Emotional Tailspin
In a very kind,
compassionate voice she relayed the news.
The CT scan had revealed a large, long tumor along his spine and
sympathetic nervous system: “homogenous but abnormal posterior mediastinal soft
tissue density.” We were to be admitted to the 7th floor for the
night and would begin the next day with an MRI, more blood tests, and a urine catch. “Don’t worry until you have to” were her
words. Yea, ok. She slipped out the door and tears slipped
out of my eyes…I was too tired to think clearly, or keep my wits about me. It was 1130pm and my emotions were already
worn to the bone. I was alone and tired
and I had no resistance to fear.
When the doctor walked out of the room I melted. I was suddenly thrust back to the day Rhyse
was born, October 17th, 2011 when an attending doctor told me Rhyse
was “probably terminal.” I never allowed
myself to go back there emotionally, nor did I entertain the idea that I would
once again be looking at the word, “terminal.”
Of course I didn’t have any information at this point, but no one was
being overly positive. I called my
husband, just like 20 months prior, and told him the news. I can’t speak for him, but for me it was
unbelievably difficult to comprehend the situation.
In today’s world any words that even come close to relating
to cancer are terrifying: mass, foreign body, tumor, and the like. When I say my entire body was trembling from
the inside out, I am not exaggerating.
It was all I could do to keep my hands still enough to function
normally. I mentally fought against every
thought that would take me down the road to the death of my son. I have been through just enough in my life to
know that there is great wisdom in, “take every thought captive” found in
scripture. If I allowed myself to
venture down the wrong mental path, I would not have been able to withstand the
stress. I had to force myself to wait
for all tests to come back and take the information one piece at a time. I
would be lying if I said I wasn’t overwhelmed off and on throughout those first
few days of blood tests, MRIs, and urine tests.
But I did my best to live moment by moment, hanging onto my Faith, my
family, and all the encouragement I received from the RAS family.
At 2am Rhyse was finally admitted to the seventh floor. I have no idea what takes hours to get
admitted to a room: the wait was impossible.
When at last Rhyse was put into his mammoth size crib, and I had the
overly firm, orange love seat with geometric shapes pulled out to a bed I
literally passed out in exhaustion. Not
long after getting into the room Rhyse had IV number 9 put in: I didn’t hear a
thing.
The morning is a blur.
I remember finding out that the MRI was scheduled for 11am, and several
doctors, nurses and hematology specialists coming and going throughout the
day. We were once again in a waiting
pattern and nothing could hurry the process along.
As I stared out the floor to ceiling windows at the city
below, an all too familiar sight, I felt like I had been swept into a place
where a time continuum didn’t exsit. My
entire life was now encapsulated into one little hospital room. What
transpired, what information I would be given, what outcomes there were—all
occurred in one small space, in one small moment in time.
Thursday was spent holding Rhyse through raising
temperatures, discomfort, and more waiting.
When my husband asked one of the Hem/Onc doctors if she was suspicious
about what they might find, she said, “yes.”
He has JMML and there’s not much doubt he has developed Neuroblastoma.
But at this point all we knew is an MRI would confirm the tumor and give the
Tumor Board something tangible to analyze.
The MRI doesn’t diagnose, it just gives a road map for further tests and
an operation.
Late Friday afternoon two Hematology doctors arrived with
the report from the Tumor Board meeting that had met early that morning. Both doctors are kind, caring, truly
compassionate people. Helen Devos
Children’s 10th floor hematology department never ceases to amaze me
with their mix of professionalism and humanness. I love them all.
When the two doctors walked in the room Jon and I were
standing next to Rhyse’s crib. My
insides had not yet calmed down from the initial shock two days earlier, and
fear was getting its grip on my heart.
As the hematologists calmly gave their report the room suddenly started
turning black, sweat appeared out of nowhere and I felt myself starting to
collapse. Fortunately I was standing in
front of the crazy, modern patterned rocker with the footstool that’s nearly
impossible to put down. I just bent my knees and plopped. One of the hematologists noticed I didn’t
look so good and asked if I was ok. Choking back tears I said, “We’ve just gone
through so much. I wasn’t prepared for another emotional upheaval.” Truth be told I am never prepared, but being
blind-sided by this tumor was almost more than I could bear. We had no idea
this year would be more difficult than his first year.
As the doctors began unfolding their plan for a biopsy, 2
bone marrow aspirations, and testing his urine for catecholamine’s I could
barely soak it all in. Through their explanation of spinal cancer, and
encouragement despite circumstances I was still completely overwhelmed by the
whole scenario. So many thoughts raced
through my mind. The worst case
scenarios always rear their ugly heads first and are the hardest to
battle. My most pronounced fear was
losing Rhyse and having two little girls (sisters) broken inside. Rhyse and his sisters have an unusually tight
bond. No doubt from all the trauma and separations and hospitalizations. My three kids are happiest when they are all
together in one room: I was terrified
for my girls. I have always battled
anxiety, and twice in my life it struck with a vengeance. But through those two difficult times I
learned some valuable lessons: one, the mind is a powerful tool against anxiety
and two, without the Lord I have no power at all. And so as fear and anxiety constantly beat at
my door, I battled back. Sometimes they
won, sometimes I won.
Pictures of all the babies in the RAS family that didn’t
make it (on FB) kept passing through my mind. Would I lose my baby too? I remember one of the phases I went through
in the first three months of Rhyse’s life. Rhyse was born with thrombocytopenia
so he required near daily platelet transfusions. I spent long hours talking with moms and dads
and grandpas and grandmas whose kids had cancer. In that time I experienced guilt. I don’t understand why. I felt guilty that Rhyse was not as “bad” as
a child with cancer. It is not that I wanted Rhyse to have cancer: I just can’t
explain where the emotion came from. It’s
completely irrational. But there I was,
facing the reality that now I too might be one of those moms —forced to live in
that black place of unknown, whose child is given some imperceptible percentage
chance of surviving.
On Friday, three days after arriving in the ER, Rhyse’s
doctors agreed we should go home and come back the day after Memorial Day
(three days later) to begin the array of testing. Packing up and leaving was not without
emotion. Usually leaving the hospital is
a momentous sigh of relief, not unlike escaping some sort of mental
prison. But this time it was just more
time to wait and pray and believe—regardless of what my emotions were
screaming.
Three Day Break
Three Day Break
Saturday morning was an odd time. I had two different documents to read and
sign regarding cancer research, and donating the biopsy so others could use it
to ‘gain more understanding’ of Neuroblastoma.
Cancer: I could hardly wrap my brain around those words. Rhyse’s doctors were assuming he had cancer
and someone already wanted a piece for research.
I wanted to keep things as light as possible for the whole family’s’
sake. Walking around in a trance
wouldn’t help anyone, especially not us parents who knew the gravity of the
situation. So with this in mind I
decided we would have an hour in the morning where each parent would take a
child and do something; an impromptu date.
I took my six year old daughter, Maggey, out for breakfast
and then just drove. She kept asking me
where we were going, and I really didn’t know.
I just picked a direction. As we
were cruising along a familiar route I spotted an estate sale sign. Being of the frugal sort myself, more forced
by financial constraints than anything else, I decided to stop. I do take great joy in finding that
incredible deal for something I really need.
On this day I was not let down.
Somewhere during the week, just a day or two before Rhyse
was admitted to the ER and then the hospital, we had a freak wind storm that
caused my six person, inexpensive glass, outdoor table to explode into a
billion shards of shrapnel. I had tried
a few times to sit on the ground and precariously pick them up, piece by piece.
But each time I quit in frustration with the enormity of the job, and with
several bleeding fingers. The only way I
could even imagine cleaning the mess up was with a shop vac. And we didn’t own one.
To my great delight I found a large shop vac for seven
dollars at the estate sale. However, I
was not just excited, I was truly thankful.
The Lord, as always, found the smallest of ways to remind me He’s
there—I am not alone, and I am loved.
That small piece of delight carried me through the weekend, serving
dinner to extended family on Memorial day, and back into the hospital on
Tuesday morning.
Late Monday morning my in-laws had arrived from Indiana to
stay with our daughters while we were once again contained in the hospital with
Rhyse.
Thank God for family.
The article above was written by a guest blogger. The opinions and ideas written belong solely to the guest blogger. The RASopathies Foundation and Noonan Syndrome Foundation DO NOT endorse political candidates and religion or religious preferences.
DISCLAIMER:
The article above was written by a guest blogger. The opinions and ideas written belong solely to the guest blogger. The RASopathies Foundation and Noonan Syndrome Foundation DO NOT endorse political candidates and religion or religious preferences.
This blog is provided for moral support purposes only. This blog is not a substitute in any way for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have learned from this blog.
The Foundation's do not recommend or endorse any specific tests, treatments, physicians, products, procedures, opinions or other information that may be mentioned in this blog. Reliance on any information provided by the Foundation, Foundation volunteers, staff or guest blogger/s is solely at your own risk. You should not rely on information you receive from or through the blog for any personal, medical or health decision, but should consult with a qualified professional for specific information suited to your family member’s case.
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