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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

2012!

*****I started on this post in March 2012, in fact, the title was, "March, already". Well, here we are in July 2012 and the post has never been finished and lots has happened including a trip to Italy and back. I will try to make all of this make sense.***** Me again...it is now February 2013 and I am determined to finish this post today. I am so sorry for an entire year without a post but our home is full of activity and the last thing on my mind is sitting at the computer for any huge amount of time. It is also sometimes an emotional process letting our lives pour out onto the computer screen and I admit to avoiding that.  I tried to sprinkle photos throughout the post from our year...some taken with a "real" camera and some cell phone shots.


 I really can't believe it is May (haha) already. The hours turn to days, turn to weeks, so fast. I don't know if this is a blessing or a curse. Time seems so much more important to me now than before and the passing days seem like they inevitably bring us closer to the day when Liviana will no longer be with us. Despite that looming thought in the back of my head I try to live each day one at a time and cherish every smile, glance, giggle and snuggle from sweet Liviana. I have been reminded all too well, with the passing of some of her leukodystrophy pals lately, that the days are entirely too short for the love we have to give to these fighting, loving, living children of ours.

Since my last post Giovanni returned from Italy in February (2012) with A+ reports. Overall, all of his tests, including the MRI, revealed no change since his June testing. This is AMAZING news. We of course didn't have MRI results for Liviana before we knew about MLD but we could assume she would have shown signs of demyelination during the same time period. Brad discussed with the doctors, at length, his night waking and what seemed to be intense pain in his hands and feet. His nerve conduction test did not reveal peripheral neuropathy and was unchanged from his last test in June. This would imply that the pain was not related to neuropathy. The conclusion was that the pain was related to growing pains. Now, Giovanni is a very tall boy for his age and he did indeed grow A LOT since June of last year but I still find myself unsure that he could have such severe pain in both his feet and hands (which is not a typical location for growing pains). One of his annual tests is a bone scan that reveals bone age based off of the size and other equations of the hand. When he had just turned 1, his scan revealed the hand of a 2 year old and likewise, his scan this past January, right after turning 2 revealed the hand of a 3 year old. In addition, his body has had to catch up from a short period of growth arrest with his chemotherapy. When he had an x-ray in October 2011 after jumping off the couch his pediatrician said his x-ray showed obvious growth arrest and continued growth lines because of his treatment. It is possible that the pain is intensified because of his body playing catch up and an already aggressive growth patter given his size. I am happy to say that the night waking, pain and screaming has improved. He pretty much sleeps through the night now but does wake a few times a week in the morning with what seems like pain but he gets over it quickly. In February he started sleeping with his shoes on. I normally would not be too keen on this idea but he seemed to get comfort from the shoes and sure enough, he started sleeping better. I did not know if the pressure feeling from the shoes helped his feet or if this is all the crazy observations of an obsessive mother :). He eventually stopped wearing the shoes after a few weeks and had nights on and off with pain but overall things are MUCH improved. I like to think it is because his treatment has kicked MLD butt! ***Update from early 2012...G was awake from 12:30am to 4:00am crying and screaming in pain. When I would ask him what hurts he would point to his feet and cry. He was also shoving his hands in any tight spot he could find because they hurt too. Last night he slept fine. It ripped my heart out holding him all night trying to help him sleep through the pain. IT was so much like many nights with Liviana. I hope he never has a night like that again*** ****since this update Giovanni has been sleeping fine at night and waking up fine as well. Overall, night waking issues seem gone. He was attacked by what seem to be mutant mosquitoes while in Italy and has been waking frequently from that but I was glad to have the explanation this time.**** 2013 Update: G is waking at night and having a hard time getting to sleep. He moves and twitches his feet and hands around. He doesn't cry but he is definitely uncomfortable. He is a big boy. He can wear Mile's socks (who is 6) and has grown just since November. I suspect this night time discomfort to be just part of growing for him but I am sure we can rule out disease processes on our visit next week.



Giovanni is by all accounts a normal 30 month old (this was typed last year obviously). He runs, climbs, plays..does everything he would be expected to do. By this point with Liviana there were several things showing up that were concerning. It was almost exactly 2 years ago (In May) that Brad and I had our first conversation about Liviana. I remember the day so clearly like it was yesterday. We had just gotten home from the Farmer's Market sans children and Liviana was standing by the closet in Aria's room whimpering and seeming to be in pain. I picked her up and held her and was unsure what was causing the tears. I sat her down on the couch and looked at her legs. Her right leg was looking very different from her left. It was beginning to turn inward in a knock kneed and hyperextended position. This happened SO fast. I have a photo of her from the last week of April standing with perfectly "normal" looking legs....2 weeks later there are noticeable changes. We stood there that day discussing how we both had noticed she seemed to fall down more and have balance issues. Those two things combined with a host of little things....her shaking and unable to balance if she was put on the counter or other surface with her legs hanging down to sit, shivering uncontrollably after nap and especially during bath times, overheating easily...were all screaming, "there is something wrong" in my head. G doesn't have any of these issues. I have "tested" him, often afraid of what I will find but overjoyed when all seems normal. He has buttoned his shirt (something Livi's shakey fine motor skills would not have made possible), climbs up and down on tall surfaces, sits on the counter when I let him :), stands on his tippy toes for long periods of time to reach things...he really leaves me in awe every single day. To only be the second child in the world to have undergone this type of treatment for MLD...I am really speechless and full of so much hope all the time.
***2013 Update on G*** One of G's favorite things to do is jump. When he is excited he jumps, when he tells you something he jumps, when Daddy gets home he jumps. It is so awesome to me every single time his feet leave the ground. He goes up the stairs one step at a time holding 2 fire trucks and little people, he jumps on the bed, he rides bikes outside, he pulls the wagon around...he is an amazing, normal, 3 year old little boy. So amazing!



 Giovanni and I will go back to Italy in July 2012. This will be a VERY telling visit. By that time in Livi's life she had already had an appointment with her geneticist to figure out what was going on with her. I remember her standing in the room in her cute denim dress in the middle of several people. She was so cute and entertaining but too quick of a turn and she would lose her balance. It is hard for me to imagine Giovanni having a dramatic change downward in just 2 months but then again...MLD has done that to us already with Liviana. All the good thoughts and prayers for his continued well being are welcomed. He is still not talking as much as they would expect at 27 months. He communicates easily, just not with a ton of words. I doubt this is MLD related since both Aria and Miles had expressive language delays. He has the same pattern they do, accept he is ahead of where they were at the same age. His testing reveals at age level or advanced...we just need to get him saying more. He has about 15-20 words and repeats things randomly on some days. He says, "Daddy" all the time. I feel anxious about him losing is speech to MLD before I ever get to hear him call me Mama. I am going to start him on speech in this summer and hope to see some improvement. *****Inserting July update on Giovanni's visit to Italy***** Giovanni, Adelina, Tarah and I headed off to Italy on July 2nd. I had such mixed emotions going into this trip. I hate flying. It is an irrational fear that developed after having kids. I think the only time I wasn't stressed is when we were all together because if something happened I wouldn't be leaving any children behind. I also was very afraid of leaving Liviana and fear that she would get sick while I was gone. It can happen in an instant. One minute she is smiling and calm and the next her breathing is labored and she needs oxygen support. I had trust in Brad though to take awesome care of her and knew they would have fun while I was gone since it would be easier for him to get out with just the 3 of them. They went bowling, to the Children's Museum, out to lunch, the Farmer's Market and played outside in the pool. I was so happy she was able to get out and enjoy the week, even if it did get horribly hot. I was also dreading going back to Italy. Despite the image people have in their head, it is not all glorious. When Brad was there in February, his friend Jason said he didn't even believe they were in "Italy" until a couple of days into the trip when they went to a neighboring town with friends. The idea of being back at the same hotel, in the same hospital rooms we visited, with that same smell in the hallways felt overwhelming at times. There isn't anything inherently wrong with the place, it is just the memory of that time last year going through it all with G and the rest of the family that I try to avoid. At the same time, I was so excited to show off our G-man. He is so stinking cute and he is, by all accounts, still a normal 2 year old. In a summary, all of his tests came back normal and unchanged. His nerve conduction tests, MRI, motor skills evaluations, psychological evaluations...all normal. His hemoglobin which was always consistently around 9 is now comfortably at 13.6 so no more concerns over iron supplementation. I attribute that in part to his love of Odwalla Green Machine :). I feel like I just smiled at him all the time when we were at the hospital. I am so proud of him...so proud of all he has been through and how happy, well adjusted and social he is, proud of his accomplishments, proud he is so strong, proud that his test results show hope for other children in the future. I feel like I (we) have so much to learn from him, as we do Liviana. He and Adelina were both so awesome on this trip. Our longest flight was 10.5 hours and we had people coming up to us comment on how well behaved they were. Their smiling faces made that unusually long flight home more bearable for many of the passengers. I love seeing our friends in Milan...making these new memories there is important to me so I can slowly remove the negative feelings from his days in the transplant ward and the difficult days in Italy. It also helped that we were there in July so the sun was shining...something we didn't often see during our first few months there.


 Onto sweet, beautimus Liviana. She keeps us on our toes...she likes it that way. A few days after Brad and G got back from Italy, on February 14, 2012, we took Liviana to the ER. G was sick first, right after returning home and it passed onto Liviana and Adelina quickly. When Livi gets sick it comes on quickly and gets scary fast. She starts seizing and pretty much becomes unresponsive. She doesn't make eye contact, she doesn't react to our voices, smile...nothing. Her breathing was rapid and I had been unable to get her fever to come down, which causes more seizing. We were lucky to have our sitter in town so Brad and I took Liviana to the ER that night. Her fever upon arrival was 105.2! I was only getting a 103 reading at home (I have since bought a new thermometer I trust more. X-ray revealed a little bit of "something" in her right lung...she was quickly admitted. She ended up testing positive for RSV. After being in the hospital for a day and a half she was put on oxygen, as she was no longer able to maintain her saturations. I was devastated when I got the text while I was on my way into the hospital. I know oxygen needs are common with RSV but her situation is not normal, her ability to fight this and cough is not normal and it seemed like such a back slide. It was, for me, the scariest time I had with her to that point since I gave birth to her and wondered if she would survive her CDH. I laid with her in the hospital bed, still unresponsive, on oxygen, and ran my hands through her hair, like I always do when I hold her. It hit me like a ton of bricks...when we lose her, I will never be able to touch her hair again. I could not stop the tears this time, and I am usually pretty good at that. I felt desperate and helpless. I felt insane for mentally refusing to lose her EVER. She ended up in the hospital for a week. Not only is the hospital challenging for us with 4 other children but the whole time we just want Livi home with us. It does not feel right to not be all together. I spent the week running back and forth from home to hospital and in the middle of it all took Adelina to the ER too because the RSV in her, being so young, was scaring me too. Our amazing babysitter, Annie, happened to be off work that week which was a an absolute God Send. She was able to say with the kids so I could go up for a few hours and come back because of a nursling at home. Brad stayed at the hospital most nights but I ended up staying twice and kept Adelina in the room with us at the hospital.



 The entire week was a absolute blur. After discussions with our doctors at Children's Hospital it was decided that Liviana being on Hospice care at home would be best for her. This allows her to stay home more when she gets sick, allows doctor visits to the home as well as nurses that check in on her once a week. It doesn't have the same connotation as "Hospice" for adults...it just allows us to have an appropriate team in place and nursing care for when that time comes since things can be more unpredictable with children. It also doesn't include a nurse being in our home taking care of her all the time.  We are Livi's parents and caregivers.  The nurses are here for about 30 minutes once a week to check on her, take vitals and see if we need anything.  It works out perfectly.  We met with the Hospice team the day after she came home. I was an absolute ball of anxiety and nerves leading into that appointment. I knew there could be challenging discussions and it is all so new and unknown to us. I think we keep a pretty tight circle around Liviana and letting in people we don't know is hard for me. They were all wonderful and good at putting my mind at ease. We were faced with needed to discuss signing a Do Not Resuscitate form for Liviana. Not something any parent should have to face signing for their child. I held onto the paper for many weeks...not ready to sign it. I know we can change our mind at any moment but it is the whole concept of having to sign something like that for my children...knowing that that one, short document will come into play one day.



 Deliveries of medical equipment started...suction machines. oxygen machines, oxygen tanks for travel and power outages, IV pole. Our living room was transformed overnight but I had peace in it all knowing that we could take care of Liviana at home the next time she was very sick. It is the only place I feel all is well...when we are all together as a family, sleeping under the same roof.

 A new type of anxiety comes with having a child with a terminal illness. Things you never imagined could make you anxious do...simple things like being at the grocery store too long or pretty much any important date on a calendar. You learn to really live one day at a time since a day, an hour or a minute your whole live could change. I really have to work hard to not get lost in sadness. It isn't a pervasive feeling, just fleeting moments when some memory catches me, or I think of Liviana running up and greeting Miles as he comes home and them running off outside to play. We have 5 friends who have little girls who turn 4 years old, just like Livi, within a month and a half of her birthday. I can picture them all giggling in a corner or playing together. I imagine her still always wanting to wear dresses like her big sister and probably annoying Aria by always wanting to take her stuff and play in her room :). I am sad that Aria will miss out on that traditional sister relationship with Liviana. That was one of the first things that made me cry myself to sleep after she was diagnosed. I was so sad for Aria's loss. I can see that in Aria too. She lays with Livi and talks to her. She talks about, "If Livi was sharing a room with me". I can't tell you how much I would LOVE to hear the girl squabbles. The, "That is MY shirt", "Did you take my pink jacket". It would be music to my ears. The biannual clothing rotation for seasons is always difficult. I have one tub that says, "2T" with a big heart drawn next to it. I'm not sure how easily I will be able to let Adelina wear those clothes. I can see Livi still walking in them...they are the last clothes she walked in and then the clothes she stopped walking in. They are the clothes that she wore as she sat in her favorite spot on the couch in Milan, the swimsuit she wore on the beach in Sardegna and the tutus and sweaters that so many came to recognize as her. The awareness that these "things" are all we will ever have of her one day changes the way we look at them. I find myself putting anything that reminds me of Livi, that was her favorite things, the book she read most, her photos...in one tub that is tucked into the back of my closet. I will keep these items and cherish them for the rest of my life. When she is no longer with us they will warmly remind us of her. I got this uncomfortable feeling one day as I added something to the Livi tub...what will happen when I am gone? What happens to Livi's things? Will she still be remembered and cherished since she herself won't be here to keep that legacy going? I don't ever want her forgotten...that smile, the way her eyes twinkle with her happiness, her long lashes, her long, curly hair, her fighting spirit, her humor, her love of pretty dresses and Calliou. I want her to live forever and since I can't stop time I want her legacy to live forever. This all makes me feel quite irrational at times...desperate and oddly clausterphobic...like I can't "fix" things and make the outcomes perfect. So those pretty dresses and favorite books mean so much more than anyone could ever know.



 I have this odd sense some days that I don't even recognize her. I don't mean in the basic sense of recognizing someone but rather, my memories of her walking and talking are of a 2.5 year old...even after her 3rd birthday she still was talking. Now, before me, as I dress her and talk to her and hold her in my lap I see a very tall, 4 year old girl with hair half way down her back that curls up tight after a bath. I see my 4 year old girl and I would do absolutely anything to know what Liviana would have to say to me as a 4 year old girl...Absolutely.Anything. It is a sad feeling. I am sad for her, as much as selfishly sad for myself. I have told myself that I am not missing those moments because they were never meant to be part of Liviana's life but are rather are just part of my imagination. When I look at old photos of her, as I so often get lost in, It is as if I am looking at photos of someone else...it is an odd experience. As a mother though I can't help but look at Miles and Aria and wonder about the wonder in Livi's face as she learns something new, or makes a new friend, scores her first goal or talks about her first day of school, which would have been this fall 2012. She would have been playing on Mile's soccer team this year with him...how awesome would that be to watch? Miles was acutely aware of that one day as we headed off to his soccer game. He told me, "Livi would have been playing with me, right mom". I said, "Yes sweetie...she would have loved that". He gave her a kiss as he ran off to the field and told her he would win the game for her. Love that kid!

 I can't focus on that stuff though...it is a quick way to a downhill spiral. I focus on who she is instead. I wake up seeing her smiling face looking right at me. She gives me the sweetest sounds and when she looks right at me it melts my heart. She can still answer affirmatively with an, "Uh Huh" if you ask her a question. I LOVE that. She falls asleep almost instantly when we hold her and she loves to laugh at her brothers and sisters, especially Giovanni. He is her little entertainment.

 When she was an infant she would reach up and hold my hair in her hand when she nursed. When she stopped nursing she would still hold my hair to get herself to sleep. Those nights of her feet hurting and difficulty sleeping it was my hair that would eventually help her fall asleep. She was slowly losing the ability to actively hold my hair on her own during our time in Italy. When I would visit from my time in the hospital and get her down for nap I realized she could no longer hold my hair, as her motor skills had declined and her fists were held tightly clenched.  That was heartbreaking.  For every night that I laid there with a to-do list in my head, wanting to get up while she played with my hair...I would take them all back in a second.  When she is having a hard time settling down I have started putting my hair in her hand, which is usually tightly held in a fist. She makes the happiest, sweetest sound of contentment. I wish she always had that contentment.

 I have been obsessed with finding all of our old videos and photos of Liviana. I was going through photos and videos from Brad's old phone the other night and found a video he took of Livi with his US phone while we were in Italy that I had never seen before. It was so weird and awesome to see her reaching her hand up to scratch her head and reach for the phone. We take for granted our kids being able to move their arms on their own. I would run a million miles to just feel her hug me again. A HUG! That is why I always say, "Hug your babies". You have no idea how amazing a hug from them really is.

 ***May 2012 posting to present*** I knew when Miles got sick last week  (May) that it was probably going to eventually make its way to Liviana. He sits with her all of the time and plays with her hair and she always gets big kisses at bed time from everyone. Miles rarely gets sick and if he does it is pretty short lived. This seemed to be a nasty virus though and he ended up home for 2 days with a fever, eventually going back to school on Wednesday. Liviana started her fever on Friday. We acted quickly since fevers increase her seizure activity. She started having respiratory difficulty and we had to dust off her oxygen machine after not having to use it since late February. With the illness that meant we had to make sleeping arrangement changes. She needs to stay downstairs with oxygen so she slept on an air mattress and Brad slept next to her on several rolled up comforters on the floor. I stayed upstairs with the nighttime nurser. We had several nursing visits and the Hospice doctor visited on Tuesday. He said if she still had a fever the next day they could consider starting her on an antibiotic since it likely indicated the virus had caused a bacterial pneumonia.

 On Wednesday morning she woke up doing great. I got some smiles and she looked directly at me (a big deal since she is pretty unresponsive when she is sick). She was fever free and I was able to take her off oxygen. I was ecstatic. I talked to my mom and told her the good news, sent a text to Brad...it looked like she was getting over the virus...yay! I gave her her first albuterol breathing treatment in the morning as I was getting the kids ready for school. This was a burn the breakfast, running between Livi and finding socks and shoes type of morning. She was doing well and by the time the kids left for school she was ready for a nap and slept peacefully. I sent a text to Brad saying that she was sitting in her seat (she breathes better laying down when sick), sleeping, fever free, off oxygen and saturations were great. I noticed she seemed to be getting more uncomfortable starting around 10am. I switched her positions, gave her a little ativan and tried to figure out what was wrong. I took Adelina up for nap at 10:30 and when I came down Livi's face was BRIGHT red. I was startled and obviously wondered if it was reaction to albuterol. I called her nurse and she thought the 3 hours between it showing up and the treatment was unlikely. She seemed distressed and uncomfortable so I held her and tried to help her feel better. By this time Miles was coming home from school and things really just went haywire. Her extremities were ice cold. She was moaning and looking at me with wild, scared eyes. The oximeter was not giving me good readings. I normally will look at her rather than the machine but she was in such distress that the all over the board readings scared me to death. I called Brad, called her nurse and asked for someone to come over right away. I was terrified! She was in my arms screaming and her heart rate was reading over 200 and her saturations were sometimes in the 80's but sometimes in the 70's and then the machine would go all over the place. Brad showed up, the nurse showed up and she confirmed her HR was in the 190's. We gave her some more ativan and it didn't do much to help her. Our nurse looked at us both and said she was worried that Livi would not be able to maintain her HR that fast for long. I had the WORST feeling in my stomach as I held her and just realized I could be suddenly and unexpectedly losing her right there. Brad ran over to the school to get Aria out of school so she could be home with Liviana. The look on her face broke my heart as she walked in the door and came over by me. My head was spinning. I was NOT ready for this at all. I knew she still had more life to live. Our other nurse showed up and our doctor (one of the Hospitalist from Children's who has seen Livi a few times in the hospital). On the phone our doctor had said to give her another dose of Ativan and by the time she got there Livi had finally calmed down and was breathing more normally (on 3 liters of oxygen), but had started running a fever again. The doctor said that while an elderly adult could not sustain HR above 200 that long that a child could do it for days. I do not fault our nurse for alerting us to the seriousness of the issue though. It was a frightening situation. The doctor believes that she recovered from the virus but the bacterial infection kicked in and that is what caused the sudden onset of issues and distress that morning. We sat in the Living room, while Aria and Miles drew Get Well card for Liviana at the dining room table, discussing what our options were for Liviana. The 300lb elephant in the room was of course that we could lose her and that it is usually a pneumonia or other serious illness that takes our MLD kiddos from us. We discussed said elephant and what our options were. We could go to the hospital, get a chest x-ray and have her taken care of there. That would of course separate our family and put Livi in a less than comfortable situation away from home. We could start her on an antibiotic at home and hope it showed improvement for her in 12 hours or we could do nothing and free he from fighting this monumental fight. We chose to start her on an antibiotic. This was the first experience with the house full of doctors and nurses and machines humming. I know Aria and Miles were worried and I hate that their lives have to hold such fears at such young ages. We tried to explain to them that she was very sick and we hoped the new medicine would help her. It was just two day of the Cipro and Livi woke completely improved. Hallelujah she had kicked this. So humbled by this little girls strength.



 Up until this illness Livi was still getting 3 "meals" a day that I made her through her g-tube. She got 3-210 ml meals and then two more 210ml rounds of water in between meals. About a week after she got over the illness she suddenly started vomiting during her feeds. I started lowering her volume slowly each meal...trying to get to a point she could tolerate. This is typical with MLD disease progression. The body just stops working effectively and can't tolerate the same volume of food. Just when I thought she was at a safe point for her meal volume she lost an entire feed all at once. Bless her sweet heart. It is so scary when she throws up because she immediately starts aspirating since she can't swallow. We try to rush to sit her up and get her suctioned. Then I feel so bad that she is covered in all of her food. The worst was when I had just wheeled her outside to get some sunshine and fresh air. I went back in then to get Adelina and she had thrown up and was covered in her entire feed...which contained sardines. I also put Turmeric in her food so the yellow staining never came out of her favorite pants. Such a silly thing that makes me sad for her. She doesn't react much, doesn't cry, doesn't seem to get upset but I know it upsets her anyway...she takes in life just like any child her age would...she just does it silently. Eventually, I had to change Livi to continuous feeds to make her get enough volume throughout a day. She has now settled on 85ml's an hour that runs all day, splitting between her food and water. So far she has held steady at that 85mls even though her big illness this past December. Once we went to continuous feeds it became harder to keep the weight on her. She overall has lost about 1.5lbs which seems like a lot since she has gained so much length and is already so tiny. I know she is healthy though because her hair and nails grow like crazy but I still keep trying to beef her up without overloading her too much in each meal hour.

 Spring and summer is so busy. We wrapped up the spring and the school year with soccer games. I am pretty adamant that either we all go to games together or I or Brad will stay home with Liviana. It just doesn't feel right to me to leave her behind. The only reasons we have had to make the decision for one of us to stay home is if the weather is too cold or too hot or too much travel is involved. Aria's final soccer game rolled around though...right after Livi's big May illness and Brad and I both really wanted to be there. Livi was still recovering and on antibiotics and even though the game was up the street at the school, we thought it would be too much to bring her out when she wasn't a 100%. Our wonderful hospice nurse, who is like a member of our family, offered to come by off duty and sit with Livi so I could go up to the game. I was so happy to be able to see Aria's last game (It always seems that she scores her goals at the games I miss) but felt awful going with Livi at home. I agreed to have Carolyn stay with Livi and I loaded Adelina up in the sling to make the walk up to the soccer field. I felt sick to my stomach that entire walk. I can't even describe the feeling of leaving her at home. It didn't feel right but neither did missing Aria's last game. I know it doesn't seem like a big deal to other people but this was the first time ever we left her home without one of us...even if it was just Adelina...she was without her family. I had tears welling up in my eyes when I got to the game but didn't want people to think I was a freak so I pretended all was well, all along feeling like only part of me was there. When we got home she was in good hands...snuggled in Carolyn's arms sleeping. That made me feel so much better knowing she was getting loved and snuggled while we were away.

 There are strange dynamics that take over when you have a child in a health situation like Liviana. We seem to sometimes have multiple families in one. Sometimes I feel like Brad, Aria and Miles are one unit. They get to go more places together and live more of a life outside our home. It isn't easy to get Liviana loaded up and isn't always comfortable for her and although we had put in for her stroller/wheelchair request in late April, it took a couple of months into summer to finally hear something and get it for her. At one point I had gone 2 months without leaving the house. Brad did grocery shopping, running the kids places, friends picked up the kids. I stayed home with Adelina, Livi and G. The heat of summer is hard on Liviana and I could not wait for cooler temps since we had her new chair, to be able to take her places. Once the new school year rolled around we had a whole new round of activities that included soccer 5 times a week. And guess what...I can only think of two games across both Aria and Miles that we didn't all go to. It was actually really, freaking awesome...loading up Miles and Aria and G, Livi and Adelina and heading out 5 times a week for soccer. I loved it! It was controlled chaos and more than once, as I navigated the 5 of them by myself when Brad couldn't make it, through the soccer field...holding Adelina, pushing Livi's wheelchair and monitoring the other three as we entered the parking lot, had people either look at me like I was nuts or want to high-5 me. I am mama hear me roar....and all together is the ONLY way I feel complete. I can't wait for soccer season to start again. I look forward to getting Liviana out and seeing G and Miles play during Aria's games, Adelina learning to kick the ball and chatting up the other parents. It all brings me so much happiness.

 As we got closer into fall I knew I wanted to go down to Wichita to do a couple of photo sessions for friends. I wasn't looking forward to going without the whole family though so Brad and I spent a lot of time discussing if it would be possible for us all to go. Aria many times throughout summer and into the beginning of school, as kids would talk about their vacations would say, "Why can't we go anywhere". I always felt so bad. I don't want them to resent Liviana (although the love her to death and would never intentionally resent her) for us not being able to easily do things but is certainly is not easy for us to travel with her. Because I make her food it would entail a lot of extra travel gear, blenders, oxygen tanks, feed pumps, supplies for a crisis, food already made, cooler, etc. We just flat decided we would make it work in October though and we would all go down to Wichita. We really were like the traveling Griswolds. I don't think you could have squeezed anymore into that van. I brought some premade food for Livi but otherwise brought the blender and it the grocery store to make her meals while we were there. The trip really went well. We stayed with my mom and my brother, his wife and their daughter were there also. We went to the zoo and the kids played outside. Adelina and Jensen played together and Livi just took it all in. Like I mentioned before, Livi is silent but she takes it all in and loves all of the activity. She will laugh at the most surprising times and smile and interact in her own way. She seemed really comfortable the entire trip until our ride home. I realized when we got home that she had a pressure sore on her spine from the combination of her stroller and carseat. I felt awful and now we know to give her extra padding on the back of her seats. Even our trick-or-treating outing on the bumpy sidewalks was uncomfortable for her.



 Sometime in September I was contacted my Alessia in Rome. She is with the Fondazione Telethon and they fund the clinical trial that G went through in Milan. They did a day of filming while we were in Milan in July but really wanted to get the whole family so they planned to send a producer and crew from Italy to do a short film to be used for the December Telethon to raise money for rare disease research in Italy. I really can't say enough about all they are doing for rare disease research. Maybe they just keep it all a secret here in the US but it really seems to go leaps and bounds above what we are doing here. I am proud to know them and let our family do all we can to help them raise more money. We were very lucky to have Max Croci, who did our filming in Milan join us here in Omaha at the beginning of November. They hired a local film crew from here in Omaha and they were great to work with also. It means so much to me to have this footage of our kids and Liviana especially. I will cherish it forever. Thank you Max and Telethon!

 Thanksgiving was wonderful and low key. We had made plans that my brother, his wife and their daughter would come for Christmas so just my mom visited for Thanksgiving. I appreciated the low key holiday. Aria's birthday always falls over Thanksgiving break so she had friends over for our first ever house-full-of-kids birthday party. It was great! At the beginning of December we headed out to Santa's Woods for our Christmas tradition of picking out our Christmas tree. I really don't love this time of year. It just brings me back to when Livi was diagnosed. I wish I could escape the season but the kids look forward to it so that brings joy to us too. The Christmas tree was positioned this year right so Liviana could see it from her bed. She beamed when she first saw it put up and the lights turned on.

 Everything was going well leading into Christmas break when our little, already fragile world came crashing down again. Adelina, who was now 13 months old, had been increasingly fussy for a couple of weeks. Wanting to nurse all of the time, whining, horrible sleeping. I noticed she had 4 molars coming in all at once so that seemed to explain the agitation. On Sunday, December 16th she seemed fine in the morning and upon me getting home from the store she ate almost an entire container of blueberries (her favorite). She then had two pouches of banana puree. A few minutes later she she threw up. At first I thought, "Oh wow, she ate too much" but then I got worried that she had gotten sick from our friend who mentioned not feeling well after being with her a couple days earlier. I messaged her but she didn't report any vomiting issues with being sick. I kept an eye on Adelina and she just sat on the couch like a lump. She ended up throwing up again all over Aria who was so sweet and didn't even freak out but kept holding her, telling her it was alright, until I could get to her. It really bothered me that she seemed sick but wasn't running a fever. As the day went on her breathing seemed to get heavier but she didn't have any respiratory congestion. I had a nagging feeling something else was wrong but researching didn't turn anything up...friends said that the fever would probably show up soon. That night I laid awake all night with her laying on my chest, breathing heavy. She seemed so out of it. I know now, and have read other parents telling their story say the same, that she was dying. That morning I told Brad first thing that we needed to get her into the doctor. Of course we thought worst case scenario was a horrible virus we would treat and move on from. When the doctors office was full I said I we just needed to take her to the ER. She was hardly responsive at this point, breathing heavily, not opening her eyes much. Walking into the ER at Children's they immediately said, "2-2.5 hour wait". They heard her breathing though and sent a nurse out to listen to her. When she heard that her chest was clear they went ahead and brought her back right away. They weighed her and did the usual assessments and asked the usual questions we were finishing up and as an afterthought I mentioned that for the last two weeks I noticed she had been peeing more. It coincided with when she started drinking out of a sippy with water so while I wrote it off, it also bugged me. I sat in the room holding my little baby with a halting, heavy breathing and after initial blood test they came in to tell me she was in a severe diabetic state and that she had Type 1 Diabetes. She was in a diabetic coma, Diabetic Ketoacidosis and her blood PH was 6.8 upon admission. Anything below 6.8 is considered incompatible with life. We were immediately admitted to the ICU where she stayed for 2 days and another 3 on a regular floor, learning all we could absorb about our new life with Diabetes. I sat in the ICU room holding her, still out of it, still being slowly nursed back from near death with IV's and wondered What The H*#@? My, still breastfed, healthy eating, no family history, miracle surprise, MLD free, little darling now had to live her life with this autoimmune disease (yes, Type 1 is an autoimmune disease and has nothing to do with diet and exercise) that will REQUIRE her to have daily insulin injections to keep her alive. WTH? It felt overwhelming at the hospital learning about carb counting and insulin formulas but once we were home it seemed easier than it seemed while in the hospital. So, so many people stepped up to help during that week. Ww had not done our Christmas shopping yet, mainly because it is hard to get a sitter with Livi's medical needs and the other kids. We had a long standing "date" to Christmas shop that week because a friend had offered to come over with her kids and do crafts and have fun while we went out.   Obviously that wouldn't happen.   So here we were one week before Christmas with no shopping done, a week stay in the hospital, more time off work for Brad holding down the fort at home and a bunch of friends and angels from our church jumped in and did Christmas shopping, made meals, shoveled our driveway, helped at home and made sure we were set and didn't have to worry about anything. I cannot begin to thank everyone enough. As if I didn't dislike this time of year enough, we now had this horrible dx and hospitalization right at holiday time. Thank you, thank you, thank you to EVERYONE who helped make it a great Christmas for the kids on such short notice and planning. We love you all and are blessed to have you in our circle of friends. Julie...you are a rockstar :).

So, we have a new lifestyle at home. Sleepless nights as I lay awake staring at the clock waiting to test her blood glucose again. We have had one major hypoglycemic episode that caused seizures in Adelina very suddenly. It just.isn't.right and yet she handles it with grace and awesomeness, often saying, "Thank you" after I give her insulin injections. My mind is filled with keeping two of my kids alive in my home each day. Less than a week after Adelina got home, a couple of days after Christmas, Liviana started breathing heavy suddenly. I checked her oxygen saturations and she was 88-89 so I dusted off her oxygen machine that sat unused for months and got her on oxygen. My biggest fear had happened. Aria had been sick with a nasty respiratory virus the week that Adelina was in the hospital and Liviana had gotten it, along with Adelina (which made her blood sugars a nightmare). This then took us on a journey that at first just seemed like an illness we had to get her over, like before. Her oxygen needs would increase, her fevers would come and go and she became less responsive to us. Things changed one day and suddenly, about a week later and her Heart Rate was dropping way down into the 30's and 40's and it was taking rousing to get her to take a breath again. One afternoon I could not get her saturations up with the machine we had, which only went to 5 liters. Her HR was dropping way low and she was having multiple bradycardia episodes. I was home by myself, literally keeping Adelina and Liviana alive, while keeping G happy and made a couple of calls to get a nursing visit to check on her. They knew the situation was serious when I called them because I never ask for help. About 30 minutes later a nurse and our Hospice caseworker showed up. They thought Livi sounded awful but didn't have the "end of life" signs they often look for. At the same time, Brad and I were told to be prepared and asked if we had let her know it was ok to let go. We had not...I wasn't ready for that...it didn't seem like time...I NEED Livi here with us. The Home Health team had to bring out another oxygen machine going to 10 liters, as her needs were going above the 5 liters we could give her. Brad was on nightime duty with Liviana downstairs while I was on nightime duty with Adelina's diabetes upstairs. One night, at 2am, we passed in the kitchen as I dosed insulin and got something for Livi.  We were both bleary eyed each morning and scared.to.death. We were experiencing this all differently as well. He felt like he saw Livi's fight dwindling and I felt like this wasn't her time. Her respirations were low and her exhalation was longer than inhalation which I clearly remembered as a sign of end of life. This startled me and I texted Brad and he was equally concerned. We were able to get her on Cipro again, like we did when she was sick in May. I prayed that she would start to get well after a couple of days like last time. I didn't sleep each night I went upstairs for fear I would not see her again. I wanted nothing more than to just sleep in her bed, beside her and hold her all night. It is one of my greatest stresses...that I can't give her 100% of myself, as her mom all the time. After a few days on Cipro Livi did start to improve. Her Bradycardia episodes continued until she was off oxygen completely and then they stopped too. It blows me away to see her off oxygen, smiling and doing so well after so much fear that we would lose her. So many people from all over the world sent cards and letters to her. I would sit on her bed each day and show them to her and read them and then we taped many of them up on the wall next to her to remind her how much she is loved.  I have no doubt that all of the prayers and cards and letters make a difference to her.  She knows how loved she is and knows she has much more life to give and lessons to teach.  I'm not sure I could have ever expected her life to help so many people.  The messages we get from people talking about how much she has taught them means so much to me.  She has taught me to live differently, love differently, laugh louder, smile more, don't sweat the small stuff, hug more, snuggle longer, work less, play more and live life with what is best for others in mind.  I can't imagine life without her by my side.



The rest of January calmed down after Liviana was well.  On January 16th, Giovanni turned 3 years old and on January 18th, Liviana turned 5....FIVE.  I can't believe it.  We did things pretty low key without a house full of people this year....too risky with illness season (maybe we should start celebrating their birthdays in July).  We had a dear friend, who is a firefighter, come by with his crew on their birthday weekend to surprise Giovanni. We wanted G to see a firetruck and firefighters (he is obsessed with fire trucks) but didn't want to leave Livi at home for the festivities.  Thank you so much Drew for coming by with your truck!  G was very serious the whole time...staring, quiet, pensive.  Firetrucks are serious business for a 3 year old boy :).  I feel like sometimes G gets lost in the middle of it all.  Miles and Aria are older and get to do more, Adelina is the baby and Liviana is always the center of attention and G is off to the side playing with his firetrucks, wearing his tools and sitting in his "office".   Don't get me wrong, he gets lots of snuggles and play.  He is my little buddy during the day.  He brings me so much joy.  His, "Thank you mama" and "Ok mama" is the cutest thing every single time I hear it.  He is so cute and funny and sweet.  He cares about Adelina and Liviana so much.  I think we worry so much about Aria and Miles and how they will handle things when Livi is gone (we had a big talk with them this last illness round) but I worry quite a bit about G because he won't understand why she is gone...where she is being take and why she isn't here anymore.  That breaks my heart and I hope she is here for many, many more years so he can learn to love her even more than he does today.

I was thinking the other day that one day that G will probably ask me about Liviana and what she has and I will have to explain Metachromatic Leukodystrophy to him and tell him that he has it too.....Wow.  I can't imagine that conversation and the look on his face and how that will change him forever.  When I look at G I see amazing things in his future.  I get this feeling that he will be something amazing when he grows up and what he has been through and all that he can teach others is a foreshadowing of his future.




We are less than a week from our trip back to Milan for Giovanni's 2 year follow up.  We will be gone February 16th to March 1st.  This is the entire battery of tests again that he had at baseline.  The MRI, EKG, EEG, bone marrow aspirate, csf draw, x-rays, ultrasounds, heart echo...the whole shebang.  This is the big appointment....the one that tells them more than any other how this gene therapy has worked.  I am excited and anxious all at once.  I am optimistic that we will have amazing news and can take yet another deep breath until the next visit.  I am probably most anxious about traveling with Adelina and all of her specialized medical needs with diabetes.  We will be traveling with a bunch of new paraphenalia and pray that she has no major hypo or hyper episodes while we are away.  

It has been a difficult 2013 already for MLD and Krabbe families.  I think we all lost a little piece of our hearts when Gummy (Montgomery) Maughn passed away on February 3rd.  His mom is very dear to me.  She is the MLD mom who immediately reaches out to and "meets" all the new MLD families.  She has surprised us with a new blender for making Livi's feeds and a beautiful fruit bouquet last January when Brad was away in Italy with G and I was a pacing basketcase the whole time.  She is a mom who has been there 3 times over with MLD.  She has lost two babies to this horrible disease and is nurse-mom to beautiful Tabitha who still fights and conquers MLD each day.  We love you Cindy and your family is in our prayers.  Livi has a new, very special angel looking over her along with Matthew, Rebecca, Josi and too many others who have flown high already this year.

Every night before I go to bed I give Livi a big kiss.  Even if she is sleeping, I always tell her to have sweet dreams.  When she is awake I talk to her about what dreams she will have that night...what we will be doing...where she will go.  She always gives the biggest smile when I ask her about going to the beach.  Hot air balloons, climbing mountains, going to an ice cream shop can't compare to a beach and sand and water to her.  I cherish the moments we had in Sardegna and thank Erica from the bottom of our hearts for inviting us along on that trip during her conference.  The gift of that time to Liviana is simply priceless.   Toes in the sand, carefree, joyful.   Those are the moments that carry us through the rough times around here.  We have photos of the smiling faces all around us.  Although I see a very different Liviana it is clear that the same spirit is still alive and well behind those amazing, glorious eyes.  Her sweet face and toes in Sardegna.

I am beginning the ritual of packing, preparing and organizing for our trip these next two days.  Aria started coughing yesterday and I want to zip her in a bubble to keep my two mini-travelers from getting sick and keep Liviana well while I am gone.  My biggest fear is getting a call or message that Livi has gotten sick and isn't doing well while we are gone.  Please send all the prayers and healthy vibes her way that she is able to stay healthy and happy during our two weeks away.  Send well wishes that my mini-travelers stay well too.  Illness is havoc for Adelina's diabetes and can get scary fast.  I will swear away anyone who is coughing or hacking near her during out trip :).



I know the year was much more filled than I could get into this blog post.  Those on my FB page are better able to keep up with our busy little family and share in our daily joys, love and fears.  I love you all and love the little family we have built around us.

I will be posting updates of Giovanni's testing and our trip, as I can on the Liviana and Giovanni's Journey Page on Facebook.   I am very happy to have my friend Kelly going with me to help with Adelina while I am in testing with Giovanni.  I hope we can see some sights so she doesn't think Italy isn't all like the area around the hospital.

Thank you for the continued prayers and love for our kiddos.

Hug Your Babies!

Amy

 

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Living and Loving

My apologies (again) for not posting for so long. First and foremost I wanted to let everyone know that on December 21st we found out that Adelina is completely unaffected by MLD. She isn't even a carrier! We were so completely overjoyed with the news. Brad was out of town at the time and I called and said, "We got Adelina's test results"...his voice cracked as he said, "Oh No"...I told him "she is unaffected, not even a carrier". I heard such a tone of joy and happiness in him I have not heard in so long. I felt like I had one the lottery accept a million times better than the lottery. It was life we had one for one of our children. I have reread the e-mail with her results dozens of times. I do not think we had any idea how much the fear was consuming us until we knew she was healthy. I caught myself or some time, and still do, forgetting that we get to see her grow up. That is SUCH a simple thing we all expect when we get pregnant and give birth but it has not been a reality we have known with two of our kids. She is a chuncky,beautiful girl. She is happy and sweet and smiley. She loves Aria and Miles, she laughs out loud at Giovanni and her and Liviana have had some of the most amazing little "chats" that absolutely melt my heart. I have no doubt that she was an amazing gift from above at at time that we needed all the light and love we could get.

Gosh, since my last post we have had Thanksgiving, Christmas, a new year and birthdays. I had anticipated the holidays being a difficult time for us since it coincided with when everything in our world changed a year prior. I ended up being completely wrong. I thought the holidays were wonderful. We had my brother, his wife and their new daughter and my mom here for Thanksgiving. We ate good food, drank wine, smiled, laughed and enjoyed a house full of kids. We went to my sister-in-laws hometown in Kansas for their daughter's baptism which meant seeing people I haven't seen forever and more smiles and laughter. Aria turned 7, we had cupcakes and gifts and she had two friends over the day before Thanksgiving.

The winter has been unseasonably warm which has really helped my mental state this year. The sun and warmer temps are in sharp contrast to the snow covered ground last year as we dealt with MLD and our preparation to leave for Italy. The kids and I were even able to get outside and play in the last 2 months...in January...in Nebraska. To be able to take Liviana outside for sun and fresh air was such a blessing. She gets so excited when I bring her taxi (AKA, stroller) in and tell her we are going outside. Just yesterday it was 69 degrees...Amazing!

I can picture Liviana enjoying the holiday season right along side Aria, Miles and G. I remember when she was almost 2 and our Christmas tree had to be decorated only half way up because Liviana would "undecorate" the entire thing. As the kids decorated I sat on the couch and for a brief moment I could see Liviana hanging ornaments...tall with her curly hair and a sweet dress. I smile the instant I have the thought but then I have to wipe it from my mind or else it turns to sadness...I prefer the brief, sweet image to stay. She was the one who got to pick out our tree this year. We went when we knew it would not be too busy. She got to see the horses and Christmas lights out at Santa's Woods. Our sitter and friend, Annie came with us to help with the tornado G will Brad and I had our arms full with Liviana and Adelina. We totally are like the Griswolds when we go places :).

Christmas was also wonderful for our family. First, my mom visited, then my brother and his family visited again. Liviana loves being able to see everyone. She does get a little overhwelmed with activity at times. Christmas day we had to give her a PRN med because her little muscles started spasming and she just needed a little down time to recover. Brad and I both find Christmas shopping for Liviana to be an emotional experience. All of the kids needed clothes and that was really mainly what they got from us this year. Thankfully, they all seem to like getting new pants or shirts so it is a win-win for everyone. I love picking out things for Liviana. I get her mostly stretchy pants since she has to sit or lay down all day. I figure they are more comfortable than a thicker pant. Unfortunately, most of Aria's old pants were jeans or stiffer material that aren't very comfortable for Livi. Aria also had a lot of sweaters and Liviana overheats very easily so I try to not put her in sweaters often. Even though I can still pick out cute new tops and pants I still get so sad. When you look for clothes for your kids you picture them, well...walking, standing, running in the yard. I do at least...I always picture them standing in the outfit. It is hard to think of what you are missing and the harsh reminder of that when you are doing something as simple as picking out a new dress for your daughter. She loves dresses. Every single day she would put on a dress and then another, and then another until the floor by her closet had turned into a pile of temporarily discarded dresses waiting for the next day's fashion show. I have to consider if it will work with her feeding tube, will it be comfortable for her to sit on all day. In the end I got her mostly pants and shirts but her Aunt Crissi got her a beautiful purple dress that she got to wear for her birthday party.

Toys...a no-brainer for an almost 4-year-old turns into another difficult experience. Brad and I wandered the aisles trying to find something for a child who can't use her arms or legs, can't hold her head up, can't talk. We would pass each other in the aisles and neither of us would speak. I know he was thinking the same thing I was as my eyes were welling up with tears. I remember picking out her baby accessories just two years prior. She loved to dress them, put diapers on them, carry them in a "sling", put them in their bed. Books...books are always good. She loves when we read to her. We also thought of things she can visually watch and a vibrating pillow for her legs. She has had headphones for a while because she likes to listen to music but we could not find any that fit well so we got her some new headphones, a microphone she can make noise into and play it back. She had a wonderful Christmas and in true Liviana fashion, I think she liked the clothes best :).

Giovanni is a little tornado during the day but he seems to gravitate and love all things domestic so we got him a little kitchen of his own that has its own space in our kitchen. He also got a vacuum that looks just like our Dyson from my mom (Dooda). If he was old enough to actually vacuum, do dishes and cook effectively I would have my very own built in Alice (from the Brady Bunch :)). He likes his clothes too. He is just like Liviana and changes his clothes dozens of times a day but somehow always is pantless when company visits. Pantless with his shoes on...that is G.

The new year of 2012 brought...sleep. Let's face it, when you are parents to 5 little ones you are generally in bed at the stroke of midnight. The kids were upset they missed the celebrations so the day after New Years Eve we put up streamers and blew up balloons and had a mini-celebration. In 2012 I pray for miracles for Liviana and Giovanni.

The next big day was Liviana and Giovanni's birthday. Livi was turning 4 on January 18th and Giovanni was turning 2 on January 16th. Their little lives are so tied together. I can't thank all of the wonderful people enough who came out to celebrate their birthdays. I know Liviana can't say it herself but I know she loved seeing people come and wish her well and talk to her. I could see it in her face. We stretched the day out over several hours and had an "open house" type of format so she would not get too overwhelmed. When I made her meal that day for her feed pump I told her I put a cookie in just for her...and I did. Why should she not get a cookie for her birthday just because she can't eat it by mouth :). I would have added a slice of carrot cake but she seems to have issues with dairy and the cream cheese icing may have been to much for her. You can see by the photos below the happiness she has on her face. I adore the photo of Brad and Liviana...it will be getting printed :).












































































Next up was my anxious anticipation waiting for the flight arrangements for Brad and Giovanni. Yes, they were heading to Italy for Giovanni's 1 year follow up. In fact...that is where they are as I type this. To say I miss Giovanni is a gross understatement. I gave birth to him a little over 2 years ago and have never been away from him outside of normal activities like working or when I had my every other day, 8 hour "visitation" with the other 3 kids while in Italy. I was by his side through the surgery, chemotherapy, treatment, etc. I slept with him in a tiny crib at night and woke up with him at 5:30 when they came and took blood from his port and again at 7am when the cranky housekeeper stormed in to clean the floors. This has been so hard but I am eternally grateful for Brad and his strength, love and dedication. G is in good hands. Our friend, Jason went along with him for moral support and to give Giovanni the benefit of two awesome dads.

The last few months have been very difficult for my sweet G. He screams and cries in pain at night. His hands and feet hurt which I am positive is the peripheral neuropathy we also saw in Liviana starting around the same time, only slightly later. Their behavior is identical accept G screams more. He tries to shove his hands and feet under whoever is sleeping by him. He raises his leg in the air and shakes it violently, he screams and cries and it breaks my heart. I lay there away trying to console him. I try to rub his feet, which sometimes helps but other times makes him recoil...he pulls away in more pain more often than not. I have tried all I can to help him. I started giving him his B12 at night before bed and I started using first, Frankincense oil and then St. John's Wort Oil on his extremities before bed. For 2 weeks we saw a HUGE improvement and then it was back to how it was before. I have spoken with our doctor here at length. A pharmaceutical drug would be the next step although I have not exhausted all of my other natural options first. The benefit we have seen with the oil has been fabulous although not always consistent so I persevere trying to determine what is best for him and if that ends up being neurontin then that is what will do. I have woken up in the mornings feeling nauseous with my stomach in knots about seeing Giovanni walk down the same road as Liviana. I really can't even put into words the pain that causes me heart. To already know what he "may" face and not know exactly what he will face could easily break me. Seeing him tear around the corner with is vacuum though snaps me out of that and I try to face only what I have before me.

I don't have a whole lot of details from his testing so far in Italy. He has had his MRI though and tomorrow is his nerve conduction test...both very telling along with the obvious bone marrow aspirate results and cerebral spinal fluid results. My sweet, sweet boy. Just like Liviana, I wish everyone could spend a day with G.

The trip to Italy has been made much, much easier thanks to our wonderful friends over there. Michelle and Cristiano, Erica and Stefano, Rose, Antonino and D....all such blessings to us. It makes me smile knowing that G is getting love and hugs while he is there and not just daily hospital rounds. I miss you all and hope I will see you soon, although I will admit to not missing Milan or the hospital. G and Brad will be home late Saturday night around 10pm. I Can.Not.Wait!

Here are some photos of Giovanni from January 12th...I think it was 60 degrees that day. The doll in his hands is his baby..."Gee"...she goes everywhere he goes and it shows on her...I hope she doesn't fall apart one day. If you have ever seen a doll like this let me know so we can have a back up "Gee".










































































Aria and Miles are doing great. I am afraid though that they are going to get spring fever and we are going to still get a full winter ahead of us. I can't wait for soccer to start again and to be able to get out with the whole family. We are walking distance to the school and I look forward to loading up Liviana and G in the stroller and heading over to get them from school. The air and sunshine are so good for the spirit.

Miles is such a loving and sweet boy. Brad took him to lunch one day after school and Miles suddenly said, "I miss playing with Liviana". He then went on to say that he remembered playing with her and wanted to be able to play with her again. Brad gave him suggestions for how he can sit with her and play cars on her lap or read books with her. My heart aches and I get a lump in my throat thinking of them losing their sister. When ever they are drawing or doing crafts Aria always makes something for Liviana and puts it on her lap. She made a book for her where she had to find the hidden picture...it was so cute. Miles wants her next to him at the dinner table and loves to make her laugh. Her laugh is so amazing to hear...we are blessed to still hear it. Today I called Liviana an angel and Miles got upset...."She is not an angel, she is a person here with us". It reminds me of the conversation in Italy when he suddenly told me he didn't want her to become an angel, he wanted her to stay with us. No child should have to go through what Aria and Miles are along side their siblings. Right now he is making a house for Giovanni to play with when he gets home from Italy out of a box. He had also been looking at pictures of him on my old cell phone. Much to much for a little person to have to face.

All of our kids are such a blessing. Brad and I had a conversation one morning about how each of them were placed here at just the right time knowing what the future held. I can't imagine not having the joy of Aria and Miles and just facing MLD in our lives. I can't imagine not having Adelina to bring light where there was sadness and I can't imagine not having Liviana and Giovanni for the monumental life lessons they show to so many. Not matter what we face with the kids we are truly blessed each day. I never have a pity party or feel sorry for myself....how can I when I have these sweet faces to look at each day.

I have found through all of this that I really don't like to be alone. I am still somewhat of an introvert but I don't like alone, "me" time. The concept of women proclaiming the need for "me" time eludes me. Each time I have had a chance to run an errand on my own to the grocery store or target I can't get back fast enough. Being alone with my own thoughts is not a good thing. I don't know that I have ever left the house by myself on an errand and not ended up crying in the car because I had the down time to think of Liviana and my fears for Giovanni. My fears for Giovanni have been weighing so heavy on my mind so on many of those outings I like to take Aria, Miles or G so I have someone to talk to and keep me focused on the present. That is the gift they give me each day.

It has taken me a cumulative of about 6 hours to get this blog post done. Even with Giovanni gone I have 2, then 3, then 4 kids home after school to take care of, feed, love, change, love, kiss, love...blog posts get pushed to the side. I will, I will, I will try to get better. Brad has the laptop with him in Italy so I will try to use it more and get blog posts done at night as our evenings wind down. I really do want to keep everyone up to date and share to some extent but I struggle with that taking away from my time with the kids. I have the same struggle with my business each day...that is another whole blog.

Love to you all. Thank you a million times to our friends on both sides of the world. Annie, you have been priceless this week!

Hug Your Babies!

Monday, November 14, 2011

~Life~

So much has happened since my last post. Most notably, we were joined on October 21st at 5:13 in the morning by a beautiful little girl, Adelina Faith Price. Here she is at 2 weeks old.





















Adelina has been a huge joy for us all. At this point (though she is always changing) I think she looks like a cross between Giovanni and Liviana. She definitely has Giovanni's nose and her eyes look so much like Livi's did when she was born. The spider like eyelashes are definitely in her future. The kids just adore her. Just like when Liviana and Giovanni were babies, Aria and Miles start and end their days with a kiss for their new sibling. They argue over who gets to hold her next and lay beside her. They have been excited to see her changing and growing already...the start of smiles, the eyes open all the time, the little squeaks and sounds. Liviana just turns to butter when I hold Adelina on her lap. She looks so peaceful and happy. Livi makes her happy sounds and turns her face towards the baby. A couple of times Adelina has given Livi "kisses" as she turned towards her cheek and rooted around...so sweet.

The days after Adelina's birth were full of joy with her arrival but I did find myself in uncharted territory emotionally. I really could not even look at Liviana for about a week without the tears starting to flow. To feel such joy and such sadness all at once was overwhelming. I felt guilty taking care of the Adelina when I normally spent my day taking care of Livi in the same ways...as you would an infant. I found myself reminiscing of when Livi was first home at 4 weeks old and all of the similarities having another newborn girl. I felt so much sadness to hold new life and know that Livi would eventually bring us the emotions at the other end of the spectrum from that life. Even typing this brings those emotions to the surface. New life forces us to reflect, pause and remember and so much of that reflection I saw when I looked in Liviana's face and those huge, beautiful, eye lash covered eyes. The new life represents hopes and dreams for Adelina and the painful reminder that those hopes and dreams I had for Liviana are forever gone. It is not to say that each day I don't look at her with different hopes and dreams but the growing up, going to school, playing with friends, learning to read, playing sports...those things we think of for all of our children, won't happen for her.

By the second week of Adelina's life the post-hormone storm of having a baby was settling down. The tears when looking at Livi were not as often and I was starting to figure out my days and how to balance caring for and loving on Liviana and Adelina. She is a pretty easy going baby. She has had her moments as I try to figure out if she has dairy sensitivity to what I eat or if she has a foremilk-hindmilk imbalance with nursing. It is all working it self out and she loves the weekdays when it is quiet around the house and loves the weekends less :).

3 days after we welcomed Adelina, my brother Tony and his wife welcomed their first baby, a girl named Jensen. I will get to meet her at Thanksgiving and I absolutely cannot wait. I became an aunt for the first time and think that seemed almost as awesome as having my own 5th child.

2 weeks before the baby arrived we moved. I was 38 weeks pregnant and trying to wrap up sessions, photo processing, orders, e-mails, etc. Nesting takes on new meaning when you move at the same time you nest. I was confident that the baby would not arrive until we were settled. Brad did almost all of the moving by himself and I appreciate all of his hard work so much. He stayed pretty focused on how I was feeling and if he had an inkling that I was going to go into labor soon he started rushing around getting more things done to prepare.

The kids and I mostly made the first move to the new house and then Brad made all of the return trips. There was one day that I went with him to pack up the toy room and my desk. He had to run out while we were there so I was left there, all alone for about an hour. I cranked up the Pandora on my phone as a distraction to the silence in the home. It didn't help my mind much. After a while I was texting Brad and wanting him to return soon. I knew the house meant a lot to us but I was not expecting it to be so difficult moving out. While we had moved in a year ago in September, we had only actually lived there about 7 months because of being in Italy. This was the home that Liviana last walked, last talked, last went up and down the stairs. As I went from room to room I would see glimpses of her. As I stood in the living room I vividly remembered being in the house talking with Greg, the landlord, before moving in. Liviana was running from end to end of the room, laughing hysterically with her left arm swinging back and forth. I remembered her laying in her bed shouting the ABC's instead of sleeping, I remembered as she got more unsteady before we ever heard the words, Leukodystrophy, Miles making sure he held the front door for her as she crawled down the front step. I went to the toy room and every time I turned around I found something of hers that she no longer could play with...that she used to love playing with. Her baby set we got her on her 2nd birthday with the carseat and bed, her drawing table for her lap, her xylophone...I came across it all. I walked in the kitchen and saw her helping me empty the dishwasher and walking up and hugging my leg saying, "Lub u mommy". I was crying at this point and waiting for Brad. When he got there I dried my tears (hiding it is better than facing it for me) and said, "let's get out of here". I didn't go back after that. Part of me wanted to, just because I have such an odd attachment to the place. It is as if walking away is taking more steps away from those memories of Liviana. Brad said he experienced the same thing being there so I appreciate him putting in so much time there by himself despite the difficulty.

This is a busy week. Brad will be out of town from Tuesday night to late day Thursday. Miriam from Italy will be here this week and both Giovanni and Adelina will be doing blood draws on Thursday. Giovanni is getting labs done for his next scheduled follow-up and Adelina's blood will be taken back and tested to determine if she has MLD, is a carrier or is unaffected. The thought of even having to take her in to find out her MLD status makes me sick to my stomach with anxiety. I can't even fathom getting that news...it is really too much to even think about...to write about.

Ironically, the testing date for Adelina and Giovanni is November 17th which is the one year anniversary of Liviana's diagnosis of Leukodystrophy. It is one year from sitting in a hospital room as 3 doctors gathered and told us, "she doesn't have a tumor but we are seeing very clear brain signals that are indicating something called leukodystrophy....there is nothing we can do". I remember going out and calling my mom and going into shock, freezing cold and shaking from head to toe. The last year has been a blur...it honestly has. One big blur filled with the moments of intense clarity. It still, other times, seems so surreal, like it hasn't all really happened. Such an absolutely massive change in our lives in one year. As much as I sit and think about how this has impacted us I think of how it has impacted Liviana. What does she think in her mind about the last year? Does she remember running, playing and talking? Does she understand what happened? Does she dream of running and playing again? I hope she has no sadness.

Because of MLD, this time of year will never be the same to me. I really dislike the thought of the holidays. We found out 3 days before Christmas the confirmation that Liviana had Metachromatic Leukodystrophy and so did her brother. The air, the season, the temperature, leaves, snow, Christmas trees, Christmas carols...they all remind me of the most painful time in our lives. I hate that. Maybe it is a blessing we moved since being in the same house would have made these unwelcome anniversaries even worse.

I also don't welcome this "one-year" because it means I can no longer say, "remember this time last year, Liviana was...bowling, learning her ABC's, potty training, changing her clothes 10x a day, posing for my camera, going to the library with me, saying, "byeee new house" every time we left, asking for her sunglasses....those times aren't recent anymore...they are getting further and further away. I fear those memories and her voice in my mind not being as clear one day. Each one of these anniversaries will just be a reminder that we are further from the "remember when" days.

I don't ever want to focus myself so much on how she "used to be" for fear of minimizing who she is now. I adore and love her just as much now as ever. She still makes me smile and laugh, just in different ways. She has Brad's humor..always has. She laughs at the slapstick comedy of life. Her favorite show (besides Calliou) has always been old reruns of America's Funniest Home Videos. I remember (see, doing it again) last summer (2010) she would sit down with Brad and I after the other 3 were in bed and watch the old AFV shows...laughing out loud. She still laughs at them. I told Brad she would be the child who watched the Adam Sandler movies with her when she got older because I don't. She has an awesome sense of humor. Her laughter fills the entire house. It is fabulous!

Livi was in the hospital last week for a day and a half. The pesky virus that Miles and Giovanni had made its way to her but she doesn't get over it as easily. At first she was just sick but in a matter of a few hours she had labored breathing and was barely responsive when I tried to talk to her. We quickly decided to take her in. Brad picked up Aria from school and left with Liviana. They chose to admit her. Her oxygen saturations were running between 92-98 but were more consistently higher than lower. Her lungs were still clear, just mostly bronchial congestion. Miles, Giovanni, Adelina and I visited her and brought her more of her food. When Aria got home she came to me crying and said that she was upset she didn't get to go see Liviana. I assured her that she would be home soon, which made Aria happy. I have to admit, when they got home her condition still made me feel uneasy. She just wasn't herself and it was one of those times where MLD scared me with the possibilities of what could happen in such a short amount of time. By the next day she was better but still running a fever which we battled on and off for the next 24 hours. This virus seems to be lingering for everyone so I am suctioning her often and hoping we can make it through without another hospital trip.

I have been working on this update across 2 days and as expected I have forgotten the other things I had planned to share. I would like everyone to keep the families of Alyssa and Anaya in your thoughts and prayers. Both of these fighting, warrior girls became angels after battling MLD and Krabbe Leukodystrophy. It is heartbreaking to think of what these parents have gone through and they are never far from my thoughts. Liviana and Giovanni have two new angels watching over them.

I do not know how long to expect the test results for Adelina to take. I believe we are sending off blood work to be tested here in the US as well so I am expecting just a couple to 3 weeks. Please keep her in your thoughts and prayers and pray she does not have MLD...I truly don't know how I would handle that news.

That will have to be all for now since my mind is failing me. I am gearing up for two interesting nights with Brad out of town and 3 night waking children (who almost always wake at the same time). Giovanni is the most challenging, as he seems to be in pain when he wakes and is difficult to console. Think happy, sleepy thoughts for me.

I will update as I know about Adelina.

Hug Your Babies!

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Day to Day...This Post Turned Into a Novel

I have had many people tell me that you have to take this trip day to day, even hour to hour. That is so true. You really have to stay living in the exact moment because thoughts of the future or the past both can be too emotionally daunting. This morning I had to go through my photos on Facebook one by one to make sure that they were all set to "Friends" after a friend told me that they were showing up publicly. I did not make it through all of the albums before sitting at my desk crying over photos of Liviana from last year. It did not help that I had an emotional song playing on my computer from a slideshow I had just uploaded for a client. I never know when those moments will hit. If I talk about her to others I feel a lump in my throat, making the clothing shift for fall for the kids was unexpectedly and overwhelmingly emotional, seeing old photos and videos is such a mixture of joy and sadness. I would give my arms and legs to see her run into the room.

To update from my post a month ago...We did not go to Italy for Giovanni's follow up at the end of August. I contacted them and let them know that there was no possible way I would be able to leave Liviana for 2 weeks. It took some time to get them to understand our situation from a real life perspective and not a clinical perspective. Anything could happen to Livi in 2 weeks and as her primary caregiver my absence would have been detrimental to her. Giovanni was not receiving any treatment and rather, had to have another MRI, blood work, bone marrow aspirate, EEG, EKG, Chest x-ray, hearing and vision tests and several other assessments. Given that we live in a pretty medically progressive city, I was confident the tests could be performed here. In the end, they agreed to send two doctors here to collect his blood work and bone marrow and perform his motor skill evaluation. Because the samples are sensitive and had to be tested soon after collection they left within a few hours of his test, to return back to Milan. It was really nice to see Laura (pediatrician) and Francesca (neurologist) again but only on our turf this time. They were really happy to see Giovanni and we had them over one of the evenings to see the other kids, especially Liviana. They thought Omaha was so beautiful. Yes, everyone...it really is compared to the areas they are used to living and where we lived. It is green and lush and they added in "so quiet". They have already told me they will plan to come back for his February follow up if necessary and they will plan to be here longer so we can show them Nebraska. We all warned them that Nebraska is February may be a little chilly and snowy and given that they think 50 degrees is freezing, they may be in for a shock. I am so, so grateful beyond words that they were able to come here instead of Giovanni and I going back there for two weeks.

I was really hesitant going into G's MRI. There is not any clinical or research evidence that anesthesia can speed up the progression of the disease but there is quite a bit of anecdotal evidence from parents who know their children and have seen just that happen. I spoke with this doctor and the anesthesiologist about the issue. Both agreed there is no clinical evidence on the issue with pre-symptomatic children but that there are certain anesthesias they know to avoid with myelin degeneration issues. He was under anesthesia for 2.5 hours for a detailed MRI, blood draws (25 vials) and bone marrow aspirate. When he came out he was a child possessed. He screamed psychotically for about an hour. He was clawing at me, trying to jump from my arms, freaking out about anything touching him...he was absolutely hysterical. They decided he it was from the Versed that was given to him as a pre-med before going in. The screaming episode further worried me because I know that such upset has an impact on the brain as well. For two days after the MRI he sounded like a 600lb. man with emphysema...I am assuming the combination of the breathing tube irritation and screaming caused it all.

Dr. R contacted me about a week later with his MRI results. He showed very slight change from his February MRI to his May MRI and again on the August MRI. That is the downside. The upside is that he showed some slight improvement on the MRI's metabolic readings of Choline from his May to August MRI. They still don't know enough about how the MRI metabolic readings relate to MLD but I will take whatever we can get. They will expect to see the change on MRI before clinical manifestations of demyelination begins. They also would not expect his treatment to "work" at this point, as the new cells don't get to where they need to be in the brain until about a year post treatment. During this in between time, he has the cell presence in his peripheral blood but it has yet to fully cross the blood-brain barrier and integrate there, as it needs to. To say it is nerve wracking is a massive understatement.

I have been feeling literally sick to my stomach as I have seen some things in Giovanni, just in the last 3 weeks that are some of the early things I saw in Liviana. At the time with Livi I never would have thought they would lead to such a devastating diagnosis...I chalked them up to being odd, but not a sign of something so serious. Now, knowing what I know and seeing the same things in Giovanni....well, it leaves me 150% terrified. Just 2 weeks ago I got him up from nap and brought him down to his seat for some yogurt. Within 10 minutes of eating the yogurt he was in a full body shiver from head to toe. Liviana, early on showed temperature regulation issues and I am now seeing those in Giovanni, although I do believe this is earlier than I saw it in Liviana. His balance and walking is getting more unsteady as well. Just since the doctors from Italy were here in August he is more unsteady. He loses his balance more easily and is falling more than he was just a few weeks ago. This too is earlier than we saw this in Livi. I hate to speculate that it is all related to the anesthesia and testing but can't help but see that it falls in line so soon after the testing. He is night waking and seems uncomfortable which Livi did also. He scratches at phantom things and seems bothered by his feet, or his head when we don't see anything there.

All of this is unfathomable to me. I see this little boy who is hilarious, adorable, rambunctious. It is hard to look at him knowing what I know is happening to him. We do not know how and if the treatment will work. It is a challenge for me mentally to deal with that reality each day. I am eternally hopeful and optimistic but sometimes fear that optimism will bite me in the rear (or "tushy" as Aria would want me to say). I love him so much and hate that I am so helpless now and can only stand by and wait. I do pump him full of B12, magnesium, Omega-3's, etc. but I really don't know what is happening in his brain and how fast it will take over his little body like it did Liviana's.

Onto sweet, angelic Liviana. I can't get enough of her. I am seriously addicted to her smell, the way she melts in my arms when I hold her. Right now I sleep with her at night. About mid August she started night waking regularly. It seemed to usually be either a reflux issue (which seems almost gone), muscle spasms or just unknown discomfort. She can't roll over by herself anymore and sometimes will get over to far on her side and go onto her stomach too much and be unable to move. It scares me to death. MLD scares me to death. It seems so unpredictable. The mornings that she does sleep later than me I will obsessively creep up the stairs every 5 minutes to check on her because I fear her ending up on her stomach, unable to get her breath, a seizure, an aspiration or any other things that this horrific disease may be doing to her body. You would think that being awakened multiple times a night would be bothersome but honestly, I don't mind it at all. I LOVE cradling her in my arms and feeling her breath instantly calm, her body soften and her nuzzle her head into my neck as close as she can get. It is the exact same feeling you get when your newborn snuggles into you and immediately calms. I am so often reminded of the very first time I was finally able to hold her at 14 days old after fearing we would lose her. It is the exact same peace that comes over me as it did that day. I wonder if she has any idea that she is giving me as much peace and calm as I hope I am giving to her. This last week she is sleeping better, although we have had a couple of nights with horrible spasms. They get so bad I have to hold her arms because she hits herself in the face, unable to control her arm movements. I am working hard to get the right medication balance for her so she is comfortable 24 hours a day and does not have to endure that at all. It is a struggle because I don't think the doctor's office understands the necessary dosing for an MLD child. The recommended dose is really much too low for her and does not provide her with much comfort at all. Anyone who knows me knows that I am very conservative when it comes to medication so my goal is to keep her comfortable and relaxed but NOT sleeping. That dose is going to change as the disease progresses. I work with natural treatments in her feeds to help her also. I rub Magnesium oil on her and have been trying to find other things to help...it all feels like a crap shoot at times. What is working, what isn't...I will keep trying.

The balance of life since school started has been challenging. It is hard on Livi to get her in and out of the car multiple times a day. I have noticed on days we go places and her body is moved into different positions that she seems more uncomfortable those evenings. With Aria and Miles in school it would mean getting her in and out of the car 6 times a day. As a result of keeping things easier on her Brad usually takes the kids to school and picks them up (Miles is out at 11:25 each day). I have told him we need to try to split who gets to pick them up and take them because I feel like I am missing out on their lives outside of the home. Aria and Miles are both playing soccer, which is really exciting but I have missed one of each of their games so far. I would never choose to miss one of their games. I want to be there cheering them on each day. The first time I missed Aria's game it was a cold rainy morning and Liviana was sick and we did not want to get her out. The second time, she was having a rough Sunday and had finally fallen asleep on me when it was time to get ready for Mile's game. Just like I want to be there for each game, I want Liviana to be a part of all we do too. It doesn't seem like an option to me to leave her home with a sitter while we go to a soccer game. It is a difficult situation and one that I know we will continue to face. We are trying to squeeze a not normal family situation into a normal family life. A challenge indeed.

Liviana did get sick a couple of weeks ago. Aria brought home a runny nose from school. Both her and Giovanni had a little runny nose for a few days. Miles, of course never gets sick...he has an iron immune system. Livi however faced greater challenges when it passed to her. Because of her MLD she has a hard time clearing the congestion herself. I worried so much about it going to pneumonia. She sounded terrible and was having a hard time breathing at night. I was able to get a suction machine, at the urging of other MLD parents, from home health. That seemed to help her although the suction tube is too large for her and the correct size is on back order. She kicked the colds tushy :) in about 5 days with no impacted lung issues. She is so stinking STRONG. She already is at more risk for lung related issues because of her CDH and she makes it through with unscathed....she will always amaze me.

A wonderful, amazing woman from high school, Danielle Kuhn Holtzman sent the girls the CUTEST matching outfits. I was excited to take Aria and Liviana out for photos recently and how off their love and cuteness. The outfits are from HERE...they are so cute and much appreciated! Here are a few of the photos:




























































































































As I have said before, Aria just ADORES Liviana. I will see her sitting holding her hand on the couch. They all give her hugs and kisses before they go to bed (G is always kissing her) and she gets the biggest smile on her face. Miles is protective of her like you would expect from a big brother. They all make me so proud for the amazing little people they are despite so many emotional challenges in their young lives.

A few people have asked where the kids are going to school since they are not at OLL this year. Our kids are selectively vaccinated and the school chose to not accept them as students this year. It was a challenge finding that out 18 days before school started but we found them a new school that welcomed us and seems to be a great fit for the kids. They are very happy although they do miss their friends. The OLL community was so supportive and important to us from the time of diagnosis in November and during our time in Italy. We would never want the people there to think we chose to leave the school, as it was a very important place for us in challenging times.

I have also had people ask about the Wells Fargo account. There is still an account in the name of Liviana Price Donation Account. The original account had the fraud charge cleared in July (as we fully expected) and I closed it right away. The new account had been open for a while and works the same way.

I wanted to thank Cindy Maughan for the gift of a Vitamix blender so I could make Liviana's feeds. It is an absolutely amazing machine and I cannot even explain how much easier it made my life and how much money I save on her food using it. You are one of my heros Cindy. You are a beautiful, strong, amazing woman and the spirit in your shines through in your children. I also wanted to thank Kathleen Scott, Katherine Elizabeth, Michelle Gwin and the Hunter's Hope Foundation. They all came together to get a bath seat to Liviana that had previously belonged to other Leukodystrophy angels. It meant so much to me and Liviana. I requested a bath seat for Liviana from OT back on July 28th and she still does not have one from them. Anyone who thinks that the insurance issue when you have children with special needs is easy is kidding themselves. Getting things you need takes an insane amount of time and each day that passes by you lose a little bit of your child. Your choice is to either buy it yourself or network with other parents to get what your child needs. It is those parents I have to thank for helping Liviana be more comfortable and have what she needs.

I have been waiting on her OT/PT scheduling for well over a month as well. I will not get started on that now. The one scheduling I was contacted for was for the Speech Pathologist to come out and "help her on her speech". Once again...a little research into her diagnosis before calling would save me having to say, "she can't talk anymore and won't ever again, thank you". I didn't request SP services for her anyway. Ok...moving on.

This next update is one I have debated back and forth about sharing. Having less presence with blogging is because I am really not comfortable with the public-ness of our situation. At the same time, we have met some AMAZING, kind, caring, loving people and THOSE are the people we want to share our lives with and those are the people we have to thank for so much love and support when we needed it. I realized that it would be better to share the information now, than a sudden update later. So....our "coming out" :)


Thank you to Jennifer Pinkerton for the gorgeous photo!






























We are expecting...I am actually 37 weeks along. We found out VERY unexpectedly 2 weeks into Giovanni's treatment. I will be the woman heckling from the back of the room of any Natural Family Planning or basic biology class. I swear I defy all "rules" of conception. Despite everything going on and enormous fears, we found ourselves happy to be expecting...it seemed like a bright spot in what had been such an emotionally difficult couple of months (and upcoming months). The pregnancy caused a roller coaster during G's treatment with them telling me I could not be with him....me refusing to not be with him (because of infection risk to him being perceived risk to baby), them telling me I could not continue breastfeeding him....me refusing to stop breastfeeding him and then the lovely, food aversions seeing the same, green trays of food come in each day (I shudder thinking about it). I am VERY lucky to have amazingly easy pregnancies. I don't have morning sickness and except for some hypoglycemic issues I pretty much breeze through as if I were not pregnant.

We of course, instantly worried about MLD. The doctors brushed that off as a non-concern and said I should be more concerned because I had chemotherapy exposure through Giovanni. The OB I finally saw there said that was a non-issue because exposure was too indirect (that is what my research found) and it was too early. This baby has a 25% chance of having MLD. A fact that is on my mind every single hour of every single day. I knew the moment I saw the positive test that it was a girl, and I was right :). To say they were persistent in testing prenatally for MLD is an understatment. I was also extremely dismayed to be told more than once that I could terminate and that "if parents "here" learned the child had MLD would terminate". It broke my heart. I went through the "termination" conversations from wayward doctors when pregnant with Liviana. I look at these beautiful, amazing children, regardless of their genetic disorders and can't imagine such a thing. What would our lives be without Liviana and Giovanni? So, needless to say, we did not test prenatally for MLD. This baby is a gift...a plan from someone else...a plan we will let unfold naturally.

I did ask our doctor here for the probability of having 3 children in a row with MLD and the percentage is 1.2%. I cling to that percentage even though he reiterated that the percentage is for each child which would be 25%...I still cling to it. The doctors in Italy told me that having 3 children in a row "goes against the rules of biology". While that brought me immediate comfort...the fact that I got pregnant when I did to begin with is a bit against those same rules.

The kids are VERY excited. When in Italy and Liviana was still talking she told me she wanted a girl. I cannot wait to see what joy this little one will bring her. I expect to cry often after her arrival seeing my beautiful children together and the different paths they have each taken us down. Aria and Miles talk about her arrival often and really cannot wait. Aria felt her for the first time last night and the look on her face was so precious. She is already bonding with her little sister.

We will test for MLD in November when the doctors from Italy are here for some blood draws for Giovanni. We will likely end up finding out around the same time we found out confirmation that Liviana and Giovanni had MLD. Let us hope and pray the news will be different. I can't even wrap my head around the news being any other than "she is MLD free".

As if we could keep things calm and simple around here...we are moving also. When we moved her last September, before MLD became part of our world our rent was priced right for us. I was working constantly with my business and Brad was working non-stop on harvest. It all worked out well. In late November everything changed and then changed more dramatically on December 22nd. 3 weeks later we were on a plane for Italy, leaving our jobs, for nearly 6 months. I appreciated those who suggested we live somewhere cheaper but uh...we were out of the country. Moving while we weren't even here was not logical. Our landlord tried to get us to stay here but he could not go as low as we wanted to pay. He tried to find other properties of his for us, but none of them were a good fit for us. In the end, Brad found a home 1 block from the school (which will allow a stroller ride to get the kiddos for Livi, rather than being loaded in the car). The home was newly bought by the owner and needed a TON (understatement) of work so Brad has been working tirelessly day and night to get it ready and done so we can move in before the baby arrives. He knows I need to nest and given that this little one will be born at home, just as Giovanni was...the nest is quite important. At this point, we hope to move around the 7th. I will be 38 weeks pregnant. They completely tore out an upstairs bathroom, expanded bedroom walls, replaced bathroom, redid floors, walls, put in new heating, air and electrical, tiled the kitchen, painted, etc, etc, etc. Bless his sweet heart for working so hard for us.

In addition to all of this I have many sessions coming up and a wedding I am photographing on Saturday. Yes, a 10 hour wedding day at 37 weeks pregnant. Piece of Cake...I am serious :).

So, is this update long enough. Goodness and I just thought of a few more things I could share....next time.

Thank you from the bottom of my heart to those who are standing by us through this roller coaster of a journey. It is hard, it hurts to our core, it is joyful, emotional, spiritual, loving, learning and growing.

Hug Your Babies!

PS...if there is anyone out there who fancies themselves a painter Brad could sure use the help to get the house done :).

PPS...Anastasia...where are you?