“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.

 

“There’s a bit of magic in everything, and then some loss to even things out…”

As I walked away from the pizza place, holding my girl’s hand, with tears streaming freely down my face the song “Magic and Loss” by Lou Reed crept out of my subconscious and began playing with frightening accuracy inside my head.  I have thought of the song from time to time over the last 20 or so years.  The album was first introduced to me by a dear friend soon after the passing of my beloved cousin “Angel Meghan” at the age of 6 in 1991.  As an elementary school teacher I have been known to “think” in books, but its more unusual for me to “think” in song.  It isn’t too often that a song “speaks” to me…

When you pass through the fire, you pass through humble
You pass through a maze of self doubt
When you pass through humble, the lights can blind you
Some people never figure that out

You pass through arrogance, you pass through hurt
You pass through an ever present past
And it’s best not to wait for luck to save you
Pass through the fire to the light

Pass through the fire to the light
Pass through the fire to the light
It’s best not to wait for luck to save you
Pass through the fire to the light

I have a brother.

Birth congratulations to my Dad and my brother’s Mom, Kelly would be overdue by about 24.5 years.  But I have a brother.  And I am damned glad I do.

I have always loved him.  Always known he was there.  Always followed the tales of his life from afar.  Always sent a card.  But, never really got to spend any quality time with him.  Knew he was well loved.  Knew he was tons of fun.  But never really got to KNOW him.  Not by anyone’s fault.  Life and circumstances have a way of getting in the way.

And then some time in November I had to make a phone call.  I had to call him in the middle of the life he established Texas, and tell him Dad was sick.  Quite sick.

I had known for a few weeks.  I had seen him in the ICU.  I knew about the jaundice.  I knew in my gut things were not good.  But it took weeks to get Dad to let me tell my sister the full extent of the problems looming.  Then finally he let me call my brother.

And while the weight of the guilt of carrying that secret was coming off of my shoulders, I knew it was delivering a crushing blow miles and miles away.

A few days to digest, and then another call.  “I think you need to come.”

And that was all I needed to say.

He stepped off the plane a few days later at exactly the most perfect time.  He parked himself right in Dad’s apartment and stayed.  He was there for those overnights that were getting a bit tricky – to say the least.

As you pass through the fire, your right hand waving
There are things you have to throw out
That caustic dread inside your head
Will never help you out

You have to be very strong, ’cause you’ll start from zero
Over and over again
And as the smoke clears there’s an all consuming fire
Lyin’ straight ahead

Lyin’ straight ahead
Lyin’ straight ahead
As the smoke clears there’s an all consuming fire
Lyin’ straight ahead

Dad was getting sicker.  Quickly.  And despite our initial desires to deny the reality, we knew that we were walking uncharted territory.

I grew up with two sisters -one older, and one younger.  We grew up understanding each other’s strengths and weaknesses, and working on love throughout.  Now I was in a different trio.  A different dynamic.  For a different purpose.  One none of us wanted to face – but we were there.  And the “All consuming fire” was “lyin’ straight ahead.”

We formed Dad’s “Team,” his three children, with whom he developed three distinctly different relationships through the years.  We took the best of what each of us had to offer.  We laughed at old stories.  We cried out of sadness and frustration, and anger and disappointment.  We held each other with gratitude for the man whose common link between us all had done wonders to bring us together.

Waiting for Dad’s procedure at Columbia Presbyterian – the one that was supposed to be 45 minutes, and was unsuccessful at 3 hours- we were all in quite a state.  My brother, aware of Meghan’s countless procedures at one point looked at me awestruck. “You do THIS all the time?”

Well – not quite THAT… but to some extent yes.

And there were times that we sat, each on our own personal hell.  Wondering, worrying, agonizing, reflecting, and above all desperately wanting to make it better.  We sought the magic wand… and realized it was already in place.

They say no one person can do it all
But you want to in your head
But you can’t be Shakespeare and you can’t be Joyce
So what is left instead

You’re stuck with yourself and a rage that can hurt you
You have to start at the beginning again
And just this moment this wonderful fire
Started up again

When you pass through humble, when you pass through sickly
When you pass through I’m better than you all
When you pass through anger and self deprecation
And have the strength to acknowledge it all

When the past makes you laugh and you can savor the magic
That let you survive your own war
You find that that fire is passion
And there’s a door up ahead not a wall

Dad’s struggles.  Dad’s worries.  Dad’s heartache.  His pain.  They were about to end.  He was going to be free from his broken body.  He was going to be free of his suffering and his pain.

But what about us?

I know all about the truth, and I believe deeply in Heaven.  But I am selfish.  I miss him.  I miss my sounding board.  My ally in all endeavors.  My confidant for the “blow by blow” struggles that were too tough for others to hear.

“There’s a door up ahead not a wall…”

We met at the cemetery today.  We stood for a while.  We cried a little.  We prayed a little.  We held each other a lot.  We know he’s not there.  He is in the crystal blue sky and the winds that blow, and in the hearts of all who love him.  But I admit to not shaking the selfishness.

We ate pizza as a family.  The conversation was easy and light.  Except when Meghan butted up real close to her uncle to talk about her biopsy Tuesday morning. Darned Cowden’s syndrome won’t cut her a rest.   She told him all about the arrival time, and the procedure.  She spoke like a pro – someone easily twice her age.

So much uncertainty.  So much loss.  So much worry.  So much… so soon.

She has taken an extra love to her Uncle Shane these last few weeks.  This whirlwind that took her Grandpa from her just as their relationship was budding, seems to have left her a pretty cool uncle to share some love with.

As you pass through fire as you pass through fire
Tryin’ to remember it’s name
When you pass through fire lickin’ at your lips
You cannot remain the same

And if the building’s burning move towards that door
But don’t put the flames out
There’s a bit of magic in everything
And then some loss to even things out

Some loss to even things out
Some loss to even things out
There’s a bit of magic in everything
And then some loss to even things out – Lou Reed

I have a brother.  And now I have to let him go.  But not far.  And certainly not forever.  For no one can live through what we lived through these last few weeks and remain the same.  There are experiences once shared that can not be forgotten.  There is respect earned that can never be lost.  The lesson, the reminder that life is fragile and fleeting remains forever.  I always had 2 sisters.  And I always loved them so.

But now, with an ache in my heart, and tears on my face, I have a brother too.

“There’s a bit of magic in everything, and then some loss to even things out…”

Photo credit -Meghan 12/28/13
With a “Smile” from Grandpa Tom

This one is for my favorite Marine

price of freedom2

There is a small sign on the first floor of the Veteran’s Hospital in Brooklyn, NY that expresses this sentiment.

It is small enough that I missed it the first week my Dad, a Vietnam Veteran was in the ICU for what they initially suspected to be liver failure.

But I noticed it last week.  Dad died on December 4th after a short, yet powerful battle with pancreatic cancer.

The Price of Freedom, of our freedom, the basic ones that we are all guilty of taking for granted at some point – is visible at that VA Hospital.  It is visible on the faces of the soldiers as they trek the halls, their journeys each through the battlefields of their own personal wars.

I have been away from my blog for a long time, and as I sit to write in the middle of the night, I can feel the tension finally beginning to lift from my neck.  Writing is my therapy and its cheaper and easier than the wait and the copay at any doctor’s office.

Dad didn’t have Cowden’s Syndrome.  Or at least we don’t think he did.  As a matter of fact, prior to his death, with the exception of one procedure – he was never really sick a day in his life.  When we would go to his appointments together, nurses would repeat in disbelief, “You don’t take ANY medicine?”  And he didn’t.  Not even a Tylenol.

Which is one of the things that has been bothering me so much.

I have held in my thoughts on this out of respect for Dad and his privacy – but since he encouraged my writing I am fairly sure he wouldn’t mind if I shared just a bit.

Dad saw active combat in the USMC during the late 1960s in Vietnam.  And besides the typical tortures of war, Dad was exposed to Agent Orange.

Now his body was seemingly unaffected from the toxins, but we theorized on more than one occasion that perhaps that toxic exposure triggered my own gene mutation into Cowden’s Syndrome.  Of course no one will ever know.  And even as I wonder if his cancer was a result of his own toxic exposure, I know I will never be quite sure.  His Dad, my Grandpa, died of pancreatic cancer in 1993.

But pancreatic cancer IS a genetic disease.  And even though in 90% of the cases, the genes spontaneously mutate, there are 10% where the genes are passed within families.  I don’t know the exact genes responsible, although I will in the coming months, as the genetic counselor where Dad was diagnosed will be contacting my siblings and I for testing.

More genetic testing?  It’s a thought too overwhelming to process right now.  That will come with time I guess.

I can’t help but wonder when there is too much knowledge.  I know that sounds foolish, coming from someone whose life was saved by the early warnings afforded to me after my Cowden’s diagnosis.  However, there is a point, a fine line, where you start to wonder when too much knowledge becomes a bad thing.

Tonight my thoughts are all over the map.  Tonight I prepare mentally for the wake and funeral over the next few days.  Tonight, I think about my Dad – the man.

Dad enlisted in the United States Marine Corps right out of high school.  He saw 13 months of active combat before returning to marry his high school sweetheart, my mom.  But, as young relationships so often go, this one ended a few years later.

Dad spent years trying to get settled in his heart after the trauma he experienced in the war.  He married again, and had a son, my brother.  But that marriage was not to be either.

Dad seemed to have a need to move like the wind for a lot of years, and our relationship through college was pretty distant.  Then in 1999, a year before my wedding, we began to reconnect, and our relationship had become closer each passing year.

wedding photo

Dad was not a saint.  But he was a good man with a good heart.  He was strong in mind, body and spirit.  Dad did the best he could with what he had where he was – always.

I spent lots of time working to understand the trauma that follows Veterans home.  Because of that I will always respect my father and the ways he tried his best.

But if I am honest, I am angry.  Really angry.  Not at my Dad, but at the cancer that snatched him from me just as we were coming closer and closer together.  The damned cancer that cut short a relationship just starting to bloom.  We had plans.  We were going to see the cherry blossoms in DC in the spring.  We still had things to do.

car-magnet-cure-pancreatic-cancer-purple-ribbon

Instead I am left with another ribbon to add to the collection.  One none of us ever wanted to own.

Dad often spoke about life being a puzzle, and each of us having a piece to contribute.  From our perspective its hard to see where we fit, and how our piece changes the landscape.  But, when our job is finished, our piece is placed into the puzzle – the greater puzzle – the one with no definitive number of pieces.  While this happens, our surrounding pieces are created.  The puzzle grows, visible in its entirety only to our the Creator.

As Dad’s piece was being placed into that puzzle, I was being reconnected with my brother, and bonding with my sister.  We learned to work together, to embrace our gifts, and our differences as strengths.  As a unit we were an unstoppable force getting our father anything he needed during these last difficult weeks, and I am so proud to be part of that “team.”

My father’s inner strength defies description, as he journeyed through his last days focused on a few key things he was compelled to accomplish.  Almost impossible to eat comfortably, Dad carefully conserved his energy and skillfully kept his body functional until he was able to receive his definitive diagnosis.  A diagnosis I am certain he fought for so that his children would have the ability for advance screening.

marine's mission

Dad was admitted to the VA Hospital on Thanksgiving Day, and lived for a week, as a parade of family and friends got to spent time by his side.

I walked the halls of that hospital quite a bit last week, reading prints of the NYC Vietnam Memorial such as these, as my already deep respect for our country’s veterans grew.

VietnamNYC

VietnamNYC2

We laughed, and cried, and told stories, and played music.  We held Dad’s hands in the moments before he went to meet the angels.  We were gifted with time to say goodbye.

My tears are not for my father.  He is finally free.  He paid the price for our freedom for all of his adult life.  Now he is at peace.

My tears are because I want more time.  My tears are selfish.  But I guess I good sign that you really love someone is when you can’t seem to bring yourself to say goodbye.

There will be time for thinking and reflecting on Dad, his life, his death, genetics, and long-term ramifications.

But for now, I have to get some rest.  Three days ahead to celebrate the life of my favorite Marine.

Semper Fi, Daddy.  I love you.

marine

Freedom IS NOT Free!

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

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

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

veterans day 4

I am the proud daughter of a Vietnam Veteran, and the grateful granddaughter to 3 WWII veterans.  Although 2 of my grandfathers are no longer here with us in body – their spirits remain strong in my soul.

All of the men I mentioned served in war.  All of them returned home to us.  All of them shaped my life and helped me become the woman I am today.

veterans day pop thompson

Pop T. came home after serving in Iwo Jima, to raise a family of 9 – 8 boys and a girl.  Visiting their house as a child was certainly wildly fun.  My father is the oldest child, and my sister and I were the first grandchildren.  We enjoyed time with Pop who had left behind a promising athletic future before his service in the war.  He had time to impart much of his wisdom before he passed in 1993.  My only sadness is for my many cousins that never got to know him the way I did.  There is no denying his legacy.

veterans day ggpa

GGPa came into our lives later when Mom married Ken.  I was 15 years old, and my sister was 18.  Ken wrapped his arms and his heart around both of us, and truly made my world a better place.  At the time his parents, who came to be known to us as GGPa and GGMa had no grandchildren of their own.  I was so flattered that they accepted us and enveloped us with such love.  GGPa is gone over a year now, but in our years together I got to know the definition of “gentleman” through him.  He was a positive influence, a pleasure to be around and a treat to talk to.  He is missed and loved and appreciated.

veterans day pop and gigi

Pop G. is one of the most amazing men I have ever had the pleasure of knowing.  The fact that I will turn 40 next week, and I can recount my day by saying “I spent some time with my grandparents,” in and of itself is amazing.  Not to mention  that they are 93 and 94 – living in the second floor of their own home.  I grew up during my most formative years, in the first floor of that home.  I had the daily love and support of my grandparents.  When I speak of Pop, and the influence he has had, even I am at a loss for words.  His faith dictates how he lives.  He loves God, his family, and all others before himself.  I am so blessed to listen to his stories, and to revel in years of beautiful memories, while still making more!

veterans day dad

And then there is my father.  The free spirit whose love of adventure has guided him down many paths in his life.  We have conversations that always leave me deep in thought.  He has experiences that are broad, from far and wide.  Most recently in the last few years that road led him right back closer to home, and I have been so grateful to have him just around the corner.  My girl has gotten to know him, and always remarks about his smile.  He tells her he smiles because of her.   His genuine heart, and the depth of his love have made him the person he is today – one I am truly glad to have in my life.

There are children who seek desperately one male influence in their lives.  The amount of time I have been afforded with each of these men is a gift.  I will not squander the knowledge, and life lessons I desperately try to soak up like a sponge.

veterans day 3

Each of them saw things I do not dare imagine.  Each of them lived experiences I will never understand.  Each of them sacrificed, time, love, health, and so much more.

I can only imagine that at some point they have all wondered why they got to come home when some of their comrades did not.  And, while I can not ever know the plan – I can, on my knees thank God for returning each of them safely so they could live their lives.

veterans day 1

Not everyone is as fortunate.

I have received a gift too great to squander, too valuable to toss aside, and too personal not to wear it close to my heart each day.  For it is because of them that I am.  It is because of them that I have learned poise, strength, and grace under pressure.  It is because of them that I know to love so deeply.  It is because of them I have been blessed with my daughter, unique, RARE, and determined to change the world.

Stand for the Pledge of Allegiance and the “Star Spangled Banner.”  Think about the words.  Feel them in your heart.  Educate yourself.  Learn about the sacrifices made to make this country.

veterans day 5

You may want to complain that life isn’t perfect.  You may want to complain about the country.  And while I can agree that many things are not as they should be, remember what my grandfather said to me, “The Constitution is an extremely well-written document, the flaws are in its execution.”

And regardless of your political stance on any war ever – support the soldiers.  Those men and women are there out of a selfless love of country.  They are making sacrifices far beyond what we see and what we know.

veterans day 2

Precise language.

I am PROUD to be an AMERICAN, and even prouder to be related to so many who loved this country enough to fight to defend the principles it was founded upon.

Veteran’s Day. November 11.  FREEDOM ISN’T FREE.

veterans day 6

“I hope you never lose your sense of wonder…”

Meghan left tonight for the Father Daughter Dance with her Dad.  I am always so grateful for him, but especially on nights like tonight when he can show her the time of her life.  She needs that time – to be happy and carefree.  She needs time to just be a kid.

Father Daughter Dance November 2009
Father Daughter Dance November 2009

I looked back on some old photos from dances in years past.  I know it sounds cliche, but I can not believe where the time has gone.  It stung especially I think this weekend, as my girl lost her last baby tooth, and came to the realization that Santa, and the tooth fairy, and all that magical mystery of childhood isn’t “real” in the way she had thought.

Father Daughter Dance November 2010
Father Daughter Dance November 2010

I think she took it better than me.

I cried a lot this weekend.

I think I am angry too if I am honest.  I think I am not just sad, but angry.

And that’s ok.  I have to let myself feel even the ugly emotions when they are in there.

I am angry about Cowden’s Syndrome.   I am angry about the cloud it carries, even on the sunny days.  We always seem to need to pack an umbrella in some game of anticipation – not designed to be won, just played.  Forever.

I have said before, and I will say again – if it was just me…

Father Daughter Dance November 201
Father Daughter Dance November 2011

But it’s not.  It’s her too.  That is reality, and it really does torture me sometimes.

All parents feel pangs of sadness as their children grow.  And, Meghan being my one and only, I am sure the pangs sting extra hard.  But, there is more than that.  We deal with something most parents don’t.

As her age increases the looming cancer threats that Cowden’s carries with it increase as well.  At her age, the biggest threat is thyroid cancer, and we are battling the beast head on.  We have dealt with, and continue to fight with the AVM in her knee, and we have gotten past the lipoma in her back.  All  thanks to Cowden’s Syndrome.

But, as she grows and matures, so does her body, and with it her wisdom.

She looks quizzically at my silicone breasts and her own developing ones.  She wonders.  Sometimes to herself.  Sometimes aloud.  When will it be my turn?

She asks if she will be able to have children, or if she will need to have her uterus out first.  She asks that if she does have children… do they have to have a PTEN mutation?  Do they have to have Cowden’s Syndrome?

Too many questions to flood the mind of my 4 foot 11 9 year old.  Too many questions for the string bean with the developing body.  Too many worries for my baby girl.

I am angry.  But thankfully she is not.  She takes each day as it comes.  She accepts the eventuality that one day the biopsy will not be negative.

Father Daughter Dance January 2013
Father Daughter Dance January 2013

I sheltered her for a long time, but they made me lay it on the line this year.  So we had the “cancer” talk in the waiting room of Memorial Sloan Kettering last month.  I told her there was no guarantee she would get cancer.  So she spun the question and asked me how many people with Cowden’s I interact with have NOT had cancer.  The number is small.

So we talked about the benefit we have that others don’t.  We talked about how constant screening means we will beat whatever beast tried to get at us.  We will be vigilant.

dance in the rain

We will win.

I get angry sometimes.  She just finds other ways to make me smile.  She keeps my heart soft.  She is my rock.  Wise beyond her years, and still a kid at heart.

I hope you and Daddy dance your hearts out tonight!

Father’s Day

Some days it’s not about Cowden’s Syndrome, or tumors, or doctor’s appointments.  Some days life just is about life.

Father’s Day.  A day to celebrate the fathers in our lives.

My husband is the best dad in the world.  I mean it.  And he is a pretty amazing husband too.  There aren’t enough words to describe how lucky I am.

My Dad, tries his best.  He and my mom divorced when I was 5.  He has struggled with his own life through the years, but we have stayed in contact.  He does the best he can.

My stepdad, married my mom 24 years ago.  He inherited 2 bratty teenagers and has loved us as his own from the beginning.  He has put us through college, paid for 2 weddings, fixed houses, and been there through it all.

My Pop, my mom’s Dad is 92.  A WWII veteran, and a retired firefighter, he is amazing.  He and Grandma still live on the second floor of their own house.  We lived in their house for 15 years, and they became a second set of parents for us. Now they are Great Grandparents.  They pick up my daughter on half days, and love spending time with her.

Today my heart is heavy though. My stepdad’s father is suffering.  When his son married my mom 24 years ago, they had no grandchildren.  They didn’t expect to start out inheriting two teenagers, but they did.  And they handled it gracefully.  Over time Grandpa came to love us in a very special way.  He is especially attached to my daughter, who he calls “Sapphire.”  He even made sure she had a special sapphire necklace to always remember her name.  He has been brave his whole life and has fought cancer in more places than I can count.  He has been in the hospital for a month now, and this is it.  He is ready.  He has had last rites.  He has asked his boys to take care of their mom.  He has told God he is ready to go.  So we wait.

Today we remember the fathers, grandfathers, and great grandfathers that have touched our lives.  We hug some, and we miss some.  We acknowledge their impact on us.

And today in my house, we whisper constantly a prayer to God.  Today it’s not about test results or surgeries.  Today we ask that He be merciful.  Grandpa is ready to rest…