Why I’ll Be Watching the Olympics with My Kids

It’s not very PC, this Sochi Olympics, is it?  The Russians hate the gays and don’t believe in adequate housing for journalists and have dangerous “face water” coming out of their sinks and are killing stray dogs, so we hate the Russian hosted Olympiad, or something like that.

Not me.

Hot babes holding flags -- yep, it's time for the Olympics!
Hot babes holding flags — yep, it’s time for the Olympics!

I love the Olympics.  Not like love the Olympics where I have odd appliqued sweaters.  I just dig the Olympic vibe, you know?  It’s very idealistic, very utopian.  They’re hopeful, and we all know how I feel about hope.  And they bring back the fondest memories of watching with my whole family as a kid myself.  I sometimes wonder who my son’s Nadia Comaneci or Mary Lou Retton or Mark Spitz or Greg Louganis will be.

Tomorrow night is appointment television for the whole family as we will sit down together to watch the Parade of Nations and opening ceremonies for the 2014 winter games.  There will be pomp and hypocrisy hand in hand.  When my boys are older, we’ll talk about that.  For now, at five years and five months, my boys are too little for that particular chat.

What we will talk about is the world and how big a place it is, and sometimes, how small.  We will talk about Africa (do they even have any representation in winter games?  A quick Google search says YES — Zimbabwe and Togo and Morocco, oh my!) and Europe and Asia and some of the record 88 countries that will be competing.

We will talk about how people look different, dress differently, and how that makes life interesting.  We will talk about how some countries have few or no women on their teams and wonder what that’s like if you’re a girl who likes to ski.

So often the news we hear is bad.  War, murder, gun violence, hunger, hatred, discrimination, corruption, and on and on.  I’ve stopped listening to NPR on the car ride to school, as I don’t want my son to think McDonald’s parking lots are places where masked gun men shoot teenagers.  Don’t even get me started on schools and movie theaters.  It sucks.

Despite all the bad news we endure,  every two years we get to sit in front of our televisions and show our kids how, yes, we can all get along.  And that is inspiring and cool and fun and, absolutely hopeful.  For those few short hours during an Olympic opening ceremony, we do all get along, even if it is just for the cameras.

Think about a family portrait.  Everyone is on their best behavior, well scrubbed and smiling.  Even if it is a sham, or not the honest depiction of the family dynamics.  For that brief moment, all appears as you wish it would be.  You and I are grown ups, so we know better.  We know the world is no different than the craziest dysfunctional family.  We know the Olympics are a marketing and corporate juggernaut, too valuable an asset to be lost to politics and human rights.  We know better.

But my five year old doesn’t.  And through him, I get to think about idealism and excitement and healthy competition and differences that can be put aside rather than addressed with guns or chemicals.  And because of him, we’ll have a globe on the coffee table, swirling around to identify all the nations competing. And we’ll cheer the good ‘ole USA, sure, but we’ll also cheer Switzerland and China, and yes, Mother Russia, too.

An Invitation to the Cancer Party

Yo, yo, yo!  It’s World Cancer Day!  And you’re all invited!  Woot woot!  Are you ready to party?!  I hope so, cause this is an invitation you can’t decline.

Maybe your invitation hasn’t arrived yet.  No worries, it will.  It absolutely will.  Maybe you will never get your name on the cancer party envelope, but I guarantee that you will be a plus one at some point in your life.  There is no escaping this invitation, as much as you would like to decline.  The one bright light is that no one gives a damn what you wear.  Oh, and the other party guests are some of the most amazing folks you will ever meet.

This morning I woke up early, about 4:45.  No reason, really.  When it was clear I wasn’t going back to bed, I dragged myself downstairs, otherwise known as our very local Siberia, and got to sorting laundry.  I fired up the old iPad to see what was happening in the land of Facebook and saw it was World Cancer Day.

For me, World Cancer Day was not my invitation to the cancer party.  My first time at the ball happened in 2004 when my Mom was diagnosed with GBM (glioblastoma multiform), the most aggressive type of adult brain tumor.  GBM is the brain tumor that got Senator Ted Kennedy and Gene Siskel.  It’s an aggressive bastard.

I was a plus one for my Mom.  She had a lot of plus ones — my Dad, her husband of 46 years, and her four kids, and her three siblings.  My Mom was the first of her generation to die.  That’s kind of like being the first one kicked off the island on Survivor.  It sucks and no one wants that designation.

But there I was this morning, seeing in my feed lots of posts about World Cancer Day.  I took a few moments and made this:

WCD, Donna

Any opportunity I have to acknowledge that I had a daughter who died of cancer, I will do it.  It is how I parent Donna now, along with honoring her by doing Good Things for others.  I am her mother.  No one else will do this.  Not her father, not her brothers, not her grandparents.  If I don’t do this, no one will, so I do.  And it helps.  It really does.

So anyways.

I posted my Donna meme and got on with the laundry sorting when my son came downstairs.  He was especially lovey dovey, asking to sit in my lap, wanting to be held.  He shivered, his forehead was warm.  I worried as I held him on the downstairs sofa, the same spot where I rocked Donna in my arms endlessly as she suffered through her months of neutropenic fevers.

I was triggered.

I went upstairs to fetch the thermometer, the same one I used with Donna hundreds of times.  Fevers, you see, can be life and death for a cancer patient.  They appear when the chemo treatment has eliminated or weakened the immune system.  They can be life threatening and are taken very, very seriously.  There are entire protocols followed by hospitals about how to treat the neutropenic fever.  When you live with a child with cancer, this is internalized in a visceral way.

Mary Tyler Son’s temp was 100.  For most folks, this is nothing, a blip.  But Mary Tyler Son is not allowed to be most people, because his sister died of a brain tumor.  His reality is that he is at a much higher risk of contracting cancer than a child who has not had a sibling with cancer.  And this was day 11 of off and on fevers.  Eight days earlier, his fever spiked to 105.7 and that was accompanied with intense stomach cramping.

Fevers, check.  Abdominal pain, check.  These are both common symptoms for childhood leukemia.  And, yes, I went there.  I can’t not go there because I have spent too much damn time at the cancer party.  It doesn’t even freaking matter that he was diagnosed with pneumonia on Saturday, because my boy had a fever and had been grappling with one for eleven days.  In my head, he might have leukemia.

And so it went.

Within a matter of about an hour, I had completely convinced myself that it was entirely possible that Mary Tyler Son had leukemia and it was just a matter of time before it was diagnosed.  I could picture us living that grueling, brutal life again — the life of a cancer family.  I had no idea how we would do it with a baby, but we would, because of course, we would have to — what choice did we have?

I imagined the three years of leukemia treatment, generally about a year longer for boys than girls.  I actually hoped for ALL over AML, letters known all too well by the mother of a child who died of cancer.  I considered that the boy would be eight when his treatment was finished, our baby three.  I considered  our youngest growing up in the hospital setting.

I went there, I went deeply there, and I could not stop myself.

As the doctor instructed us last weekend, to call if the fever returned, I did.  Sure enough, she wanted to see us and confirmed she would run a CBC — more letters you know the meaning of when you have mothered a child with cancer (complete blood count).  That freaked me the hell out, as it just confirmed my own worst fears.

I saw myself in the little exam room with both sons, hearing the devastating news.  I would cry, because now I knew what cancer was, but I would collect myself quickly, because I also know a cancer parent needs to be strong for their child.  I know too damn much.

Long story short, my son does not have leukemia.  His CBC was normal, the differentials were solid, and there were no blasts in his blood.  We celebrated at Dunkin Donuts.  I cried with relief in the waiting room, but only for a minute.

My invitation to the cancer party, even as a plus one, has resulted in PTSD.  I can’t not catastrophize.  I am grateful that it has happened only a handful of times in the four years since my daughter died.  I know this is something my sons will cope with, so I work hard to breathe and reason and discuss and understand how my trauma might impact them negatively.

This afternoon I reached out to two Facebook friends, both of whom have sons in active treatment for leukemia.  They graciously shared with me the symptoms their sons experienced at diagnosis.  I read those symptom lists and I was embarrassed and ashamed that I had drawn them into my trauma/drama.  My son had nothing remotely like what they described.  My son had a confirmed diagnosis of pneumonia and a lingering low grade fever.

Tonight, my son went to bed with that same fever.  He vomited this afternoon.  A lot of vomit.  He will not go to school tomorrow.  But his CBC is clear and he has no blasts, so I will sleep soundly.  Unless it’s lymphoma, because I haven’t Googled if lymphoma can be detected with a CBC.  And I won’t, because I know I shouldn’t.

This party blows.  I wish my invitation had gotten lost in the mail.

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Change Your Diaper, Change Your Life

The last words I heard my daughter utter, slur, really, before she was diagnosed with the brain tumor that would eventually take her life were, “Change your diaper, change your life.”  I remember it like it was yesterday, but it was almost seven years ago now.

Donna had been not herself for a couple of weeks and we had been admitted to Children’s Memorial the night before to expedite an MRI scan which would give us answers to the questions we had.  I woke up with her early and bent over the hospital crib to change her diaper.  As we had done thousands of times before, I set Donna down and got to work.  Our ritual, since shortly after birth, was to share the words, “Change your diaper, change your life.”

It was a clever little mantra that came to me early in Donna’s infancy and struck me as so simple, so true.  As she had countless times before, Donna repeated the mantra to me, except her words were slurred.  She crashed moments later, we were rushed into the CT room within minutes, and our lives changed forever when we learned of her cancer.

Donna lived for another thirty-one months, and all of that time was spent in diapers.  Despite being four, Donna never outgrew her diapers.  She would always say, whenever we flirted with toilet training, “I am too young to use a toilet.”  It was hard to argue or force, as so very many things in Donna’s life were out of her control.  So we didn’t, and she remained in diapers.

I remember just how proud she would be when she grew into a new size.  At her death, that number was 5.  That’s hard to imagine as our baby, now just four months old, is bursting out of his size 3 diapers.

Now, when I change a diaper, I say the same words, sometimes silently, sometimes out loud.  I never fail to think of Donna when I do, and I never fail to recognize just how profound the words are.  Think about it.  There is your baby or toddler sitting or standing or sleeping in wet or soiled diapers.  And then mom or dad or nanny or grandparent comes along and changes that wet, heavy, poopy diaper.  Blessed relief! 

Something so simple completely changes that baby’s life.  I mean it.  Your baby’s life is vastly improved with the act of cleaning and drying and creaming and powdering and swaddling their little bottom in a new diaper.  Wow.  Don’t ever discount the act again.  It’s transformative.   That is some powerful parenting shit, pun absolutely intended.

I think about this sometimes when the sheer volume of diaper changes gets to me.  I think about it in those moments when I am counting pennies and realize just how much a diaper costs (just under a quarter a pop, or .24 cents for the accountants in the house; and, for the love of all that is good and holy in this world, don’t anyone tell me I should not use disposable diapers).  I think about it when I realize how profoundly lucky my husband and I are to have adopted our newest little one, and to have the opportunity to love and nurture and care and provide and support another child.

Diaper 2

Full disclosure, diaper changing has never bothered me.  I know many of my friends say with relief, “Whew, I am SO GLAD to be done with diapers,” but for me, it’s never been a thing.  It’s a brief couple of minutes in your child’s day where there is lots of sweet eye contact, playful exchanges between you and baby, and there is a clear beginning, middle, and end.  Mission accomplished, you know?

Change your diaper, change your life.  Yes, mam, it’s true!  I will happily and gratefully and playfully change those diapers and know, really know, how very lucky I am that my simple act of parenting is profoundly changing my baby’s life, if only for a moment.

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