We’re Off to See the Wizard!

If you know me at all, you know something must be afoot for me to reference a story I dread more than any other. I have always hated the movie The Wizard of Oz and its creepy characters. I found them terrifying as a child—really? trees that slap you?—and still shudder at the thought of a flying monkey picking someone to pieces. But there is something about that scene in the movie, when all the motley characters are finally assembled, and Judy Garland kicks up her ruby-slippered heels and takes that first jaunty step down the yellow brick road. She does this jazzy skipping step that just embodies spirit, determination, and optimism. She’s so darn hopeful, so certain that someone, somewhere will help her find a way home. That’s how I feel today.

Of course I am terrified that we’ll finally get to the Mayo Clinic, pull back the curtain, and find a dithering idiot behind the hype. Don’t you just hate how the wizard makes excuses? And complains about all the pressure people put on him to fix everything? (Oh, poor wizard. Sorry we built this beautiful Emerald City to honor your brilliance.) That’s what I’m afraid we’ll find. If that’s the case, it had better end like Dorothy’s saga—all just a bad dream and Toto intact, damn it. 

In the meantime, I am so completely overwhelmed at all the last-minute preparation to get through. Seriously, I have a two-page list. And I thought packing a diaper bag was complicated! At least if you ran out of formula on the road, you could buy it in a grocery store. No such luck with this stuff—you can’t even buy it in a pharmacy. So we’ll be hauling heavy bags, lots of paperwork, but hopeful hearts. And tons of gifts from friends and family whose generosity and kindness is the most amazing discovery of all. Hell, we don’t need no stinkin’ wizard! We got peeps. Thank you, everyone, for getting us to this point. See you back in Kansas!

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The New Club Med

After six hours of grading papers tonight, I found the Heath Bar ice cream. Oops. But I have more than one reason to love it tonight: After days and days of begging, our daughter finally convinced us to let her have a few bites of her favorite ice cream, and she kept it down!

Now before you think I’m all Scrooge, refusing to let a kid eat ice cream, you need to understand that she’s been on a feeding tube for 6 weeks because every little bite of food makes her sick. Everything from a saltine to a bite of fruit or sip of smoothie—no dice. Of course, ice cream sounds like a questionable choice for a kid who can’t eat, but she gets all her (balanced) nutrition from the formula the tube drips in. The biggest concern for me was the richness. But lo and behold, a couple of bites down and we have a winner! We may try it again tomorrow. Woo hoo! This is the first success in months! Wow.

And last night I got to meet, by telephone, a stranger who may well have changed our lives. She made a slide show about her daughter, who had very similar symptoms to our daughter, and the rough journey they traveled until they got a diagnosis of POTS (postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome). It’s not as fun as it sounds! Because they waited so long for someone to figure it out, she made the presentation to raise awareness about this mysterious illness and hopefully help others. Good plan! By a miracle, it ended up in my inbox and voila, the only diagnosis we’ve been able to piece together. We expect there may be other diagnoses, and are curious to see if this POTS one sticks when we go to the Mayo Clinic.

I will always be grateful to this kind and generous woman. She is a member of my Club Med. Not the beach-intensive one. This Club Med is different. It’s a real tribe of warriors: mothers of sick children. Dads are members, too, working hard to provide for the family and keep that insurance policy intact. Or maybe they stay at home with their child. But most often it’s the moms who do all things “med”–spend hours on the phone with schedulers, nurses, doctors, insurance companies, pharmacies, home health services, and dieticians. In between we’re trying to get the laundry done and the brakes on the car fixed. We take our kids to the doctor appointments, tests, and therapies. We show up in the school nurse’s office with a list of instructions, explanations, medical release forms from doctors’ offices, prescriptions in their original labeled containers, and a list of dosages and when to take them. The fiercest Club Med members maneuver kids around in wheelchairs. Some angle IV poles into carpools, or drive the custom minivan to accommodate those myriad special needs. Our focus, however, is not on the logistics. Those are the big distractions. Our focus is to give our kids as normal and happy a life as possible.

I’m a neophyte, and a lucky one, in this Club. The veterans of Club Med have so graciously, without even knowing me at all, offered their phone numbers and email addresses so I can ask them questions “any time!” I am in awe of those who walk a tougher road than I. I am hopeful after speaking with one whose child is recovering. I am humbled by those whose kids won’t ever get “better” and who have learned to find joy and peace in the life they have been given.

I’ve talked to moms from  California to Colorado, moms who have taken their kids to all the hospitals we have tried or waited to get into. They’ve shared tips and insights on medical equipment and tests, diagnoses, theories, doctors, hospitals, and nutrition. Their compassion is a drink of therapeutic water to the bewildered. They’ve been there. They know. Like mine, their kids have baffled the best docs and frustrated the worst. But they never give up. They just keep on going. And because they are so fierce and determined, their kids do too.

So as we head out to the Mayo Clinic, I will be covering my Club Med in prayer. I ask you to please remember them, too. All the good energy you send up in their name will find them. I am sure of it. It has found me.

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Keeping It Together

Today is Thanksgiving and there is no turkey in the oven, no pies on the counter, no potatoes in the crisper, awaiting the mashing. Our daughter is on a feed tube again, and if she can’t eat, we won’t either. We will celebrate the feast of thanks later, when she is whole again, and we really have more to be thankful for. In the meantime, we keep trying to count all our blessings, which seem to shrink and swell like stars in the distance. It’s all about atmosphere, isn’t it?   

This week we redecorated her room, with a new bed set and lamps that she picked out. My little interior designer has a sharp eye! I painted two walls purple and it came out great. I even managed to stencil a border motif across the top of one wall with no mishaps and pretty impressive results. Sometimes you have to change your outer look to change your outlook. All the bad memories of being sick for a year are out of there, swept out with the old bedspread and outdated switchplates and curtains. Fresh start for a new chapter: We have finally got an appointment week set up at the Mayo Clinic!   

We’ll be there for a week of tests, consultations, and (please God!) answers. It’ll be a huge relief to finally go where the baffling is normal, measureable, definable. DEFINABLE. Won’t that be nice, to have a name and a plan for how to move forward.   

We’ve learned a lot so far, but mostly about chronic illness and how people get through it. Actually, not sure I know much about that except it takes grit and endurance. Watching our daughter cope has been humbling and…I admit, I have no words for it. She’s the bravest person I know. And second in place for that honor are other mothers whose kids struggle and suffer. I don’t know how they keep a smile going. It’s maddening and exhausting. It’s a life of “you do what you gotta do to keep moving ahead.” 

Keep it real, peeps.

Of course, there are angels at every turn, and ours are the family and friends who have stepped up and pitched in. Strangers who shared their journeys. Our doctors who remain open-minded and determined. Suppliers who get the formula here on time (shout out to Ms. Katie at Walgreens Infusion!), and anyone who’s ever just been kind and understanding.   

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.

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