Feb 2, 2006

Hitting the One-Year Mark


As the new month rolls in, it's impossible not to reflect upon the events of the past year. Yesterday, Feb. 1, was the one-year anniversary of the day I first took Matthew to the pediatrician's office to investigate his persistent headache. The remainder of that week was hectic in what is now a much missed ordinary way: We drove kids back & forth to school and had friends over on Friday night. We went out for dinner with friends on Saturday night. We baked a special cake for Danny's 9th birthday and hosted a "Super-Bowl" party for him at the local bowling alley on Sunday. That night, we watched the big game on TV with friends.

The next day, Feb. 7, Matthew stayed home from school to return to the pediatrician's office. By the end of the day, after criscrossing back & forth between the pediatrician and the radiologist, we were finally informed that the scans revealed some type of brain tumor and advised to go directly to the Hopkins emergency room. That night (or rather morning - it was 2 a.m.), we walked for the first time through the doors of the Pediatric Oncology unit (a precise moment one never forgets) and spent the first of many nights to come sleeping in a hospital chair-bed. Two days later, Feb. 9 (on Daniel's actual birthday), we received an official diagnosis.

The news was staggering. The treatment plan (6 cycles of chemo, followed by 6 weeks of radiation) daunting. It seemed as if an impossible gauntlet had been thrown before us - an obstacle course no mere mortal could possibly get through. (This is when Jon & I latched onto the visualization of Matthew as Superman, the inspiration for which came from a trick photo he'd taken several months earlier at a friend's bar mitzvah.) And then, within a few days, just as we were struggling to accept the horror of it, everything changed, unimaginably, for the worse. Matthew's status became critical; he was rushed into the emergency room for shunt surgery; he was in the pediatric ICU for a week, barely conscious and at times unable to recognize us; and we found ourselves begging the doctors to start chemotherapy as soon as possible. All of this happened within the first 10 days.

Since then, most of you know the story. After six cycles of inpatient chemo, everything looked promising. Matthew had finished 8th grade, was feeling strong, swimming on swim team, and planning to resume school in the fall. We celebrated his 14th birthday and the end of chemo, packed our bags and got ready to move up to Boston for radiation treatment...when we got the shocking news that he had relapsed. The latest scan showed the tumor growing. Both at Hopkins and at Mass General, even the doctors couldn't believe it.

We unpacked our suitcases and hunkered down to begin a different chemotherapy regiment. July and August passed. Then, in mid-September, we again received bad news. The latest chemo had failed to halt the tumor growth, so the recommended course was now surgery. Over the next 8 days, we moved through a fog, barely breathing from fear, at the same time dealing with all the necessary logistics - confirming the surgeon, reserving a hotel room, making plans for Daniel.

It was a harrowing 5-6 hours of waiting - the longest hours of our life - but Matthew came through surgery with flying colors - and was home (miraculously) three days later and on the sideline watching his brother's soccer game the very next day. In less than a week, before we could catch our breath, we would be on a plane flying to Boston to set up temporary home and begin radiation treatments. We settled into Brookline and began treatment, five days a week, for six weeks straight. Matthew attended high school and music school and received tutoring in the hospital - and the six weeks whizzed by in a flurry of activity, with Jon & Danny coming up on weekends to visit.

We left Boston at the end of November and arrived home in time for Thanksgiving. The following week, we learned the heartbreaking news that there were elevated tumor markers in Matthew's blood, indicating that tumor cells were active in his body - not in the brain this time, but in the abdomen, transported there by the shunt that had been placed to reduce fluid and pressure back in February. High-dose chemotherapy along with stem cell rescue (a bone marrow transplant) was required - not one, but two times, a "tandem transplant." We sat on the edge of our seats for four weeks, knowing that it was highly toxic to initiate high-dose too soon after radiation, while worrying that every day of delay was giving tumor cells a chance to spread. We entered the hospital in mid-December to begin high-dose chemo and have remained in Baltimore since then. Matthew has rounded the corner on the second transplant. His blood counts are trending upwards nicely and we expect to be released sometime next week, although we will have to remain within close proximity of the hospital for at least another 3-4 weeks, returning for check-ups every other day. And the story is, of course, not over.

Nevertheless, here we are. It is once again Superbowl weekend and once again Danny's birthday. A year has passed. It is almost impossible to believe what we have lived through - 10 rounds (over 40 cumulative days) of chemotherapy, six weeks of radiation, five times in the OR, countless MRIs and CTs and spinal taps. Matthew & I have lived away from home more than half of the past year.

How does one sum up this experience? I'd like to be able to say something profound or eloquent, but I don't think I'm there yet. I have only small bursts of insight, such as: what an exquisite pleasure it is to go to sleep in your own bed (especially with your husband beside you); how extraordinary it is to have a boring, ordinary day; how much simpler life becomes in the midst of a crisis, because your priorities suddenly become very clear (and everything else is so obviously unimportant); how much kindness and caring count during hard times (because you cannot trust a medical professional unless you truly believe that they care about you); and how tricky a thing is fear. You can worry and worry about the thing you fear the most, but most likely that fear will turn out to be nothing; and it will be something else entirely that rises up to get you. And then, of course, there is courage. One could never be grateful to a monster like childhood cancer, but witnessing our son's courage and grace and inner strength has been a breathtaking experience.

I need to close this blog entry with a thank you. We could never have made it to this point without the incredible support of family and friends. Our hearts overflow with thanks to all of you who have helped keep us afloat with meals and childcare and grocery shopping and petcare; with rides to and from the airport and with temporary housing; with books, movies, and other diversions; with emails, cards, letters and gifts; with hospital visits and home visits. Thank you to the teachers and administrators who have personally worked to keep Matthew engaged in learning over the past year and to his friends who have continued to include him in their circle. Thanks to those of you in Boston who reached out to us as strangers. Thank you to the exceptional individuals in the medical community who have gone beyond their professional duties and reached out to us in a caring, compassionate way. You stand head & shoulders above the rest - and we are grateful to know you and to have you on our team.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey Matt Streetlight and Grandma...Just kidding! I just read your post and I wanted to let you know how moving it was. It was great to meet you guys in the hospital last night....I hope to countinue to see you..next time and always OUTSIDE the hopital. You guys rock and keep your spirits up. Out.

Anonymous said...

LISTEN TO UR HEART WHEN IT CALLING FOR YOU.... SOUNDS FAMILIER AND I AM SURE MY VOICE DOES TOO.LOL. SO WHAT UP!! MISSING U LIKE CRAZY DUDE! LIKE IN THE SONG CAN U FEEL THE LOVE TONIGHT... THE PEACE THE EVENING BRING..LOL.. I FEEL LIKE CRYING OH MY...LOL BUT SERIOUSLY I AM HAPPY I FINALLY GOT TO SPEAK TO YA IN PERSON AND HAPPY TO SEE GRANDMA I MEAN MA AGAIN..LOL. SRY BOUT THAT BUT IT SEEM THAT I HAD TO SAY GRANDMA... ANYHOW HOPING TO SEE YA GUYS SOON AND IN GOOD HEALTH WE WILL TALK AND TRY TO FIGURE OUT A WAY FOR ME TO GET THAT PUMBA CUSTOM FOR ME WILL YA.. SEE YA AND SO LONG DUDE!!! LOVE WITH ALL MY LOVE(CAN U FEEL..) OK ROY GO TO SLEEP.. I WILL... ROY NAIM