This day…

“If tears could build a stairway,

And memories a lane,

I’d walk right up to Heaven

And bring you home again.” ~ Unknown

If there is a Heaven I’d like to think that my mom was the first one to greet Adrienne when Adrienne she passed away two years ago today after her 13 year battle with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. And by “fight” I mean a raging, relentless battle!

Two years since that fateful, inevitable fall day and not a day has gone by in those two years that I have not thought about her.

The interesting thing about this however is the fact that I mostly look back on those years before her cancer diagnosis, the nine years she lived innocently and without worry, without the constant shadow of yet more devastating news.

I remember the cute toddler that could hold a conversation with anyone and danced with me to VH1 videos (don’t judge! It was the last 80s and VH1 actually showed real music videos back in those days when Rosie O’Donnell was VJ) in the living room all afternoon, swinging her hips and twirling in her dress. I recall the birthdays that were such a happy time, celebrating both Adrienne and Daniel on the same day with backyard parties and strawberry cream cake. I remember all the road trips we took, the weekends spent in Pacific Grove in Jacqui and Barry’s house, learning how to ride her bike without training wheels (it took a while and the endless patience of her dad), and I remember how she grew from the adorable toddler that was excited about everything into a driven and studious young girl, a proud straight A student, something that never changed for the rest of her short life.

Over the long years of her illness we had often asked ourselves what life would be like without her. One thing you realize quickly when you have a child with a life threatening illness is that although you are a parent you actually do not own your child. Your child is his or her very own person and even though you will do anything to protect them from harm, in the end their lives are their own. And your life will go on without them. As unimaginable as that might seem to a parent whose children are healthy, life does go on after a child dies, day after day. Some memories fade, some will always be with you. But the world does not stop spinning

And Adrienne would not want it any other way as she always tried to live her life to the fullest. More so than most of us who do not have to deal with a relentless illness that robs you of every ounce of energy, both physically and emotionally. Cancer never held her back from following her plans (and she had plenty), achieving her goals, and going after her dreams. And although her life was cut much too short it was a life lived with no regrets and many wonderful achievements. We as parents were always proud of her accomplishments, many of which she might have never reached had she lived an “ordinary” life.

As it was, it was anything but…!

Today’s Running Tip: There will be no running tip today!

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • MySpace
  • Book.mark.hu
  • Print
  • Technorati
  • email
  • Add to favorites
  • Twitter

Forever 22*

Adrienne

Today would have been your 24th birthday! Only two years ago you celebrated your birthday and that of your brother’s in Santa Barbara, filled with hope that the new treatment protocol Dr. O’Connor had put in place for you during your visit to New York City the previous week, would work once again. Three days later you were admitted to the hospital by ambulance and in just another week we would hear from the pulmonologist what his prognosis was: that you would not survive this latest crisis. You tried! Boy, did you fight! The nurses and doctors could not believe how hard you fought to stay alive. But that was pretty much the case from the time you were diagnosed and all throughout your 13 year battle against a disease that was relentless in its quest to take your life.

I remember right after you were diagnosed you asked me on night if you would die and I told you that everyone dies one day but that chances were in your favor that you would not die from Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. I was not making things up either in an effort to soften the blow. You were 9 at the time and although you had been dealt the childhood cancer card the odds were in your favor: you were extremely young to be diagnosed with Hodgkin’s, you were being treated by the leading pediatric lymphoma specialist in one of the leading pediatric cancer centers, and Hodgkin’s was supposedly a treatable cancer with favorable outcome, “the cancer to get” (as if!!!). Whatever that means. Looking back it meant nothing. A 90% cure rate does nothing for the 10% that cannot be cured. And once Hodgkin’s becomes refractory it is one of the hardest cancers to treat. But back in those days right after your diagnosis you had no idea what lay ahead. None of us did. Instead we were optimistic and put on a brave face.

And at first everything seemed so promising. You had always been a Type A personality and tackled your illness with the same rigor you tackled everything in life. Your biggest motivation had always been academics and not even cancer treatments could put a damper on your schoolwork. Many times I took you to chemotherapy in the morning and when we were done early enough you insisted on going to school for the rest of the day. Days at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital were often long and time consuming. You coped by bringing your schoolwork with you. In a backpack bigger than you.

After 10 months of chemotherapy and radiation you were done and more than ready to put this behind you and move on with life. But even when you are in remission “moving on” is not as easy as it might sound. Every cough, every sniffle, every pain, every itch, every check up brought worry, especially during the first year. Over time, however, life went back to normal and we all started to relax a little, then a little more, and then we were looking toward the five year hurdle, a timeframe that marks a milestone in the world that is cancer. You had plans. Big plans! Boarding school on the East Coast! College back East! Living in New York City!

I still remember the day I had the first inkling that something was wrong. Memorial Day Weekend 2001 we took you and Daniel on a trip to Universal Studios. We were sitting at breakfast in our hotel and you ate exactly three bites of food. When I looked up from my plate and saw your face I could only think of how gray you looked, just as you did the summer before you first diagnosed. Even though I did not want to raise any alarms and seem paranoid, deep down I knew. Your check up that summer revealed that your cancer was back. The bags that had been packed for boarding school had to be unpacked, dreams had to be put on hold.

As you had done four years earlier you took what came next in stride, keeping up with school work while being prepped for and during your first Stem Cell Transplant, still hoping for a cure. Stem Cell Transplants had become the routine after relapsed Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and many patients never look back. You had a very hard time with the initial salvage chemo but overall the transplant was considered a success. Except that instead of the routine 100 days of isolation you had to be isolated for 6 months as your blood counts took an unusually long time to recover. A sign of things to come. Just 9 months after your transplant you relapsed again and this time Stanford did not have a magic bullet. Instead you were now facing a reality where  a cure was no longer a given. It became more and more clear that you had fallen into that 10% of cases for whom Hodgkin’s Lymphoma becomes a life long disease. Still you did not give up but went to Fred Hutchinson’s Cancer Center in Seattle where you had a reduced-intensity conditioning allogenic (mini) transplant with your brother as a perfectly matched donor. This was extremely hard on you and there where times when we could not imagine how you could get out of this and ever live a long and healthy life. What was supposed to be an all outpatient procedure turned into an ordeal that left you totally bed ridden for four weeks and resulted in complete atrophy of your legs. You literally had to learn how to walk again with countless hours of physical therapy. You were a model patient, determined and tough as nails. The drugs you had to take to keep your body from shutting down left you bloated, bald, and hairy all over. You only laughed when you shuffled to the fridge to grab another muffin to satisfy the constant appetite. We have photos from that time and when I look at them I can hardly believe the person looking back at me is you. You persevered! You came back home, went back to your high school and relapsed!

With the third relapse came the realization that your life was now going to be permanently marked by lymphoma. The question was how long could the disease be kept under control and how much quality of life could be given to you throughout various treatment protocols that were to follow. Whereas others might have given up at this point, you marched on to the next  chemo and graduated high school on time with your class, looking forward to college.

College was supposed to be on the East Coast but it became clear that a university closer to home with a major cancer center near by would be preferable. And so you went on to Claremont-McKenna. You took a full load of classes and had treatments at City of Hope. You thrived. I can honestly say that moving out on your own and attending college was probably one of the best things that ever happened to you. Not many of your coeds knew about your cancer and since you never again had chemo that made you lose your hair your personal ongoing battle was not exactly obvious. You once said that “though I’ve now had cancer for most of my life, I no longer plan my life around it; instead, I try to plan cancer around my life” and I think this came true during your four years at McKenna. Even though you had one treatment after another throughout the entire time at college, just to keep the cancer more or less controlled, you barely missed a class and even managed to spent a semester in New York City, making another dream come true. I think even you would admit that at times it was not easy, days when you felt ill, the never ending fatigue, countless trips to and from the clinic, endless hours of tests, treatments, scans.

In May 2009 you graduated with Honors with a degree in Psychology. By that time a couple of clinical trials – the forefront of cancer treatment, treatment protocols that only an unfortunate few get to try out to see how they might work, if at all – you had been on had failed and your cancer was growing rapidly and spreading throughout your entire body, up and down your spine, and in your lungs. You were in constant pain and almost permanently short of breath. Quality of life was fading fast but you kept on plucking along, with plans for graduate school and a future life as a math teacher. But this time it was not to be. One week into the second term of summer school you finally had to quit, but even then you asked your mother not to cancel your class until you had already been moved to ICU and could no longer deny the fact that you could not possibly make up the curriculum. To say you were driven would be an understatement.

You wanted to live a normal life more than anyone I know, a life not interrupted by cancer, a life most of us take for granted. But it was not to be. Six weeks after you were hospitalized two years ago this week, five weeks after your doctor told your mother you would not live through this, you passed away from the disease you had battled against for 13 long years, a disease that had held the winning end of the stick from the beginning, a disease you never once used to feel sorry for yourself. You bravely fought until your last breath, with lungs totally ravaged by cancer and its cruel effects, barely weighing 80 pounds. A breath that had to be taken away from you by turning off the ventilator that had been pumping air into your lungs for four weeks straight. In the end maxed out, at its highest setting and still unable to give you enough oxygen.

We miss you!

* reposted from last year with minor edits, because, really, there is not much else that can be said!

Today’s Running Tip: There will be no running tip today!

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • MySpace
  • Book.mark.hu
  • Print
  • Technorati
  • email
  • Add to favorites
  • Twitter

Afterlife?

 

The other night David and I finally watched the movie “Hereafter”. We wanted to see it when it first came out last fall but somehow life got in the way and we missed it. Well, it finally came out on DVD and as luck would have it because of my OCD master organizational skills when it comes to lining up new releases in our Netflix Queue, we got it in the mail the day of its release. I had heard mixed reviews and quite frankly was not sure what to expect exactly. Many people who had seen it in the cinema came away saying that it was not the story they expected, many were disappointed. I wanted to keep an open mind.

It is the story of three people from very different walks of life – a blue-collar American, a French journalist and a London school boy – who are touched by death in different ways. The American is a psychic who can connect to people who have passed away, the French journalist is swept away in the Thailand tsunami, dies but comes back to life after being rescued, the London school boy loses his twin brother in a car accident.

The movie was originally released on October 22, 2010 – two days before Adrienne’s Unveiling. During the last few years of Adrienne’s life her and I often touched on the subject of dying and death, especially as treatment options ran out for her and one clinical trial after the next failed. It was never me who approached the subject but Adrienne herself who at times wanted to talk about the end of life. She did not want to die and was more than willing to try just about anything to keep her cancer under control until yet the next experimental drug was available for her to try, but she also realized that there was a good possibility that her life would be a short one and that she would eventually succumb to her illness. At times we discussed what happens after we die and pondered the possibility of an afterlife and if it existed could we send signs to those we left behind.

There are some of us who believe that when we die the light just goes out and we are gone, just like we never existed before conception. There is just nothing there after death. Personally I have always believed that although you no longer exist in body your soul remains as energy, what once was cannot be erased. Some of us hang on longer than others, depending on how well you had lived your life and if you were really ready to pass over.

After my grandfather had passed away I continued to hear him cough every time I visited my parent’s and grandparent’s house, my mom on the other hand never showed any sign of hanging on.

The night before Adrienne’s funeral David woke up at 2am because he had felt a cold hand on his cheek and thinking it was me he turned around to see what was happening only to find me fast asleep. The next day my good friend Kim, who also knew Adrienne personally told us that while getting ready for the funeral service she heard someone whisper her name but when she turned around no one was there.

And then, about three months ago I came to one of my spinning classes and did a double take. A new girl appeared that is so much like Adrienne it is bone chilling. Her skin tone, her smile, her nose, the look, the way she holds herself and moves, even the way she dresses. It is absolutely amazing. And although I am friendly with most of my fellow spinners and know them all by name I don’t know hers. We have not talked beyond “Hello” and “Good Bye” and as it turns out no one knows her name and no one has bothered to ask, including myself.

Of course these could all be coincidences or games our mind plays with us, we don’t know. No one really knows what happens after we die, even those who die and come back, telling stories of white light and peaceful feelings. I actually think they just entered a higher level of consciousness because their heart stopped beating temporarily. Something that happened to my dad during his bypass operation. He lived to tell me that when his heart stopped he experienced absolutely nothing. No visions, no auras, no light. Just nothingness.

Those who die and don’t come back we unfortunately cannot ask. In Alice Sebold’s book “The Lovely Bones” heaven and the afterlife is whatever you want it to be, which is the loveliest concept I have ever heard of. It would be incredible because it would mean that all those who have left us are OK.

And that is all I could hope and wish for.

Today’s Running Tip: There will be no running tip today!

 

 

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • MySpace
  • Book.mark.hu
  • Print
  • Technorati
  • email
  • Add to favorites
  • Twitter

Unveiled

This past weekend David and I went up to the Bay Area for Adrienne’s Unveiling (thank you Greta and Chris for making us feel welcome in your home!). I had never been to an Unveiling before and did not know what to expect. In Jewish tradition it is customary that a year after a person’s death, when the mourning period is over, the grave marker is put in place. The mourners gather at the grave side for a short ceremony during which the grave stone, which has been shrouded, will be unveiled. Instead of flowers the the deceased’s loved ones place small rocks on the grave stone as a sign that they have visited the grave.

To say that seeing Adrienne’s name engraved in a head stone was strange would be an understatement of enormous proportion. I remember as a kid and young adult my mom and grandma used to go out once a month on a Saturday and look after the family graves. Often on those outings we came upon grave stones of a person who had passed way too young and wondered how their family was coping. A year ago we became “that family”. No one knows when their time is up but 22 is awfully young, even when this person has lived a fulfilled life. We wonder what life would have held in store for Adrienne, how her future would have unfolded. But we also remind ourselves that there are families who lose their children at much younger ages, children that never got a chance to live a life without disease, pain, medical procedures. Children too young to understand what is happening to them and why. We are grateful that Adrienne had nine healthy years where the doom of cancer did not overshadow every aspect of her life and are thankful that even though the cancer card was dealt to her shortly after her 9th birthday, we had her for another 13 years. 13 years that allowed us to make memories. A lot of parents do not get that chance.

Adrienne rarely complained about her illness and what it meant to deal with it on a daily basis for so long. She never put anything on hold and always had plans for the future. Whenever someone we knew through the cancer community passed away she considered herself lucky that she was still around and although she mourned the ones that were lost, she never let it depress her. Until the day she died she always felt confident that a cure would eventually be found for her if she could just hang on long enough. I have no doubt that the hope she had for eventually beating her lymphoma gave her the resilience to carry on and endure every and any treatment protocol that came her way, no matter how harsh and debilitating. She once told me that when you have a disease that threatens to take your life on a daily basis hope is really all you have to keep yourself going. The moment you lose hope you will succumb and let the illness win.

The day she died, one of her best friends from college said: “Oh, but Adrienne, you won!”

And yes, we all did just by having had her in our lives.

Today’s Running Tip: There will be no Running Tip today!

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • MySpace
  • Book.mark.hu
  • Print
  • Technorati
  • email
  • Add to favorites
  • Twitter

It’s been a year

It has been a whole year since Adrienne passed away after her 13 year battle with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. And by “fight” I mean a raging, relentless battle!

It is hard to believe that an entire year has gone by since that fateful, inevitable day last fall and not a day has gone by where I have not thought about her.

The interesting thing about this however is the fact that I mostly look back on those years before her cancer diagnosis, the nine years she lived innocently and without worry, without the constant shadow of yet more devastating news.

I remember the cute toddler that could hold a conversation with anyone and danced with me to VH1 videos (don’t judge! It was the last 80s and VH1 actually showed real music videos back in those days when Rosie O’Donnell was VJ) in the living room all afternoon, swinging her hips and twirling in her dress. I recall the birthdays that were such a happy time, celebrating both Adrienne and Daniel on the same day with backyard parties and strawberry cream cake. I remember all the road trips we took, the weekends spent in Pacific Grove in Jacqui and Barry’s house, learning how to ride her bike without training wheels (it took a while and the endless patience of her dad), and I remember how she grew from the adorable toddler that was excited about everything into a driven and studious young girl, a proud straight A student, something that never changed for the rest of her short life.

Over the long years of her illness we had often asked ourselves what life would be like without her. One thing you realize quickly when you have a child with a life threatening illness is that although you are a parent you actually do not own your child. Your child is his or her very own person and even though you will do anything to protect them from harm, in the end their lives are their own.

And Adrienne always tried to live her life to the fullest. More so than most of us who do not have to deal with a relentless illness that robs you of every ounce of energy, both physically and emotionally. Cancer never held her back from following her plans (and she had plenty), achieving her goals, and going after her dreams. And although her life was cut much too short it was a life lived with no regrets and many wonderful achievements. We as parents were always proud of her accomplishments, many of which she might have never reached had she lived an “ordinary” life.

As it was, it was anything but…!

Today’s Running Tip: There will be no running tip today!

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • MySpace
  • Book.mark.hu
  • Print
  • Technorati
  • email
  • Add to favorites
  • Twitter