Sunday, November 27, 2011

A most memorable Thanksgiving

I think I am safe in saying that this Thanksgiving was one our family will never forget. We had planned to go to Utah for the week, but in light of the event's with Spencer, the trip became that much more important.

We left early on Sunday and drove straight to Primary Children's Hospital in Salt Lake City. We made it in 7 hours, which meant that we got there in time to see my niece before she was discharged after having back surgery. Talk about a crappy place for a family reunion! Doug's family now has 26 grandkids and enough medical stories to fill a book. They are all miracles to us and now we need one more miracle!

We didn't stay too long on Sunday, but long enough to say goodbye to my niece and to say hello to Spencer and Doug's sister and husband. Cooper was the only one old enough to actually visit Spencer in his room, so that made it tough. Getting to finally see him and kiss his forehead was so wonderful and he really responded to Cooper, which just melted me. This is one remarkable kid and I say this with no bias. After taking care of hundreds of cardiac kids, this kid is simply amazing! He doesn't complain, he doesn't whine, he does what he is asked and when he is not in a good mood, he simply chooses to not engage. He has his Berlin Heart, a tube in his nose, a PICC line in is arm and oxygen under his nose and yet, you'd never know it. He is totally unfazed by his Berlin--he shows it to people and even knows how to get the alarms to stop when it's kinked. I am still in awe of this little man.

On Monday, Cooper got to spend time at Utah State with my best friend from college shadowing her as she treated the injured and banged up athletes. She is the physical therapist for all athletes and Cooper is thinking he might like to follow in her footsteps or at least to be an athletic trainer. He watched her do some therapy on the underwater treadmill and bumped shoulders with some of the big name football players on campus. It was a great experience for him.




We spent the rest of the week helping with Spencer's sisters and making trips to the hospital. It was nice to finally be the ones pitching in a little. My kids love their cousins, so it was a great week for them. Cooper and I spent about 7 hours at the hospital just the two of us on Tuesday and then we all spent Thanksgiving afternoon there. Tuesday was a little bit of a rough day for Spencer due to nausea, but I think he still really enjoyed Cooper's company. We got to meet his transplant surgeon, which was a very "small world" moment, realizing he trained under Cooper's surgeon. He knew all of Cooper's surgeons and where they were now. He knew the nurse manager who hired me and he was genuinely personable (not a common characteristic in cardiothoracic surgeons!). I had some very emotional moments watching Cooper interact with Spencer.

Cooper's gift to Spencer . . one for him, too.


Reading to Spencer in his room. The kid loves books!

We found out later that while we were there on Tuesday, his team was actually looking at a potential donor heart. It wasn't a perfect fit, so they rejected the offer, but it means he is that close. After 8 weeks in that hospital, it is time! As scary as it is, this kid is ready. He looks so good, his eating has improved, his kidneys are normal and he is going to do great. Every time my phone rings, I jump a little, so I can only imagine what it's like for his parents!

Our Thanksgiving at the hospital was perfect. They reserved a conference room for us and Nancy decorated the tables with homemade placemats and covered the tables with bedsheets. Is that awesome or what? It was just our family, Nancy's family and Doug's parents and the highlight of the afternoon was the smile on Spencer's face. He even asked to be turned around in his wheelchair at one point so he could watch his siblings and cousins play in the room. What a champ!

Our Thanksgiving headquarters inside the hospital


Love this pic! He could barely see over the table, but look at that smile!


He loved watching the kids play


The girls loved the white boards in the room
Before we left on Saturday, we were able to celebrate Doug's mom's 70th birthday with her. Doug's brothers fixed a huge Cajun boil and we enjoyed a little more family and cousin time before we hit the road. It was an emotional week, but I am so glad we were able to go.


Cajun boil!


Grandma turns 70


Kinley and Jess (one of our other family medical miracles, born just shy of 28 weeks)

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

11 in '11

I have been a blog slacker. Part of it is pure busyness, but part of it was a hope that I could post lots of good news at once. I had it all worked out in my head--I was going to report that my nephew got a heart transplant, Kaiya had a birthday and that she qualified for Level 6 state gymnastics. Well, Kaiya had a birthday, but neither of my other hopes came true.

It was a gut-wrenching gymnastics season for Kaiya. It was a big jump from level 5 to level 6 and the judges even warned us that this level is tough. The judging is picky and the skills are tough. It's the last level in which they all do the same routine. Level 7 becomes her own stuff. She had 5 meets in the last 7 weeks and she just missed qualifying at two of them by tenths of a point. She is crushed, but she also knows that through adversity, she will grow. I offered to switch her to tennis or volleyball, but she won't listen.


I love this shot because her hair seriously glows!


Her favorite event


Floor


Upside down


Her nemesis, the darn beam!



Top finisher on bars at DU

Her birthday was a big success. This was an off year for a party, so the family outing was to see the Broadway show, Lion King. I saw it ten years ago and it was just as amazing this time. It was even more fun to watch my girls' eyes light up. We had dinner at the Olive Garden and then went to the show. It really was a great night. We let her have a couple of her gymnastics friends over the weekend before her birthday for a sleepover and took treats to her class. She has grown into such a beautiful young lady this last year. She maintains A's in school, plays piano, devotes 12+ hours per week to the gym, and has even started babysitting other people's kids. She's also a great big sister and Kinley really looks up to her.


Birthday dinner at Olive Garden


Lion King!




With her teacher, Mrs. Wolfinbarger . . . love her!


Her gym buddies have quickly become her best buddies

No party is complete without a hair salon


So proud of this girl. Through her tears, she gave her teammate a big hug to congratulate her for qualifying. Fortunately, we leave the next day for Utah and as I think about what will face us when we arrive at Primary Children's Medical Center to see Spencer, I am brought back to what's really important right now.

Im looking forward to reporting about our visit next week! Until then, here are some pictures of my beautiful girl.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Loveland Half Marathon

For some reason (OK, likely because a significant birthday is around the corner), I decided to run another half marathon three weeks after the last one I did with my mom.

At mile 2, I pulled my calf muscle (yet another sign of my age) and had to run 11 miles basically limping. Thank goodness for awesome friends who stuck with me the whole way. I couldn't walk for a few days after that, but it was still worth it.

The weather was so nice and it was awesome to be able to run with friends. Some of the group ran the 10K and some ran the 1/2 marathon. Other than the pain, it really was a great day!

Before the race


About to cross the finish line

The three of us ran every step together

The whole crew of pink ladies


Glad to be done!