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Warrior Moms and Muggles

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Today did not get off to a great start. Well, it did and then it did NOT. A goal/reward got her dressed without one tear. Picture day at school was off to a terrific start. Sadly, the part in her hair did not feel good and so it began. Agitation, frustration, anger. Today the invisible cell we live in with this monster illness got chipped and lost some of it's cloak as she continued her rage outside to the bus stop. She could not, would not pull herself together, and I could not, would not, find any sympathy today. This type of thing pushes you to the brink as a parent and I am not always at my best. We are in this together and I am as tortured a soul about mornings as she is. The guilt of not being a supportive, patient parent rips at me until that bus brings her home to my arms and we can heal.  A vulnerable, sick child who should not have to endure this needs a parent who can. I will do better.

Warriors
My heart breaks every day and every day I seal it back up with love and hope and strength because there is no other option. Most of the time, love and hope and strength is found in the words, wisdom, and experience of other parents walking this path. Through the glow of our screens we are connected. moms, and a few dads, any time of day or night, across the world, who come to learn, solve, cry, wail, rage, and only rarely laugh. We give and we take and we seal each other back up and we all keep going. Fighting individual battles in the same war, we understand in a way no one else can. We press on.

Wrought with worry for our children, scanning every horizon for the next illness, and inspecting every behavior change for signs of a flare. Lucky for me, one of these moms lives just 15 minutes from us. Trudging along this path far longer than I, she has been sharing her encyclopedic knowledge of autoimmune disorders with me.  When we last met at our little local playground I recognized her pain and her tiredness and her fear. I recognized her resolve when she had absolutely nothing left to give. Resolve to save her child. I recognized myself in her and we were instantly connected with no words. And then with lots of words we found support and connection and we were not alone.

Muggles
Although you can not know this life unless you live it, support sometimes comes from people on the outside; muggles. Family members who put themselves in this world with us, offering support in big and small ways, lending a shelter from the storm for this little love of ours. There is not one moment that lacks gratitude in my heart for these people and nothing is taken for granted.

There are old friends who have known us since way back when and remember the early months when I was so confused, my confidence as a parent suddenly shaken as I was quickly losing ground, unable to help my three-year-old daughter. These friends check in from time to time, just a little text to let me know they are thinking of us. Doing their best to understand even though they walk a different path.

Then there are the newer friends who want to learn and understand, who check in, spend time, ask questions, and sometimes just tell me they miss my face. Silver and gold. All of them. Silver and gold. Last week a newer  friend of mine, a muggle on the outside looking in, brought me to tears with a simple text message. Having all the reason in the world to focus on her own troubles this friend reached out to let me know she was thinking of us. Sincere in her efforts to understand; asking questions, encouraging me to stay the course, and checking in with hopeful but realistic inquiry. That "realistic" part is a true gift because it means I don't have to disappoint her. She knows. It is a rare person on the "outside" who can even begin to understand our reality so any effort or interest means a great deal. Connection.

Last week was rough. Many have been rough but last week even more so. This is a progressive illness so if we aren't getting better we're getting worse. It was then that the gift of connection came to me from the across the ocean blue. That mother with a seven-year-old girl who had found this blog and recognized her daughter in my words. This mother recognized an opportunity to connect not only for herself but for our children. Brilliant! New pen pals in the making, and my daughter wrote to her new far-away friend, telling someone for the first time what this illness feels like to her.  The following day after school, barely putting her backpack down, she read aloud words from the first friend she's ever had who knows exactly what she is going through. A picture of a sweet child and her cat and suddenly my daughter is not alone.

Connection. Powerful. Affirming. This mom's message sent me back to my blog because I realized someone had read my story, and since this story isn't done I needed to keep writing, no matter how painful.


Invisibility
It is hard to dig deep day after day after night after night and then day after day again. And again. And then again. Two months. Last night it was a full hour of sweet chit-chat and gentle little songs before I felt she was ready for the suggestion of sleep. With all my efforts and love and patience and creativity. With all of my deep breaths and grounding games she still began her dance. This terrible bedtime dance of nightmare thoughts and itchy hair, and a hurty neck.  "The nightmare thoughts are coming Mommy! I can't make them stop!"  Panting and squirming and fearful, unable to accept my comfort. Last night I managed to dig deep and hang in there for another 20 minutes after the first hour and she finally fell off to sleep in my arms. At 9:30 I ate my dinner.

Digging deep is harder some days. This morning, as my beautiful sweet girl yelled and screamed I could not dig deep. I did not yell. I did not cry. I simply shut down and went about my morning. Finally announcing that it was time to get in the car, 30 minutes after she did not get on the bus, I drove her to school with her loud words bursting through her tears. Pulling in to the muggle drop-off line I hugged her through the wetness and told her to get out of the car. Yes my love, they will see that you've been crying. Yes my sweet your eyes will be red and puffy. The invisibility cloak is losing strength and so am I.

Walking Alone Together
But I press on. A few days ago we hit day 11 of a stronger antibiotic, and when my daughter complained of additional symptoms I pulled the plug on it. There are no clear rights and wrongs. There is no instruction booklet. (God how I have always loved the certainty of instruction booklets.) We move on to another med that makes perfect sense in a different way as all the others have and we hope against hope that this will be our fix. We struggle to keep her healthy and free from viral and bacterial infections while we figure out how to help her through this absolutely maddening course of trial and error. Another illness could spiral us out of this universe in to a very scary place. My mind can not go there. Hope. Strength. Resolve.

So I will write again and again and again until there is nothing left to say. Until this child is happily going about her day-to-day activities with all the carefree energy of a typical 7-year-old I will write. Possibly giving connection to someone out there, searching like I have by the glow of this screen for someone who understands and information that will help. I will take those connections that bring us together across the mountains, across the plains, and across the oceans blue. We walk alone together and we will return our children to their beautiful, healthy selves.

Hope. Strength. Resolve. Even when we can't.

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