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| RH in the back yard |
Next week I'm going through a familiar ritual.
I'll be gathering together a useless heap of distractions, gnawing my fingernails off, and waiting for hours that seem to have no end in the hospital's MRI waiting room.
I've been doing this for five years- almost six. I've lost count of how many times I've gone through these motions. I could tell you with absolute certainty how many times it's been, I have
obsessive records. But I really don't care to spend any of my free time going through the grim details of M's early months
after his diagnosis.
But this time, it's going to be different. This is another new waiting room. This time, I'l be waiting at the Children's Hospital.
You see, when she was about two months old, RH did this totally normal baby thing. She put weight on her legs. She seemed to really enjoy it. And then one day she just... stopped.
And really, that shouldn't be much of a cause for concern. So she doesn't want to put weight on her feet? So what? She still kicked like the dickens, she still put her feet in her mouth, what did it matter?
It became an adorable little quirk of hers. You'd pick her up, and she'd just stick her feet straight in front of her. It was pretty darn cute.
So at the six month check-up, her pediatrician asked if she stood at all, and I said she didn't.
She thought that was a little odd, and recommended that I call early intervention to have her evaluated. I did. When the evaluation came through, they recommended physical therapy for an hour a month. I thought it was laughable.
Then the nine month appointment came around. We still hadn't actually gotten started with her one hour
a month of physical therapy, and she still wasn't standing.
In fact, she wasn't getting to sitting by herself, pushing to her knees, crawling, or pulling up to her feet on furniture.
I'd been very aware of this. I tried to trick her into it on a regular basis. Doorway jumper? She wasn't interested. Exersaucer? Just a chair with a tray. Dance parties? Forget about it.
But her legs were obviously
very strong. Whatever was going on, it wasn't muscular. There were a couple of explanations.
First, and most obviously, she didn't feel like it. There's no telling a baby what to do and when to do it, they just do what they want. So she didn't want to stand up, and why should she? Her sisters and I are more than happy to give her what she wants, she doesn't exactly need to work for it.
The second though, that was the kicker.
The pediatrician told me that because of M's history, she wanted RH to see a neurologist.
Especially because she had put weight on her legs, and then she
stopped.
The pediatrician said not to panic, that it was probably nothing, but that she should be checked by a neurologist. I asked if she was going to schedule a CT or and MRI, and our doctor said no, whatever she set up would probably be something the neurologist didn't want. Murphy's Law, she said. So she should just be evaluated by the pediatric neurologist and they would decide what to do.
I held my happy, kicking, babbling baby on my lap, and sqeezed her, nodding and taking mental notes on what the doctor said. Willing myself to stay calm even though my stomach seemed to have relocated to somewhere behind my collarbone. I smelled her hair, and felt her unbearably soft skin, and I did not panic.
With my ears buzzing, with the words "pediatric neurologist," I went to the pharmacy. The inside of my head was an unbroken stream of
don'tpanicdon'tpanicdon'tpanicdon'tpanicdon'tpanicdon'tpanic...
And I didn't. I kept my cool.
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| She's pretty cute, right? |
I kept reminding myself that until I knew for certain that there was anything, anything at all, wrong with RH, she was
just fine. She was better than fine, she was perfect.
When M got home, I told him frankly and without a trace of fear that I needed to make an appointment for RH at the pediatric neurologist. His reaction was predictable. Outright terror.
We both knew that M had the
most common variety of childhood brain cancer. We both knew what it could mean to see those white masses on the scans. As frequently as his neruo-oncologists told him that there wasn't a genetic link, who knows? There could be...
But I didn't panic. And M didn't panic. We agreed- no reason for it until we knew that something was wrong.
We also agreed not to publicize it. We might be capable of staying calm, of keeping perspective, but we couldn't count on anybody else. We didn't want to unnecessarily frighten them. People don't know how to react to M's battle with cancer now, and he's almost six years from his date of diagnosis. So how would they react to information like this?
But deep down inside, my heart felt like an eggshell with a tiny crack- ready to simply shatter and collapse.
I had to schedule RH's neurology appointment for a soon as possible, and the only way I could get her an appointment even in the same calendar month was to take her to an outpatient clinic an hour and a half away.
And so, I dropped my big girls off at their best friend's house, and I drove the ninety minutes to the far flung regions of the 'burbs. Alone, with the baby sleeping peacefully in her car seat.
It was an unbearably long drive.
The pediatric neurologist was a lovely person. She was kind, and understanding, and utterly non-threatening. That was nice. She did a much more thorough examination of RH than the early intervention folks had, which wasn't surprising. RH liked her.
Then she told me that she didn't think that RH had brain cancer, and I very nearly cried.
Instead, she said, she thought RH had a cord tether. I actually knew what this meant, a friend of mine has two little girls around the same age as my kids, they both had cord tethers.
So she told me to schedule a spinal MRI for RH as soon as I could, and to get a full blood workup and MRI of the brain
just in case.
And if she's right, and RH has a cord tether? She'll need corrective surgery. Yes, on her spine.
And if RH is completely fine and there's nothing wrong at all and it turns out she's just a very stubborn girl who doesn't want to put weight on her legs right now?
Well, that would be even better.
The hour and half drive to collect RH's big sisters was dramatically shorter than the one to the 'burbs. But no less filled with anxiety and circular trains of thought.
Regardless of the MRI, the pediatric neurologist prescribed twice weekly physical therapy. That hasn't started yet. It's amazing how much red tape there is when you're trying to get involved medical services for your child.
That pediatric neurology appointment was about three weeks ago. Now? RH gets to sitting by herself. She gets to all fours. She army crawls.
She even stands if you set her in front of the piano.
I want to think she's just trying to give me a heart attack. That was taking her time, waiting to take these developmental steps in the grandest, most dramatic way possible.
I'll still be taking her to the hospital next week to get her MRI. I'll still be holding her until she's fully sedated and asleep, I'll still spend the next several hours staring blankly at my kindle screen and not taking in a word of the first book I've had the opportunity to sit and read for ages.
It's going to be a long day.
It's so difficult to know what I'm feeling at times like this. If I'm feeling terror, or relief, or even nostalgia. I don't know what the layers upon layers of stress are doing to me. I don't know if I want to allow myself to be lulled into a sense of security by her progress, or if I want to maintain my fight-or-flight reflexes and not be caught emotionally off-guard for bad news.
Rh is blissfully oblivious. She plays with her sisters, makes mad, creepy-crawly dashes for forbidden corners, shoves fistfuls of grass and dirt into her mouth. That's her job.
Mine is to worry. And simultaneously not to worry.
And to give her endless kisses on her soft, chubby cheeks and arms and hands, to tickle toes, and to gently wash the oatmeal out of her hair. To watch her sleep, and marvel at how much she resembles me, and M, and her sisters, and her grandfather. To feel dreadful when she cries, and to feel unfathomably happy when she grins at her daddy.
That much I can handle.