Sibling Speak [VIDEO]

He doesn’t remember a time when there wasn’t cancer in the house; when his older brother wasn’t damaged, hurtful, screaming, and beside himself with pain. He was a sweet toddler who couldn’t yet sympathize with it all, so he became a witness to and – if we’re being very honest – a victim of cancer pain at the hands of a two-year-old sibling who didn’t understand any of it himself.

He is only six now and he’s tough as nails, but will weep at the thought of anyone in pain – ever. He has a love/hate relationship with Chase – wailing on Chase at times and wailing on anyone else who dares to disparage his brother. He is the youngest and yet he is not the baby. And he himself doesn’t completely understand why a scream turns him inside out, but I know. I remember how he would run during a lab draw, when neutropenia and pain left more monster than brother on the couch to his little baby eyes.

He will spend his whole life being a part of this and having it be a part of him, and by the grace of God and fervent prayer, we never stop praying that it will be the making and not the breaking of him.

The life of a cancer sibling is often a silent, supporting role. It has to be, and they do it so well. But here, in his own words, is Karsten – sharing a little of himself. This is raw, unfiltered, uncut – All boy, all brother, all laughter, all pain, all in.

Moment by moment…

Bullying [dictionary definition]: the use of superior strength or influence to intimidate (someone), typically to force him or her to do what one wants.

Bullying [Karsten definition]: the dictionary plus anything else he’s not a fan of Chase doing – a line of demarcation that changes every three to five minutes and may depend on how recently Chase has shared the iPad with him. 

This post is dedicated to the siblings of children with cancer and special needs. Please never forget that we see your patience and bravery. You are amazing and beautiful in the struggle.

 

Making Dust In The Wind

The kids are finally out of school and summer programs are easing into projects and days at the pool, but there’s one thing that I’m still trying to wrap my mind around. I’ve shamefully fought it for three years now, dreaded it and done everything I could think of to ward it off. But this year, I’m giving into it…embracing it. It’s a part of us because he’s a part of us.

People with low executive function need boundaries – a daily paradigm, as it were. Or, at least this is the truth of Chase. And it’s a truth that makes summer and it’s loose, last minute plans a waking nightmare. Okay, perhaps not a complete nightmare, but it definitely ranges from marginally uncomfortable to “Mom’s going to sell y’all on E-Bay if you don’t give her a moment of peace!” For Chase, it’s not enough to know there will be a lunch, a dinner, and some kind of activity for the day. If he doesn’t know what’s for dinner, for lunch, what we’re doing and approximately when, he becomes agitated, confused, and will repeatedly ask (and by repeatedly, I mean every few minutes until we do whatever it is he’s asking about – so sometimes, for hours) what comes next. Without a doubt, low executive function and short term memory loss are a wicked combination. (and if you don’t believe me, please feel free to reference last month’s Facebook post on Chase’s burying his sister’s cell phone in the front yard)

For years now, I have only been able to cope with life by living in the moment. Not worrying about the next thing ’til it’s in front of me. If you don’t commit, then you will never be disappointed by what’s not going to happen, right?

And yet, now, I’m committing. Every day. For me. For him. For sanity. I’m committing to the day.

I will push him: he doesn’t always get to know every single event of the day in the exact time it will occur. But he will push me too: I need to have an idea and have it written out because it helps him feel safer – better.

This is love.

So, I will learn to plan the next day in faith and he will learn to live this moment in grace.

And we do it all in chalk so the plans are only ever dust in the wind…

Moment by moment. 

Trust in the Lord with all your heart; and do not depend on your own understanding. Seek his will in all you do, and he will show you which path to take. Proverbs 3:5-6 (NLT)

Dear Cancer Sibling

When cancer hits, it never hits just one.

While it inhabits one body, it hits all.

This week, I watched my daughter play with her cancer sibling. She’s 11 and is exactly the beautiful, frustrating conundrum you’d expect of that age, but in the one moment she held Chase in her arms, anything juvenile melted instantly.

When she holds Chase, she knows nothing, but she knows everything. Into that moment of holding go years of pain, suffering, frustration, and love far beyond anything we would have imagined or desired for a pre-teen.

Watching the expression on her face – half-sister, half-mother – it caused me to recall that she’s one of many. …and the many are on my heart today. So, siblings, this is for you.


Dear Cancer Sibling,

I may not know you, but I want you to know that I see you.

I see the pain of wondering of a beloved playmate is going to die.

I see that pain in your heart while the other kids your age don’t hardly understand the words let alone the concept.

I see you standing in the doorway of your house…a friends house…a grandparents house…while we, your parents and protectors pull out of the driveway and go to another doctor, another hospital, another appointment without you.

I see you standing quietly in the halls of the hospitals while doctors and nurses buzz around and make a deal about seemingly everything and everyone but you.

I see you in the shadows of the flashing lights when the only words they’ll tell you are “it’s okay” and “stay out of the way”.

I see how hard you work on that skill, that task, that sport…all for that one event someone will take pictures of and send to your absent parents.

I see you hiding in your room, trying to drown out the screams of a small child getting a needle plunged into their chest.

I see your frustration when your broken, sick sibling that you love so dearly hurts you as if they don’t care.

I see the guilt when you have a moment of resentment or wishing it all could have been different. It’s okay… we all have those.

I see the playgrounds and school halls through your eyes as you protectively and with a righteous anger watch social situations go over your atypical siblings heads or behind their backs.

I see you crouch low over their bed and tell them it’s going to be okay because you’re there.

I see you talking to and playing with the air in front of you as you live out their memories and remember their presence.

I see you watch the same movie, listen to the same song, paint with the same color over and over again just because it’s a fixated comfort.

I see you being the one who doesn’t get the special gift or amazing experience.

I see you stand helplessly by and watch grown men and women sob scarily and uncontrollably.

I see you having a different, often less understood life from the other kids around you.

I see you marking birthdays and holidays with an empty chair at the table.

I see you visiting a cemetery while your friends visit a park.

But here’s what else I see…

I see your bravery.

I see your unconditional love.

I see you standing up when you’d rather fall down.

I see you stepping up when you’d rather sit down.

I see the hard things developing justice and mercy in equal, beautiful parts of your soul.

I see you living out the truth that no child should ever be left out; left behind.

I see you developing a sensitivity to others beyond that of your peers.

I see hints and teases of who you will someday become and it takes my breathe away.

You will hold the world and you will run it.

Today, you may feel like the one abandoned, but one day soon, you will be the one who includes, who leads, who fights, who dominates and you’ll be able to point back to these moments when it felt like nobody saw you and you’ll say: “This was when I grew.”

So quietly, bravely grow, my dear cancer siblings…

You are seen and we can’t wait to experience the incredible person you become.

Love,

Your Parents

Choose To Live

I first had the honor of meeting Stephanie Goodall over the phone. I remember it well…she was sitting quietly in a hospital room on the 17th floor, I was at home washing the dishes. She was isolated from her other children and I was constantly getting mine to be quiet to I could talk on the phone. We had been connected by a director at St. Baldrick’s

Cancer mama sisters (L-R) Sarah, Ellie, Stephanie

when she realized that Stephanie’s son, Jonah and my Chase shared not only a hospital, but some of the same doctors as well. “You’ll like her, Ellie. She reminds me of you. She’s got four kids, faith, and writes a blog too.” Little did I know that I’d not only like Stephanie, but be encouraged by her and be even slightly in awe of her love for life and commitment to joy in the unthinkable. We were finally able to meet in person this past Saturday night at the Hearts For Hope Gala – what a joy it was to hug this dear sister in real life!

It was at this gala that Stephanie spoke: she opened up her heart and shared Jonah’s story – incredibly, beautifully formed. Jonah goes in for an MRI on Tuesday, May 23 around 1:00 CST and I’m thrilled to be sharing Stephanie’s text from the gala with you – not only so you can be encouraged, but so that you too can join in prayer for darling Jonah and the Goodall family. As you read these words, they’ll be on their way to the hospital.

“Whatever may pass and whatever lies before me… ”

Meet Stephanie and Jonah:

“When Christina originally asked me to share our story [at the gala], I was excited to share a story filled with hope, optimism, overcoming odds and lessons learned.  I was going to share a story that wrapped up nicely with a ribbon – that may have made you feel a little sad or uncomfortable at points but would have ended happy and hopeful.  Pediatric cancer isn’t like that though – and based on recent MRI results, our ribbon has frayed.  But before I get to the today in of our story let me go back to the beginning.

Our story probably begins in the Spring of 2014.  Jonah was a happy, healthy, energetic, bright 3 1/2 year old who was wildly popular in preschool.  He had both an older brother and sister as well as a baby sister.  That spring regular waves of nausea and vomiting started to interrupt Jonah’s exuberant play with growing frequency.  A visit to the GI doctor indicated everything was fine so Jonah was placed on a course of antacid and everything cleared up.  Jonah continued to live his life at full speed, with a bump in August 2014 when he was diagnosed with an anaphylactic allergy to flaxseed.

Super Bowl 49 is a game that will live in infamy in our family – not because the Patriots beat the Seahawks with the swirl of “Deflategate” in the background, but because Jonah had another flaxseed exposure that landed him in the ER.  After the Super Bowl event, Jonah’s nausea and vomiting returned and so we were back to GI.  This time the antacid didn’t help and in May 2015, Jonah was diagnosed with eosinophilic esophagitis (EOE), which is an allergenic condition of the esophagus that effect 1 out of every 2,000 people.  One of the best treatments for EOE is diet modification which we immediately implemented.  Unfortunately, Jonah seemed to be getting worse instead of better.  He was eating less and less, vomiting more and more.  Our bright, rambunctious, big living little boy was fading before our eyes.

By July, our pediatrician was growing concerned as well.  Jonah had become extremely lethargic and had lost almost ten pounds since the spring.  He then had a episode of double vision followed by an episode of “word salad” (using proper words in incoherent order) and we were sent to the local hospital for an urgent MRI.  What started out as a normal Wednesday, forever changed the lives of our whole family.  A tumor, the size of a plum, was discovered in the cerebellum of Jonah’s brain.  That evening we were transported to Lurie Children’s.

The following day, it was confirmed that Jonah had medulloblastoma, which had metastasized through his brain and spine.  Although medulloblastoma is the most common malignant pediatric brain cancer, only 400-500 cases are diagnosed a year. The days that followed were a blur – surgery to remove the tumor, a life threatening hematoma, 2 weeks intubated in the PICU, another hematoma, surgery to place a shunt and central line.  Jonah also suffered a sever case of posterior fossa syndrome as a result of the surgery, which only occurs 20-25% of the time.  Basically, Jonah’s body forgot how to listen to his brain – it was almost like he was in a coma, but he wasn’t – he couldn’t breathe for himself, eat, move, smile or talk.  As much as we longed to allow Jonah to recover from the posterior fossa syndrome, his cancer was too far spread and he didn’t have that luxury.

Pediatric cancer treatment decisions are a nightmare.  As a parent, you have to decide between terrible and horrible.  There isn’t a third, more pleasant option.  We choose terrible, and Jonah received 5 rounds of high dose chemotherapy often referred to as “the kitchen sink” on the oncology floor.  We then moved onto a 6th round of chemo that made the first 5 seem like child’s play, followed by a stem cell transplant.

In stereotypical fashion, we saw Jonah’s beautiful bright blonde hair fall out, we saw him continuously nauseous and throwing up so regularly that it stopped phasing any of us.  We saw mouth sores that required a morphine drip to dull the pain, skin rashes that caused him to peel from head to toe, sepsis from neutropenia and other random infections.  We saw him so miserable, it was hard to find the light in his eyes.

Because of the posterior fossa syndrome, when Jonah wasn’t at Lurie, he was at RIC (now the Shirley Ryan Ability Lab – a rehabilitation facility offering a variety of inpatient and outpatient therapy).  Jonah had to relearn how to eat, smile, laugh, talk, squeeze a finger, sit, stand and walk.  His hand dominance changed as his right side no longer possessed the strength it needed.  A boy who had learned to ride a 20” 2-wheel bike at 4 was relearning how to ride with adaptive tricycles.

Jonah’s treatment didn’t end there though.  He went on to have radiation as well.  Radiation isn’t great for a developing brain, so much so that doctors rarely recommend it for children under the age of 3.  In the window of 4-8, things are gray.  Radiation destroys developing brains and most brain development occurs before the age of 8.  Jonah was 5.  Radiation is however currently the most effective treatment for medulloblastoma and so we moved forward.  Although our team couldn’t tell us the specifics, they guaranteed us that radiation will cost Jonah IQ points.

Jonah finally finished treatment May 2016.  He spent 275 consecutive days in the hospital, endured 6 surgeries, received close to 100 blood & platelet transfusions and faced many other hardships.  The blessing is, the spirit of the boy we knew returned once he was done with treatment.  He’s again silly, loving, kind, inquisitive and warm.  He is also different – he is more timid, less confident, more scared.  Cancer has changed him on the inside as well as the outside.

This past year out of treatment has been an amazing time for our family.  Sure, it’s been weighed down by 6 hours a week of OT, PT & ST for Jonah.  Sure there have been some academic struggles in school we’re having to work through.  Sure Jonah’s had 2 additional surgeries to address lingering complications of resection.  Sure Jonah wears hearing aides and walks with a walker.  All of those things are true, but our lives have been infused with gratitude for the gift of together.  Our family is again all under one roof doing normal life, traveling and making memories, filled with thankfulness.

This grateful, hope-infused gift of life was how I had originally planned to end our story.  Unfortunately, that wouldn’t be the whole story.  At Jonah’s last surveillance MRI in April, there was a new spot on spine that the medical team cannot explain.  It is not certain that this spot is recurrence or not, but suspicion is high.  If this spot is recurrent disease, there is no cure.  The median life expectancy for children, like Jonah, with metastatic medulloblastoma with recurrence is 1 year.

This is why research matters.  Research matters not only to Jonah, but to his siblings who love him so, who have walked this impossible journey and may still face the loss of their brother.  It matters to his preschool friends from before and from now, who love his bright spirit and are being formed by their relationships with him.  It matters to the 13 children diagnosed with brain cancer today, and the 13 children that will be diagnosed tomorrow.

The reason events like this [fundraising gala] matter is because only 4% of the US federal funding is dedicated to all pediatric cancer research combined, which is less stand alone cancers like prostate and breast cancer .  Most pediatric cancer research is funded through private organizations, and events like this help fund those organizations.

I know that there are many heart wrenching causes that you can help support and the mere fact that you are here means you likely are aware of the devastation pediatric cancer can cause.  I ask you to help not only in funding research through your donations, but also in raising awareness so that others beyond this room can be moved to help support research.  Pediatric cancer is something you can’t wait to care about until it impacts you, because then it’s too late.  The research of today will help the children of tomorrow much more than it will help the children living with cancer today.

Jonah will be having a follow up MRI on Tuesday, to hopefully give us more insight into what this spot it.  It is our deepest desire that the spot has miraculously resolved and we will be able to proclaim the power of prayer.  We also have to be prepared that the results will mark the beginning of our good-bye.  Either way, our family is going to choose to live.  We are going to lean in, love, celebrate, find joy and be together.  I encourage you to do the same.”

The Goodall Family: Anna, Julia, Stephanie, Noah, Jonah, and Simon (May 2017)

**Please join us today in praying for Jonah and the Goodall family.**

Moment by moment.

“Yet I am confident I will see the Lord’s goodness while I am here in the land of the living. Wait patiently for the Lord. Be brave and courageous. Yes, wait patiently for the Lord.” Psalm 27:13-14 (NLT)

For more from Stephanie, please visit her blog: The Goodall Life

You Are Loved

“The faithful love of the Lord never ends! His mercies never cease.” Lamentations 3:22

“I can’t do this.”

His precious little mouth contorted on the one side – the way it always did when he became scared. “Mom, I’m not a first grader. I can’t do this. I need to go back to kindergarten.”

Behind his back, the window glowed with the last remnants of the sunset, signaling night…the night before school.

Chase shook his fuzzy, scarred head with each new sentence of voiced fear. After months of proudly proclaiming his being in first grade now and – including outrageous claims for privilege (“I should get to stay up late at night and watch Netflix because I’m a first-grader now, Mom.”) – the time had finally come and he felt himself unequal to the road in front of him.

His words flooded my heart as I heard echoes of my own timid voice in memory. Through his cancer, the ambulances, the hospitals, childbirth, even marriage… big things. Life things.

I can’t do this. God, I’m not ready for this.

I’m too young…

Too immature…

Too imperfect…

Too scared…

I need more time to prepare.

To get it right…

To be aware…

To make it count…

But here’s the thing with life… When I am blind-sided with my weakness and need, God is aware of the plan – my perfect life plan. And when things feel underdone and undone, out-of-nowhere, frenzied and stressed, He alone knows the ways to make them count for my good and His glory.

I knelt in front of Chase and put my hands lightly on his arms. Oh, how I wanted him to listen and connect with the words I needed to say. “Chase, you can and you will – because you are ready. It doesn’t feel like it yet, but you’re ready;” I paused, searching for the right words, “And, you are loved.”

You are loved.

In the hard moments when our brains acknowledge our good and His glory, but daily life throws gut punches that leave us lacking, gasping “I can’t do this”, it comes down to those very few words: I am loved; you are loved. These are the conduit from our head to our heart – from knowing what’s true to believing and resting in what’s good: His faithful love.

This had become a key sentence with my darling cancer survivor over the last several months. With his age and progression comes the increasing sense of “other”. He knows he looks different from those around him and often reacts differently too. He is strong, but it takes precious little for the remorse and regret to set in – and the fear too. I watch him feel unequal to the road in front of him and know beyond a shadow of a doubt that only perfect love can conquer this fear. And I know because I feel my own weakness, sadness and fear.

So, in the sunset before that August big day, as Chase lay his head down to sleep in that sixth year of a life we never thought he’d have, I grabbed the first piece of paper I could find (for it’s the words that are most important, not on what they are written) and I wrote what I believe…what I know and too often forget: You are loved. And then I tucked it, folded small into the blue top pocket of the crisp, new backpack to be found on the bus the next morning.

For truly, these words give a strength and joy like none other. And with these words, we are ready for anything life may bring – in His grace – moment by moment.

“See how very much our Father loves us, for he calls us his children, and that is what we are!” 1 John 3:1a

“Repeat them again and again to your children. Talk about them when you are at home and when you are on the road, when you are going to bed and when you are getting up. Tie them to your hands and wear them on your forehead as reminders.” Deuteronomy 6:7-8