Saturday, September 9, 2017

First Week of School

Last night was back to school night at Evey's school. That meant that we went to back to school night, listened to the information given and met with Evey's teacher for questions. Only Evey's teacher. We should in reality be meeting with Evey and Bryanna's teacher. We should be running from one side of the school to the other to make sure we meet both meetings. But we are not.

Last week we met with Evey's teacher. We always set up a meet and greet before school starts to help ease the transition, the stress and the nerves that come with the start of school. We started that when Bryanna was in First Grade. This year we only met Evey's second grade teacher. Bryanna did not have a 5th grade Teacher. We do not get to hear all about middle school transition and the last year of elementary school.
This Tuesday was the first day of 2nd grade for Evey.
Two years ago, we took a picture of Evey and Bryanna on their first day (Evey was in Kindergarten and Bryanna in Third Grade). It was a day of excitement and nerves and lots of stories after school.
Bryanna loving her new boots and posing with Evey and Liam on the way to school. Out of respect for Evey and Liam, I have covered their faces to protect their identity.
Bryanna First day of 2nd Grade

Bryanna and Evey first day of school 2 years ago (Evey was in Kindergarten and Bryanna was in 3rd grade)
Last year, I took Evey to her first day of school, met her class in the cafeteria, gave her lots of love and then rushed to the hospital to be with Bryanna. I still remember her face when I walked in her room...




This year, I took Evey to her first day, met with her class in the cafeteria, gave her lots of love and then went to the cemetery to sit with Bryanna's angel puppy, at Bryanna's grave site.




Please don't ever take your child, your husband, your wife or anyone in your family for granted.
I wish this on no one. Cancer sucks.

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Awareness is survival

September is Pediatric Cancer Awareness Month. It is a very important month...but so is every other day of the year. We need to love and be aware every day of the year. Life is short...these kids need help making it longer.

When we were in the hospital with bryanna last September, we knew that it was pediatric awareness month - but as we sat by Bryanna's side as she battled ETP-ALL, the brutal chemo therapy, nausea, fatigue, overall sickness and then septic shock leading to intubation (The first of 2 times that she required life support)...all in the month of September...I couldn't stop to think about awareness or funding or all the people who are rallying around the nation to help kids like Bryanna. I was not even remotely thinking about cancer awareness, lighting the night, lighting it up gold or any other slogan. I only focused on loving my dying little girl. I focused on supporting my two other kids (who are equally as important) who were struggling to make sense of cancer. I was trying to eat and drink something each day beyond the cold cup of coffee I got sometime early in the morning that day. I was trying to be aware of the immense exhaustion and stress that Mike was dealing with as he had to continue working so that we would not lose our clients. I was aware of the guilt we both felt when we weren't by her side, even though we knew one of us was always by her side. I was aware of that Mike would make sure my gas tank was full so that I wouldn't have to stop to get gas when I was so exhausted. I was aware of the sorrow and fear in the eyes of the parents on hemonc. I saw and was aware of the encouragement from the team when I would rock the halls with Bryanna and annoy her by singing the same song over and over. They knew that these moments were miserable and painful but so important to her. They also knew the amount of energy it took me to put on that brave and happy face and sing and encourage her as we circled the floor in her special wheelchair - reclined, padded with pillows and secured with a seat belt. It was a time where every being in our body was praying for a miracle, still believing that she would be able to beat this.

September was a month where we were already adjusted to our new routine. We no longer were foreign to the staff, to the hospital or to the treatment. We made friends with the janitors and the parking attendants. We often found a special note from the janitor reminding us to smile and to take care of ourselves. We would find our cars parked in the closest spot to the door by the elevators that we would use after using valets on the mornings that there was no parking. This was not by chance. We would have conversations with the lady at registration about our kids, we would give updates to people we met in the cafeteria. We were surviving. I would show a brave and encouraging face to Bryanna, get in my car and scream and cry. I would compose myself once again and be brave in front of Evey and Liam. Cancer meant that the short weekend that Bryanna was home, Mike and I stayed up literally all night to ensure that she got her medicine. Cancer meant that this same weekend, we missed my brother's wedding. Cancer meant that we would double check the dosage that we drew up to make sure that that narcotics, anti-nausea and every other one of the 15 drugs prescribed to Bryanna was given correctly at 1 am and 4 am and all throughout the day.

Cancer is telling Evey and Liam that Bryanna is going to beat it, and that she won't die. Cancer is being confronted by the kids demanding to know why she died when I promised she wasn't going to. Cancer is not finding the right words, not feeling like you did enough and not being able to make it better. Cancer is telling people that you are okay, but really none of us are.

Cancer is exhausting-scary-messy-painful-feeding tube-TPN- potty troubling- vomiting- cleaning - requiring bravery disease. That is the face of cancer. Cancer meant that while I was waiting for Mike in the hall by the cafeteria, a random woman walked over and gave me a hug...because I was leaning against the wall crying...not caring who saw me.

Cancer is realizing that someone stopped.

Cancer affects the patient so greatly that should you survive, it is absolutely life changing. Had Bryanna survived, she would have been met with severe side affects such as a certain infertility, secondary cancers, and had she survived long enough to get radiation - she would have been affected intellectually. Cancer is not a disease that you take a pill and move on. It is a life changing, soul searching long term ordeal. It affects every part of your being. It is watching your daughter realize that she is losing her hair. It is hearing your 9 year old daughter say she knows she is going to die. It is hearing your child scream and beg for the pain to stop. Cancer is watching your child beg for the nurse to hurry with her sedation before her weekly IT because she knew it was the only way she didn't feel pain. Cancer is watching your healthy daughter become frail and pale. It is watching the life go out of her eyes, it is holding her in the middle of the night because she is too scared to be by herself. Cancer means that you run across the hospital down two floors all the way to the cafeteria 5 minutes before it closes for the pizza that she is craving. You go because you would do anything for her, and this is the first time in a week she asked for food. Cancer means that you end up eating that pizza cold across the room from her because she can't handle the smell of it and no longer has an appetite. Cancer means that Mike goes to the ends of the earth to get cottage cheese when that's what she was craving - and when no one would help him, he went into the kitchen to ask the guy to give it to him, which he of course then purchased. Cancer to a parent means you do what you have to do to make your child okay. Cancer meant that the cottage cheese was put in the refrigerator and never eaten because she couldn't stop throwing up. Cancer means that you can't hold your baby girl because you are so run down that you got sick. Holding your child at that point now meant that you could literally kill her from the virus that you have.

Cancer means that your little girl goes from looking healthy (even though you knew something was wrong)

... to being so sick she couldn't sit unsupported...

So sick that she only had energy to draw a circle...one time.




and so sick that she couldn't wake up when super heroes came and visited.



Now we just have pictures.


We just have memories.
Memories that we hope to never forget because we know we can never make any more with Bryanna. This is what cancer means.

Now, as I sit here in my kitchen and not in the hospital, with Evey and Liam making a fort without Bryanna...as I sit here thinking about cancer awareness, I am painfully aware what pediatric cancer is. I am painfully aware when I go grocery shopping, when I go back to school shopping and when I prepare the kids for a new year of school. Last year - Bryanna was in 4th grade...and the entire school year felt like an eternity. Cancer meant that last summer she was diagnosed, and then during the school year she was put on life support twice and then died. Cancer meant that we still had to get Evey and Liam through the rest of their school year. Cancer means that we still have to pick up the pieces as school starts in a few days knowing that everyone else has moved on, but we still struggle. She would have been in 5th grade. Not yet a year has passed since she has passed away and yet Cancer has made it so we are only preparing two kids to advance a year. Cancer has made it so Mike and I weigh the emotional risk of watching certain movies or going to certain places. Cancer means we do not have our beautiful Bryanna here with us.

Cancer means that we need so much more in funding...more than 4% to find better treatments and cures for pediatric cancers...and especially those such as ETP-ALL which has very little research and virtually no specific treatment protocol like AML and T-Cell ALL. This means that as much as I know what this month is, I am also painfully aware what cancer is every single day of the year. But, I am also aware that without awareness, we as a society will never fully understand the magnitude of their impact on these children. We as a society can help change the lives of these children. Because of awarness and national efforts, parents can focus on their kids and not worry about going gold. I am miserably aware that it didn't work for Bryanna...but let's continue to be aware of what is needed and work together to help other kids...No kid should have to go through what Bryanna did. No kid should have to suffer and feel the pain and fear like Bryanna did. No child should ever have to visit their sister's grave site or look for signs that she is still with them.

Cancer is isolating yet we are never alone in this. It's tough but it's not enough. We need to be aware. We need to kill the cancer so it doesn't kill our kids anymore. So, when I can no longer avoid the grocery store and I prepare myself as I get up to the register and am asked every single time if I want to donate to pediatric cancer, and as I watch the St. Judes commercials that are a constant reminder of what Bryanna went through (only they don't show the dark side of it), I remind myself that it is because of everyone coming together that one day we will have a cure. It is because we go gold in September every year that more people are aware of kids like Bryanna. It is because of this that the parents do not have to think about going gold in September when they are in the hospital with their child. It is because of this that folks are more aware of the lack of funding. People are more aware that kids die all the time. Kids like Bryanna. People become more aware that siblings like Evey and Liam are left behind. All because of cancer.

It is because of this that I hope that one day there will be no cancer.

It can't come soon enough.





www.facebook.com/bryannaslove

Saturday, August 12, 2017

What If?

We have had a tough week this week. I'm not sure what the significance of this week is beyond the fact that it would have been the week after Bryanna was initially admitted into the hospital. At this point she would have had 2 Intrathecal chemo (Chemo in the spine to target her central nervous system) and at least 9 days worth of chemo and steroids on top of that. This is when her hell really began. The pain, the suffering, the fear...it didn't stop once she was admitted...it only just began.

It's interesting though - as we struggled this week on various levels, we also had various signs that Bryanna was with us.  As Mike and I put the kids to bed one night, we talked about Bryanna and her star. We talked about missing her but that she was here with us in our hearts. As sad as it was, there were no tears that night but an understanding. A belief that she truly was with us when we needed her. We read to the kids, turned their music on, gave them kisses and hugs and came back out to the living room. We were met with a odd sound - one that we couldn't place. We thought it was our air purifier and so we shut it off. It didn't stop. We turned the TV down, it didn't stop. Then it hit me. It was my purse buzzing. It was Buzzy, buzzing in my purse. My purse had not moved, fallen or shifted since it had been set on the floor earlier that evening. Nothing changed from the time that we had taken the kids to bed to the time that we came back out to the living room. And yet, buzzy was buzzing away.  For those who don't know - buzzy was a tool that we used to help distract and get Bryanna through some of the scariest treatments. It is a bee shaped little plastic thing that  you turn on and it buzzes hard. It has only gone off on a few occasions since she passed. When we got back into our car after picking up her remains - as we sat at our usual rest stop eating taco bell on our way to Massachusetts, when we were having a tough time and everyone was a mess when we got home from camp....just random unexplainable times. It gives me goose bumps.

On our way into our house from our car after camp the next day, there was a beautiful yellow butterfly following us. It kept circling us and made me think. What if? When I mentioned it to Evey she said something that made me stop in my tracks. That same day at camp, the same colored butterfly kept bugging her. It kept circling close to her head and flapping it's wings next to her ears. As she said, she thought it might be Bryanna, but it wouldn't stop bugging her and it was annoying. I laughed when she said that and reminded her that Bryanna and her used to annoy each other at bedtime and many other times during the day just because you knew you could. But even after that, you guys were best friends and loved each other so much. What if that was Bryanna saying I'm here with you...and I'll annoy you like I used to? What if?

This week, as I was leaving camp, a little girl was being greeted at camp. Everyone was so super excited to see her. They said (Spelling is likely different but pronunciation was the same) "Bryanna!! We missed you so much! We are so happy to see you Bryanna!".  I understand that there are many special Bryanna's in this world. But the timing of hearing that was gut wrenching. I don't often hear the same pronunciation of the name so it made me stop for a moment.  Then I carried on and was so grateful that that little girl got the greeting of a lifetime - just like every other kid that went through those doors. The smile that child had hearing her name reminded me of my Bryanna. They made sure she felt special. They made sure she knew she mattered. They made sure she felt loved.

There are so many ways to justify many of the things that happen during our days. So many reasons that a butterfly might be flying around us, buzzy may have gone off, interesting reflections are seen from her headstone. So many things that can be scientifically or logically explained. But then again, can they? What if the explanation defies science? What if there was more to it? What if it truly is a sign?

What if we could see the invisible. What if we could see what we could feel. What if our beliefs and thoughts were so innocent and pure like children...children who see so much more than we see. What if we could put our insecurities aside and just let things happen. Would we see more than we expect? Would we feel something more powerful than we could ever imagine? What if?

Today, the kids thought they would quiz me on their favorite things in life. Talk about loaded questions. They are never the same. Seriously...their favorite things are NEVER THE SAME. How is a mom supposed to keep up with their never ending thirst for a new love? Don't get me wrong - I appreciate that they like so many different things...all the time, but it would be easier if Evey had that one lovey or that one favorite thing. Always keeping me on my toes.
So, when asked what her 4 favorite things she wants to be when she grows up, and her 2 favorite foods - I did the best thing I could think of. I said, I obviously know what they are, but I think you should tell me what they are so you can't change your mind when I say it. Ummm...save me please.
So she said...that's fair. My favorite things are: 1 Unicorns (obvy..everyone should be a unicorn), 2. Minion (well, that's only natural), 3. Firefighter (totally didn't see that one coming) and last but not least a Dolphin. (That makes sense, since we live in the water).  She was so excited that I was thinking all the same things. Thank goodness for the all knowing mommy sense. phew. Then it went to her loveys (She doesn't have nor has she ever had a lovey)...so we started it again. Thankfully, I was "Thinking" the same thing she had said.  Evey had stars in her eyes.
Liam and I went through the same process. I am so thankful for my all knowing thoughts, because obviously I knew he wanted to be a chocolate covered minion. (seriously...how???).

Our silly moments like these gets us through the tough moments like this week.  I am so grateful that I can still give the perception that I know everything...I know that the day will come when they will think that I know nothing. So for now...I'm going to live each moment and enjoy it. I'm going take the time to think about those special moments when the butterflies flutter around our ear and buzzy goes off. I'm going to embrace all the moments that make us say "What if?" I'm going to live in the love that the kids show and continue to be grateful and blessed that I still get to physically hold them and embrace and show that love back to them. I'm going to let it continue to be okay for us to stop and say "What if?". We are going to continue to embrace the signs that Bryanna may be with us when we need her. She is no longer in pain, and no longer in fear. What if she really was here with us? What if that really is a sign?  What if?


Tuesday, August 8, 2017

The Obstacle Along The Way

Going through life without Bryanna has been trying. It has been grueling. It has made me do a lot of soul searching. Getting through our days with just the 4 of us, just the 2 kids going to camp is still an adjustment. Nothing seems to fit right without Bryanna. Keeping the kids in camp and having a routine has been crucial to us functioning on a day to day basis. Anyone who knows me knows that I'm a stickler for routines...kids love routines...my kids especially do much better with routine. But sometimes, as we walk this road that we feel is somewhat messy, we somehow keep coming up to a wall. A wall that brings a kink to our routine. It brings anxiety and stress and often times more tears and many reminders of what we don't have any more. It reminds us of our reality.

But yet as we try to get through these various obstacles, Evey and Liam remind me about what appreciation is. What love is. What grace is.  From the outside, we are smiling, we are laughing we are doing our best to enjoy each moment. By golly - we know only too well how vulnerable each moment is, how quickly each moment can be taken from you. So we do our best. But afterwards and often during, behind closed car doors, closed house doors, closed bathroom doors - we are not able to always laugh. We are not always able to smile and we have to remind ourselves that it is really okay to enjoy each moment but it is also okay to not be okay. We remind ourselves that Bryanna would have been living life to the fullest, and would have wanted us to do the same. But it is hard.

The kids struggle just as much as we do, just in different ways. They have their tough days at camp - some days are better than others. During the past few weeks of camp, Evey struggled a great deal and occasionally had to come home. She struggled with being only a stones throw away from where Bryanna used to hang out. She struggles with the talk of God and heaven because in her mind, God is being selfish by keeping Bryanna with him when she wants Bryanna here with her. I understand this. So yes, there are times that the stress of being at camp is not productive or helpful, and those are the days that we snuggle or run errands together.  Today was a tough day for Liam. His day started great because it was raining - Rainy days at camp means everyone is in the same building...which means that Evey is close to him. He has such bad separation anxiety these days, and knowing that he can bump into Evey or see her throughout the day gave him so much relief. Until I left. Unfortunately, he couldn't get through the day without a lot of one on one emotional support. As much as I appreciate everything they do for him, it was a good idea to come home and snuggle and take the stress off of him. So we snuggled, he napped and then we made bread.

So this is where once again, my kids absolutely amaze me. Cooking and baking are not a foreign concept to me. I typically love cooking and cook most of our meals from scratch with fresh vegetables and fruits and meats because of my food allergies. When Bryanna was a baby, we were in a much tougher financial place and so I made even more things from scratch - breads, pastas...everything that I could.  So cooking has always been something I have been good at and I enjoy.   But as I try to get through the loss of Bryanna and try to still be present during the day and all the while being a functioning adult who contributes to society, I have found cooking and baking to be incredibly taxing. Yes, I no longer go out of my way to buy disposable plates now, but cooking still isn't exciting. Sometimes I dream of a chef magically preparing amazing meals for us...even if it is just grilled cheese. But this too is part of being present, of living...and so I baked bread. Don't ask me why. I haven't figured that one out yet either. :)

So back to making bread with Liam. He was super excited to do this together...and I used a recipe that if I had sat back and thought about it, didn't work. The bread didn't form like it was supposed to (too much water with the yeast...which I have never done before), and I didn't have enough flour to fix it. So, we decided to still see if it would rise and what would happen.  Liam was so excited at watching the progression of yeast bread growing. It's these simple things that make it worth it. Even though I knew that this was not going to be bread...perhaps a hockey puck shaped like bread, but nothing remotely similar to bread, in Liam's eyes - we just made the best, most fluffy magical puffy bread that ever was made to man.

After it was baked and my suspicion turned out to be correct - the kids wanted to try it. The inside never fluffed up. Yet, they loved it. Liam very carefully explained how we should try again so that it becomes big and fluffy when it is cooked, but that it was still amazing. Evey said that it was the most amazing bread she has ever smelled, that it was "very good" and that even though I don't think it cooked right, it was the best bread she had ever tasted because we made it.

Yes, life is hard. Our bread was yet again another obstacle in the road. So what if our bread didn't turn out the way we expected it to. We tried. We got all the ingredients together, we measured, we mixed and we laughed. We together created amazement and excitement in the eyes of a little guy that had so much trouble finding the good in things this morning. We sat together and critiqued this bread (which I might add was not the least bit yummy), and talked about how delicious it was because we made it.   We tried, and we conquered.

The day after Bryanna was admitted.
We thought she only had Meningitis
August 1st was the day that Bryanna was admitted to Children's National Medical Center for Meningitis. It was the day that everything started (though I know that she had been battling it for much longer). It was a tough day...and leading up to it Evey said...let's have a party on that day. So we made an amazing ice cream sunday for dinner and a tiny mexican pizza for desert. Instead of crying and being miserable, my beautiful little girl wanted to celebrate Bryanna for everything she went through. She wanted to give us a moment of happiness because why not. I couldn't think of a better time for ice cream sundays. I appreciate how much she tries to find the good in life, even when it feels like there is more bad than good.

 I struggled with the upcoming August 3rd. That was the day that Bryanna was diagnosed with Leukemia (we still didn't know that it was ETP-ALL). At that time, I thought it was the worst day of my life. I'm so glad I didn't know what was yet to come. I don't think my heart could have handled it. Flash forward to last week, I dreaded that day - I didn't know how we were going to get through that day...yet another milestone if you will. How did time pass so quickly??! It was a day that I had assumed that we would be able to look back at and talk about with and hug Bryanna, while telling her how proud we were of her and that she's got this. But that's not the case. That's not our reality.

This was the morning that Bryanna was Diagnosed with Leukemia (At this point, they thought it was AML). Treatment for Meningitis was no longer effective and she was getting sicker by the minute. 
So the 3rd came and in true "us" fashion, a huge obstacle came our way. The electrical pole directly outside of our complex broke and knocked the power lines down. That means, no cars could go in or out. That meant that we had to quickly come up with an alternate plan for picking the kids up from camp...only 2 hours before camp was to be over. So we called camp, asked them to bus the kids to the closest location and Mike and I set out on foot to go pick them up. By car, that route took them only 5 minutes away. On foot and only being able to take the main road part of the way due to the redirected traffic, it took us 45 minutes to get there. We got the kids dinner and then set back on our way home before the upcoming storm (it started thundering), could come through. With Liam asleep on my back (I had him on my backpack much like how you would carry a baby...it's amazing actually), and mike and I switching off carrying him and Evey doing her best to keep up...we started walking home. An hour and a half later we got to our street where the electric company was fixing the wires. Because of that, no one was able to even walk down the street any more. And the sky opened up. So here we are, almost 2 hours later after setting home on foot, through the crazy traffic jam and then eerily empty section of the road by our house (it was shut down), we were stuck in a big rain storm only a stones throw from our home.  Yet there we were...on another day that we were afraid to face...jumping over yet another obstacle...laughing and triumphing most of the way. Yes, we did go under a fence and through tall grass when we couldn't get down the other roads...but we laughed the whole way. It was very weird how just when you don't think you can get through it, another curve ball is thrown our way...and it turned out to be a fun adventure. Sure, there were some squabbles, and yes it was hot, exhausting and slightly stressful. But we laughed, and we joked about having to get home before the zombies came out during this apocalypse. We had fun. We made the best of our wall and we once again got through it. Together. As a team.

So yes, life is hard. Life can suck many times throughout the day. But I'd like to think that when one of us is having a really tough time, we will continue to rally together and gently show each other how we can enjoy the seemingly yucky things in the day. And surprisingly, those yucky things don't end up being as yucky as we thought.

At the end of last week, we were at the hospital with Liam for a procedure to try to identify why he hasn't been feeling good for months. Sitting there with him was incredibly difficult. It brought back so many memories with Bryanna. As I sat there trying to not to fall apart, I realized that those memories are crappy and were full of pain and suffering and fear. But they were also full of so much love and trust and hope. It sucked to be there and relive so many of these memories...but then again, in one sense, I am lucky because at least I have those memories with my baby girl. I had the occasional moments of smiles and seconds of fun. But we were able to give her those moments and we lived them with her. I appreciate those memories.

They were always together. They always had each other's back. They were best friends. They were a team.
This is the best we can do for now. It's the best I can ask of my family. Of my kids. Of my team. Of my heart.  Missing Bryanna can hit me like a freight train in the exact moment that I think I'm okay and I actually am getting through this.  But after it does, after I pick myself back up and remind myself that I got this, I have to look at what I still have surrounding me and I remind myself how much I appreciate them. How much I appreciate life, and how much I appreciate the memories. Life is short and so I appreciate every moment that I get to hug my kids. I am grateful that I took every opportunity I could to sneak another hug or "I love you" in with Bryanna. I have been taught a hard lesson - never take anything in life for granted. Everything in life counts.

Sometimes the obstacles along the way remind us of the memories of days passed - of pain and suffering and fear...but they also remind us that there was love, trust and hope. Cancer is not pretty and death does not have mercy but we can choose to find the light in the darkest days. We have the power to choose to light our way.

I always said to Bryanna during the toughest moments "You got this and I've got you".

You've Got This and I've Got You.

Maybe she is saying that to us now.


Monday, July 24, 2017

A Story About Reassurance, Snuggles and Hugs.

It's been a while since my last post. So much has taken place since the end of June, when I last posted in this blog. A lot. Often times, I feel like this blog is therapeutic and other times I am just not sure how to put my thoughts into words. This month sneaked up to us so much faster than we thought it ever would. July always has had so much excitement for our family. It's a month of bbqs and family gatherings, it's a time to celebrate the 4th of July with fireworks and music, family and laughter. It is also the time to celebrate Bryanna's birthday. July 9th - a day that we will always remember. Bryanna is the lucky one of our three because she was born during the summer. That means, her birthday party was almost always a pool party. Evey and Liam certainly get their turn for amazing celebrations for  their birthdays...just not in the warm sun and around a pool.  This year we decided to honor Evey's request and have a luau party in honor of Bryanna. It was pretty special. It was very hard. I made a special cake that I think Bryanna would have loved - it was the most taxing cake that I have ever created. I wish she could have seen it.  Having pictures of Bryanna and Hawaiian music didn't help fill the void of her not being there. But we focused on the pool, the food and the festivities. We got through it.

The next day (which was actually her birthday), we put butterfly balloons at her grave site and then went kayaking to enjoy nature and take our minds off of missing her. The following day we were back to our everyday life and activities when reality hit. The kids didn't want to be at camp, they were sensitive and upset much of the day as I tried my best to patch the hole in my heart and theirs. It just wasn't possible. It was a stark reminder of what death means. It's not easy to get through the day without Bryanna running to snuggle before we have to get up, or hugging me at as I drop her off at camp. It's a stark reminder that pictures now take the place of her warm embrace and excited two step dancing when she was waiting for her cake to be presented. It is a stark reminder that there is a hole that cannot be filled, no matter what you put in it, no matter how busy you make yourself and no matter how loud you play the music. It's a stark reminder of the hospital walls, the hospital gowns, the hospital curtains and the hospital decor. It's a stark reminder that not everyone hits remission and goes home from the hospital. It's a stark reminder of the darkness of cancer.

 Time has passed and we have made it through. We have survived Bryanna's 10th birthday without her. Because she didn't survive cancer.


It's amazing how much sparkle Bryanna really did leave along the way. She continues to touch people that she never even knew. She was meant to sparkle. 

First time piping roses and flowers. I really think she would have loved this cake. 
Bryanna at her 9th birthday party with the hydrangea cake that I made. 

Our 4th of July festivities were strained this year. We thought long and hard how we should celebrate this day. We thought it would be a good idea to go somewhere different, do something we have never done, just so that it may be a little bit easier. But in the end, that didn't feel right. So, we went to our local town's celebration as we did last year. In true "us" fashion, we danced and sang to the music and we had a picnic. But it was different. Evey and I dug deep and tapped into our courage to request Bryanna's song by the live band. Not only did they grant that request, the put a shout out to "our baby girl in heaven who just got her wings". They made the crowd stop. The loud crowd suddenly seemed so much more in tune to the music and the words that they were saying. As we sat there, not knowing how to feel other than this incredibly huge hole, and as we try to get the kids motivated to dance and smile...we couldn't escape the fact that it will never ever be the same. We can take the same smiley selfies...which we still try to do as often as possible-  because you never know when those pictures will be all you have left...it's not easy and it's not the same. From the outside, we are a family of 4, happily taking a picture to lock that moment forever into time. But that's not us. We are a family of 5, making the best out of the worst situation, knowing that these pictures are so important. Having the pictures of Bryanna can at times make or break our day. Talking about Bryanna to Evey and Liam while showing pictures can give them a moment of peace that no amount of hugs, snuggles or reassurance can bring. There is a balance, but I am so grateful for these moments.

Last fourth of July was silly - we were dancing and having a pizza picnic and looking forward to the fireworks. Evey wore her fluffy princess skirt and was dancing to her beat, Liam was playing with the kids who loved his cars, without any prejudice or care in the world. Bryanna was trying to deal with all the little kids coming up to hug her because she was dressed as Elsa from Frozen. After about an hour of being there, she told me she wished she wore her regular clothes. She hated to be touched...and here were all these little kids looking at her with princess stars in her eyes as they thought they were in the presence of true royalty. She let them hug her, but didn't hug back. She was a trooper. She let them have their moment and breathed through hers. She once again put others before her discomfort, even though I know she would have jumped into the biggest and baggiest jumpsuit if that had been available. Unbeknownst to us, she was already battling cancer. She was already sick. Yet here she was, a picture of royalty -making a lot of little kids happy. She was amazing. They all were amazing. It was our last family holiday together.
This. Just This. Evey with so much spirit. Happy Fourth of July - 2016 when the world seemed right. 

Liam playing with a little boy that just thought he was the coolest kid in the world (I do not have the parent's permission to post this little guy, so I had to edit to protect his privacy)
Bryanna a.k.a Elsa - my most patriotic girl at the local fourth of July celebration 2016
💜💜💜💜💜


There are so many things that we deal with on an everyday basis but we try stay positive and know that we have a very special family. We have a family that extends beyond the 5 of us, a family that is close and far and that will be there with just a text or a call. As amazing as that is, we have also learned that not everyone has our back. Though I won't go into details here to once again protect the privacy of my children, we have learned some hard lessons with that as well and sadly had to put up a wall to protect our family. This is a boundary that we will have to figure out as we move forward as our family's privacy and protection is our utmost priority. There have been some people who have not had our family's best interest in mind and in doing so, put our kids in a potentially bad situation, and caused us unnecessary stress. I'm sure it would surprise them to learn though that at the end of the day, our team grew stronger, it grew bigger and we know who is really on our team. We hold strong and stand together. We get through it and we soldier on.  We protect our kids from the ugliness of the world as much as possible and like any parent, try to surround them with people that only love and support them.  It is easy to judge.  It is easy to move on, but this is our story. It is a story that continues to unfold and isn't necessarily always happy and pretty. It's a story involving ugly cries, being sad-mad, feeling a void...it is a story that involves therapy to help cope, counselors at camp who take the time to sit with the kids as they fall apart because God took Bryanna when they wanted her here. It is a story about family rallying together to  make sure we are not alone on Bryanna's birthday. It's a story about a lot of dark moments in a day but also finding the sun peaking through the clouds and taking moments to breathe.  It's a story of lots of reassurance, snuggles and hugs. It's about love. 

We know that for those families out there that spend their holidays at a grave site, for those families who picnic in front of a headstone, for those families who talk to a statue and keep the flowers fresh or prevent them from being eaten by the deer...I get it. Being at the hospital watching Bryanna fight so hard day in and day out was hell. But our hell was nothing compared to what Bryanna had to go through. Yet, she fought it with so much grace.  As I tuck Evey back into bed at 11:30 at night because she woke up and just needed a hug and a snuggle, and as I remind Liam earlier in the night for the gazillion time that though he feels alone in his bedroom, we are here with him - I am reminded of our love. I am reminded of our resilience to get through yet another trying and seemingly impossible trial in our lives. I don't know how we will get through this. I don't know when the kids will transition to new things easier and not struggle with the mention of certain things like God, Jesus and Heaven. I don't have any answers to any of this. I know that there is so much uncertainty in our days, and I know that not much can bring comfort, reassurance or healing. But I know with absolute certainty that what I see in my family - what I see in my team gives me the assurance that we will find the other side. We may not feel it now...in fact many days, I can't imagine the day when life seems easier. But, I have faith that it will be there. Yes, we will spend many days paying our respects to our baby girl's puppy angel...or more harshly...her grave. Yes, I will continue to make sure that she has beautiful flowers there with her fairy unicorn and her puppy angel. Yes, I will continue to pick the kids up from camp when it is just too much to be there without Bryanna. Yes, I will hold them in the middle of the night until they fall asleep again. I will reassure the kids that they matter and that they are not going to die. We will continue to have their back and each others no matter what this journey has in store for us.  Life isn't easy right now, but we aren't going to let it stop us from loving. We may all hate cancer, but we sure love life. 

As Liam stood at Bryanna's grave today, he said something really powerful. He said "I love you Bryanna and I will never forget you. When you are sad, I will make you happy". 

My little 4 year old spoke words that we have echoed throughout their life as a team. They resonated with him. He understood it. He got it. This moment was his moment to reassure Bryanna that he has her back. He always will. 

Bryanna's Puppy Angel and fairy garden at her headstone. I think she would have loved this all. Just wish it was in our garden and not at the cemetery. 

This is our reality. Our baby turned 10 years old on July 9th. 

Evey trying to find some peace as we celebrated Bryanna on  her 10th birthday. The strength that she continues to show when it is unbelievably hard is amazing. No child should have to face this. No child should have to lose a sister to cancer. Ever. Period. 



Wednesday, June 28, 2017

What is your story?

Life is a funny thing. We go about our day trying to put our best foot in front of the other. We look at the world around us and wonder what the person at the check out is thinking, or why the person at the gas pump was frowning. Somewhere along the way we hear or say how so many people appear to be so caught up in their own world, that they seem so cranky or inpatient. But at the end of the day, do we ever stop and ask them how their day is? Do we ever start a conversation with them to see why they look unhappy, to see if there is anything that we could do to make their day even a little bit better? I think the answer is no. I would love to say I do...but the truth is, I am just as guilty. It's so easy to judge someone by their outward appearance, by not wanting to approach because they seem so grumpy, so busy, or in their own world. But at the end of the day, that's not what I want the kids to grow up doing. As much as we try to remind the kids that maybe their friend that yelled may have been feeling sad or scared inside. Or that, maybe that friend that was really reserved just needed someone to go up to them and start a conversation - I recognize it's not always easy.  Sometimes you don't want to share your story, sometimes you don't think people want to hear it. Often times you don't know how.

Everyone has a story - their story is just as important as your story. That's what I have told the kids for as long as they could understand. That's what I would tell Bryanna all the time.

I have a story to tell as well. But my story is not one that many people are prepared to hear. I know that while I may be smiling and laughing at times, there are many times that I may seem unapproachable or reserved. I may look serious or even sad. But that's my story. I have three kids. Three beautiful kids - 9 year old Bryanna (who would have been 10 in two weeks), 7 year old Evey and 4 year old Liam. As my story goes - I have one daughter that blessed my life with her contagious laugh, her beautiful smile, her candid honesty, her sassy attitude, her love for dance, her struggle with math, her blue eyes, her love for fashion, her unbeatable love for animals, her love for my black heels, her sweet nurturing side, and her love for our special ice cream dates in the middle of the night. I have another daughter who has blessed my life with her quirky smile, her contagious laugh, her giggles in her sleep, her love for inventing amazing functional things, her love for dancing, her new found love of fashionable clothes and matching socks, her love for go carts and archery, her love for cheetahs and leopard print clothes, her nurturing nature, her fixer attitude, her strength and her candid honesty. I have a son who loves to dance, who makes most people smile, who loves hugs, who loves pink, princess Elena, costume dresses, who loves to quietly listen and says the most wise and unexpected things, who loves zooming cars around and who really loves his sisters. 

I have three kids. One in heaven and two here with me. One in my heart and two in my arms. 

Yesterday was one of those days that my story took over my day. It was an impossible day. We have been working with our health insurance provider and the Health exchange to get Bryanna's date of death correctly noted so that we can get reimbursed for the months that she was on our policy but no longer alive. This has been taking place since January. We have sent her death certificate to each company, made a min of 8 calls back and forth and was required to physically take her death certificate to a physical location to show proof of death. We followed up time after time and was told the matter was resolved and to call back in a month or so to apply the credit as it is updated in the system. So, I called yesterday. It was then that I found out that nothing had changed. That they wanted me to go through the entire thing again. Keep in mind, this is not taking a birth certificate or marriage certificate in to show proof of a happy time in your life. No, this is constantly having to prove that my 9 year old daughter, that my first born child died on October 24, 2016.  She died in both Mike and my arms I might add. This just adds insult to injury. They have once again escalated the matter but this means that nothing is resolved, and yet again I have to wait for a call by a supervisor and discuss my daughters date of death to yet another person, to yet another stranger, to resolve a business matter. A cold business matter. 

That was so difficult. So, naturally afterwards I was a mess. I tried to focus on my work (which when upset like that makes it quite difficult to focus on translations). Just when I thought the pain of not being able to hold Bryanna was impossible to get through, I realized that Fireworks started playing on my Pandora station. Fireworks - Bryanna's favorite song. Fireworks - the song that got her through  her final really difficult days. After that Centuries from Fall out boy came on...the lyrics 
"Some legends are told
Some turn to dust or to gold
But you will remember me
Remember me, for centuries"


kept sticking with me. After that song, I composed myself and I started working. I had a pop station on the radio - a pop station that normally ONLY plays pop. As I was working and I was starting to feel more calm, I realized that pop music was not actually playing. Piano music was playing. Not just any piano music...but the specific songs that she loved that would play every night when I put the kids to bed. The specific songs that were on a very different station. I have never had a time where the stations switched like that. I have had this happen before. Early on, when I was playing music at the cemetery and asking for a sign...anything to know that Bryanna was with me...the song I was playing suddenly stopped... suddenly without anything being clicked or in queue, fireworks started playing. There as no explanation...it just was. I know this sounds crazy, but I'm not the only one to have these stories happen. Bryanna is with us. 

 Today, Liam and I had an unexpected lunch date. He wasn't feeling the best, so he was quite.  I told him how amazed I was that our plants were getting super tall because we planted them from bulbs. He says: "oh no, they are so big. What if they grow to the sky?!"I said, "well then bryanna would get to see them too". He responded "Bryanna already sees them".  Let me remind you that Liam is 4.  The power behind his words just blows me away. 

The day before our trip to honor Bryanna and to celebrate Evey and Liam, Evey and I stopped by the cemetery to sit with puppy angel. We were so surprised to see that her headstone had been installed that day. We sat in front of it saying how beautiful it was. As we sat there, my arms around Evey while she sat on my lap - Evey says "Bryanna is happy now". Let me remind you that she is 7. 

The questions at bed time in our home tend not to be about simple things like, will the weather allow us to be outside at camp tomorrow, or why do dogs sniff butts...you know the simple kid stuff. Rather, our questions are loaded and heavy and thought provoking. It's questions like - are there oceans in heaven? Does it hurt when you die? Did Bryanna want to be in heaven as much as she wanted to be here with us. Did Bryanna have a cold that led to her leukemia. Will I get it? 

This is our story. 

Before you judge a kid for having a melt down or not listening in public, before you judge a child for always being in their mom or dad's arms, even though they are old enough to run around on their own, before you judge a lady at the store for looking unapproachable, before you judge a man who seems inpatient, take a moment and ask what their story is. You never know, that kid may have lost a sister to a horrible cancer. That kid may be terrified of leaving their parent's side because they had to leave their sister's side and she died. That lady may be a mom who is trying to make sense of her daughter's death and is thinking what she could make for dinner that would make her kids smile and forget their pain even for just a moment. That man may be thinking about the last discussion he had with his daughter or may be thinking of how he had to rush to the hospital to be by her side as she passed away.

Everyone has a story - we can choose to have a bad day or choose to have a good day. What we do with our story is what defines us. How we get through the impossible days will give us strength to be present. It is with that presence that our story will keep growing. There is so much darkness in my story - but I believe that the sun will continue to shine bright and light our way. I believe that the days may be hard, but we can always find something good in it. We can always choose to do good. As I was reminded by a very wise man today, we need to remember to find three things we like every day. That's so important. Our story isn't all bad. We had 9 beautiful years with Bryanna. We have beautiful butterflies, animals and nature all around us. We are surrounded by people who love us. We are living each day feeling Bryanna's Love. We have each other. 

We have to live our story, but we also have to make it count. 

This is my story. 












Monday, June 26, 2017

Grape Scented Bubbles and Never Ending Hugs

We are a full week into Summer vacation and emotions have been running high. Like every family, we have so much going on in each and every day. We have camp, doctor appointments, counseling, work, and the time somewhere at the end of the day that we sit on the couch and at least one person falls asleep.  We need to find a way this summer to slow down. To let life happen without exhausting our energy all day every day. We need to breathe.

A week ago school ended. June 19th marked another first since Bryanna was diagnosed with cancer and subsequently passed away. The end of the school year came. I remember the first day of First grade for Evey and PEP for Liam. It was also the first day of fourth grade for Bryanna. It was a day she was dreading because she was certain she was not going to make any friends. It was a day that we never expected to look like it did.  The first day of school came about a month after our life was changed forever. It came a few weeks after I emailed Bryanna's team at school to let them know that she would likely miss the beginning of the school year. That she had been diagnosed with Leukemia and that we needed to get her into remission before she could go back. It was during that time that we were hoping that at the very least, she could attend in a month or so, but then decided collectively with her team of doctors that she would not attend school at all this year. We were all too concerned that it would be too dangerous for her. We were concerned that even if she reached remission, that she would be near kids and germs and contagious colds that could set her back. We were concerned that the stress of school would not help her heal (School was a very stressful hard place for Bryanna. It didn't come easy in so  many ways and she struggled every day). Moving forward, the first day of school for Evey (Liam started a day later) was a surreal day that we all tried to get through with a smile and with grace. Mike and I arranged to make it possible for me to stay home the night before school started and to take Evey to school. Mike stayed with Bryanna - We wanted to make sure that Bryanna felt special and loved as she laid in her hospital bed dealing with chemo, nausea
, excruciating pain and her hell we know as cancer. At the same time, we wanted Evey to feel special - like her day mattered, that first grade was a big deal and that we were present for her just as much as we were for Liam and just as much as we were for Bryanna. Making her feel special and being present wasn't hard. It was knowing that as I stand with Evey as she sits in line with her new classmates, as I talk with her teacher briefly, as I hug her and take our first selfie of the school year and swing her around and smile ear to ear, I knew that Bryanna was fighting for her life. That Bryanna didn't have a choice. Bryanna was not at this school, in the cafeteria with all the other kids lining up with their new teachers and classmates about to start a new school year and excited about being in the fourth grade. That was such a difficult balance. It was hard. It sucked. After leaving the school only after giving  Evey 100 hugs, and telling her that we will be there to pick her up, that she will have a great day, and we are with her in her heart the entire day...I got my ice coffee...pretty much the one drink I had all day while I stayed at the hospital. I then started on my hour long drive to the hospital crying most the way and rushed in to Bryanna's room as she was waiting for me anxiously. Mike had to leave shortly after I arrived so he could get to work, but once again we seamlessly made sure that all three kids mattered, that all kids felt loved and somehow, we did it together.

Flash forward a few months to last Friday. It was so sad to know that Bryanna would not be moving up to Fifth grade. She would not be excited for the last day of school...the day when we always treat the kids to ice cream or the dinner of their choice. It was a day that we celebrated a job well done for Evey and Liam. It's a day we realized that we made it through the year. But the void is still there. I am so proud that the kids made it through this year. It was brutal for them. It was painful. It was hard. It was emotional. There were times that I didn't think we would get through it. But we did. Next year is going to be hard too. Starting school will be another transition that Evey will likely struggle with. It will be another confusing change for Liam but we will do it.
It was sad to me that as we ended school, instead of holding Bryanna's hand out to the car as they liked to do, Evey was holding the donation box that we had in the office for Bryanna's Love...containing stuffed animals to give to kids like Bryanna, fighting for their life and missing out on the normal kids things. It made me so proud to see how much she wanted to help. How much she wants to be a part of Bryanna and her story.  From the outside, it may just look like a little girl carrying a big box, but to me it was a huge mile stone. It was Evey being okay with that box. It was Evey dealing with the fact that the box is the closest thing we had of Bryanna in that moment as we left the school on her last day of First grade.

All this comes a week after the Memorial that Children's National Medical Center's Grief and Remembrance program hosted for the families of children that passed away at the hospital over the past two years. It was beautiful and emotional all at the same time. We were dreading going, but we needed to do this. We thought we could get through it until we walked through the door and was greeted by a handful of her team from the hospital. They volunteered to work this year. They volunteered to be there knowing that Bryanna was going to be honored along with all the others beautiful kids. It was in that moment that I wasn't so sure that I could do it. It's one thing to be there with a large room full of strangers, and it's an entirely different thing to meet people that make all the difference for your family. It made all the difference to us that they were there. They knew us by name. They knew Bryanna by name. They made Evey and Liam feel special. They knew. They just knew. They made sure everyone was given a packet with a butterfly that we would let go when the name of your child was called. It was so beautiful. It was so magical...it would have made Bryanna so incredibly happy.  I was taking pictures of the kids during this during which I was so touched by the incredible bond that Evey and Liam have. They show such strength through this undeniably hard time. They show love and support, even though they don't always  understand it. They are sad-mad, happy, angry, hurt, scared and every other emotion that they can feel. But they both get it. They both understand each other, even when they don't put it all in words. Yes, they have their moments, but more often than not, they are right next to each other unknowingly getting the other through this struggle. I miss the pictures of the three of them together, but I'm grateful that they are so close that they want to be together. I did not plan any of these photos - they were completely candid, which make them that much more powerful to me. We had some really great ones with the kids and butterflies, which we like to think one might have been Bryanna...especially the one that kept staying near or on us. But out of respect for Evey and Liam's privacy, I can only show you a few.  I'm grateful that we are in a time where we can easily take pictures and videos. I need to keep taking advantage of that because those pictures and the few videos I have is what gets me through some of the toughest days of missing my baby girl.

The remembrance tree (I'm not sure if that was the exact name) - All the siblings wrote a message for their brother or sister. These were then put on by each child to a tree for the ceremony. After the ceremony, the remembrance team put them on a tree in front of the hospital for the wind and rain to bring each message back to the earth. Each message was voiced by Evey and Liam and Mike and I transcribed. 


Bryanna was one of way too many children's picture that was up in the front of the hall to be honored. Way too many children passed away. Way too many families were feeling our pain. Way too many people continued to suffer. 
One of my favorite pictures - This is the truth of our life right now. We miss Bryanna so much, try to be so close to her, even when we don't realize where we are sitting, what we are facing and what we are doing. 

Holding onto that butterfly and making sure it was safe really was the kids trying to hold on to a little bit of Bryanna. To touch her, to be there with her. To feel her. ..


This little butterfly kept landing on us. On my head, on Mike's hand, on Evey's dress, on Liam...and on Bryanna's picture. Over and over.  It makes me wonder....



Moving forward to this past week. The first week of camp. The camp that Bryanna loved so much, that was so wonderful to Evey and Liam over the year. It was a camp that did everything in their power to make Evey feel okay while Bryanna was first diagnosed and in the hospital during the summer. This is the same camp that helped put an amazing celebration to honor Bryanna after Bryanna's passed away. We love them. But it was the first time that the kids had to get back into the swing of camp...without Bryanna. It was hard. Evey struggled to go every day because she was only a stone's throw from where Bryanna's used to be. She struggled to be away from me, her safety. She struggled to be okay during assembly...the most energetic time during camp where they have skits, dancing and all around amazing fun. That's when Bryanna and Evey would sit together, dance together and sneak their last hug before embarking on their day with their group (Liam was at daycare on the same property...but this is the first year that he is old enough to be with the big kids). The second day of camp came with many challenges. They both had a dentist appointment and then Evey had an ophthalmology appointment where she learned she had to have an eye patch for an extended period every day for the entire summer. NOT a highlight of her summer for sure.  But getting her back to camp that next day was a flashback to how she struggled at school after Bryanna's passed. It was a lot of crying, running back to the parking lot (which scared me), having to have a strong team of people on the ready to help her get in the groove of camp and distract her just long enough for me to leave. It was trying. It was exhausting. It was heart breaking.  I was so tempted to take her home, to snuggle her and to let her have a movie day with me. But that doesn't help her face this, and that doesn't make any of it go away. Besides...they made sure to take her aside and let her do archery. one on one with the lead counselor..which made her week. During this week, Liam struggled to keep up with his group. His asthma continued to flare up and he progressively started to struggle. He started to not feel well even more than before, and it was a hard balance of letting him go to camp and making sure that he was healthy. On Thursday, I picked him up early because he had an asthma attack. Code orange air quality coupled with smoke from the camp fire put a big damper on his breathing. We got him home, gave him a nebulizer treatment and he slept and snuggled the rest of the day. And then he spiked a fever. For the past few months, Liam has been losing weight, falling, fatigued more than before, not much of an appetite, having leg pain, vomiting and having stomach pain. And now he spiked a fever. His team of doctors are doing their due diligence to find what the problem is. In the mean time, we try to keep him as active as possible and send him to camp. We are hoping that whatever is going on...we will finally figure it out, and he will have an easier time at camp. He talks about Bryanna so much more on the days that he goes to camp. It's pretty amazing to hear our kids who struggle to express these feelings, to talk about heaven and Bryanna so freely as we go to camp. I'm hoping that while they have fun, after they get over the anxiety of being there and they start enjoying their day...hopefully somewhere along the way the find a little nugget of peace.
After Liam talked about Bryanna being in heaven on the way to camp last week, Evey told me that she hates that word. That she thinks it should have been called something else. I agree...heaven doesn't sound the same to me. But then again, it's a place that my beautiful girl is when she should be here with me. It is a place that I can not go right now. It is a place where we can not hold Bryanna. Anything we name it would be tough to swallow. We wouldn't like it if we called it the park or Disney world either...because the little girl we love is there and not here with us.  But at the end of the day, we have to have faith. We have to know that heaven is a beautiful place of peace and happiness. It is a place that Bryanna no longer feels pain or suffering, that she is happy and that she is not alone, not scared and is okay. 
Hopefully the grape scented bubbles that greet the kids, along with the high fives, the personalized shout outs to each of the kids, the fun music, the great activities...and hopefully the making of friends...will allow the kids to put their guard down and to enjoy each activity, enjoy the moment and find a little bit of peace. 

That's what I want. I want the pain to subside just enough to find peace. I want to know that when the kids melt down it's because they are dealing with kid emotions and kid things...not grown up issues like the death of their sister. I want to make it all better, but I know that's not possible. I want to hold Bryanna. I want to talk to her again. I want to smell her. For now, I will settle with grape scented bubbles at camp. I make sure to continue to hold the kids every day. I want to let them let go of me first when I hug them so they know that the hug is there for as long and as often that they need it. 
I want wake up to three kids excited about their day...not just two. But these are the cards I am dealt. We will be okay. I will continue to breath and get through each day. Even the impossible ones.
Evey and Liam basking in the joy of catching grape scented bubbles, and about to high five more people than the average athlete does on their way to the field. It is a moment of happiness, a moment excitement before they think about Bryanna not being with them...dancing all the way in. Bryanna's love for camp was contagious...