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.

This Is The Week

This is the week.

This is the week I’m going to write more.

This is the week I’m going to have brilliant insights.

This is the week I’m going to take better care of myself and those around me.

…the week I’m going to be more intentional about the words of Jesus.

…more intentional about parenting.

…about a child with special needs.

…about my neighbors.

…my friends.

…my spouse.

This is the week.

This is the week that nobody is going to get sick.

This is the week that all the meals will be beautifully home-cooked – even the last minute ones.

This is the week that I’m not going to raise my voice.

…that nobody is going to cry.

…that life isn’t going to seem like such a struggle.

…that the joy will outweigh the hurt.

…the pain.

…the terminal.

…the endlessness of it all.

This is the week.

This is the week I’m going to solve things.

This is the week I’m going to be ahead of the ball.

This is the week I’m going to spin all the plates.

…I’m going to make it look easy.

…find my groove.

…get it right.

This is the week.

This is the real week.

In this real week, I can’t find words that I haven’t already said.

In this real week, I don’t want to write about all the silly frustrations that hamper and shame.

In this real week, I’ve already given up on self-care before I started because there’s just too much to do.

…I already plugged a fiction book into my headphones; reaching directly over my untouched bible to push “play” on my phone.

…And then I yelled at my kids to be quiet.

…especially the kid who can’t hardly control his volume.

…while I closed the blinds to the neighborhood.

…and let resentment fester that work was keeping my husband out of the house and away from the family again.

This is the real week.

The reservoirs of joy, thankfulness, and intentional living are on empty…or beyond empty (if there is such a concept).

This week is dead on arrival and it isn’t even here yet.

Call the code. Throw in the towel. But wait…

There may still be a week.

There may still be a week because it isn’t about me anyway.

There may still be a week because my story is not really my own.

There may still be a week because any good thought I have is a God gift.

There may still be a week because I can ask for wisdom and it is promised to me.

…because I have a merciful high priest in Jesus.

…because the mercy is new every morning.

…because my life is atypical for a glory reason I don’t yet see.

…because I plan things and then Jesus directs it all.

…because while I have breath, I can still surrender.

…my family, my neighbors, my friends, my spouse.

…the pain, the terminal, the endlessness of it all.

This is the week.

This is the week formed by Perfect Love – just like the last week and the one that comes next too.

This is the week with glory purposes that have yet to unfold.

This is the week that dawns moment by moment in grace.

This is the week…

…the day.

…the moment.

…the breath.

…that the Lord has made.

Rejoice.

The story is bigger than the week.

~MbM~

Free

Dear ones, this last month has been full of speaking and writing projects, but I wanted to go back in time just a little because I miss you and it’s been a long four weeks. I originally wrote this in the Easter season of 2013 while Chase was in treatment and I’d recently received some very critical feedback on desiring to find joy in suffering. A dozen times, I sat down to write out a “So there!” defense of where Bob and I stood, but there were no good words…until Easter. My freedom to write isn’t bound up in who I am (I need no argument or plea!), but rather, in who God is.

Free to write, free for joy, free in Christ because of the cross.

I hope you are free this weekend, this year, and this life too.

Our weeping is for a season, but joy comes in the morning (Psalm 30:5).

Waiting for the Eternal Morning!

~ E

As a Christian, Easter is one of the most important times of my year. It’s the season I set aside to celebrate what Jesus did for me, but this year is more precious as I consider how the events of Easter fit into our cancer world.

I believe with all my heart that Jesus is the son of God, that the Bible is true, and that the promises it contains are real and this is why I so often include verses in my blog posts–to remind myself of what I know to be true when my circumstances are overwhelming (which they often are). In those moments, I literally have the physical sensation of drowning.  Believing as I do doesn’t change the pain of cancer or anything else in this life, but it can and does change how I face the drowning moments.

Often, like the thief on the cross next to Jesus–not the mocker, but the other–the weight of life and pain (some self-inflicted, some not) closes in and I cry out.  And then comes the reply,

“Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise.”

That’s it! This is the answer to the agony. The pain and suffering is only a season, because death is swallowed up in Jesus’ glorious victory and its sting is gone. One day soon I will be with Jesus in Heaven!

Because I know God made me, and I will be in Heaven with Him forever when this weary life is over, I am freed from the drowning to feel joy in sorrow and peace in chaos. Death may be sad, but it need not sting because this life is not the end, but the beginning.

In the midst of this cancer world, there can be incredible, inexplicable peace because my ultimate struggle has already been resolved. My sin was taken care of on the cross by God Himself! All that happens in my life is what He lovingly allows for His pleasure and glory. Someday I will be complete and lacking in nothing and with Him forever in fullness of joy.

This is my cancer foundation. This is my life foundation.

Moment by moment.

“He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.” Revelations 21:4

 

Amazing Easter thoughts that encouraged my heart today ~

Ann Voskamp writes from the perspective of the mother who watches her son die… How Good Friday Meets All Our Hard.

Greg Morse shows how A Savior Stepped Forward on the Desiring God blog.

Fighting For Love

Yeah, there’s coffee, and laughter in abundance, but there’s something else too. Something that only comes forged in pain. I don’t have a word for it, but it’s there to be cherished – oddly like a terrible battle wound. See this? We went to war and we survived. Isn’t it strange that the hard things often knit us as close (if not closer) than the happy moments? They say that “love changes everything“, but sometimes I think everything changes love: kids, illness, job changes…and often just the weight of years and the passing of time. Love is not a static, stoic concept, but it is deep, and it’s meant to be unshakeable as it mirrors Jesus love for us and in us.

So what happens when things like cancer come at a marriage? In the video below, we take a few minutes to share a little of what we’ve learned and are still learning today.

Because life is messy, love is going to be messy too – that’s the primary reason we sat in front of an iPhone on a Saturday morning with no make-up, no good angles, or fanciness of any kind.

This is us.

We are real.

We fail more times than either of us would like to admit to each other or you, but we will fight for our marriage. We must fight for our marriage.

And please don’t kid yourselves…this isn’t always self-generated or motivated by flowery love, but rather, determined commitment. We had people during Chase’s treatment actually holding us accountable to talking with each other, spending time with each other, even being intimate with each other…because honestly, truly, and messily…if we hadn’t had someone calling us out and reminding us of our marriage, we would have ignored it and ignored us. This is the nature of stress and real life.

The fact that we’re still together is the grace of God, but dear ones, if there’s anything we’ve learned, it’s that you’re going to fall. It’s a foregone conclusion – this is life. But will you fall away from each other, or towards each other?

Fight for each other. Fight to fall into each other’s arms. Things like cancer will seek to take many, many pieces of us, but fight to make sure marriage is not one of those pieces.

With love, messiness, and a deep-rooted longing for Perfect Love…

Moment by moment.

[Disclaimer: After you watch this, you’ll know why I write instead of talking…or why my spiritual gift will never be filming and editing a cell phone video. Just sayin’…go with your gifts.]

Where Missions And Cancer Meet

“This was one of the first times I made a conscious decision, in the midst of a very difficult situation, to say yes immediately to God’s ways and trust his promise to keep me under his wings.” ~ Connie Patty, on unexpected, frightening hospital days spent awaiting the birth of her first child, July, 1990

Dear Ones,

Today, I want to encourage you with a book: No Less Than Yes.

It is Connie’s firsthand account of her calling to missions in Eastern Europe and her life there with her husband, Dave and their three children. The entire piece is woven together with breath-taking, amazing stories, as only Connie can. Warning: carve out some time, because you’ll not be able to stop turning pages.

But why share a missionary’s story (as lovely as it is) for encouragement on a cancer-dominated blog?

  • This story is unique because unlike many missionary stories (recorded posthumously), this is LIVE! It’s happening right NOW! The book is a spectacular glimpse into a living, working, miraculous God even in the mess of our current age.
  • The heart of this story is one of learning love for and obedience to God in hard things – accepting that He is good no matter what occurs. Um, sound familiar, my cancer friends?
  • And finally, you’ll be able to relate as Connie has had her share of health trials – both as an individual and as mother. Her open heart throughout the book will bless you. She unfailing chronicles not only the hospital journeys (yes, there are more than one), but also the struggles. She doesn’t shy away from being truthful when it hurts to trust God.

As you read her words, you will be encouraged to persevere in the journey God has for you. So, I’d urge you to pick up a copy of this book today.

Moment by moment,

Ellie

You can find No Less Than Yes on Amazon HERE.

For more on Dave and Connie’s work in Eastern Europe, visit the Josiah Venture website HERE.