For the last several weeks, I’ve been getting feedback both on the idea of Chase Away Cancer and now on the finished book itself. Everyone is being so gracious, but there have also been some threads of question and/or doubt woven in that I’d very much like to put to rest.
So, what should you expect when you’re expecting to read this book? Here are the three most common points of feedback that I hear. I hope with all my heart that the answers put your mind at ease and prepare you to join us on the journey.
1. “Well, I probably won’t read the book because I’ve followed along with your blog the whole time, so I pretty much know the story anyway.”
Yes…and super, really NO.
Yes, it’s true that if you’ve followed the blog or Facebook page, you have a good idea of where the story goes, however, this book was written from scratch (almost two whole times!) and while it holds some similarities (lessons learned, etc), this is the straight-up, dialogue-filled story of Chase’s diagnosis and treatment. I’m not kidding, you guys. You will be IN THE ROOMS with Bob and I as we make decisions on his treatment and life.
This is unprecedented openness for us — and it is so much so that over a dozen medical staff had to sign off on conversations and use of their real names. It’s so different from the blog in some ways that my own parents (with whom we lived during Chase’s treatment) read the book and immediately called us to say “Wow, we knew, but at the same time, we didn’t know…”
So, to sum up, put all ideas of a yawn fest aside. I kept you faithful story-followers and blog readers in mind when I wrote the manuscript – there will be plenty to learn, and dare I say, even …enjoy?
2. “I really want to support you and everything, but I’m really scared to read a book about a child who gets cancer.”
I would be too.
I can honestly say that if I hadn’t written this book, and somebody told me I should read it, I would probably approach it with some trepidation.
There will be some chapters that you’re going to want to have the box of tissues close, but there are other chapters that will make you laugh out-right and you’ll be shocked that you just giggled over a book with the word “cancer” in it. This is life with Chase. You laugh. You cry. And sometimes, you do both together.
My amazing editor and I (along with a gifted and highly skilled team) worked incredibly hard to make this book “breathable” – ie: you will feel what we felt in the sadness, but you’ll also feel our joy and you’ll find times to “breathe” and take it in as you read. In other words, you’ll get all the feels, but it’s unlikely to blindside you. This was written for joy and grace, not a shock value.
3. “But I don’t have a child with cancer.”
That’s the best news I’ve heard all day!
While it’s true that this book will probably speak most directly to parents of children with cancer, each chapter ends with something God taught us on the journey and the heart of the entire book is that LIFE IS MESSY, butGOD IS FAITHFUL.
So yes, your life might not include cancer, but don’t underestimate how the story might touch you, encourage you, or give you far greater understanding into the life of a friend who might be hurting.
Does that sound proud? I don’t mean it to be — but you guys, throughout this journey, I’ve been amazed that some of the greatest, most touching stories I’ve ever heard about what’s written on this blog came from people who were encouraged and given hope to carry on because they saw their infertility, their disease, their caregiving, their financial difficulties, their selling a house, etc, etc… (seriously, I could go on and on) through the same eyes as I saw a trial of cancer. Yes, my difficulties might look different than yours, but stress is stress and in that, there is a really incredibly universality in Chase’s story.
So, won’t you join us?
*Have other questions or concerns? Please let me know! I’d love to answer them.*
This week, I had the honor to guest write for Way-FM. They asked me if I’d be willing to write about the seasons in life that come with no answers, and fully acknowledging the irony of answering the unanswerable, I undertook to wrestle through this. And I’m so glad I did! God is faithful and good.
I hope my wrestling blesses you as it did me. I’ve included the first few sentences here to get you started and then click on over to Way-FM and discover where I ended up with my answers.
-MbM-
“There are no words in any language that adequately express the emotion felt when hearing the phrase: “There’s a large mass”, no way to express the feelings that wash over the heart and mind when these words are spoken over the body of a two-year-old boy.
But, I know I’m not the only one who has heard words like this and Chase isn’t the only one to carry cancer like this.
How many times have I heard other stories?
Have you heard them too?
The friend whose breast cancer was gone for thirty years and then relapsed…
The small child who had every advantage that modern medicine could offer and still stopped breathing…
The parents and family and friends with empty arms and an un-fillable void in their lives…
Cancer is a bully – a vicious beast robbing us of our health, resources, relationships, and perhaps most frequently: answers. Nurses look puzzled, doctors shrug, and all people – from every possible religious and cultural background – weep, pray, and go through various rituals to beg for answers that will bring peace and change, and most especially, healing. As if somehow, understanding the unfolding horror will make it suddenly more bearable…”
As he stood before me, he nodded somewhat unwillingly. “Okay, fine. Just one picture…”
Chase was going to “his hospital”, and he was going as a pirate. Because nothing says “this is who I am” like a pirate costume. Due to a slight cold, I would not be joining them on the oncology floor that day and so it was extra special because it was “time for just Chase and Daddy” – the very best.
Occasionally, I drop hints in my writing about Chase’s aggression and I have trouble doing much more than that for several reasons. I think mostly because there is rarely any redemption or beauty that would benefit you from reading about it in greater detail. It is sad and ugly and Chase is deeply ashamed of it. Whenever we talk about what happened during his angry moments, he dissolves into genuine tears, promising never ever to do it again.
And so, there has become this other quiet side to our lives that in some way seems less real because I don’t write or talk about it the same as I do other facets, and yet, it is extremely real and taxing in our home and on our family.
Over the years, Bob and I have experienced shock and judgement on the occasions when Chase’s struggle rears it’s head in public. There are comments and suggestions, and the response that always breaks me a little: tears and the quietly whispered aside – “I don’t know what to say but I’ll pray”. I think I’d say that same thing to me if I were seeing it from the outside for the first time too.
And over the years, as people have witnessed the struggle in hospital and out, we’ve been told that we as parents were overindulgent and we must be spoiling him, that Chase needed boundaries, that he needed more control over life choices, that we were giving him too many choices, that we weren’t treating him normally, that we were treating him too normally, that the anger was his reaction to the out-of-control-ness of life in cancer treatment, that it might be the anti seizure medication he takes every day, that it stemmed from anxiety, that we needed to change his diet, that we needed to change his supplements, that we needed to change his environment, that it could be circumstantial, and various other things.
We’ve thought many times about getting help for him, but weren’t even sure what “help” should look like or who should provide it. We were often told that he was too young and his brain was still developing too much for anything to be of assistance, and were even told at one point that some specialists had no paradigm for a child who’d been through the extreme brain and emotional trauma that Chase had experienced. It was as if everybody knew on some level that it was happening, but nobody knew how to deal with it or what was at it’s root. A very isolating feeling.
Hearing that it was something we were doing was especially difficult. In the first week that Chase was diagnosed, Bob and I had determined that one of the very best gifts that we could give him was the gift of normal. His life had become extraordinary and we desired to keep that out of his way as much as we could, and so, we instituted loving boundaries in and around the chemo and treatment. How do you give a “time out” to a child whose life is a giant hospital bed punishment? You can’t… but maybe if a toy got thrown in anger, then the toy went into time out for a few minutes. Small things like that – the things that made him like his brothers and sister, like the other kids outside the hospital walls. But it was a constantly changing situation in which we were (and still are) always having to weigh out what’s chemo damage, what’s tumor damage, and what’s Chase. It was during this early season that I found the phrase I love so well: “There are only so many hills you can die on.” But despite our efforts, the rages continued unchecked. We felt like we were doing everything good parents were supposed to do. How was this our fault?
We plunged forward and fought these fights ever week and sometimes every day, and yet, we’ve felt largely unheard. Not because anybody’s ignoring us, but because I truly believe that the pediatric cancer survivor field is still significantly unfolding in this area. Think about it: Chase’s cancer has only been defined by name for about twenty years and it’s only been about seven since his treatment began as a clinical trial, changing statistics from completely terminal to marginally terminal, and suddenly, Chase’s generation of survivors are living long enough to really see what happens after the dust settles. Some days, our lives feels like the cancer equivalent of the old Oregon Trail – where we just circle up the wagons and try to survive.
Bob and I often liken Chase and his treatment to a house fire. When he was rushed in with his large mass, he was a house consumed. The teams of doctors were almost like teams of fire fighters, working collectively to extinguish the deadly blaze on all levels. You do what you have to do to save. And then we were done and thankful… But, who helps rebuild the house? You can’t expect the firefighters to do that for you.
This is ultimately what lead to Chase going to the hospital as a pirate this cold winter morning – we were on a search for builders – master builders. (Sorry, this is what happens when you’ve watched The Lego Movie a couple hundred times with your kids) It was time to work at rebuilding and Chase’s primary team of doctors had recommended that he was now old enough for a neuropsychology evaluation. We were cautiously optimistic, having been warned that it may not explain his aggression, but would definitely show some of his strengths, weaknesses, and how he learned. But we could still hope. Maybe there would be something – anything – that could provide us with a clue as to how we could help him.
And so it began, hours of testing, piles of paperwork, and then a two hour meeting for which I was conferenced in. And Chase sat in the back of the doctor’s office and over the speaker on Bob’s phone, I could hear Matt Redman singing “10,000 Reasons” from the iPad. Some things never change. But what we learned in the meeting was both life changing and life amazing.
I marvel how so many cancer parents know exactly where their child’s tumor was located in the brain. I am not one of those parents. I asked some other crazy and weird stuff at the time of his diagnosis, but I never asked exactly where the tumor was located. At 6cm with midline shift and tumor cell metastasis, it seemed to be everywhere. Which is why it stopped me dead in my tracks to realize for the first time in three years that Chase’s tumor decimated his language center. Did you hear that? Chase shouldn’t be able to talk. I need to say that again because I want it to really sink in. Chase shouldn’t be able to talk. Those of you who have met Chase know the truth, and I’d like to think that through this blog, even those of you who haven’t met Chase know the truth. Chase talks. Oh my word, does he talk! And well, too. So take just a moment and breathe in this insane miracle of a brain that, freshly cut and traumatized, made the decision to move knowledge to a safer area, and compensating for itself, retained power of speech even after hours of being open on an operating table. God is good.
But the damage and the compensation and the radiation all carried a price and it had to come from somewhere. In this meeting, we found out that it had been taken out of a few areas, including Chase’s executive functions – his emotional regulation.
What followed were long and breath-taking explanations in which instance upon encounter began to click into focus and understanding for us, and several times, I was tempted to burst into tears on the conferenced call just because the meeting was the most incredible revelation.
There are only so many times you can be told that you’re doing something wrong as a parent before you begin to believe it, and this meeting was the first time in a very long time that it was acknowledged and known beyond a shadow of a doubt that Chase’s aggression isn’t due to something we’re doing or not doing. There is damage, it is real, and we learned that there might actually be ways to heal, or at the very least, help.
There is not a magic cure. The process of working with a traumatized brain like Chase’s is a life-long one. There will be more therapies, more meetings, and possibly even medication to help retrain and replace some of what has been lost. And this will change and grow as Chase changes and grows.
So why do I share all of this? First, because if someone had told me three years ago that survival would be this complicated, I wouldn’t have believed them. And there are a lot of struggling survivors around almost all of us, so look to them with understanding and grace. Second, neurological issues are often simple in their exhibited symptoms yet mind-blowing in their actual complexity. So, the next time you’re in a store and you watch a mom deal with a screaming, wailing, kicking, on-the-floor child, know in your own heart and mind that it could indeed be an issue of boundaries and you might do something different if it were your child…or it could be that her child’s shirt hides multiple port scars and his hat covers a giant resection scar and that mama is dying just a tiny bit inside because she doesn’t know why he’s on the ground, what made the anger so great over something so small. And as you watch her, know that she’s been to places that broke her and she’s being broken once again in the aisles of a store and she wishes for just a second that things were different.
We are so deeply thankful because, three years ago, we didn’t even know if Chase would live let alone function, but we are weary parents, and the bald pirate has a long road of work ahead. So we rely on neurological sciences, survivor breakthroughs, and prayer – knowing that our seemingly accidental stumbling through it all is part of a good and hope-filled master plan. And we begin yet another facet of this life . . . moment by moment.
“…More than 95% of survivors will have a chronic health problem and 80% will have severe or life-threatening conditions.” – St. Baldrick’s Foundation
We sat in the room for almost two hours and dialogued on how the brain works. Chase fell asleep in my arms as Bob and I sat with the epilepsy specialist, discussing the EEG results and asking our questions. The human brain is an amazing place; full of energy and a fragile balance that the slightest thing can disrupt at any time. Marvelous and scary.
Despite Chase’s anti-seizure medication having some issues, after two hours of discourse and answered questions, we were counseled to stay the course. We were told that Chase’s brain was still too close to it’s trauma and needed to be protected from itself. Because Chase’s behavior was stable, we were to stay the course, increase his vitamins and call in three weeks to follow up.
[We were also re-briefed and updated on monitoring for any sort of seizure and the actions we should take if we ever observe anything. This included a seizure crash kit of sorts that travels with Chase at all times…just in case.]
May 2, 2014
Three weeks came and went and even with the extra vitamins, the aggression issue didn’t seem to improve at all, so, despite the continued need for neuro protection, the specialists conferred and decided to try reducing the anti-seizure medication. It’s only the tiniest bit (literally only a half of a milligram on one of the two daily doses), but over the last four weeks, we’ve seen a little improvement!
We’ve had some really encouraging, productive conversations with his teams of doctors and are feeling heard on this issue, however, there’s still much left to understand. Nobody knows for certain if what we’re seeing are the effects of medication, or radiation, or tumor, or being forced into an adult life at age two. The one thing we know is that whether we’re in a hospital room with specialists or in our home, with our family, working through a difficult moment; pursuing answers will be a marathon; not a sprint, and only time will prove…
We would so appreciate your continued prayer for wisdom and discernment as we continue to approach who Chase is and how to best care for him in all his facets of this special life.
Moment by moment.
Hear me, O God, when I cry; listen to my prayer.You are the One I will call when pushed to the edge,when my heart is faint. Shoulder me to the rock above me. For You are my protection,an impenetrable fortress from my enemies. Let me live in Your sanctuary forever; let me find safety in the shadow of Your wings. Psalm 61:1-4 (The Voice)