 2 visits at which he told me she was fine.  Let it go.  Unless of course, he just doesn’t quite trust himself…

“I’m glad she’s feeling so well.”

EXCUSE ME??????????  Did you just see MY kid?  Because MY KID is incredibly polite, and often very positive.  She is articulate and bright, but she will NEVER tell you she feels WELL.  She doesn’t believe in lying.

Some days this is like a bad movie. Or a dream where your finger is stuck in the door and it keeps closing over, and over, and over again.

4740897520_door_jam_xlarge

August 18th.

Damn.

So much for a month without doctors.

When do you, as the Mom, put an end to it?  Knowing that any “miss” falls right on you, it’s so hard to defy their recommendations, even when their competence can be questioned.

Rheumatology on the 30th.  GI on July 2nd, and Pediatric Endocrinology AGAIN on July 3rd.  And that’s just the first week.

I guess I better plan something fun for the 1st.  Something worthy of a stepping stone for that bridge…

Her entire right side hurts to the touch tonight.  Every natural pain remedy I research has something her reflux doesn’t allow.

She fell asleep tonight reading her Bible.  Our Pastor sent her a long letter with some great verses of comfort.  She hasn’t stopped rereading it.

Sigh…

Two hours to get in.  Two hours to get home.  Less than 30 minutes on the floor of the hospital.

“This is getting old Mom.”  Wise kid.

“‘Cause what if your blessings come through rain drops
What if Your healing comes through tears
What if a thousand sleepless nights are what it takes to know You’re near
What if trials of this life are Your mercies in disguise” – Laura Story

Snow Boots

The winter boots are still in the closet.

It’s June 12th.

Actually Meghan’s room has a basket of winter boots that are not only off-season, but are too small for her.

It’s June 12th, and that is definitely a new record for me.

june12

In my old life clothes got changed systematically in April, and early October.  Jackets got washed, shoes got put away.

That was my old life.  I don’t remember it much.

I don’t really have a big closet.  The spring shoes are upstairs in the hallway.  All over the floor.  I’ve been getting one pair at a time as I need them, but if I don’t hurry and make the switch soon winter shoes will take over my bedroom floor.

Thankfully, Mother Nature seems confused about the season.  That is buying me some time.

Mother-Nature

In my old life, nothing was really on the floor – ever.

We went to the doctor today.  Shocking news really, I know.

We went to the doctor today in hopes of replacing the endocrinologist with someone more open-minded, and “outside the box.”

EPIC FAIL.

What we got instead was a closed box, closed-minded,”I won’t take on your kid, so stay where you are” doctor, in a really bad suit.  (And I’m not much about fashion – so you know it was a REALLY bad suit.)

I had lots of time to look at her, and the suit while I used my hand to keep my mouth from spilling out my actual thoughts and embarrassing my daughter.

I brought the 3 page synopsis of tests, hospitalizations, and medications.

I brought the 3 INCH binder full of lab tests and pathology reports.

I brought the CD of the neck sonogram.

She glanced at her most recent blood work.  She told me her TSH was too high.  She told me she needed more Synthroid.  She told me her current team was just fine.  Then she told me twice they were better suited to treat a Cowden’s Syndrome patient than she.  Feel like a leper much?

I asked all sorts of questions.  I asked about T3, and potential problems with synthetic absorption.  I reminded her that in addition to PTEN she has an MTHFR mutation which impacts her ability to process B12.  I asked if there could be anything else she has trouble processing. (Hint Hint… synthetic thyroid hormone?)

“You’re very smart,” she tells me.  “You know a lot,” she says.  Yet, she deflects my questions like a goalie with a hockey puck.

Hockey-Stick-and-Puck-Photographic-Print-C11950881

News flash.  I don’t need stroking – just answers.

But I watch my tongue.  And I watch my tone, because my daughter is watching my every move, my body language, my attitude.  She is using my response to gauge whether she needs to be uptight.

I asked what was the upper limit for synthroid.  I was told there was none.  I was told that the dose would just continue to be increased.  I was told she would likely reach .200 mcg.  I expressed concern.  I was told not to worry.  The body only absorbs a percentage of the synthetics.  Um, that would be the point of my worry.  She doesn’t have a good history of secreting junk.

I got a lesson on the pituitary and the up and down regulation of TSH.  I was told when to dose the medicine.  I reminded her I have been on thyroid replacement for 27 years.

She asked me if she had answered all my questions.  In my old life I might have politely said, “yes.”  But, this is not my old life.  I smiled, shook her hand, and said “No, actually you didn’t, but I don’t think you know the answers.”  Then we left.

In my old life things were neater, and more orderly in every aspect.  Sometimes I miss the order.  But not for long.  There is nothing orderly about this kid, except her behavior (98% of the time,) and I am learning to embrace the chaos.

She woke this morning feeling like real crap.  Exhausted from swim practice (she made it almost through) and fifth grade trip yesterday.  She hurts.  She is mellow.  She has fun with the kids, but she’s not herself.

Maybe it will just take time, but hours and weeks and months of childhood seem to be ticking away.

I pushed her today to start making dates with friends for the summer.  Her friend’s parents must think I am weird.

It’s as important, or MORE important to plan pay time as it is to plan doctor’s appointments – for so many reasons.  And since we have so many appointments, I want to start with the friend time – NOW.

We live in the middle of New York City.  One would think finding pediatric endocrinology in the mood for a challenge would be much simpler than this.  Instead I am left to return to the surgeon on Monday, so he can validate himself by telling me he doesn’t feel anything in her neck.  And then, back to see the resident of her endocrinologist in July.  (The actual doctor takes off February, July and August – so he has yet to see her since the surgery.)

Life is not ours to plan.  But, we have to try to schedule the fun stuff before the days get away.

We RSVP while holding our breath.

There is more “One day at a time…” than I have ever known.

one day at a time

Maybe there will be some time to get those snow boots away.  In the mean time, if you do stop by- don’t judge the hallway.  Or the closet.  Or the dog fur.

I took a walk yesterday, and another one today.  I listened to music.  It’s a slow process, but I am working on my emotional health.

It seems to be the only thing I can control.

I am working on those foundation stones for Meghan’s bridge.

And in the mean time, if you happen to need any snow boots – I can get them for you in a hurry.  I know exactly where they are.

snow boots2

 

 

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…