Hey, we just enjoy it. I think we think we’re getting the hang of this thing you know? Keith Richards

For all of the ‘what-if’s’ I played in my head last night, Samantha passed her medical tests today with flying colors! Pancreas, liver, kidneys all look good and we are a go to continue with the diet.

We are happy to be home and even happier that Samantha’s vital organs look good. She’s quite a trooper, our little girl. Today she handled contrast, I.V’s, blood draws, tests and sedation with a gummy smile, just happy to be held and have her head rubbed.

Samantha has earned the dubious title as being the ‘Keith Richards of Anaesthesia’ from her Anesthesiologist. She has been on so many seizures meds that her body is accustomed to the effects. She woke up soon after they stopped the I.V. sedation meds and was wide awake…no recovery time….that’s right….Keith Richards and my three year-old….good times.

On a note beyond our daughter’s rock star lifestyle, thanks everyone for the good thoughts, prayers and suggestions in case we had to go off the Ketogenic diet. It’s nice to know that where ever we go….you are right their with us.


You’ve got the sun, you’ve got the moon and you’ve got the Rolling Stones –
Keith Richards

You don’t have to see the entire staircase, just take the first step….Martin Luther King Jr.

This is not our first step….perhaps our 20th but I still do not see the entire staircase. In fact, just when I think I can see the staircase, it becomes like those in the Harry Potter books…the staircase is always changing…keeping us on our toes.

Samantha went in for a follow up blood test today only to reveal that her metabolic levels are higher than last week. They went down when she was fasting but went right back up once we started back on formula. Her digestive system is struggling, her pancreas is working too hard.

The culprit? The ketogenic diet. This is a tough one for me. The ketogenic diet controls or helps 60% of kiddos with seizures. Those 60% either become completely seizure free or, in Samantha’s case, have good seizure control with diet and reduced meds. But the diet is hard….hard to manage and even harder on Lil’ Miss’s stomach. For two and a half years, her meals have consistented of olive oil, hard boiled eggs and the tinest bit of carbs where we can squeeze it in.

It’s hard on the liver, kidneys and pancreas.

BUT it controls seizures. Hard choice to make, eh?

I have said “hard’ seven times in this post……

Tomorrow we go back in for further testing. Tests will confirm one of two things:

1. Everything is fine. Her pancreas is plugging along. No changes.

2. We need to stop the diet. It is a strain on her organs. If we do stop, Samantha will be admitted tomorrow evening. She will be put on I.V meds, placed on an EEG and weaned off the diet.

We will watch to see if she seizes or perhaps(?) does not seize. We will also watch to make sure metabolic levels normalize.

What do I want?
Ha! As I take this next step…unsure of what lies beyond, I only, truly want Samantha to be healthy……my list of healthy wants include seizure free, healthy blood levels, and a little girl who is not dopey due to too many seizure meds.

Tall order? We’ll see….I’m just taking the step.

The People I Know

I am proud to call this woman a friend. Heather Janssen, mom, wife, writer, editor, lovely, proud, force of nature gave this speech on Friday about living with stage 4 breast cancer. Sometimes the ‘unfairness’ in life is balanced by the amazing people you meet along the way…..

My name is Heather Janssen. Please accept my gratitude at your presence here tonight. Whether you’ve been affected by cancer (that’s such a benign phrase, isn’t it?) I think we should say, “Whether you’ve been assaulted by cancer either yourself or because a loved one or friend has, or because you’ve got a child, grandchild or friend in the show tonight, your presence speaks loudly. To me, it says that bringing an end to breast cancer is important. Thank you.

I was diagnosed in May 2008 with stage IV breast cancer. Staging can seem like an unknown to those who don’t know (and who wants to until you have to?) Basically, there is no stage “5” in cancer. When you’re diagnosed at stage four, certain doctors begin to talk about how they’re very able and willing to help make you comfortable before you die. Certainly, for many victims diagnosed at stage IV, the end is near. For many of us, though, it means that we will be forced to live with cancer until it kills us, which, in all likelihood, it will, but may not, and may not soon. It’s very different for every person, since cancer is pretty sneaky and shows up and grows differently in everyone. . For me, what it has meant is that I went through the traditional routes of treatment: chemotherapy, double mastectomy and oopherectomy and radiation. That’s the route most familiar to most of you. After I finished the cadillac round of cancer treatment, I was given a blessed reprieve—the state of being “NED” or No Evidence of Disease. This needs to be clarified as separate from a “cure” in spite of its optimistic sounding nature. Indeed, it is optimistic. What you may not know is that many of us living with this stage IV, or what we call metastatic disease, in any form (not just breast), whether we’re NED or not, generally undergo ongoing treatments which we will face forever. Yes. Forever. So every three weeks I still go to my oncologist’s office in Denver and receive an infusion of two drugs that will hopefully continue to keep me strong, kicking and mouthy for a good many more years. I also take a little pill every night to suppress any leftover estrogen in my body. It makes my feet hurt so I hobble around like a hobbit in the morning, but other than that, the side effects remain unseen.

I spoke last year about how my body was in tatters. I’ve mostly made peace with my deformed body. My scars are healed and mostly invisible, and I’m getting used to this “new,” albeit plumper, me. They serve as reminders—sometimes painful, but more and more, as bittersweet reminders of the terror we faced when I was diagnosed and the subsequent relief we’ve had as I’ve gone well past my “use by” date, if you will.

What I haven’t been able to piece back together quite so seamlessly are the internal wounds. They’re still wide open and bleeding, not yet having had a chance to scab up and begin the scarring process. They keep seeping through the bandages of denial I attempt to use as salve. Simply put, cancer has broken very nearly everything in my life. I’ve watched my husband break, my own resolve break, the woman that I was break, my daughter’s innocent childhoods break. It would be one thing if we could have gone through cancer and were now done with it. Then perhaps the damage could be left alone for awhile to heal without new trauma. But we don’t get to “leave it behind.” Every three weeks I get reminded of my status, and that rips my scabs off all over again; when you’re told, via a stage IV diagnosis, that you’d better stuff a lot of life into a fairly limited time frame, let’s just say, you do what you’re told. I’ve become more mouthy, more giving, a little bit more funny, probably only to myself, and daring, and become who I’ve always wanted to be….at warp speed. There are certain downfalls to this, though. For example, my family no longer recognizes me. It makes it difficult when I pick up my kids at school, or my husband rolls over in bed and screams, “Who’s that woman?!”

The other fallout is that these loved ones who no longer recognize you haven’t entered warp speed. They’ve been left wobbling on the ground in the aftershock of the takeoff of the unrecognizable family member. And something in them breaks. It’s one thing for me to face the terror of a cancer diagnosis and fear the worst. It’s quite another to watch your family and dearest friends wade through the same cesspool of fear, trauma and pain. To watch as they disconnect from reality to gain a tenuous reprieve, or fold inward because the pain of being vulnerable is just too painful. These are the wounds that resist healing, because the fear doesn’t stay away politely like it ought to. It shows up in the most inopportune, unexpected times, and all our resolve collapses. We cling fiercely to one another, forced to face the fear and the pain. In those times I find myself irrationally angry that anyone would love or need me so much that the very thought of my absence causes them such pain. Frankly, I don’t want to be that important.

But we manage to pull ourselves off the floor eventually, put on the pot of coffee, pray for strength, and resume life. Recently I discovered the artist P!NK. Yes, I’m old and out of touch. You probably are too. Nonetheless, she’s raunchy (don’t let you children listen), and her music is pulsating, pounding. I’ve found that she provides the perfect soundtrack to my anything-but-normal life living with stage IV cancer. I can rage while pounding away on the treadmill, angry at the broken pieces of my life. After I’ve defused my rage, I can again enter the center stage of life and see how, though broken, all these beautiful pieces are dancing their own gorgeous, though sorrowful dance. My husband’s ability to make us laugh punctuates our battered landscape with joy. Thanks, Clark. My daughter Emily’s laughter is in itself a song. My eldest, Katie, accompanies our days with a melodic thoughtfulness. Eliza, our baby’s, whole life is one bouncing, lively dance. And Megan, our blondie, keeps us all on our toes, her sharp wit and mind providing lively lyrics to all the music.

I hate cancer. I hate that it puts me in a full nelson of guilt and shame that I’m still a mom without enough time for myself or energy to give to my girls as much as I’d like. I hate that it’s the big, ugly, fat elephant in the room when my husband and I try to talk about the future. I hate that it’s made having even the most benign conversations, sometimes with strangers, wrought with awkwardness due to my inability to respond in a socially expected way, i.e. don’t mention the cancer. Except that now I do. I tell everyone who gives me even a moment of their time or a portion of their ear that I am LIVING with cancer. Not that I HAD cancer and am now “cured.” Not that I “beat” cancer. I say, “No, I’m not done ‘with all that’ yet and explain that I will most likely be in treatment forever, god willing and if they keep coming up with drugs to keep my cancer at bay. Because I’ve decided that, for me, it’s really important that people understand that it’s a part of what makes me “me.” It’s also what makes far too many of my sisters and brothers battling metastatic disease who they are. Part of the “Ride on the Cancer Rocketship” freak show–whatever I’m thinking just comes right out. I talk a lot about living with this disease, salted throughout with heavy sarcasm and an unhealthy dose of profanity, all in an effort to keep this reality from pulling me into constant, chronic grief. It’s one of my most powerful weapons; if I can laugh, if I can cry, if, for the love of pete, I can dance a crazy dance, then it’s not winning. I am. I win. I will not roll over and die to this monster that has broken my life in irreparable ways. I will however, take those pieces and patch them together with my voice, my humor, my loud and obnoxious singing, my ambition, my mothering, my friendship and my belief. I will refuse to allow it to break anything more.

The truth is, we’re all dying. Some of us just live with the reality and its nearness closer than others. It’s morbid, for sure, but it’s also a brutal reality. My life is lived in a middle earth between life and death. But really, when I look closely, when I’m dancing, it’s an earth full of life being lived apart from illusions, with death no closer than my last breath.

-Heather Janssen

Fe, fi, fo, fum….what’s going on with Samantha’s tum?

At first I thought it was the dreaded UTI. Logical, typical, predictable.

Thursday meant canceling school, other appointments, loading up the Malibu and heading down to TCH.

No UTI.

“Really? Can we check again?”

I sometimes get an idea in my head about Samantha and hold onto it like a dog with a bone….grrrrr…must be UTI….grrrrr

Samantha had been on edge, pulling her feet up and pretty lethargic ….grrr…UTI….don’t touch my bone…..

She also had another nasty MRSA filled ear….okay, I’ll see you an ear infection but that didn’t explain her tummy. Or did it? It’s a puzzle with little Sammers

The doctor pulled in the other specialists and the next step was confirmed; they needed to take some blood for a metabolic panel.

Trying to get blood from Samantha is like milking a turnip. A squirming, hysterical turnip. I would rather stick bamboo up my toenails than hold Samantha as they try for another lousy, scarred vein.

In fact it’s so much fun, I pulled Samantha’s Grandma in the room too. I like to share. Grandma Judi’s a trooper.

Blood was drawn and four hours later, we headed back to the Land of Love with no answers but a prescription for her nasty ear.

Yesterday Samantha still wasn’t on her A game. At lunch we get a call that her metabolic levels were off and we needed to come back in for further tests. Liver issues are huge for mito kids so we headed back in.

“We think Samantha has mild pancreatitis.” Our smarty doctors said.

“Pancreatitis!!! Oh my God. What does that mean????” As Samantha’s mom, I have a tendency to go to a bad place when we get a diagnosis. I usually go there before I know the meaning or the treatment. I freaked out when I heard Samantha had the Rhinovirus.

The RHINOVIRUS!!!

“Heather it’s another word for the common cold.” But the common cold and mild pancreatitis can be very serious for Lil Miss if it’s not treated and monitored.

Her pancreas is mildly upset from the ketogenic diet and her seizure meds. Treatment? Give her clear liquids for 24 hours. Recheck blood levels at TCH on Monday.

Not so bad. We got home around 7:30 last night. Samantha feels much better as we are ‘cleansing’ her system.

In spite of our long TCH days and my grumbling about blood tests, I am so grateful that our doctors look a little ‘deeper’ when it comes to Samantha. A happy pancreas is a good thing.

I Cannot Buy an iPad

Today Apple unveiled it’s highly anticipated tiny, tablet computer….

The world waited with breath that was baited….

I heard it on the news this morning….

The iPad.

I laughed out loud. I have iPads in my bathroom, next to the maxi pads. Funny, but this is a HUGE corporation, surely they have checked with the public, focus groups and shareholders to make sure no one else thinks the iPad protects against those ‘days’ I surely, truly, must be the only one who thinks the iPad is for those lady days.

But no…..

The New York Daily News thinks it sounds like a feminine hygiene product, even techie men are saying the iPad might help keep your knickers fresh.

I have an iTouch and sometimes I feel a little naughty for saying iTouch…where is my iTouch? Oh the battery in my iTouch has died. I must plug my iTouch in.

I am sure the iPad is fabulous. Apple owners love their products. Heck, I love my iTouch (hehe, I said iTouch). But where are the women on the Apple marketing team? Couldn’t someone have said that the name just doesn’t go with the flow?

Perhaps the marketing people need a little help…I thought I would put in my two cents.

The iPad….small, discrete, no one will know but you

The iPad…put it in your purse and go

The iPad…so thin you will never know it’s there

The iPad…life doesn’t slow down….neither should you

Shorter, lighter periods…is there an app for that?

Chocolates

My Grandma Dodie had a birthday last week…..I think she turned 87. How awful am I that I can’t remember if Dodie is 86 or 87?

Bad Grandaughter.

Back in the day, my Dodie was fabulous. She taught me how to dance by standing on her feet in her kitchen. She and my Popa always had coca-cola in their refrigerator and you could never eat too many potato chips.

Thousands of lightening bugs lived in their backyard.

Thousands!

Popa and Dodie bought me velvet dresses and impractical boots with heels. My feet were cold for a whole winter and I slid through the cross-walk to school…but I had great boots. Even today when I want to add a little fabulous to my outfit, I pull out one of Dodie’s choker’s or handbags.

I visited Dodie today. I’m not quite sure she knew who I was but she was still fabulous. She watched me pull out a birthday card….she let me read it to her. I pulled out flowers…eh, flowers.

And then I pulled out a big heart shaped box of chocolate and set it on her lap. Her eyes got wide. Her little fingers started to pull at the celophane…..

“Dodie, do you want me to open this for you?”

“uh huh!”

She eagerly plucked a carmel, dipped in dark chocolate and popped it in her mouth. It didn’t matter who I was, we were now friends.

Mama always said…..life is like a box of chocolates

Learning Moments

I was planning on posting about our wonderful weekend in Beaver Creek and the fact that mama can’t do the bumps the way she used to….

This will come soon but something else has occupied my left frontal lobe…it’s taking up too much space so I must purge. It’s a good purge.

We got home this afternoon. Samantha was cranky, bags needed to be unpacked, calls to nurses must be returned and appointments for the week had to be made.

Samantha was tired; reduced to screaming in the middle of the floor. Bart was getting ready for a trip and I was supposed to lead a discussion tonight on Including Samuel. Including Samuel is a documentary on inclusion in public schools. It is a wonderful, moving documentary but I wasn’t in the mood to be moved.

I thought about cancelling the discussion. Long underwear, ski boots and gloves covered our living room floor. Samantha needed some attention. I was tired from the weekend and overwhelmed by the week. I couldn’t give anymore of myself.

But I went….long underwear wasn’t going anywhere. Bart and Samantha finally cuddled on the floor. I had committed…I headed to the library.

Instead of a group of caregivers, teachers or therapists, our audience was a group of adults living in a community home, people who have lived through public school inclusion or in many cases, separation into special needs classes.

At the end of the movie, one girl put her hand to her heart and said “This was my life!”

It soon became clear that I was not here to teach the pros and cons of inclusion, I was here to learn; learn about living a different life, being separated in school, being included and spending too much time in a hospital. We talked about Samantha, eating through a tube and trying to change perceptions.

I took away much more than I could ever give.

The underwear is still in the living room.

***The showing of Including Samuel was sponsored by the Arc of Larimer County A second screening will be held at the Fort Collins Main Library on January 30th at 2:45 pm. Admission to both screenings is free.

Stay at Home Sentence

Get Born Magazine is looking for ‘firsts’ for their Spring publication…..not sure if this will make the cut but this is my essay on when I first realized I needed to be a stay at home mom…..

Stay at Home Sentence:

We sat across from each other in the ICU. Our 6 month old was stable but knocked out on seizure meds; there was nothing else to do so we worked. I typed to the tune of her heart monitor, answered emails, closed deals, made sure my team had everything they needed.

It was January 30th. I had to close last minute sales in order to make commission for the month. My head was buried in my laptop. My husband’s head buried in his laptop….we worked….in the Intensive Care Unit at Children’s Hospital.

My husband looked up from his computer. “When are you going back to work?”

“I’m not.” I answered, finishing my email. I am not. I finally had the nerve to meet his eyes. He looked at me and nodded…agreed….I am not going back to work. His eyes went back to the screen. I paused and looked the ceiling, watching the words I just uttered dance across the lights.

What did I just commit to? The fact that Samantha was so sick and we were both answering work emails was ridiculous. Someone needed to bite the bullet. Someone needed to be at home with her. I knew that someone should be me.

I had always entertained the idea of being a stay-at-home-mom but once those words…I’m am not going back to work , vomited from my mouth I felt like I had lost myself. I had lost ten years of ladder climbing, schmoozing, selling, getting on the managerial fast track…I had just committed career suicide…identity suicide. Who am I if I am not working???

Truth was I didn’t even like my job. I wasn’t saving lives or changing the world. I worked in marketing….trying to convince people to buy things. My daughter was very, very sick and I was negotiating with clients who were trying to convince people to buy things…Important things….garden gnomes, aprons with cute sayings, fart machines…life changing items

But it was what I did. What do you do Heather? Well I work for a company that tries to get people to buy garden gnomes and fart machines. This is what I do. And even though I didn’t really like what I did, there were parts of my job that I loved.

When Samantha was four months old, I had to go on a business trip to New York. I coordinated her care with my mom and husband. I cried as I said goodbye. I felt guilty and called myself a bad mom…..

And then I got on the plane and took a four hour nap. I then took a taxi to the W Hotel in Manhattan, checked in, changed into my pajamas, ordered room service and watched four hours of back to back episodes of Sex and the City.

I woke up the next morning after having the best sleep since I was pregnant.

The next morning room service brought me an omelet, fresh orange juice and coffee. I ate, uninterrupted, still in my pajamas and watching the Today Show.

I took a twenty minute shower and doused myself in Aveda products. No baby shampoo in this shower. No baby to have to listen to while keeping the soap out of my eyes.

I called my husband and pretended to feel guilty about a 2 am feeding. This was difficult because the W Hotel in Manhattan does not recognize 2 am feedings or poopie diapers or projectile vomiting. They only recognize things of the fabulous and sexy sense.

I dressed in a black silk suit, kitten heals and marveled in the fact that my jacket showed no signs…what so ever….of baby vomit.

I was fabulous in the meeting; witty and charming. I closed the garden gnome deal. Our team celebrated at a restaurant off of 5th Avenue.

Two months later, I sat in two-day underwear in the ICU at Children’s, watching over my daughter. I was feeling very un-fabulous, sad, beaten down. I did not care about my garden gnomes.

But my clients love me, they need me.

But my daughter needed me more. I knew I was doing the right thing…perhaps the life saving thing. Samantha needed someone to scour the internet, bother the doctors, ask questions, write down answers and ask questions again.

But I couldn’t help but be sad about a decision that was not mine, a decision that came out of necessity. I missed my kitten heals.

And I became a somewhat bitter, stay-at-home mom.

I protested for a while. I wore only sweat suits and refused to shave my legs. I traded my United Airlines Visa card for a Grocery rewards card. I watched a lot of Oprah. I also focused on my daughter, her care and realized the job I was now doing was rewarding, life-changing and life-altering. I wrote, I advocated. I discovered the sweet, sweet world of the afternoon nap.

I emerged from my funk a couple months later. Perhaps there is life beyond the garden gnomes. My new feet no longer fit my fabulous kitten heals. They were traded for a pair of sensible Merrells. The silk suit still has a place in the closet…hoping for another Manhattan date with the W.

I Have a Dream

I sometimes forget when the working world has a national holiday….

I also sometimes hold full-length conversations with myself. Today I was remembering the national holiday and talking to myself….

9:00 this morning I remembered it was Martin Luther King Jr’s birthday. Quite a man. Do you know he was only 39 when he was assassinated?

I turned 39 on Saturday. I certainly don’t feel old. I always thought powerful, thoughtful people had to be older than I am….someone with a couple more years under their belt. I certainly don’t feel empowered enough to move mountains, people and ideas the way MLK did. Perhaps I need to get a move on.

So what is your dream? My little voice said this morning over a cup of Starbucks.

Oh, for Samantha to be happy and healthy

Phhhhffffff…she’s happy and healthy now. Really, if you could shoot for the moon, what would it be?

So I shot for the moon….We would be able identify the mutated gene, the one causing all of the problems. And doctors would fix that gene; either through stem cells or some other sort of therapy. And Samantha would be fine. She would walk. She would talk. That nasty mutation would be fixed. That, is my dream. I have a dream And I felt so idealistic for even voicing that thought.

And then my little voice said Many of those people on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial who heard Dr. King make that empowering speech in 1963 never thought a black man could be president only 46 years later. They never thought a country could change so much. That dream, like your dream, was beyond their comprehension.

This is why I enjoy my talks with my little voice.

And even though my dream is so very different from what was discussed on those steps in 1963, it is still a dream, a hope, it is about looking forward, change, about expecting more from people-kind. It is about not giving up and believing in what seems impossible and so very far away.

We cannot walk alone.

And as we walk, we must make the pledge that we shall always march ahead.

We cannot turn back. MLK 1963

Because we all have a dream.

Pat, God and Haiti

Haiti has been on my mind. Haiti has probably been on your mind too. I have tried to put my feeling to words but sometimes things are just too awful to verbalize.

So I have said nothing.

But then Pat Robertson said something….putting words to my emotions.

In case you missed it, Pat said the Haitian earthquake was “God’s punishment for Haitian slaves’ ‘pact with the devil’ to win freedom from France.”

Instead of sorrow, I felt rage, disbelief, horror and embarrassment. The Christian Science monitor stated that his remarks “got the usual chuckles of disbelief among local intelligentsia about American culture.”

Boo, hiss, Pat.

I gathered my rotten eggs in retaliation. I came up with poopie-head names to call him. I started to throw my stones. And then my smart friend Renee posted this on Facebook; A Response to Pat Robertson’s Comments about Haiti. I read Don Miller’s forgiving, intelligent post and lowered my eggs.

When Samantha got sick, I used to comment that we must have done something in a past life to anger the Karma gods. . I would think, why us? Where was God in the ICU?

And then I discovered that God was not in the seizures or the sickness, not in the sadness. God was in what we discovered from our hard times; the people in our lives, the amazing doctors, the ability to tell our story, our fight for Samantha and others. God was in our ability to keep loving and be loved.

God is not in this earthquake; not in the overwhelming death and destruction. God is in the doctors who fly in for 20 hour triage missions. God is in the small miracles that we hear about day by day. God is in the outpouring of aid to this poor nation.

This is not my sermon. People who know me know that I am far, far from a Saint. This is my speech, for myself, to keep me from throwing rotten eggs at Pat.

I want to say I feel sorry for a man whose spirituality is embedded in guilt, blame, hell fire and brimstone but I can’t. His words are too damaging. Instead I will search for the good and compassion in people trying to help. We will make a donation to help the people in Haiti and I will put down my stinky eggs.

Too bad…I was hoping to clean out my refrigerator.