“We’re All in this Together…”

High School Musical – We’re All In This Together

“…Everyone is special in their own way
We make each other strong
We’re not the same
We’re different in a good way
Together’s where we belong
We’re all in this together
Once we know
That we are
We’re all-stars
And we see that
We’re all in this together
And it shows
When we stand
Hand in hand
Make our dreams come true…”
The news is filled with horror stories.  Local and abroad, young and old.  Lives lost through senseless acts.  Cries for unity, and division sometimes drown each other out.  From the grand scale, to stories closer to home, we seem collectively to be lacking the notion that, for lack of a better phrase, “We’re all in this together…”
As Rare Disease patients, one of the statistics that blew Meghan and I away early in the game, was the one that said 1 in 10 Americans suffers from a Rare Disease.  If all of these people got together, they would make the world’s THIRD most populated country.
  • 30 million people in the United States are living with rare diseases. This equates to 1 in 10 Americans or 10% of the U.S. population.
  • If all of the people with rare diseases lived in one country,  it would be the world’s 3rd most populous country.
  • Source https://globalgenes.org/rare-diseases-facts-statistics/

We have wondered through the years what good could come of uniting forces for the benefit of all Rare Disease Patients.  And slowly we are starting to see charities connect for the betterment of the big picture.  The PTEN foundation has teamed with a patient with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, to raise funds to benefit both causes, and for those that remain undiagnosed.

Please consider supporting this cause.  There is important work being done for all.

(FROM THE PTEN FOUNDATION FACEBOOK PAGE) Exciting News!!! We have a team of 12 sponsored cyclists that will support Ride4Gabe getting the word out about ‪#‎Duchenne‬ Muscular Dystrophy,‪#‎PTEN‬, and all Rare Genetic Illnesses with unmet medical needs. This is huge. You can help, please share this and our team go fund me link often. 1/2 of all proceeds will go to our PTEN Foundation. 

HTTPS://www.gofundme.com/wesupportride4gabe

THEY GET IT!  They understand, “We’re all in this together…”

I was never a huge fan on Disney’s High School Musical.  I’m not really sure I ever sat down to watch, and I likely judged without thinking.  But I’ll be the first to tell you first impressions can be flawed.  And I’ll also tell you that I ‘get it’ on a much more grand scale after last night.

For us it started with a friendship that bloomed between Meghan and one of the most compassionate young ladies I have ever met.  They’ve known each other forever, but only in recent times have they come to know each other as “friend.”  They spent time on stage together through middle school productions, and it was through this young lady we learned of a Summer Theater opportunity offered.

Meghan's "Sisters" not by birth, but through love, heart and choice.
Meghan’s “Sisters” not by birth, but through love, heart and choice.

Welcome to the

Staten Island Children’s Theatre Association

We are a self-sustaining program sponsored by the Staten Island Mental Health Society whose mission is to promote positive mental health through the arts.  We are currently celebrating our 52nd Season of bringing live theater to children and families. 

Looking for a summer change of pace, and not knowing at all what to expect, I dropped Meghan off to the Snug Harbor dance theater where these forty-five or so 9-18 year olds would spend the next 8 days generating a full “junior” production.  I walked into the back of the room for the parent meeting at the end of the first day, and I watched the children, and young adults, attentive on the floor.  This was July.  There were a lot of them.  Their respect had already been earned by the staff.  This was a “no-nonsense” set up.  We received out parent information and as we left to head home, my girl said very little about the day.  She told me she liked it though, and this was a big win.

Some of the children in the program were new, like she was.  Others had been in the program for years.  And somehow it seemed to not matter.  Ages, genders, styles, personal interests, there seemed to be very few alienating factors.  Everything seemed to be joining them together.

Each day pick up was a little smoother.  Names were a little more familiar.  Identities seemed a bit more well-established.  By the time we came home last Friday, it was hard to imagine they had only spent a bit more than 24 hours together.

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10-4 for eight days they sang, they learned, they laughed and they grew.  They focused and learned that they needed to keep …

 “Just keep ya head in the game
Just keep ya head in the game

And don’t be afraid
To shoot the outside “J”
Just keep ya head in the game…”

They became a team.  They became a group of high energy youth, who each possess their own strengths.  Instead of trying to outshine each other, they learned they would shine best together.

Last night before we got into the theater I looked around.  I saw photos from the dress rehearsal, parents and children I knew from other walks of life, and family and friends there to support my girl.  I am an over-thinker.  I always will be.  It was hard not to think one week from then she’d be, God-willing, on my couch recovering from another biopsy.  But, that was not about tonight.  Tonight was about #beatingcowdens by being part of a group, by being one of “them,” and by being on that stage in a very present way.  So I cleared my head, and I watched.

Sneaking in a Proud Mommy Moment 🙂

I watched a play about finding your own identity, supporting each other, not being linked into your “label,” following your passions, learning trust, and forgiveness and so much more.

I never was a fan of “High School Musical,” until last night.  Last night I realized that there was such a timely, deeper meaning.

Truly, “We’re all in this together…”  and in the words of Ben Franklin, “We must all hang together, or most assuredly we will all hang separately…” It’s time.

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It’s time we stop seeing labels, and who we think people are.  It’s time we start learning who they really are.  It’s time to start celebrating the good.  Because there is much good to be celebrated.

On an island knee-deep in a very real drug crisis, hitting every single walk of life, I am filled with gratitude for SICTA, for giving children something to focus on, and for instilling a positive message of self-worth and deeper meaning.  I can not name all the adults who touched my girl’s life this week for fear of leaving someone out, but YOU, YOU are leading by example.  I  am full of gratitude.

Life #beatingcowdens is riddled with twists and turns.  You gave us a brief respite.

And, as the lovely young lady took Meghan from the steps of the theater and invited her to the diner “with the cast,” so many things came together.

“We’re All in This Together,”  indeed.  THANK YOU #SICTA

“1,2,3…BRAVA!”

 

This Matters

A few weeks ago, as we were preparing for World Rare Disease Day, my principal allowed Meghan to speak to my school.  She did an assembly for the entire school, first grades 3-5 and then grades K-2.

In both assemblies she showed her video, although we clipped the beginning from the little guys.

In both assemblies she spoke about Cowden’s Syndrome, following her mission to raise awareness.

Our Student Council actively worked to collect denim as part of a fundraiser for the mission.  They were amazing.

One little girl, our first grade friend Emma shared her journal with Meghan.

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Meghan and Emma
                                                     Meghan and Emma

Then she shared the journal with the whole school.  We are so proud of Emma and thankful for her bravery.  It felt really good to know the mission of awareness was working, coupled with intelligent compassion as young as first grade!

We had the fundraiser on the 21st of February.  The $13,000 has been dispersed, but the lessons remain.

Children in my hallways ask about “Meghan” as if she is one of them.  They want to know how she is, and what she’s up to.  A few even ask when she is coming back.  These are the young, bright eyed reasons I love my job.

Plus one more

About 2 weeks ago a young lady sought me out to give this to me.  This was a labor for her, truly a labor of love.  Writing is not easy, but clearly compassion is a natural emotion for her.

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We are getting somewhere.  Meghan wants the world to know.  With promising children like this on her side, she’s developing the advocates young.

With much love and gratitude, we remain

#beatingcowdens

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

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

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

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

Somehow we find each other…

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

College Graduation - 1995
College Graduation – 1995

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

At all.

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

I think it was Wednesday at work.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

meghan boot 2

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

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

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

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

“How does the foot feel?”

Meghan, “Much better.”

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

meghan boot 1

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Fair enough.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

What if every day was a snow day?

Now before you jump through the page – hear me out.

The kid in you may be cheering.  “SNOW!  FUN!  PLAY! ”

And the grown up in you may be growling.  “TIRED OF SHOVELING AND GETTING STUCK AND BEING COLD.”

But actually, neither is exactly what I meant.

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I got a message around noon that my daughter was hurting.  The pain has been bad again.  The weather doesn’t help.  I fought through a wicked virus last week, and there is always the possibility of it eating at her.  Her nerves are shot.  The thyroid consult is Thursday.  Consciously or not – she is worried.  I’d be shocked if she wasn’t.  I am too.

And between the weather, and the stress, there is the pain.  It started a few weeks ago in the shoulder.  It found its way to the ankle.  Physical therapy in between.  Swim practice ends up being haphazard and inconsistent.  My heart breaks.  I am distracted.  Most of the time.

But this afternoon, when we left school together, and there were 8 inches of snow on the ground where it hadn’t been a few hours earlier – no one we were about to meet would have had any real idea of what I wrote in the last 2 paragraphs.

After settling Meghan into the warming car I set about clearing it off.  Its a decent car, but a sedan,not an SUV, and while it can handle 2 or 3 inches, it is NOT designed to drive in 8 inches of anything.  I ended up on my bottom twice as I finally got the windows and roof clear enough to be safe and legal.

Then, I decided to pull out.  Well I went through all the motions anyway.  There was lots of spinning and not much moving.

Then there were people all around my car.  Some I knew, others I don’t think I ever met.  And for a moment getting my car out of the spot was the most important thing on their agenda.  They guided me as I behaved like a ditsy distracted woman.  They had no idea how full my head was, and they passed no judgement.  They were patient.  I got free.

I kept driving, ready to make the first right when a woman waved me away.  Someone was stuck.

I proceeded straight slowly, and when I tried to move slightly to the left to be sure I cleared someone in the road, I quickly ended up on the curb.

Fortunately no cars were in the way.  But I was not moving.

And then… there were people.  New people.  Surrounding my car.  Strategizing.  Thoughts of Thursdays appointment still waffling around in my head, I desperately tried to focus.  They worked at it.  I did as they said.  And in a few moments, I was free again.

I kept to the main roads for as much of the rest of the trip as I could manage.  And I was doing well until I had to stop to let a car pass at the service road.  Stuck again.  This time I had the wherewithal to free the car on my own.  And as I turned down my block, there was a sense of relief.

So I pulled up alongside our other car to quickly shovel out the spot in front of our house.  Then I got in the car to back it up.  Spinning wheels.  Sliding.

Then there was a neighbor.  Then another.  People I have lived near for 13 years, but I am embarrassed to say I formally met for the first time today.

They aren't actually touching - but it's 2 inches at best.

This time the predicament was a bit more dicey.  My new car was literally inches from the old one.  A slide in the wrong direction was going to cost me the front corner panel of one, OR BOTH, of my cars.

Hesitant I called my parents house.  I knew my Dad would make it down and help me make sense of it.  I frantically shoveled until I could see the blacktop of the street, looking over my shoulder and holding my breath as a few cars sporadically made their way down the street.  Our other neighbor, a former bus driver, came over and strategized a bit.  Before I knew it the two of them were moving my Saturn out of the way.  As my stepdad’s familiar smile greeted my from the window of his truck – my neighbors had safely parked both of my cars – without them ever touching!

Relieved.  Grateful.  Exhausted.  I gleefully accepted my Dad’s news that he’d be using the snow blower on the back of our property and I busily got to work on the front.  Street to street property is nice… most of the time.

Guess we should have taken the flower pot in?

Some time close to five – a few minutes before my husband got home, I walked my sore back into the house to greet the face of my wiped out “I’ve totally had it.” kid.

Close to two hours after I had left my job, I had to stop for a minute and reflect.  The chaos of my mind was still swirling about my head.

I chatted with “The Captain” for about 15 minutes in awe of exactly how many angels had crossed my path today.  By my count at least 15 people had in some way “paid it forward” to me and my girl.

And I work less than a mile from my house.

So what if every day was a snow day?  Well we may have lots more chances to find out.  But, more importantly, what if we TREATED each other, EVERY day, as if it was a snow day.  What a wonderful world it would be.

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Thankful for… that first piece of pie!

I was going to avoid boring everyone with the same drivel that has been written over and over today, but I couldn’t resist.

It’s hard not to think about what you are thankful for on a day earmarked for reflection.

So, here it goes…

I am thankful for my husband.  He stays behind the scenes all the time.  He never looks for the credit in anything we do, yet he is the driving force behind our marriage and our family.  He knows when to make me laugh, and when to hold my hand.  I am not sure how I could have gotten through this year (or the 12 before it) without him.

I am thankful for my daughter.  She reminds me every day what is important in life.  She inspires me to push through adversity, and to keep on going – even when the going gets rough.  We share a lot (maybe more than I would like… darn Cowden’s Syndrome) and I could not ever ask for a kinder, more compassionate, loving daughter.  Even on the days we go head to head – I am the proudest Mom.

I am thankful for my “furry children,” my Allie and Lucky.  Their unceasing loyalty, their love and companionship bring such joy to all of us.  Plus – there is nothing like rubbing a belly on a stressed out day to make you feel better!

I am thankful for my parents, and their “being there.”  Sometimes that’s all you need is for someone to be there.

I am thankful for my siblings… all of them so very different, yet all so incredibly important to me.  I am thankful that even on the days we don’t see eye to eye – our love is strong,

I am thankful for my nephews, and the joy they bring, just by being themselves.

I am thankful beyond words for my grandparents.  Their support through these last 39 years, has been pivotal in my development as a person.  I am certainly a better, wiser, stronger woman – having learned from their example.  I continue to learn from them each day; lessons of love and compassion.  Not many people my age are so fortunate. 

I am thankful for my home – more this year.  I celebrate the fact that we passed through “Superstorm Sandy” virtually unscathed.  I am prayerful for those who have lost so much, and I am trying so hard -to recognize the “small things.”

I am thankful for my friends – near and far.  I am thankful for my local friends, my college friends, my friends from work.  I am thankful for the friends I see often, and the ones I hardly see at all.  I am thankful for my “cyber” friends, that I have “met” through support groups, and this blog.  The joy of knowing you are not alone can never be understated.

I am thankful for my health.  I know that may sound strange, considering the whole premise of this blog is about a genetic disorder that compromises the health of myself and my daughter – but hear me out.  I have this year alone undergone 2 major operations, and recovered.  I survived breast cancer without ever needing treatment.  I am able to walk, to run, to care for my child, to exercise, and move freely about my world.  While I have health concerns, and Meghan and I will always have them – I recognize how much health we do have, and I am thankful.

Finally, and the one thing that brought the biggest smile to my face all day – I am thankful for my daughter’s first piece of pie.

Meghan has always had food allergies – gluten, dairy and soy.  This year we made her a pie by rolling out her cookie dough as the crust.  We filled the middle with coconut milk ice cream, and topped it with her syrup.  She was so excited.  It wasn’t until I cut her a piece and she asked me how she was supposed to eat it, that I realized she had never had pie.  Sometimes the little things – are the big things!

Happy Thanksgiving one and all.

Friends…

It was hard to believe it had been so many years since we were all together.  It was even harder to imagine it was over 15 years since we all shared space, time, and our souls in SUNY New Paltz.  It was a far cry from most of our late nights at P & Gs.

As a matter of fact , as we sat across from each other at The Cheesecake Factory in New Jersey, two of them pregnant and all of us chatting about our children, and old times -often in the same breath- you never would have imagined the amount of time that passed since we last spoke – face to face.

But the food was decent, and the conversation refreshing, and I found myself wishing it could happen more often – or last a lot longer.  It hardly seemed right to get up when only a few hours had passed.  But each of our lives called us away.  To children, and husbands, and lives that needed tending to.

As we hugged each other, and I watched my two friends ‘baby bumps” bang into each other, I was reminded of the reality that real friendships truly do last forever.  We picked up with each other as though graduation had been last week, and although there was so much more to say, there wasn’t a moment that lacked conversation.

Facebook has been a blessing for us.  A way to keep tabs on each other, and keep track of the major happenings.  These ladies used Facebook as a means of support for me over the last six months, when some days it seemed the sky was falling.  They reached out to me – as if we were still next door neighbors in New Paltz.  Facebook arranged our meeting last night.  As a simple group message “Hey can we pull this off?” – and I am so grateful we did.

See in order to stay sane, life has to be about more than Cowden’s Syndrome.  It has to be about more than knee pain that wakes my girl up in the middle of the night after only 4 days without her Celebrex.  (At least we tried!)

Life has to be about more than infections that scare me half to death, viruses that take hold way too fast, and doctors that want to fix it all but don’t know how.

It can’t always be about tumors, and, “Are they growing or not?”

It can’t always be about the tests and the screenings, like tomorrow’s colonoscopy.

The recovery room at tomorrow’s colonoscopy site!

Those things are always going to be part of our lives – forever.  They aren’t going away.  That is the reality of Cowden’s Syndrome.

But the real reality, in the world where we know too well that “Everyone has Something,” is that it is necessary to make time to hug old friends.  It is helpful to the soul, to relive old times, and to sometimes sit and have dinner with people who stood beside you years ago, and who have made it clear they are prepared to do the same now.