Friday, November 30, 2012

Resilience


I was at a work conference recently on “Challenging Success in kids and adolsecence’.  Much of the discussions and lectures were around instilling resiliency into our children. Resiliency is the single biggest indicator of a successful person.   Not SAT or ACT scores, not grades, not the extra curricular activities you participate in… RESILIENCE!

One of my all-time favorite people in this world, Ken Ginsberg, M.D., led a 2- hour workshop on Real Success – Coping with Life.  He spoke at length about resilience and strategies that schools and parents can use to help their children help themselves.  He defines resilience “the capacity to rise above difficult circumstances, allow our children to exist in this less-than-perfect world, while moving forward with optimism and confidence”.  Hmmm…..

He further went on to explain the importance of instilling realism - not optimism (the cup is half full) and not pessimism (the cup is half empty) but realism (the cup is filled halfway).  Hmmmm….

And that a part of realism is conserving your energy; letting things go; knowing when to use your fight and let go of your flight; having the ability to recognize the things we can change and the things that we do not have control of.   Hmmm..

Yes, you did come to the right blog www.larrysoxcancer.blogspot.com and not the blog I write for school.  When I was sitting in this workshop I was listening with two different sets of ears.  One was my “I work in a school and help middle school students with their everyday stressors and the other was my ‘I am a sister of a brother that has cancer and I am helping myself, and my family, with that everyday stress”.
My family has faced difficult circumstances that many families do not have to endure.  Although, I would give anything to have my dad and aunt with us today, the tragedy of losing them forced me to be the resilient person I am today. It helped that my dad and aunt were two of the strongest people I know, and that strength was instilled in me at an early age.  It also helped that my mom was there to pick up the pieces of this less-than-perfect world and moved this family forward.

So, here we are now.  My family is faced with yet another difficult circumstance- my brother has cancer. Since July 18th, I have been in AWE of my family.  We have truly exemplified realism.  I didn’t realize that’s what we were doing until Dr. Ginsberg put a name to it.  Now, I can’t say that we are natural realists.  But what we are is well-balanced machine.  Anytime one of us goes to the half empty side someone is there to remind us that the glass is halfway filled.  When one of us proclaims the glass is half full, another one us is there to gently guide us to the glass is halfway filled.  And that is where we remain today, through the ups and downs of this cancer diagnosis, we are keeping it REAL!
On Tuesday, my brother will undergo the HIPAC procedure at Illinois Masonic Hospital.  Dr. Salti will first examine the abdominal cavity for any tumors that may have been missed on the CT scan.  If there are any he will remove them and then proceed with the chemo bath (HIPAC).  We are unsure how long the surgery will take – anywhere from 3-6 hours, depending on what they do/do not find.  He will then recover for about 9 days in the hospital and 4 weeks at home.  He is definitetly not looking forward to this!  He will have a feeding tube again, but this time they are adding a drug that will increase the amount of time he will need the tube.  That means no food or drink for an even longer time than the last surgery.  We will once again be waiting for that coveted fart that will indicate his body is waking up and is ready to drink, then eat, then poop, then go home.  I will keep you all updated on how well the surgery goes on Tuesday and throughout his recovery.

As much as we would like to we cannot change his diagnosis and we, alone, cannot take this cancer away.  What we need to do is recognize that and conserve our energy for things we can change, like…

-Keeping my family in your thoughts on Tuesday and the weeks following the surgery
-keeping my brother’s spirits up by sending a card, a text message, a phone call.. just knowing that people are thinking of him lifts his spirits and gives him the energy to recover and heal
-get a colonoscopy
- make colon cancer awareness a priority this holiday season when you are giving to a charity

I really do hope that resiliency is the number one indicator of a successful person...because my family are experts!


Sox it to it Lar...




Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Grateful


Yes, that's right we popped a bottle of bubbly to celebrate the news we got today.  We first met with his oncologist, Dr. Stein.  When she walked into the room with tears in her eyes, and hugged my brother, you heard a huge sigh of relief in the room.  The CT scan was clear - it showed no tumors, no swelling of the periteneal wall or lymph nodes.  YAY!!!  We could not have asked for better news!
A couple hours later we met with the oncology surgeon, Dr. Salti to hear what our next step is.  He was very pleased with the scan and how he tolerated the chemo and he's excited to get his hands on him to do the HIPAC procedure.(chemo bath).  He will have this surgery the first week of December.  We'll know the exact date tomorrow.  It's the same procedure I've talked about - nothing different.  He'll be in the hospital for 9 days and then recover at home for another 4 weeks.  He is NOT happy with this but too bad.  Once he has recovered from the surgery he will then go back to Dr. Stein for another round of chemo.  Like Dr. Stein said, "aggressive treatment for a very aggressive cancer".

Thank you again for all of your positive vibes, thoughts, prayers, whatever you did.  It worked!

Sox it to it Lar...

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Positive Vibes today



Grant me the serenity

to accept the things I cannot change;
courage to change the things I can;
and wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time;
Enjoying one moment at a time;
Accepting hardships as the pathway to peace.


Ahhhh….the old serenity prayer.  An oldie but a goodie.  I took some creative license to change it up a little for my ‘spiritual but not in a god sorta way’ friends and family. 
Larry has his CT scan today to see if any tumors have grown in the past 16 weeks since his last one.  Last week this ‘prayer’ was brought up in a conference I attended on adolescence and problem solving.  Weird I know, but as it was being read (I actually listened to each word) I couldn’t help but think about today and tomorrow and my family.  I think this ‘prayer’ helps put things in perspective.
Please send out all of your positive vibes today!   


Sox it to it Lar...

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Get your Rear in Gear Slideshow





I'm FINALLY done with the slide show that I put together for the Get your Rear in Gear 5k.  The actual slide show has been done, it's the uploading for quality that took me awhile.  For someone that thinks she's computer literate, this project almost put me over the edge :)  Thank you to everyone that shared their pictures from the day, especially Jill Kullen for capturing a wonderful day in pictures.  
Thank you to the LRM Crew for taking time out of your busy schedules and walking with us - your support has meant the world to us.  For everyone that supported the LRM Crew, I thank you for your donations that will one day wipe away colon cancer.  A special thank you to my mom for coordinating an amazing brunch that fed the Crew after the walk.  And to my brother, thank you for being the strong wonderful guy that you are...This is for you!

To view the slide show please click:  2012 Get Your Rear in Gear 5k Chicago

PLEASE let me know via email or the comment section on this blog if you have problems viewing the show.  OR if you can view it but the quality is poor.  I think I fixed all the issues, but you just never know.

Enjoy :)

Sox it to it Lar...