Adahlia’s 1st Acupuncture Treatment & Experiment Success

So this is fun!  I just gave Adahlia her first acupuncture treatment.  Now, we’ve been doing Japanese acupressure for awhile (Shonishin) with favorable results.  But today, Adahlia was having a tough time with her mood.  She was irritable.  Persnickety.  And so I asked if she wanted some Shonishin. (She calls it “tapping and magic”.)   She said yes.

We went to the clinic room and she stretched out on the table.  I began the regular Shonishin routine, adding in some muscle release work and shiatsu at the base of her skull and along her trapezius.  (There are some very important points here, especially related to behavior, depression, and the marrow.)  She immediately passed out.

This is not so uncommon.  Such deep relaxation is a sign of a very therapeutic treatment.  But my response this time was new.  As I continued doing shiatsu down her affected channels, loosening constrictions of fascia and opening flow for energy and blood circulation, I decided to gIve Adahlia her first few needles.

I decided to do them on two areas that her body was advertising could use the help:  Her two dark brown “freckles” hidden in her hair.

Whaaat? you say.  Freckles and moles and “beauty marks” are pathological? 

No.  Not pathological.  Indicators of areas where there is a blockage.  A stasis.  They are surface-level expressions that something isn’t flowing right underneath them.

They are the body’s way of saying, “HEY YOU!  DOCTOR WITH ALL THE THEORIES AND COMPLEX MUMBO-JUMBO OVER THERE IN THE GLASSES SWEATING ABOUT THIS SUPER-COMPLEX CASE THAT YOU CAN’T FIGURE OUT!! YES! YOU!!!!!  CAN YOU SEE ME???  HELLOOOO!!!!  THE BIG PROBLEM???!!!  IT’S RIGHT HERE!!!!

It’s a pretty clear message.

Don’t believe me?  That’s okay, you don’t have to.  But to learn more, visit my website and sign up for my newsletter so I can email you when my blog is active.  One of the posts will be about the subject of beauty marks, moles, freckles, and what they tell us.  It is fascinating!  🙂

At any rate, Adahlia has two blackish-brown freckles on her scalp over her left ear hidden by her hair.   They are on the gallbladder channel — not surprising at all to me (though that probably is baffling to anyone who doesn’t know much about gallbladder energy, where it sits energetically in the seasonal/clock cycle, or its connection to the marrow, but that’s okay.  And oh, that’s right… DBA is considered a bone marrow failure disorder.  Would it surprise you to know that the brain is considered the Sea of Marrow?)  Those two little fellas received two needles each.  She didn’t stir, so I continued to do acupuncture:  some points in her ears, some on her scalp, some at key points on her Du Mai (Governing Vessel).  I added in some acupressure point stimulators at other key points for marrow and blood and did some reiki.

And she’s still passed out.  (That’s why I’m writing this.)

Adahlia is almost four years old now.  Naps such as these are rare when she’s not anemic, and she just received a blood transfusion last week, but I don’t think she sleeping because of a growth spurt.

I think she is sleeping because she is healing.

We are in the process of a great integrative medicine experiment.  Now of course, we’ve been working in an integrative medicine fashion since she was born.  But recently, I’ve really stepped it up.  I dove in.  I decided it was now or never, read and researched everything I could get my hands on from the GAPS to the SCD to the paleo- to the autoimmune to no-sugar diet, and created a diet of our own.

When we first started this experiment nearly 9 weeks ago, Adahlia went from never napping to napping nearly every day.  One day during the first two weeks, she napped twice for a total of five hours.  And yet, she was not doing worse in terms of anemia – she actually went 5 weeks between transfusions.

In many very important ways, she is doing better than ever before:

Adahlia sleeps more deeply now at night, not shallow or fitfully.  She has fewer nightmares. Now, she usually reports no dreams at all or she says something like this: “I took a deep breath and dived down, down, down into the ocean with a mama and baby sea turtle and held the mamas shell and then we came up and took a breath together!”

Her liver enzymes are both completely within normal range and have stayed in normal range for the 8+ weeks.  Is it important that her liver is no longer leaking the enzymes it releases when it is under stress or falling apart on a cellular level?  Um, YES.

Her ferritin is down to 320 ng/mL — a HUGE drop from 660, which is where is was approximately 8 weeks ago.  In the past, the lowest Adahlia’s ferretin has ever been was the mid-500s, and every time we’d seen it drop below 600, it would rise again to the mid-700s or higher the very next month.  Yet now it is steadily dropping.  We have broken through some sort of plateau.

Now, typically in DBA we read ferretin as a measure of iron overload, but it also is a marker for viral infection and inflammation.  And in this case, I have a strong suspicion that the drop in ferretin is not just iron.  I believe what we are seeing is a massive drop in systemic inflammation.   This is HUGE.  Why? Because systemic inflammation is implicated in nearly every chronic, complex, life-ending disorder.

Overall, Adahlia’s digestion is better — her belly rarely hurts after eating and she doesn’t lift her shirt anymore to put her belly against the cold tile floor or cool bed pillows, saying, “my belly is hot.”  Suddenly, now, she’s an eater.  In a mere 2 months, my former super-picky eater now eats beef.  It’s shocking.  She eats meatloaf.   Quiche loaded with spinach, basil, garlic, bacon, and random vegetables.  She’ll come running to eat the salted bone marrow from the stock of broth that’s been on the stove for the last 48 hours.  And she eats right up to and through her anemia and transfusion, when she used to refuse food about a week prior to being due for transfusion.

She’s also less moody.  Yes, she’s still a toddler.  But she’s less “crazed.”  She’s definitely happier and more bubbly.  It is kind of hard to describe because it is a bit intangible, but it is like she is being driven less and is driving more.  Make sense?

And the biggest clincher?  Adahlia has gotten SOLID.  Yes, I mean as in, “she’s a brick house… she’s mighty-mighty…”

Now, don’t get me wrong.  Adahlia isn’t chubby.  Never has been.  Except for right before she was first admitted to the hospital, (at 6 weeks old, when she was severely anemic and at approx the 30th percentile for weight-for-height and she rebounded almost immediately once she received blood,) she has maintained almost exactly the 50th percentile for weight-for-height since birth.

Guess where she is now?  Nearly the 80th.

That’s right.  In just over 8 weeks, she jumped from the 50th to the 80th percentile.  We’ve measured her twice in that time and her weight-for-height has only climbed.  She’s stronger and more solid than ever before.

This is HUGE.

Would you be surprised to learn that DBA children often have muscle tone and muscle weakness issues?   I wasn’t.

This is amazing!! you say.   Does what you are doing make sense?

Yes.  It makes sense from both Eastern and Western medical philosophies and perspectives.  It makes sense from oriental, natural, and conventional medical treatment approaches.  It combines the wisdom and medical contributions of intellectual, scientific, meditative, holy, and intuitive doctors, medical pioneers, and masters.

How exciting!  What does this mean?

I don’t know yet.  Theoretically, it could mean I’ve found a key on the path of reversing the pathology that has lead to her DBA.  It may mean that one day she will begin producing her own red blood cells again.  Then again, it may not.  I don’t know.  She is not yet retic’ing.  Time will tell.

But at the very least, I have a child who is stronger physically, mentally, and emotionally.

I’ll take that.

 

Fish and Phlebotomists    

Well, we are here at the hospital again, just a mere 3.5 weeks since the last transfusion.  Adahlia has her IV in place and we are waiting for blood to arrive, so we headed down to radiology to watch fish swim.  This hospital has a couple really nice fish tanks – the one in radiology has a saltwater tank with several fish straight out of Finding Nemo, and the one near cardiology has several larger fish… I think they are freshwater.

  

It says something about your life when you know which departments to go to in the hospital to find fish and pass time.

Adahlia had one of the worst IV placements in a long time.  Not through any error of the nurse administering the IV, but because we first allowed a phlebotomist to do a finger prick test to ensure she needed blood.

The phlebotomist was one we knew from the northern children’s hospital location.  It was a pleasant surprise to see her… Even though it only serves to illustrate how often we frequent these facilities.  She performed the finger poke without incident, and results came back as I expected: 7.2 Hb.  

Which of course, requires transfusion.

But Adahlia was under the impression that by doing the finger poke she was getting out of the IV.  (Because usually we get a finger poke to check her Hb when I suspect transfusion won’t really be necessary.  The northern campus location is 30 minutes closer than the main campus, so we go there for a quick Hb finger poke check, which makes a difference when you’re doing this every few weeks and you’re trying to preserve your kiddo’s veins.) 

The nurses wanted to be sure she needed a transfusion before placing an IV, and when I asked Adahlia, she said a finger poke was ok.  I had thought I communicated properly, but in retrospect,  Adahlia clearly did not quite grasp that the one procedure might lead to the other – she thought it was an either/or situation.

So as the nurse started setting out the tourniquet, she suddenly  threw up quite a fuss, screaming that she she didn’t want them both on the same day, and of course the nurses are busy, and I didn’t feel right asking them to come back later, so we quickly did it anyway.  

The IV itself was flawless.  After, I tried everything to calm her, but she was clearly wounded by having a procedure done against her will, when normally she agrees bravely to transfusion.  “I didn’t want both in the same day,” she sobbed. I offered to take her to see the fish, and she replied, “they might make me happy,” only to start wailing again.

I continued to hold her and explained how if we didn’t do it today, we’d have to come back tomorrow, and she’d miss school, and Friday is dance class with Miss Rachael.  She seemed to internalize the wisdom of this and then broke down in tears again, and it was only until I started crying too and told her that I was sad, also, by how it went, that she dried her tears and agreed she was ready to go see the fish, because we both would like them.
The biggest takeaway here is how important it is to honor a child’s will and sense of self ownership in medical procedures.  Adahlia has always faced her transfusions and finger pokes bravely… But then, I always consult with her about it,  explain why I think it’s necessary or best, and give her time to digest it.  Then, when I ask if she is ready, she almost always says yes, and doesn’t cry until the actually IV, if at all.   This allows her to feel respected, that she has some measure of choice, instead of simply being violated.

You might think this is obvious.  But many of us are too busy and wrapped up in what “must happen” to take the time to explain things to our kids.  Or, just as bad, we fear their reaction and aren’t equipped ourselves emotionally and creatively to handle their refusal and fear, so we spring “bad” things on them as a surprise.

Is it any wonder so many kids grow up distrustful and resentful of authority?  Of their own parents?

Remember, kids live in a world of wonder, where they get lost in the magic of a bug or, as with Adahlia yesterday, the “beauty” of a store. (Adahlia complimented the owner of the bulk foods store, “what a beautiful store you have!” quite a few times.  It was sweet.)

Kids need time to adjust to transitions as simple as getting in the car and going someplace else, and much moreso when they must get vaccinations or endure other unpleasantries.

After all, think about it:  they pretty much follow an adult around all day, being pulled in this direction and that, and rarely does the parent tell them what it’s all about or why they are going where they are going.

We wouldn’t expect a spouse or lover to go along with our daily to-do lists without an explanation, why do we expect it of our intelligent kids?  Don’t you appreciate knowing what you’ll be expected to do tomorrow, instead of having someone redirect you every time you pick up your book or sit down at your computer?

Today was a perfect illustration of how preparing (or not preparing) your child for a painful or unpleasant procedure can make all the difference in his/her perception of trauma.  And today, sadly for both of us, was a traumatic day that could have been avoided if Id been more aware of my daughter’s comprehension of the situation.

Of course, readers of this blog will wonder why Adahlia went only 3+ weeks between transfusion.

The answer is that she had a very nasty GI viral infection for about 7 days after her last transfusion.  It is typical for the spleen to chew up transfused RBCs  in addition to the other cleansing work it’s doing in the blood during such acute infections.

Hopefully, after this transfusion, she won’t get sick, and we will get a better idea of how she is doing in terms of DBA.  And hopefully, we won’t have to come back for at least 4-5 weeks, or maybe even 6.  

But with this disorder, who knows?

We might as well just draw on our faces with markers, and dance to the imaginary animal parade (which is what Adahlia and I did last night).  

Nothing is guaranteed… Everything is possible.

And when phlebotomy gets you down, find a fish and feel better.

Love to you and yours.

Says the Spirit

Driving Adahlia to her preschool this morning… (we typically walk or she rides her bike, and it would’ve been fabulous cool-but-sunny winter weather for that but we’ve been sleeping in and class had already started… not that anyone really cares because there’s not exactly an intense curriculum, but still…)

… she gazes out the windows, first one side, then another.  We’re moving pretty fast.  

“Is it almost nighttime?” She asks.

“No, see the sun there? It’s coming up.  We are headed east.  When we see the sun this way we know it’s morning time.  When it’s close to nighttime it’ll be behind us – that way – and then we know it’s almost night.”

“The sun is going higher and higher?” She asks.

“Yes, it goes all the way over our heads, and makes the day warmer.”

Adahlia is pensive. I take a quick right turn.  We have to go around a big park.

“This place might be crazy!” Adahlia says.  I glance in the rear view and she is looking out the windows, her head on a swivel, taking in trees, buildings, people, buses, and cars. “This place might be Huge!”

I laugh, passing a bus loading up passengers.  “It is pretty crazy! You mean Earth?”

“This place might be HUGE!” Adahlia repeats, raising her arms above her head in a sweeping arm gesture. I make another rolling stop for the next right turn – we’re almost there.

“It is huge, baby,” I affirm.  “There’s so much to see here.”

Blinkers left then right, I slow and arc onto Terry Street.  Our car’s momentum carries up the preschool driveway.  

“I want to live in all these houses,” Adahlia announces.

I open the door, unbuckle her, and help her out of the car.  She looks at the row of craftsman houses, some of which are homes and others have been converted to businesses, like her preschool.

“I want to live in all these houses,” she repeats.

I giggle.  “I know, I enthuse, “there’s so much to experience!”  

I reflect for an instant on this little mirror by my side.  When I was little, not much older than her, I thought it unfair that we had to pick a future.  I wanted to be so many things. I did not want to have to choose, to be locked into anything.  I wanted to experience many careers and lives.  
When I break my reverie, I acknowledge the face value of her words.  “We will live in many houses, love… when we don’t have to do so many blood transfusions, we will travel lots and lots and live in many, many houses.”
Adahlia holds my hand as we walk up the front steps.  “All these houses,” she repeats.

And this time, I allow myself to bask in the depths of the message.

I want to live in all these houses.

We start out unafraid of death, unattached to our particular lives, ready and eager in a state of wonder to live.  To experience. No experience is necessarily better than the others. They are all different, all valuable. All wonderous.  All adventure.

Then, at some point, we identify with the body we live in and the stories it experiences.  At this point, we do one of two (or a combination of) things:  We reject the current body, becoming ashamed or unhappy in it because it has become a storehouse of trauma, or we become too attached to the current body (and life) and lose perspective on the validity and beauty of living and seeing from a different set of eyes.

We become lost in one story, the story of this one lifetime, and lose sight of the possibility, grandeur, and truth of the others, especially when woven all together.

I want to live in all these houses.

Yes, yes I do.

I want to live in all these houses.

So says the Spirit of the Body.

Problems & Solutions

I have a problem.

I have a very scientific brain.

So it still astounds me that my daughter asks for Shonishin. That it immediately calms her. That it changes something in her.

It is nothing more than tapping, stroking, and what we call “magic” (light pressing of certain acupuncture points) with one of two copper tools.

Yet, it changes something in her.

And she asks for it.  Demands it even.

I oblige.  And as I stroke her skin, I wonder:

What is happening?

Yes, I know the theory.  The theories.  Yes, I have been witness to and felt energy movements.  Yes, I know it changes heart rates and respiration and hormones and chemicals and cells.  Yes, I know it’s real.  

Yes, these things still astound me.

I grew up Catholic after all.  Upper middle class. Suburban.  Educated at a prestigious military engineering academy, for Pete’s sake.  Drove an old Mercedes in high school and bought a used, silver Celica in college.  Designed scientific research projects and tested digital interfaces with military applications.

And so I touch one tool to one point, and then bend her leg and touch it to another, and when I stop to dress her because she’s fallen asleep (much like when an adult falls into the “acu zone”) and she wakes and begins to cry and complain, I tap gently along her hairline and temporal lobe with my fingertips this time, not tools, and she’s out again.

What is happening?

Good question indeed. 

What is happening right now, this rise in integrative and functional medicine? This surge in consciousness?  This coming together of warring and opposing viewpoints?

East meets West.

When cold air meets hot air.

Body meets Spirit.

What is happening, indeed, when two beings vie for the same niche? The same body? When the line between self and other begins to blur?  When it is called love in one breath, and self-destruction in the other?

When autoimmune disease is connected to viral invaders and leaky guts and dysbiosis and mutated genetics and brain chemical imbalance?

I have a problem.

Several, actually, but another is that I have a rather poor sense of loyalty.

It’s true. I’ve never been loyal. Fond, yes.  Self-sacrificing, definitely.  But I’m not loyal.  

I’m too pragmatic for loyal.  I am an observer.  Always have been.  And any observer knows that there is much too much to see to ever align oneself with any one or any thing.

I see too much.  But this isn’t to say that I judge harshly.  Or that I’d ever sell anyone out.  (But I might.)  It’s to say that I withhold judgement.  That I understand motivations.  Or to say that I see all of you, including your dirty, selfish, mean parts, and if I choose to be around you anyway, it’s because I like you anyway.  Not because I’m blind.  Not because I’m in your camp.  Not because I’ve drank your Kool-Aid or believe your hype or self-promotion.  I just still like you.   Or I happen to be here with you.  Or there’s no where else I happen to be.

This is a good trait for those who value honesty. For the rest of the world, it makes me rather undesirable.

What I mean by this is that I’ve never been particularly driven to be loyal to someone simply because of who they are: teacher, parent, mentor, sibling, or friend. 

It also means I’m not disloyal either. 

I guess it means I’m not super attached.  I like you. Your opinion is interesting.  I like that person, too.  His opposing opinion is interesting, too.

Can I be hurt?  Sure. Deeply.  By those who I thought cared for me but show by their actions that they don’t or didn’t.  

But I’m not talking loyalty like the steadfast allegiances of love.  I’m talking loyalty like the blind allegiances of clans.

So what do I follow?  What am I loyal to? 

I’m not sure.  Some might call it God.  Or intuition.  Or a feeling.  Or my gut.  But it’s all of those things and none of those things.

Someone says something and it either sounds like truth to me or it doesn’t.  

For lack of a better term, it’s an energy.

That’s what I listen to.  

(Which brings up another problem, because that’s not very scientific.

Or is it?

Depends, perhaps, on your definition.)

East meets West.

One body, how to unify a mind?

So much of the world is blah blah blah, and we could be talking about God and it’s nothing or we could be talking about shoes and it’s divine transmission… It has nothing to do with what’s being said.

It has everything to do with what is being said.

(Yes. I realize I used the same words.)

Because it’s not the style. The style might be fun or amusing or angering or whatever.  But it doesn’t matter.  The substance does.

And I’m not talking about morals or a platform or about preaching.  The substance I’m talking about can’t be pinned down.   

These days, I’m amazed at what’s being said.  

About the herbs my daughter tests positive for.  About this journey we are on.  

I say all this because I’m not loyal to my Chinese herbalist teacher.  I do not blindly follow him.  I test his theories.  In fact, we test them together.  I see that his theories hold.  They are confirmed.  

No, I am not loyal to my teacher.  I see him work.  And what I have seen has caused me to deeply respect him.  I am grateful to him and to existence (God) for placing me in his path.  I would, in return, help him if I could, the way he is helping me to learn, to see.

Because if there is anything important to an observer, it is being able to see.  

I am the watcher.  I’m not in control.  I have little money, little experience, and little sway.   

I do my best.  I come forward.  I administer what I know.  I listen to what comes my way.  I discern, not judge.  It passes through me like a sieve.  I depend on no dogma, no doctrine.  I keep what may be useful.  I keep only what “rings” true.  

I wait and see.  And what I see is amazing.

My problem just may be the solution.

My problem never existed, after all.

Blessings.

Haha! I was wrong!

Not something folks often celebrate, but I just found out that I was premature on stating that Adahlia is not retic’ing.  I hadn’t gotten the reticulocyte results back with her CBC (retics take longer for the lab to process).  But I went ahead and went to press with what we knew, and assumed that since she wasn’t making reticulocytes last month, she wouldn’t be this month either.  In fact, it has been over a year since any baby red blood cells at all were spotted in her blood stream.

But now she has got some!  She’s not making a ton of baby red blood cells, but she IS making them.  

Step 1: stop the destruction.

Step 2: rebuild.

Or, if at all possible, do step one and two simultaneously.  

And make a little dance out of it. 

Woohoo!!!

If you’re following our journey, now is the time!  Send prayers, love, and light to Adahlia’s gorgeous, resilient rivers of bone marrow. 

Thank you!

Step 1: Stop the Destruction

I’ve mentioned it before, but in China, DBA is approached as an autoimmune disorder.  Whenever I describe the disorder’s symptoms, remissions, and treatments to naturopathic and other professional, holistic health care colleagues, they all respond the same way: 

“Whoa,” they say, eyebrows raised.  “Sounds autoimmune to me.”

And I agree.  

Sure, there’s a genetic aspect to DBA.  But there’s a genetic aspect or tendency to most autoimmune disorders.  

And I maintain DBA is triggered by an overburdened, stressed and compromised immune system.

It is, after all, impressive how many DBA babies are born to women going through or just graduated from medical or nursing school (or paramedic training).  Is it autoimmunity as a result of a virus that proliferates wildly during pregnancy, stressing the mother and fetus? Is it a susceptible gene tied to mental/emotional stressors? Why can’t it be either and both?

Those answers aren’t coming in the next few weeks.  Or maybe years.  But I’ve got some good news to report:

Adahlias last transfusion of 2015 was at 8.8 Hb, 5 weeks and 1 day after her previous transfusion. 

Yes, that’s right.  She could have easily gone 6 weeks, but we transfused her because we were going on vacation out of state, and didn’t want her to need a transfusion while out of state.

6 weeks between transfusion is a record for her.

Of course, it could potentially be attributed to a fresher bag of blood.  A slightly larger bag of blood.

Maybe.  

Doubtful, when her transfusion previous to that was at 6.6 or 6.8.

Today is Adahlia’s first transfusion of 2016, and she is being transfused at nearly 5 weeks at 8.0 Hb.

Not that impressive? It’s not a jaw dropper, but when you consider that I was uncharacteristically spotty in her medicine compliance (except for the exjade – we protect her organs from iron overload at all cost) her Hb may have been higher, had I been more compliant. We were traveling, it was the holidays, I was tired, excuses, excuses.  

Last week, at 4 weeks, we did a finger-prick test to check her Hb and it was 8.3.  This disappointed me a bit, so I immediately resumed a more dedicated medicine regimen with her.  Even so, I was expecting she’d be around 7.5 today.  Maybe lower.  (Her trend is to drop quickly once she gets below 8.5; in the past she’s dropped down to 6.6 in a week’s time.)

But she was 8.0.

To my knowledge, she’s still not reticing, still not making her own baby blood cells.  But I know she can make blood (she made a normal amount when she was an infant, but it wasn’t enough to prevent need for transfusion).

So what’s happening?

Well, at this point, it’s all educated guesswork based on theory.

But if this disorder is autoimmune at all, then in Chinese and Natural medical approaches to autoimmunity we are at Step One:  Stop the destruction.

We are calming the Spleen.

What do I attribute this to?

In October, I was again uncharacteristic, this time with my Chinese medicine herbalist mentor.  For the first time ever (we’ve been consulting with him since she was approximately 5 month old), Adahlia didn’t require me to assist her as he tested different herbs against her for her reaction.  So I sat on the floor at Adahlias feet, my back against the wall, my head tilted up at the ceiling, and vented.

“We are missing something,” I seethed. 

Then I caught myself. 

“Don’t get me wrong: Adahlia has come a long way.  Her brain is better. Her inflammation is lower.  Her digestion is better. I’m not saying the herbs aren’t doing anything- I know they are.  She’s remarkably bright and healthy for this disorder. The herbs have helped a great deal,” I acknowledged.

I took a breath, regaining focus and momentum.  “But they aren’t doing the one damn thing I want them to do most of all.  We’ve got all these antimicrobial herbs in her system, but are they getting into the marrow? We need to get these formulas into the marrow.  We need to help her build blood.”

I sighed.  My mentor was certainly not the enemy here, if an enemy existed at all.  “We’re missing something,” I repeated, and my tone bordered on a growl. “I know it.”

My mentor remained silent and kept working.  But he had obviously been listening.  Because when he showed me the new formula, he highlighted two new herbs that we had never tried in the seemingly endless potential combinations of herbs.  My jaw dropped. They made sense: no, they were obvious. We hadn’t tried these?

No, he said, shaking his head. While my mentor is an expert in treating autoimmunity, these herbs had never been necessary, never tested positive, for his hundreds of other autoimmune patients.

But then again, he’d never seen DBA before.  

And now here we are. Three months later.  Scoring a solid 8.0+ Hb at 5-6 weeks between transfusions instead of a 6.8 Hb. 

Step one: stop the destruction.

We are onto something.  I’m confident in what we are doing.  And while we may spend a few more months working on stopping destructive processes, I’m excited for the next step, since I’ve recently stumbled across three Chinese herbal formulas specifically used to protect and rebuild the bone marrow during and after chemotherapy and radiation (perhaps the only two destructive processes that can compare to the destructive power of autoimmunity).

Oh, that’s right.  I didn’t specify  Step Two, but you’ve probably figured it out by now:

Rebuild.

Thankful

Today, I take a moment not to curse and mourn my daughter’s bizzare blood disorder called DBA.  Today, I take a moment to be thankful for it, and for the fact that my daughter has required blood transfusions since infancy to stay alive.

Here’s why:

1) Everything is more precious.  You know the saying, you don’t know what you have ’til it’s gone?  Well, we are human.  We take things (and people) for granted. Even children.

DBA means that there’s absolutely nothing guaranteed about tomorrow.  Every couple weeks, I get an unmistakable reminder of that fact.  One minute we will be sitting down to a routine ol’ family dinner, and the next, I’m calling the emergency on-call line at the Children’s Hospital Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders… a name which inspires terror into the most stalwart parent’s heart.  (You know, I think it should be renamed.  I vote: the Children’s Hospital Center of Ultimate Love and Support.)  With so many complications to DBA, I am acutely aware of the precariousness of my child’s presence in my life.

So I can’t help it. Every time we go to the creek, I snap a picture of our adventure, because a little voice in my head will suddenly pipe up that it might be our last.  Every time she wants to dance, I dance, at least a little.  When she asks me to sing, I sing, even if strangers are walking by.  And darn it if I don’t have a huge, under-bed Tupperware full of nearly every scribbling (even on napkins and menus), dabbling of paint (on ceramic, canvas, and paper) and toilet-paper-roll dragon we’ve ever created.  I just can’t throw the damn things out. And truth is, I need to upsize or get another container soon.

2) I’m a better mom than I ever would have been.  Now don’t get me wrong: I probably would have been a pretty great mom anyway.  But, if being a better mom means being more patient, present, and nurturing, then I have DBA to thank.

Patience: I am more patient with my DBA daughter than I ever imagined possible for me.  I am kinder. More compassionate.  More understanding.  More supportive.  Gentler in my reprimands.  Calmer when she throws a tantrum and gentler when she finds her way out of it.  Now, I’m not perfect.  But I’m capable of vastly greater patience than anything I could have imagined.

Nurturing: During Adahlia’s first 18 months, I was a breastfeeding champion.  I worked my poor breasts until aching exhaustion (sometimes forcing myself to wake up to pump twice a night) to restore my milk supply after it nearly dried up because she was too weak to nurse, and I was too sick to make much milk.  In the end, I managed to breastfeed her for over three years, making me something of an expert on restoring and increasing milk supply.  I still co-sleep with her, because, of course, it makes sense that a vulnerable child is terrified to sleep on her own. (I know plenty of adults who are terrified to go to sleep on their own and wake up spooked of the dark. So why do we expect children to sleep alone?)

Presence: I have spent more time with my daughter than I ever would have if she’d been healthy.  If she’d not had DBA, I would’ve gone back to finish my doctorate 2.5 months after her birth and opened a clinic, which would have been great, but which would have also translated to more time distracted by (and focused on) things other than her, and the simple enjoyment of our time together.  I don’t regret a second of my time spent with my daughter.  I can finish my doctorate and start a clinic anytime in the next five years.  I cannot spend time with my daughter as an infant ever again.

And it’s more than physical presence: when I’m with my daughter, I make a concerted effort to be mentally, intellectually, emotionally, and spiritually present, not just physically there.  I don’t talk on the phone a lot or go on lots of playdates where I spend more time talking to the other mom than playing with her.  I try to ignore my emails and texts and messages and the Internet and Twitter and Facebook and yes, even this webpage.  

I engage with her.  I try to get her involved with cooking or organizing or whatever my chores are for the day.  I read and play.  I do my best to explain things from multiple perspectives or admit that “life is strange and I don’t know,” instead of giving a brisk and easy answer, as if I’m some sort of authority on this baffling planet, like: “because I said so.” Because of DBA, I have had to explain very tough things, like why I keep taking her to the hospital to let people hurt her, so I know (hope) someday I’ll talk with her openly about sex and drugs, the allure of danger, the illusion of safety, and what it really means to be safe and secure and free in this world.  

DBA demanded that I re-arrange my priorities.  It forced my high-achieving, ambitious, and fear-of-failure self to stop being high-powered and slow the heck down, despite the fact that our economy pretty much requires two breadwinners for all except the wealthiest couples.  (That’s something that needs changed.  Women should be economically free to raise their own babies if they want to, not be forced to hand them to a stranger for their most formative and vulnerable years.)

If it weren’t for DBA, being a mother would have meant that I’d become a one-woman balancing act.   I’m sure I would have done a good job, and it wouldn’t have destroyed my daughter.  But, because of DBA, being a mother means I am all about my daughter.  Period.  I wouldn’t have done it myself.  DBA forced me to do it.  For that, I’m eternally grateful.

3) DBA is challenging me to grow stronger than I’ve ever been.

Now, I’m not there yet. I’m still working on regaining strength, especially physical and energetic strength.  But soon, I’m going to be stronger than I’ve ever been, and I owe a lot of thanks to DBA.

DBA has helped me get in touch with what it means to be a Mama Bear.  To stand up for myself and my daughter.  To get what we really need, instead of what other people think we need.  It is not actually something I was conditioned to do well.

Not that my little bear isn’t tough.  In many ways, she can handle herself.  But, like a mama bear, if folks dare to step between us, or threaten her in any way (physical, emotional, or psychospiritual), they are confronted with the likes of which they’ve only dreamed out… and then woken up with pee-pee on their sheets.

Truth is, I am ruthless when it comes to my daughter.  And I don’t feel bad about it.  In fact, I usually laugh about it.

4) Because of DBA, my relationship with my partner (her father) has been pushed, cracked, shaken, sledge-hammered, shredded, and otherwise thrown into the fire.  What has been forged is true.  The process has taught me more about self-love, love for other, partnership, and co-evolution than I could have ever imagined.  This can’t be measured.  It is invaluable.  And it can’t be obtained if you don’t go through the crucible. Again, I’m eternally grateful.

5) DBA has forced me to internalize the important things, the things I believe we come to this planet to learn.

Things like what it means to live in peace and acceptance of yourself and the other, without letting the other destroy you, or feeling like you need to destroy yourself.

That I am creating my own legacy of love, and that with fearless dedication to honesty, kindness, and hard work, I can break free of ancestral patterns, and make my legacy of love grander than anything I knew or can imagine.

That unaware, I have no say in how I spend my energy.  It is spent according to the drives and pulls of my conditioning, unconscious beliefs, programming, emotions, et cetera.  Aware, I have more choice over how to spend my energy and time.  I’d rather spend it in the present moment, in love and creation, with my child who may not be here tomorrow, than in bitterness, resentment, gossip, drama, and worry.

That people come and go.  I come and go.  Understanding changes enemies to friends, and the lack of it changes friends to enemies.  Separation isn’t bad.  It’s healthy.  It’s a season, like winter.  It can be survived.

And that someday, I will be physically separated from my daughter, the little spirit who has taught me and awed me with so much.  And yet, since separation is never the end of the story, and all things are circular, I know I will meet her again.

I will try to make our inevitable separation be a long, long, time from now.  But if it happens sooner than I’d like, because of cursed DBA, I’ll have DBA to thank for the fact that it was so incredibly sweet.

The belly-drop

Just a few minutes ago, right before dinner, Adahlia turned towards me and said “ouie, ouie.”  I looked where she was pointing – a small area of irritation was on her skin, just below her right kidney on her lower back. 

“Did you get hurt?” I asked.

She said yes.  A few minutes prior, she had been rough-housing with her dad.  I assumed it a carpet burn.

But she didn’t want to let it go.  

“Ouchie, ouchie,” she repeated.  I looked again and the skin was redder, rougher, more irritated.  I asked if she wanted medicine and applied some calendula cream. She winced as I gently rubbed it on.

“It’s that bad?”  I exchanged a look of mixed amusement and concern with her dad.

This level of pain over a scrape wasn’t like her.  She had suffered much worse and barely flinched, got up, and continued playing.

She kept lifting up her shirt.  I reached over but she wouldn’t let me touch her back.  She jumped down from her chair at the table and I took off her shirt.  

“Is that better?” I asked.

She ran away from me. “Ouie, Mama,” she repeated.  She bit her arm.

To distract herself from the pain?

And so I could no longer deny it.  No longer pretend we are a normal family with a normal child who got a little scrape.  For the fifth or sixth time, I stood up from the table, a longing glance at my untouched dinner, and went over to her to check her back. 

And I knew.  My belly dropped.  I almost vomited.  I fought hysteria.

“It’s spreading, it’s bigger,” I said, my voice emotionless. I wanted to scream but didn’t.  “And it’s on her other side now, too, below her other kidney. There wasn’t anything there before.”

I picked up my phone.  I posted to the DBA Family group to see if any one had similar experience to get an idea of prognosis.  I called the on-call number at the hospital and left a message for the operator to page the doctor. But I already knew.

It’s the Exjade.

It’s not the first time this has happened.  It happened 4-5 months  ago, after increasing her dosage to get the iron out of her liver and heart.  But those were smaller welts, on her arms and abdomen and neck, and though they spread once all over her body, they went away on her own. 

These welts were large and too near her kidneys for comfort. (I know that doesn’t matter from a western perspective but from a Chinese medical one, it does.) And she had never had pain before.  Itching, yes. Not pain.

15 minutes later, the pain appeared to leave as mysteriously as it came.  She sat at the table and started eating ravenously, moreso than normal.  

The doc and I conferenced. I informed her that Adahlia was doing better, eating and no longer in pain, and I could tell the doc was beginning to dismiss the issue.  She suggested we do some Benadryl.   “Ok, we can try that…” I replied. “Are you… familiar with Exjade and its possible complications?” 

And things got a little awkward.

But luckily she took it well, and after a brief pause, she answered “ye…es…” with a bit of hesitation in her voice.  She conferred with me a bit more, and I could tell she was paying more attention, to the point where she offered to call again in 2 hours to check to see if things  remained improved, and suggested that I call her back if things took a turn for the worse.

Because Exjade rashes are serious complications and can result in death.

We are supposed to run the Boulder Panicking Poultry Kids 1-miler tomorrow.  A Thanksgiving Trot of some sort is a tradition of ours, the one sporting/racing event we do every year.  We’re not exactly competitive about it. It’s just for fun.  And Adahlia’s always enjoyed the spectacle.

She seems to be doing well now.  Rash still red, and she still won’t let me touch her back, but she’s sleeping.  Just a brief scare.  No reason that tomorrow we can’t pretend to have a healthy little girl again.

I read some Bhuddist quotes today:

“He who lusts after people has woes; he who lusts after no one has no woes.”  

Would I describe my love for my daughter, my desire for her life and wellness, a lust?  Well, yes.

And…

“Hope and fear cannot change the seasons.”

I have hoped for her recovery.  I have feared for her death.  The  transfusion cycle continues.

And…

“If a problem is fixable, there is no need to worry. If the problem isn’t fixable, then there is no benefit in worrying whatsoever.” 

A quote I need to somehow tattoo into my consciousness, as I administer various treatments and rack my brain for some elusive missing link.  

(Sorry about not attributing the quotes properly, but as they are all from elevated Bhuddists, they should be above ego trappings and probably don’t care.  And I am ready to be done with this post and give the little one a bath.)

Besides, you get my point.

Just when I think I’ve got this down, that I’ve become accepting of her condition and loving of our journey, hard as its been, that I’m yet another impossible step closer to Zen, and grateful for this incredible challenge to my own becoming, awakening, and enlightenment, she breaks out in rash and I have to stop myself from running screaming, sobbing, into the winter night.

But I also read something today about terrorists, and how they supposedly love death more than the rest of the world loves life.

And I know one thing:  This carnival ride is crazy.  And the belly-drop parts have always made me sick.  But I wouldn’t trade it.  I wouldn’t forgo this experience of the whirling lights – the tastes, the sights, the sounds, the touch of this carnival, both glorious and nauseating – for anything.  I’m ever so grateful for this chance to be here.  To know Adahlia.  And to explore this carnival with her dad, and see if we will lose all our tokens, or win a stuffed bear.  Either way, when it’s over, I hope we will laugh.

Because I love life.


T minus One

It’s the day before our billionth transfusion and I am warming my back to the Colorado sun, sitting on a creek bank of river rock and fallen leaves, as Adahlia tosses stones into the water with a kerchunk or ploip, depending upon the size of the stone and the depth of the water.

I don’t really know if she needs a transfusion.  She didn’t want a finger prick test.  It’s been four weeks since her last transfusion.  In a choice between the sterile forced heat propelled from a hospital furnace or the living forced warmth of sunlight blasted miles across space, I hesitated only a second before exchanging hospital for creek.

She picks up a stick and dips it into the water, taps the surface a few times.  It’s her fishing pole, she informs me.  Then she wanders a bit down the creek from me.  After a few moments, I look over to see that she has taken off a shoe and a sock is walking back towards me, leaves crunching under her remaining shoe.  I’m betting her foot fell in.

But no.  When she hands it to me, the sock is dry.  She is just bringing her stuff to me to hold because she wants to puts her foot in the water.  I take off the other sock and shoe, roll up her jeans to just below her knees, and she hobbles carefully to the edge of the water.

I am glad to be hearing the sound of it.

We saw a little snake last time we were here.  He dove desperately into the creek and swam like mad for the other side.  It’s a good day for snakes, warm like it is, but we haven’t scared one yet.

I brought a piece of pumpkin bread we made together yesterday and now she is eating it.  Licking the aluminum foil.

Probably shouldn’t let her do that. But eh.  

It’s a rare peaceful moment prior to a transfusion.  Opposite of what one might think, she’s usually bat-shit crazy right about now, hours away from it, and anemic.  Last night, she was super hyper and difficult right up until she passed out. There was no dietary or obvious reason for it.  

But she’s always been like that.  She’s doesn’t get sleepy and complacent when she’s severely anemic.  She gets firey and manic.  When she was a baby, she would just start screaming and wouldn’t stop for hours (unless someone other than her dad and I was present.  She got quiet then).

No, it doesn’t make sense from a western biological or linear perspective.  But from a Chinese medicine or circular perspective it does make sense.  Yin (blood) is necessary to root or hold the spirit (yang).  It’s the container.  Without adequate container, her spirit is an untethered fire and acts as such, flitting and flaring.  

And from a psychological perspective, it makes sense too. When anemic, she feels rotten and she wants us to do something about it, but doesn’t know what.  She doesn’t feel safe around non-family, so she pulls inward.  But she feels safe when it’s just us, so she screams and refuses to listen and even bites and pinches, letting us know something is wrong.  But there is nothing we can give her, nothing we can do to help.

I brought some books and tea with us, too.  Tomorrow will be sad and painful and demanding.  Today there is incredible tension, like the night before an anticipated army attack, or the day before a board exam.  At this point, you’re either prepared or you’re not.  You don’t know how you’ll perform.  When the grenades and flares start flying, you’re just going to have to put your rifle to your cheek and scan for targets.

Last transfusion, I didn’t perform to my expectation.  I started tearing up as I sang Adahlia Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, as the anesthesiologist put her to sleep for her MRI.  

But, I’ve decided to cut myself some slack due to poor tactical planning.  I should have never attempted to sing that song.  I should’ve chosen something different.  For example, last March, for Adahlia’s first MRI, I had sung The Wheels on the Bus.  That  was tough, but I managed to smile through the entire song, not bursting into tears until after she passed out.  

But it’s impossible not to cry if you’re singing TTLS to your kiddo as he or she is put under.  It might seem an appropriate selection, but it’s just terrible.  If you do it anyway, and your goal is to help your child feel that everything is ok because you’re ok while she is being administered gas, you are setting yourself up for failure.

Maybe tuck that away somewhere.

I’m used to this by now, but I still don’t like it.  Even professional concert pianists and ball players get nerves before the show, the game.

And I have no idea what level of challenge I will face tomorrow.  Will she need one poke for the IV?  Will she cry and scream and resist?  How about my talk with her primary hematologist?  It is always like chess.

Like many professional performers, I don’t particularly want to talk to anyone right now.  But I do want to sit by a creek with my back to the sun. To let the water rush past with its wisdom while I soak up the sun’s strength.   

This too will pass, these emotions will pass, this stress will pass, the creek says.  Let me wash and tumble this all away.

Here, the sun says, take my warmth.  Absorb it and be strong. 

And I’m struck by an amusing and serious truth with many layers of meaning:

If it weren’t for Nature, I’d be dead by now.

My daughter wants us to go down the stream to where the water runs over rocks, creating rapids.

“Let’s go to the deep, deep part, the deep, deep part,” she says.

Indeed.

He laughed. I danced.

The phone didn’t ring or vibrate, but I walked over to where it sat on the kitchen ledge, anyway.  My partner rolled into the climax of his post-work-week story, unaware of the 6th sense that had drawn me away.  I glanced down and stopped breathing.  It was 5:21 on a Friday, and “Colorado Children’s Hospital” was scrolling in illuminated text across my phone’s darkened screen.  It could only be Adahlia’s hematologist.

I hesitated.  It might be better not to know.

I snatched the phone up before the call went to voicemail.

“Hello, this is Erika,” I said, leaving my partner and the kitchen without a word or gesture.  I stepped briskly towards the front porch.

“Hi, Erika, this is Dr. N.”

“Hi, yes, good to hear from you.”  Was it?   “Are you calling about the MRI results?” I continued.

“Yeah, I’m glad I got ahold of you.  I just got back from radiology and discussing the MRI.  I wanted to catch you before the weekend.”

“Oh, okay,” I said.  He was discussing the results?  My casual tone belied my anxiety.  I pulled the phone away from my ear to make sure the volume was up.  I could hear Adahlia shrieking as she wrestled her dad.  The screen door shut behind me.  It was just me and the news.

“Well, there’s some good news, and news that we can’t really trust right now, so I just want to warn you about that.  We need to have it re-analyzed.”

“Okay,” I agreed, my heart pounding. I poured my attention into the phone as intently as as trapeze artist stares towards his partner’s outstretched arms.  Would his words catch me?

“The good news is that the liver’s looking good.  If you remember – I’m sure you remember – her liver iron overload was measured at 9.x.  And the lower the number, the better for the liver; the heart is the opposite.”

“Right, yes.”  The good news is the liver?  Oh no….

“Well, the liver imaging came out really clearly, so there’s no doubt about the new number, and its 6.x.  So that’s really good, and that’s something we can point to and say, ‘Alright, chelation is working.’  I think it’s really positive; its a really strong trend downwards.”

No! The heart’s not better?!  Focus.  Focus on the liver.

“A drop of 3 points in 6, 8 months is on par with what we might expect on this dose of chelation? Or is it better than average?”

“It’s good.  It’s on the high end of what we could have hoped for.  We’re definitely on track getting the iron out of the liver.”

I exhale.  “That’s great,”  I say.  And I mean it.

“It is good.  I’m really happy with it.  It’s a great decrease, especially for an oral chelator.”

Because the intravenous chelator works better.

I take a breath.  “Well, that’s great to hear.  Especially since the pictures were so clear, so we can be confident in it.”

“I agree,” he says.

He takes a breath.  I don’t.

“So, the heart.  As I said before, I’m not as confident in the results on the heart, because the pictures were a little blurred again.  Last time, they gave us this really low number for the heart, and then, because it was blurred, they said it maybe wasn’t quite so serious as they first said.  So we went from considering it a RED situation, to well, a little less red.”

“Right, it was 4 milliseconds.”

“Right.  So potentially really serious.  So, I don’t want you to get too excited, because maybe this isn’t quite as good as they are reporting.”

Wait… excited?  Good?  

My inbreath catches and comes in tiny spurts, like a little songbird’s heartbeat.

“They’re saying that its a normal heart.  And that’s just not believable.”

I might fly away.  I step quickly down the front porch steps, as if pulled by a rope, as if to seek better reception.  But I had heard him just fine.

“Normal?”  If word selection is a game of pick-up-sticks, an echo is all I can come up with.

“Right, basically, they are saying that there’s no iron it.  Which you and I know, given her last images, is just not very likely.”

I surge joyfully upwards.  Like a hot-air balloon, I need something concrete to tether me.  “As in, the report came back above 20 milliseconds?”

“Yes.”

I want to scream and cry and jump and laugh.  But I force my smile together and draw my mind through my emotions like a laser, like the West-Point-trained military officer I used to be.  I demand answers from my people.

“Are they aware how bad it was before? Have they seen the prior images? Have they compared them?”

“That is why I went down there.  I just got back from talking to them and showing them the last report.  They are going to re-analyze the images and re-run the calculations.  There is blurriness to the pictures, and I’m just not comfortable with these results.  The situation in her heart is most likely improved, but, not to be the negative guy, I just don’t believe that its normal.  Its just not believable.”

Because the heart is the hardest organ to get the iron back out of.

A moment of silence passes between us.  I am walking down the sidewalk, headed towards the busy avenue.  I stop.

“So.” I say, choosing my words carefully. “What you’re saying is:  The worst case scenario is that things are better.”

He laughs.  And it is an amazing laugh.  How often does a pediatric hematologist laugh this sort of laugh with a child’s parent, a laugh without sadness or edge to it?  “Yes,” he laughs, “the worst case scenario is that things are better.”

My eyes tear.

It is the first truly good news, the first real positive trend, the first actual news of improving health, with real numbers and real time behind it, that we have heard in – literally – 3 years.

“Well, that’s great news,” I say, and my voice has a smile in it.

“Yes, it is.  Even if her heart’s not all better, I think we can all be really happy with how far things have come.”

I consider all the moxa I burned over the summer on her body, when it was too hot for her to sleep with a shirt on in our wonderful, non-airconditioned, cabin-like house.  The points I had chosen for her heart.  The mystical points just medial to her scapula, indicated for restoration of “vital organs,” ancient points discovered by ancient monks, points that I poured over in my texts and spoke to Joe about in the heat of summer evenings.  I consider the moxa I had recently applied to these same points through her pajama top, now that it was cooler, using the Tiger Warmer tool.

I consider how I have finally reconnected with my Reiki Master lineage, whom I had lost touch with ever since my own Master died, and how I had appealed to them to send healing energy on my daughter’s behalf, to help her body get the iron out of her heart, to help it make it’s own blood.

No, I didn’t think moxa and prayer was fully responsible for getting the iron out.  But I did think it was possible for the moxa to direct the energy of her body to her heart, and draw the chelation medicine towards her heart, and help her body focus on clearing and healing it.

“Well,” I say, pivoting and turning back towards our house, “I know its not really believable to you, but it just might be possible.  I’ve been doing some very focused work on her heart from the chinese medicine perspective.”

And there are lot of people praying for her and sending her light energy.

“I know you have.  And this speaks to how much you’ve done, and to patient compliance with the oral chelation, so I think its something you can be proud of.”

It’s so nice of him to say these things.

Except we’ve been compliant with the oral chelation since we started it, since she was 18 months old, and her iron overload only got worse.  So it’s not about patient compliance.  Perhaps, you mean, the importance of proper dosage.  Perhaps the initial dosage was too low.  Perhaps, as some suspect, too low of a dose actually leads to increased iron deposition, instead of iron chelation.

I’ve made it back to the front porch.  Adahlia is standing there, picking leaves off of the vine that winds through the railing, and her dad is looking at me with interest.

“Well, I want to keep her on the oral chelator at this dose.  Until the liver is also clear, until we see that her organs are completely clear, I want to keep her on this dose,” I say.

“I agree,”  Dr. N. says.   “I don’t want to make any treatment decisions – including any decisions about steroids – until we get better results back on the heart.”

Ah, I think.  But I made an agreement with myself, and with Joe, just a couple nights ago on this very porch, before we knew the results of the MRI. When Joe had asked me, hypothetically, what we would do when we learned the results.

I had announced: “If her heart is the same or worse, we will do a steroid trial.  No question about it.  We have to.  And if her heart is clear, we won’t.  We will keep transfusing.”

He had shaken his head.  “But,” he had scoffed, striking a stick against the railing, “that won’t be the case.  It’ll come back saying something in the middle.”  Something requiring a tougher decision.

I know; you’re right.” I had sighed, looking out at the empty street.  A few yellow leaves blew by.  Nothing has been clear or easy for us.  Why should this be?  “We will just have to make that decision when we get the news.”

And as Adahlia likes to say:  And now, here we are.

Dr. N. doesn’t know it yet, and he won’t be happy about it, because he wants to try the steroids.  But as long as her results for her heart remain negative for iron overload, we aren’t going to do a steroid trial.  Her recent MRI shows an unbelievable result.  It is so unbelievable I take it as a pretty clear sign from Spirit that we should keep on our trajectory, that we should keep doing everything we can to find a cure from a natural and oriental medicine perspective. Steroids are still not right for us, at least not right now.

After all, if the moxa worked for the heart (and I really believe the moxa is primarily responsible for helping the iron chelate it), it can work to heal the bone marrow.  The trick will be, as it has always been with acupuncture, to find the points that will work.

After hanging up the phone with Dr. N., thanking him for calling us so late on a Friday afternoon, I relay the news to Joe.  He sits very still in the motionless rocking chair while I speak.

When I am done, he doesn’t laugh.  He doesn’t even laugh when I relay the bit about the worst case being that things are better.  It’s been too much of a roller coaster.  He can’t laugh.  He knows that Monday he may find out he should be crying instead.

And truth is, I can’t really laugh either.  Not lightly.  Not freely.

I can smile, though.  And break into spontaneous dance.

So I do.