I must confess that I don’t listen to podcasts very often, but this is a good one, and I’m not just saying that because they’re talking to me. 😉 You’ll definitely want to tune in to Tyndale House Publishers The ARC Podcast!
And seriously, you guys, even if you don’t ever podcast, you need to listen to this because Joy and Adam (the hosts) had to listen to crazy Ewoldt family stories and they deserve a really great audience on this cast for that alone.
I mean, I’m talking potty-training-boys kind of Ewoldt family stories. So even if you feel you’re all caught up on Chase’s story and hearing about the goodness of God (Ha. As if…), please, listen … for Joy and Adam… 🙂
It was a long weekend and we spent too much time feeling blind in a lot of different ways.
And surgery can take the cataracts out of him, but never the “boy“.
We took a walk in the bright and sun on Sunday and he kept a blanket, hood, hat and sunglasses all over his swollen, ultra light-sensitive face, but he hopped out of the stroller for one minute to do this…
Because, you know, it’s Chase.
And after a while, you learn to expect the unexpected.
I’ve come to this writing place so many times in the early hours of morning light. I’ve come here to sit and think through brain surgeries and other surgeries. Through diagnosis and heartache. Through wrestling with God and seeing his love in unexpected and beautiful ways. Through exhaustion and answerless seasons. …and if you’ve been following along for any length of time, you know I could keep going with this list.
But now, in this dawn, I wake up, not with an impending sense of dread, but with great anticipation. And it seems surreal to me to consider that I look out, not over the lake as I have so many times before, but out over my own backyard and the very window where I stood and heard that we were looking at a potential relapse back in the day…where I stood when I heard my mom was sick. In some ways, this view has become my baptism by fire – it’s my cancer window, and yet I love it.
This morning as the calendar quietly speaks May over us, next to my well-worn, well-loved old coffee mug is a piece of already well-worn art. Its 289 pages hold my blood and that of my baby, and its outside is already covered in the smudges of tiny fingers. And if you look closely, there are even some lip marks where a bald boy held it close, kissed it soundly, and whispered over it with awe: “It’s my book! It’s about me!”
Oh dear ones, once again in the dawn, I have no idea what comes next. We’re standing on the edge of something and I believe it’s for our good. Once again, I’m without answers in the wait to see. But as always, of this I am sure: There is Light in the darkness.
And as always, even though we have know idea what’s ahead, we know how it will unfold.
With all my love and gratitude, joyously waiting with GREAT HOPE… Moment by moment.
I originally wrote this piece a couple of years ago for my amazing friend Sheila as part of her Chicago Now Blog, Mary Tyler Mom.
Sheila is a cancer mom herself and every year, she fills the entire month of September (childhood cancer awareness month) with our stories. It’s a season that is not for the faint of heart, but then again, this is a life that is not for the faint of heart.
I know there are so many of you wonderful parents who identify with one or another of these things that have long made for extraordinary living. God bless.
I so look forward to knowing the purpose in the suffering.
In the meantime… Moment by moment.
I’m a cancer mom.
There are fourteen months of “there’s less than 20% chance”-beating treatment, over one hundred inpatient days, as many outpatient days, ER runs, ever so many blood and platelet transfusions, nine chemo therapy drugs, multiple surgeries, and endless procedures and tests saying that I’m a cancer mom.
But what does that mean to me? Just this…
It means being wakened in the night by nightmares and then realizing it really did happen…I really did hear “There’s a large mass” pronounced over the ER bed of my 2-year old and there’s been no waking up ever since.
It means absorbing the sad looks and conciliatory touches to the shoulder and wanting to shout that we aren’t at a funeral yet.
It means “normal” defines any trip made to the hospital with myself behind the wheel instead of five-point harness-strapped into the back of a speeding sirens-and-lights ambulance while assuring him it’s going to be okay.
It means handing out candy at the door and seeing the looks on the costumed faces as they take in the too white, scarred, bald child at my side and ask their parents what he’s supposed to be while the embarrassed adults avert their eyes and move quickly away.
It means “fixing dinner” is preparing an 18-hour IV bag of nutrition and hydration and then attaching it to a tube in his chest.
It means watching a chemo being carried into the room…a chemo so light sensitive that it must be protected in a dark bag…and then they hang it and pump it into my baby.
It means being the grown up and saying; “You need to take your medicine even though it’s yucky.” to a red, tear-stained face when I want to sit down and cry right along with him.
It means listening to him whisper “I’m so brave” over and over as the medicine lulls him into a stupor and I hand him off to sets of surgical masks and scrubbed arms, knowing he’s going into the operating room and I can’t go with him.
It means that while other kids his age are learning to ride a two-wheel bike, I take joy in his remembering a words or learning to jump with both feet at the same time because in his world, that’s a really, really big deal.
It means there’s a kit in my purse that has gloves, alcohol swabs, clamps, and everything I need for a child with a central line and I carry it everywhere he goes….just in case.
It’s being up and out at 2:30AM, not for a party, but for an ER run in which I find myself praying that the fever goes down and the blood pressure goes up and that we can just be admitted to the regular oncology floor and not the ICU.
It’s learning to walk, and even at times run next to a child attached to tubes because playing makes them feel better.
It’s accepting the part of the living child forever lost to the moment his brain was open on an OR table and loving the living child he is today.
It’s feeling like I can’t breathe until I get answers and then they have none and I somehow go on breathing.
It’s allowing the child I swore to protect to go through intense seasons of pain, heartache and potentially life-long damage in order to try and save him.
It’s sitting by a hospital bed; a hundred percent powerless to fix anything and praying for the day the chemo stops hurting his skin enough that he’ll be comforted by a mother’s touch once again.
It’s holding him close next to the Christmas tree and answering “Mommy, will you hold me close so the death won’t get me?” without completely losing it.
It’s hearing that after almost two years of clear scans, there’s something growing and nobody knows what it is and the best thing to do is to wait and check again in six weeks and I find myself agreeing over the sound of my heart ripping open.
It’s knowing we’re out of options to cure his diagnosis and still getting up in the morning.
It’s coming to peace with the understanding that what I do may never change an outcome or what’s ahead for my darling son…and then finding the strength and purpose to make the most of every second of every day anyway.
Sometimes it isn’t the actual doing of things that is hard, but it’s the thinking about doing things that lays us out on the floor and oddly teaches us dependence.
Chase has his first of two eye surgeries tomorrow (Friday), and we’re all a bit of a wreck over it. Which is ironic when you consider all he’s had done over the years. To have gone from major, major brain surgery with half his head lying open to fearing a simple outpatient surgery on one eyeball – that same procedure that very likely half the population over age 60 has done – it doesn’t make sense, does it? But fear never does make sense.
We are desperately out of practice with surgeries. Chase hasn’t had a single procedure for nearly two years, and so the thinking of tomorrow – even when we rehearse being strong and of good courage because God is with us – it’s been laying us out, or driving us up a wall.
Carrying this on his heart finally culminated yesterday morning in a knock-down, drag-out, complete and total refusal to get on the bus. He lay down on the sidewalk, and then he ran for the door and wouldn’t let go of the handle, and then he made it in the house and took a standoff posture in the living room, followed by clinging to the bannister while I tried to carry him down the stairs, and finally, a star-like posture with his arms and legs against either side of the doorway while I tried to get him outside again. This kid, he knows how to fight. You get the idea…
Right now, it sounds a little hilarious and completely like something out of a Calvin and Hobbes cartoon, but in that minute when he was screaming and pulling my hair, and the bus driver was honking and frowning at me, and I was pretty sure one of the drivers in the halted cars on either side of the street was about to call child services on the whole spectacle, it was awful, and I could feel myself sweating and freaking out right along with Chase.
He missed the bus and the morning got completely thrown off, but it ended up being the best thing that could have happened because I got him to one of his “safe zones” – the places he can escape to when he’s really worked up – and I wrapped him in his favorite, old blanket, and when he was finally still, we talked.
“Surgery.” He only spoke one word and his poor, broken eyes welled up with tears.
He recoiled as I began to speak comfort and logic and interrupted frantically, “But are they going to take my eyeballs out??”
Oh dear ones, I’ve said it before and I’m saying it again now because it took Chase in tears with secret, crazy fears and sitting under a surgery shadow again to make me realize afresh how desperately I needed to slow down and just be in the moment by moment grace of life. Sometimes, we all just need to sit down and reassure somebody that no matter how bad it all feels, our eyeballs are still going to be in our heads at the end of the day (or whatever your equivalent of this scenario might be).
Life is too important and too short to worry about what we look like to others or what happens to our perfectly planned days when the unexpected shows up at our door. (or ninja-refuses to step outside our door)
It’s time to keep our eyeballs in our heads, breathe deep, and love those around us in need. And if you think of it, please pray for Chase as he goes back into the OR tomorrow.