48 Hours On The 20th Floor

“Will you stay with me?” His lower lip trembled as he tried to be brave. And then, all too fast, we are at the reinforced white of the double doors, and the doctor in his gray-blue scrubs and hair net murmuring, “It’s time”.

I kissed his head awkwardly over the side rail of the bed, wishing I could gather him close – shield him from all of this – even as I smile and the doctor takes our picture. A final brave moment.

And then the doors open and the bed wheels through them… Chase moving forward as I’m left behind. 

“Remember, there’s no smiling in the hospital,” I call stupidly just to see a tremulous smile. Even as scared as he is, he will try simply because I told him not to do it. “I love you sweet boy,” I call one last time and then the doors close as they turn the corner.

The surrender of a child is and will always be one of the most heart-wrenchingly difficult parts of this journey for me.

It takes four hours – four long hours before he’s done and I stand in another hallway, flanked by two friends as the doctor explains the anomalies of the surgeries and Chase’s body. And I want to laugh because this was a surprise to him, but very few things surprise me when it comes to my sweet boy. He’s not about the easy road though things.

The important things is that the surgery went well and that he got all the cancer out. And I tell the doctor that he deserves a gold star for powering through a thyroid surgery that lasted as long (or possibly even a smidgeon longer…) as Chase’s brain surgery. He smiles because he’s been with Chase for six years now and he knows Chase’s brain surgeon well. And later, the neurosurgeon will demand the gold star for doing a brain tumor resection in the time it takes to remove a thyroid. Doctors become strange family members this long into a fight.

I just need to see my boy now. I need to see with my own eyes that he breathes.

It felt like hours, but was probably only minutes before they call me back and as I follow the nurse, I’m whispering prayers for strength because I remember the brain surgery. Very few things make me weak in the knees, but the sight of my broken boy was one, and I remember Bob getting on the bed with Chase because I couldn’t. I couldn’t handle the stitches and scars in those first minutes and I beg for strength because Bob isn’t with me this time and I will need to find my way with Chase alone in these first minutes.

He is so broken. My sweet boy. There is a part of me that knows it is never as bad as it looks, but the part of me that birthed him and loves him absolutely detests seeing him cut and scarred – with an unholy rage. 

It will pass. It always does.

But this is what it’s like to walk this road with Chase. I ache when he hurts and cry when he breaks. I signed papers asking them to do these things because all his pain is still better than the cancer – and that’s just a messed up place to be in my parent head and mother’s heart.

He finally wakes and his first words are “Call Mimi” – his maternal grandmother. And then he lays in the bed and watches her silently on the screen, and I worry that he doesn’t want to talk even though the doctors said his vocal cords came through the surgery just fine.

And then we are finally taken to a room high on the twentieth floor and he lays perfectly still. “I get to ride on the bed, but you have to walk,” he cracks and croaks, and I know even as still as he is in his pain and brokenness, he is so relieved that the surgery is finally done.

But tears leak out of the sides of his eyes and track down his temples and onto the pillow. “I can’t laugh”, he says, and I don’t know whether he’s talking about the condition of his throat or his heart.

“You’ll be surprised”, the doctors say. “It feels like he’s going to be like this forever, and then he will suddenly just start healing.”

After the sun goes down on this forever long day, a magician knocks at the door and literally folds his tall frame in half over the bed giving Chase a magic wand and the rest of us the first, hoarse bark of a faint laugh.

Has it really only been hours since the surgery? …a day since we woke to this reality? Perhaps it’s going to be okay.

But then, his calcium levels drop – a sign that his body is in revolt over the space where his thyroid used to nestle close – and so they call for labs to be done every few hours and more medications to be added to his list. 

Isn’t calcium a glass of milk or strong nails? I think to myself even as they warn me about loss of feeling in his fingers, toes, and lips, and tell me to watch for his hands stiffening up, fingers becoming like tiny claws. I pray they’re kidding even while I know they aren’t and breathe just to get through the next lab. Because when you don’t have a port, every blood draw is a needle, and when you’re Chase, it’s two or three needles and so many tears..

He lies elevated on the hospital bed, sobbing hoarsely. “Don’t hurt me. Please stop hurting me” as the order comes through for labs every four hours instead of the six. And we will only know later that the nurse went back and begged to remain at the six hour mark after seeing his tears.

All through the night, the staff comes in and out for labs and medications, and to check his breath and heart as the small color-coded stickers on his torso and back keep setting off alarms. Calcium is so much more than a glass of milk and I will need all the coffee when the morning finally comes. 

The next day is so much better, and Chase sits up in his bed, but he falls back and sleeps within minutes and not even the hospital playroom can tempt him for long. We smile with the staff coming in and out as they pick up Chase’s Bears bear in his San Francisco 49ers sweatshirt and ask “What is happening here? This bear seems very confused.” And Chase growls and pretends to kick his nurses out of his room after he finds out that they’re two Wisconsin girls with Green Bay in their hearts.

Then it’s time for the drain to come out of the hollow in his throat, and they reconfigure his IV while he lays still and cries more. And it would be too much for me if not for Zack, a nurse on the floor who’s father is Chase’s PE teacher and his help on Chase’s arm is the reminder I need – the reminder of connection, the reminder that we aren’t ever alone and our stories cross in crazy places and times. And after the tears dry, we send a picture of Zack and Chase to the teachers in the school.

By this second night, the healing suddenly starts where we can see it. He gets up and takes some steps, walking in the hall with his ambulance nurse friend, Craig, and flirting with the nurses. His voice is quick, high, and gravel-filled, as if he’s afraid to push against the bruised feeling they say he’s experiencing. And then he tires and I push him around in the wheelchair because Chase is still Chase and likes to move even when his muscles want none of it.

“There’s nowhere I’d rather be than here with you, Mom”, he whisper croaks over the sound of beeping monitors and a fussing baby. And for one glorious second, the hall of the hospital is the most perfect place on earth.

But the calcium dips again. So it’s another night on the twentieth floor and the hope that the morning brings better news. 

And it does… thank God, it does. We will be discharged today.

By the late afternoon in the fog and rain, I push his wheelchair with one arm while I carry bags and a suitcase in the other. I wish I had a moment to cry over this tiny peek into the life of Chase’s friends who live in their wheelchairs. It hurts so much more when the ramp is bumpy or the door doesn’t open. There are so many nuances I didn’t realize until now with my hands on my own son’s wheelchair moment.

But I can’t think about crying for long because it just feels so good to leave. Neither of us have slept in so long – too long – and the Chicago parking garage air is cold and dirty, but we both breathe deep. “Freedom”, Chase whispers.

And then we drive a few short blocks to pick up Bob and the other kids at the Chicago Dance Marathon and end up staying a few minutes and saying a few words and somehow, watching people dance with abandon and cheer on kids like Chase is the most perfect way to celebrate a discharge even as Bob and I catch each other’s eyes over the crowd and marvel that Chase is still on his feet.

Sunday passes and he rests long hours at home and plays with siblings the healing is remarkable. It feels so good to hear him try and laugh again even though he’s still quiet compared to his normal Chase self. And his hand keeps going to the bandage at his throat.

Monday morning brings school for the others and more labs for Chase. And we all whisper prayers for high calcium and receptive veins. “Why do they need more blood?” he cries, even though he knows the answer. It’s simply his way of voicing the desire that this not be the way it is.

“I miss you being my hospital butler, mom.” He tells me in the car as we leave. “Now I will have to do things all by myself again.” He sighs. “I liked it better when you had to do everything for me.”

It’s late afternoon when the hospital calls. Hoping it’s positive calcium news, I’m surprised to hear the voice of the otolaryngology fellow. The pathology report is back on the cancer and it was indeed the thyroid cancer they had assumed.

Expected.

And then she tells me how the cancer was also tucked into the few lymph nodes they took out.

Unexpected.

It feels like a gut punch, this news with the with the lymph nodes. Those tiny things scare me so much as they seem to function like the railway system for the entire body. What if…? My brain silently travels the railway lines of worry like cancer even though I know I shouldn’t worry if they aren’t worried. It’s only news…words…I tell my gut.

God is as much in control of Chase’s life and story as He was five minutes ago and will be five years from now.

They aren’t very worried because Chase is asymptomatic, his glands smooth and unswollen, but it’s definitely another bend in the journey’s road. At this point, there is no great surprise. Only weary grief. And not even great sadness for Chase – he is strong and brave as he always was and will be – it’s just the heart-weighing grief of living in a world where these moments exist – where little children get sick.

Any time, Jesus, any time now, my heart whispers quiet on the call.

So in the now, we wait for word from more doctors, we wait for calcium levels, we wait for hope, we wait for strength and peace. Sometimes life is a waiting room, really. And the story twists and turns are not always fun, but they’re known to God even if they aren’t known to us. And because of this, we are free to keep choosing hope.

Moment by moment.

Keep Breathing: An Update

So, it might still be nothing, but it looks like it’s something…

As some of you are already aware, while the MRI found no cancer recurrence in Chase’s brain or spine, there was a growth detected in his thyroid. At the time, we were told that it was most likely a nodule and not something to worry about, but today, somewhere during his seven appointments (handled in total beast mode), we learned that the thyroid spot doesn’t look good. 

And while we don’t know the end of the story, we know the first steps…
On Monday, Chase will be having a needle biopsy under sedation to determine whether the growth is indeed cancer, as is feared.

And after that, regardless of the biopsy results, Chase will be having a surgery to remove his entire thyroid – because you don’t leave something that grows other things in a kid like Chase – and pray like crazy that it’s just the thyroid and nothing is in the lungs or lymph nodes.

If it isn’t cancer, we keep breathing.

And if it is, we keep breathing with some treatment.

 As always, the only thing we can do is buckle up and cling even more to hope in the moment by moment. 

“Yet I am confident that I will see the Lord’s goodness while I am here in the land of the living.” Psalm 27:14

Of Hard Moments And Incredible Gifts

Early tomorrow morning, Chase will step into a room, accept needles, give blood and drop into unconsciousness for a two hour MRI, kicking off a month of appointments and exams.

Everything is coded as routine, and so it is, for there’s no emergency, and yet it’s anything but routine for my sweet boy.

We live the strange survivor conundrum that is this: the older he gets, the more physically easy a test may become, but the greater the toll to his emotions.

He is so nervous and got to the point last night that he told me that it wasn’t just about the needle, but that he wished there had never been a seizure or cancer or any of it – he wished that he could take it all back and make it different – and then we both cried because his words are in my heart all the time.

And yet, we find incredible joy in the journey too. So as I thought through what I wanted to share with you this MRI Eve, I thought of this little video.

You guys, THIS.

Chase was given an iPad six years ago when he began treatment and it finally, irrevocably died this past Fall.
While we have never wanted for anything, there is no extra money to go buying new iPads on the regular, and I found myself crazily mourning the loss of a screen with so many appointments upcoming – not to mention, it helps Chase to stay focused on the drives to the hospital so that he doesn’t start vomiting (a neuro/mental holdover from chemo days – he sees the Chicago skyline when we go to the hospital and starts to vomit).

And then, there was a text from a friend with the words “It’s all taken care of…”

And then there was an Amazon box on the front step.

And then there was this video, in which my darling boy with all his challenges felt the right emotion in the right moment – a thing I have hardly ever seen and my gift in witnessing it was greater even than what lay in the box for Chase.

And it knocked me over.

So THIS.

On the eve of the MRI, be a part of our joy and thankfulness.

And if you picture Chase tomorrow morning, know he’ll have a beautiful, fresh screen to help. And then say a prayer for his bravery to hold in the moment by moment of this cancer life.

Everlasting gratitude and love to the Anthony Rizzo Family Foundation​ to taking a cancer diagnosis and turning it into a blessing for so many. Thank you for seeing our children for who they are and what they can do and then never resting until their quality of life is the best it can possibly be.

Stuff, Things, And Chase Stole My Book

…or, as I like to call it: “Our joint office”.

Yes! It’s the first day of May, the kick-off to Brain Tumor Awareness Month, and that warrants a rather questionable video of me telling you whatever is on my mind.

First of all, THANK YOU so much for all the texts and messages in response to my little update yesterday. I so appreciate all your encouragement and prayers – feeling so loved. Please continue to pray that the Lord would guide and direct me in every step. I know the desire in my heart, but I also long for my heart to mirror God’s will, even if that means changing things up.

Next… Brain Tumor Awareness! Dear ones! Chase Away Cancer (the book link to Amazon) turns TWO today! And in honor of that, I explain why you need to go buy one, share it with a friend, give it as a gift, and basically all other manner of shameless promotion. Guys, I believe in the message of this book with every fiber of my being. Pass it on.

And last, you’ll have to watch the video because … wait for it … Chase is a book-stealing book stealer. Ah…

 

Moment by moment…

Ellie

PS: Y’all can @ me anytime on Facebook (Ellie Poole Ewoldt, Instagram (Ellie Poole Ewoldt), or Twitter (eleanorewoldt) – I love to hear from you!

PPS: If you think of us tomorrow (Wednesday 5/2), please remember to pray for Chase while he meets with his endocrine team at Lurie. Our hope is that the growth hormone shots are working and that Chase’s system is as strong as it can be.

8 FOR 8

Dear ones, by all rights and data, we should have never seen a 3rd year, let alone an 8th birthday! Yet, here we are and Chase still lives and breathes joy into our family and the world around him!

He is a miracle and we are so thankful.

To help us celebrate Chase’s 8th birthday this year, we are doing something different and new. We kindly ask that you consider making a donation directly to our Lurie Family – Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago – through this online donation page. Give $8 (or more!) in honor of Chase’s 8 years.

Every dollar counts.

With your help, we can contribute to brighter futures and better outcomes for children like Chase. 

We have asked that all monies given in honor of Chase be sent directly to his wonderful doctors in the Pediatric Brain Tumor Program – these doctors that you all have come to know so well over the last several years. Imagine what they can do with your gift! All donations are tax-deductible and will be acknowledged by Lurie Children’s Foundation. 

On behalf of the patients and families of Lurie Children’s, thank you for your support. 

 

Moment by moment, with deepest gratitude,

The Ewoldt Family