Invisible Illness

For the last 6 nights my soon to be 10 year- old has slept in between her father and I.

Now I will pause to give you time to gasp, as wave your fingers at me.

I will give you time to self-righteously proclaim that you “know better” than to put your child in your bed, because once you start “that habit” you will never be able to break it.

Go ahead.  Tell me its my own fault that I don’t sleep as comfortably as I could with my 5 foot tall 85 pound child bouncing between clinging to my husband and I.

Tell me I should just send her back to her own bed.

And then – when you are done.  Come over.  Please.  I will even make you some coffee – but you will have to settle for fake milk.  No need to keep any in a house where a child has a dairy allergy.

When you come over you can watch her for a few minutes.  I will let you watch as she winces in pain, and cries out as she bounces around.  And that, that is after she actually gets to sleep.

invisible illness

See before she gets to sleep, there is pain.  Always some pain.  Always.  But some nights, or weeks like this one, it is worse than normal.

There are nights, and plenty of them that she sleeps in her own bed.  Right through until as late as we will let her.  Those are the nights the pain is at its best.

Then there are the nights she needs one of us to rub her in her bed.  A knee, a calf, and ankle, an elbow, a shoulder, a wrist, or even a head is keeping her up.  Sure, you could say she is exaggerating.  Maybe she is acting like any kid who doesn’t want to go to sleep.  But Meghan is above many things, a really rotten liar.  So, when she hurts – she lets us know.  And when she doesn’t it never comes up – end of story.

The worst nights are the ones like this week.  The ones where she can’t even get herself comfortable in her own bed.  These are the nights she cries not only for the pain, but also for the raw fatigue that keeps her awake when she would rather sleep.

This week there has been pain.  Pain in the legs as she adjusts to swim practice, or plays with a friend or two at a play date.  There has been pain in the wrist, the pesky wrist injured now since early June.  The one that has to have a problem – we just don’t know what it is – yet.  The wrist in line for an MRI/MRA has a pulse to it that is reminiscent of the AVM  in her knee.  But we are trying not to jump the gun.

If you ever do stop by my house in the middle of the night, to see why none of us have any semblance of a normal sleeping pattern, maybe you can bring a warm compress, or strong hands, and help as we massage cramping, painful body parts.

Even on the days we fall hard!

No one knows the Meghan of 2 AM.

Everyone sees the bright smiley face.

Everyone sees the interpersonal child who talks with everyone – who makes them laugh.

Everyone sees the reader, the friend, the kid who likes quiet, and order, and rules, and helping people in need.

The Meghan of 2, or 3 AM disappears with the morning light.  She washes her face, brushes her teeth, and puts on the best smile she can to prepare to face the world.

This is the story of life with chronic, invisible illness.

energy to be normal

No one knows about the growths on her thyroid, or the insufferable hot flashes she has.

No one knows about the effort it takes her to walk up the stairs, or to sit and play with friends.

No one knows she is slated for 2 more MRIs, a pituitary function test and a pelvic sonogram – and that’s just the next 2 weeks.

No one knows because she doesn’t “look sick.”

And she wouldn’t have it any other way.

She wears her denim ribbon necklace, the one crafted after the Global Genes Project logo – every single day.  And she dreams of the day she will look across a room at another little girl wearing one too.

The denim ribbon is the symbol for rare and genetic disorders, and since identifying her own need to have a “symbol” to wear, like my pink ribbon, she saw to it that one was created to be worn around her neck.  She chose to have it modeled off the Global Genes Project- an organization that spoke to her heart soon after our Cowden’s Syndrome diagnosis.

We wear them now, my husband, and Meghan, and I – united in our battle.  And we hope that one day there will be more.

circle of three

A denim cause ribbon, crafted after the Global Genes Project's slogan, "Hope it's in our Genes!"
A denim cause ribbon, crafted after the Global Genes Project’s slogan, “Hope it’s in our Genes!”

Next month we will travel to Disney World, as we have for the last 6 years.  While we are there Meghan will use a wheelchair.

Recently, when the controversy hit about the misuse of Guest Assistance Passes at Disney, I was sick to my stomach.

You see I have a child with a virtually invisible disability.  She can walk, by the grace of God.  She can swim.  She can function throughout a day – often with insufferable pain at night.

But what she can not do is walk for long distances.  Ever.  Regardless of the footwear – no matter how hard we try to prepare.  She just can’t.

We took her out of soccer because of the impact.  We took her out of dance for the same reason.  Now she swims, and even with that sometimes the muscle pain is difficult to bear.

So it is especially tricky for us at a park that necessitates walking and standing.  Sometimes she can stretch her legs.  Usually she can cover about a half mile on foot.  Then she needs to rest.  If she pushes too  hard on day 1, by day 4 we might as well be back home.

She spent her birthday one year in tears, pleading with me – in the middle of EPCOT that she would go home “RIGHT NOW IF YOU COULD MAKE THE PAIN STOP.”  That was the day after we let her walk 50% of the day before.

She hates being confined.  She would rather walk.  She looks like she should be walking.  But she can’t be.  Bottom line.

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So as I said earlier, those of you who want to judge me for rubbing my child’s sore and aching body so she can rest – feel free.  As long as we breathe she will be able to seek comfort in the arms of her mother and father.

And when you see me pushing her around Walt Disney World, I know there are the lowlives out there who abuse the policy, but before you assume that my “normal looking” child is one of them, ask yourself if you have ever met anyone with an invisible illness.

Ask yourself how many children, when given the opportunity, would rather navigate the happiest place on earth from the confines of a chair.  Sure we all need a rest some time.  But she’d rather have it on a bench.  And while we are at it – she would rather be having an ice cream cone like the other kids too.

Just because I teach my child to go through life with her head held high.  Just because I teach her to push through pain.  Just because I teach her to smile at adversity and to be kind to judgmental strangers- that doesn’t mean she doesn’t hurt.  None of that invalidates the 4 surgeries for the AVM in her knee, the thyroid biopsies, the constant scans, the issues yet to be uncovered.

My child knows patience.  She knows how to wait.  And she does it all year at countless doctors, and invasive lab tests, with grace, and poise and dignity.

So, before you forget what invisible illness looks like- look here.  We are too busy BEATING COWDEN’S to acknowledge the judgmental.  We teach our daughter to love and forgive.  She has too much stress in her life to harbor any anger.  We learn our best qualities from her.

you were given this life

Overwhelmed

overwhlemed 1

Yep.  Totally and completely overwhelmed.

I know I am not the only one.  But I think sometimes the first step is admitting it.

Maybe it was overzealous to try to synchronize mine and Meghan’s 6 month follow-up appointments to coincide with the first 2 weeks in July and the February break.

My initial attempt scheduled 12 doctors , plus one MRI and one sonogram between June 27th and July 16th, (for both of us combined.)

overwhelmed 2

It has mushroomed to include a Pituitary Stimulation Test and another ultrasound, 2 more MRIs yet to be scheduled, a possible muscle biopsy – pending a conversation between 2 specialists, a full day of work for me one day next week, Physical therapy 1-2x a week as we can fit it, 3 nights a week of swim practice, and 2 dentist appointments (that I PRAY don’t need follow-up!)

So, I waffle in between resenting the loss of my summer, and being grateful that I have July to get all this done.

The entire month of June I salivated for July.  I couldn’t wait for schedule free days.  Now I am frantically overtaxing my shredder as I organize all the tasks I label for “summer,” during the year.  The July calendar makes me nauseous.  Literally.

swim overcome

I mean we might have gotten bored eventually, but we have barely been near the pool.  I say bring on the boredom.

Most of our appointments are in Manhattan.  That can be a 45 minute trip or a 2.5 hour trip – depending on… well, the humidity?  day of the week?  air pressure?  There is ABSOLUTELY no predicting.

We could take the bus.  But that often involves the need for the subway, which I won’t do with Meghan, and lots of walking, which honestly she can’t do.  So, we drive, fill the car with gas, head over a bridge and through a tunnel to a carefully pre-selected parking garage.

And, since there is no predicting, there is always a meal to pack.  Never want to be caught off guard with a hungry Gluten, Dairy, Soy allergic kid.

Sometimes we are on time.  Sometimes we are late.  Always we wait, and wait.

overwhelmed 3

Meghan is the most well-behaved child.  I don’t lie because there is no need.  I am sure she was a gift to me – while we can at times butt heads, her personality allows her to pack a book, her iPad, or something, and sit.  For hours and hours.  I couldn’t pull this off if she was any other way.

But, I don’t know if I would have a choice.  There is no traveling to Manhattan at 4 pm, on a school night.  It just can’t be for either of us.  So we do what we must.

Today, before 8AM she was in the park, running the “fun run” of a local race that has been dedicated to our “Angel Meghan” for over 20 years.  She ran for a quarter-mile – 2 and a half minutes, came in a close 2nd, and has been nursing her knees ever since.

Meghan july413

I am in the basement, shredding, and writing while I wait for my overworked shredder to cool.  Trying to get a few things off the “to do” list.

My head is constantly going – processing new information learned this week.  Thinking.  Asking.  Wondering.  Worrying.

Today is a good day.  Daddy is home.  The ultimate distraction for her.

We had a long talk this morning, me and my girl.  I tried to push her to reach out to some friends.  To go and be carefree like she should be.  Even if its only for a while.  Everyone has something we reminded each other.

I still can’t shake my need for order.  I don’t need a psychiatrist to tell me my obsession with a clean house is tied to the inability to control much else in my life.

Cowden’s Syndrome – our curse, and our blessing.  Sucking away hours that should be spent on the beach or in camp.  Forcing a little love to grow up way too fast.  Torn between my guilt that this mutation came from me, and my gratitude that she saved my life.

I lost my driver’s license today.  Just the license.  It fell out of my pocket.  For $17.50 I ordered a new one on-line.  Here’s to hoping that whoever tries to be me has a strong stomach, and a decent amount of stamina.  They don’t know what they are up against.

overwhelmed 4

The beach… and all her other plans – I will do my best.

Just trying to get by one day at a time.

This one is a favorite of a dear internet friend :-)
This one is a favorite of a dear internet friend 🙂
The thought for the day...
The thought for the day…

It’s a Thin Line…

It’s a thin line between love and hate.  That’s how the story goes right?

thin_line

These days I feel I am walking a very thin line, teetering tenuously between confidence that I will end on solid stable ground, and terror that I will just fall off.

Balance has never been one of my strong suits.  But I try.  Every moment of my life I try.

tightrope3

It’s a thin line:

between paid work and “real” work

between schedules and chaos

between strong and terrified

between education and being “over informed”

between smiling and crying

between a cider drink, and a few ounces of straight rum

between prevention and over protectiveness

between not screening, and missing it

between realizing everyone has struggles, and  feeling overwhelmed by your own

between knowing it could be a whole lot worse, and wanting to crawl into a corner and give up

between a vacation, and a time to catch up

between feeling lonely and being alone

between cancer and “precancer”

between prevention and overzealous

between holding your girl as she cries in pain, and crying the night away yourself

between asking all the right questions, and asking too many questions

between BEATING COWDEN’S, and giving in…

It’s a thin line.

tightrope2

I am walking it every day this month, as the schedule changes constantly, and the number of days I had nicely confined so as not to overtake our summer quickly begin to envelop July.

I am walking it, as I wait for call backs that never come on time – cell phone pressed into my fingers.

I am walking it as I wait to schedule haircuts, and dentist appointments, and things that “normal” people do.

Why do I ask so many questions?  Why do I push for answers no one really wants to give?  Why?

Because if I don’t – who will?

It’s not going away.

BalanceBoardImg

When I walk the line with Cowden’s syndrome, and vigilance on one side – ignorance and denial seem to be on the other.

I don’t plan to fall – but if I do, I know where I need to land.

You Can’t Have a Rainbow Without a Little Rain

rainbow rain

As a young child a can remember hearing stories of rainbows in Sunday School.

This week I needed lots of reminders that I am not alone.  God keeps His promises.

Yesterday we saw Endocrinology at MSKCC in NYC.  They spent an hour and ten minutes preforming a detailed sonogram of Meghan’s thyroid.  She was an angel – calm and patient.  I watched the whole thing, uncomfortable with how much I am able to see on an ultrasound now.  The things we learn through repetition.

It was obvious to me that the many nodules – well over 10 – are still there.  At least three are quite large.  I watched as they were measured, and my “numbers” brain frantically tried to recall the stats from December that had led us to January’s biopsy.

We spent an hour waiting on the ninth floor, the pediatric cancer unit.  And as I have said before, and I will say again, if you ever need to count your blessings, I mean truly count them, I strongly suggest you swing by there.

rainbow not thunderstorm

Meghan played on her iPad as I watched.  Chemo pumps beeping.  Children from 2 to 20, some seasoned veterans, some terrified newcomers, attached as the poison to kill the evil cells drips into their body.  Some sleeping, some resting, some running.  And their parents. Dark eyes.  Worry.  Terror.  Fake smiles.  Bitten up coffee cups.  “Count your many blessings count them one by one…”

“Mom, I am not scared of thyroid cancer.  I am only scared if they don’t catch it early enough.”  I knew what she meant. She went back to playing.

In the doctor’s office there was a moment for us to be relieved, kind of.  The nodules are slightly larger, but are growing slowly.  They are still in that same “precancerous” state, but we are not in imminent danger.  No biopsy right now.  We get at  least another 6 months out of the thyroid.

Then there were the other conversations.  The ones about hormone levels that won’t regulate on lab work.  The MRI that showed a pituitary “diminutive in size.”  The inconsistencies of these tests with her current development.  The statement from the endocrinologist that this lab test (having already been repeated 4 times,) “defies human physiology.”

Yeah, and…

So he drew the labs again.  This time at “his” lab.  And a thyroid panel, and a few other things.

He’ll call me Monday.  Then I will find out more about “human physiology.”

At swim practice last night I met a mom.  She has an only child too, just about Meghan’s age.  And she is BRCA positive. So, after a day of doctors, somehow we were placed in each other’s path last night.  And, I had conversations with a virtual stranger that I probably haven’t had with some of my closest friends.  There are no coincidences.  Of this I am sure.

And this morning – barely able to move from stress and fatigue, salivating for a day of “vacation,”  we dragged ourselves out of bed again.

rainbow snoopy

I packed the bags – always bringing lunch and a few snacks, and we headed out – a little later than I wanted.  As I crossed the bridge I had the sinking feeling that I didn’t have my wallet.  Back across the bridge.  Back home.  Back out.  An accident on the FDR assured me that I couldn’t use the $14 parking coupon I had printed.  Into the $42 lot we went. We made it into the office at 10:03.

The vascular surgeon is uptown.  He has been inside of Meghan’s knee 4 times, so he knows her well.  This time we had less overall pain to report.  But, of course he never felt the pain was connected to the AVM anyway.  So I recounted tales from her PT evaluator, and her swim instructor about how difficult it is for her to run without limping, or to push off to start a race from the block  I had his attention.  The legs have different girth.  The left is undoubtedly stronger then the right, having been spared the AVM.  Do you take her for PT he asked?  Um… constantly.

Fortunately we love Dr. Jill!

We took her out of soccer and dance and put her in swimming.  There isn’t much else we can do.

Oh, and could you look at her wrist?  The one she hurt at the school carnival almost 4 weeks ago.  She was victorious at her quest to climb the rock wall.  Stubborn, competitive child.  But has paid the price since.

For a few days I told her to suck it up.  I admit it.  But it kept going.  Knowing Meghan as I do, she will keep me abreast of every pain – but the SECOND it stops, its like it never happened.  This one wasn’t quitting.  Dr. Jill helped us.  We tried a brace. Then another one.  Then no brace.  No better.

So as I watched the doctor manipulate her wrist I couldn’t help but remember my frustration the day after the carnival, when all of her friends walked around unscathed, and she suffered terribly with pain all over.  I remember thinking how cruel it was that she had to make a conscious decision to suffer in agony the next day – if she wanted to keep up with her friends.

He examined it for what seemed like forever.  Then he asked me who my orthopedist was.  I laughed out loud.  The one subspecialty we have NOT found – is pediatric orthopedics.  So he asked if she had a rheumatologist.  I said we were headed there July 9th.  He said try to move it up, and call him after I saw her.  She needs and MRI of that wrist.

“I don’t think it’s vascular…”  And after that we will get one of the knee – just to be safe.

There went two more days off the summer calendar.

40 blocks away was the geneticist.  He is the one we credit with saving my life.  And I credit the angels with placing him in our path two years ago.

We spoke at length.  He has more questions.  More research.  He has a theory.  He will call me.  He will send me the articles.  The conversation lasted an hour.  He is brilliant.

She hugged him and told him she wants to be a geneticist.  We have a friend for life.

The people training on the  new teacher evaluation system in NYC frequently declare “This is going to create more questions than answers.”  I don’t know why I find the system to be perplexing.  I should be used to it by now.

It rained tonight.  Thundershowers.  They have been happening a lot lately.  Maybe I need a lot of reminding.  The rainbows are there.  The promise remains.  Nothing happens by accident.  God’s timing is perfect.

6/28/13
6/28/13

Finding the Rainbow

My mom has always loved rainbows.  I mean she REALLY loves them.  She would take us all outside when we were younger to look at them after a storm.  She would sometimes pull the car over so we could see them.  I remember always knowing they were special.  But, like so many things in life I think I am only starting to “get it” now.

Rainbow

What a June this has been!

There has been rain and more rain.  It only started to feel like summer a few days ago.  And while I am sure we will all be complaining of the heat soon – it is nice to see some sunshine.

As I walked out of my house to make a quick run to the store tonight there was rain.  Lots of it.  I went back in for my rain coat.  I had to be ready to pack lunch for Meghan as we head to her appointments tomorrow.  So, I had little choice.

As I was listening to the all familiar sound of the wipers on the windshield, I found myself looking for the rainbow in the sky.  There was sun, there were clouds.  There was rain.  I knew I would find it if I looked.

I thought about these last – almost 2 years since the Cowden’s diagnosis.  I thought about the twists and turns and sleepless nights.  The days when I was sure the sun would never shine again.  Yet – somehow it did.

I thought of my husband.  My strength in tumultuous times.  I thought of how he began school 2 years ago this week, setting out for his electrical licensing exam, never knowing three short months later life would be forever altered with mine and Meghan’s diagnoses.

I thought about how the course that was only supposed to take a few months, and the test that should have been in early 2012 ended up being in January of 2013.  I thought of him trekking to school two nights a week, and studying every spare moment.  I thought of how flat out proud we were as he passed the written exam with ease.

Through tests, surgeries, scans, cancer, agonizing waiting – he persevered.I am not sure I could have kept my focus.  But he took it a step further.

Perhaps it was out imminent family health crisis, or maybe his own internal motivation, in June of 2012 he began his journey towards better health on Isagenix.

While continuing in school  and under extreme stress, he has managed to lose, and maintain the loss of about 45 pounds.

meghanleigh8903.isagenix.com
meghanleigh8903.isagenix.com

He took the second and final part of the exam on June 4th.  The passing score came in the mail Monday.  Now all that stands between him and his Mater Electrician License is some tedious NYC paperwork, and undoubtedly some more fees…

As I looked for the rainbow I couldn’t help but think, that even though they are sometimes hard to see, and even thought the days are sometimes dark and cloudy –  they are there.  They wonder, the beauty – all perfectly placed to be appreciated.  If we look…

Tonight's rainbow 6/26/13
Tonight’s rainbow 6/26/13

I am so proud of my husband.  I am so grateful that he is so often the rainbow on that cloudy day.

My mother taught me to look for rainbows.  I get it now Mom.  I get it.

My husband helps me find them.

I am a lucky girl.

Thyroid sonogram tomorrow – 10 AM.

We’ll be looking to make our own rainbows along the way.

Forever- it’s all about perspective!

Even new beginnings start to become normal occurrences, and things begin to wind their way into the much anticipated summer vacation.  New beginnings can’t stay new forever, and as the school year comes to a close we have spent some time reflecting on the twists and turns that caused it to end much differently than it began.

Schoolbooks

Meghan finished fourth grade with her normal grace and poise – and I am sure good grades. (Report cards are given tomorrow.)  Although she finished the year alongside different students, and in a different building then when she began, she finished with the same bright smile and cheery, friendly personality, that quickly endeared her to the young and old in her new environment.

There are some people she misses from her old school.  There are some people I miss.  There are circumstances neither of us miss at all.

This wasn’t the plan.  But really, as I keep learning – we don’t actually get to plan everything.

Learning experiences.   That’s what they are.

positive attitude

You never really know what tomorrow will bring.

Make the most of what you have where you are.

Trust your heart and your gut.  If it feels broken, it probably is.

Reduce your stress.  Eliminate toxins.  Its good for the body, mind and soul.

let go of the toxic

No experience is wasted.  No interaction is a loss.  People come in and out of our lives, some for a season, some for longer – but always for a reason.

www.meghanleigh8903.isagenix.com
http://www.meghanleigh8903.isagenix.com

And now there is summer.

Finally, not a summer of overwhelming homework, but not a summer of fun-filled camp days either.

Thursday we visit Sloan Kettering again.  Time for the thyroid sonogram.  How could six months go so fast?  And as the appointment closes in she starts to articulate her fears.  They are the same as mine.  I should know that she is smart enough to process.  To understand that they are looking for thyroid cancer.

On Friday we see the vascular surgeon for a follow up, and then a genetics follow up.  Meghan loves to visit the geneticist.  She says, quite correctly, that he saved both of our lives.  I remind her that she saved mine.  She smiles, and hugs me, even as she says quite matter- of -factly, “well when I get breast cancer – at least I know they will catch it early.”  Ever wonder what it feels like to be sat on by the ‘elephant in the room?’  Well, as I gasp for breath – speechless, I give her a hug.  No empty promises to offer.  I can’t.  I won’t.  She would see right through them anyway.

This is our life.  This is how our summer begins, and between the two of us, it doesn’t really let up.  There is little time for camp, or beaches.  We will sneak in a few play dates.  We will get away for a few days in August.  She will read a few great books.  We will spend a lot of time on the expressway, or the bridge, or in waiting rooms all over Manhattan.

This – this is why we need a life free of toxins.

This is why we eliminate unnecessary stress.

Cowden’s Syndrome carries enough stress of its own.

Persistence Dog

You see this will be our life – forever.  And the sooner we adjust, and find the balance, the sooner we learn to roll with the reality – the better off we will be.

Forever.

Forever is a long crazy concept.  Forever – while trying not to plan too much.  Forever.

Forever has this awful way of disappearing sometimes.

I used to think Pop’s vegetable garden would be around forever.

GiGi and Pop
GiGi and Pop

Well, actually I guess it is.  I just grow it for him at my house now.

Forever.  It’s all about perspective.

character

My Young Teacher

As I was getting ready to say goodnight to Meghan a few days ago, she was visibly upset.

During our conversation I learned that she felt the cleaner I had just given her for her face had made the small bumps she has (courtesy of Cowden’s Syndrome) more noticeable than before.

I didn’t see it.

I look and I see my beautiful daughter – radiant inside and out.

God's got this

Cowden’s affects the skin, and sometimes we get these obnoxious small bumps in all places you would never want them.   Dermatologists with little experience with the syndrome don’t recognize that each one is in fact a tiny benign tumor,  in the hair follicle, causing inflammation.

She is almost 10.  She is 5 feet tall.  She has fantastic hair and a great attitude about life.  But, like any girl in this society she gets self conscious about her appearance at times.

So, in my effort to reassure her that her “bumps” were most noticeable to her, I showed her my legs.

Both legs are riddled with bulging, pulsating, colorful varicose veins.  I have had 7 surgeries to keep them under control and eliminate the pain that goes along with them.  I have over the last 2 years lost about 35 pounds.  They just don’t let up.

rare mom and meg

I told her how self conscious I am about my legs.  I told her how hard it is to wear a bathing suit, or shorts.  I told her that  I have only bought my first shorts in over 10 years in the last 2.

I know now what I didn’t know then – that these relentless varicose veins are likely a credit to my Cowden’s Syndrome, and the same path that led Meghan to that pesky AVM in her knee – a generation earlier presents as these veins in me.

She looked at me, pointing out my own insecurities, and she said Mom, you have to understand – it looks worse to you.  And you have to remember, “Some people only wish they had legs… or legs that work.”

And there it was.  My girl again.

“Sometimes your blessings come through raindrops, sometimes your healing comes through tears…” – Laura Story

hope its in our genes

We took the iPad.  We looked at pictures of veins.  We looked at pictures of acne.  We looked in the mirror.  We hugged.

Sometimes its so hard.  One battle after another on this journey.

I don’t know that I could handle anything so gracefully without my young teacher.

JUNE!

It’s June.  It doesn’t feel like it.  At least the weather doesn’t.  It’s cool and rainy.  I guess that’s OK for now – while we are still wrapping up school.

It has been a long week.

I don’t usually leave my blog unattended for so long.  I am behind at writing.  I am behind even further at my reading.  It seems the days just blend together lately.

It is June, and when you are a school teacher, this is a month of eager anticipation, and volumes of paperwork to be settled. There are boxes to back and things to carefully put away in preparation for the fall.  There isn’t much time to be still.

schools out

Well – in another 2 weeks it is!

It’s June, and when you are an advocate – you do take a few minutes to celebrate the victory that put speed bumps on the street where you had the accident that damaged your back forever and ever.  You are grateful for the citizens, and politicians alike that fought relentlessly.  You are thrilled by speed bumps, but you still want that stop sign.  You celebrate with a glass of wine – or two.

crash

It’s June though, which means that damaged back has to ache longer in between trips to the chiropractor, and the PT you promised yourself seems like it may never happen.   You are the mother.  You will get by.

It’s June and when you are a Mom of a kid with Cowden’s Syndrome you spend 2 or three afternoons a week at physical therapy to make her chronic pain bearable.  Not totally sure the pain is related to the Cowden’s, but sure it’s related to SOMETHING, you scoff at the denial for school based PT and wonder what they would say if one of them could spend a morning in your house watching your 9 year old walk like she’s 90.  You balance those PT appointments with swimming lessons, all in preparation for the team she will join.  The team she is desperate to swim on successfully, and God willing – pain free.

competition_pools

It’s June, so you balance the breakthrough of the virus on that adorable immune compromised 9 year old’s face with increased doses of the antiviral medicine and extra trips to the pediatrician.  It’s June so when it’s not pouring – you make sure she has a hat to keep the sun off her face.  And when you look at the dose of antiviral medicine you start to feel a bit guilty, nervous maybe, about her liver – and all the prescription medicine.  So, you take a chance and toss the Celebrex to the side.  Hoping maybe, just maybe she can get by without it.

celebrex100mg

It’s June and its raining.  You feel a little guilty about “forgetting” to tell her you stopped the Celebrex, but each day you hear the complaint of another joint, another ache, another pain.  Ten days later you abandon your hopes of relieving the stress on that young liver, and you relent. Too many Tylenol – not cutting it.   Celebrex it is.

The war rages – all the months.  The battles are won and lost on a regular basis – but the war looms large.  I don my armor – a large binder of medical facts, bloodwork, and reports.  I gather my inner strength.

It’s June.  Summer vacation is coming, but there will be no camp in our house.  It doesn’t fit in with the schedule.

calendar

Every six months.  Every doctor.  Forever.  Mine, and hers.  Different doctors.  Different times.  Different facilities.

I am getting better at the scheduling.  I have learned to bunch them together.  So, we go in February and again in July.

For Meghan it’s the thyroid first.  That foreboding nemesis.  Ultrasound, appointment… and we will see what comes next. Then its the AVM follow up, and the genetecist.  That’s just the last week in June.

Mom has an MRI to schedule to look at that spleen, some more surgical follow ups…

There will be 15 appointments before the 2nd week in July.  That’s if every one goes well.

This is how it has to be.  We have to work, she has school.  We can’t have the appointments all throughout the year, so we must endure them all at once.

It’s June.  I am already tired.  Wrapping up one full time job to focus on another. I feel my anxiety rising.

Getting all my rest.  Gathering my inner strength.  Armed and ready.  Kicking Cowden’s to the curb…

We can… WE WILL!

keep swimming

Mother, Wife, Teacher, Advocate

First I was a daughter.  A sometimes mousy, sometimes mouthy daughter.  I was respectful, but hated to be stepped on.  I wrote letters to the editor when I was annoyed.  I let people know how I felt.

Then I was a teenager.  I was full of opinions and was quite sure they were all right.  I was willing to debate for hours, or sometimes stay really really quiet – stewing in my personal assurance that I was right and they weren’t.

hand ove rmouth

I spent 4 years away at college.  Even though I didn’t want to – lol.  I will be forever grateful to my stepdad for his insistence that I drive, AND go away to college.  I am not sure I would have done either.  At college I learned to stand on my own two feet.  I met all sorts of people from all walks of life.

time-warp

By the time I hit my 20s life had educated me some.  I still held strong convictions, but I was able to accept that it was ok for others to have their own.  I gained the belief that as long as people were respectful – we could disagree.

In my 20s I met my husband.  A match that many thought was destined to fail.  And unlikely pair we compliment each other in every way.  He was my missing piece.

bethlehem 4

In my 20s I became a teacher.  A lifelong goal realized.  I worked harder than I ever had in my life to be the best I could be.  I recognized the magic of teaching.  I became addicted to the “spark” in their eye when they “get it.”  I came to see that my presence and my attitude were as important as my lessons.  I taught/teach my students, my children – to see the best in others, and to tolerate and embrace differences respectfully.

In my 20s Mom had cancer.  And I learned what it was like to be scared.  And I learned what really really matters in life.  And she fought, and she won.  I always appreciated my family, but I learned to appreciate them even more.

In my 20s I got married.  I got my Master’s Degree.  We bought a house.  We tore it apart.  We fixed it up again.  We got buried in debt.  We worked hard to get out.

Then – just about when I was ready to turn 30 – we had Meghan.

Disney 2012
Disney 2012

Mom said you do more changing in your 20s than in your teens.  She was right.  But as my 30s come to a close – I think they beat my 20s hands down.

In my 30s I learned to love my heart, outside of my body.  I learned that I would never be as important as that little human we created out of love.  I learned about family all over again.

In my 30s I learned to live without sleep.  I learned to endure tears and screeching and pain as my heart ached for my baby girl.  I learned that colic can last way longer than 3 months, and I learned to bounce and rock and sing and move for hours and hours on end.

In my 30s I learned how to balance two full time jobs, as a mother and a teacher.

In my 30s I learned what it was like to be truly terrified, as your baby went into the hospital, and into surgery over and over again.

In my 30s I became really close with God.  I learned that my relationship with Him transcends walls and buildings and people.  I learned gratitude, and I learned not to be shy about my faith.

In my 30s I learned that convictions can change.  And the things I was sure I was right about 5 or 10 or 15 years ago…well, maybe I wasn’t so right after all.

In my 30s I learned that close friends share bonds that go past time and distance.  I learned that even though I miss them, they are there when the going gets tough.  I learned that EMail, facebook, and the internet, when used properly – are some of the biggest blessings in life.

In my 30s I learned that you have the power to make changes in your life when situations, circumstances or people have you angry, sad, hurt, mad, or generally annoyed.  I learned doing something is way more rewarding that complaining.

dead-poets-society-1thoreau 3

In my 30s I learned if you believe in something enough, if you believe in someone enough, well even if you stand alone, you have to stand up for them.  And I learned that if you do – they will be your friend forever and ever.

In my 30s I learned what it was like to hear the words “You have a Rare Disease.”  I learned words like “Cowden’s Syndrome.”  I learned about “tumor suppressor genes,” and “genetic mutations.”  I learned about risks and tests that could take worry to a whole new level- if I let it.

rare-disease-day-feature

In my 30s I learned what it was like to hear the words “You HAD cancer.”

In my 30s I learned which body parts are “extra.”

In my 30s I learned – because they made me- what it was like to tell your 9 year old, “The doctors are pretty sure you will have cancer.”

From mousy to mouthy.

From school teacher to Mom.

From “victim” to advocate.

All these things make me who I am today.

So much has changed, and yet at my core, my heart – I am the same.

I feel.  Deeply and truly.  I care.  Often too much.  I laugh, and I love with my whole heart.  I know pain, and I know joy, and I have been intimate with both.  I know fear and bravery.  I know that I am not always right – but when I am… watch out.  Because little will stand in my way.

I know life is not fair.

Life's not fair

god-is-good-logo

I know God is Good.

This weekend I went to 2 wakes.  One for a woman who had lived a full life, and another for a young girl who sparsely got the chance.  There are too many wakes.  There are too many things that don’t make any sense.  Too many people gone way too soon.

I can wail and cry and wither away in my sadness.  I can let fear win – or I can stand strong.

Cowden’s Syndrome tries to win.  It can strike fear in my core with a headache, or the sighting of a lump, or the feel of a bump.  But I will not let it paralyze us.  I will not let it win.

So we have our team of doctors.  We have our visits scheduled.  We check it all.  Sometimes its tiresome.  Sometimes its discouraging.  But I would rather be out in front of the boulder – than under it.

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

Through it all I know Meghan is watching.  My student – learning from how I react, how I fight, how I handle adversity.  My teacher – teaching me bravery, courage, candor, tenacity, and stamina.

always believe

I do the best I can to show her that its important to stand up for what you believe in.

I think she gets it.  I know I do.

The 30s have been a ride, and I still have a few more months to go.

In my 30s I learned what it was like to total a car.  I learned the frustration and injustice that often goes along with accidents that they would like to tell me I am powerless to fix.  I also learned that even though there are in fact some things I can not fix – there are others I can and will speak up about.

photo 1

If you happen to catch this before 10 PM – try channel 11 news “Help Me Howard.”  Working with the neighborhood to change a few things at my car accident site.

https://beatingcowdens.com/2013/06/04/howard-works-to-put-a-stop-sign-in-a-deadly-staten-island-intersection/

Advocacy.  Empowering.  Invigorating.  Much more fun than lying in wait.

We have to keep our energy up, standing up for what we belive in while we are “Beating Cowden’s!”

The Grass is Green!

thankful for the bad

Sounds ridiculously cheesy I know.  Sometimes the bad things are just crap.  And some days just stink.  But, not most of them.  Really, if I think about it- just a few days now and then really stink.  The rest of them seem to hold within them some lesson, some joy, some laugh, some memory – something that makes my spirit richer than it was before.

Don’t ever delude yourself into thinking things are perfect here.  That would be a lie.  We have our whiny, cranky, in each other’s way kind of days.  But that’s not most of them.

Lots of rotten things happen to everyone.  But lots of good things happen too.

Lots of rotten things happen when you have Cowden’s Syndrome. Sometimes the key lies in looking at things from a different perspective.

perspective

Every moment.  Every meeting.  Every diagnosis.  Every doctor’s appointment.  Every report read.  Every bill fought for.  Every new teacher.  Every new friend.  Every old friendship renewed.  Every miracle.  Every ordinary moment.  They all bring us to where we are.

Maybe I have watched too much sci-fi with my husband, but to change any one thing, any event in our lives, could alter the course of our lives.

I won’t spend time wishing things away- certainly not the good, and definitely not the bad.

Sometimes the lessons hurt.  Sometimes they make us cry.  Sometimes, like when we say goodbye to dancing school, and all its emotional joy, coupled with insufferable physical pain, we get a little sad.

Then we say, if it wasn’t for dance, we wouldn’t have learned love of the stage.  If it weren’t for dance we wouldn’t have seen a growth in confidence, and an ability to manage a growing young body.  Losing dance is hard…

But if there wasn’t Cowden’s, and chronic pain, and an inability to deal with impact – would there be swimming?

Private lessons at a local college start Saturday.  Regular practice begins the next month.  She salivates when she gets near a pool.  She just wants to get better and better.

now is right on time

New sport, new school, new friends, and old ones too.  Same old pain.  Same nasty viruses.  Some things change, and some remain the same.

Sometimes I wish (quietly to myself) that life could be a little bit easier.  Then I look at my daughter, and my husband, and my dogs, and my house, and I think – things are just fine right here.

We have each other – for the ups and downs- for the ins and outs.

They say if everyone had a few moments with everyone else’s problems, they would fight to grab their own back.

We are getting by.  We are “beating cowden’s”

The grass is green enough right here.