Wednesday, April 9, 2014

A Day of Celebration and Thanksgiving



Last Saturday we had a beautiful celebration of Mom's life. It was poignant, heart-felt and emotional, but those who spoke certainly had us smiling, laughing, singing and even clapping our hands in joy as we remembered many wonderful stories about Mom. 

Dad, Katharine, Michael and I were so very grateful for the many people who attended, including many who had traveled far to be there.  Mom formed such close, authentic bonds with people throughout her life; it was so beautiful to be surrounded by all of her family and her many kindred spirits. The only regret of the day is that we wish we had more time to spend with each of those who came.

We were also very fortunate to have a talented member of the First Baptist congregation record the service and put it on You-tube.  The link to the recording is at: http://youtu.be/NlKbksw7vrI or you can search You Tube for A Service of Celebration & Thanksgiving for Denise Soares.

Of course a celebration of Mom would include talking about her life as "DeeDee". During the service, the grandchildren, grandnieces and nephews came forward and discussed with Pastor Don about what DeeDee had taught them about sand dollars - and then they broke open a sand dollar right there at church to release the sand dollar doves inside.

Photo of children with Pastor Don 

Photo of a successful opening of the sand dollar

Children each receive a sand dollar dove to take with them


Katharine's nine year-old daughter Graylin shares our mother's love of writing and poetry. She wrote a lovely poem for DeeDee and showed great poise reading it at the service.  

Photo of Graylin reading the poem



Someone asked if we could include here on the blog, and so here it is:


They’re giving it life

Just walking in a door
Will tell you
All you need to
Know.
You’ll be able
To tell
Who a person is
By their shelves,
Their collections,
What’s hidden in their nightstand drawers.

I know people with rooms full of books,
People who cover all space in collections.
There are people
Of the sea,
People of the air,
And people of their home
Then some people …
Are everything.
That was DeeDee.

I love the people
The ones who
Frolic and play.
Who live in the night sky,
And kiss the sun.
I know ones who
Collect the salty beach spray
And keep it in their hearts.
DeeDee did all of this.

A penny is worth more than one cent.
Every seashell and sand dollar
Has a story to tell
And few people see
The specialness,
The gift of unique life
In something, someone
So ordinary.
And then people who do
Can always live on,
For they caught love
In their own bare hands.







For those reading this by email, you can find the photos by going to followingdenise.blogspot.com

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Mom's Service on Saturday

Dear Friends and Family,

As many of you know, Mom's memorial service will be this Saturday, April 5, at 11 am at First Baptist Church, 228 North Main Street, Fall River, MA.  We will have a reception afterwards in the church hall.

For those of you making your first visit to First Baptist Church, here is some additional information.  The church is on the corner of North Main Street and Pine Street, across the street from the Fall River YMCA.  The church does not have its own parking lot. There is street parking available as well as an office parking lot around the corner from the church at 181 Pine Street that is available on Saturdays for church parking.

We are very grateful for those of you planning to attend the service. Mom has friends and family across the country, and we completely understand that some of you are not able to be here on Saturday. We know you hold Mom and us in your hearts and prayers.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Mom's Service

Dear Family and Friends,

Thank you so much for all your kind words, stories and prayers.  In this past week, we have been really enjoying hearing about Mom in your letters and messages.

We wanted you to let you know that Mom's memorial service will be on Saturday, April 5, at 11 am at the First Baptist Church, 228 North Main Street, Fall River, MA.  We will have a reception afterwards in the church hall.

For those who are coming from out of town, we will be arranging room reservations at the Hampton Inn in nearby Westport, MA, 508-675-8500. Please wait until after March 17 to call for reservations.

Here is a brief write up about Mom that will run in the Fall River newspaper a week before her service.

With love and thanks, Mom's family


Pastor Denise Soebbing Soares, 68, of Tiverton, RI, passed away on March 8, 2014, after a courageous battle with pancreatic cancer. She was the beloved wife of Edward J. Soares.

Denise was born in Ipswich, MA, daughter of the late Marie Dunn Soebbing and the late Thomas J. Soebbing. Raised in Rochester, NY, she attended Our Lady of Mercy High School. An enthusiastic and bright student, she graduated from the College of New Rochelle with a BA in literature. There she met her loving husband Edward of forty-four years. They raised their family in Baldwin, NY. Denise nurtured in their children their love of learning, nature and family traditions.

After college, Denise worked as an in-house editor for several companies; as office administrator for several churches; and also ran her own handmade crafts business. At age 57, Denise entered Andover Newton Theological Seminary, MA. Denise was ordained an American Baptist minister, and felt blessed to be the pastor of Calvary United Presbyterian Church in Fall River, MA.

In addition to her husband, Denise will be greatly missed by her children, Christiana Jones and husband Jamie; Katharine Lucas and husband Chris; and Michael Soares and wife Jiff Martin. Her beloved grandchildren will fondly remember “DeeDee”: Graylin Lucas; Jackson, Sam and Juliet Jones; Elliot Rose and Robin Soares. She is also survived by her sisters Patricia Shields, Mary Ann Thomas, her brother Thomas Soebbing, and her nieces and nephews.


The memorial service celebrating her life will take place at the First Baptist Church, 228 North Main Street, Fall River, MA, on Saturday, April 5, 2014 at 11 am; reception to follow. In lieu of flowers, please direct donations to Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Adult Palliative Care Program, 450 Brookline Avenue, Boston, MA, 02215.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Final Journey and Blessing

With heavy hearts, we want to tell you that our wonderful Mom passed away on Saturday, March 8. Our hearts ache with a loss that we do not yet even fully comprehend, but we find comfort that she is free of her earthly burdens and can be her true beautiful and radiant self once again. As a dear friend said, heaven has gained a truly bright star.




The night before Mom's passed, one of Mom's beloved friends said a beautiful prayer as the family gathered around Mom.


"Guardian of the Galaxies,
Mother of the Universe,
Father of the Stars Beyond Counting,
may we rest in thee tonight."

We will celebrate Mom at a memorial church service at First Baptist Church of Fall River, MA, the church of her adult baptism and ordination.  The service will take place on Saturday, April 5, 2014, at 11 am.  The church is located at 228 North Main Street.

We are sorry that we are not able to call you and all of Mom's friends to personally share this difficult news. Thank you so much for holding Mom and us in your thoughts and prayers.

With love,
Ed, Christiana, Katharine and Michael


followingdenise.blogspot.com

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Gathering Around

We are gathering around Mom, physically, emotionally and spiritually over the past few days. As the saying goes, we've laughed and we've cried.

On Monday, instead of getting the gastric tube she had been waiting for, the doctors felt she was pretty sick and perhaps had aspiration pneumonia. They told us to gather the family and be with her.  It did seem touch and go that night, and we were so grateful when several times she opened her eyes and talked to us. The next day she seemed a little stronger and we again thought we might be able to take her home soon. But yesterday she was weaker again, and we sat with her all through the day and night - waiting, watching, talking, sharing. Morning has dawned again and as I write this, she is enjoying the sunny view out her window. 

We have decided it is best for her to remain here. She has not talked about going home in awhile and she says what good care she is getting here. She loves the doctors and nurses, and she has become a favorite of theirs.

You are here with us. Some of you sent prayers and blessings to share with her, and Mom and all of us have loved them.  Each was was different, and each one touched Mom.  We picked up a bunch of mail being held at the post office and she had a pile of cards for us to read to her.

We've been watching in the room old home movies we recently had transferred to DVDs.  It's great for Mom and us to see Mom and Dad on their honeymoon and being with us as babies and young children. A wonderful life it's been.

In the last few days, Mom has shared amazing stores, interesting visions, and some really funny one liners. She said earnestly last night, "I'm ready, I'm ready, oh Lord, I'm ready." She and God are working out the details. 

Monday, March 3, 2014

Your Favorite Blessing

Mom's good friend from her church gave her these wonderful prayer cards with Bibles verses and prayers.  Tonight the four of us each read one aloud to her and we talked about what words and ideas jumped out at us.

We enjoyed doing it very much.  Mom really loved it.  We said we should do it again and select new blessings.  I thought it might be nice if Mom's friends and family sent Mom their favorite blessing, prayer, Bible verse, or poetry to share with her and us.  You can send it to dsoares5@cox.net.

Mom had a great weekend, but is having a really tough time tonight, struggling not to spit up bile.  I'm counting the minutes to the gastric tube is placed today.

One of the prayers enjoyed tonight from St. Thomas Aquinas:

Grant us o Lord the minds to know you, hearts to seek you, wisdom to find you, conduct to please you, faithful perseverance in waiting for you and a hope of finally embracing you. amen

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Update on Mom

Mom is still at the hospital; she was moved to the Palliative Care floor where there is a tremendous team of caring medical staff and a quieter atmosphere than the surgical/trauma floor she was previously on. The doctors are trying to make her more comfortable and manage her symptoms so she can enter into a hospice program, either at a hospice residence or at Mom and Dad's home.  

To ease some of the pain and pressure, the doctors inserted a catheter that will be able to easily drain on a regular basis the fluid created by the tumors in abdomen. Due to the bowel obstruction, for the past two weeks Mom had an NG tube placed in her nose to drain her stomach and the tube was becoming very uncomfortable. The plan is that she will undergo one more procedure to insert a gastric drain which will have the same effect as the NG tube draining her stomach. This will allow Mom to have the comfort of drinking tea, broth, water and juice without the build up of pressure in her stomach and without the tube in her nose. This procedure is slated for Monday.

We had two really low days in the hospital last week. One day she was in a great deal of pain, and the following day she was very, very lethargic and not too responsive. The next morning when I went to her room before daybreak I was surprised to find her awake. I could immediately see she was feeling much better. She had another delightful nurse that morning and mom told her all about her sand dollar collection and broke open a sand dollar we had at the hospital to show the nurse the doves inside. In the company and embrace of her sisters, Mom cried about how fast things seem to be happening. She talked to Dad and us later that day, a heart-felt and heart-breaking talk, but it was good for all of us to have that talk. She was high spirits yesterday, feeling like she had a good day.

We will let you know if there are any other big changes and when she gets discharged from the hospital.  If the gastric drain is placed on Monday, I would think the earliest would be Wednesday.

Thanks to everyone for their blog comments, texts and emails. We read them to Mom all the time.  There has been a bit of delay with mail since mailing getting forwarded to Florida is now getting forwarded back to RI, and is on hold at the Rhode Island post office.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

More about Mom


As we spend more time as the hospital, we see there are fewer medical options to provide long term help for Mom.  Yesterday they did place a third stent into her colon, but they were not able to place it where they wanted to.  The GI team said there was a small chance it would alleviate the obstruction, but it seemed more likely that the stents or future stents would not work.


Mom’s surgeon came to talk to her last night, and the rest of us were with her.  He spoke to her thoughtfully and gently about her situation.  He said that surgery to fix the bowel obstruction was a tough option because there were many downsides – it might not work, it would be very difficult to heal, new tumors could cause new obstructions.  With no chemo options available there was nothing to keep the cancer in check.  Mom said she was interested in having her remaining time be of the best quality that it could be. He said it could be a few weeks, it could be a few months, but gently suggested it would not be much time.


Mom was so very strong and amazing during the talk with the doctor.  She said this was not the news we had been hoping for, but in many ways it was not a surprise.  Mom talked about how grateful she was for this past year, how it had been such a gift to do special things, to spend time with friends and family, to enjoy life.  As I write this I don’t have enough mental or emotional capacity to find the right words or even remember her exact words to convey how inspiring Mom was and how helpful the doctor was to her and us.


We would like to bring her home to her Golden Pond House for hospice care, to watch her beloved pond, to be near her fireplace, to be with Dad and us. However, that is difficult to know the specifics at this time.  The doctor is weighing different options about whether to place some tubes to continually drain her fluids.  She is experiencing one of her intense pain episodes this morning, so the doctor's first priority is to manage her pain.  We hope to bring her home within the week but we just need to take things day by day.


When her pastor and a few of her close friends from seminary came this weekend, Mom told them that she really felt that God was leading her through all of this, just like how he led her to Rhode Island, the church there, then seminary and ordination.  This too was part of her journey and she felt God’s presence along the way.  She also said they she really felt held up by everyone’s prayers.  Thank you for your wishes and prayers for all of us. 

ap

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

The Latest

Yesterday was overall positive news.  The CT scan done Monday showed the GI team a better view of the partial bowel obstruction, and the scan did not seem to indicate a new major tumor issue.

The GI doctors late yesterday afternoon inserted a stent into mom's colon with the hopes of opening up her partial bowel obstruction. This endoscopic procedure took more than two hours.  It will take some time to see if this works; over the course of the next few days the stent will slowly open.  It seems more than likely the doctors will do another endoscopic procedure at the end of the week or early next week to see how much of an opening the stent is providing and to place another stent a little further up in the colon. It would be a great sign during the next few days if she could move her bowels on her own. This would hopefully go a long way in releasing the great pressure of the fluid and air in her digestive tract. 

Last night after the procedure the NG tube draining her stomach was not working properly so mom was up most of the whole night. The three of us with her at different times throughout the night, Katharine being with her for the most difficult part.  They moved her to a private room today so she could get more rest.  The medical care there continues to be very good - not only smart and competent doctors and nurses, but also very caring. Being at the hospital makes us even more in awe of the family and friends in our lives who work in the medical profession.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Mom is Back in Boston

Yesterday we flew with Mom and Dad from Florida back to Boston. With big snowstorms up and down the East coast on Thursday, we were very grateful that our flight was on time and uneventful. Mom made it through the flight and undoubtedly no one on the plane knew how sick she was.  After arrival at the airport, we drove directly to the emergency room at Brigham and Women's Hospital.  The hospital was so crowded that the ER waiting room was moved to the hospital lobby so they could use that waiting room to treat patients.  Since mom's surgeon knew she was coming and due to her health issues, they fast tracked her and she was seen relatively quickly and then admitted.  

Looking at her scans taken in Florida, the Boston doctors see the narrowing of the colon that is causing much of her pain and bloating.  The oncological surgical team proposed that perhaps a stent could be placed in the colon during a endoscopic procedure (similar to a colonoscopy) to enlarge the colon's opening.  This would be a minimally invasive procedure as compared to surgery.  However, there are many issues for the gastrointestinal team to consider (such is there enough of an opening to insert the stent and will the stent stay in place after insertion).  The "advanced gastrointestinal team" is meeting with the oncological surgical team on Tuesday to review previous scans, an upcoming scan and mom's overall medical record before making recommendations regarding the stent or other procedures.

Poor mom is dealing with many issues in addition to the partial bowel obstruction.  Her pain fluctuates and can get bad very quickly. Here in Boston they placed her on a IV where she can control her own pain med dosing.  She has gained 30 to 40 pounds in fluids in the past two weeks, distending her stomach and filling her legs with fluid. This makes walking and moving around painful.  Some of the fluid retention is from the cancer, but they think a majority of it from the bowel obstruction.  Last night in the middle of the night she started spitting up stomach contents so they inserted a NG tube into her nose to drain her stomach.  It was difficult to place the tube and took several attempts, but she did find relief as some of the intense pressure was relieved.  Mom is also on a catheter to monitor her urine output. Tonight that was not functioning, making mom feel like that everyday has something new to deal with and overcome. (As I write this, Michael tells me the new catheter seems to be working.)

With all these issues going on, we are so glad that we were able to bring her to Boston and this hospital.  In our first hour of talking with the doctors in the emergency department and oncological team, we learned so many new things through their thoughtful ideas and from their clear explanations.  While there were some very good doctors and nurses that stood out when mom was in Florida, the caliber of the doctors in BWH in Boston is amazing. I said to mom in the ER, "I feel like we are on a different planet." 

Dad is hanging in there. The hustle, bustle and noise of hospitals are not conducive to an 88 year old man who has difficulty walking and hearing. He worries about mom and is not sure at times what to say to her. He is glad to have his kids and family around to help mom and him too. Right now in Boston, we are staying at a hotel very close to the hospital where we can take dad back and forth to see mom. 

We will let you know what the doctors decide on Tuesday. Thanks for you good thoughts and prayers for mom!

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Heading North Soon

Mom is still in the hospital and it's been a tough week for her.  They did not want her to leave there until she moved her bowels, so all sorts of measures were tried from medicines to a painful gastrografin enema.  Scans did not indicate a blockage, so they performed a colonoscopy yesterday.  The gastroenterologist found a partial obstruction he believed potentially caused by a tumor on the outside of the colon, though recent scans have not shown a tumor in that region.

We are flying out of here on Friday, waiting for the big snowstorm on Thursday to pass.  We will go from the airport straight to Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston to be admitted to the hospital.  There her surgeon from the Dana Farber Cancer Institute will evaluate her to determine if she does have tumor constricting her colon, if surgery alleviate the blockage (resulting in a likely colostomy), and evaluate how her overall health and strength. Mom wants to keep pursuing options and the doctors think potentially there are some measures she can take. Mom's oncology team in Rhode Island has been wonderful in helping us sort through all of this, and we have great confidence in them and in her Boston surgeon to guide her and us through all of the upcoming the decision making.


Currently Mom is able to walk around, she is on a clear liquids diet and her pain level fluctuates from uncomfortable to severe pain at different times of the day.


A year ago when her surgeon first told her that it was stage 4 cancer and therefore incurable, he said that perhaps chemo could turn a life expectancy of "months into having months and months."  This was my initiation into the vague timelines given with terminal illness.  The surgeon was right - Mom has had many months and months, and overall it has been a wonderful year.  To use a similar analogy, I think some of the current options being considered could turn having just weeks into having weeks and weeks.  Of course, she and all of us want for time that includes a quality of life that makes it all worth it. Decisions are ahead - some will be made by mom, some will be made for her depending on what future evaluations determine.


After we got the bad news from the GI doctor about the partial blockage, there was a knock on the door and it was someone from the pastoral care team asking if we were interested in a prayer - and we said yes!  Mom is still finding comfort and strength in prayers - and in sunsets.  She gets out of bed to take pictures of the sunset she sees from her hospital window.


Thanks for your prayers.  We will keep you posted after what we learn on Friday and the weekend.

Monday, February 10, 2014

Update on Denise

Please keep mom in your prayers.  She is having a tough time right now.  She has been having bad abdominal pain for several weeks since being in Florida.  It reached such a high level of pain last Wednesday that she went to the emergency room and has been in the hospital since then.  She went through a battery of tests looking for an obstruction, new tumor masses, or infection.  What they did find among other things was abdominal fluid retention which could be a sign the cancer is more advanced than we thought.  Her doctor in Florida has advised mom to return to Rhode Island to be with her family and her team of Dana Farber doctors.  This news was a devastating surprise for mom; she felt like she was getting better and doing well all things considered.

However, mom is not being released from the hospital in Florida yet because mom is not able to move her bowels (likely due to pain medication but they looking for other causes) and because at certain times of the day the pain meds are not able to control her pain. We are not certain when she and dad will be leaving Florida - at the moment Patty and I are down here with them - but we hope we can fly them home within the next few days or within the week.  It will be very hard to mom and dad to leave her - they love it and they have wonderfully supportive friends down here.  But mom realizes she wants to spend time and treasure life, family and friends up back at the Golden Pond home.

I know you have many more questions - all of us in our family do too.  The doctors are being helpful but they are not able to give us a road map at the moment how exactly this is going to play out.  I will keep you posted when we know more, when she is going home to Rhode Island, when she might be able to visit or talk with people.

We are all so grateful for your love and support of mom and dad.

Love, Christiana, Katharine and Michael

PS She is not able to talk on the phone much - gets tired and has a very dry mouth at times.  If you were going to send her a letter, I would send it to the Rhode Island address:

979 Old Stafford Road
Tiverton, RI
02878


Monday, January 6, 2014

Epiphany 2014

Today the Feast of the  Epiphany - the feast of the Wise Men following the star to find the baby Jesus. It has always been one of mom's special days. A year ago on Epiphany, we were in Boston preparing for her surgical procedure to learn how advanced the cancer was. It was stunning and devastating when the diagnosis had come back as stage 4 cancer. All seemed very dark and very bleak, and the idea of following light, following a star seemed so relevant, important, and hopeful.

A year later, mom has followed the light and the warmth of our closest star, the Sun, and has traveled with dad back to Florida for the winter. She and dad got out just in time on the day snow and arctic weather descended on New England.

Mom received chemo today. Since the week of Thanksgiving, after she fully recovered from her ovarian cyst surgery in October, she is back on a schedule of receiving chemo every other week. All things considered she is doing really well, though there are days, especially late in the day, where she does not feel 100% and needs to take some pain meds and rest. Her blood tumor marker is higher than it was in October but has been stable recently. There are certainly times of high stress and frustration about setting up doctor appointments or worrying what is causing her to at times not feel well. However, Mom continues to have a great overall attitude. She and her granddaughter Graylin went outside on New Year's Eve at midnight to ring bells to welcome the new year and 2014; mom was excited about the new year. 

We all gathered in Rhode Island for Christmas. It was wonderful to have all of us be together, especially the grandchildren. The kids had a great time with their DeeDee and Vovo.

On this day of Epiphany, we thank all of you for being on this journey with mom and all of us this past year. Your love, prayers, good wishes and messages have meant the world to mom and us, and have helped us all to keep focused on following the light, following the joy.  Much love from us to you!  Happy New Year.

Mom and Dad hope to be in Florida through the winter months.  Their Florida address:

1550 NE Ocean Blvd B102
Stuart FL 34996

Photo of Mom and Dad in Rhode Island on January 2 before heading to the airport.



For photos and to post comments, go to www.followingdenise.blogspot.com

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Update

With apologies for being so long since posting; I know you have been wondering how Mom and Dad are doing these days.

They did go to Florida for a few weeks in November. She got the go ahead from her Boston surgeon that all looked good and she was okay to travel. Unfortunately for at least half their FL trip, Mom did not feel very well.  She had aches and pains, and generally did not feel good. The doctors were not sure if there was an infection from the surgery, so they put her on antibiotics.  When she still not feel better, they did scans looking for abscess or additional cysts, but they did not find anything.  When she felt better and was ready to get her first chemo treatment in over six weeks (she had to stop before and after the cyst surgery), the doctor said while her surgery incision overall looked great there was a very small section not completely healed. As a result Mom had to wait again and get clearance from another doctor before she finally received chemo on the Friday before Thanksgiving.

Since then Mom has felt really well, and is appreciative how good life is when one is feeling well. She and Dad flew up from Florida a few days before Thanksgiving. They spent Thanksgiving at the farm, and everyone thought Mom looked really great. We had much to be thankful for!

This week Mom has been going with Dad to several doctor appointments. He never complains, but he has been dealing with a cough, a shuffling walk at times, more hearing issues than usual and a flare up of psoriasis. The doctor ordered a chest x-ray yesterday and EKG today to rule out any time of infection or congestive heart issues. We expect he is okay but it is good they are making sure.

Mom has her next chemo next Monday.  She and Dad will be in the northeast through New Year's, and then plan to return to Florida for the rest of the winter.

Love from the tree farm! Christiana



Photo of Mom and Dad before heading off to Florida in November




For photos and to post comments, go to www.followingdenise.blogspot.com



Saturday, October 26, 2013

You Will Heal Very Well

We wanted to let you know Mom's surgery went very well yesterday. (Sorry not to let you know earlier - the hotel we stayed at last night in Boston did not have a wi-fi connection.) The surgery lasted less than two hours, which was much shorter than expected. The surgeon said everything went well, there were no surprises and the two large cysts were removed. Mom was in a fair amount of pain when she first reached the recovery room, but she got better as the day went on.  

Today the doctors have said she is doing so well that she can probably go home tomorrow, on Sunday, just two days after the surgery. Mom has been up, walking around, eating well, and chatting with the nurses. She still does experience pain when she gets up from laying down or sitting, or when changing her position in bed, but after major abdominal surgery that is to be expected.  We will know tomorrow for sure if she will be discharged but she certainly is on the road to recovery.

Mom attributes much of her healing due to the great power of people's prayers and to positive thinking.  So many of her friends and our family friends have sent prayers and good wishes - we are all grateful.

At the suggestion of the hospital she read before the surgery, "Prepare for Surgery, Heal Faster", a book by Peggy Huddleston of mind-body techniques. Mom really responded to the positive messages in the book, using guided imagery to focus on healing and not on the pain. She had the surgeon read several healing statements during the surgery.  At the end of the surgery while she was still under anesthesia, he said, "Following surgery, you will heal very well so you can pick shells up at the beach."

So hopefully she will be able to pick up shells on the beach soon!  She and dad have plane tickets to go to Florida in a few weeks.  We will keep you posted.




Friday, October 18, 2013

Wisdom for Life

A much delayed entry . . .  partly due to the fact that for much of time Mom has been doing pretty well, and partly due to my life at the farm getting busy during pumpkin season.

Mom did have a very good September (more about that later), but she is currently dealing with two large ovarian cysts that need to be removed surgically. The doctors have been monitoring the cysts since May, but in the last weeks the cysts have grown to the size of grapefruits. Mom was feeling intense bouts of abdominal pain and found out after a trip to the ER one night that the cysts were pressing on her colon. The cysts are not cancer tumors but their growth is related to the cancer. As one doctor described it, they are by-products of the cancer.

Mom needs to be off chemo for about two weeks before having the surgery. Surgery is scheduled to take place on October 25 at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. Being that it is abdominal surgery she will be in the hospital about three to five days.

Understandably Mom is frustrated how this issue with the cysts interfered with a planned trip to Rochester for her 50th high school reunion and visits with family. Also, she and Dad originally planned to drive to Florida this week to spend a month there before returning to RI for Thanksgiving through Christmas. If the surgery and recovery go well, she hopes they can still fly down to Florida for a few weeks before Thanksgiving.

The scans of the ovaries and surrounding area showed that the tumor in the pancreas is stable and has not grown, so that's good news. Hopefully it will continue to be stable as she will need to be off chemo for a few weeks due to the surgery.

Mom did have some very good times in September.  Over 30 of her college friends joined her and Dad for a lunch at the farm.  Mom went to the College of New Rochelle, an all women's Catholic college in New Rochelle, NY - that's where she met Dad.  The college's motto is Wisdom for Life.  Her college friends are a such a wonderful, warm, friendly, down to earth, interesting group of people.  As Mom told them that day, her college friends and college experience were not the wind beneath her wings, but the very wings themselves, bringing her to new heights as a young woman and supporting her now.

Another great time was when Mom and I returned to the eastern end of Long Island for a weekend trip. We visited the Montauk area where our family had our annual camping trip for over twenty-five years. It was a wonderful trip down memory lane - a perfect time capsule of our much loved family vacations.  Our trip was complete with a visit to see Jane, one of Mom's dearest friends and mother of my good childhood friend from when we lived in Baldwin. It was great to see Mom and Jane talking and laughing just like old times. Though things had changed so much for both - Mom dealing with cancer and Jane the loss of her beloved husband - they still had much to laugh about. When I wrote Jane after our visit to say how inspiring she was to me, she said she could not do without the three F's - Faith, Friends and Family. 

Mom will be looking to faith, friends and family in the next few weeks when she is in the hospital. Thanks for your love, good thoughts and prayers.

Friday, September 13, 2013

Let Us Rejoice and Be Glad in It

Mom has had a really great month, topped off with good results from a scan this week. The scan showed that the tumor is still less than an inch and has not grown. The scan also showed that there were not any new tumors. Mom and the rest of us were very happy with the news. The previous week she had a blood test that showed that the tumor marker has continued to decrease, and to now under 300.

Before these recent tests, Mom and the rest of us had taken a vacation from cancer when we all went to Cape Cod for the week. We had a wonderful trip. Almost every day we go to a great bay beach close to the house - the kids love how the changing of the tides create a whole new beach experience every time we go. It's a good place for Dad, with a pretty manageable walk from the car to the beach. It was so much fun to be all together - lots of great memories in the making.

Mom continues to do things that make her happy and keep her going. She preached at her church Labor Day weekend . . .  and she bought two dozen pink flamingos for her yard.  As she says, "they make me smile."  We will have to get a photo of Mom with her flamingos, but here's a picture of the whole family at the Cape. For the past few years, we have made some tie-dye shirts during the vacation. This year, because Mom loves stars, we each created and painted a star shirt.  Mom's shirt featured the star on a sand dollar.  This weekend Mom and Dad are looking forward to a mini-reunion we are hosting for their dear friends from the College of New Rochelle - where Mom and Dad met almost 50 years ago.




For photos and to post comments, go to www.followingdenise.blogspot.com

Friday, August 16, 2013

A Great Big Heart

We are off to Cape Cod tomorrow to spend next week with Mom, Dad, Katharine, Michael and me and our families.  It will be a great time. This is our 9th annual family trip to the Cape. For Mom and Dad it combines their favorite things - beach and grandkids.

Mom was able to successfully receive her chemo recently.  After her scheduled week off from chemo, her white blood cell counts were, in the words of her doctor, "excellent".  (Mom said it was so nice to hear him use the word excellent for something.)  After the first treatment in this round, to boost her white blood cells, she received shots at the hospital on WTF (that's Wednesday, Thursday, Friday - that's a little joke from the family reunion). Those shots helped so she was able to receive her next chemo on schedule. Also her tumor blood marker had gone down from the 800s to under 400. So that's all very good.  She really was really wiped out yesterday probably as a residual side effect of the chemo earlier in the week, but feels much better today.


Mom and Dad have been having a great time with Katharine and her daughter. Mom woke up with them several times this past week in the middle of the night to watch the Perseids meteor shower.


Also this past week Mom went Katharine and her daughter to the DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum in Lincoln, MA. She enthusiastically exclaimed to all of us that this was her favorite museum of all time!



Photo of the Big Hearts Sculpture, a favorite of Mom's




Photo of Mom with the Great Big Heart




Photo of Mom with Newspaper Sculpture, 

joking she discovered the crossword puzzle.  

Hope this sculpture does not give her or other
ephemera collectors we know any big ideas.






For photos and to post comments, go to www.followingdenise.blogspot.com

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

A Starry Night

This past weekend Mom and Dad had a wonderful time at a family reunion and party at the farm. Folks came from as far away as Texas, North Carolina, Maine, Georgia, Pennsylvania and upstate New York. Mom loved having her sisters, her brother and their families all together - plus some of her cousins too. She also had friends there from elementary school through graduate school. Mom and Dad were able to meet a few young great-nieces and nephews for the first time, as well as connect with dear friends some of whom they had not seen a while. It was a weekend full of stories, laughs and great food that culminated with "A Starry Night" party in the barn. 

We hope to share some photos in the next few weeks, but I wanted to say a quick note of thanks to the many awesome people who helped Katharine, Michael and me plan and host the reunion. Also heartfelt thanks to all who were able to come - you being there is what made it so special.

As Mom said to everyone in the barn that night she has really felt lifted by everyone's prayers. Thank you.

Photo of Mom relaxing on the swings after the weekend.


For photos and comments, go to followingdenise.blogspot.com

Monday, July 29, 2013

Life Current

I recently finished reading Against Wind and Tide, by Anne Morrow Lindbergh, the book that Mom loved reading a few months ago. I really enjoyed Lindbergh's touching letters on motherhood, career, grief and nature.  Many passages reminded me of Mom, and especially this one:

"Prayer opens the heart and connects ...to a life current.There are other ways of being connected with the life current: being with people you love, seeing the beauty of a flying bird, or hearing music... One says thanks, and one's heart is suddenly infused again with the life current."

Mom continues to find great joy in nature - from the watching the families of turkeys that visit their yard to watching the sunsets on the pond. With Dad, she has been thrilled to attend operatic performances and a chamber music festival in Newport. Certainly she has been happy being with loved ones, mostly recently enjoying having Katharine and her daughter on the East Coast this summer.

Mom started her third type of chemo this month. Again, she has done amazingly well tolerating the side effects of the chemo. After the months of chemo now, her hair has become so fine that she has started wearing a wig at times.  

However, the chemo is very rough on her white blood cells. Her first treatment of Gemzar/Abraxane reduced her white blood cells counts to the lowest they have been; therefore, her next chemo treatment was cancelled. There was a fair amount of confusion and concern for her and us about all the ramifications of the low white blood cell counts - could she go out in public? was being with the grandchildren too risky? would the white blood cells be able to rebound? would she be able to do this chemo?

The following week her white blood cell counts did improve. She was able to receive a chemo treatment, and her doctor outlined a plan for her to receive shots of neulasta and neupogen on her chemo weeks to stimulate her levels of white blood cells. This week she has a scheduled week off from the chemo.  We will all keep praying and hoping - thanks for your prayers and wishes for her and us.

Mom, Dad and all of us are looking forward to having a family party this upcoming weekend for Mom and Dad.  It will be great to have the siblings, the grandchildren, the cousins, the second cousins and a few family friends together.  There should be lots of opportunities to connect to the "life current".

Photo of Mom and Dad before going to the Music Festival



Photo of recent Pink Sunset on Golden Pond


For photos and comments, go to followingdenise.blogspot.com