“It Doesn’t Suck”

“Thank you…” That’s how she led at 6:30 on a Saturday morning, when I picked her up 140 miles from home so she could squeeze in a uterine biopsy on the weekend, so as not to miss any class her first week of PA School.

“Thank you…” How many 21 year olds lead with that? Nothing to eat or drink. Half asleep. Headed to ANOTHER procedure which would require ANOTHER IV into a vein literally EXHAUSTED from overuse.

She spent a few minutes telling me about her Friday night out with her new classmates before falling asleep. “It doesn’t suck.” This was absolute music to my ears.

Anyone who doesn’t know Meghan, and hasn’t followed her story, and even some who think they know her, but haven’t really been paying attention, might think that describing her first week of classes as a graduate student by saying “It doesn’t suck,” is negative, pessimistic, or a bad attitude. But to me, who has been paying the closest attention, knowing the reality that virtually every school experience has “sucked,” this was music to my ears.

No point in going backwards to the countless times when she was belittled, ostracized, tormented, and tortured. She was never perfect, and she never claimed to be. But years of therapy have taught her not to shrink herself down to fit into anyone else’s box. I don’t know why many kids found her unlikeable. But she knew it. Always. And the ones who didn’t mind her were typically too afraid to speak up. “It doesn’t suck…” cautious optimism. I’ll take it!

I had 5 hours in the roundtrip between home and her school to reflect on this kid. And I have to tell you, I’m so proud of her sometimes I feel like I could burst.

Don’t get me wrong. The years of social isolation have been daunting and exhausting. But, they have given her wisdom and patience well beyond her years. She has gained confidence. She is insightful. She is capable of telling you her weaknesses right alongside her strengths. She is transparent, and straightforward. You never doubt where you stand. She is passionate, loyal and driven. She is resilient.

Writing has been hard for me these last few years. I feel like we mark time in between surgeries, rehab, appointments, tests, and more surgery. I have withdrawn from almost every relationship I have because most people seem exhausted by our chronic cycle and I have grown weary of apologizing for our reality.

Meghan’s tumor in her right thigh took up most of her high school and college years. ’19, ’22, ’23, and with the ultimate torture in the summer of ’24, she became a regular at PT during the years when kids her age were debating which party was better. A mere six months after the worst surgery by far, our New Year’s Eve was spent at NYU in recovery from her bilateral mastectomy. Which, in case you wanted a reference, she said was so much easier than the leg surgery. Well, pain wise anyway… but, I digress.

We are living inside of 2 PTEN mutated bodies with all the trials and tribulations that come with them. My own scans continue. Battles with insurance and radiology alike are the rule, not the exception. In the last 6 months two of our primary providers left their practices and the job of “training” a new doctor begins again.

Pride. Focus. Determination. Dedication.

Meghan and Ella graduated from Misericordia in May. Then, the difficult decision was made that retirement was in Ella’s best interest. Selflessly she put her best friend and closest companion ahead of herself. Again.

Ella is slowly transitioning to retired life with her “brothers.”

She left in early June, a year after that leg surgery that still has me traumatized. She walked away from me with her passport in hand, and traveled 2,500 miles to meet the one friend she will keep forever from her undergrad. They met in Vancouver and they had a 2 week adventure that included activities she had never even dreamed of being able to accomplish. She paid her own way with gifts carefully saved through her entire life. She is a traveler in her soul. This was the first of many journeys that passport will see.

We squeezed in a ton of appointments at the end of June, including beginning to “train” our new endocrinologist. One of the appointments was a pelvic ultrasound. She has had them frequently since her “endometrial hyperplasia” in 2015. And when the report popped into her chart that Friday afternoon – we knew it was going to need follow up.

Her gynecologist is just an utterly superb woman, who trusted me with her cell phone number at our first visit. I texted her and alerted her. She found the report, and we were scheduled to see her July 3rd. Classes started July 7th. Because.. why not?

Her biopsy was Saturday. I stayed with her until the IV was placed and we met up again in recovery. It is a dance so familiar to us that in and of itself it’s unsettling.

We don’t have results yet. But I am tired of waiting. I’m tired of waiting for the next thing to be finished before continuing our story.

This is an ongoing saga. PTEN mutations do not get “fixed.” We may find some lulls along the way, but waiting is so much a part of this life.

Meghan took this at a butterfly exhibit in NYC with her dad, on her grandfather’s camera. I thought the busted wing on this blue beauty was epic.

Meghan walked out of the procedure, stopped, looked me in the eye, and thanked me. Again. I told her to stop, and she said no. “I’m so happy I didn’t miss Friday night, because of that uncomfortable Saturday.”

Maybe that’s the lesson. Don’t miss Friday because Saturday holds a daunting reality.

Two 300 mile round trips in 18 hours. She didn’t skip a beat and was right on time for classes today where she belongs.

Here’s to hoping “It doesn’t suck” continues to transition…

No Rest for the Weary…

I have found when I am just exasperated by life, I get really quiet. Like hide in a corner, under a table in a dark room kind of quiet.

And if you’ve been looking for me, that’s where I’ve been since mid-August.

Mid- August, about 30 seconds after Meghan’s leg started to feel like it was ok to keep it attached to her body without the need to writhe in agony, is when we went for another one of her PTEN “routine” scans. Except nothing is routine when you have Cowden Syndrome.

So a few hours later when the report posted, we took a gut punch. There were definitely things to be concerned about.

And, when her gynecologist called the next day after reviewing the results it got a little harder to breathe. She said, even though the report suggested a 6 month follow-up, she wanted us to go in 3. And book her with a surgeon for a consult soon.

So we scheduled the follow up sonogram for the day before Thanksgiving. And we scheduled the surgeon(s) for her fall break – Thursday and Friday of this week. We will head into the city on the bus together. Not to see a show, or do some shopping, but rather to get her established at the Perlmutter Cancer Center, and learn our next steps.

Meghan and I have talked at length about the likely next steps. We just need the doctors to weigh in. We are not “getting ahead of ourselves” as some like to suggest. We have read more than our fair shares of scans and reports. We know when something is going south.

And so Meghan headed to her senior year of college in August with the crippling pain of her leg slowly receding, and the epic weight of this new news weighing her down like a stone hung around her neck.

Literally it felt like 30 seconds in between.

My beautiful girl continues to make life happen, she and Ella in their own, well-deserved apartment this year. But it is so hard to be free. It is so difficult to be present with peers who even if well-intentioned could not possibly relate.

My girl continues to interview for Physician Assistant programs and to proceed as if success is inevitable. Even though sleep eludes her. Even though her entire life seems to be in a state of flux.

I think about the people who tell us, alone or together that we should “reach out” when we are overwhelmed. And I wish with every fiber of my soul that instead those people, who are rightfully at a loss for words, would send a simple text to her. One that says you’re not as alone as you feel. One that says, it’s ok to talk to me. I will be here. And even if you can’t talk, even if you can’t form the words, I will keep checking on you. Because even though we are painfully aware everyone has something, sometimes the load is just too epic to carry alone.

When you have a chronic, cancer causing condition, there is always an appointment and a scan. But the longest time, the one that is the hardest and the loneliest, is the wait between scan and plan.

Those are the times where you just cannot focus on anything. That is when you are the most vulnerable and alone.

We’re not high maintenance people. But there is literally no rest for the weary.

We will be headed into the first of those 2 appointments midday on Thursday as we have done all the others – side by side.

Because when we are lonely, lost and overwhelmed we remember that we have each other, and a dad/husband who loves us both with his whole soul.

As we push through these next days we remain quietly…