Blog Archive

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Success!

She did it! They were in and out in 20 min, home before Matt's virtual ALS clinic started at 8:30 and we got to spend the afternoon #paintingcats with the incomparable @amanda_evanston. What a treat!

Venturing out

Today Elizabeth had to venture out from our quarantine cocoon to get her blood drawn. Matt took her into the hospital and without touching any surfaces, whisked her in and out so later today her transplant team can make the necessary adjustments to her immunosuppression based on the results. Will you pray for her protection, and specifically for her Tacro levels to be optimal so we can space out her blood draws and limit her COVID19 exposure?

God has sustained her life for 15 years now, and we know he will be faithful to continue.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Coming up for air


Hello! I’m finally coming up for air! πŸ˜… Quarantine has been for us, like it has been for so many. We’ve relished in even more together time with Matt working mostly from home.  We’ve played games, worked some puzzles, read some books, taken a few walks at a safe distance from friendly neighbors. We’ve FaceTimed or Marco polo’d, or zoomed to stay in touch with friends, our church family and our family-family also sheltering in place around the world.  I’ve taken up stress-baking & stress-eating...just to keep balance. πŸ˜‰


We’ve also struggled to find a rhythm for our new normal...just when I thought I’d found my footing, Ruby spiked a fever on Wednesday night and we found we had to separate her from Elizabeth both for the risk of COVID19 and honestly the risk of ANY exposure to ANYthing now that she’s so immunosuppressed. 


Mercifully, a neighbor on our floor is out of town for the next month, and we were able to schlep ourselves to their apartment! πŸ™πŸΌπŸ™ŒπŸΌ Such grace. 
Now we wait. E needs to be away from Ruby for 14 days...so we’re counting down to a week from this Saturday...until then, we FaceTime and zoom and I get coffee delivered to my door every morning by a handsome delivery man. πŸ’—


Sunday, March 15, 2020

Social-distancing & an update

It’s been so long since I’ve posted any updates about our family or Elizabeth’s transplant recovery. Honestly, I’ve been battling with low-grade depression since E’s surgery & it’s been easier just put my head down & deal with the urgent needs in front of me.  With COVID-19 in the forefront of all our minds, some of you have been checking in & I wanted to let you know how we’re doing. 
Social distancing has been our middle name since November! After two glorious weeks in February when we got to visit colonial Williamsburg mostly mask-less & attend a class for school IN PERSON...we’re back to our old routine of self-quarantining & keeping Amazon & Instacart in business. 😷. The GREAT news is, Elizabeth is doing brilliantly from a transplant recovery perspective. Following months of tinkering with her meds on a weekly basis, her labs all look  great, & she’s once again gaining weight, & is fully off the additional immunosuppression required for the first 3 months post-transplant.  She got a mild cold and handled it like a champ, so that bodes well! She’s been having a mysteriously high heart rate for a few months now, so we’re investigating that, but all-in-all, she is doing so well. 
Many of you have asked...Matt’s still working in the hospital, but they are pushing off any non-urgent patient visits they can & utilizing tele-medicine whenever possible.  He had his first “possible exposure” experience last week and it really drove home the reality that for him, and us, if feels like it’s only a matter of time. 
I’m not exaggerating when I say this only feels a *bit* different than how we’ve been living for the last 15 years.  So much of our future has been uncertain for so long. “Through many dangers, toils and snares” we have seen God’s daily bread provided so faithfully that we know he will continue to meet us where & when we need him.  We have learned, even without certainty of our future, we have deep & abiding hope & it is our prayer that we can share that peace & toilet paper πŸ€— we have with our neighbors during this scary & uncertain time. 
Please pray for our protection & for joy to abound in our home.  How can we pray for you?? πŸ’—

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Thankfulness Abounds

If our best laid plans had worked themselves out, we would be sitting in the hospital waiting area today while Elizabeth underwent a living donor liver transplant. Instead, I woke up with thanksgiving on my lips and got to snuggle with My firstborn, a cup of coffee and my journal. πŸ’—Because God's ways are infinitely better than our ways, we have been home for TWO WHOLE WEEKS and Elizabeth's liver has had 24 days of its second life. πŸ’—Ruby turned 12, Thanksgiving came and went and Elizabeth's recovery has been so very smooth. Sometimes when the weight of want to say is so great, I simply can't find the words. The reality that we are home and enjoying these precious and mundane moments together is a miracle and a tremendous gift. Words seem too small, but I will try to express what's in my heart.πŸ’—Life was shared with us, at great cost to someone else. We owe such a debt of gratitude to our precious donor.  We pray Elizabeth's second chance life will bring some measure of comfort to a family walking through great loss. πŸ’—Today also looks very different for our living donor family. Lisa is a childhood friend of mine, who willingly put her and her family's life  onto the rollercoaster our family was on when she offered to share half of her liver with Elizabeth. Lisa and her husband spent a week here this summer undergoing tests to make sure she was a perfect match. She began to up her exercise and even completed 3 triathlons to give Elizabeth the strongest liver possible! Our initial date of Nov. 7th, was postponed to Jan., then moved up to Dec. 3, and Lisa was gracious and patient with all the changes, expressing that her priority was "for Elizabeth to get the best possible liver".  Lisa's family was totally on board and ready to spend their holidays here in post-op recovery. When we got the call, their family did too. Their family stood on the sidelines and cheered us on, even as they processed that their precious gift wasn't going to be able to be shared. πŸ’—Lisa's commitment to be available whenever we needed her allowed us to have incredible peace about waiting and hoping for a deceased-donor transplant. The stress of not knowing if and when our lives would changed was mitigated by the knowledge that we had a transplant date on the calendar. πŸ’—πŸ’—Lisa and Jared, are heroes to our family. Generous, gracious heroes. We love you


Instead of heading into a transplant, we headed to our weekly bloodwork and follow-up appointment. Elizabeth's liver continues to thrive. She's stopped losing weight and is no longer dehydrated. She's been off pain meds entirely for over a week. Her spleen (impaired by the clot in her portal vein) is working perfectly now & she no longer has neutropenia! She's a walking miracle. 


To say we are thankful is an understatement. To say we are tired,  is a fact. πŸ˜³πŸ˜‚ God has been so faithful. Happy BELATED Thanksgiving. πŸ’—










Sent from my iPhone

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Home and Healing

I'm sorry I seemed to drop off the face of the earth as soon as we hit the front door! After a few days of adjustment (read a little less TV, a smidge more sleep, & lots more family time) Elizabeth is in her happy place. She's still pretty fragile, so God forbid she get any school work done, :) however she's got plenty of energy to take short walks around the apartment to earn her TV time, (Mom's a drill sergeant) and she's got Grandmas and Sisters to keep her supplied with treats. Her first follow up appointment went well. She's lost quite a bit of weight, so we're trying to get her appetite back, but her liver is still very happy and overall, she's recovering so well!

My mom (Granna) left on Friday morning, and Matt's mom (Grandma) came Friday evening. We're so blessed by Grandmas who travel and jump right in to support and encourage us!

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Home!

She's home! First the girls had to soak he every minute of media time (notice the πŸ‘€) πŸ˜‚, then we got the third rundown on all her medications, set up our clinic appointments, packed our bagels and hailed a taxi! Clearly she's a New Yorker. 😍 so so happy to be home sweet home. πŸ“· credit: @suzie.peterson

Monday, November 18, 2019

Miracle of miracles!


Thank you so much for reading these updates, and responding with your encouragement and prayers! Your support during this time has been an incredible gift. πŸ’—

It is a marvel to see how far our Joy-child has come in such a short time:
πŸ’—10 days ago we received the call. 
πŸ’—9 days ago someone gave us the greatest gift, and 10 hours later she was recovering in the PICU with a perfectly-matched, healthy new-to-her liver! 
πŸ’—4 days ago she underwent her closure surgery. 
πŸ’—Today, she worked with OT, PT, got in and out of bed without help, took a shower, climbed up and down a flight of stairs, walked 6 laps around the fourth floor,sailed through a chest X-ray & abdominal ultrasound confirming her lungs have fully recovered, and had both of her drainage tubes removed. Her abdomen is officially “sealed up tight” and if all goes well tonight, her team would like to send her home tomorrow! πŸ˜­πŸ™ŒπŸΌπŸŽ‰πŸ’—
FRIENDS!! I’m speechless. And eating celebratory strawberry pie! #itwasawholepie #nowitsnot
God is so so good! 

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Happy Sabbath



Visits from two different therapy dogs πŸ’—
Breakfast treats sent from a friend πŸ’—
Having two new friends from @tgcwestside as part of Elizabeth’s care network at the hospital πŸ’—
Retro bingo complete with the ball tumbler makes for a sweet girls’ afternoon πŸ’—
Get well cards from friends at @tbt.nyc  to cheer Elizabeth’s heart πŸ’— 
Happy Sabbath πŸ’—

What a Difference a Day Makes!

If I tried to give you the play by play, it would take me 6 paragraphs, so I'll simply say, praise be to God, Elizabeth is on the mend! 

* She has been fever free for over 24 hours
* Though she still has significant chest pain due to her collapsed lung, her hatred of the high flow oxygen πŸ˜… has motivated her to practice slow deep breathing, πŸ™ŒπŸΌ and she is slowly improving!
* Her abdominal pain is so improved that she no longer needs her pain med pump. Oral meds means she can get transferred out of the PICU πŸ™ŒπŸΌ
* She took 2 walks and sat up for about 4 hours in total today! 🀯 Remember how she had abdominal surgery only 48 hours ago?! Between the physical therapist and the respiratory therapist and the nurse, she had quite an adoring entourage! 
* Her appetite is slowly returning and she enjoyed both pizza and a friend's homemade Mac and cheese! πŸ• πŸŽ‰ #ispydaddystealinghermuffin 😜
* Because her heart rate, oxygenation and respiratory rate were stable, we gave her a trial off of her oxygen & she did amazingly! 
* Because she'd spent all afternoon off her oxygen and was maintaining her sats, she was cleared from respiratory therapy, another hurdle to leaving the PICU

Finally...just after shift change, we got assigned to a room outside of the PICU! And by 9pm, we were making ourselves at home on the 4th floor! 

Needless to say, it's been a wild ride, and we go to bed with thankFULL hearts. πŸ’—



Sent from my iPhone

Friday, November 15, 2019

A Bump in the Road

After almost a week of steady improvement, today Elizabeth hit her first significant bump. She began having heart rate spikes, then developed a low grade fever and trouble breathing. Based on her bloodwork, cultures and the chest X-ray, her left lower lung is collapsed and she has a pulmonary embolism. Both of these can be side effects of abdominal surgery (No one wants to breathe deeply when their belly hurts!) but it's terribly uncomfortable. They also saw some fluid in her abdomen and her white blood cell counts indicate she's got a bug brewing, so she's in the right place to be taken care of quickly. As of late this afternoon, she's definitely more comfortable with high flow oxygen, we've ruled out the terrible things (the liver is still happy) they've tinkered with her meds and now we wait. πŸ™πŸΌπŸ™πŸΌπŸ™πŸΌπŸ’—πŸ’—πŸ’—
As I walked from home to the hospital this afternoon, this song (Be Still my Soul) came to mind. I drew so much courage from knowing the One who was there when she came into being, is with her now. Her body still knows it's Maker and will listen when He says "Peace, be still".

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Surgery 2 Update

She's back from surgery, mostly comfortable after some big bumps in her pain support, and now we're starting the last leg of Phase 2 of our transplant journey! Shockingly, she could be home before thanksgiving! My brain is still not computing that possibility, but that's what I'm praying for! πŸ’—

Closure Surgery

Elizabeth is back in surgery to close her abdomen this morning. They expect it to last between 1-3 hours. Leaving is the worst part. I snapped this pic last Saturday morning as we were heading to her transplant. She was wheeled away on her bed this time...anxious but brave as always. So much has happened in less than a week! Praying for sweet dreams wisdom for the doctors, and a successful closure. πŸ’—πŸ™πŸΌπŸ’—

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Fun Memories

Tbt The girls' first Scout overnight camping trip! πŸ™ŒπŸΌ We were only 13.1 miles from our front door, we were gone for exactly 24 hours, and we broke down camp and hiked out in the rain, but it was a blast! Scouts is just one of the activities we've intentionally added to our family schedule this year. We were so thankful the camping trip took place just weeks before the transplant! We're thankful Ruby & Hannah can still participate while E is recovering, and we're especially thankful for precious family time.
πŸ’—
Today was another great day for Elizabeth. She still has bouts of severe and distracting pain, but she's also acting more and more like her healthy self. She's such a trooper. Her overcoming joy, amazing tolerance and quirky sense of humor amidst all the poking and prodding and invasion of her physical space is inspiring, and brings out the best in me when I'm with her. She's a rock star patient. Meanwhile Ruby & Hannah are troopers too! Pray for all the tender, tired hearts. It's hard to be outside the eye of this emotional hurricane. πŸ’—πŸ™πŸΌπŸ’—
Thank you friends

Monday, November 11, 2019

A Walking Miracle

Thank you to everyone who prayed for Elizabeth’s night! It was so much better. Matt thinks he gets at least *some* of the credit, and in exchange for staying again tonight, I’m gonna let him. πŸ˜‰   Long story short, she slept well, wasn’t as agitated and let everyone get good sleep! What mercy.
πŸ’—
Today was pretty eventful for her. We’re making baby steps toward getting transferred out of the PICU. In fact, she’s a walking miracle. And by “walking” I mean, literally, standing up and taking a walk to the far wall! πŸ€―πŸ™ŒπŸΌ a little more than 48 hours have passed since she received a liver that “doesn’t know it’s been transplanted,” (I’m looking at you normal liver function tests!?) and she’s doing brilliantly! (Swipe to see the proof!)
πŸ’—
She also was able to graduate from a bunch of her IV meds. She’s a pro with pills, so once her blood thinners reached the right level, they were able to take out all this hardware!
πŸ’—
Please pray for another night of good sleep, protection for all of us from the winter bugs flying around, 😷 and for her pain to continue to improve.
πŸ’—
Thank you precious friends. Your prayers and support are lifting such a heavy burden off our shoulders. πŸ’—


Sunday, November 10, 2019

Liver Love and Some Ups and Downs

The last 24 hours have been both really good and really hard. First the good: medically speaking, Elizabeth is doing amazingly. Her liver is acting like it didn't know it was transplanted! πŸ™ŒπŸΌSo many numbers are coming back in the normal range. She *sat up* today, got a dressing change and finally bit of a spa treatment courtesy of her awesome nurse. So thank you for all those prayers! They really are sustaining her. Also in the "good" column is: a nap and a short for Mama; E got a visit from Granna & the girls; a visit from our pastor; meeting the newest @torrejonclan baby, born a few floors up from us on the same day as Elizabeth's new liver! We really have so much to be thankful for. πŸ’—

Now the hard: Last night was pretty miserable for E. She was in a great deal of pain and was extremely uncomfortable and discouraged. Neither of us slept much, which made it all feel worse. Mid-afternoon her dressing became loose and without going into a lot of details, it was really stressful for her for a number of hours.
Tonight we've gained some ground on her pain management, and Matt has worked up a satisfactory cover for her wound dressing so please pray for deep rest for both of them, as well as all of us at home.

Saturday, November 9, 2019

Rest & Recovery



Friends, she’s out of surgery, and recovering in the PICU. We are blown away by God’s mercy.  Everything went so smoothly! The precious gift liver was a perfect match. They had to do some work-arounds, and as a result she has a “temporary closure”, which will be replaced in a week or so once the swelling goes down. But everyone is really happy with how the day has gone. 
I’m going to put my phone down for a while, but I must tell you how faithful our God is.  Yesterday, in the early hours of the day I was reading my bible and reflecting that in Acts 12, scripture says that Peter was sleeping in prison, chained between guards and likely aware that he could die the next day. Meanwhile “the church was earnestly praying to God for him.” I recognized the trust required for Peter to sleep and leave the outcome of the next day in God's hands. But after more reflection I realized how Peter was *resting* and it was the church who was doing the work. Peter wasn’t the one interceding for himself, he wasn’t *acting out* his faith. He was resting.  

Yesterday, when the hope of transplant was still a month away, God gave me the grace to believe HE &; YOU, our friends and family, would do the work. We could rest and receive His care. 

All through the day there were little nudges that made us see that God was working. Matt ran into our surgeon on the train and he let Matt know E was at the top of the list in the region. This didn’t guarantee her anything of course, but after weeks of not seeing any possibilities, we felt hopeful again.
Later in the morning we had an orthodontist appointment and I followed my gut and we removed her braces.  This was a sweet moment of celebration and makes her oral hygiene so much easier in the hospital! It also meant she had pizza as her last meal before we had to stop her food and drink. 

As I mentioned before, we had weekend childcare in place, so the race to the hospital was offset by a fun night for Hannah & Ruby. The Chandlers brought their A Game and hosted both a cupcake bake-off and a building competition today. To have Ruby and Hannah loved so well is just priceless.

While waiting in the ER to be called for surgery at 4am was so painful, once we got upstairs, Matt and I were able to crash in an unused pre-op room. The sweet nurse wheeled in two gurnies, and we got a couple of hours to sleep!  
After the shift change a new nurse  brought us to a room with a door! #itsthelittlethings and we were able to wait there for the whole day. Lunch & dinner from a friend, so many texts and calls and prayers and offers of support from all of you made such a hard day, so much easier. 
Elizabeth came out of the ICU with amazing stats. In real time she’s miserable (she deserves to feel awful), but on paper, she’s doing an A+ job of being a transplant recipient! My mom hopped on a plane and will be here for the next few weeks. Friends, we are so very thankful. We’re exhausted, overwhelmed, amazed and humbled by the mercy and grace we’re experiencing. Thank you for continuing to do the work while our family rests in such beautiful provision. πŸ’—







Rest & Recovery


Friends, she's out of surgery, and recovering in the PICU. We are blown away by God's mercy.  Everything went so smoothly! The precious gift liver was a perfect match. They had to do some work-arounds, and as a result she has a "temporary closure", which will be replaced in a week or so once the swelling goes down. But everyone is really happy with how the day has gone. 


I'm going to put my phone down for a while, but I must tell you how faithful our God is.  Yesterday, in the early hours of the day I was reading my bible and reflecting that in Acts 12, scripture says that Peter was sleeping in prison, chained between guards and likely aware that he could die the next day. Meanwhile "the church was earnestly praying to God for him." I recognize the trust required for Peter to sleep and leave the outcome of the next day in Gods hands. But after more reflection I realized how Peter was *resting* and it was the church who was doing the work. Peter wasn't the one interceding for himself, he wasn't *acting out* his face. He was resting.  


Yesterday, when the hope of transplant was still a month away, God gave me the grace to believe HE & YOU, our friends and family, would do the work. We could rest and receive His care. 


All through the day there were little nudges that made us see that God was working. Matt ran into our surgeon on the train and he let Matt know E was at the top of the list in the region. This didn't guarantee her anything of course, but after weeks of not seeing any possibilities, we felt hopeful again. 


Later in the morning we had an orthodontist appointment and I followed my gut and we removed her braces.  This was a sweet moment of celebration and makes her oral hygiene so much easier in the hospital! It also meant she had pizza as her last meal before we had to stop her food and drink. 


As I mentioned before, we had weekend childcare in place, so the race to the hospital was offset by a fun night for Hannah & Ruby. The Chandlers brought their A Game and hosted both a cupcake bake-off and a building competition today. To have Ruby and Hannah loves so we'll is just priceless.


While waiting in the ER to be called for surgery at 4am was so painful, once we got upstairs, Matt and I were able to crash in an unused pre-op room. The sweet nurse wheeled in two gurnies, and we got a couple of hours to sleep!  After the shift change a new nurse  brought us to a room with a door! #itsthelittlethings and we were able to wait there for the whole day. Lunch & dinner from @eliswads, so many texts and calls and prayers and offers of support from all of you made such a hard day, so much easier. 


Elizabeth came out of the ICU with amazing stats. In real time she's miserable (she deserves to feel awful), but on paper, she's doing an A+ job of being a transplant recipient! My mom hopped on a plane and will be here for the next few weeks. Friends, we are so very thankful. We're exhausted, overwhelmed, amazed and humbled by the mercy and grace we're experiencing. Thank you for continuing to do the work while our family rests in such beautiful provision. πŸ’—