A Letter to Me as a “Mommy-to-Be”

Dear 30 Year Old Me on Mother’s Day,

Listen up.  Yes, you – acting as the general contractor; living through and participating in your house overhaul, while carefully moving your pregnant belly out-of-the-way.  Do me a favor and sit down a minute.  You don’t sit much, but you focus better when you do.

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Life is hectic, I know.  You’re working full-time, working on the house full-time, and trying to wrap your head around this Mom thing.  You have a lot to do.  I get it.  There are papers to process, contractors to fight with, lessons to plan, furniture to order, walls to paint, and tests to grade.  There is this small, ok, large human growing inside you.  There is so much to think about, but there isn’t time to stop.

Do me a favor, and make time?  I mean it.  Force it in.  Make time for you and your husband to just be.  Make time to laugh.  Make time to rest.  Make time to get in the car and drive the not so far distance to see the handful of friends that have always had your back.  Because, believe it or not, your new life will make this chaos look like a day in the spa.

Those friends, they are high quality.  And you will always have each other’s backs.  But, they will have husbands, and children and houses, and obligations of their own.  Before you know it you’ll be keeping in touch with each other’s lives via Facebook and blog posts.  (Yes, you’ll have a blog, but I’ll explain that later.)  You’ll regret not seeing them more.  Not sneaking in a few more dinners out, or some drinks and dessert.  The time for that will come again, but it’ll be much later.  And sometimes you’ll get lonely.  Really lonely.

While you’re still sitting down, reign in some of those day dreams about the smooth way everything is going to go once the baby joins you.  Broaden your definition of healthy into a “spectrum.”  Refocus yourself onto the important jobs of motherhood; guardian, advocate, supporter, guide, confidant, conscience, role-model, nurse, doctor, therapist, just to name a few.  Don’t bother looking at Pinterest.  Your life doesn’t work there.  Actually, MOST lives don’t work there.

That baby inside of you isn’t going to stay there forever.  One day it’s going to make its way into the world in grand fashion.  And she, (yep, you’re wrong, it’s a girl) will change your life in ways you could never imagine.  By the way, if you can get through to that doctor before the induction, try to save yourself the bags of Pitocin and the HOURS of labor.  She’s got a big head just like you.  The C-Section is inevitable.

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And, she’ll be the biggest baby in the NICU.  Right from the start you’ll hear about her feistiness.  The nurses don’t lie.  Right from the start you’ll have to change your perceptions of how this mothering thing was going to go.  From the very first hours you’ll have to learn to go with the flow because you’re about to set down a path you could not have imagined.

For about 18 months you will sleep rarely.  She will cry and scream and yell in ways that your family will forget, but you will remember for life.  You will learn how to function on raw nerve.  You will use the baby pouch you got skillfully to sneak in an hour or two of sleep without dropping her.  Because you know she’s not “spoiled” even though she only rests on top of you.  You know it’s more.  You know it’s her belly and you will hang on when others want easy answers and excuses.  You will fight for her because you are her mom.  And THAT is what mothers do.

By the time she’s one there will have already been a week-long hospital stay and a surgery that left the doctors “perplexed.”  This is only the beginning. Dig in hard and sharpen your instincts.  Trust yourself.  Ask tons of questions.  Learn early that doctors, and therapists are a dime a dozen.  Settle for nothing less than the best.

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Because those therapists, those Early Intervention therapists, and the Physical Therapist you’ll pretty much use for life, will have some of the greatest influence on your parenting, and on the health and growth of your girl.  They will change your world.  Listen carefully and learn.

This girl is going to get stuck like a pin cushion and shuffled from specialist to specialist.  She’s going to confuse them, and amaze them.  She will start to retreat into herself.  All of a sudden she’ll be two, and not making a word.  Hang on and don’t let her go.  She’s not autistic, and never was, but she is medically complicated and she is not well.  You will try as hard as you can.  You will read, you will frantically research.  You will seek out expensive alternative specialists.  You will even record her agony for your husband so you can press on for her care as a united force.

You will fire pediatricians, doctors and specialists alike.  You will slowly find your confidence.  You will become a master record keeper.  You will try things that are “different” just to see what happens.  You will step over your toddler for two weeks as she tantrums on the floor when you take away her milk.  You’ll worry that she’ll never eat again.  You’ll get angry when you realize that the food she’s eating is making her more unwell.  You’ll learn about the immune system and the GI tract.  And by the time she’s two and a half you’ll get a whole lot of babbling.  By the time she’s three and a half the speech therapist will cut her loose.  Her belly will be flat.  She will be much calmer, and she’ll be in a regular preschool with some “transitional and sensory issues.”

Her baby sitters will be tortured by your need to have every detail written down.  Because, like a detective you will spend nights poring over things to make connections.  You will have volumes of daily diaries, and binders of lab results.  You’ll never leave and office without uttering the words, “Can I have a copy of that?”

She’ll grow physically and intellectually.  You’ll cherish every moment extra, because you’ll know from where she came.  She’ll have surgery after surgery, and a few more hospital stays.  There will be scans and specialists to check that knee pain, the joint pain, and every other bit of chronic pain that will plague her young body.  It will hurt you to watch, but you will be strong for her.  You will not give up.  You will not give in.  You will press on.

And then in third grade there will be that genetic diagnosis that will turn life on its ear again.  “Cowden’s Syndrome,”  a “PTEN Mutation.”  And you will start to study genetics.

But while you are studying you’ll learn about the health risks and you’ll focus on solutions.  You’ll try desperately to wrap your head around the realities of this tumor provoking condition.  You’ll hear the word “cancer” more times in reference to your girl then you’ll care to count.  Then, you’ll get that positive test result too.  That day when guilt takes over for a while.  That day when you realize she doesn’t just have your hair and your smile.  She also had this syndrome because YOU have it too.  Don’t hang out in the pity party for too long.  It’s not good for either of you.  Trust in the grand plan.  

Oh, and those relatives you love so much, the parents and grandparents, they won’t be around forever.  I know that’s hard for you to imagine, because there are so many, and they are ALWAYS there.  But, one day it will end.  Do me a favor and take a few extra minutes and cherish each of them.  Even if you’re really tired.  Swing by.  Say hi.  Pick up the phone.  You’ll be glad you did.  I promise.

Days will blend into weeks, and weeks into months, and months into years.  You’ll blink and wonder, but there will be no time to catch your breath.

Because it won’t be long before you’re in surgery for a double mastectomy.  Yep.  With lifetime breast cancer risks in the high 80%s, and your own history of 7 biopsies, this PTEN diagnosis took the decision from your hands.  Don’t stress over it for too long.  You’ve got good instincts.  The double mastectomy with immediate reconstruction will be one of your best decisions ever.  Get home to the angel that saved your life.  The pathology report will confirm cancer was lurking in the breast proclaimed clean by MRI a month prior.  You don’t need perfect breasts.  You need vigilance.  This beast will nip at your heels through a complete hysterectomy weeks later.  It will swipe at you.  Take care of yourself.  Recover quickly and completely.  Lose some weight.  Fill your body with excellent nutrition.  This is going to be a battle and you’ll need all your strength.

One day you’ll count and realize there will have been 16 surgeries for your girl.  There will have been 16 times when she was walked into an operating room, and put to sleep.  16 times when you’ve prayed harder than you’ve ever prayed in your life, and 16 times when you know the pure joy of gratitude when you see her awake for the first time when it’s through.  And you’ll know in your heart 16 is only the beginning.  But don’t get caught up in that.  TRY to stop putting it all together.  TRY to just breathe, and enjoy the moments as they come.  

One day you’ll look at your baby, all strong and determined.  She’ll be taller than you and you’ll wonder how it went so fast.  She’ll be mature, and so smart.  She’ll be talented and compassionate.  She’ll still be feisty and competitive too.  She’ll be as athletic as her body will allow.  She’ll swim and sing and be active in fundraising and outreach work too.  She’ll be passionate about raising awareness for Cowden’s Syndrome and other rare diseases. She’ll encourage you to tell the story of the struggles you two face.  Even though she’ll have a deep understanding that everyone has something, the rarity of this syndrome will cause her to implore you to get a real-time record out in the world.  You’ll blog diligently, as often as you can, making sure to have her edit most of your work.  

She’ll struggle sometimes, and so will you.  Sometimes you’ll even argue.  But, it’ll be the most amazing relationship you can imagine.  You two will spend more time together than most other mother-daughter duos.  Most of your time won’t be on “fun” adventures, but you’ll have hours and hours to talk and get to know each other.  You’ll realize she’s spectacular.

If I had to pick the most important advice, it would be to tell her she is enough.  Be sure she lives and breathes the reality she is loved.  Deeply, and sincerely.  Make sure she knows deep in her heart that she is enough, and all she ever has to be is who she is.  Middle school is tough work, and she’ll need to believe this in her heart from the very beginning in order to remain true to herself during those years. 

It’ll be a busy 13 years.  But, every single moment will be so worth it.  Trust yourself.  Love each other.

Mother’s Day is really every day that you are hugged, loved, and respected.  If you put the time in, it will pay dividends later.

I’m not sure what the rest of the journey has in store for us, but I’m sure we’ll be just fine.  We’ve got a pretty awesome kid, and we are #beatingcowdens together.

With love,

Your 42 Year Old Self

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“…plans to give you HOPE and a future.”

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When you’re in the middle of it, it’s often hard to see it.  You’re in the middle of it, trying to be careful, protective and nurturing.  You’re in the middle of it, often wide awake hours longer than your body wants to comprehend.  Sometimes you’re terrified.   Sometimes you’re confident.  Often you’re in prayer.  This thing.  It’s big.  Too big.  Like a giant web with unmanageable offshoots.

Somewhere in between trying to get back to school after a night in the ICU last Sunday, and this Saturday morning when she woke, not ready to swim, but with a raging 102.5 fever, I lived a few years.

The last few nights I’ve lived a few more.

Fortunately, I take pretty good care of my body, and when she’s well I make covering between 7 and 9 miles a day a priority.  I make eating well a priority always.  I invest in nutritional cleansing by choice.  It’s a lifestyle.  I focus on taking the stairs when I can.  Laughing with the elementary school children as I hit the 4 flights in our building over and over is good for me, and them.  Some people train for marathons.  I train for life.  It’s a bit of a marathon itself.

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It’s quiet here.  Nothing stops a conversation faster than telling in honest frank terms the newest challenges Cowden’s has thrust in our faces.  Last week there was the trouble breathing and the debacle of no answers at the ICU.

Tuesday the orthopedist recognized uncharacteristic tightness in al her muscles.   Her hips and legs were in full spasms.  He was confused.  Updating him on what was new since our last visit included the D&C amd precancerous cells in the uterus.  It included letting him know she is now on 10mg a day of progesterone.  To say he was unsettled be an understatement.  He let us in on his fears that the hormones were causing muscular issues, and that he feared her vascular malformation could indicate a tendency towards blood clots which this hormone level left the door wide open for.

Sigh.  Growl.  He left no bones about where he stood.  He withstood our questioning about risks and benefits.  He disagreed with the hormones.  End of story.  I asked if we were to return in 6 months.  I was told 2 months.  He’s concerned.

And as the week went on she continued to just feel worse.  For the second week in a row, only one swim practice.  An indicator of the severity of things.  By Thursday I reached out to the Adolescent Gyn.  She called while we were in the pediatricians office stating how poorly Meg felt.  All the suspicious virus tests came through negative.  CBC was normal.  Our Pediatrician spoke to the Gyn.  With reservation on her part, and too much “soft evidence” cited by him. the decision was made to pull the hormone.

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This is NOT a decision to be taken lightly, for so many reasons.  The least of which, yet still significant, is the generalized body discomfort that came with the months prior to the D&C, and prior to the hormones.  It was torture for her.  Then, there was the clear declaration, (because everyone likes to speak to the very smart 12-year-old,) that this hormone treatment, this move to arrest cellular growth in the uterus was the BEST way to help ward of cancerous tissue trying to form.  In other words this hormone causing chaos in her body was her best shot at avoiding uterine cancer.

So to be in my head was not a good place.  To be in the head of my girl…  No words.

She woke up Saturday morning very unwell.  I don’t recall the last fever.  This one was 102.3 at 9AM.  Back to the pediatrician we went.  Tamiflu and 2 antibiotics.  Hit whatever it is hard, real hard, and keep her out of the hospital.  That was the plan.

So far it seems we’re on the right track.  The fever is waning.  The breathing is sometimes tricky.  The phlegm is thick.  She’s tough.  She’d hydrated.  She’s resting.  She’s doing her part.

There are decisions that have to be made while #beatingcowdens that no one should have to make.  There are guesses and speculations we have to play into, with no guide and no proven statistics.  We have to focus on today.  We have to make decisions based on today, and quality of life issues right now.  But even these are insanely complex.

We have a strong girl.  We are thankful.  We have a God who has a plan.  We are thankful for that as well.

There are times, as humans, we want to know more.  We want a guarantee.  We want insight into the plan.  It is a sign of our weakness.  We are working on it.  Our God will continue to guide us, strengthen us, and move us forward.  Be need to breathe in peace and faith.

Some days this is not an easy task.

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To our friends, please know we don’t hide.  We don’t avoid RSVPs to be difficult.  We don’t back out at the last moment because we want to.  We miss you.  We are anxious for easy, comfortable gatherings.  Life just seems to toss things in the way – often enough it gets difficult to dodge.

It’s ok if you don’t have words when we throw heavy stuff on you.  It’s ok.  Sometimes just to listen is all we could ever ask for.  Please listen.

We have not lost touch with your lives.  We understand we are not alone in challenges.  Do not feel you have to protect us by not sharing.  You trusting us, makes us feel valuable.  It makes us feel we matter to you.

See just because #beatingcowdens has overtaken our lives doesn’t mean we’ve lost touch with reality.  We want to see your baby photos, and hear about first steps, and awards, and sporting events.  Call. text, Email, write.  Know we haven’t left you for a better deal.  We, like you, are just keeping our heads above water.

We remain always, #beatingcowdens

#BeatingCowdens #NoMatterWhat

The week was tough.  The pain was real.  The reflux was persistent.  The fatigue, bone crushing.  There were three missed practices and a missed school day, simply because she couldn’t.  That NEVER happens.

By Thursday, when she had clocked too many hours of sleep for me to count, I started trying to pull some things together.  My “Mommy Senses” were tingling.  Things were going downhill fast.

I checked through the files.  When was that last brain MRI?  She should probably have another because the headaches won’t quit.  And, if I want to blame the hormones, which my instincts do, we have to rule out any other possibility.  But, we fired the neurologist.  UGH.  How I dread training new doctors almost as much as I despise working with rotten ones.  On the hunt…

And the GI.  She is a wonderful woman, but she is on a personal leave.  We can’t keep at this level of reflux meds.  It will start to hurt her bones.  But, I can’t imagine letting her try a day without some attempt to shield her stomach from all this crap.  I hated all the GIs.  As Pop would have said, “I’m difficult to work with.”  And, THAT was on a GOOD day,  When someone isn’t doing right by my girl, I’m IMPOSSIBLE.  Hunting again…

New doctors.  Tough to find.  Take up hunks of time while we get used to each other… and in the mean time, we wait.

But waiting seems like such a bad idea.

Saturday she dragged herself out of bed for the CYO meet at CSI.  She swam three events, beautifully.  But, before the 50 fly, her favorite, she was struggling.  She motioned to her head.  I made a mental note.  She swam like an all-star, turning in her best time again.  And then it all went quickly.

She was on the deck obviously struggling to breathe.  I grabbed her stuff, and had Felix get the car.  We switched seats at the house and I drove her to Urgi Care.  By now she was feeling better, but still weak, and tired, and full of reflux.  At least she could breathe.

Urgi Care triaged and told me to get her to the Emergency Room.  90 minutes past the swim meet her heart rate was still at 120+.

 So in went the IV.  Out came just about enough blood, but not exactly enough to cover the blood tests the pediatrician wanted.  Then the order for the abdominal CT, and the contrast dye to be swallowed.  Two hour wait in a tiny crazy room.  Heart monitor, IV fluids.  No dehydration.  No obvious signs of infection.  And a negative CT scan.

 There was a ticket to the Peds. ICU for monitoring overnight.

 Some dinner from Daddy at 10 pm.  ICU monitors everywhere.  Medical history to the resident.  I come with three typed pages of summary in tow.  Medication and history in the computer.  Heart rate coming down.  No real ideas.

The night passed and I spent more time than I should have ALONE in the PICU.  No nurse.  Nobody.  Made me wonder why we were there.

I watched the heart monitor like it was my JOB.  I took notes.  I watched the 120+ heart rate hit the mid 40s.  I watched the blood pressure dip to 92/37… I walked and watched and walked some more.

 In the morning when they showed up again, they told me a heart rate in the 40s was ok for an athlete.  Not to worry.  Then I asked how 120 could be “mildly tachycardic” if 40 was “normal.”  Can’t have it both ways.

The evening resident blew the meds.  Even with the cheat sheet.  The overnight nurse dosed her with illogical concoction of thyroid meds, despite my cheat sheet.  The day resident paid more attention.  Definitely more than the dietician who served her a tray with milk AND soy.

There was a negative chest x-ray as they grasped at straws.

The thyroid numbers were all in range.

What would you do?   I challenged the resident.  What organ do you pick to save?  What medication do you give up?  I didn’t expect any answers, but I wanted to get in her head.  Just a little.

 Time to discharge.

With a list of new doctors to find on my own.  And absolutely NO answers.  So the next time she goes to swim, or play, or do anything, I have no way of guessing if this will be our new normal.  Can’t keep a 12-year-old in a bubble.

Onward.  Focused.

#Beatingcowdens #nomatterwhat

 

This is Our Reality

Alone, in a crowded room.

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As I look around frantically trying to figure out exactly where, or how I fit, with anyone, my mind wanders.  I can’t seem to make conversation, or to pass the time socially as easily as others.  I watch.  I retreat as soon as I can.  I can’t quiet my head.  And, knowing the whole line of thinking that occupies my mind some days makes everyone uncomfortable, I step back into myself to cycle through reality.

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“Those hormones?  Are they causing her headaches?  Or is it something more sinister?  How would I even know?  Do we need to use another MRI?  What if it is the hormones?  What choice do we have?  The doctor said she has to stay on them to stop the development of those “irregular cells” in the uterus they found in December.  They’ve already begun to schedule another D & C for July.  “You have to make sure…”  The uterus is a prime site for malignancy in Cowden’s Syndrome.  I got to keep mine until Meghan was 8.  Will she get to keep hers?  Will she have the chance to make the choice whether she wants to bear her own children?  And, even if we save the uterus and she wants to, will it be viable after 15, 18, 20 years of hormone treatment?  And at what cost to the rest of her body?  What about the breast cancer threat that looms large to a young woman whose Cowden’s Syndrome alone puts her at an 85% lifetime risk.  That coupled with a mother and grandmother who have had breast cancer… sigh…why is it even a topic of conversation when she’s 12?  It seems so unjust.  This issue shouldn’t have to be addressed now, well not ever really, but especially not now.  And when she has the headaches I have to give her something.  What about the headache medicine?  What about that esophagus we are trying to heal?

 

Is it those medicines that caused the horrendous reflux after Easter, or was it her MINOR indulgence into a few SAFE sweets?  Why should a slight indulgence cause such discomfort and vomiting?  Why does she have to be so careful all the time about everything?  No wonder she is so serious.  And what if it is the headache medicine?  What am I supposed to do to help her?  Tell her she has to deal with it?  I can’t imagine “toughing out” a blinding headache.  

 

The knee.  Oh the knee.  She tries not to complain about it, but I see when she struggles.  The AVM is finally stable, but the leg takes a lot of work to develop.  She works hard on it too.  But, the stamina isn’t there.  Hours in a pool yes, on land, no way.  Standing too long, walking the mall, or for a short walk, things we take for granted cause such pain.  And pain causes fatigue.  And on the occasions she relents and allows the wheelchair into use, she struggles.  Not for the need to use it temporarily, but for fear of insulting those who have to use it all the time.  She is proud.  She is frequently humbled.  She is conflicted.

 

And who wouldn’t be?  16 surgeries before the 13th birthday.  The need to be tough all the time, while you feel weak.  The desire to be stronger.  Having to fight, hard, for physical accomplishments.  Having to accept the ones that will never be.  Never giving up.  Pushing to be better.  To make the world better.  

 

She’s not perfect.  Never has been.  And oh, there are DAYS…  But she is good, in her heart.  She means well.  She has no spite or malice, and I can pray it remains that way.  I can pray that the children who don’t get it, one day come to understand her, just a little better.  That one day they can accept her,  for the good in her.

 

I scheduled 3 doctors appointments for the next three weeks.  Dermatology, orthopedics, and endocrinology.  The first is a screening.  Cowden’s Syndrome, melanoma risks.  Her father’s increased risk of melanoma on another unrelated genetic disorder.  Her grandmother’s melanoma this summer.  Every 6 months they told me.  Bring her every six months.  The others will work on long-term plans.  Spring break.  Every holiday, every vacation.  Every day off.  Doctors.  Not the mall, or a friend’s house.  Doctors.  For what?  And I’ve toned down the list quite a bit.

 

There are two bills of my desk.  One for her and one for me.  Both a battle.   Always a battle.  If it’s not the reality, or the appointments, it’s the bills.  And we are so fortunate to have insurance.  But, the hours.  Oh my goodness, the hours…”

 

I try to shake it off.  To stay focused on the good.  On the positive.  On the blessings, and they do abound.  But, so often it’s just me, and my head.  Working to get out of my own way.

I miss my Pop.  I miss my Grandma even though she’s still here.  I miss their goodness.  I miss my Dad.  I miss his listening ears.

I quiet the voices a little and try to follow the conversation around me.  I smile politely and nod.  I stay quiet.  “It’s good.”  “We’re good.”  That’s about all they can handle anyway.  Even the ones who genuinely do care.  Why drag someone to a place where there is absolutely nothing they can do or say?

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This is our reality.  This is Cowden’s Syndrome.  This is every day.  As long as we have breath, and strength, and stamina to shake off the pain, place the smile firmly where it goes and press on, we will.

Because the real reality is that every person in the room may have a similar string of thoughts in their head.  The reality remains that EVERYONE HAS SOMETHING…

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I booked dinners for our Disney trip today.  I like to plan ahead.  Plus, Disney gives me a little extra strength, so that we can remain always,

#BEATINGCOWDENS!

 

Meghan’s Rare Disease Day Video and Speech 2016

This is the text of the speech Meghan delivered at this year’s “Jean’s for Rare Genes 2” Fundraiser.  Regardless of the monetary totals, which will come in the next days to weeks, I can assure you it was a success.

I want to start by thanking you for attending this fundraiser here today.  This is the second “Jeans for Rare Genes, a tradition I hope continues to grow each year.

I knew nothing at all about Rare Diseases until the fall of 2011.  I was in 3rd grade.  I went to a geneticist because I was having all sorts of medical trouble.  He diagnosed me with Cowden’s Syndrome.  A few weeks later he diagnosed my mom with the same thing.

Cowden’s Syndrome is a mutation (a break or a mistake) on the PTEN gene which is a gene that is supposed to keep the body from making tumors.  Basically, when you have Cowden’s Syndrome, which is pretty rare (only 1 in 200,000 people) your body makes tumors.  Sometimes they are benign, and sometimes they are cancer.  It also causes my body to make vascular malformations, like the one in my right knee, that has caused me 6 surgeries all by itself.  That is why with Cowden’s Syndrome we have to be watched all the time.  There are so many doctors, so many things that need to be checked, and scanned and looked at, it can be really overwhelming.

You can’t catch Cowden’s Syndrome, it has to be inherited, like I got it from my Mom.  You also can’t get rid of it.  Once you have it, the only thing you can do is get checked, a lot.

I have had 16 surgeries so far, and I only turned 12 in August.  That doesn’t even count for the doctor’s appointments, Emergency Room visits, scans, and never-ending blood tests.

When I first learned I had Cowden’s Syndrome, I went to a website called the Global Genes Project to learn of facts about rare diseases.  I learned all sorts of interesting, and sometimes upsetting facts.

  • There are approximately7,000 different types of rare diseases and disorders, with more being discovered each day
  • 30 million people in the United States are living with rare diseases. This equates to 1 in 10 Americans or 10% of the S. population
  • 80% of rare diseases are genetic in origin
  • Approximately 50% of the people affected by rare diseases are children
  • 30% of children with rare disease will not live to see their 5th birthday
  • 95% of rare diseases have not one single FDA approved drug treatment
  • Approximately 50% of rare diseases do not have a disease specific foundation supporting or researching their rare disease

I started out feeling like I didn’t fit in anywhere.  I couldn’t understand why all these diseases existed and no one seemed to know or care.  I found the “Global Genes Project” motto, “Hope it’s in our Genes” to be a comforting play on words.  I identified myself with the denim ribbon, a powerful symbol of Rare Genetic Disorders.  My Mom’s friend made me a denim ribbon necklace, and I felt like I had an identity piece, something that represented me.

At first I organized an assembly at my school, and in 4th grade we gave out denim ribbons to raise awareness.  In 5th grade we had a fundraiser. We sold some T-shirts, and had a small event at the school.  The money went to the Global Genes Project.

Last year, a charity was created called the PTEN Foundation.  It is the first charity that looks to help people with our specific disease.  They want to create a patient database, so people with our Syndrome can be studied and learned about.  Then, maybe there will be a way to help us. 

As happy as I was about the PTEN Foundation, by this time, I had learned about a lot of other Rare Diseases, and kids, who didn’t have a chance to live and do as much as I can.  I promised myself I would always remember those kids when I did any fundraisers.

Last February, “Jeans for Rare Genes” happened at the Hilton Garden Inn.  I wasn’t sure I could pull off anything that big, but with a vote of confidence from Borough President Oddo, and my Mom supporting my vision, it happened.  150 people showed up, and we raised over $12,000.  True to my word, half of the money went to the Global Genes Project, and the other half went to the PTEN Foundation.

This year, I invited Bob Jackson, my favorite entertainer from Walt Disney World, to come and play piano at “Jeans for Rare Genes 2.”  He is here with us today and I am so excited!  We also have “Charlie Balloons,” back to help us again, and lots of great raffles from generous donors.  This year, I think and hope we can raise a lot of money to send to the PTEN Foundation and the Global Genes Project. 

One of the hardest parts of having a Rare Disease is one I don’t like to talk about too much.  Middle school is tough enough, but when you spend more time at the doctor than at social gatherings, it gets tougher to fit in.  I am glad that with Cowden’s Syndrome I don’t “look” sick, except it makes it even harder for people to understand why my life is so different.

I’ve gained an appreciation for the reality that “everyone has something,” and I work hard at not judging others, because everyone is fighting their own battle.  I want to make more people aware that this is the case, and that is why raising awareness for Rare Diseases is so important to me.

The pressure of life, the surgeries, the hospitals, the worrying, the waiting, and the wondering, has done a lot to make me who I am.  I don’t wish for anyone else to really understand this pressure, but I sometimes wish more people would understand me.

I have met a handful of people along the way, some in the most unlikely places.  These people have provided me support through the pressure, and I am forever grateful.

I know I still have a lot of time to grow into the person I am supposed to be.  I love swimming, and drama and singing.  I do well in school, and I love being with my friends.  I love helping others.  I will continue to search out my “Corner of the Sky.”

As you watch the video I have prepared for you, you will see that despite the pressure of life, I will not ever be defined by my disease.  I am determined to focus on a brighter future, and to channel my energy into making a real difference in this world.

I look forward to seeing what the future hold, and how the next chapter in my life turns out.  I hope to see you at our event next year!

When you’re through reading take the time to appreciate her video, created by herself!

Overwhelmed

Someone tried to steal my credit card today.  Online purchase of almost $1000.  We are pros at this.  Text alert.  Call to Chase.  Charge suspended. Crisis averted.  We are pros at being hacked.  One day I’ll figure out why.  Right now I don’t have time.  I’ll be busy calling E-Zpass, and all the other automatic charges on our only real credit card.  Whatever.  I have to laugh.  Cause if I don’t I might cry.  And that would cause a headache and be counter-productive.

I have serious attention issues.  Probably because everything I touch seems to morph into a few more things to address.  More phone calls, more emails, more papers, more appointments.

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My life is not that bad.  Truly.  I know I’m in good company.  Chaos abounds and if you don’t appreciate some of it, you’ll regret missing it.  But, the thought that someone would want to BE me makes me laugh a bit.  Or maybe they just think I’d be too busy to notice…

Yesterday Meghan was scheduled for a biopsy at 3:30 PM.  That is a rotten time for any surgical procedure.  It involves a full day of fasting, anxiety and the like.  We arrived at 2:30 and got checked in.  Then we waited.  And at 6PM when I finally walked with her to the OR she was dizzy and light headed from nerves and a day of not eating.  Hours delayed.  Cause, why not?

reason for everything

It sucks that my 12-year-old knows what a biopsy is.  It really, super sucks that she has had so many.  It’s helpful that they’ve all been negative so far, but the notion that “luck” will run out at some point looms.  She knows all about pathology and wonders if it will be back before Christmas.  I am often struck by the notion that all of this is unfair.  But, I have always hated the people, young and old, that whine about things that are “not fair.”  The struggle not to become THAT person is real.

help

I write to bring back my focus.  I write to get the thoughts swirling around in my head back into good order.  I write because it makes it less awkward for the people who actually want to hear about our lives, but don’t know what to say.  Some days the task of organizing these thoughts is much easier than others.

We are at a point that our lives are overwhelming.  I don’t just mean busy, like in a typical, school, activities, homework, sports, etc. kind of overwhelming.  I mean they are overwhelming in the medical sense.  We are past the point where we can even really talk to most people about what’s going on.  I get to kid around a little when I talk about needing my spleen tumors scanned again, or my implant lifted, but it’s hard to share the true tears of frustration I feel that I will have to do that with a new surgeon because mine sold her practice and is now out of network.  I keep the tears I cried about that tucked away.

In fairness, what do you say when you are discussing the umpteenth medical procedure of your 12-year-old, when most adults you know have only had one or two surgeries or procedures in their lives?

How could I expect someone to even respond?

How do you explain that we have “operating room routines?”

What can you say to soothe the lonely pain of recovery.  Again?

Nothing silences a conversation faster than a discussion about the uterine biopsy of your 12-year-old daughter.

Nothing silences her cell phone faster than trying to just share a little of that enormity.

path destination

Truth is, we know.  We know we are loved.  We know we are thought of, and virtually hugged, and prayed for.  We know.

But, when so much of your life is swallowed up in medical procedures that you really can’t talk about – it gets lonely.

She’ll need another day on the couch.  To recover fully.  Her Dad will stay home tomorrow.  They will watch some TV, and talk without speaking.  They are good at it.

And Monday, she’ll head back to school, awkwardly searching for the fine line of politely ignoring the enormity of her life, and sharing just a little with those who are brave enough to ask.

Please don’t take any of this the wrong way.  We appreciate the love, and texts, and Facebook messages, and Emails.  We love all of you.  And we are sure we’ve missed some key things in your lives too.

elephant and dog sit under the rain

It’s just, well, the reality of this Cowden’s Syndrome, the enormity of the 5 surgeries in a bit over a year, the gut wrenching notion that it won’t quit – ever, the frustrating planning of two scans and a doctor’s appointment already eating up the next “vacation,” the waiting for the pathology report for the polyps that just don’t belong in the uterus of a 12-year-old, well, honestly… It’s just overwhelming.

I think that’s the word that describes my thoughts best.  Overwhelmed.

Now that I’ve got that organized, I’ll get back to the business of

BEATINGCOWDENS!

Making the Most of It All…

Sunday night, coming home from a swim meet, Meghan outlined her goals.  Among them included, “no surgery for a whole year.”  To someone who hasn’t had 4 surgeries in the last 12 months, that may not seem quite that important, but to Meghan it was at the tip-top of the list.

Over the last several years she has spent more time living in “recovery” than just living.

Your Recovery Green Road Sign Over Dramatic Clouds and Sky.

She dropped 16 seconds total off her event times at this month’s meet, and 17 last month.  Insanity.  Except to a young lady who is now growing into herself, and her abilities.

 

She wants to swim.  Hard and often.

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She wants to soar academically – no average under a 95 will do for her.

She wants to act, and sing, and be on stage.

She wants to participate in her youth group, and retreats, and live her faith.

She wants to raise community awareness of Cowden’s Syndrome and rare diseases.

She is on the move all the time.  I know, because I am with her.  Or helping her stay organized.  Or transporting her at least.

This weekend we drove 200 miles.  Today at least another 60.  LOTS of time for car chat.  Lots of time to get to know each other well.

onthego

Sometimes she drives me crazy.  Sometimes I frustrate her so badly she wants to scream.  Sometimes she does homework, reads, or works on projects.  But, lots of other times we talk.  About anything and everything.  And as much as I hate traffic, and long distances, I’ve learned to make the most of our time in the car.  I’ve learned to appreciate my captive audience, with the realization she won’t be in my back seat forever.

Captive Audience words on a ransom note in cut out letters in a message to forced or trapped customers or people

As a matter of fact after today’s appointment, she could easily be in the front seat.  All the time.  At a very trim waistline, and a height of almost 5 foot 7, she presents as YEARS older than she is.  Which I sometimes have to remind myself when I am busy expecting her to have it all together.  Sometimes she still needs me to help her along.

Today was the knee surgeon.  Six month follow-up.  He sees the shift in the patella.  He feels the scar tissue, and the clicking.  But, he said, she can wait.  She can wait until she’s ready before he cleans it out again.  With Cowden’s it’s a fine line.  How much pain can you deal with?  Because every surgery will lead to an overgrowth of scar tissue which carries its own issues.  Drag your feet.  Know when enough is enough.

Next we will have an MRI to check on the AVM.  As long as that’s stable, we should have a bit of time.  A bit of time to do some things besides recover.  A bit of time to be a bit more like a “normal” busy 12-year-old.  Well, like a “normal” 12-year-old planning a fund-raiser for more than 150 people with her favorite Disney entertainer… But, hey, she dreams big.

This kid. My stength. My motivation. My hero.
This kid. My strength. My motivation. My hero.

Tomorrow she goes to another doctor.  And about this one I just pray.  A lot.

In two weeks I get to remind myself I have Cowden’s with an unplanned visit to my plastic surgeon to question a poorly behaving painful prosthesis.

Plenty to preoccupy the mind.  In our immediate and extended family.

One day, one event, one obstacle at a time.

I did start my Christmas shopping.  After 2 years of holiday sadness, I am craving joy, and celebration.  I am craving the anticipation of the birth of the baby Jesus.  I am determined to remove myself from the holiday hustle and bustle.  I am determined to set my mind right.  Because none of us ever know.  Really.  And there is no promise of tomorrow.  Really.

But organization makes me happy.  And it’s about being happy.  And making the most of it all.  All the time.

organize

 

The Story of the Girl and Her Mom

once upon a time

So, four years ago they diagnosed this girl with a rare genetic disorder called “Cowden’s Syndrome.”  Soon after they diagnosed her, they diagnosed her mom too.

And the mom and the girl read everything they could find, which really wasn’t very much.

And they asked a lot of questions.  Some from the doctors, but mostly from people on the internet who had this Rare Disease too.

They learned a lot.  They also learned there was a lot to learn.

They learned about cancer risks, and how very high they are.

They learned about screening tests.

They met lots of new doctors.  Some were super awesome, and others were super awful.

They fired the awful ones, and kept the awesome ones.

The doctors sent them for tests, and screenings, and blood draws, and all sorts of poking and prodding.

At the beginning it was pretty much all they had time for.

the girl who is always there

The girl had lots of surgeries, and lost her thyroid, and then they called her a “previvor” because they said she got it out just in time before it was cancer.

The mom, she had a bunch of surgeries too.  In one they found cancer.  But she was called a “survivor” because it was all gone.  (Thanks to the girl who got diagnosed first and saved her life.)

The girl and her mom ran from doctor to doctor.  They sat in traffic for forever.  They stayed in hospitals and had surgeries, and tests.  Everyone treated them kind of strange.  Like they were aliens or something.  Their condition was so rare that hardly any doctors even understood what they were supposed to do.

mother-daughter-2

Over time the girl and her mom got a better idea of what really mattered and what didn’t.  They started to be more assertive about doctors, and schedules and planning.  They started to say, “not right now,” sometimes, knowing that a few weeks wouldn’t matter, but a few months might.

The girl and her mom talked a lot about Cowden’s Syndrome.  They talked a lot about Rare Diseases.  Sometimes they were really angry.  Sometimes they were sad, and other times they were grateful.  They saw what some other people with Rare Diseases went through.

The girl and her mom had LOTS of long talks, real talks about tumors, and tests, and cancer, and life.

They worked on some things separately and some things together.  But they agreed to get busy living.

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That didn’t mean they could ignore the seemingly endless doctors appointments.  They all had to be done.  It meant they could schedule smarter.  It meant they would talk about what symptoms had to be addressed right now and which ones could wait.  It meant they had to get really good at communicating.

This isn’t always so easy since the girl is almost a teenager, but they are getting pretty good at it.

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The girl had 4 surgeries this year, some more major than others, but she spent lots of time recovering.  And she learned that she liked to be busy.  She likes to sleep too, but she likes to be busy.  With kids.  Often.  She also likes to be active.  A lot.

The girl and her mom still have this Cowden’s  Syndrome, and sometimes for reasons no one understands, they hurt a lot.  Sometimes the pain makes it hard for one of them to push on.  Sometimes the tired almost feels like they can’t go on.

But the girl and her mom, they push each other.  They push each other to press on because laying down and giving up is not an option.

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Their days are long.  The mom works full-time.  The girl goes to 7th grade and makes high honor roll.

Their afternoons are full of drama club, the girl’s love of theatre, and lots of swim practice.  The days are often 13 hours or more of constant motion.

The girl and her mom, they decided that they might have a Rare Disease, but it definitely wasn’t going to “have” them.

So they decided that whatever comes their way, they are going to be active, healthy, strong, fueled with nutritious food, and built of muscle.  This way if Cowden’s punches, they will punch back harder.

Sometimes the mom wonders if life would have been different without the girl.  The mom wonders if alone she would have been able to push on.

But she doesn’t have to wonder.  Because they have each other.  And, because this weekend they spent 3 days at a swim meet.  And the girl knocked major time off her events.

And, when they came home, the daddy, who is the glue that holds them together, had warm chicken, and rice and vegetables, the healthy fuel  – all ready.

And the mom and the girl were so grateful.  For each other.  For the desire to fight.  For the strength from good food, and faith, and the love of a dad who backs them up every step of the way.

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And as the mom drove the girl to youth group at their church, they talked, about the swimming.  And about the fundraiser they are planning. So that Rare Diseases scarier than theirs get some attention.  “For the Babies,” and so that there can be research for this Cowden’s Syndrome.  So that maybe it can get stopped in its tracks.

And as the mom walked home enjoying the fresh crisp air of Fall she was filled with gratitude.

For this story of BEATINGCOWDENS has only just begun.  And each chapter holds more promise than the next…

Do What You Love


It was almost 8:40 last night as I drove down Grymes Hill with Meghan.  She hadn’t been home since we left for school at 7:20 that morning. She was facing a shower, dinner, homework, and a later than normal bedtime.  She had spent the afternoon registering for her after school drama program, and had spent the last two and a quarter hours in some combination of intense exercise- on land and in the water.  She was exhausted and it was evident in her face. But, not it her voice or her mannerisms.


“I know I’ve got you running all over the place Mom, and I know it’s a lot of hours.  But, I have to tell you that I LOVE it.”


I couldn’t help but smile in spite of myself. We all want for our children to do what they love. And here she was; registered for drama, swimming 4 days a week, pushing the herself at school, enjoying church youth group, and planning a fundraiser for February.


She feels rotten. A lot. But she pushes. And I have to believe that is how we have to live this syndrome – this life.  Maybe I’m a good influence after all.

She plays in pain. Constantly.

She is always recovering from or anticipating something. But instead of waiting for the storm to pass…

She’s clearly dancing in the rain.


We have our spats. We’re supposed to. But, we balance each other too.

We keep each other motivated. We keep each other grounded.  Her diagnosis still makes me physically ill.  But, it does not, can not, and will not define her. I’m convinced.
Do what you love I tell her. Do what makes you happy. And she does.

And I do too. Watching her for hours, on the bench, in the basement by the pool makes me happy. Watching her on stage makes me happy. Watching her persevere makes me proud.

We will do this- together. We are BEATINGCOWDENS.

Losing Count…

In school I count children.  Religiously.  Especially in September.  I count them in, and out.

I count pencils, to pacify my OCD.  12 to a table.

I count days until appointments, special occasions, and vacations.  I love numbers.

I have a tendency to remember addresses, phone numbers, anniversaries and dates.

So it’s a really big deal in my mind when I realize I am losing count of Meghan’s surgical procedures.

counting

I keep a list in my bag, that I update often.  I have a 16 gig flash drive with a history spanning 12 years in that same ziploc bag in my purse.  But, this year.  Well, this year has been a little more wild than usual.

And every time I say it, I find the old saying, “You ain’t seen nothing yet..” coming true.  But, every year I sit at an IEP meeting talking about discontinuing some services, and we always say, “When she goes a year with no surgery…”

Good thing I’m not holding my breath.

See I wrote, and I think I blogged, TWICE in the last week, that the hand surgery was Meghan’s 13th surgery.  Except it wasn’t.  It was the 14th.

counting 3

And maybe, when I lose count, it’s time to stop counting.  Because they are all starting to blur together.

2004- Epigastric hernia surgery

2007 –  Gall Bladder Removed

2008 Tonsils and adenoids removed

2008 Back mass lipoma

2009 Oral “fibrous polyp”

2009 Embolization (internal) AVM right knee

2010 Embolization (internal)  AVM right knee

2011 Direct Stick Embolization AVM right knee

2012 Direct Stick Embolization AVM right knee

2013 excision of mass from right palm

2014 complete thyroidectomy

Nov. 2014 emergency (direct stick) embolization AVM right knee

May 2015 Arthroscopic Surgery – Right knee

August 2015 Excision of vascular lesion from left palm

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But, just as I think I should stop counting.  Just as I think that this is “normal,” or that these procedures are somehow “minor,” I realize the ridiculous nature of that train of thought.

THIS IS NOT NORMAL.  THIS IS COWDEN’S SYNDROME.  And, BEATINGCOWDENS is what we do, but it is far from NORMAL!

This week, Meghan had a fever blister break out before her surgery.  Maybe nerves, maybe coincidence, maybe a medication screw up.  Whatever.  It reminded me again, that her body is taxed.  It is tired.  I have been hunting through past blood work, another plan in place to try to deal with chronically low IgG levels.

She spent the 48 hours after the “minor” hand surgery with high fever and frightening headaches.

We had to postpone the follow-up to the “real” 13th surgery Thursday morning because she could not get into the car.

No surgery is minor.  And we run the risk of confusing things we are used to with things that are not significant.  And that is a dangerous road.

It is so important to keep validated, as an adolescent or as an adult.  When we trivialize procedures, intentionally or not, we invalidate the patient.  Cowden’s Syndrome patients will undergo insane numbers of procedures, surgeries, hospitalizations and testing in their lives.  They all matter.  Because we matter.  And while we are forever grateful every time a surgery is smooth, benign, and uncomplicated, we are all a little more rattled than we were before.

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So LOSING COUNT, is not acceptable.  It somehow trivializes the nature of what goes on here.

We didn’t get to the beach this summer.  We did get to Disney.  Thank goodness.  Because pretty much everything else we did involved traffic, a co-pay and a parking garage.

We are blessed.  We are grateful.  We are in tune to the tragedies and horrors around us.  But, sometimes it gets lonely.

We miss barbeques and parties.  We cancel at the last-minute.  We rarely socialize.  It’s not because we don’t want to.  It’s because things change so quickly we can not keep up.  And then it looks like we don’t want to.  But, it’s just not true.

We are eternally grateful to the people who reach out.  Just for a minute. Because it matters.

If you’re reading this because you know someone with Cowden’s or a similar syndrome, my advice to you is reach out.  Text.  Call.  Email.  It’s not about money, or grand gestures.  It’s the 5 minutes you spend that will truly aid in the recovery process.

Because recovery is essential.  Number 15 is just around the corner.  And even though that’s a “regular” surgery, I bet not many of us have had our wisdom teeth extracted at the age of 12.

It’s physical.

It’s mental.

It’s emotional.

It does not stop.

BEATINGCOWDENS