[Photo Description: Ollie and Dawn pose in front of a Make-A-Wish Eastern Ontario banner at a recent Golf Tournament. Photo courtesy of Sharon Forbes, Make-A-Wish Eastern Ontario.]
That's part of why I do so much advocacy and fundraising for organizations that are important to us. To that end, September was Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, and a busy one it was!
We started out filling in for another oncology family who was supposed to speak at a golf tournament being held for
Make-A-Wish Eastern Ontario, but was admitted to hospital unexpectedly days before. Often cancer families are in this situation and we ourselves have experienced this in the past, too. Ollie and I drew the raffle tickets and spoke about Ollie's story and what his wish meant to him. Ollie caused a flurry of sales when he told the attendees that there were 200 tickets to be sold and they'd only bought half of that and another kid like him might not get their wish if they didn't buy more! 😆 He was honestly so charismatic and inspiring that the entire tournament was in love with him.
[Photo Description: A masked Ollie holds a CHEO Teddy Bear in the nursery in the CHEO Dream of a Lifetime Home for 2022 during the official media launch.]
The next week we got a last minute call from the CHEO Foundation asking if we'd fill in for the oncology family that was going to help launch the
CHEO Dream of a Lifetime Home Lottery for them. Sadly this family had also been unexpectedly admitted to hospital with illness. Mario and Abby had school and work obligations, so Ollie and I represented. You can see the launch and our interview
here. He was a bit tired and shy about the official launch part, but did amazing at the one on one interviews. You can read another account of the launch event with Ollie's interview
here. Finally, I did an interview with Sam Laprade on her CFRA An Hour to Give session on the CHEO Dream Home. You can
listen to my interview starting at the 33:58 mark.
[Photo Description: Ollie sits in the driver's seat of a golf cart decorated with gold balloons with Sensei Lyne sitting beside him and Dawn standing beside her at the 2nd Annual Kids Kicking Cancer Canada Ottawa Golf Tournament. Photo courtesy of Sensei Reesa.]
Finally, we were glad to be asked to be Ambassadors for the 2nd Annual
Kids Kicking Cancer Canada's Ottawa Golf Tournament (no filling in for others this time). This time we got to spend the day in the beautiful fall weather, cruising around in a golf cart delivering food to volunteers, talking to golfers in the tournament and later delivered a testimonial as to the difference that the program has made in Ollie's life.
[Photo Description: Dawn makes her eleventh blood donation wearing a mask at
Canadian Blood Services in October 2022. Her milestone 10th was in July 2022.]
In addition to all of this, I'm working full-time, am on various committees and councils for pediatric cancer and blindness and continue to work on several cancer-related studies. It's a lot, but I feel so grateful to be well enough myself to do these things and to pay forward the incredible blessings that we've been given. As we move into the winter some of these commitments will be completed, lightening my load somewhat.
[Photo Description: Ollie and Dawn are masked and sit on the sofa in the living room of the CHEO Dream of a Lifetime Lottery Home.]
One of my biggest mental loads still is, and likely always will be monitoring Ollie's health. To illustrate how important this remains, even though he is more than two years post transplant we had a little medical issue over the past 6 weeks, too.
[Photo Description: Ollie has blood taken at CHEO for his thyroid tests in September 2022.]
In the first weeks back to school we started to see little changes in Ollie:
- Being short-tempered;
- Waking in the night each night (he hasn't done that regularly in about a year);
- Waking up at 5 am daily after waking in the night and not sleeping his usual 10 hours per night (getting about 7-8 hours per night maximum);
- Falling asleep in French class in the afternoons and it being really hard to wake him;
- Sleeping 2-3 hours at midday on weekends (normally he insists on staying awake even when he's tired);
- Complete lack of appetite and is having to almost force food down his throat;
- He continued to lose significant weight (he'd lost 9 pounds in the month after stopping his miracle cancer inhibitor drug Lorlatinib, which was expected given other people had after stopping) rapidly;
- Unexplained constipation and diarrhea again when we'd finally gotten bowel movements settled over the past 6 months after 18 months of instability after transplant;
- Nervousness and anxiety (he'd started getting stressed again about scratching, dropping or breaking things and ask us constantly if he had. He used to do this whenever he was really anxious, but we've worked on it with the child psychologist and in August and early September when he'd gone off of the Lorlatinib it had disappeared entirely, then suddenly came back 6 weeks later);
- Heat intolerance when he'd have his plantar warts lasered, even though he'd done the treatments for a year and never complained that it ever hurt; and
- Night sweats.
[Photo Description: A masked Ollie checks his Braille on the Perkins Brailler in the Braille Room at school. A small black lab stuffie wearing a CNIB vest sits beside him on the table. Photo courtesy of Dawne Smith-Appell]
It was the meltdowns and falling asleep during the day that made little bells go off on my head in the third week of September. This was just after his school team started wondering if he really was unhappy in French Immersion and suggested we might need to take him out. I started thinking about when we'd seen these symptoms before. At first it was scary because many of them are also symptoms of cancer. But I breathed deep and thought harder and remembered that after transplant when we'd gotten home and started seeing outbursts, fatigue and many of the same symptoms, it was his thyroid causing issues. Then I started thinking about what could make his thyroid meds stop working properly and I remembered that when he'd gained a lot of weight on Lorlatinib after transplant, they'd needed to bump his synthetic thyroid hormone med up because they told me it had to be calibrated to his weight. He'd lost 18 pounds in 2 months, so I realized he was likely experiencing hyperthyroidism instead of the hypothyroidism that he started taking the med for. Essentially I was certain he was taking too much thyroid medication because of his weight loss and this hadn't been flagged as a concern by his team at our last checkup at CHEO in August, even though they'd commented on the rapid weight loss.
I verified in his MyChart online that they hadn't measured his thyroid levels by checking his TSH and T4 levels in his bloodwork since April. So I sent messages to the endocrinology team and his oncology team to explain and request a blood test. When the nurse practitioner in endocrinology called me back, she confirmed that it sounded like his thyroid was now overactive and ordered the blood test. She also said we would check his cortisol levels at the same time to be sure they were okay. Our team in CHEO's Medical Day Unit was kind enough to squeeze us in on the Friday morning for the test to keep things easier for Ollie to have it in an environment he knew well versus going to the lab directly. Monday I got the results in MyChart before I got a call from the Endocrinologist. Cortisol levels were fine. But he did have high T4, low TSH. Hyperthyroidism. The Endocrinologist called about an hour later to confirm it, to commend me for seeing it and asking for the blood test, and to tell me she'd send a new prescription to the pharmacy for us that he should start the next day. She said that it would take 4-6 weeks for things to level out on the new meds and if we were coming in for routine bloodwork at the end of October anyways, we'd also check his levels again to see if the levels were normal or we needed to adjust the dose again.
[Photo Description: Ollie wears a helmet and is being silly while riding his Berg peddle go kart at the Central Experimental Farm with both hands in the air.]
So I was able to go back to his team at school and confirm that it was his thyroid, not bad behaviour or boredom. And Ollie insisted he was going to continue in French Immersion even if we have to work harder this year to make up for the two missed years when he was sick. He says if he could catch up on everything else last year after two years away, he can catch up on French this year, even with thyroid issues.
[Photo Description: Ollie and friends from his Beep Kickball with the
Miracle League of Ottawa.The kids are outfield in the last game of the season that was kids against blindfolded parents. Of course the kids won!]
Despite these challenges this fall, my boy has also participated in the Terry Fox Run and made the Cross country running team. He didn't go to the meet, though, as it ended up being the same day as a special event day for the Blind Low Vision program and he attended that event instead, where I'm told he was a real leader and helped the little kids a lot! He's also finished his Beep Kickball season and returned to his skateboarding lessons at
The Yard with instructor Jordan. He's even inspired another little friend with vision loss to start taking lessons just before him on Tuesdays with Jordan!
[Photo Description: Ollie porches on the edge and gets ready to drop in on the bowl at skateboarding lessons at the The Yard. Instructor Jordan holds his hands for balance.]
Mario and I both continue to work from home, with him going into the office the odd weekend day to do server work for a few hours as needed. We are grateful for the flexibility that our employers allow us to work around Ollie's school drop off and pick up schedules, as well as his medical appointments. Having to figure out a one-to-one daycare situation for him as well this year would have been a huge challenge. There have already been a number of days where there has been a shortage of Educational Assistants at Ollie's school and two afternoons that I've had to keep him home for lack of support already. These are the same educational workers that the Ford government and the Education Minister Stephen Lecce are refusing to negotiate fairly with. The same ones that my son and special needs kids like him need to get an equitable education.
So our work flexibility may be even more necessary in the weeks to come if the mediation fails and educational workers strike. We had so hoped that this year could be completely normal, but between educational worker issues, difficulty getting COVID vaccines that should have been available months ago and more COVID spread, and flu season happening earlier than normal, it looks like we're destined to have another year of disruptions. Still grateful to have these problems than those that we've been dealing with the past 3-years, but wouldn't it be nice not to have to keep adapting?!
[Photo Description: Mario describes a small pumpkin to Ollie and holds it so that Ollie can feel it at the pumpkin patch at Miller Farms.]
So as we cruise into this week, which marks our three year anniversary of landing at CHEO in pursuit of diagnosis, and our twice annual MRI and CT scans to see if he's still cancer free, we once again thank you for continuing to follow our little story. Shockingly we are nearing 400,000 views of this blog around the world in the almost 3 years I have been writing it! Once again, I humbly ask for your ongoing positivity and prayers for clear scans this week. We'll share a short blog post as soon as we have results.
In the meantime, be kind to each other and yourselves, and please don't take any of your blessings for granted. See below for Ollie's recent Thankful Friday inspiration in his class from the day they also did the Terry Fox Run at school. Let us all see the world as Ollie does despite all of the suffering he's endured in his young life.
[Photo Description: Ollie's brailled message for Thankful Friday contribution on Terry Fox Run Day. It reads, " I am grateful for life. I am grateful for friends. Everyday, I am grateful for those who survived." Photo courtesy of Leanne Endicott]