Rare Disease Day 2025

This is technically our 14th “Rare Disease Day,” since our PTEN diagnoses came in the fall of 2011, but if I am fair, the entirety of 2012 was such a blur that I feel like this is more like the 13th year we were consciously aware that “Rare Disease Day” is annually celebrated on the last day in February.

If you search the files of this blog you will find that in 2014 we did some Rare Disease outreach at my school, and in February of 2015, 2016 and 2017 we held successful fundraisers for the PTEN foundation that supports our own rare disease PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome, or Cowden Syndrome as it is often called.

We ran one more fundraiser in October of 2018. Then we stopped hosting.

It was not for lack of desire. But, rather for the difficulty that came with filling the room. Rare Diseases, if you are lucky, (yes, read that again) are also chronic. And people have lives and experiences and other things to tend to besides annual events for what was going to be a fact of our lives.

And, truth be told at an average of one or more surgeries each year, things got tricky to manage on our end too.

“Let us know if we can help,” became a most cringeworthy phrase as I retreated into a deep hole of survival, fight or flight, and often downright depression. How could I pick up a phone if I sometimes struggled to pick up my head? And could I expect people to keep showing up when the story was the same? The times in between surgeries were sometimes even worse. The anticipation of an appointment. The worry about the next scan. I often didn’t want to hear me speak.

Tumor, surgery, pain, isolation, therapy, recovery. All heavy. All the time.

It’s been over 6 years since that last fundraiser. I sometimes feel guilty. Then I force myself to feel proud of what we were able to do when we could.

More times than not this journey has felt like climbing one of those rock walls. Except a real one. Where hanging on was literally for dear life, and the harness was hard to find.

This last year has tested Meghan and I, and Felix as well. It has tested relationships in all of our lives. Her surgery in June of 2024, well documented here was by far the one that was the most traumatic for me. If I close my eyes at just the wrong time I can still hear her screaming during the longest hospital stay in over a decade. The physical pain has been hers to manage, and she does so in ways that consistently blow me away. The emotional pain, of watching your child suffer… that one is a special kind of hell. If you know, you know. And if you don’t, I will never wish it on you.

The double mastectomy, just barely 2 months ago, was well documented as a necessary move on that 9 page pathology report. PTEN patients have a 91% lifetime occurrence of breast cancer, and my PTEN kiddo was able to couple that risk with 2 first degree relatives, her grandmother at 48, and her mother at 38. My daughter is a smart, focused, brave, and driven woman. This one is a different kind of recovery, one where the physical pain is less but the emotional upheaval of adjusting to your new body at the age of 21 is very real. Scars take time to go down. Things take time to settle. But, waiting in and of itself can be torture.

Ours is just one PTEN story, of the 1 in 200,000 people across the globe diagnosed with a PTEN mutation and the effects of the mutation in each body run a wide gamut. Rare diseases are generally underserved because studying us is time consuming. Massive cuts are a reality and we are not a priority. The PTEN family lost our brightest advocate Dr. Charis Eng in August of 2024 and all of the PTEN foundations across the globe despite obstacles, continue to press on with urgency, in her honor and for the betterment of us all.

Ours is just one rare disease story. You know people with rare diseases. You may even be one of them. I have learned more about rare diseases since our diagnoses. I know the names of syndromes, and most importantly the people behind the stories.

This year on Rare Disease Day, when we are asked to #ShowYourStripes, tell your story. And, if you don’t have a story to tell, reach out and let someone tell theirs.

Alone we are rare. Together we are 300 MILLION strong. And we matter.

Scars…

There are days I forget.

I forget that it’s not just Meghan, but also me with this rare disease.

As a matter of fact, it’s actually uncommon for me to remember.

Maybe it’s survival.  Maybe it’s maternal instinct.  Maybe it’s denial.  Maybe it’s some combination.

But then there are days that it smacks me right across the face.  And it stings, no, actually it’s more like a scalding burn.

I post mostly about Meghan.  She’s my hero.  She’s my inspiration. She motivates me to be a better person, every day.  But,  if I really want this blog to be transparent, and I really want the truth about our experience living with and beating Cowden’s Syndrome to be out there, sometimes I have to allow my own inner self to be exposed. 

I feel good.  I really do.  Aside from a little lag from my thyroid, I am feeling better and stronger than I have in years.

But there are the scars.  They hide behind my clothes like a little secret.  Cause people forget.  And that’s what I want, because most of the time I forget too.

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But then I look in the mirror, and I see the scars across the implants replacing the diseased breasts removed in the nick of time.  And my shirt doesn’t sit quite right.  And it’s probably my own fault, as I refused the tissue expanders necessary for a proper reconstruction.  I didn’t have the time, or the energy, or the desire, or the stamina to put myself through the frequent fills, the repeated pain, and the additional surgery necessary for the sizes to be equal.  It just wasn’t worth it to disrupt our lives longer.

I saw the plastic surgeon last week.  My two-year follow-up.  Hard to imagine.  She gently reminded me again that she could even things out whenever I was ready.  No cost thanks to the positive pathology for breast cancer, and the genetic mutation.  No monetary cost.  I’m not ready.  Yet.

I saw the breast surgeon last week too.  I see her every 6 months, so she can make sure nothing sinister is growing behind those implants.  The reality and the reminder that as fortunate as I was – I still had breast cancer.   And once you know for sure that those malignant cells had life in your body, you never look at things quite the same.  “No lumps or bumps,” she happily reported.  “See you in 6 months.”

I can’t wait.

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And there are the lymph nodes in my neck.  They were checked last week too.  Sonogram.  As long as they stay stable, we can leave them alone.  “But, if they grow…” she reminds me every time.  Six months for her too.

And my legs.  Fitting into the smallest size they have ever in my life the veins are protruding again.  The PTEN diagnosis, known for enhancing vascular issues, perhaps the explanation for the vascular problems that have caused 2 operating room visits and 5 in office procedures since I was 23.  But, it doesn’t really matter I guess.  The legs start with a familiar heaviness.  Then there is the throbbing.  The last thing I feel before bed, and the first thing I feel after the alarm gets shut down.  And the pulsing – like I can feel the blood moving the wrong way through the broken veins.  And the giant bulging, from groin to ankle, that makes it a little less fun to buy the shorts in a size 2.  I switch to “Bermuda” length and some sundresses.  I wait for the word that GHI has approved another vascular procedure.

Not to mention I saw the GYN Oncologist too.  Everything ramped up a notch with the “Cowden’s Syndrome” label.  There are no “regular” visits anymore.  Even with that benign pathology, it’s a forever commitment to the “Clinical Cancer Center” of the hospital.  Two years since the hysterectomy too.  Time marches on. You can barely see the scars from the laproscopy.  But I know they are there too.  A few inches under the implant scars.  Reminders of the year that changed my life.  Our lives.

The week finished with genetics.  Our geneticist – found by an incidental internet search at the recommendation of our physical therapist, is a gem of a man.  He greeted me with a hug and a smile, and exclaimed that I looked better than I did at my diagnosis.  Then he drew my blood.  More genetic testing.  This time not because of the Cowden’s Syndrome.  This time, it is to fulfill the wishes of my father.  Wrapping up a genetic counseling visit I completed in April, and after consent was received from GHI, the vial of blood was drawn to test for the markers for pancreatic cancer, the killer of my father, and paternal grandfather, as well as about 15 other markers I probably don’t want to know about.  We both said a silent prayer that the test yielded a whole lot of nothing.  We hugged again.  It’ll be about 6 weeks.

So this morning my shirt didn’t fit quite right.  The indentation on the right side was causing the shirt to fit lopsided.  And the vein bulging out of my right leg, especially just above the knee was a little too much for me to take.  I struggled with my tears, trying desperately to hide them from my extraordinarily observant soon- to- be -11 year-old.

This is the reality she knows we share.  Yet, I want so badly to help her maintain some of her youth.  Worry free innocence taken with the words, “You have a mutation on the PTEN gene…” and years of her own surgeries have stripped her of some of the privileges given only to the young.  There is something about 11 surgeries with no real end in sight, that can leave you a bit anxious.

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It only took a minute.  Although it seemed longer.  A hug from my husband.  My ever patient, loving soul mate, who makes me feel beautiful just by the smile in his eyes when we kiss.  And it was time to shake it off.

 

But not without first acknowledging that maybe that was quite a few appointments for a week’s time..

When we got in the car to head to the doctor, the Christian station was playing one of my favorite songs, “Fix My Eyes,” by For King & Country.

There are no coincidences.

And as we sang along, I looked in the rear-view mirror.

“Fix My Eyes”

“Hit rewind
Click delete
Stand face to face with the younger me
All of the mistakes
All of the heartbreak
Here’s what I’d do differently
I’d love like I’m not scared
Give when it’s not fair
Live life for another
Take time for a brother
Fight for the weak ones
Speak out for freedom
Find faith in the battle
Stand tall but above it all
Fix my eyes on youI learned the lines and talked the talk (everybody knows that, everybody knows that)
But the road less traveled is hard to walk (everybody knows that, everybody knows)
It takes a soldier
Who knows his orders
To walk the walk I’m supposed to walkAnd love like I’m not scared
Give when it’s not fair
Live life for another
Take time for a brother
Fight for the weak ones
Speak out for freedom
Find faith in the battle
Stand tall but above it all
Fix my eyes on you….”

Click the image to hear the song…

We spent Friday looking for sites for a fund-raiser for “Rare Disease Day 2015.”  We met a lovely woman who was surprised we weren’t raising money for us specifically.  We explained that we were grateful.  I feel well enough to work.  We have good medical coverage. There are so many not as fortunate.
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When it gets to be too much, I know to fix my eyes on things far beyond the mirror.  I have a greater purpose right in my own house.  And WE have a greater purpose.

We are BEATINGCOWDENS… together!