Salt

Experimenting is a new favorite past-time for Kelsey. She is either baking with chocolate, making slime, mixing pantry products, or combining kitchen ingredients for a variety of fun and curious reasons.

A recent day of baking and cooking led to some interesting conclusions from our persnickety girl.

Today’s ice cream sandwiches smelled delicious until they were ready to taste. The amount of salt was difficult to stomach, and we realized our error with the butter after a review of ingredients.

Dinner was the opposite. The taste seemed to be missing something. It was, most obvious to our connoisseur, salt.

Later that night, she equated our salt disparity today to her medication recently.  “I guess I’m like a recipe the doctors are trying to figure out,” she pondered.

And continued, “some think they have the right medicine and doses, but it is missing something.  I hope they figure out the salt for me soon.”

As do we.

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To support our salt intake and enjoy a fun event, consider attending our inaugural golf outing:

INAUGURAL GOLF OUTING

International Women’s Day

To celebrate International Women’s Day and Women’s History month, Kels worked on a project at home.

Together,  we colored and read about a few special women.  Then laundry and chores consumed our Saturday.

A few hours later, the page was more closely examined and revealed the following:

When asked why she added herself, the answer was simple and direct, “there was an empty box for me to use even though I’m still writing my story.”

Smart girl.

Here’s to strong woman- May we know them, may be be them, may we raise them.

To all the woman still writing their stories, those who fight battles every day and still strive to be the best versions of themselves, we acknowledge you and wish you Happy International Women’s Day (a few days late).

Oh, the Places…

Oh, the Places You’ll Go! is a family favorite.  Recently, while reading aloud before bed in anticipation of Dr. Seuss’s birthday, we thought, not only of all the places we hope our children will go.  However, we also considered Oh, the Places We’ve Been…

You’re off to Rare Places!
You’re off and away! (Like it or not)

You have genes in your body.
and a rare disease to face
You steer yourself
in directions you don’t choose

You’ll look up and down google. Look it over with care.
About some you will say, “I don’t want to click there.”
With your legs full of scars and your joints full of pain,
you wish for the smartest to keep you all sane.

And you may not find any
who’ll want to treat you.
Rare can scare doctors
Rare means something new.

OH!
THE PLACES YOU’VE GONE!

You’ve been admitted and poked!
You’ve had labs and IV frights!
You’ve transfused Christmas Eve right through midnight.

Sometimes, you’ve lagged behind, because you’ve lacked the speed.
You’ve cried with the gang and hoped for a new lead.
Wherever you’ve traveled, you’ve wanted the best of the best.
Wherever you’ve gone, you sometimes just want to rest.

I’m sorry to say so
but, sadly, it’s true
that Hang-ups and Bang-ups
have happened to you.

You’ve had some unpleasant bumps.
And you’ve been in a Slump.

And when you’re in a Slump,
you’re not in for much fun.
Un-slumping yourself
is not easily done.

You have been to a place where the docs are not sure.
Some think to test this way and others want to treat that.
A place you could biopsy your groin or your chin! Thigh or ankle, please carefully pick.

Simple it’s not, I’m afraid you will find,
for some med-maker-uppers to make up their minds.

Sometimes you move toward a most useless place.
The Waiting Place…

…for people just waiting.
Waiting for a call to come
or a lab to process
or waiting around for a Yes or a No
or the results to show.
Everyone is just waiting.

Oh, the places you’ve been!
But on you will go
though the needles be foul
On you will go
though your vessels may prowl
On you will go
though the dosage is due
Onward up many
a frightening path, too
though your legs may get sore
and your body feels weak.

So be sure when you step.
Step with care and great tact
and remember that Life’s
a Great Balancing Act.
Just never forget to positively think.
And never mix up your white pills with your pink.

So…
be your name Kelsey or Maggie or Hallie
or Trey Ali Vanessa Anna Maria,
you’re off to Great Places!
Today is your day!
Show your stripes and get on your way!

Rare and Far from the Shallow Now

#rare

Defined as “seldom occurring or found : uncommon.”

When #rare is your normal, you seek comfort in #gaga and #shallow from #astarisborn to show the world what rare can do.  An #oscar performance so rarely gains so much interest and attention that it must be uncommon and it must be #rare.

@BradleyCooper and @ladagaga – an exceptional performance like yours and a speech from @ladygaga reminds our family to keep fighting.  A reminder of our journey is perfect timing as we near Rare Disease Day, 2019.

Rare Disease Day is held on the last day of February each year to raise awareness for rare diseases and improve access to treatment and medical representation for individuals with rare diseases and their families.

Building awareness of rare diseases is essential.  Statistically, 1 in 20 people will live with a rare disease at some point in their life.  Many go undiagnosed and few have a cure.

Our rare is difficult.  Our rare is painful.  Our rare is far from the shallow now…

To quote @ladygaga “What it’s about is not giving up.  If you have a dream, fight for it.  There’s a discipline for passion: it’s not about how many times you get rejected or you fall down and get beaten up, but how many times you stand up, and are brave and you keep on going.”

To all those who keep on going in search of a cure and awareness for the rare diseases they face; stand up and keep on fighting!

Kindness Hero

As she sat creating her kindness challenge poster with rainbows, peace signs, and wonder woman in the center, a tune was sung over and over again.  She made up this song because she was so happy and filled with joy.
She sang:
“It’s a sunny day.
It’s a sunny day.
Kindness on my side.
Nothing in my way.”
To know Kelsey is to love Kelsey.  Though she selected Wonder Woman as her kindness hero this year, she continues to be ours.
May you have a sunny day today.

Golfing for a Cause

In the midst of questions and concerns, we find hope in our generous family and friends.

Our inaugural golf outing is fast approaching.

If you are interested in attending, making a basket for raffle, or donating something for a basket, please let us know.

We are grateful for you.

Click on the link below for more information:

Golf Outing

Is that okay?

Weekends with two young children can best be described as a constant scheduling conflict.  Kelsey has lacked interested in group sports until this season, and to our delight, she has started basketball.  Her confidence has soared and her friendships on the team have started to blossom.

The first few weekends were full of joy and smiles when she made a bucket or missed.  There was always a chance to rebound.

Last weekend, a parent even came over from the opposing team to say he could watch our daughter play all day.  “She is always smiling.  She really loves it out there,” he noticed.  We noticed, too.

This weekend, when a slow pace ensued and a lack of interest was displayed, it was our first sign that something was happening below the surface.

A two hour nap followed this forty minute game and our alarms were on high alert.

We check in with our doctors to forge a positive plan.  A restful day is hers and a great night of sleep is had.

After sleeping in until 8, she wakes and laughs with her family.  Then she turns to say she would like to take a nap at 9. “Is that okay?” she asks because she knows that it is always okay to listen to her body, but she also knows that it is another signal.

Is that okay?  We pray it will be.

Emotional germs

There are so many germs surrounding us every day now.  Can you catch emotion, uncertainty, and worry, too?  Maybe emotion is as contagious as a virus?

Worry seems to be our word of 2019, though we have such high hopes for the year ahead.  Worried that warmth is more than viral, belly pain is more than surface, and all we do is just not enough.

We all need an outlet and a support system.  However, when children worry, how do we know that their worries are truly eased?  There is no antibiotic strong enough for our emotional fuel as parents.

It comes with parenthood, we guess.  When we consider how deeply our parents still worry about us as adults.  Ours, in particular, have caught the emotional virus, too.  Their worries may be harder than ours at times because the day to day knowledge is often lost.

The constant cycle of worry, it seems, will continue to run wild for now…

We pray and hope it escapes as the winter germs and blues fade, too.

 

 

Eight, Please be Great

In a few short days, we turn the page on another year and hope for a great year of eight.

Seven has been challenging, to say the very least.  Though we have been showered with love and support, questions remain unanswered, therapy options are still in conversation, and the unknown overwhelms us at times.

We look behind to another year of lesions, biopsy scars, and pain.

We look behind for joyful moments and laughter that have kept us whole.

We look today into the eyes of a child full of joy, uncertainty, and love for all she does.

We look ahead craving hope and answered prayers.

May eight be as great as she wishes…

May all of her dreams come true…

“Am I fat?”

Body image and confidence can be a struggle at any age.

Impeccable words and explicit attention to building confidence in our children is incredibly important.  We work hard to craft language that helps our children feel strong and healthy, along with encouraging exercise, activity, and healthy habits.

Tears of anguish brought the house down on this topic the other night.

“Am I fat?” was the question because a young man in Kelsey’s class said she was fat and she was deeply upset by his inquiry.

“Of all the challenges I have right now, I do not want fat to be one of them,” was her eloquent expression stunning us right there before bedtime.

Teaching our children kindness and love could never be more imperative in our world.  Helping our children understand to be kind and full of love when someone tells them otherwise is more difficult than we imagined as parents.

Steroids cause a moon face and a puffed look that an eight year old child cannot help but misunderstand.  His comment may have been with ill intent or perhaps it was simply innocent.  Either way, we want our children to love themselves for who they are and never let one feature define the young men and women they will be today or become in the future.

We call her strong and brave.  Of all the challenges she faces, those are the words we hope she sees when she looks in the mirror.