Unlocking Benjamin
Our family's journey through unexpected circumstances

quiet weekend

Sunday, 5 February 2012 21:20 by teena

Dave and I enjoyed our time, though we missed the kids.  It’s funny how you can really enjoy time away and miss them at the same time.

Nate and Megan are home again, both very tired and somewhat sore from constant sledding.  Both kids competed in a talent show while they were there-Megan signed a song called Silly Pizza-very challenging, and Nate rapped White and Nerdy.  Over all, they had a great time. 

Dave and Nate both were invited to Super Bowl parties today, so off they went. Megs, Ben and I just hung around here at home and took it easy.

Ben still has a very round face, though he does not have the characteristic swelling under the jaw of mumps.  He has been rather more crabby than usual, and complaining that his ear hurts-he has a mild ear infection as well.  Seizures are still hanging out in the normal range, so I think we will do another drop in Lorazepam tomorrow and see how things go. We are down to 1 ML from 5. Sounds like crazy slow, but it’s been the way things had to go to get him off. God willing, we’ll be done in 5 more weeks!

I am feeling better and better, but have not yet recovered from mono. Mostly I am really irritated about still being sick, and so tired of being tired all the time.  I did manage to get the house all spring cleaned over the weekend which makes me happy, and reduces the amount of housework I’ll have to do during the week. I also got caught up on Ben meals. Now we just need to do some school!

Teena

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Whose kid gets mumps in this day and age?

Thursday, 2 February 2012 19:00 by teena

Mine, that’s who. Which kid, you ask. You know which one-we have just come from Dr. Marks office after noticing odd swelling around Ben’s eyes and cheeks. There is a slim chance it’s lymphicitis instead….we opted not to do the blood test or run the cheek swab because the results were going to take up to two weeks to come back, in which case he would already be over it.  So far the swelling is not too bad, noticeable only to those who are used to Ben’s thin face.  If it really is mumps, this will probably get worse. So far Ben is in very good spirits, aside from not wanting to eat and a mild lethargy.  It’s true, we neglected to get our “autistic-like” child an MMR vaccine, and I still stand by that decision (Dr. Mark backs me up here-he wouldn’t give it to Ben, either).  We are now paying for that decision, but there it is. Normally I would be very concerned about seizure activity with such a virus, but so far things have been even milder than normal, Praise God. Ben is now quarantined from anyone who has not had the vaccine…which is going to make taking the kids to camp tomorrow interesting. I haven’t figured that one out yet.  The piece of very bad news is that Nate may get it as well….his vaccine is pretty old. We’ll just have to wait and see, but the virus gets worse the older you are, so let’s pray that passes him by.

Nate and Megan are off to Yeti, our churches winter camp, tomorrow. Today I have been making Nate’s food, Megan has been packing and practicing for the talent show, and Nate has been mixing the music for the commons room. It has been a very busy day.  They are pretty excited and will hopefully come home only slightly bruised and with hoarse voices.  Sort of goes with the territory.  Dave and I are looking forward to a VERY quiet weekend at home with our sick, swollen kid.

Potty training is going FABULOUSLY.  It’s almost like we tripped a trigger and now he’s potty trained.   This is so wonderfully exciting to all of us. Ben is especially happy to be wearing Spiderman underpants Smile.  He’s motivated, and sometimes remembers to sign “potty’ to me.  We’re working out the logistics, which is rather different than doing this with a toddler, so we’ll see how things transpire.  Right now we are all thrilled to be in this place and time.

Mono and mumps in the same house?  I live in a crazy world.

Teena

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more ups than downs

Tuesday, 31 January 2012 20:49 by teena

It’s been an interesting week of ups and downs so far.   Sunday evening Ben had a rather nasty seizure cluster.  It was a difficult evening, things didn’t improve much.  However, Monday evening went really, really well.  The best news is, we have made some wonderful progress in potty training. I have said all along that three years ago, I took a potty trained child into the hospital.  Three unconscious days and four new medications later, I took home a critically ill child who was no longer potty trained. I have always said it was the medication. As we lower his Lorazepam, ALL of his skills increase, and at long last we are seeing an improvement in the potty training area.  It’s early days, but we are starting to get excited that at last we can put diapers aside for the third (and final?) time.

Ben’s therapist is absolutely thrilled with his progress. Every week now she tells me how amazed she is, how much progress he is making. His balance, focus and coordination have all made huge leaps in the last couple of weeks. As Dave puts it, these days give rise to that dreaded “H” word-hope.  What would our life be like, if Ben didn’t have to be watched every second? What if we didn’t have to lock and alarm doors? What if we didn’t have to lock cupboards? What if we could leave out technology items without them getting destroyed? What if we could relax, get a full nights sleep, live without constant anxiety for Ben’s safety?   We have hoped before, and there is very little worse than crushed hopes-it is an utterly despairing feeling.  And yet, and yet, hope springs eternal. God’s mercies are new every morning.  We feel the blessing of it, even as we all feel anxiety as we let down our constant guard. It is a blessed time, and a strange time.

The month of January marks another anniversary for us. Sufferers of epilepsy are a superstitious lot, so I waited until the month was over to share our benchmark.  It has now been an entire YEAR since Ben last spent the night in the hospital! Not even a full night in the emergency room.  This is our miracle….This has not happened since he was two. Even as I write this, I can hardly believe it.  There was a time when he was hospitalized nearly once a week! 

We have been told, more than once, that Ben’s condition is not “consistent with long life expectancy”.  We were once told he probably wouldn’t survive the next year.  We were told his epilepsy would steal away his brain function until he was little more than a vegetable.  We were told his nutritional issues would degrade his body functions until he could no longer survive.  We were told the progression of his epilepsy  was inevitable, and he would retreat further into his own world, and we would lose him in every way possible.  What the doctors did not say, is that the power of prayer can change lives.  Children can heal-perhaps this is not the miraculous healing we have all been praying for. This is not what we pictured when we began this journey of faith.  I was going to write a book about miraculous, complete healing.  Instead, this has been a slow, arduous journey.  Ben is not completely healed, in fact, far from it. But never, never feel your prayers have been in vain.  Ben is still with us, praise God.  Not only is he with us, but doing far better than ever, far and above better than any of his doctors or therapists ever thought he would do.  He continues to amaze, he continues to heal. This is not the miracle we pictured.  But it is indeed, a miracle.

One more time-thank you for your prayers

Teena

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Time is just flying by right now

Friday, 27 January 2012 14:22 by teena

I can’t believe it’s been three days since I last wrote!  Good things are happening here.  Ben’s seizures are actually pretty good, Praise God! No more big ones, and the smaller ones are infrequent right now.  We’ve seen more and more language. Yesterday we were doing a cooking project and he said “I’m helping cook!” something I never modeled for him.  He now talks constantly, though we generally recognize that he is reciting Arthur books. We don’t care, he is practicing language, and it is a pre-reading skill, so we’ll see where it goes.

We’ve been keeping busy with my friend Julie who has been here from out of town, and I’ve been preparing for Nate’s 15th birthday tomorrow. As of today, he is enrolled in Drivers Ed. My, how the time flies!  We’re having a little family party tonight, and in a couple of weeks Nate wants to put together an airsoft war.

Dave took this video of Ben chatting his ear off this morning. No, you can’t understand a word, but he’s talking!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlaPyvHzs84&context=C30bd8e3ADOEgsToPDskLioxQ1Yq6Ehg7X0uyXxXEc

Teena

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The snow is nearly gone

Tuesday, 24 January 2012 21:02 by teena

It’s already been a busy week.  Dave and I went to a seminar last night about planning for your disabled childs’ financial future. It was very informative, we learned a LOT. About what we’ve done wrong so far…but there’s still time to change things, and change them we will. 

This week we are getting back on schedule, as much as mono allows. I really felt sick today-it’s making me cranky.  Anyway, Nate turns 15 on Saturday, so we are making some birthday preparations and working out Driver’s ed arrangements. Yes, it is that time in life-soon Nate will be learning to drive.   But the driving hours are all Dave’s job, let me tell you! Ok, I will help.  But later…after he’s had lots of practice. Smile

We made another drop in Lorazepam on Monday.  Ben has had a couple of big seizures, one Sunday morning and one this evening as he was going off to sleep. He also has a new and exciting rash on his face, so it looks like it’s time to treat for yeast again. The poor kid! He can’t seem to catch a break!  But there’s nothing to be done for it, it’s got to go.  There are behavior issues, sleepless nights and vomit in our future.

Otherwise, we are keeping it pretty quiet here.  Frankly, though I am not as sick with mono this time, I am completely done in by evening.  I’m really thankful that we don’t currently have a ton of evening activities.

OH, that reminds me. Megan auditioned for her acting class play, they are calling it a one act play, and she got one of the three leads! We are so proud, and so excited to see her year end performance.  She loves acting, and is truly enjoying a chance to learn the lingo, and things like how to physically get into character, to find her mark, etc. This has been a fabulous opportunity for her.

Teena

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