Sunday, December 27, 2015

Winter in Santa Fe 2015

It's been a while...

But rather than try to play catch-up and fill the post with what we've been up to this year I'll just post some fun photos from this week. 

We are in Santa Fe. Niko is behaving like an angel. It's been a literal Winter Wonderland. We've had a gentle (and at times not so gentle) snow storm over the last few days. And for a San Francisco city girl who rarely sees snow, I felt like I was inside a snow globe. It was just magical!

Happy Holidays! And Happy 2016! 

P.S. I do actually have a lot of catch-up to do here. SO MUCH has happened this year. I'll get to that when I have some time. Time have been such an illusive bastard lately. But I'm savoring every minute I've got. 



Sunday, November 1, 2015

Happy Halloween

It's been a super long time since I've posted. And I have so much to catch up on. However I'll save that for a when I have a significant chunk of time on my hands.

For now, I want to say Happy Halloween. I am an absolute FREAK over Halloween. I geek out like crazy and spend an embarrassing amount of time making costumes. It's my guilty time splurge of the year. We should all indulge in such madness. Here is a recap on all the halloween costumes I've made for Mila. I've made a few less elaborate costumes for Niko, but she's usually asleep and covered up by the time we go trick or treating so I don't have too many exciting photos of her in costume.


Wednesday, April 22, 2015

RIP Mikey

It's been a long time since I've posted. I think I've lost the posting bug.

And part of it is that too many I-Cell kiddos have passed in the last few months. I used to write a little about each kid who passes, to note their short time here on earth. I wanted to share the beauty that I saw in each of their faces. But however I tried to focus on the overwhelming joy they all brought to their families and beyond, it's just so sad. I don't need to repeat how much each passing hurts me.

But just recently, Mikey passed away. Mikey had an older sister, who also passed from I-Cell just before she turned 5 years old. And even though he was getting up there in age for an I-Cell child, I still can't believe he's gone. He was almost 9 years old.

I have always thought of Mikey as the spokesperson for I-Cell. I thought of him as our "Ambassador of Spunk". In fact, I mentioned this to his mother, and lo and behold, she created a Facebook page to honor this title, which was made official by the 18th congressional district of Florida. 

Mikey receiving his official title from Congress - thanks to Lisa Lickstein!!
Posted by Mikey, The Ambassador of Spunk on Thursday, March 19, 2015

Mike had a larger than life and undeniably lovable personality. He deserved his own TV show. I thought that perhaps he was the most capable of expressing the wonders of I-Cell children, even to those who don't know us. I imagined that if people met Mikey or watched his videos, they would understand "us". And hopefully if his mother continues to share those videos, the world will understand I-Cell through Mikey. 

In my house, Mila will sometimes ask me out of the blue, "Can we watch some Mikey videos?" Here are a few of my favorites. 



Not always rainbows, kittens and unicorns!'
Posted by Trish Doyle on Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Mikey will never walk but my son can move!!
Posted by Trish Doyle on Wednesday, February 22, 2012

BAWK!! Uncle Fwankie at it again
Posted by Trish Doyle on Monday, March 16, 2015


Step aside KC!!
Posted by Trish Doyle on Thursday, September 4, 2014

Rest in peace Mikey, Ambassador of Spunk. April 26, 2006 - April 3, 2015. 


Monday, March 9, 2015

Photo dump

Photos and videos!
Mila getting ready for Chinese New Year

And Mila messing with Niko's hair again.

A cup of Niko in the morning: light and sweet.

This past weekend we got a chance to see the Ross and Watson families again! Even though we had a short time together, it was so great to see the families.
The sprouting kids are a reminder of how fast time flies, as the saying goes.



More I-Cell Coo Coo People!


Many people talking at once, including the dad book reviewers.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Happy Chinese New Year

Happy Chinese New Year from the little sheep Niko!



Bonus Photo
I really should not let Mila do this to her, but she thinks it's beautiful.
And it's really too funny.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Feeling Better

Niko is finally feeling better. She's cleared her pneumonia and all her little parts checked out fine.

After many sleepless nights of comforting Niko around the clock, I think we need to lock all our doors, close the shades and go into family hibernation. Though that is not possible, but one can daydream.

Here are a couple short clips of happy and rejuvenated Niko moving about again.






And closeup shots of Niko are my favourites.  Here she is looking like a lump of cuteness.  

Side Pigtail curtesy of her stylist, Mila

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Alice in Wonderland

“I don’t know how you do it.”  I hear people saying all the time to me and to other parents of children with great disabilities. 

The response is always, “you just deal with it”.  I think we all deliver that line like robots.  It’s the easiest way to explain the inexplicable situation in which we found ourselves. 

The truth is this.  We are not stronger than those who have “normal” families.  We are not the special chosen ones with divine challenges that only we can handle.  We have not suddenly found the meaning of life simply because we are working harder than we did before.  

The truth is we find ourselves wondering the same thoughts of others with big challenges. 

When I read about other I-Cell families with kids who are equipment dependent, or suffering organ failure, or hospitalized regularly, I say, “I cannot imagine what they are going through.”  When I hear the news of another passing (and there have been so many over that past few months), I am hit with renewed shock and terror.  I say again, “I cannot imagine what they are going through.” Really?  I can’t imagine it?  It’s true, I cannot really imagine it.   

Our minds usually stop us from imagining unnecessary damaging scenarios.  I don’t mean that we cannot be paranoid.  Clearly we have internal precautionary warnings that protect us from making ghastly mistakes.  I do not mean that we cannot dream up terrifying tales.  Stephan King has made a living off of it.  I am talking about the very realistic and likely immanent realities that I am thankful for being outside of the realm of my imagination. 

This weekend, I helped a friend with a birthday party that had the theme of Alice in Wonderland.  And this weekend, Niko is sick with pneumonia. 

Whether it’s morbid curiosity, a natural propensity to expect the worst, or being in proximity of those who are suffering, whatever the reason, if your mind happens to wander down the rabbit hole seeking for terrifying possible outcomes, you are usually met with a shut door.  On the door there is a sign that reads, “Keep out”, “Do not enter”, “Not yet”, or simply “Fuck off!”  And it is with great gratitude that you should retract that curiosity.

What you do not want is the answer to those curiosities.  You do not want that time to come, where you are no longer outside those doors.  You do not want to chase that rabbit to unlock all those doors.  Because behind those doors, it’s not cookies that read, “Eat me” or bottles that read, “Drink me.”

This weekend, as we face Niko’s first real dangerous complication, I realize that this is the first time I’m confronted with the what-if.  We have never had any close calls.  We have not had to make any double-sided wrong decisions at the hospital.  I have never thought, “I could lose her… today.”  I have not seen the other side of those doors of morbid curiosities.

Niko has had a fever for three days.  She has pneumonia in both lungs.  She has an ear infection.  And she’s stopped feeding and drinking.  When she does try to take a little water, I can hear the sickening sounds of gurgling and hard bubbles in the throat and chest.  She throws her body in an angry fit from the pain and turns purple.  She cannot sleep.  She is suffering.  I have a physical lump of worry stuck in my throat and I want to vomit to flush it out.  She is on antibiotics now.  I have added a new machine to the collection of loud and obtrusive devices in the house.  She has a nebulizer now, which provides the medicine albuterol in the form of a mist, which she inhales.  I’m not even sure what it does, but I hope it helps to clear her lungs. 

I have come to the conclusion that when you come to the point where people wonder “how you do it.”  All you can do is deal with it.   

Here is a video of Niko before she got sick.  This is from my point of view, with Niko as close to me as possible.  So close that I can inhale her.  

Friday, January 2, 2015

Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, Happy Holidays, Merry Everything

It's 2015 and we are all doing great!

We just came back from Santa Fe where it was about 18F when we left.  Everyone was wrapped up in long underwear, wool sweaters, down jackets, scarves, mittens, hats...
And Niko was dressed in a thin cotton onesie nearly everyday.  When we went out into the snow, she was tucked into a stroller pouch.  I think anyone looking at us would think that it was child abuse, but she loves the cold.




Niko's annual wrestling match with the luminarias!


And Mila gets the most gifts.