Audrey says, "Hi everyone! Thanks for coming to read about me! It has been a very busy couple of weeks."
AUDREY'S THROAT:
The photos below are from a tiny camera looking down Audrey's throat on 3-19-12; you can see the scar tissue closing it down to a tiny hole which is all the room she has to swallow anything through. This is why she needs minor surgery to dilate her throat every two weeks. I hope someday we'll be able to dilate her all the way back to the wide area you can see that is supposed to be her throat size, so that she can begin to eat like a regular child instead of through a tube into her stomach. For now, she is back to 100% G-tube feeding and I have been a bit discouraged!
Sick, surgery, sick again, waiting for surgery again. That routine is getting old, we are ready for spring! Another child of ours has needed several doctor visits this past month as well, and the nurses at the office are getting to know us pretty well-- they said we deserve a frequent flyer punch card or something. Between the pediatrician's and the specialist I think we usually talk 15 times a week!
Audrey caught a bug right after my last post, and started gagging on her spit again. After exchanging texts, our surgeon took a detour on his way to make his hospital rounds on a Sunday morning, to meet me at his office and examine her to see if the infection was in her lungs. It wasn't, so he decided to dilate her on Monday morning the 19th. Surgery went off without a hitch, but he didn't make much progress on widening the stricture. He has to be so cautious to avoid risking a tear.
Audrey and Daddy on a happy outing during a visit from Grandparents. Our parents and almost all of our family live in other states, so a visit with them is always a special treat!
Her big brothers (ages 7 and 9) sent some toys for her to play with, and she loved that too!
One good thing about all of this is that I am learning so much! Both in mind and heart, so much knowledge and so much empathy and love for others. One friend's 12 year old daughter was in the hospital this past weekend with a new diagnosis of diabetes-- it was such a heartbreaking time, but I loved getting to visit her and give her a hug and her daughter a little present, because we were right down the hall from them where Audrey was recovering from RSV. Then I also got to spend an hour on the phone with my dear friend Angie, catching up on her baby Charly Bella! Charly is a miracle micro-preemie baby who was born at about 24 weeks weighing just over a pound, and continues to wow her doctors with her spunk! We used to be neighbors a few years ago, and then last summer we also became neighbors in the NICU--there are no coincidences, right? You can read about her amazing journey at charlybella.blogspot.com. I admire Charly's mom and her blog so much, and wish I could tell you Audrey's story with the flair and heart that Angie has-- because so many of the things that she is feeling, we are too. Much like Charly, Audrey also has a special calmness about her-- a kind of quiet strength that seems to hint at the wisdom of an old soul, and she is so patient with her many tests and doctor visits. It is remarkable, and we are such incredibly lucky moms to have them! Audrey is 11 months old now and like Charly, still sleeps in a bassinette right beside my bed at night. I was so excited to finally set up a pretty crib for her last month, and she now takes naps in her big sister's room!
Audrey still can't eat anything by mouth, and her oral aversion is coming back. All weekend when she was sick, she cried with her mouth tightly shut. I understand that she when does that, it is a way to exert one of the only bits of control that she has. She does it to protect herself, both physically and psychologically, because she can feel when it isn't ok for her to swallow something by mouth-- whether it is because her stricture is too tight to pass things through, or some other reason, so I feel like right now my job is just to listen to her cues. This time it was because of a full stomach. I'm certain her tiny stomach was super full of gunk, because she gagged so hard with just her regular formula that I had to turn down her feeding pump flow rate to almost half what she normally gets, and even then when I gave her her medicine into the tube, she threw it right back up. But hope really does spring eternal. She is smiling again now. When she laughs, she forgets about all the bad stuff, and so do we. When her daddy teases her, she is more likely to reach for things and taste them. When her big brother plays with her, she relaxes and opens her mouth to laugh. I just know that she wants to be normal and eat like her brothers and sister and mom and dad.
Just considering the possibilities of chocolate cake.
I don't mean to make these posts so long, but our lives are so busy and there is so much happening with Audrey that it is hard for me to write more often than I do, so if you have stuck with me this far (thank you!), I want to reward you with one last lovely thing.
My parents were so great and patient with my stressed grumpy self this past week, and helped a ton with the household and children. But they really stunned us when my mother presented us with one particularly beautiful gift. We have four other children, and for each of them she has made a miniature scrapbook to chronicle their "firsts," bath, haircut and so forth-- and each book is a unique and precious treasure. But of course, Audrey's firsts have been so different from her siblings-- she couldn't have the same book as they do, quite, but my mother found a way to do it anyway. Justin and I both blinked back tears as we looked through its pages, realizing how far we've come in the past year. Audrey's birthday is coming up this month already! Here are the book pages Mom has completed so far:
You're an incredible mother, Susie. I miss you so much!
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