Donna’s Cancer Story: One Year Later

sand

I feel a little bit like I am walking on air this September, weightless, unanchored.

For the first time since 2006, I am neither living through nor writing about our time in Cancerville.  This year I am simply cutting and pasting.  Literally, cutting and pasting, moving the daily installments of Donna’s Cancer Story from this site onto the Huffington Post operating system.  This makes me grateful, relieved, able to expand my lungs in full breaths.

Cancer is a badass bastard.  And once you move to Cancerville, you never leave.  Your subdivison changes, but you never leave this place.  Since 2009, Mary Tyler Dad and I have lived in Grieving Heights, the subdivision everyone fears the most.  The resale values in Grieving Heights suck, as no one wants to buy there.

This year, with a little distance and minus the pressure of writing every day, I feel grateful to be grieving rather than terrorized by some of the day-to-day realities in Cancerville.  Many grieving parents might disagree with me wholeheartedly and I know some that would give anything, anything, for another hug or moment with their child.  The terror of living through Donna’s cancer was at times almost physically impossible to bear.  It would send me into a dark corner of my home, Donna and her Daddy playing somewhere else, he much more able to be with Donna in the dark times.  I would grab the phone and call either my father or my sister.  I would wail.  I would rock back and forth, trying to soothe the intense fear I felt, the terror, really, which is fear’s evil twin.

The grief I feel now, I manage with more ease.  I see grief as the endless landscape of the rest of my life.  I will always live in grief, it will never go away.  Donna’s Daddy will always live in grief, too.  Gratefully, we are there together.  His sadness mirrors my sadness and vice versa.  Sometimes I feel guilty for thinking that, let alone writing, that, in effect, acknowledging that living without Donna is easier than living with the thought of losing Donna.

Does that make any sense?  Am I a horrible person, cold and numb in my grief?

Three years ago we were nearing that last month of Donna’s life.  In the end of September 2009, she started to show signs of tumor progression.  Tilting her head to one side, her left arm weakening.  We could no longer ignore what would be imminent — our daughter’s certain death.  But still, she went to pre-school two mornings a week.  I drove her there, gym shoes on my feet, Mary Tyler Son in the car seat next to her, his stroller in the trunk.  The five weeks that Donna was in pre-school were some of the happiest of my life.  For three of those weeks, six days, I got to feel like a MOM.  Like a run ‘o the mill, harried housewife.  It was bliss.  True bliss.  I feel grateful every day for those weeks.

Two weeks ago, Mary Tyler Son started at the same pre-school.  Today is his sixth day.  He is so very happy there, just like his sister.

The process of writing Donna’s Cancer Story was intense.  Intense.  For the first ten days or so last September, I would, at some point over the course of the day, read thirty days worth of Donna’s CaringBridge journal.  Mary Tyler Dad and I were prolific.  In the absence of a religious or school community to rely upon, CaringBridge became our virtual temple, church, mosque.  For many periods, we would write almost daily updates, often late at night.  So I would read thirty days of that.  Then I would pour through thirty days of photographs from the same month to cherry pick two, three, or four to supplement the words I had yet to write.

Usually late, around 8:30 or 9 PM, I would sit down to write.  On some days, usually the ones I was working, I would not have had the opportunity to read through CaringBridge or sift through photographs until this time.  Each post took about 2-3 hours of reading and photo selection, then 1-3 hours of writing.  That was approximately 3-6 hours a day.  Every day.  By mid-September, I had lost the ability to stay up past 10 or 11.  I would read and photo select before bed, then rise early to write, on work days, that would be rising about 4 AM.  By the end of the month, that last week of September, all bets were off.  That’s when I stopped being able to get up early or stay awake late.  The last few posts weren’t complete until 3, 4, or 5 in the afternoon.  Last September nearly done me in.

All of this was possible because I am married to a gem.  A true gem.  Mary Tyler Dad supported my efforts, though no doubt, they were wrenching for him, too.  While he wasn’t reading the CaringBridge or looking through photos, he was reading my posts, and holding me in my tearful exhaustion, and both mothering and fathering our son.  I thank my lucky stars every day that I found him and that he found me and that we both recognized one another.

So a year later, Donna’s Cancer Story is not the wrenching labor it was last September.  The actual posting is more of a task, a technical chore, than an emotional odyssey.  I am not the wrung out dish rag I was last September.

This year, I feel focused.  Laser focused.  I am more aware and receptive to the stories strangers send me about their responses to Donna’s Cancer Story.  I have space to both hear and feel what Donna has meant to you.  I am grateful, so very grateful.  I am angry at the shameful lack of funding for pediatric cancer research.  I am sad for the forty-six families that today will learn their child has cancer.  I am devastated for the seven American families that will lose their child today.  I am proud, both of my writing and ability to bring people to Donna’s story, ensuring she will not be forgotten, at least not right now, and of Donna herself.  I am so completely proud of my girl.  She remains amazing, three years after her death, and you all see what we saw and were privileged to nurture and bask in — Donna’s wisdom, her wonder, her joy.

And our family is doing okay, good enough as they say.  At Donna’s memorial service I talked about our need to ‘figure it out,’ our life without Donna.  We are doing that.  Mary Tyler Son ensures that every day of his life.  We are not what we were, what we could and should have been, but we are what we are — a loving, grieving family, incomplete, but figuring it out.

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Profound thanks for witnessing our girl, our sadness, our loss.  Thank you. 

 

Mary Tyler Mom Goes to Springfield

General Assembly
Photos by Kristen Schmid, courtesy of the University of Chicago Medicine

I’m a reformed political junkie.  Vice President of the College Democrats, yo, class of 1991.  We won’t talk about the fact that my boyfriend was a College Republican.  Somewhere along the line, I lost the faith.  Politics don’t move me the way they used to and I no longer believe what politicians tell me.  Don’t get me wrong, I vote and have opinions and still hope for brighter days, I just no longer feel politics is the way to get there.

All that went out the window when a fellow Cancer Mom contacted me in February about HB 4211, the Illinois Childhood Cancer Research Fund.  Laura, over at Ay, Mama, mother of Atia, and Director of Atia’s Project Ladybug Fund, graciously asked me if I would ever be interested in testifying in Springfield, Illinois’ capital, on behalf of an annual income tax return checkbox, enabling Illinois tax payers to donate $ to pediatric cancer research as part of their annual taxes.

Um.  Yes.  Yes, I would.

Well all of that came to fruition bright and early last Thursday morning when me and Laura made our impassioned pleas.  It was solemn, it was fun, it was empowering, it was a packed house.  I wrote in January that children with cancer need research dollars more than they need a bald Barbie.  I still stand by that and my testimony on Thursday was the proof of that snarky pudding. 

It is an emotional process to continue to tell Donna’s story.  Mary Tyler Dad and I say it is how we parent her now, and sad as that is, it is true.  In the absence of homework and tween drama and first dates and sibling squabbling, we have Donna’s Good Things.  We can’t hug Donna’s Good Things, or comfort it, or tickle it behind its ears or read it stories before bedtime, but we can nurture it.  We can support it and help it grow and develop.  It’s not enough, but it is something and it is what we have.

I am supremely grateful to Laura, my fellow Cancer Mom, herself a cancer survivor, for reaching out to me and including me and Donna’s Good Things in her initiative.  I like her.  She is smart and pragmatic.  In our first conversation she laid it out on the table:  Atia was treated at Comer Children’s Hospital at the University of Chicago; Donna was treated at Children’s Memorial, the soon to be Ann and Robert Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago (first week of June I will be writing about that transition).  Atia was alive; Donna was dead.  Together, we accounted for the majority of children with cancer being treated in Illinois.  She had me at “Hello,” to be honest.

Something that grieving parents fear is that their child will be forgotten.  And that is a very real possibility.  When Laura was testifying, she held beautiful Atia in her arms.  Atia shines brightly.  She is a gorgeous girl, full of life and pluck.  A lot like her Mom.  Her testimony was received well, people welling with Atia’s story, and questions were asked when she finished.  When I reached the podium, I introduced myself and opened with a punch, “My daughter, Donna Lubell, died of papillary meningioma, a rare and aggressive brain tumor, on October 19, 2009 at four years old.”  Eyes were averted.  I tried to make eye contact, but it was hard.  People don’t want to hear about children that die.  People don’t want to look a grieving parent in the eye.  It’s too harsh a reality.  Trust me, I know, I get it.  Sometimes it’s hard to look in the mirror.  Laura is not afraid to look me in the eyes.  And she appreciates the power and significance of educating people that pediatric cancer kills children.  Seven every school day.  One in five of every child diagnosed with cancer will die. 

Testimony

Donna’s story is now part of the congressional record for the State of Illinois.  That’s saying something.  And even if people could not look at me when I spoke, I could feel that they were listening.  And I could feel Donna, too, keeping me company, guiding me through the day.  And what a day it was.  I am honored to have testified beside Laura and Dr. John Cunningham, Chief of Pediatric Hemotology/Oncology at The University of Chicago Comer Children’s Hosptial in our attempt to make the Illinois Childhood Cancer Research Fund a reality.  Grateful thanks are also extended to our sponsor, Representative Cynthia Soto, of Illinois’ 4th District.  She could not be a more invested sponsor or a more gracious host to us in our visit to the Capital — even getting us a meet and greet with Govenor Quinn. 

I am so proud of what we did together, Laura and I.  I’ve said it before, but Cancer Moms are some of the most amazing people you will ever meet.  Never underestimate a Cancer Mom.  Word.  Thursday we were able to do something that could potentially make a vital difference in the lives of thousands of Illinois children.  Here’s to passage of the Illinois Childhood Cancer Research Fund, here is to the researchers that need our help, here is to the taxpayers giving generously, here is to the children, here is to Donna. 

We did it, girl. 

High Fve

Good morning, Mr. Chairman, and Committee Members. My name is Sheila and I am honored and humbled to be here today. 

My daughter, Donna Lubell, died of papillary meningioma, a rare and aggressive brain tumor, on October 19, 2009 at four years old.

Donna had an early prognosis of 2-3 months when she was diagnosed just under two years old.  Her oncologist at Children’s Memorial Hospital, the soon to be Ann and Robert Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, gently told us that it would be perfectly reasonable not to treat her cancer, to bring her home and enjoy the time she had left.  We opted to treat, under the guidance of our team, and are so grateful we did. 

Though more than half her life was spent in that treatment, cancer did not define Donna.  Her bright and intelligent nature did.  Her astounding vocabulary and empathy did.  She was perfect measures of grit and grace.  She loved books and dancing and her baby brother Jay.  She was and continues to be a wonder to us and our guide.

Donna’s thirty-one months of treatment were an endurance test for our family.  They included four tumor resections, six rounds of inpatient chemotherapy, followed by six hospitalizations for neutropenia,  a stem cell transplant, twelve weeks of out-of-state proton beam radiation treatments, and four months of palliative and hospice care in our home. 

Her treatment team, lead by Dr. Stewart Goldman, had no roadmap to guide them.  There was no protocol for them to consult.  Every single treatment decision that was made was a shot in the dark, an educated guess, a hope, and a wish.  The thing that failed Donna was the science.  Her cancer was simply  better equipped than her doctors. 

Great and tremendous strides have been made in cancer research in the past few decades.  When children like Atia are diagnosed with ALL now, almost nine out of ten of them will survive.  Those are pretty good odds, until you realize that they apply to children.  Our children.  Your children.  Illinois’ children. 

I stand before you today not asking for $, but asking for opportunity.  The 248 children that were newly diagnosed with cancer at Children’s Memorial in 2011 need that opportunity.  Their families need that opportunity.  Give us this opportunity to better equip the doctors and researchers that treat our children.  Do it for Donna, and Atia, and for the thousands more that will follow them. 

My humble thanks to you.

 

Kids Looking Up
Things are looking up for Illinois kids.
Handshake with Quinn
Hand shake with Illinois Governor Pat Quinn
Ladies
Mary Tyler Mom, Rep. Cynthia Soto, Laura of Atia’s Project Ladybug Fund

Bald Heads, Clear Eyes, Full Hearts, Can’t Lose

Saturday was the big St. Baldrick’s shaving event our charity, Donna’s Good Things, sponsored.  I am still reeling.  To be on the receiving end of such love and support and action is humbling, astounding, and quite honestly, a little paralyzing for me.

At the root of all of this is Donna, our little girl.  The utter success of Saturday’s event is proof positive that her bright light, gone two years, five months and five days, still shines.  All that goodness she inspires fills me up.

$72,000 and still counting (unofficially) is what was raised.  Those dollars will go directly to St. Baldrick’s and be used to fund research for pediatric cancer.   We are currently $52K above goal.  WOW.  Never in a million years did we think Donna’s Good Things would become a force in Cancerville.

The purpose of our charity is two-fold:  1) to do Good Things that provide joyful opportunities for kids in difficult situations; and 2) to encourage others to do Good Things in Donna’s name, helping to fulfill her potential that was cut so dreadfully short.

When I wrote Donna’s Cancer Story in September, I had no idea what it would lead to.  Like most things in my busy life, I was just thinking about the day at hand — what am I responsible for today?  What needs to be done? For thirty-one days, that was tell the story of Donna’s cancer.  My sincere belief was that if people came to know Donna, they would know pediatric cancer and how devastating it is for these kids and their families.  And to know Donna was to love her, so in bringing her to people my hope was that knowing would become loving would become doing.  I’m strategic like that.

Saturday was the culmination of that doing for one reader.  Jamie is a mom like me.  She works outside the home like me.  She has young children like me.  Something in Donna’s story touched her so deeply that her knowing turned into doing pretty quickly.  Soon after the story ended, Jamie contacted me with the idea to host a St. Baldrick’s event.  She herself was in to shave and was committed to raising $5K.  I was a little bowled over, but I was in. Yes, of course, I wanted to help.

We first met on Jamie’s birthday.  Why she wanted to spend her birthday with a stranger organizing a charity event months away, I don’t know, but I am indebted to her.  That first night I found myself shying away from Jamie’s lofty goals.  Crazy high numbers were being thrown around and they scared the stuffing out of me.  There is nothing worse that trying to raise $ to honor your dead child and not meeting the goal.  Seriously, it is like another little death.  I cautioned reserve and a much lower goal of $20K.  Jamie was optimistic.  I was cautious.

Getting from $20K to $72K was a lot of work and involved loads of folks: The shavees who were going under the razor, the volunteers who gave time and energy, the donors who opened wallets and dug deep, and the blogging community who sounded their drums to get the word out loudly and repeatedly.  $72K for pediatric cancer research would not have happened without any of them.

Saturday’s event is still a bit of a whir to me.  I likened it to a wedding, as it is the only thing I can think of that captures the emotion, joy, good cheer, and optimism of the event.  Plus, it was crazy like a big wedding is crazy.  People wanted to be photographed with me.  People stood in line to meet me. People handed me cards with supportive words as I met them.  And like any good wedding that you’re in the middle of, I neither ate nor drank during it.  I was too busy meeting and greeting and crying and dancing.

People came from across the country for the shave.  ACROSS THE COUNTRY.  I mean, come on!  I was freaked out to meet folks, but especially women, that were not only willing to shave their head because I asked them to, but were willing to fly and drive across the country to do it. And there were dozens of people who did this.  Many of whom raised thousands of dollars.  Yowzers.  Talk about committed.  These folks, lined up for the shears, were proof that Donna was not forgotten.  And while I am not able to tuck her in or fix her fish sticks, I am able to tell her story.  And $72K later, it is clear that folks are not only listening, but doing.

And before I get to the photos, just a few moments of gratitude:

  • Thank you to Jamie for being moved to do something, and allowing me to help;
  • Thank you to all of our shavees who traveled near and far to participate in St. Baldrick’s goal of conquering kids cancer.  You raised $ and are now raising awareness.  I am at a loss to tell you what your actions mean to me;
  • Thank you to Nikki of Moms Who Drink and Swear for being the best MC this gal could ever ask for;
  • Thank you to Katy of I Want a Dumpster Baby who sold the heck out of iPad raffle tickets;
  • Thank you to Robert Jeffrey Salon who provided volunteer stylists for all our heads;
  • Thank you to Candlelite Chicago who could not have been kinder or more accommodating in the use of their fine establishment;
  • Thank you to the St. Margaret Mary community who offered their parking lot and have allowed Donna and her story to enter into the hearts and minds of the beautiful children who study there;
  • Thank you to TK Photography for shooting the event for Donna’s Good Things;
  • Thank you to the DOZENS of bloggers across the country who supported this event and encouraged their readers to do the same;
  • Thank you to Heather of St. Baldrick’s for taking us under your wing — it’s a lovely, warm place to be;
  • Thank you to my Dad for just sitting at the bar and taking it all in — witnessing what his granddaughter was still capable of doing;
  • Thank you to all of our silent auction donors and table workers;
  • Thank you to Amanda Cohen at Fine Point Productions for providing some of the most amazing face painting I have ever seen;
  • Thank you to all the supporters who came out in droves to cheer on your shavee;
  • Thank you to Julie with Lifesource and Be the Match who dropped her plans for a family event to set up a bone marrow drive
  • Our speakers, Dr. Rishi Lulla from Children’s Memorial in Chicago and our survivor friend, Brooke, who came out with her family to talk to the crowd about what cancer is like when you’re a kid in treatment;
  • Foster Dance Studios in Evanston for choreographing the Firework flash mob;
  • Performing Arts Limited for supporting Donna’s Good Things in a hundred different ways.

Whew.  Now I only need to worry about who I am missing, which I am certain of there are many.  Well, that’s for me to obsess over.  How bouts’ you obsess over some of these photos.  This is what knowing and loving and doing look like:

crowd scene
So many people!
mother-daughter
Mother-Daughter shavees
husband-wife
Husband-Wife shavees all the way from Michigan.
girls
Our youngest shavees — so brave!
PAL Studio
Our “PALS” from Performing Arts Limited
Dr. Lulla
Dr. Lulla talks about the realities of pediatric cancer.
Ellen
Ellen shaving with a brew. Thumbs up, girl!
Flash Mob
Firework flash mob!
Dollars and Hair
Taking it all off for a few bucks!
Swabbing
Joining the bone marrow donor national registry is easy!
Bald Beauties
Look at our bald beauties. Lovely ladies.
Shavin' Shelleys
The Shavin’ Shelleys from Georgia! They are peachy!
Audience shot
What you see when you’re being shaved.
Deb triumphs
Deb wins the prize for distance travel — came from California to shave!
Blogger Royalty
The Blogger Brigade!