It's been a really long winter... It's taken us the entire winter to get Madilyn back to a relatively stable place after attempting school again last fall. I actually took her to the grocery store the other day to get a few things and it went really well and she was very proud of herself. I never imagined that running to the grocery store would bring me to tears.. at least this time they were happy ones.
We never ever thought this is what life would be like raising Madilyn. In some ways it is soooo much better than we ever expected and in other ways it's soooo much harder than anyone could ever comprehend. I always thought it would just get easier and easier as she got older and let me be the first to confirm that thought is a totally not even close to true.
On the good side she learned how to walk on her own last fall/early winter and is cruising everywhere in the house on foot now. That also means she's cleaning off tables and counters and she has this incredibly strange obsession with the window bench in our kitchen. It's not allowed to have anything on it. When she gets beyond the gate the first thing she does is throw everything off that bench. Then she moves on to the shoe carpet and if the door is open she throws everything down the back porch steps, and she's not happy until absolutely everything she can reach is thrown out there. Then it's onto the dog food dish... ugh, who needs a sensory bin when you've got a dish full of dog food?
I'm currently hiding in my dining room (on the other side of another gate) and she knows I'm in here and is mad. She stands at the gate and gags herself until she vomits in hopes of getting her way. The reality of it is I'm not even sure what she really wants. I never thought that in my 40's I'd be playing a never ending game of can you guess what I want? or how I feel? or what's wrong? Imagine spending you life with the never ending 1-3 year old.... right? You are currently thinking you'd probably go insane. Some days it feels like that is a distinct possibility and other days are wonderful. Cognitively we believe she understands way more than she is able to communicate. You can see the look of recognition when you tell her something but then you also get the absolute frustration, aggressiveness, anger and sometimes tears of sadness from both of us when I can't figure out what she wants or she can't figure out how to make me understand.
We are currently working on getting a distinct yes or no answer from her using green (yes) and red (no) bracelets. Every new skill takes an eternity to master for us so it's a constant work in progress but the hope is that it will at least give her those 2 definitive choices and eliminate a little bit of confusion and hopefully a few meltdowns.
We are hopeful that we can start getting her back into some "normal" little routines like being able to run to the grocery store again or maybe even the dreaded Walmart. She is back to doing very well at her outpatient therapies so now it's time to start trying to add back some everyday life things. Our hopes are that over the summer we'll get back to where we were before attempting to start school last fall. We are medical homebound for school next year so we'll hopefully be adding the teacher into our home once per week and eventually therapists. We have to go at her pace though because we can't spend every winter attempting to undo the medical damage and regression that we have had the past two years.
I won't lie.. I've always longed for her to be able to go to school and for it to go very well. The fact that it does not is really quite the grieving process to go through. We typically live in the moment with Madilyn, it's the only way to maintain our heads above water... but school was a huge dream for me and it's been shattered and the grieving process has been long and very difficult. As always though, in the end we adjust our thinking, reassess our dreams and be thankful for how far we've come and what we have instead of what we don't.
It's getting nice again and I'd love to say we've got some new little pink shoes to show off but we don't ... not yet (truth is she's still wearing the same shoes from 3 years ago)... but soon because after all.... life is all about the little pink shoes.
Showing posts with label preemie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preemie. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Where do I begin???
Where, with a child like Madilyn, do I even begin to explain to people how fragile her life is? Where do I begin so they can understand that just because they "don't see that" that it doesn't make it not very real for us? I see the look of shock and disbelief on people's faces when I say she has no cerebellum, it's just a fluid filled cyst. She shouldn't be able to breathe or move much less talk or walk or understand anything that she does.
How do I make them understand the fear that I'm constantly trying to keep under wraps that one day I will wake up and she'll no longer be with us. Every time I read a post about a Dandy-walker child that went for a nap or to bed and was fine and never woke up my fear takes over. It happens way too often and nobody talks about it. It's devastating to watch other families we've met online say good-bye to their children with no rhyme, reason or warning.
How do I make someone understand how much extra effort and stress it takes Madilyn's little body to just function each and every day? Add to that her Adrenal Insufficiency and complex X-chromosome abnormality and we are in completely unchartered waters.
How do you make someone understand that there is not another person ever to have her complex X-chromosome abnormality and it is not compatible with life.... so how is she alive still at 6 years old? Nobody knows...
We have genetics specialists around the world and 17 specialists here and they don't know, they don't understand how or why.... she's rewriting genetics history... she's disproving hundreds of years of genetics research.... how do you make people understand that when they just look at you like you're nuts when you try to explain it?
How do you make someone understand that something as simple as going to school in a very controlled and well thought out environment was killing her? When their main worry is what did they do wrong and why can't she come just one day a week for the teacher time? Why do I have to involve our medical team to attempt to make them understand that I'm not nuts... it truly is our life. It really is too much and not just a parental wish to keep their child home.
How do you make someone understand how much work and time it takes just to be able to get her through the grocery store without being overwhelmed? How do I get them to understand the devastation of finally reaching that point and then having it all taken away because we tried something new and pushed her little body too far?? How do I get them to understand the grieving process of having to start to learn those things all over again just so we aren't prisoners in our own home?
How do I get them to understand how upsetting it is to watch her struggle in an environment that previously was her happy place? A place outside of our home that she was thriving in and now is struggling because we tried school? How do we get them to understand that we're not making it up and we're not doing it to inconvenience them and it truly is detrimental to her health to be in that environment even when we/they are doing everything right?....it's simply too much for her....she doesn't fit in their tidy little box of diagnosis and "kids we've worked with" and never will.
How many times will I have to repeat myself over and over and in the end they don't understand anyway?
How do you get them to understand that when I say we have to pick and choose our battles it's not a simple choice? Some days hair brushing and taking footie pj's off is the end of the world and a battle we don't choose. Some days are full of non-stop playing but more often than not they are like today... she alternates laying in her playroom and the living room.... she sits and cries and yells at me while holding up the corner of the pink yoga mat that she has claimed as her own and she doesn't have the energy to drag it into the other room herself.... but it's a must have for her to lay on with her pillow and her minnie mouse blanket.... so I drag it from room to room and set it up and tuck her in and pick the right cartoon after a million tries and I wait for her to smile and ask me for kisses and then I hide in the other room and cry....
I cry because of the guilt of pushing her too far because I wanted something normal... I wanted her to go to school... I wanted an occasional break... I cry because sometimes no matter what I can't figure out what she wants or what she's trying to tell me.... I cry because I'm exhausted and I'm tired of trying to get other people to understand... I cry for all of the "normal" things that we will probably never do that I had previously taken for granted. I cry.....
and then I move on...I get out the blocks and puzzles that she can do while laying on her precious yoga mat and I lay on the floor and I play with her and I love her and I send out a little wish that I have many many more opportunities repeat this struggle because it means she's here with us and whether people understand or not, her being here is the most important thing and I will protect her and advocate for her until my last breath...
I always thought it would get easier as she got older but that most definitely is NOT the case... the struggle is real.... and so are the little pink shoes that have kept us going for the past six years.. after all.... those little pink shoes are what life is all about and if they could simply understand that life would be a whole lot easier.
How do I make them understand the fear that I'm constantly trying to keep under wraps that one day I will wake up and she'll no longer be with us. Every time I read a post about a Dandy-walker child that went for a nap or to bed and was fine and never woke up my fear takes over. It happens way too often and nobody talks about it. It's devastating to watch other families we've met online say good-bye to their children with no rhyme, reason or warning.
How do I make someone understand how much extra effort and stress it takes Madilyn's little body to just function each and every day? Add to that her Adrenal Insufficiency and complex X-chromosome abnormality and we are in completely unchartered waters.
How do you make someone understand that there is not another person ever to have her complex X-chromosome abnormality and it is not compatible with life.... so how is she alive still at 6 years old? Nobody knows...
We have genetics specialists around the world and 17 specialists here and they don't know, they don't understand how or why.... she's rewriting genetics history... she's disproving hundreds of years of genetics research.... how do you make people understand that when they just look at you like you're nuts when you try to explain it?
How do you make someone understand that something as simple as going to school in a very controlled and well thought out environment was killing her? When their main worry is what did they do wrong and why can't she come just one day a week for the teacher time? Why do I have to involve our medical team to attempt to make them understand that I'm not nuts... it truly is our life. It really is too much and not just a parental wish to keep their child home.
How do you make someone understand how much work and time it takes just to be able to get her through the grocery store without being overwhelmed? How do I get them to understand the devastation of finally reaching that point and then having it all taken away because we tried something new and pushed her little body too far?? How do I get them to understand the grieving process of having to start to learn those things all over again just so we aren't prisoners in our own home?
How do I get them to understand how upsetting it is to watch her struggle in an environment that previously was her happy place? A place outside of our home that she was thriving in and now is struggling because we tried school? How do we get them to understand that we're not making it up and we're not doing it to inconvenience them and it truly is detrimental to her health to be in that environment even when we/they are doing everything right?....it's simply too much for her....she doesn't fit in their tidy little box of diagnosis and "kids we've worked with" and never will.
How many times will I have to repeat myself over and over and in the end they don't understand anyway?
How do you get them to understand that when I say we have to pick and choose our battles it's not a simple choice? Some days hair brushing and taking footie pj's off is the end of the world and a battle we don't choose. Some days are full of non-stop playing but more often than not they are like today... she alternates laying in her playroom and the living room.... she sits and cries and yells at me while holding up the corner of the pink yoga mat that she has claimed as her own and she doesn't have the energy to drag it into the other room herself.... but it's a must have for her to lay on with her pillow and her minnie mouse blanket.... so I drag it from room to room and set it up and tuck her in and pick the right cartoon after a million tries and I wait for her to smile and ask me for kisses and then I hide in the other room and cry....
I cry because of the guilt of pushing her too far because I wanted something normal... I wanted her to go to school... I wanted an occasional break... I cry because sometimes no matter what I can't figure out what she wants or what she's trying to tell me.... I cry because I'm exhausted and I'm tired of trying to get other people to understand... I cry for all of the "normal" things that we will probably never do that I had previously taken for granted. I cry.....
and then I move on...I get out the blocks and puzzles that she can do while laying on her precious yoga mat and I lay on the floor and I play with her and I love her and I send out a little wish that I have many many more opportunities repeat this struggle because it means she's here with us and whether people understand or not, her being here is the most important thing and I will protect her and advocate for her until my last breath...
I always thought it would get easier as she got older but that most definitely is NOT the case... the struggle is real.... and so are the little pink shoes that have kept us going for the past six years.. after all.... those little pink shoes are what life is all about and if they could simply understand that life would be a whole lot easier.
Thursday, May 18, 2017
Changes changes changes
Boy life has been crazy here! So many changes.. Since her adrenal insufficiency diagnosis Madilyn is doing pretty good. She's making HUGE progress at therapy in all areas and it's awesome awesome awesome to hear all of her little words coming back! (even if some of them are sassy..)
We had our 3rd shunt malfunction in early April... they scare the sh*t out of me! She recovered beautifully though without any complications. The downside is that her risk of another malfunction is 20% higher for the next year because they've been in her head messing around with it... ugh.. our only other 2 malfunctions were 6 months apart in 2014. I can't explain the overwhelming feeling of fear that takes over knowing that a doctor is messing around in your child's brain, it's not something I will ever be okay with.
Seasonal allergies are wreaking havoc on the Peanugga right now and causing feeding issues, (at least we hope that's all it is) that may land us inpatient briefly if we can't get her gut to cooperate... ugh
We've recently had a formula change to attempt to get more calories in her. Last summer Madilyn was up to 36 pounds and right now she's only 31. With being so sick prior to the adrenal diagnosis last fall she lost a bunch of weight and we are unable to get it back on her. At least the problem now is because she's so active! Her GI doc put her on a higher calorie formula so we actually get to decrease the volume but she gets more calories and hopefully some weight gain.
Now the fun stuff! Madilyn has a new sidekick...: Meet Goose!
Goose is a purebred standard poodle and is Madilyn's best friend and service dog in training. We are currently almost done with our first obedience class and are working with a local training agency and the C.A.R.E Dog Coalition to do all of our training. Goose has already started coming to her therapies with us and when we go to Children's for appointments on June 5th he will be coming with us. Madilyn gets so stressed out with the medical stuff that Goose is already being trained in deep pressure therapy (he literally sits on/hugs her) and it's very calming for her. She can go from crying an puking to giggling within a minute or two thanks to Goose! The bond between these two is absolutely amazing to see.
I'm procrastinating as usual on the school thing... we need to tour a local special needs program and see how willing to work with us they are. I wish transition wasn't so hard for her (and us)... I think we may both need some new little pink shoes for that one....
We had our 3rd shunt malfunction in early April... they scare the sh*t out of me! She recovered beautifully though without any complications. The downside is that her risk of another malfunction is 20% higher for the next year because they've been in her head messing around with it... ugh.. our only other 2 malfunctions were 6 months apart in 2014. I can't explain the overwhelming feeling of fear that takes over knowing that a doctor is messing around in your child's brain, it's not something I will ever be okay with.
Seasonal allergies are wreaking havoc on the Peanugga right now and causing feeding issues, (at least we hope that's all it is) that may land us inpatient briefly if we can't get her gut to cooperate... ugh
We've recently had a formula change to attempt to get more calories in her. Last summer Madilyn was up to 36 pounds and right now she's only 31. With being so sick prior to the adrenal diagnosis last fall she lost a bunch of weight and we are unable to get it back on her. At least the problem now is because she's so active! Her GI doc put her on a higher calorie formula so we actually get to decrease the volume but she gets more calories and hopefully some weight gain.
Now the fun stuff! Madilyn has a new sidekick...: Meet Goose!
Goose is a purebred standard poodle and is Madilyn's best friend and service dog in training. We are currently almost done with our first obedience class and are working with a local training agency and the C.A.R.E Dog Coalition to do all of our training. Goose has already started coming to her therapies with us and when we go to Children's for appointments on June 5th he will be coming with us. Madilyn gets so stressed out with the medical stuff that Goose is already being trained in deep pressure therapy (he literally sits on/hugs her) and it's very calming for her. She can go from crying an puking to giggling within a minute or two thanks to Goose! The bond between these two is absolutely amazing to see.
I'm procrastinating as usual on the school thing... we need to tour a local special needs program and see how willing to work with us they are. I wish transition wasn't so hard for her (and us)... I think we may both need some new little pink shoes for that one....
Monday, January 9, 2017
True Fears
I really have no words to explain what happened tonight. We dropped Shyanne of at driver's education and barely made it around the corner and the vomit started...she was mad cause Shyanne got out of the car?? maybe?? she was upset cause it was dark outside and her DVD wasn't turned on?? carsick?? I don't have a clue but oh the vomit... the thick, choking vomit... she can't breathe, she can't get it out and I'm caught in traffic trying desperately to find a place to stop....
I stopped right in the middle of North Ave....half in traffic half out...it's snowing and slippery and there's so much traffic by the school it's chaos... I pulled over 3 times in less than 2 minutes...we came home and scared the daylights out of my hubby who's upstairs sick.. we were supposed to be gone to Walmart to pick up some crackers, 7 up and a few other things and instead we're back in the door 10 minutes after we left with Madilyn yelling her head off at me and me sobbing, yelling, begging her to stop puking.
Madilyn dying from choking to death while I'm driving and stuck in traffic is one of my biggest fears... I've watched her turn blue right in front of me when we were in the house...when the puking starts and I'm in the car alone with her panic ensues.... I try to keep my calm the best I can but tonight I lost it... I drove home the last few blocks sobbing, yelling and begging her to stop..... it makes me never want to leave the house alone with her again.... I will, because I have to but it leaves me with this pit of fear in my gut that makes me nauseous and I somewhat hold my breath just waiting....
I've always been a deal with it and move on kind of person...a don't dwell on it kind of person... I still don't dwell but the PTSD doesn't always let me move on either.....
I stopped right in the middle of North Ave....half in traffic half out...it's snowing and slippery and there's so much traffic by the school it's chaos... I pulled over 3 times in less than 2 minutes...we came home and scared the daylights out of my hubby who's upstairs sick.. we were supposed to be gone to Walmart to pick up some crackers, 7 up and a few other things and instead we're back in the door 10 minutes after we left with Madilyn yelling her head off at me and me sobbing, yelling, begging her to stop puking.
Madilyn dying from choking to death while I'm driving and stuck in traffic is one of my biggest fears... I've watched her turn blue right in front of me when we were in the house...when the puking starts and I'm in the car alone with her panic ensues.... I try to keep my calm the best I can but tonight I lost it... I drove home the last few blocks sobbing, yelling and begging her to stop..... it makes me never want to leave the house alone with her again.... I will, because I have to but it leaves me with this pit of fear in my gut that makes me nauseous and I somewhat hold my breath just waiting....
I've always been a deal with it and move on kind of person...a don't dwell on it kind of person... I still don't dwell but the PTSD doesn't always let me move on either.....
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Learning to Love the "I don't know"
As many of you know our life with a medically complex/fragile child is filled to the brim with "I don't know". This "I don't know" life was again the only answer we received with results from our recent sleep study. The ENT doctor called me on Friday and I was so hoping for an actual answer to her snoring and possible sleep apnea but all I got was "I don't know". For ENT purposes the study was inconclusive. She said it showed one episode of obstructive sleep apnea and that Madilyn does enter all stages of sleep but during the study most were too brief to really tell her anything that she needed to know. She went on to explain how some people think that tonsil and adenoid removal is considered routine thanks to most insurance regulations but with Madilyn it would be anything but. The risks are way to high for her to remove them without conclusive evidence that it will help her. We would be there for weeks due to the risk of hemorrhage and the fact that we live so far away. The risk of the surgery shutting down her GI tract is way to high as is the risk of it causing a critical sugar crash that could leave her comatose or in organ failure. The "I don't know" options given are a steroid nasal spray to see if that helps and if after a month there is no improvement we will be referred to the sleep clinic doctors and put through a boat load more testing to see if they can figure anything out. The positives are other than that one episode her oxygen levels remained steady and good throughout our night of little sleep. I can live with that.
I got stuck on the "I don't know" for about 2.3 seconds. Then I came to the quick reality of "I don't know" is okay. It's better than the definitive negative answers we could have received. I don't know exactly where in this journey "I don't know" became so acceptable,but it has and here's why. We started out with "you will never go home with a baby, she's so little, so sick and has so many genetic issues she'll never survive".....that turned into "she'll be lucky to live to 8 months old"....and when we gained custody of her at 11 months old it turned into "if she's alive in 3 months call and schedule another appointment". I have become oddly familiar with life flights crews and oddly comfortable screaming at doctor's to stop writing my child off because of what her diagnosis looks like on paper. I have become so in tune with my "mommy instincts" that doctor's no longer question when I am telling them something is wrong, they just trust me and try to figure it out. I have screamed at an ER doctor to do something because my child was dying in my arms in the only place that could save her life.
I have been looked at and whispered about among doctor's and therapists when they questioned if Madilyn knew her name or knew who I was... Madilyn proved them wrong. I have been told countless times "that's impossible, she shouldn't be alive much less able to do that"...it's okay, because I don't know how she does it either but she does.
It's actually kind of crazy to hear that your child has defied all odds and hundreds of years of genetic research just by being alive. They are thrilled and amazed that she's actually thriving. Endochrine was so thrilled at this last appointment with her growth. The doctor said "I don't know how you did it but she's growing....it's amazing". We hear quite often "I don't know how you do it"..my response is "I don't know how we couldn't". Madilyn had my heart from the moment my daughter said she was pregnant. When we found out that she had a severe case of Dandy-Walker Syndrome the prognosis was not good. My family can vouch for the fact that I completely trusted my gut when I defied doctor's by preparing to take her home when they said she never would, they all thought I was crazy. It's funny now, three and half years later because my response was "I don't know....how to make you understand what I feel but she'll come home".....that infamous and recurring "I don't know"..
Someone asked the other day about life expectancy for Madilyn and if she's "getting better". I don't know how a child with multiple genetic rare diseases ever gets "better", there's never ending risk in our life, there's always something going on with her but I told her " I don't know, but she's here and she's happy and we'll take it". We live every single day in the moment because we know that it can change in the blink of an eye. We take nothing for granted.
Madilyn is an absolute blessing in our lives. She has taught me more in her short life than I ever could have imagined, and for that I am thankful. I've had countless doctors and therapists ask how we do it and my typical response is that "we just love her". I'm not super mom and I have zero super powers, I'm not special, I'm just a mom that loves her child unconditionally.
On our recent trip to Milwaukee for appointments our GI doctor very sadly told us he's moving to Texas to be closer to his family. Madilyn was his very first official patient out of med school. We love him and have a boat load of gratitude for him for trusting us, listening to us and not being afraid to think outside the box when it came to Madilyn's care, we wish him well but are very sad to see him go. Right at the end of our appointment he was holding Madilyn playing with her. It was in this moment that I received the hugest compliment I think I will ever receive in my life. He was looking at her with the biggest smile and you could tell he took pride in all that he has done for us. He said that someday he will see us again when Madilyn is famous and advocating for other children like her, he said that he has all the confidence in the world that she will do great things with her life. He thanked me for letting him share in our life and trusting him to be her doctor....He then looked at me and said "I don't know how you did it but you have loved her to absolute perfection".......this moment taught me to love the "I don't know"...
I got stuck on the "I don't know" for about 2.3 seconds. Then I came to the quick reality of "I don't know" is okay. It's better than the definitive negative answers we could have received. I don't know exactly where in this journey "I don't know" became so acceptable,but it has and here's why. We started out with "you will never go home with a baby, she's so little, so sick and has so many genetic issues she'll never survive".....that turned into "she'll be lucky to live to 8 months old"....and when we gained custody of her at 11 months old it turned into "if she's alive in 3 months call and schedule another appointment". I have become oddly familiar with life flights crews and oddly comfortable screaming at doctor's to stop writing my child off because of what her diagnosis looks like on paper. I have become so in tune with my "mommy instincts" that doctor's no longer question when I am telling them something is wrong, they just trust me and try to figure it out. I have screamed at an ER doctor to do something because my child was dying in my arms in the only place that could save her life.
I have been looked at and whispered about among doctor's and therapists when they questioned if Madilyn knew her name or knew who I was... Madilyn proved them wrong. I have been told countless times "that's impossible, she shouldn't be alive much less able to do that"...it's okay, because I don't know how she does it either but she does.
It's actually kind of crazy to hear that your child has defied all odds and hundreds of years of genetic research just by being alive. They are thrilled and amazed that she's actually thriving. Endochrine was so thrilled at this last appointment with her growth. The doctor said "I don't know how you did it but she's growing....it's amazing". We hear quite often "I don't know how you do it"..my response is "I don't know how we couldn't". Madilyn had my heart from the moment my daughter said she was pregnant. When we found out that she had a severe case of Dandy-Walker Syndrome the prognosis was not good. My family can vouch for the fact that I completely trusted my gut when I defied doctor's by preparing to take her home when they said she never would, they all thought I was crazy. It's funny now, three and half years later because my response was "I don't know....how to make you understand what I feel but she'll come home".....that infamous and recurring "I don't know"..
Someone asked the other day about life expectancy for Madilyn and if she's "getting better". I don't know how a child with multiple genetic rare diseases ever gets "better", there's never ending risk in our life, there's always something going on with her but I told her " I don't know, but she's here and she's happy and we'll take it". We live every single day in the moment because we know that it can change in the blink of an eye. We take nothing for granted.
Madilyn is an absolute blessing in our lives. She has taught me more in her short life than I ever could have imagined, and for that I am thankful. I've had countless doctors and therapists ask how we do it and my typical response is that "we just love her". I'm not super mom and I have zero super powers, I'm not special, I'm just a mom that loves her child unconditionally.
On our recent trip to Milwaukee for appointments our GI doctor very sadly told us he's moving to Texas to be closer to his family. Madilyn was his very first official patient out of med school. We love him and have a boat load of gratitude for him for trusting us, listening to us and not being afraid to think outside the box when it came to Madilyn's care, we wish him well but are very sad to see him go. Right at the end of our appointment he was holding Madilyn playing with her. It was in this moment that I received the hugest compliment I think I will ever receive in my life. He was looking at her with the biggest smile and you could tell he took pride in all that he has done for us. He said that someday he will see us again when Madilyn is famous and advocating for other children like her, he said that he has all the confidence in the world that she will do great things with her life. He thanked me for letting him share in our life and trusting him to be her doctor....He then looked at me and said "I don't know how you did it but you have loved her to absolute perfection".......this moment taught me to love the "I don't know"...
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
up and down....over and over again
So I thought in 2013 when we heard a few times that we almost lost our sweet Peanugga that we would never have to hear that again. That we had things under control. Boy was I wrong! 2014 was full of huge developmental progress and growth and yet we still heard 4 times that "she probably would not have woken up". Those words are devastating even more so because it is solely my mommy instincts that prevented it. Sometimes there is no clear indication that something is wrong. It's just off and my gut gets this horrible feeling that something is really wrong. Thankfully all of our doctors listen to me and we've come through it okay.
The shunt revisions are horrible. Knowing that they are digging around in her brain is incredibly hard for me as one little slip could change our lives so quickly. Sugar issues are even worse. We had a scare in November, I thought it was just a coiled feeding tube as she wasn't tolerating feeds. We contacted Milwaukee and decided that we didn't need a med flight (we had already had 3 of them in 6 months) but that we would immediately head to Children's Hospital and would be a direct admit through the emergency department. Madilyn was starting to dehydrate and was tolerating zero fluids through her feeding tube ports but was otherwise acting completely fine. Imagine my surprise when they got her IV going in the ER and then checked her blood sugar and it was only 32. For those that know nothing about sugar levels 32 is organ failure and coma range. The nurse couldn't even contain her surprise as she frantically ran from our room in a panic. They said that Madilyn should have been completely lethargic and difficult to wake up (if she woke up at all) but not our little pistol. We had to mummy wrap her in a sheet and 3 of us had to hold her down to get her IV going. This causes HUGE concerns because once again she doesn't display any typical symptoms when there is a problem. During this 4 day stay we had to hear those dreaded words "for reasons unknown to us"...I get so tired of those words. They determined that Madilyn's entire GI tract just randomly stops working and they have no idea why. They've done scopes and blood work and meds repeatedly and there are no answers. Our teams of doctors are fabulous and you can tell it bothers them just as much to say it as it does for us to hear it...I can't even begin to adequately explain the way it makes me feel.
Since we came home in mid November things have been very difficult. Madilyn was supposed to have her routine eye exam under anesthesia in mid December and the doctor let us reschedule it until right after Christmas, this was a good thing as she ended up with round 1 of the croup and was on steroids and they wouldn't do anesthesia. Five days prior to the rescheduled trip she ended up with the croup again and this time it turned into pneumonia and we spent our very first overnight stay at our local hospital for observation for her breathing issues. The pneumonia/'croup diagnosis puts anesthesia off for 4 to 6 weeks due to airway narrowing. We were scheduled to go again in early February and once again failed the surgical clearance physical. Both of Madilyn's ears were infected again (5th or 6th time in 6 months) and her lungs were not yet clear, so we wait....another 6 weeks. We attempt again in March to pass the surgical clearance and pray, pray, pray that the fluid pocket on her right eye remains stable. In the meantime the ear infections have earned us another specialty to add to our list. We now have to see ENT for possible tubes when we go for our big cluster of appointments in mid April. Six appointments in 3 days plus x-rays makes for a very long week, especially since the Peanugga and I travel alone for those extended routine trips.
I always had the idea in my head that the older she got the easier this would be and I realize now that is not really the case. In some aspects it is easier, she is able to play with her toys and is mobile and is learning to talk so it helps. On the other hand it brings new struggles, she is mobile but is unable to walk on her own yet doesn't want to be held or carried so a simple thing like running into the bank or post office requires dragging a stroller everywhere because otherwise it's world war 3 as the Peanugga thinks it's perfectly acceptable to roll around the nasty floor wherever she chooses. The talking also brings about issues, she has words but not quite enough to express herself all the time which tends to lead to angry lashing out. She will grab at my face and arms and pinch or gouge at me (or whomever is closest) when she has no other way to communicate and is frustrated or overwhelmed. When we end up in seclusion when she is sick the progress we have made with transitioning in public comes completely undone. For example: Walmart used to be one of Madilyn's favorite places (even though I hate it..) and after not being anywhere we spent the entire first trip with her in tears and puking. We took her there three times last week just to have her out somewhere....I really need to find some better places to hang out..
We have now entered the world of sensory brushing and joint compression and are waiting (since November) for theratogs for Madilyn's legs. All of these things will hopefully help when she's on sensory overload or to somewhat avoid the overload to start with. I'm to the point that I'll try just about anything to attempt to make her life a little easier, for both of us.
We've had so much going on the last few months that I have not been keeping up with the blog. Sometimes I find things extremely difficult to process and I'm not sure how to share it without sounding completely negative, and I don't like negative as it gets us nowhere in life. So I will just share....the good, bad, up, down, ugly and amazing. I actually am beginning to thing that part of the problem is there is not enough pink in her purple/pink tennis shoes...maybe it's time for new pink shoes....because life is all about the little pink shoes..
The shunt revisions are horrible. Knowing that they are digging around in her brain is incredibly hard for me as one little slip could change our lives so quickly. Sugar issues are even worse. We had a scare in November, I thought it was just a coiled feeding tube as she wasn't tolerating feeds. We contacted Milwaukee and decided that we didn't need a med flight (we had already had 3 of them in 6 months) but that we would immediately head to Children's Hospital and would be a direct admit through the emergency department. Madilyn was starting to dehydrate and was tolerating zero fluids through her feeding tube ports but was otherwise acting completely fine. Imagine my surprise when they got her IV going in the ER and then checked her blood sugar and it was only 32. For those that know nothing about sugar levels 32 is organ failure and coma range. The nurse couldn't even contain her surprise as she frantically ran from our room in a panic. They said that Madilyn should have been completely lethargic and difficult to wake up (if she woke up at all) but not our little pistol. We had to mummy wrap her in a sheet and 3 of us had to hold her down to get her IV going. This causes HUGE concerns because once again she doesn't display any typical symptoms when there is a problem. During this 4 day stay we had to hear those dreaded words "for reasons unknown to us"...I get so tired of those words. They determined that Madilyn's entire GI tract just randomly stops working and they have no idea why. They've done scopes and blood work and meds repeatedly and there are no answers. Our teams of doctors are fabulous and you can tell it bothers them just as much to say it as it does for us to hear it...I can't even begin to adequately explain the way it makes me feel.
Since we came home in mid November things have been very difficult. Madilyn was supposed to have her routine eye exam under anesthesia in mid December and the doctor let us reschedule it until right after Christmas, this was a good thing as she ended up with round 1 of the croup and was on steroids and they wouldn't do anesthesia. Five days prior to the rescheduled trip she ended up with the croup again and this time it turned into pneumonia and we spent our very first overnight stay at our local hospital for observation for her breathing issues. The pneumonia/'croup diagnosis puts anesthesia off for 4 to 6 weeks due to airway narrowing. We were scheduled to go again in early February and once again failed the surgical clearance physical. Both of Madilyn's ears were infected again (5th or 6th time in 6 months) and her lungs were not yet clear, so we wait....another 6 weeks. We attempt again in March to pass the surgical clearance and pray, pray, pray that the fluid pocket on her right eye remains stable. In the meantime the ear infections have earned us another specialty to add to our list. We now have to see ENT for possible tubes when we go for our big cluster of appointments in mid April. Six appointments in 3 days plus x-rays makes for a very long week, especially since the Peanugga and I travel alone for those extended routine trips.
I always had the idea in my head that the older she got the easier this would be and I realize now that is not really the case. In some aspects it is easier, she is able to play with her toys and is mobile and is learning to talk so it helps. On the other hand it brings new struggles, she is mobile but is unable to walk on her own yet doesn't want to be held or carried so a simple thing like running into the bank or post office requires dragging a stroller everywhere because otherwise it's world war 3 as the Peanugga thinks it's perfectly acceptable to roll around the nasty floor wherever she chooses. The talking also brings about issues, she has words but not quite enough to express herself all the time which tends to lead to angry lashing out. She will grab at my face and arms and pinch or gouge at me (or whomever is closest) when she has no other way to communicate and is frustrated or overwhelmed. When we end up in seclusion when she is sick the progress we have made with transitioning in public comes completely undone. For example: Walmart used to be one of Madilyn's favorite places (even though I hate it..) and after not being anywhere we spent the entire first trip with her in tears and puking. We took her there three times last week just to have her out somewhere....I really need to find some better places to hang out..
We have now entered the world of sensory brushing and joint compression and are waiting (since November) for theratogs for Madilyn's legs. All of these things will hopefully help when she's on sensory overload or to somewhat avoid the overload to start with. I'm to the point that I'll try just about anything to attempt to make her life a little easier, for both of us.
We've had so much going on the last few months that I have not been keeping up with the blog. Sometimes I find things extremely difficult to process and I'm not sure how to share it without sounding completely negative, and I don't like negative as it gets us nowhere in life. So I will just share....the good, bad, up, down, ugly and amazing. I actually am beginning to thing that part of the problem is there is not enough pink in her purple/pink tennis shoes...maybe it's time for new pink shoes....because life is all about the little pink shoes..
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Some truth for you....(and me)...
I'd be a liar if I didn't say I'm tired...summer was not what I had hoped for and I feel like I blinked my eyes and it's fall and we're sick again. We got to enjoy one day...yes, I said one day at the beach this summer where we got to swim and enjoy family and one other day that we got to enjoy a picnic on the beach at a friend's camp. That was our summer. Madilyn doesn't tolerate the heat well so when it's above 75 degrees we are in the air conditioned house and as soon as it cools off we start enjoying daily walks and she ends up sick right away. Sick for us means breathing treatments every 4 hours with 3 different meds, steroids that have her bouncing off the walls, antibiotics that cause a whole other round of intestinal issues and puke...oh the puke...which leads to weight loss...it's a vicious circle and I'm tired...
We went to Milwaukee in July for appointments that went really well and almost exactly a month later we were air lifted to Milwaukee because Madilyn's feeding tube coiled from her intestines back up into her stomach which ended up making her really sick really quick. Feeding tolerance had not been achieved yet and now she's sick. Sometimes it feels like we'll never make feeding progress. It's the one mountain that I feel like we'll never climb successfully. Yet we keep trying, over and over and over....maybe someday we'll get there...at least I hope...I always have hope.
A life of seclusion is difficult, I feel like people sometimes forget about us. I understand why though. Why would my friends keep inviting me out when I never get to show up. I miss working, but that's not practical either with our special needs/medically complex life. My son had to get himself to college 10 hours away from home because our emergency med flight and inpatient stay made it impossible for us to get him there, physically and financially. My car needs new tires and the exhaust repaired and I have no clue where we will pull the money from. We have two trips coming up to Milwaukee in the end of September and again two weeks later. We need a specific weather cover for the stroller so we can be outside and Madilyn can be protected.........if it's not one thing it's another and there's never enough money or me to go around....but we'll figure it out, we always do.
The doctor recommended that I purchase/make signs to attach to the stroller/shopping cart etc..they are a stop sign and then a medical alert is printed on them clearly stating that we are a medically fragile child and please don't touch us.....like we don't feel secluded and alone enough now we're going to put a big red stop sign on us? I can't even begin to explain how this makes me feel....while I don't want people touching her and getting in her face I honestly don't know how I feel about the stop sign approach either.
I'm done whining...I'll have my good cry cause I'm exhausted and we'll move on and figure it out. That's what we do. We choose to focus on the positive, we have to....this virus has not landed us inpatient, we are able to be home....that's positive....and thanks to the drastic change in weather the little pink boots have been ordered.....cause our life is all about the little pink shoes..
We went to Milwaukee in July for appointments that went really well and almost exactly a month later we were air lifted to Milwaukee because Madilyn's feeding tube coiled from her intestines back up into her stomach which ended up making her really sick really quick. Feeding tolerance had not been achieved yet and now she's sick. Sometimes it feels like we'll never make feeding progress. It's the one mountain that I feel like we'll never climb successfully. Yet we keep trying, over and over and over....maybe someday we'll get there...at least I hope...I always have hope.
A life of seclusion is difficult, I feel like people sometimes forget about us. I understand why though. Why would my friends keep inviting me out when I never get to show up. I miss working, but that's not practical either with our special needs/medically complex life. My son had to get himself to college 10 hours away from home because our emergency med flight and inpatient stay made it impossible for us to get him there, physically and financially. My car needs new tires and the exhaust repaired and I have no clue where we will pull the money from. We have two trips coming up to Milwaukee in the end of September and again two weeks later. We need a specific weather cover for the stroller so we can be outside and Madilyn can be protected.........if it's not one thing it's another and there's never enough money or me to go around....but we'll figure it out, we always do.
The doctor recommended that I purchase/make signs to attach to the stroller/shopping cart etc..they are a stop sign and then a medical alert is printed on them clearly stating that we are a medically fragile child and please don't touch us.....like we don't feel secluded and alone enough now we're going to put a big red stop sign on us? I can't even begin to explain how this makes me feel....while I don't want people touching her and getting in her face I honestly don't know how I feel about the stop sign approach either.
I'm done whining...I'll have my good cry cause I'm exhausted and we'll move on and figure it out. That's what we do. We choose to focus on the positive, we have to....this virus has not landed us inpatient, we are able to be home....that's positive....and thanks to the drastic change in weather the little pink boots have been ordered.....cause our life is all about the little pink shoes..
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
We see what we want to see
We've been quiet for a while...my son graduated from high school and we've moved to a single story home..it was a crazy chaotic few months. This past month we've just enjoyed being settled and we've been to Milwaukee for 5 days for medical appointments (again). Madilyn's appointments went great. GI is thrilled with her growth since they upped her calories. It was the first time in 11 months that we finally had to increase her calories so she'd gain weight. She's just over 23 lbs now and almost 3 years old. The retina specialist was very happy too. The fluid pocket on her right eye is still there but it's very stable at this point and is not in a vision threatening position so that's a relief! It also means they don't have to put her under anesthesia again until December to look at it.
We're enjoying our new home and the Peanugga is learning to navigate her gait trainer outside in the grass. It's fun to watch her...she so LOVES it! She has learned that the road in front of our house has a very slight hill and she'll walk/run super quick for about 5 steps and then hang on her gait trainer and coast just like papa does when he's pushing her in the shopping cart. She giggles like crazy when she does it. She sure is smart.
With all of our accomplishments have come challenges. Madilyn is sleeping in her very own bedroom since moving and that's going really well. I now sleep with the video monitor...:) When it's warm outside as much as we love to be out there she still doesn't deal well at all with the heat. The combination of allergies and just her reactions to the warm temperatures usually mean tons of fun while playing and lots of vomit, sometimes for several hours after we've been outside....nobody can tell us why...(imagine that), it's just what she does....it's frustrating. Everything we do seems to have a trade off or consequence...we just have to weigh heavily if the consequence is worth it and how much stress it'll put on Madillyn's little body. Is it worth it to spend the entire day outside with family and having fun for her to be vomiting and exhausted for hours after? Sometimes it is....sometimes it isn't...it's all a huge juggling act....I'm terrified to drop the wrong ball...
Madilyn has been making huge progress with her speech and motor skills. She's pulling to stand on all of our furniture and she's an extremely busy 2 year old that doesn't hesitate to tell us no. So just when we're starting to feel like the worst of everything is maybe behind us we deal with the news that two little Dandy-Walker sweehthearts have earned their angel wings over the past 5 weeks because of this rare, nasty disease....and it makes my heart break...one of the families we followed in a group we belong to. Both of our girls had their shunt issues at the same time....my heart breaks for them.....that could be us...I try not to let my mind go there...it terrifies me...
Then to add to it we get the phone call....the dreaded phone call stating that a medical department closer to our home won't even see Madilyn because she's way too medically complex and fragile. She scares them, they refuse. It makes me want to scream! Madilyn has multiple medical diagnosis and they are all rare...one of them so rare that she's the only one in the world....she shouldn't be alive they tell us, she shouldn't be able to do anything they tell us............but she is and she does....I want them to see what we see. I want them to meet her before they shun her and see what a happy, beautiful little girl she is. They have never met her, they think that she's a vegetable because on paper that's what they say she should be.........I hate "they"...I hate that she's stereotyped and shunned and she's not even 3.....the ones that take the time to know us love her. She's an inspiration, not something to be feared. She's a sweet, adorable, loving little person....not just a medical anomaly...and something to be gawked at.....she's so much more than just their statistic, but they don't take the time to see that.......it makes me incredibly angry and sad all at the same time.....
"They" can see what they want....and I will see what I want...we live it every single day...it is our reality...we choose to live for the positive and focus on the good things otherwise the negative will suck us in and that's a place we don't want to be. We also choose to celebrate....the little pink crocs.....cause it's all about the little pink shoes...:)
We're enjoying our new home and the Peanugga is learning to navigate her gait trainer outside in the grass. It's fun to watch her...she so LOVES it! She has learned that the road in front of our house has a very slight hill and she'll walk/run super quick for about 5 steps and then hang on her gait trainer and coast just like papa does when he's pushing her in the shopping cart. She giggles like crazy when she does it. She sure is smart.
With all of our accomplishments have come challenges. Madilyn is sleeping in her very own bedroom since moving and that's going really well. I now sleep with the video monitor...:) When it's warm outside as much as we love to be out there she still doesn't deal well at all with the heat. The combination of allergies and just her reactions to the warm temperatures usually mean tons of fun while playing and lots of vomit, sometimes for several hours after we've been outside....nobody can tell us why...(imagine that), it's just what she does....it's frustrating. Everything we do seems to have a trade off or consequence...we just have to weigh heavily if the consequence is worth it and how much stress it'll put on Madillyn's little body. Is it worth it to spend the entire day outside with family and having fun for her to be vomiting and exhausted for hours after? Sometimes it is....sometimes it isn't...it's all a huge juggling act....I'm terrified to drop the wrong ball...
Madilyn has been making huge progress with her speech and motor skills. She's pulling to stand on all of our furniture and she's an extremely busy 2 year old that doesn't hesitate to tell us no. So just when we're starting to feel like the worst of everything is maybe behind us we deal with the news that two little Dandy-Walker sweehthearts have earned their angel wings over the past 5 weeks because of this rare, nasty disease....and it makes my heart break...one of the families we followed in a group we belong to. Both of our girls had their shunt issues at the same time....my heart breaks for them.....that could be us...I try not to let my mind go there...it terrifies me...
Then to add to it we get the phone call....the dreaded phone call stating that a medical department closer to our home won't even see Madilyn because she's way too medically complex and fragile. She scares them, they refuse. It makes me want to scream! Madilyn has multiple medical diagnosis and they are all rare...one of them so rare that she's the only one in the world....she shouldn't be alive they tell us, she shouldn't be able to do anything they tell us............but she is and she does....I want them to see what we see. I want them to meet her before they shun her and see what a happy, beautiful little girl she is. They have never met her, they think that she's a vegetable because on paper that's what they say she should be.........I hate "they"...I hate that she's stereotyped and shunned and she's not even 3.....the ones that take the time to know us love her. She's an inspiration, not something to be feared. She's a sweet, adorable, loving little person....not just a medical anomaly...and something to be gawked at.....she's so much more than just their statistic, but they don't take the time to see that.......it makes me incredibly angry and sad all at the same time.....
"They" can see what they want....and I will see what I want...we live it every single day...it is our reality...we choose to live for the positive and focus on the good things otherwise the negative will suck us in and that's a place we don't want to be. We also choose to celebrate....the little pink crocs.....cause it's all about the little pink shoes...:)
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Glimpses, glances and hopes
So I've been quiet for a little bit and it's because I've been struggling. We were placed on a new medication to help the Peanugga tolerate tummy (G) feeds better in hopes of less vomit and progress and it has been great. Too bad in the middle of it when we caught that first hopeful glimpse of coming off the J feeds she ended up throwing up while sleeping which startled her and she gasped right in the middle of it which resulted in our first encounter with aspiration pneumonia. When you hear "aspiration" anything it results in this unbelievable fear that our feeding issues may multiply. We've had therapists and doctor's in the past question how we've never dealt with this before with the massive amounts of vomit we have dealt with and all the major GERD/reflux issues. I'm not sure how we haven't but I'm very thankful that we didn't and I'm praying really hard that it was a total fluke one time incident. After the pneumonia we had a few really good days and got out to enjoy some nice weather and she ended up sick again.....allergies? maybe? The runny nose, coughing and congestion has made us stop all tummy feeds for an entire week because they all result in vomit. The vomit causes horrible stress for me...it causes weight worries, aspiration worries....It also causes me heartache and fear....for the first time in well over a year I finally caught a glimpse of what it would be like to have all tummy feeds and no more night feeds and it seems as quickly as I finally acknowledged that hope the whole thing blew up in my face. I can't even put into words how that makes me feel and add to it that we finally had her taking some foods by mouth and all of that stops too when the vomit starts....one step forward two steps back.....:(
On top of all of the "normal" Peanugga stuff in our lives we are getting ready for my son to graduate tomorrow. I never in a million years thought I'd be the boohoo mama but apparently that is exactly what I have turned in to. I am so incredibly proud of him and the young man he has turned out to be. He has had to grow up way too fast with all the unexpected events in our lives. It seems like if I blink my eyes it was just yesterday that it was him I was watching play on the floor and now he's all grown up. He is amazing to watch with Madilyn. I think her Uncle Thomas is her favorite person ever....they have a bond that I can't explain but when you see him with her it makes you tear up. Thankfully we have lots of family help with Madilyn so his graduation can be all about him.
There have been way too many times in the past two and a half years that my children and husband have voluntarily taken a backseat on my priority list in order for me to take care of Madilyn. They have never complained and for that I am thankful but it does not ease my own self-inflicted guilt that at times with all the travel and extended stays in Milwaukee that I feel my children are growing up without a mother. I am very thankful to all of their friends mother's that have stepped in as surrogates and cheered them on at their sporting events when I could not be there and have opened their hearts and homes to my children where they could escape and just be normal for a little while. Without you other mom's and dad's that have done this for my children they wouldn't be a wonderful as they are and you deserve that acknowledgement and my gratitude. I do find lately though that along with that gratitude comes some feeling of jealousy for all of the things that I have missed out on with them in my place.
I think it's time for me to invest in some pink shoes of my own for walking.....and to hold on to my hopes and dreams no matter how many road blocks and detours may be in the way.....after all, it's all about the pink shoes...
On top of all of the "normal" Peanugga stuff in our lives we are getting ready for my son to graduate tomorrow. I never in a million years thought I'd be the boohoo mama but apparently that is exactly what I have turned in to. I am so incredibly proud of him and the young man he has turned out to be. He has had to grow up way too fast with all the unexpected events in our lives. It seems like if I blink my eyes it was just yesterday that it was him I was watching play on the floor and now he's all grown up. He is amazing to watch with Madilyn. I think her Uncle Thomas is her favorite person ever....they have a bond that I can't explain but when you see him with her it makes you tear up. Thankfully we have lots of family help with Madilyn so his graduation can be all about him.
There have been way too many times in the past two and a half years that my children and husband have voluntarily taken a backseat on my priority list in order for me to take care of Madilyn. They have never complained and for that I am thankful but it does not ease my own self-inflicted guilt that at times with all the travel and extended stays in Milwaukee that I feel my children are growing up without a mother. I am very thankful to all of their friends mother's that have stepped in as surrogates and cheered them on at their sporting events when I could not be there and have opened their hearts and homes to my children where they could escape and just be normal for a little while. Without you other mom's and dad's that have done this for my children they wouldn't be a wonderful as they are and you deserve that acknowledgement and my gratitude. I do find lately though that along with that gratitude comes some feeling of jealousy for all of the things that I have missed out on with them in my place.
I think it's time for me to invest in some pink shoes of my own for walking.....and to hold on to my hopes and dreams no matter how many road blocks and detours may be in the way.....after all, it's all about the pink shoes...
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Blessings and changes
The last few months have been crazy for us. All of the time stuck at home between snow storms, freezing cold temperatures and health issues has made us a little shack happy. We've been to Milwaukee for appointments 5 times already since the end of January. This last trip was a girls trip. Madilyn and I brought my 12 year old daughter Shyanne with us so she could experience Children's Hospital and all of the things Madilyn goes through at her appointments.
After 8.5 hours of nonstop running from one appointment to another and all the poking and prodding Shyanne was as tired as us. We started our day with GI which is always great cause our GI doc loves Madilyn and the fact that she's gained so much weight. He is actually a little worried that she's still gaining too fast. Sometimes I feel like we can't win, too slow...too fast...where's the happy medium???
We've been having some issues with the g-tube (direct to her stomach) feeds that end up with vomiting episodes so GI has started her on a new medication that will hopefully help with that. Today was day #1 and we made it through all 3 g feeds with no vomiting or gagging so I am hopeful.
Next up was Endochrine and they monitor her growth really close. Her regular doctor was on vacation so we saw another one and when he saw her he said she needs growth hormones..NOW...I politely explained that she's been through enough and as long as she's proportionate she's fine, we're not injecting her daily just so she can be someone else's version of "normal"...she's been through enough and that is a battle we are choosing not to fight right now or probably ever. After Endochrine we went to the scoliosis clinic for the ortho doctor to see her for the first time. Madilyn had a very "functional shift" to one side due to vision issues for a very long time and with her hypotonia (low tone) they just like to see them to make sure everything is the way it should be and thankfully it is!
We then went to Interventional Radiology and finally got the feeding tube switched from a 12 inch long peg to a cute little glow in the dark button! They had to sedate her for this which was okay because she had a quick brain MRI right after it to check out her new shunt catheter. Both of these appointments went great and the neurosurgeon is very happy with the way her shunt is functioning so the day was a huge success in my book!
We're settling into our normal again after the shunt scare and are looking forward to hopefully staying home until July now. Her emergency shunt surgery eliminated one May appointment and when she had her eyes examined under anesthesia on March 21st the fluid pocket had improved so he is seeing her again in July instead of May. Hooray for an unexpected little break!
Madilyn's busy busy and never stops moving or chattering which is such a blessing for us. She also had her very first round of professional pictures today! I'll be sure to post one or two when we get them back. Pictures are not something we've ever been able to do as Madilyn does not cooperate and definitely runs the show. Thankfully the photographer (my friend Krista) had a ton of patience and it paid off!
Thankfully the snow is melting and we're finally seeing signs of Spring. I can't wait to be able to be outside with Madilyn in her gait trainer and watch her explore and be able to run around with other kids.....especially since we have new little pink tennis shoes...again...we love shoes.....it's all about the shoes!!
After 8.5 hours of nonstop running from one appointment to another and all the poking and prodding Shyanne was as tired as us. We started our day with GI which is always great cause our GI doc loves Madilyn and the fact that she's gained so much weight. He is actually a little worried that she's still gaining too fast. Sometimes I feel like we can't win, too slow...too fast...where's the happy medium???
We've been having some issues with the g-tube (direct to her stomach) feeds that end up with vomiting episodes so GI has started her on a new medication that will hopefully help with that. Today was day #1 and we made it through all 3 g feeds with no vomiting or gagging so I am hopeful.
Next up was Endochrine and they monitor her growth really close. Her regular doctor was on vacation so we saw another one and when he saw her he said she needs growth hormones..NOW...I politely explained that she's been through enough and as long as she's proportionate she's fine, we're not injecting her daily just so she can be someone else's version of "normal"...she's been through enough and that is a battle we are choosing not to fight right now or probably ever. After Endochrine we went to the scoliosis clinic for the ortho doctor to see her for the first time. Madilyn had a very "functional shift" to one side due to vision issues for a very long time and with her hypotonia (low tone) they just like to see them to make sure everything is the way it should be and thankfully it is!
We then went to Interventional Radiology and finally got the feeding tube switched from a 12 inch long peg to a cute little glow in the dark button! They had to sedate her for this which was okay because she had a quick brain MRI right after it to check out her new shunt catheter. Both of these appointments went great and the neurosurgeon is very happy with the way her shunt is functioning so the day was a huge success in my book!
We're settling into our normal again after the shunt scare and are looking forward to hopefully staying home until July now. Her emergency shunt surgery eliminated one May appointment and when she had her eyes examined under anesthesia on March 21st the fluid pocket had improved so he is seeing her again in July instead of May. Hooray for an unexpected little break!
Madilyn's busy busy and never stops moving or chattering which is such a blessing for us. She also had her very first round of professional pictures today! I'll be sure to post one or two when we get them back. Pictures are not something we've ever been able to do as Madilyn does not cooperate and definitely runs the show. Thankfully the photographer (my friend Krista) had a ton of patience and it paid off!
Thankfully the snow is melting and we're finally seeing signs of Spring. I can't wait to be able to be outside with Madilyn in her gait trainer and watch her explore and be able to run around with other kids.....especially since we have new little pink tennis shoes...again...we love shoes.....it's all about the shoes!!
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Med flights and shunt malfunctions
We've been having some "issues" since early February, up until this past Saturday morning they were all chalked up to "it must be a virus". I absolutely positively despise those words. Those are a doctor's polite way of saying I have absolutely no clue what is wrong. Madilyn was fine on Friday morning and then she went down for her nap...when she woke up her eyes didn't look right. They tend to flutter when she's tired but they appeared to be little slits and when they were open her eyes were darting in completely opposite directions. I watched her closely for quite a while and then noticed she went completely cross-eyed...this NEVER happens and is a huge flag for a shunt malfunction. I also noticed her balance that we've worked so hard for was not there so I called Special Needs in Milwaukee and talked to them and brought her to our local emergency room.
It's difficult to explain the panic I felt bringing her there. One moment she appeared fine and the next everything was haywire. Thank god the local doctor that was on duty that evening knows me and Madilyn and knew something wasn't right. Med flight was arranged to bring us to Milwaukee and by 1:30 am we were on our way. This is the second time we had to med flight to Milwaukee and it scares the daylights out of me, Madilyn however, loves the plane ride...the ride doesn't bother me either it's just the circumstances surrounding it that tend to drive me crazy with worry and panic.
When we arrived at Children's Hospital emergency room the chaos ensued when the first ER doc acted like I was a little crazy....I do realize they deal with people every day that insist there's something wrong with their child when there really isn't, this however wasn't our case and I was adamant. They went over her labs from our local hospital, multiple doctors came and looked at Madilyn and talked to me and they finally sent us for shunt series x-rays. The doctor came in a little while later and said the shunt series showed absolutely no problem with it. I freaked out! At this point Madilyn had a constant tic on her left side and was unable to sit much less to anything else, she was struggling just to pick her head up and could barely open her eyes and the whole time she kept letting out with this horrid gut wrenching painful screech. I totally flipped on that doctor and demanded they do something because something was seriously wrong and for the third time in a year I could feel her slipping away from me.
He agreed to send us for a CT scan to check the shunt and within 35 minutes of heading to the scan we were heading to emergency surgery. The catheter part of her shunt that goes into the ventricle and does the draining had come out and the pressure on her brain was building quickly. Surgery last an hour and a half and thankfully all of her symptoms were gone afterwards. It amazes me that they can open up their head and repair something that goes into her brain and less than 24 hours later we were ready to come home.
We were informed by the neurosurgeon that all of the feeding "virus" issues that sent us to Milwaukee in mid-February and the sleep issues were probably all the shunt starting to malfunction. My gut told me then that they missed something but it wasn't a feeling that made me panic like when she woke from her nap that day. That day was the third time in 13 months that I was told that if I didn't trust my instincts and had just put her to bed she probably would've never woken up. Those are the hardest words I have ever heard and hearing them once was awful but three times....CRAZY!!!
I don't focus on the "what could've happened" because I trusted my gut and it turned out for the best and if I focus on what could've happened I will miss out on way to much of the now. It does put it into perspective just how precious every single moment is in our lives. They don't give us life expectancy guesses with Madilyn because they don't know. She could live for 70 years or 7...they've never seen her grouping of rare diseases and her complex X-chromosome abnormality they know nothing about so we choose to make long-term plans but we live in the now and are thankful for every single moment that we get.
As we are really wanting to just recuperate from this whole thing life must go on and we are packing to head to Milwaukee again for another eye exam under anesthesia to make sure the fluid pocket hasn't moved. So for the next few days we will pray exceptionally hard for no changes, we will enjoy every moment and we will wear her new little pink shoes......cause that's what it's really about.....those little pink shoes.
It's difficult to explain the panic I felt bringing her there. One moment she appeared fine and the next everything was haywire. Thank god the local doctor that was on duty that evening knows me and Madilyn and knew something wasn't right. Med flight was arranged to bring us to Milwaukee and by 1:30 am we were on our way. This is the second time we had to med flight to Milwaukee and it scares the daylights out of me, Madilyn however, loves the plane ride...the ride doesn't bother me either it's just the circumstances surrounding it that tend to drive me crazy with worry and panic.
When we arrived at Children's Hospital emergency room the chaos ensued when the first ER doc acted like I was a little crazy....I do realize they deal with people every day that insist there's something wrong with their child when there really isn't, this however wasn't our case and I was adamant. They went over her labs from our local hospital, multiple doctors came and looked at Madilyn and talked to me and they finally sent us for shunt series x-rays. The doctor came in a little while later and said the shunt series showed absolutely no problem with it. I freaked out! At this point Madilyn had a constant tic on her left side and was unable to sit much less to anything else, she was struggling just to pick her head up and could barely open her eyes and the whole time she kept letting out with this horrid gut wrenching painful screech. I totally flipped on that doctor and demanded they do something because something was seriously wrong and for the third time in a year I could feel her slipping away from me.
He agreed to send us for a CT scan to check the shunt and within 35 minutes of heading to the scan we were heading to emergency surgery. The catheter part of her shunt that goes into the ventricle and does the draining had come out and the pressure on her brain was building quickly. Surgery last an hour and a half and thankfully all of her symptoms were gone afterwards. It amazes me that they can open up their head and repair something that goes into her brain and less than 24 hours later we were ready to come home.
We were informed by the neurosurgeon that all of the feeding "virus" issues that sent us to Milwaukee in mid-February and the sleep issues were probably all the shunt starting to malfunction. My gut told me then that they missed something but it wasn't a feeling that made me panic like when she woke from her nap that day. That day was the third time in 13 months that I was told that if I didn't trust my instincts and had just put her to bed she probably would've never woken up. Those are the hardest words I have ever heard and hearing them once was awful but three times....CRAZY!!!
I don't focus on the "what could've happened" because I trusted my gut and it turned out for the best and if I focus on what could've happened I will miss out on way to much of the now. It does put it into perspective just how precious every single moment is in our lives. They don't give us life expectancy guesses with Madilyn because they don't know. She could live for 70 years or 7...they've never seen her grouping of rare diseases and her complex X-chromosome abnormality they know nothing about so we choose to make long-term plans but we live in the now and are thankful for every single moment that we get.
As we are really wanting to just recuperate from this whole thing life must go on and we are packing to head to Milwaukee again for another eye exam under anesthesia to make sure the fluid pocket hasn't moved. So for the next few days we will pray exceptionally hard for no changes, we will enjoy every moment and we will wear her new little pink shoes......cause that's what it's really about.....those little pink shoes.
Friday, February 28, 2014
Living with multiple rare diseases and the things nobody ever told me...
Today is Rare Disease Day and it's time to share more details of what it's like living with multiple rare diseases. There are a lot of things nobody ever told us when we started this journey with Madilyn and they still don't say it...maybe because it's not politically correct or it's discouraging or because they just don't know what to say. I'm going to take the liberty of saying it for them...
1. Living with multiple rare diseases and special needs is lonely.....you feel very alone and in most cases you are. In our case there is nobody else in the world that lives with the Complex X-chromosome abnormality that Madilyn has and her other diagnosis like the Dandy-Walker Syndrome, Turner's Syndrome Mosaic, her feeding disorder, hydrocephalus, hypotonia, and ROP (vision) are all rare....if it wasn't for the internet I wouldn't know anyone at all with her diagnosis.
2. Rare disease pretty much equals no answers ever. Madilyn has some of the top specialists in the world overseeing her medical needs and we rarely ever get answers. I'm not sure, I don't know and let's try this and see what happens are the most common answers we hear. Unbelievably frustrating and at the same time these answers become oddly acceptable because when there is no funding (or very minimal) for research how can we ever expect them to be able to answer our questions. Everything is a giant game of chance, maybe it'll work, maybe it won't.
3. You learn your own language. Madilyn is starting to talk now but there are a lot of rare disease/special needs children that don't and her vocabulary is no where big enough to communicate some very key things. I never really realized how Madilyn and I communicate because we do it every day so when my nephew was here a few weeks ago he was watching Madilyn and I together and he said "it's so cool to watch you two, it's like you have your own little language"........it made me smile cause yes we sure do..you have to in order to do what's best for your child.
4. You will feel tremendous envy when your other family members and friends get to go on with their "normal" lives and yours is like planning a trip to Alaska just to make it to therapy and the grocery store in the same day.
5. People will stare...oh boy do they stare when we go into a public place hooked up to the feeding pump and with her little glasses on....it's okay...let them stare, it doesn't hurt anything.
6. People will talk....If I had a nickel for every time a stranger in Walmart feels the need to tell me my child looks so tired and needs a nap I'd be rich. I usually just smile and say yes she is, because she is....but here's the real reason...Madilyn's muscles don't always work like ours do..with her hypotonia holding her head up and sitting are not simple like they are for us so when I have her in a shopping cart it's a ton of work for her to keep her head up constantly with no type of support behind her to help her out. So yes, she's tired but not for the reasons people think. I've actually found myself going into explanation if the same person has said this to me more than once because I feel the need to educate everyone in regards to Madilyn. This often leaves me with people telling me how sorry they are, which leaves me more frustrated because sympathy is not what I am looking for.
7. There is never enough money. All the trips to see her doctor's and specialty items she needs are crazy expensive....I can't just sit her in a chair, she will fall out on her head, or jump out because she's constantly sensory seeking and has the highest pain tolerance ever. I can't sit her on the floor and walk away...that's getting better but everything takes time....1000 times longer than with normal children.....and costs so much more. It forces me to be creative out of necessity...I'll figure out a way to modify the $30 chair to suit our needs because I don't have the minimum of $300-over $1000 to purchase the ones that are made for children like her.
8. Your rare disease/special needs child will teach you more patience, tolerance, compassion and creativity than you ever knew existed but at the end of the day we are still human. I was up one night several weeks ago and found myself mentally giving kudos to the guy that had the courage to publish the book (for adults) called Go the F#@k to Sleep. I actually giggled out loud as Madilyn is standing on my lap holding my hands squealing and flinging herself wildly back and forth with that constant sensory seeking need that drives her. It was probably the lack of sleep that got to me but when I acknowledged at the moment that I totally and completely understood the book I read once years ago it made me feel normal. It made me feel like we were normal....I never said it out loud and never thought I'd put that thought in print....but it was a totally liberating and humorous moment for a Nana that rarely ever gets to sleep. It's funny how your thoughts change throughout time...up until recently I always said she can keep me up all night if she wants as long as she's here with us and thriving....well she's here and she's absolutely thriving and now I want her to learn to sleep...:)
9. Your therapists and nurses will become your "friends" because your friends are too busy having their own life and don't understand yours. I am learning that we tend to make people uncomfortable, in reality I would be uncomfortable watching us from the outside. The reality is most days making it to a 5 minute shower is a huge accomplishment. Our "normal" freaks people out....suction bags, feeding tubes and VP shunts and gait trainers are our normal.......it's okay if you're freaked out and I won't be offended if you tell me that.
10. Find a friend, that lives a similar life to you, it will improve your life dramatically. When you have another child that isn't "normal" and your kids can just be who they are and play it's awesome! When you can sit and rattle off tests and other medical/therapy terminology without having to give descriptions because they understand already what you're talking about makes you feel normal for a while. You live the life and when you can find that one other person that truly understands it and isn't just feeling sorry for you it's amazing. I found that, finally, 2 years into this life I found that. I can't explain how liberating it is to be able to text someone and simply state...I want to scream....and they don't think you're crazy, they just get it. For me this friend was the biggest missing chunk to our rare disease filled special needs life. It's like the missing puzzle piece has been found and our girls are AMAZING to watch together...they are inspiring!
11. My last one...I promise...bug everyone you know to raise awareness...if people don't know what you live with they will never understand it. I don't expect them to understand it anyway but I hope it will make them a little more tolerant and compassionate towards others.
You can't always see rare disease on someone's face or in their external appearance at all so before you judge someone think twice because you never know what they are living with......
1. Living with multiple rare diseases and special needs is lonely.....you feel very alone and in most cases you are. In our case there is nobody else in the world that lives with the Complex X-chromosome abnormality that Madilyn has and her other diagnosis like the Dandy-Walker Syndrome, Turner's Syndrome Mosaic, her feeding disorder, hydrocephalus, hypotonia, and ROP (vision) are all rare....if it wasn't for the internet I wouldn't know anyone at all with her diagnosis.
2. Rare disease pretty much equals no answers ever. Madilyn has some of the top specialists in the world overseeing her medical needs and we rarely ever get answers. I'm not sure, I don't know and let's try this and see what happens are the most common answers we hear. Unbelievably frustrating and at the same time these answers become oddly acceptable because when there is no funding (or very minimal) for research how can we ever expect them to be able to answer our questions. Everything is a giant game of chance, maybe it'll work, maybe it won't.
3. You learn your own language. Madilyn is starting to talk now but there are a lot of rare disease/special needs children that don't and her vocabulary is no where big enough to communicate some very key things. I never really realized how Madilyn and I communicate because we do it every day so when my nephew was here a few weeks ago he was watching Madilyn and I together and he said "it's so cool to watch you two, it's like you have your own little language"........it made me smile cause yes we sure do..you have to in order to do what's best for your child.
4. You will feel tremendous envy when your other family members and friends get to go on with their "normal" lives and yours is like planning a trip to Alaska just to make it to therapy and the grocery store in the same day.
5. People will stare...oh boy do they stare when we go into a public place hooked up to the feeding pump and with her little glasses on....it's okay...let them stare, it doesn't hurt anything.
6. People will talk....If I had a nickel for every time a stranger in Walmart feels the need to tell me my child looks so tired and needs a nap I'd be rich. I usually just smile and say yes she is, because she is....but here's the real reason...Madilyn's muscles don't always work like ours do..with her hypotonia holding her head up and sitting are not simple like they are for us so when I have her in a shopping cart it's a ton of work for her to keep her head up constantly with no type of support behind her to help her out. So yes, she's tired but not for the reasons people think. I've actually found myself going into explanation if the same person has said this to me more than once because I feel the need to educate everyone in regards to Madilyn. This often leaves me with people telling me how sorry they are, which leaves me more frustrated because sympathy is not what I am looking for.
7. There is never enough money. All the trips to see her doctor's and specialty items she needs are crazy expensive....I can't just sit her in a chair, she will fall out on her head, or jump out because she's constantly sensory seeking and has the highest pain tolerance ever. I can't sit her on the floor and walk away...that's getting better but everything takes time....1000 times longer than with normal children.....and costs so much more. It forces me to be creative out of necessity...I'll figure out a way to modify the $30 chair to suit our needs because I don't have the minimum of $300-over $1000 to purchase the ones that are made for children like her.
8. Your rare disease/special needs child will teach you more patience, tolerance, compassion and creativity than you ever knew existed but at the end of the day we are still human. I was up one night several weeks ago and found myself mentally giving kudos to the guy that had the courage to publish the book (for adults) called Go the F#@k to Sleep. I actually giggled out loud as Madilyn is standing on my lap holding my hands squealing and flinging herself wildly back and forth with that constant sensory seeking need that drives her. It was probably the lack of sleep that got to me but when I acknowledged at the moment that I totally and completely understood the book I read once years ago it made me feel normal. It made me feel like we were normal....I never said it out loud and never thought I'd put that thought in print....but it was a totally liberating and humorous moment for a Nana that rarely ever gets to sleep. It's funny how your thoughts change throughout time...up until recently I always said she can keep me up all night if she wants as long as she's here with us and thriving....well she's here and she's absolutely thriving and now I want her to learn to sleep...:)
9. Your therapists and nurses will become your "friends" because your friends are too busy having their own life and don't understand yours. I am learning that we tend to make people uncomfortable, in reality I would be uncomfortable watching us from the outside. The reality is most days making it to a 5 minute shower is a huge accomplishment. Our "normal" freaks people out....suction bags, feeding tubes and VP shunts and gait trainers are our normal.......it's okay if you're freaked out and I won't be offended if you tell me that.
10. Find a friend, that lives a similar life to you, it will improve your life dramatically. When you have another child that isn't "normal" and your kids can just be who they are and play it's awesome! When you can sit and rattle off tests and other medical/therapy terminology without having to give descriptions because they understand already what you're talking about makes you feel normal for a while. You live the life and when you can find that one other person that truly understands it and isn't just feeling sorry for you it's amazing. I found that, finally, 2 years into this life I found that. I can't explain how liberating it is to be able to text someone and simply state...I want to scream....and they don't think you're crazy, they just get it. For me this friend was the biggest missing chunk to our rare disease filled special needs life. It's like the missing puzzle piece has been found and our girls are AMAZING to watch together...they are inspiring!
11. My last one...I promise...bug everyone you know to raise awareness...if people don't know what you live with they will never understand it. I don't expect them to understand it anyway but I hope it will make them a little more tolerant and compassionate towards others.
You can't always see rare disease on someone's face or in their external appearance at all so before you judge someone think twice because you never know what they are living with......
Friday, February 14, 2014
Feeding Frustrations and Awareness
February 9-15th is National Feeding Tube Awareness Week....how appropriate considering the week we've had. Madilyn was doing awesome until a little over a week ago. She was up to 21 pounds 5 ounces and we were starting feeds into her stomach again and making really good, quick progress......and then she caught a slight cold. When I say slight I mean slight...low grade fever for 48 hours and some sneezing, that's it. No big deal....right? Think again.
We started Saturday suddenly puking up a few feeds and waking 3 to 4 hours after starting her night feed just screaming. Screaming like she was in unbearable pain and gagging and puking. We slowed and diluted the feeds for a few days and nothing seemed to help. Tuesday I weighed her and she was down to 20 pounds 7 ounces in less than a week so I called her GI doctor in Milwaukee and they feared that her feeding tube had either kinked or become displaced so it was an emergency trip to Milwaukee on Wednesday for a 15 minute appointment to check placement. Her tube was fine.......
I'm very thankful her tube was still in place but it still doesn't answer what's going on with her then. They have us slowing her feeds way down which means we are spending 18+ hours per day hooked up to the feeding pump again and she's still not gaining weight yet. There are times that we have no choice but to unhook her regardless of her much needed caloric intake as she begins to relentlessly gag herself. She crams that little fist all the way down into her throat and is digging at her throat...she used to do this before her stomach finally healed after her tube change surgery last August. Now the difference is she's older and does it with a vengeance because she needs some type of relief from whatever is bothering her internally. It scares me when she does it because she has made herself bleed and I fear that she will do damage to her throat or esophagus. It's times like this that I wish she had more of a vocabulary and could tell me what's wrong. When she's not feeding she's happy as can be which leaves me even more perplexed.
I cannot even begin to explain the frustration I feel after driving 7 hours one way for an emergency appointment and coming out with absolutely no answers. They instructed us to slow her feeds down even more and to call on Monday with an update and if she's still not gaining weight and tolerating better than it's back to Milwaukee to be inpatient so they can watch and observe and attempt to figure out what's going on.
It's crushing to realize just how quickly all the progress we've made with the feedings can so quickly be undone....and all from a minuscule little cold.....I can't even begin to explain the tremendous amount of grief it causes me.
I keep praying that she'll wake up and her feeds will suddenly go fine and her weight will jump up but I know the cold hard reality of it is that with a tube fed immune compromised child like Madilyn one bad day can undo months of progress.....I just pray we don't end up inpatient. I pray that all the recent gagging and vomiting will not completely undo all the progress we've made with her oral aversion. We finally had her putting food into her mouth for the first time in just over a year......
It's heartbreaking and frustrating and it's our life. With children like Madilyn we live with the unknown every single day. Unfortunately the doctor's not having any answers for us is more the norm than the rare occasion. So when you're healthy little one wants just one more cookie .....please give it to them and count your blessings to be able to do something so normal.....
We started Saturday suddenly puking up a few feeds and waking 3 to 4 hours after starting her night feed just screaming. Screaming like she was in unbearable pain and gagging and puking. We slowed and diluted the feeds for a few days and nothing seemed to help. Tuesday I weighed her and she was down to 20 pounds 7 ounces in less than a week so I called her GI doctor in Milwaukee and they feared that her feeding tube had either kinked or become displaced so it was an emergency trip to Milwaukee on Wednesday for a 15 minute appointment to check placement. Her tube was fine.......
I'm very thankful her tube was still in place but it still doesn't answer what's going on with her then. They have us slowing her feeds way down which means we are spending 18+ hours per day hooked up to the feeding pump again and she's still not gaining weight yet. There are times that we have no choice but to unhook her regardless of her much needed caloric intake as she begins to relentlessly gag herself. She crams that little fist all the way down into her throat and is digging at her throat...she used to do this before her stomach finally healed after her tube change surgery last August. Now the difference is she's older and does it with a vengeance because she needs some type of relief from whatever is bothering her internally. It scares me when she does it because she has made herself bleed and I fear that she will do damage to her throat or esophagus. It's times like this that I wish she had more of a vocabulary and could tell me what's wrong. When she's not feeding she's happy as can be which leaves me even more perplexed.
I cannot even begin to explain the frustration I feel after driving 7 hours one way for an emergency appointment and coming out with absolutely no answers. They instructed us to slow her feeds down even more and to call on Monday with an update and if she's still not gaining weight and tolerating better than it's back to Milwaukee to be inpatient so they can watch and observe and attempt to figure out what's going on.
It's crushing to realize just how quickly all the progress we've made with the feedings can so quickly be undone....and all from a minuscule little cold.....I can't even begin to explain the tremendous amount of grief it causes me.
I keep praying that she'll wake up and her feeds will suddenly go fine and her weight will jump up but I know the cold hard reality of it is that with a tube fed immune compromised child like Madilyn one bad day can undo months of progress.....I just pray we don't end up inpatient. I pray that all the recent gagging and vomiting will not completely undo all the progress we've made with her oral aversion. We finally had her putting food into her mouth for the first time in just over a year......
It's heartbreaking and frustrating and it's our life. With children like Madilyn we live with the unknown every single day. Unfortunately the doctor's not having any answers for us is more the norm than the rare occasion. So when you're healthy little one wants just one more cookie .....please give it to them and count your blessings to be able to do something so normal.....
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Blessings and meltdowns
We just returned from Milwaukee and our first round of good appointments for this year. Madilyn has a fluid pocket on her right eye that could potentially detach her retina. It was discovered in November during her eye exam under anesthesia. Dr. Han (the retina specialist) feared it may detach in between appointments or that it would progress and he'd have to do another scleral buckle both outcomes could quite possibly leave her completely blind. We were blessed and there was no change. It is maintaining and we will return in March for another eye exam under anesthesia to monitor, as we do every two months. We'll continue to pray that it doesn't change or that it goes away, in the mean time we count our blessings every single day that she wakes up and can see us.
We next saw her GI doctor and he couldn't be more pleased with how much she's growing and how much she has progressed and changed since her surgery in August. We see him every three months but he was nice and let us slide a few extra weeks this time since she was gaining so well and didn't make us travel right before Christmas. Once again we count our blessings.
Our trip was extremely emotional, like riding a roller coaster. I don't know how to explain the emotions that come along with knowing your child is going into surgery with vision in only one eye and could potentially come out with none because they're trying to save it. When Madilyn had the first scleral buckle done the scar tissue she produced afterwards did more damage, the bad almost outweighed the good. We go into this now knowing that the scleral buckle may be our only hope each and every time she goes into that surgery so we pray. Every single morning that she wakes up and I know she can still see me brings me to tears.....and again, I count my many blessings.
I also got to witness her GJ feeding tube change on this trip. It is done in Intervention Radiology and is painless for Madilyn other than she gets mad cause I had to hold her still for two minutes while they did it. We all know how much two year olds love to be held still...she was one angry little girl, thankfully it's super quick and the staff was awesome. Once again I count my many blessings.
After the roller coaster ride we head home with happy reviews and run into horrible weather and the first leg of the trip that normally takes 2 hours takes 5. The first part when we could have easily turned off was all right and of course when we should have stopped there was nowhere to go. The stretch of nothingness seems never ending when you're going 5 mph trying to keep a toddler occupied while she's gagging herself every two seconds and throwing up because her throat is so irritated from the anesthesia the previous day.
It's after the weather clears when I admit to my husband how scared I was but everything is clear and we keep heading towards home. At this point the toddler is finally sleeping peacefully after hours of Roli Poli Olli on the portable DVD player (if I never hear that again it's too soon...). It's in this clear silent stretch somewhere between Crivitz and Iron Mountain that everything crashes in on me and the tears start. Unstoppable tears of relief and frustration. Relief she can still see, frustration cause the relief only lasts for a moment. Tears of fear because the GI doctor wants us to start doing daytime bolus feeds again with Madilyn. Bolus feeds for me bring back months and months of massive vomiting and our life revolving around a feeding/puking schedule. At the same time I am hopeful that her stomach is healed enough to handle the feeds without the vomiting.
It's during this time that I am thankful that my husband is focused on driving or obliviously lost in his own whirlwind of emotions and just lets me cry, I don't want to talk, just cry. This seems to have become somewhat of a ritual for me, one I feel I have no control over. Either way when it's over and I'm done crying my tears of happiness, relief, anger and frustration I look into the face of that sweet little girl that calls me Nana and count my blessings. I chuckle to myself at how far we've come because this is the first trip that she actually told the surgical prep nurse No...a very clear, very distinct no when she wanted to check her vitals. She also yelled at the GI doctor until her told her he was only going to listen to her and she understood and stopped yelling and let him listen to her.
It's hard to explain the emotions that come along with Madilyn's reactions to walking through the skywalk at the hospital. She knows where we are and she knows she'll get poked and prodded and doesn't hesitate to express her dislike of the whole situation. The older she gets the harder it gets, at least when she was smaller she was oblivious......I thank god every single day for the progress we've made but at the same time question all the time why children like my Madilyn have to go through the things that they do. She doesn't like them touching her, the whole experience is very upsetting to her and to us. No matter how great the appointments are I come home feeling like I've been hit by a truck and so does Madilyn. We always take the day after we get home off........off from therapies, off from visitors and just hang out in our jammies at home and play. It is much needed down time that we don't get very often.
Just when I think the roller coaster has almost slowed to a stop it's time to call and schedule the next round of appointments....the last few times I've let Special Needs Care Coordination handle this for me but this time I did it myself...........so the coaster is set at a slow, straight, steady cruise for two months...where we'll be busy making progress at home and getting ready for the March, April and May appointments....but most of all we'll be busy counting our blessings.....
We next saw her GI doctor and he couldn't be more pleased with how much she's growing and how much she has progressed and changed since her surgery in August. We see him every three months but he was nice and let us slide a few extra weeks this time since she was gaining so well and didn't make us travel right before Christmas. Once again we count our blessings.
Our trip was extremely emotional, like riding a roller coaster. I don't know how to explain the emotions that come along with knowing your child is going into surgery with vision in only one eye and could potentially come out with none because they're trying to save it. When Madilyn had the first scleral buckle done the scar tissue she produced afterwards did more damage, the bad almost outweighed the good. We go into this now knowing that the scleral buckle may be our only hope each and every time she goes into that surgery so we pray. Every single morning that she wakes up and I know she can still see me brings me to tears.....and again, I count my many blessings.
I also got to witness her GJ feeding tube change on this trip. It is done in Intervention Radiology and is painless for Madilyn other than she gets mad cause I had to hold her still for two minutes while they did it. We all know how much two year olds love to be held still...she was one angry little girl, thankfully it's super quick and the staff was awesome. Once again I count my many blessings.
After the roller coaster ride we head home with happy reviews and run into horrible weather and the first leg of the trip that normally takes 2 hours takes 5. The first part when we could have easily turned off was all right and of course when we should have stopped there was nowhere to go. The stretch of nothingness seems never ending when you're going 5 mph trying to keep a toddler occupied while she's gagging herself every two seconds and throwing up because her throat is so irritated from the anesthesia the previous day.
It's after the weather clears when I admit to my husband how scared I was but everything is clear and we keep heading towards home. At this point the toddler is finally sleeping peacefully after hours of Roli Poli Olli on the portable DVD player (if I never hear that again it's too soon...). It's in this clear silent stretch somewhere between Crivitz and Iron Mountain that everything crashes in on me and the tears start. Unstoppable tears of relief and frustration. Relief she can still see, frustration cause the relief only lasts for a moment. Tears of fear because the GI doctor wants us to start doing daytime bolus feeds again with Madilyn. Bolus feeds for me bring back months and months of massive vomiting and our life revolving around a feeding/puking schedule. At the same time I am hopeful that her stomach is healed enough to handle the feeds without the vomiting.
It's during this time that I am thankful that my husband is focused on driving or obliviously lost in his own whirlwind of emotions and just lets me cry, I don't want to talk, just cry. This seems to have become somewhat of a ritual for me, one I feel I have no control over. Either way when it's over and I'm done crying my tears of happiness, relief, anger and frustration I look into the face of that sweet little girl that calls me Nana and count my blessings. I chuckle to myself at how far we've come because this is the first trip that she actually told the surgical prep nurse No...a very clear, very distinct no when she wanted to check her vitals. She also yelled at the GI doctor until her told her he was only going to listen to her and she understood and stopped yelling and let him listen to her.
It's hard to explain the emotions that come along with Madilyn's reactions to walking through the skywalk at the hospital. She knows where we are and she knows she'll get poked and prodded and doesn't hesitate to express her dislike of the whole situation. The older she gets the harder it gets, at least when she was smaller she was oblivious......I thank god every single day for the progress we've made but at the same time question all the time why children like my Madilyn have to go through the things that they do. She doesn't like them touching her, the whole experience is very upsetting to her and to us. No matter how great the appointments are I come home feeling like I've been hit by a truck and so does Madilyn. We always take the day after we get home off........off from therapies, off from visitors and just hang out in our jammies at home and play. It is much needed down time that we don't get very often.
Just when I think the roller coaster has almost slowed to a stop it's time to call and schedule the next round of appointments....the last few times I've let Special Needs Care Coordination handle this for me but this time I did it myself...........so the coaster is set at a slow, straight, steady cruise for two months...where we'll be busy making progress at home and getting ready for the March, April and May appointments....but most of all we'll be busy counting our blessings.....
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Wishes and Reality
I spent all of last year wishing and wishing for less trips in 2014. I can't even begin to count how many times I've sat down and tried to figure out how to make less trips to Milwaukee. The countless hours wishing and praying for less trips. We had ten of them last year and more than half were anywhere from 4-5 days. Oh how I wished for less trips.....................
Then we saw the retina specialist in November and he completely crashed that idea when he discovered the fluid pocket on Madilyn's right eye (the only eye she has any vision) and we went from seeing him every six months right back to every two. I was crushed............
We also found out around that time that a hospital only two hours away vs the 7 we travel is capable of doing Madilyn's G/J feeding tube changes every 3 months and I got sooooo excited............and then they refused to see her because her medical history/diagnosis is so complex.........they're afraid of her. So once again I was crushed..............
So I had my pity party (which lasted about 8 minutes) and reassessed the situation and made my wishes more compatible with my reality. We traded the most beautiful, luxurious, spacious gas guzzling Tahoe for a comfy, fun to drive and fuel efficient car.......we ordered a portable DVD player to entertain the Peanugga on these trips so she can watch her favorite cartoons and listen to her music videos in the car and during the long days at the hospital during appointments..........and I altered my wishes.
Now I wish for good appointments instead of less. I wish for the chance to go to the zoo and the aquarium while on these trips and to have at least one meal that doesn't come from a drive-thru, hospital cafeteria or mall food court on at least half of the upcoming trips. I've come to terms with the fact that no matter how "healthy" we get Madilyn and regardless of how much she is thriving all the risk factors are still there. I've accepted that no matter what they will still want to physically see her in order to monitor her and in most departments they have no other option. Neonatal Development has to see her twice per year to track her progress to assign or redirect therapies for her, Endochrine has to track her growth, GI has to monitor her growth and her feeding tube, Neurology has to monitor her shunt and her Dandy-Walker, the retina specialist has to continually see her in hopes of maintaining her vision, the ophthalmologist has to see her to moni.tor her glasses/vision needs and Genetics has to see her because she is one of a kind in the world so they have to monitor her because she wasn't even supposed to live with her chromosome lines much less thrive. So we wish for good trips and happy specialists and for no life threatening illnesses this year.
In the past few months we've had never ending ear infections (at least it felt that way with 3 in a row)...c-diff and 2-year molars and through it all Madilyn has made huge progress...she went from being completely uncooperative at physical therapy to showing off. She's taking steps and running everywhere in her walker which is awesome because we get her gait trainer (a walking aid) in two weeks and are very excited. She's suddenly back to putting food and everything else in her mouth so it makes me hopeful that she will start to consume something orally instead of just through her feeding tube. We are also nowhere near as dependent on the suction bag because her stomach is finally healing and that is amazing!!
I guess sometimes I forget how complex Madilyn is medically because we live it every single day. We don't take anything at all for granted but at the same time it is our "normal". My "job" is different therapy appointments 5 days a week, feeding tubes, shunt function and having fun with the sweetest little girl ever who has the most amazing belly laughs I have ever heard. If you had to wait over 1 1/2 years to hear those laughs finally come out you would totally understand why they bring tears to my eyes every single time.......to me, it is the most beautiful sound ever.....
So we still wish and dream because without wishes and dreams life doesn't have meaning.........we just make sure those wishes aren't quite so unattainable..........and we will shop for new little pink tennis shoes because in reality it's all about the little pink shoes...........
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
I wonder....
I wonder about a lot of things.......
I wonder if each of you reading this knows how much you mean to me?
I wonder what life would be like without so much financial stress?
I wonder is Madilyn's ear infections are ever going to go away?
I wonder if she's ever going to sleep through the night again?
I wonder what I'll do when she goes to school? what type of school?
I wonder if Madilyn is ever going to go back to eating somewhat normally or if being tube fed will always be part of our/her life?
I wonder is she will be self-sufficient someday or will she always need a caretaker?
I wonder if our therapists realize that most weeks they are the only adult interaction I have other than my immediate family and the teller in the checkout line?
I wonder what people think of me reaching out for fundraising help so we can attempt to breathe?
I wonder if I'll ever be able to go to work again or if full-time caregiver is my life?
I wonder if people, even those closest to me, realize just how often I cry?
I wonder if others realize just how much my children inspire me to be a better person?
I wonder if we will have to move away in order for my husband to obtain a better paying/benefits providing job?
I wonder if she'll ever be potty trained?
I wonder what it would be like to go to the grocery store without a set budget and meals planned?
I wonder if people know how amazing my son and daughter are with Madilyn?
I wonder if my husband knows how much he means to me even though I don't always show it?
I wonder if people know how hard it is for me to ask for help?
I wonder how long Madilyn will continue to do her new little war cry in her sleep before she lets out the tiniest little toot and contentedly goes back to sleep? Meanwhile, I'm awake watching her wondering why on earth she does that?
I wonder if people truly get as excited as I (we) do about the tiniest little accomplishments and milestones finally being met?
I wonder if her doctors/therapists know how overwhelming it is to know we have to add even more therapists?
I wonder if people realize how lonely and overwhelming our life can be at times?
I wonder if our new friend realizes how much it means to me to finally have someone in our lives that we have so much in common with?
I wonder most if people realize just how much I love my life even though it's a struggle?
Even with all of these concerns and wonders swimming in my head every single day I am learning not to dwell on them..........I am learning to live in the moment and for each tiny blessing that we have in our lives..........I am a work in progress, we all are.......I have learned to never, ever take anything for granted..not even the tiniest minuscule amount of progress or gesture of kindness.....
I guess my point of this whole blog is.....everyone has worries and concerns...we all have obstacles in our lives, some we share and some we don't....you never know what another person is going through..
So in the rush of our daily busy lives I ask that you :
1. smile at someone and say hello......it may be the only interaction they have
2. hold a door for someone or help carry someone's groceries
3. brush off the car next to you in the parking lot
4. attempt to do a random act of kindness every single day...........I speak from experience when I say it can change someone's life....:)
I wonder if each of you reading this knows how much you mean to me?
I wonder what life would be like without so much financial stress?
I wonder is Madilyn's ear infections are ever going to go away?
I wonder if she's ever going to sleep through the night again?
I wonder what I'll do when she goes to school? what type of school?
I wonder if Madilyn is ever going to go back to eating somewhat normally or if being tube fed will always be part of our/her life?
I wonder is she will be self-sufficient someday or will she always need a caretaker?
I wonder if our therapists realize that most weeks they are the only adult interaction I have other than my immediate family and the teller in the checkout line?
I wonder what people think of me reaching out for fundraising help so we can attempt to breathe?
I wonder if I'll ever be able to go to work again or if full-time caregiver is my life?
I wonder if people, even those closest to me, realize just how often I cry?
I wonder if others realize just how much my children inspire me to be a better person?
I wonder if we will have to move away in order for my husband to obtain a better paying/benefits providing job?
I wonder if she'll ever be potty trained?
I wonder what it would be like to go to the grocery store without a set budget and meals planned?
I wonder if people know how amazing my son and daughter are with Madilyn?
I wonder if my husband knows how much he means to me even though I don't always show it?
I wonder if people know how hard it is for me to ask for help?
I wonder how long Madilyn will continue to do her new little war cry in her sleep before she lets out the tiniest little toot and contentedly goes back to sleep? Meanwhile, I'm awake watching her wondering why on earth she does that?
I wonder if people truly get as excited as I (we) do about the tiniest little accomplishments and milestones finally being met?
I wonder if her doctors/therapists know how overwhelming it is to know we have to add even more therapists?
I wonder if people realize how lonely and overwhelming our life can be at times?
I wonder if our new friend realizes how much it means to me to finally have someone in our lives that we have so much in common with?
I wonder most if people realize just how much I love my life even though it's a struggle?
Even with all of these concerns and wonders swimming in my head every single day I am learning not to dwell on them..........I am learning to live in the moment and for each tiny blessing that we have in our lives..........I am a work in progress, we all are.......I have learned to never, ever take anything for granted..not even the tiniest minuscule amount of progress or gesture of kindness.....
I guess my point of this whole blog is.....everyone has worries and concerns...we all have obstacles in our lives, some we share and some we don't....you never know what another person is going through..
So in the rush of our daily busy lives I ask that you :
1. smile at someone and say hello......it may be the only interaction they have
2. hold a door for someone or help carry someone's groceries
3. brush off the car next to you in the parking lot
4. attempt to do a random act of kindness every single day...........I speak from experience when I say it can change someone's life....:)
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Things to be thankful for
Today we are thankful for the little giggles that fill our home with joy. We are thankful that we are all healthy and happy. We have a turkey in the oven and a roof over our heads. We have children scattered everywhere and are feeling very blessed.
This past year has taught us so much about what we have to be thankful for. It doesn't have to be the big things, there are little things every day that so many people overlook. A year ago we were struggling with the Croup and Madilyn couldn't even hold her head up. This year we are healthy and she's giggling, chattering and motoring all over in her walker and on the floor.
Our community has shown us more love and support than we know what to do with. It's overwhelming at times. The financial gifts, the toys and clothes for Madilyn all mean more to us than my words could ever say. My sisters who have taken time from work to travel with me and sit in emergency rooms, to celebrate the little things and sometimes to just listen to me and let me cry, without them I don't know where I'd be.
My husband for always loving and supporting every crazy idea I have and every rant I go on. My children for being so tolerant and accepting all the changes that life has brought us in the past year. My parents and in-laws even though they are far away for always checking in with us and helping in any way they can.
Madilyn's teams (all 8 of them) of nurses and doctor's that take incredible care of her and us. They are always willing to go out of their way to help us in any way they can. To the nurses and teams of doctors on W-11 at Children's Hospital for being so amazing during two scary hospital stays this past year..(we love you but hopefully won't see you this next year...)
I am also incredibly thankful for each and every one of you that takes the time to read this blog. For the moment in time that you take to share in our lives and to learn about the things we live with every single day.
We are thankful for old friends and new and for our therapists that have become like family to us.
Most of all I am thankful that the sun is shining, the Peanugga is smiling and we have little pink shoes...it's all about the shoes..:)
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!
This past year has taught us so much about what we have to be thankful for. It doesn't have to be the big things, there are little things every day that so many people overlook. A year ago we were struggling with the Croup and Madilyn couldn't even hold her head up. This year we are healthy and she's giggling, chattering and motoring all over in her walker and on the floor.
Our community has shown us more love and support than we know what to do with. It's overwhelming at times. The financial gifts, the toys and clothes for Madilyn all mean more to us than my words could ever say. My sisters who have taken time from work to travel with me and sit in emergency rooms, to celebrate the little things and sometimes to just listen to me and let me cry, without them I don't know where I'd be.
My husband for always loving and supporting every crazy idea I have and every rant I go on. My children for being so tolerant and accepting all the changes that life has brought us in the past year. My parents and in-laws even though they are far away for always checking in with us and helping in any way they can.
Madilyn's teams (all 8 of them) of nurses and doctor's that take incredible care of her and us. They are always willing to go out of their way to help us in any way they can. To the nurses and teams of doctors on W-11 at Children's Hospital for being so amazing during two scary hospital stays this past year..(we love you but hopefully won't see you this next year...)
I am also incredibly thankful for each and every one of you that takes the time to read this blog. For the moment in time that you take to share in our lives and to learn about the things we live with every single day.
We are thankful for old friends and new and for our therapists that have become like family to us.
Most of all I am thankful that the sun is shining, the Peanugga is smiling and we have little pink shoes...it's all about the shoes..:)
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Amazing and heartbreaking all in one trip
We just got back from trip #10 to see the Milwaukee docs yesterday. I went into this round of appointments with complete apprehension about meeting the Renal Specialist. We found out last month that Madilyn has deformed kidneys with two collecting duct systems. The good news is that even though they have the deformity they are functioning fine and since she has never had a UTI or unexplained fever they are not concerned at all. They told us that they only need to see her if she has more than three UTI's in one year or multiple unexplained fevers. They also told us that typically if the extra collecting duct system was going to cause a problem it would've already done so. I am thankful that it hasn't and they say it probably never will.
Madilyn was seen by Radiology for the first changing of her g/j tube. She did very well with this as she had not yet woken up from the anesthesia from her eye exam so she didn't even know they did it!
Now for the eyes...Madilyn has Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) which has caused complete retinal detachment in her left eye leaving her blind when she was around 3 months old. She had laser surgery while still in the NICU to try and correct it but it failed. The retina in her right eye started to detach so they placed a Scleral Buckle around it when she was 4 months old in hopes it would not detach further. This worked great at the time and when she was 11 months old they snipped the Scleral Buckle so her eye could grow normally and she's done amazing since then. Until this appointment...she once again has a fluid pocket behind the right eye. Her doctor was very upset about it as there is absolutely nothing he can do to remove it without further impairing her vision. He said "at this very moment it is not threatening her vision" but there is the very real possibility that we could get up one morning to discover that she is completely blind.
We were set to see him every six months for the eye exams but with this setback we are back to every two months. In January when he sees her again there is the possibility of placing another Scleral Buckle depending on what he finds. In the meantime, we pray. We pray that she keeps her sight. We pray that if she doesn't keep her sight that it is painless (I have no idea what it feels like to have a retina detach and it terrifies me that it will hurt her). We pray...for understanding...for patience....for the unknown as our life is full of the unknown.
The one thing I know for sure is that Madilyn is happy and absolutely thriving with or without vision and she loves her new fuzzy pink slippers..
Madilyn was seen by Radiology for the first changing of her g/j tube. She did very well with this as she had not yet woken up from the anesthesia from her eye exam so she didn't even know they did it!
Now for the eyes...Madilyn has Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) which has caused complete retinal detachment in her left eye leaving her blind when she was around 3 months old. She had laser surgery while still in the NICU to try and correct it but it failed. The retina in her right eye started to detach so they placed a Scleral Buckle around it when she was 4 months old in hopes it would not detach further. This worked great at the time and when she was 11 months old they snipped the Scleral Buckle so her eye could grow normally and she's done amazing since then. Until this appointment...she once again has a fluid pocket behind the right eye. Her doctor was very upset about it as there is absolutely nothing he can do to remove it without further impairing her vision. He said "at this very moment it is not threatening her vision" but there is the very real possibility that we could get up one morning to discover that she is completely blind.
We were set to see him every six months for the eye exams but with this setback we are back to every two months. In January when he sees her again there is the possibility of placing another Scleral Buckle depending on what he finds. In the meantime, we pray. We pray that she keeps her sight. We pray that if she doesn't keep her sight that it is painless (I have no idea what it feels like to have a retina detach and it terrifies me that it will hurt her). We pray...for understanding...for patience....for the unknown as our life is full of the unknown.
The one thing I know for sure is that Madilyn is happy and absolutely thriving with or without vision and she loves her new fuzzy pink slippers..
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Therapy progress and setbacks
So everyone knows our whole life is about three steps forward and one step back. Madilyn has earned herself a two week break from one of her physical therapists because she has been so uncooperative. This was very upsetting to me personally but it has also taught me a valuable lesson. Everyone needs a break sometimes to breathe and reset. With Madilyn we are constantly pushing and encouraging and using every moment we can as a teaching moment. She has therapists/home visitors 3 days every week and 5 days every other week, this is not including medical appointments. I think her outright rebellion was her way of telling us enough already.
I took the break reluctantly and even eased off at home and just let a few days be lazy (for lack of a better word). If she didn't want to put the blocks in the bucket or play at the music table I didn't make her. I didn't make her do "just one more" before letting her scoot around the floor like she loves, and I didn't try sticking food in her face praying she would finally eat something every time she turned around. This was a very difficult thing for me to do, but it paid off!!
She has suddenly, after six months of trying and encouraging, decided to go forward in her walker and when she hangs on to our fingers and pulls herself to standing she has started taking a few steps!!! I can also put her in her highchair and put food on the tray and she's starting to put it in her mouth. She is actually taking bites all on her own of the cheese puffs!! I'm so excited.....she just wants to do it herself, when she's ready. She's asking to go bye-bye on days when we're home all day and talking more and more. It absolutely melts my heart and makes me cry rivers of happy tears whenever our little Peanugga does something new.
That was the three steps forward............the nasty C-Diff infection is the one step backwards. C-Diff is a highly contagious intestinal infection that was caused by the antibiotics Madilyn took at the beginning of October for a double ear infection. It causes nasty diarrhea, gas, cramping and an in general unhappy baby. It has made for some very long nights as that is when she gets her feeds (her main source of nutrition). Her j-tube feeds go directly into her infected intestines.
We are extremely thankful that after just a few days on antibiotics we have seen a complete turnaround. She is sleeping better which is making for much better days too. We are very fortunate because C-Diff can be very difficult and can lead to dehydration, hospitalization, kidney failure and sometimes it can be deadly.
If I never had to hear "that could've killed her" again I'd be a very happy grandma, unfortunately for me I don't see any time in the next few years that I won't have to hear that. Madilyn is getting stronger every day and some things aren't quite as scary as they used to be. I do seem to have the bad habit of taking my moment of meltdown with each new infection or setback and then I brush myself off, take a deep breath, pick my positive thing to focus on and keep going....
I took the break reluctantly and even eased off at home and just let a few days be lazy (for lack of a better word). If she didn't want to put the blocks in the bucket or play at the music table I didn't make her. I didn't make her do "just one more" before letting her scoot around the floor like she loves, and I didn't try sticking food in her face praying she would finally eat something every time she turned around. This was a very difficult thing for me to do, but it paid off!!
She has suddenly, after six months of trying and encouraging, decided to go forward in her walker and when she hangs on to our fingers and pulls herself to standing she has started taking a few steps!!! I can also put her in her highchair and put food on the tray and she's starting to put it in her mouth. She is actually taking bites all on her own of the cheese puffs!! I'm so excited.....she just wants to do it herself, when she's ready. She's asking to go bye-bye on days when we're home all day and talking more and more. It absolutely melts my heart and makes me cry rivers of happy tears whenever our little Peanugga does something new.
That was the three steps forward............the nasty C-Diff infection is the one step backwards. C-Diff is a highly contagious intestinal infection that was caused by the antibiotics Madilyn took at the beginning of October for a double ear infection. It causes nasty diarrhea, gas, cramping and an in general unhappy baby. It has made for some very long nights as that is when she gets her feeds (her main source of nutrition). Her j-tube feeds go directly into her infected intestines.
We are extremely thankful that after just a few days on antibiotics we have seen a complete turnaround. She is sleeping better which is making for much better days too. We are very fortunate because C-Diff can be very difficult and can lead to dehydration, hospitalization, kidney failure and sometimes it can be deadly.
If I never had to hear "that could've killed her" again I'd be a very happy grandma, unfortunately for me I don't see any time in the next few years that I won't have to hear that. Madilyn is getting stronger every day and some things aren't quite as scary as they used to be. I do seem to have the bad habit of taking my moment of meltdown with each new infection or setback and then I brush myself off, take a deep breath, pick my positive thing to focus on and keep going....
Friday, October 11, 2013
Did you know? Our Dandy Walker Life
Did you know that 1 in 2500 babies are born with Dandy Walker? Unfortunately 54% of these babies will become angels within the first 4 weeks of life and another 32% by 6 months. There's estimated 1 person out of every 30,000 living with Dandy Walker. There are 3 stages of Dandy Walker.....variant, malformation and syndrome. Dandy Walker effects the brain......in Madilyn's case she has a very tiny deformed cerebellum which causes balance and gross motor issues. She also has a VP shunt for hydrocephalus (fluid build up on the brain because her ventricles don't work properly) and a slight deformity on the back of her skull that is covered by her hair. We keep hearing that "on paper" Madilyn should basically be the mentality of an infant, she shouldn't know anyone or anything or be able to do the things she does. In reality she's motoring all over, learning to talk and is delayed but is happy and thriving.
We have feeding issues and most recently a kidney ultrasound showed us that Madilyn has deformed kidneys that contain 2 collecting duct systems rather than 1 and she has kidney stones but her blood work shows that they are functioning normally. We are adding Renal to our list of specialists that we see (they will be #8) and will meet them for the first time during our November trip to Children's Hospital in Milwaukee.
There are no two people in the world with Dandy Walker that experience the same symptoms. Some people live their entire lives never knowing they have it.........babies die from unknown causes because they were born seemingly healthy full term babies with never a suspicion that something was wrong. Others spend years wondering why they have balance issues or other problems only to finally have an MRI done and the diagnosis of Dandy Walker to answer their questions.
Is Dandy Walker really an answer? In my opinion it at least gives it a name, other than that it tells us nothing and nobody really knows anything about it......the brain is so complex and so many things can be rerouted that they have no way of telling us what to expect. It can wreak havoc on the entire body, it causes problems with other organs, muscle tone and strength, vision, feeding, speech, development and no two people are alike.
Up until this point we have felt very very alone and frustrated in our Dandy Walker life as most people have never heard of it but recently thanks to the internet I have found a whole world of us. I can read and reread a million times the medical sites and government statistics on Dandy Walker but absolutely nothing compares to reading another post or having a chat with another parent/person who is living it. It gives us comparisons and inspires new ideas to push our children to progress and achieve new milestones. Dandy Walker (or any other special needs parent) is forced to think outside the box on a daily basis, we are forced to become the McGuyver of medical contraptions to figure out what aids and benefits our children the most. We live in a world where we have no comparisons. Nobody can tell us when or if our child will ever reach milestones. It can be incredibly frustrating and lonesome and at the same time tremendously rewarding.
Our little Madilyn Rose and Dandy Walker has taught us to never ever take anything for granted....each day you wake up and can open your eyes is a blessing, each milestone and smile is applauded, praised and cheered for. Each new word and discovery for Madilyn is celebrated usually with happy tears and a bombardment of my facebook page because I want the whole world to know. In the same token a cold is never just a cold......a setback is just another bump in the road and absolutely nothing is the end of the world...she has taught me patience, compassion and an entirely new level of unconditional love. She has taught us to choose the positive every single day and that all the medical terminology and gadgets just make me smarter and the new specialists give me a chance to make new friends.
Though our life is full of struggles......financial and emotional......I absolutely love it....Madilyn is such a blessing in our lives and so are her new little pink shoes....
We have feeding issues and most recently a kidney ultrasound showed us that Madilyn has deformed kidneys that contain 2 collecting duct systems rather than 1 and she has kidney stones but her blood work shows that they are functioning normally. We are adding Renal to our list of specialists that we see (they will be #8) and will meet them for the first time during our November trip to Children's Hospital in Milwaukee.
There are no two people in the world with Dandy Walker that experience the same symptoms. Some people live their entire lives never knowing they have it.........babies die from unknown causes because they were born seemingly healthy full term babies with never a suspicion that something was wrong. Others spend years wondering why they have balance issues or other problems only to finally have an MRI done and the diagnosis of Dandy Walker to answer their questions.
Is Dandy Walker really an answer? In my opinion it at least gives it a name, other than that it tells us nothing and nobody really knows anything about it......the brain is so complex and so many things can be rerouted that they have no way of telling us what to expect. It can wreak havoc on the entire body, it causes problems with other organs, muscle tone and strength, vision, feeding, speech, development and no two people are alike.
Up until this point we have felt very very alone and frustrated in our Dandy Walker life as most people have never heard of it but recently thanks to the internet I have found a whole world of us. I can read and reread a million times the medical sites and government statistics on Dandy Walker but absolutely nothing compares to reading another post or having a chat with another parent/person who is living it. It gives us comparisons and inspires new ideas to push our children to progress and achieve new milestones. Dandy Walker (or any other special needs parent) is forced to think outside the box on a daily basis, we are forced to become the McGuyver of medical contraptions to figure out what aids and benefits our children the most. We live in a world where we have no comparisons. Nobody can tell us when or if our child will ever reach milestones. It can be incredibly frustrating and lonesome and at the same time tremendously rewarding.
Our little Madilyn Rose and Dandy Walker has taught us to never ever take anything for granted....each day you wake up and can open your eyes is a blessing, each milestone and smile is applauded, praised and cheered for. Each new word and discovery for Madilyn is celebrated usually with happy tears and a bombardment of my facebook page because I want the whole world to know. In the same token a cold is never just a cold......a setback is just another bump in the road and absolutely nothing is the end of the world...she has taught me patience, compassion and an entirely new level of unconditional love. She has taught us to choose the positive every single day and that all the medical terminology and gadgets just make me smarter and the new specialists give me a chance to make new friends.
Though our life is full of struggles......financial and emotional......I absolutely love it....Madilyn is such a blessing in our lives and so are her new little pink shoes....
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