Tag Archive for: childhood cancer awareness

Through My Eyes: Week 1 Results

Kellie took over our Instagram feed and stories on 9/5/19 to share Brinn’s cancer story and give you a ‘day in the life’ view of their day. It’s real and it’s raw… this is childhood cancer.

We shared several perspectives last week as part of our Through Your Eyes: This is Childhood Cancer Awareness Campaign.  We loved seeing the engagement, the comments, the likes, the shares and the donations. Each perspective is so different and gives us another viewpoint of the realities of what this awful disease is doing to our future and their loved ones.  It’s a month-long series to help make you aware, we have plenty more to share.

Week 1 results:  $11,525 was donated and 73,315 people were reached on social.  Thank you to those who donated and who shared.  We are asking a lot this month, we know.  But as Erin said… “Sometimes your child’s life hangs in the balance of whether or not someone out there is going to do something for your child.”  So we are doing something about it.

In case you missed any from the 1st week:

9/2: We Have Stopped Making You Aware

9/3: Through My Eyes: This is Childhood Cancer 

9/3: Through My Eyes: What Cancer Leaves Behind

9/4: Through My Eyes: Day In the Life Of Kellie Andrew, Warrior Mom Fighting to Save Her Child From Neuroblastoma

9/5: Through My Eyes: Behind the Scenes with Aaron Plummer, Dad to RhabdomyosarcomaWarrior

9/6: Through My Eyes: What My Child About Cancer, What Really Scares This Cancer Mom

This Week Look For…

➡️ Monday:  Behind the Mind of a Teen Fighting Cancer & Social Anxiety Disorder

➡️ Wednesday: What It’s Like  to be a Young Adult Fighting Cancer

➡️ Friday: What it’s Like to be a Young Adult supporting a Loved One With Cancer

Other Ways to Take Action This Month

➡️ Become an Awareness Ambassador

➡️ Register for the ISF Race, 9/28: 5kforkidscancer.com

Thank you for your time, all the comments to these families, content shared and dollars donated.  We appreciate the action taken and hope to inspire more.

DONATE NOW

Through My Eyes: What My Child Thinks about Cancer, What Really Scares This Cancer Mom

Through My Eyes is a series in which those affected by childhood cancer share a behind-the-scenes look into what it’s like to be in their shoes.  Read every perspective. Become aware and donate to help create solutions for kids fighting rare pediatric cancer. 

  • Perspective: Cancer Mom
  • Name:  Dianna Lariviere
  • Son:  Max Lariviere
  • Cancer: Stage 4 High-Risk Neuroblastoma
  • Diagnosed:  08.05.18
  • Treated at:  Levine Children’s Hospital

UPDATE, JULY 2020:  We are thrilled to share that Brinn is currently in remission and there is no evidence of disease.  

Max has had a rough year with many setbacks, delayed treatment schedules, prolonged hospital stays and high anxiety. These are just a few thoughts from her son that scares this cancer mom. Dianna was featured on our social channels (Instagram & Facebook)  on 9/6/19.  It’s real and it’s raw… just like childhood cancer.

 My Child Now Wants To Keep His Cancer… 

He lost his friends because of his cancer and his new friends, his nurses, he will lose, when it is gone.  He will be 4 in October. So now he has to see speech therapy to retrain himself that it’s ok to eat food by mouth, he will need speech therapy for hearing loss and he will most likely need therapy to realize that he does NOT want to keep his cancer.  All he knows are these nurses. Those are his friends because he’s been isolated for a year now, and it’s not over. A 3 1/2 year old thinks this way. Max is pretty advanced. He knows exactly what is happening to him and that’s what scares me. He’s not going to forget all of this.

 

 

It’s All My Fault…

He’s stuck in the house all the time like bubble boy and has no childhood.  It’s just awful. He says “It’s all my fault” and “I’m sorry” all the time. He thinks the cancer is his fault and shuts down when we try to talk about anything.

 

 I’m Never Going to Get Better…

“I’m never going to get better.” – Max

That’s how our conversation home from clinic today began. So much emphasis is placed on the physical side effects of cancer and not the psychological. I can’t tell you how many times people have said Max won’t remember half of what he’s going through. They are wrong. He was almost 3 when he was diagnosed. He’s going to be 4 next month. He has spent the past year living in a hospital… living a complete nightmare all while in his toddler years, when developmental stages are so crucial.

People don’t think a child Max’s age can have severe anxiety or PTSD but they can, and he does. I only hope one day he can have less of it, that we all can have less of it, but he has to live with this for the rest of his life as well. Every what if.

DONATE NOW

Photos courtesy of Dianna Lariviere. You can follow Max’s journey with neuroblastoma on his Facebook Channel Max’s Fight With Neuroblastoma

*** THROUGH MY EYES: THIS IS CHILDHOOD CANCER

9/2: We Have Stopped Making You Aware

9/3: Through My Eyes: This is Childhood Cancer 

9/3: Through My Eyes: What Cancer Leaves Behind

9/4: Through My Eyes: Day In the Life Of Kellie Andrew, Warrior Mom Fighting to Save Her Child From Neuroblastoma

9/5: Through My Eyes: Behind the Scenes with Aaron Plummer, Dad to Rhabdomyosarcoma Warrior

Through My Eyes: Behind the Scenes With Aaron Plummer, Dad to Rhabdomyosarcoma Warrior

Through My Eyes is a series in which those affected by childhood cancer share a behind-the-scenes look into what it’s like to be in their shoes.  Read every perspective. Become aware and donate to help create solutions for kids fighting rare pediatric cancer. 

  • Perspective: Cancer Dad
  • Name:  Aaron Plummer
  • Spouse:  Kayla Plummer
  • Daughter:  Merritt Plummer
  • Cancer: Stage 1 Rhabdomyosarcoma, group 3
  • Diagnosed:  03.04.19
  • Treated at:  Levine Children’s Hospital
  • Feels:  Thankful

UPDATE, August 2020:  We are thrilled to share that Merritt is currently in remission and there is no evidence of disease.  

Aaron was featured on our social channels (Instagram & Facebook)  on 9/5/19 to share what it’s like to be a daddy, husband, and provider while helping his daughter fight for no more cancer. It’s real and it’s raw… just like childhood cancer.

My Daughter Has Cancer

“In February the babysitter went to change Merritt’s diaper and discovered what looked like small grapes coming out of Merritt’s vagina.  After a visit to Merritt’s pediatrician she determined that it had prolapsed and sent us to a urologist at their other office to determine why.  That urologist did a quick ultrasound and discovered a tumor in Merritt’s abdomen. After seeing the pediatric urologist at Atrium Main, we were immediately admitted to Levine Children’s Hospital where Merritt had a biopsy surgery, CT scan, and bone scan the following day.”

03.04.19 At 17 months old Merritt was diagnosed with Stage 1 Rhabdomyosarcoma Group 3.  Merritt has been through several tumor removal surgeries, 10 radiation treatments, and is in week 22 of 42 weeks of chemo.

The New Normal…

“It’s so frustrating that Merritt has to see this as her “normal” life because it is far from normal for any child at her age.  I have for years heard people refer to children of Merritt’s age being in their “terrible twos”. I disagree with this term because it is not terrible twos, it is a child that is trying to figure out life itself, their emotions, and why things happen the way they do without knowing how to express themselves.  Now take that and throw the “cancer life” on top of that. Try having an almost two year old trying to figure out how to express the fact they don’t like being held down to have their port accessed or how awkward it feels to be put to sleep each day for 10 days in a row for radiation treatment. Having a child that is going through what most of the world sees as “terrible twos” at the same time as cancer treatment is frustrating as a parent. 

And then the new normals as a parent… No parent should have to turn a deaf ear when their child wakes up screaming and crying for 30 minutes wanting milk, but can’t because she isn’t allowed to eat and drink this morning due to scans. No parent should have to be thankful that their child’s white blood cell count is good enough to go to a fundraiser to benefit them.  No parent should have to sit in the waiting area at the hospital just scrolling through their phone, hoping to make the minutes of waiting not seem like hours…..even though they still do. No parent should have to sit in a post-op area just thankful to have their child back in their arms as they wake up from anesthesia, even though they are fussy with a scratchy throat because they had to have a breathing tube during their MRI. No parent should have to be extremely thankful that they don’t have to ride on the CT scan table with their child this time. No parent should have to pray endlessly for the best possible results from scans that determine future surgery and radiation, but they will not get results until Thursday. No parent should have to be so thankful for their child returning back to their “crazy” toddler self just hours after all of this.  

No parent should have to ever do any of this, but this is what has become our new normals.  No parent should have to we know that there are others out there that haven’t had days as good as ours along their journey.”

The Necessary Evils of Childhood Cancer…

“The toll chemo drugs takes on Merritt’s little body is awful.  The worst has been the chemo burn she gets in her diaper area after certain drugs.  Not being potty trained makes it to where we have to change her diaper every 45 minutes for 12-24 hours after chemo to keep it from burning her so bad.  It gets so bad at times that one week we went through 14 tubes of Desitin diaper rash cream and 4 tubes of prescription diaper rash cream.”

On average Merritt has had a fairly smooth treatment process with little sickness. This day during Chemo week 20 brought vomit and many tears over port access. Imagine physically holding your child down screaming & crying “Daddy Move” while nurses are trying to access the port for chemo. Many parents can explain to you about the heart breaking moments involved in getting their child to comply with their cancer team. The memories of pinning them down will never fade.

The Juggling Act

“Family, work, life and cancer… juggling everything is exhausting.  I am lucky enough to be able to have a work place that is willing to work with me and allows me to be with Merritt at every single treatment and any specific day that is affected by her treatment.  But it is hard to go to work on days that are not affected by it because no matter what… Merritt is always in the forefront of my mind no matter what I am doing. 

We are good about going with the flow and taking things as they come but not having control of your life and a lot of what you are able to do is hard.  Your entire life revolves around numbers like hemoglobin and ANC and things like constant sickness for weeks at a time. So just having to see that controlling Merritt’s life and what she can and cannot do would have to be the hardest part.

Chemo days are the days that the average person doesn’t realize that even when the chemo Merritt receives only lasts for 1 hour that day… it still makes it a 6 hour day round trip from the time we leave the house until the time we get home…and some days the chemo itself lasts for 7-8 hours when we get to clinic at 8 am and are leaving around 4.  Non Chemo days I work usually 10 hour days. I luckily work local, 12 minutes from our house, so if I were needed for anything I could be there fairly quickly. I usually get off work around 3:30 or 4:00. When I get home I first spend a little time with Merritt before taking care of things around the house like mowing the yard, changing the oil in a vehicle, or a long list of other things needing to be done.  I then come in and fix dinner. I like to do this because I know even though I have worked all day, taking care of Merritt can be just as much if not more tiring for my wife. We then eat dinner and then usually play outside with Merritt before going to bed.”

Thankful…

“When you turn on the news, open the newspaper, or read through your social media you see a lot of negative in the world today… but there are still A LOT of good people in the world.  The number of people that we don’t even know that recognize what Merritt is going through and they do what they can do or what they are led to do to show their support for her and us. Whether its an encouraging word or letting us know they are praying for us or anonymously paying our bill at a restaurant.  Even just now, 175 miles away from home sitting in a restaurant eating breakfast and the waitress comes up and tells us that someone has taken care of our bill. It is very humbling to know that there are so many good and caring people out there that just want to help in any way that they can. I am so thankful not for the fact that my daughter has cancer but for the fact that we do have Merritt here with us.  We are able to fight with her to beat this because we know there is a reason for everything and we are seeing this make differences in the lives of others.”

Dear Merritt…

Dear Merritt… aka Fuzzy,

I love you more than anything and everything on this Earth.  I will never forget that first time that I laid eyes on you and got to hold you in my arms.  That was the best feeling ever. It was at that point on that Friday afternoon on September 8, 2017 that I knew God had big things in store for you for your time here on this Earth.  Little did I know just how BIG they were. You have always been the most fun loving kid I have ever seen. You have always been able to put a smile on everyone’s face that you come into contact with and if they get to see you dance their smile becomes bigger than your smile.  I did not begin to learn the magnitude of big things you would do until that Monday morning of March 4, 2019 in Dr. O’s office. The last thing that I wanted to hear come out of Dr. O’s mouth was that dreaded “C” word as he informed us that you had cancer. You have become the strongest person I know.  I know it sounds crazy because I am the one that you call for to get the stool so you can watch your fishys and the one that is there to do whatever you want. My strength is miniscule to yours. It has been tough from my eyes to see you going through what you have gone through, but your strength through it all is what has given me my strength to do the things for you.  Being able see you up and playing within hours after everything, whether it be surgery, chemo or radiation, has been what has been the drive to my strength. My strength throughout the journey with you has made me stronger but still no where near as strong as you. You are truly amazing. You have also touched the lives of so many others, from ones that see you every day to many that have never met you. Your smile, your love of life and everything else about you has affected so many people.  Just being able to see your smile and seeing you dance with what you are going through has made a lot of people realize that the things they are going through in life are minor compared to what you are going through and your attitude is so much better than theirs. I have no doubt that this is just the beginning of what God has in store for you. You have a very bright future. I am thankful that God chose me to be your daddy, I am lucky and honored. We will get through this together and this has made us all stronger.   Always remember that no matter what you will always be my solid rock to lean on.

Love always and forever,

Daddy

If you are a dad reading this and your child has cancer, we applaud you. It is so hard to do what you do to stay strong for your family. Thank you to Merritt’s dad for giving us a glimpse into being a daddy, husband, and provider while helping his daughter fight for no more cancer. This is childhood cancer. Are you aware now?

DONATE NOW

Photos courtesy of Aaron Plummer. You can follow Merrit’s journey with rhabdomysarcoma on his Instagram account, @FightingWithMerritt

*** THROUGH MY EYES: THIS IS CHILDHOOD CANCER

9/2: We Have Stopped Making You Aware

9/3: Through My Eyes: This is Childhood Cancer 

9/3: Through My Eyes: What Cancer Leaves Behind

9/4: Through My Eyes: Day In the Life Of Kellie Andrew, Warrior Mom Fighting to Save Her Child From Neuroblastoma

https://youtu.be/9IC5dijpz2U
Aaron was featured on our social channels (Instagram & Facebook)  on 9/5/19 to share what it’s like to be a daddy, husband, and provider while helping his daughter fight for no more cancer. It’s real and it’s raw… just like childhood cancer.

Through My Eyes: Behind the Scenes Look Into What Cancer Leaves Behind

A cancer mom shares what cancer has left behind 7 years after neuroblastoma took her daughter. It’s real and it’s raw… just like childhood cancer.

What Cancer Left Behind (2014)

Written by Erin Santos, published on Huffpost (2014)

You never stop thinking you are a family of five. You never stop answering that you have three kids, or two daughters. It never stops feeling like something is missing, because something always will be.

We all know that childhood cancer is a killer. Cancer is the second leading cause of death in children and 1,960 children will die from it this year alone. A form of childhood cancer killed my daughter. Her killer’s name is Neuroblastoma. Her cancer stalked her for five years. We would beat it down, hide from it, trick it and then celebrate its death. But one little cell would multiply, and before you knew it, the gang was going after her once again.

After five long years, those cancer cells finally killed her.

Why is this felon still roaming the streets? Because only 4 percent of federal funding for research goes to all childhood cancers combined. So when the dollars are cut, my daughter’s killer is not captured quickly enough. For parents of children with these diseases, this is a hard pill to swallow.

Want to know the crime record for Neuroblastoma? This killer accounts for 7 percent of all children’s cancer diagnoses and is responsible for 15 percent of deaths from ALL childhood cancers. It is an aggressive form of cancer because two out of three patientsdiagnosed with this form of cancer are already high risk at the time of diagnosis. This cancer will try to kill children over and over again with a relapse rate of 50-60 percent. The survival rate for a relapsed patient is less than 20 percent. Neuroblastoma does not discriminate. It is slaughtering our children and we need to stop it. It is still on the loose, out there stalking and killing more children daily, wrecking families.

For Childhood Cancer ACTION Month, I want to give a glimpse for 30 days of what cancer stole from my family, and what it left behind when it took my daughter, Isabella. My hope is that you will donate to childhood cancer causes this month and every month. It’s hard to get people to listen. There are so many worthy causes in the world, but once your child has been taken out of your arms and placed in a funeral home van in your driveway, you will never think about anything else. We need to stop this killer. It’s not too late to save other families from losing their children. We need to allow these children and their families to experience all the things they are destined to do in their lives.

30 Days of What Cancer Stole from My Family, and What Is Left Behind:

Day 1

We met the CEO of Macy’s and his wife at a Ronald McDonald House of New York, Inc. event in 2010. Isabella spoke with them briefly and made quite the impression on them. They asked what she wanted for Christmas this year and she said a wedding dress. A month later, a custom made white dress was sent to us from Alice + Olivia by Stacey Bendet, a well-known designer. I’m not sure if the designer anticipated her wearing it with a white Disney Princess shawl over it, but that was Isabella’s added touch. Isabella told me she wanted her wedding dress to look just like this when she married her little brother Grant someday.

Cancer stole her wedding day.

Day 2

This is what cancer looks like in the end. The bones in her back were so evident, but her brother continued to rub her back and act like he didn’t see what was happening. He fell asleep next to her that night. It’s the last picture I have of them together.

Cancer stole his sister.

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Day 3

We get to watch my daughter play in Isabella’s room with her American Girl dolls because her room is NOT off limits to her. This also means we have to listen to her bedroom doorbell ring, her door squeak open and close and the sound of little girls playing where one should be.

Cancer stole a playmate.

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Day 4

All she wanted was a kitty. We fought her forever, but folded in the recovery room after another brain surgery. She dressed “Jake” up in baby clothes, walked him on a leash and painted pictures of him that we have hanging in our house. She screamed with joy when he jumped out of the box on Christmas morning. Now, he is loved by the ones she left behind. She is somewhere surrounded by kitties, I hope.

Cancer stole this kitty’s Mommy.

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Day 5

We fought every day about what she wanted to wear. It drove me crazy how it never matched. But, I look back and realize that it was the one thing that she felt like she could control. I wish I would have just let her have more control in her life, since everything else was in someone else’s hands. Her white coat still hangs in my closet and the rest of her clothing is slowly making its way to her sister’s closet. It’s going to be hard to see her sister in these items, but she can’t wait to wear them. Especially those red boots.

Cancer stole a fashionista.

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Day 6

When Isabella was in treatment, I was experiencing an emotional roller coaster that was hard to hide. Now I’m left with high anxiety (especially with loud noises) and other emotional tics. I go through periods of losing my hair, I have trouble sleeping, and I’m hesitant to let new people into my life because I feel like I’m a ticking time bomb.

Cancer stole my sanity.

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Day 7

This self-portrait Isabella drew of herself hangs on our pantry door and will never come down. She expressed herself every day through art. I still open drawers in our house and find little drawings or notes she wrote. I would love to see the pieces she would have continued to create.

Cancer stole an artist.

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Day 8

Whenever there is a special day for Isabella, Grant likes to bring her flowers. Today he picked these out to leave at Isabella’s site because the upcoming race event is all for her. “Mom, she would love these!”, he tells me. You’re right buddy, she would love it all.

Cancer stole my son’s innocence.

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Day 9

Stuart and I bought a run-down little beach shack on Oak Island when I was eight months pregnant with Isabella. We had dreams of our family creating years of beach memories here as Stuart and I would watch them play together in the surf and sand. Instead we take walks, just the four of us, as Sophia reminds us that “we have one missing.” She loved to collect seashells, play in the sand and stand in the waves.

Cancer stole our beach dreams.

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Day 10

Isabella was always known for being an “old soul.” Because of this, many times the people that she bonded with the most were women who weren’t close to her age. There are so many people who brought joy to her life and I have to remember that while cancer stole something from her immediate family, it also stole something from lots of other people as well. I would feel safe saying that these women below are people that she would have called her best friends too. Miss Chrissy — her number one friend. They went everywhere together and shared a bond that she had with no one else. Miss Deb was her NYC Fairy Godmother who flourished her love of cupcakes and nail polish. Nana was her Charlotte Grandma who was with her from the day she was born until the day she passed away, always cuddling with her. Miss Stephanie was Soleil’s Mommy and Isabella would have lived with her if I would have allowed it. Miss Jen, who she shared a cancer battle with in NYC. My hope is that they are playing with fat cats together in heaven. And lastly, my Mom, who was like a second Mom to her all those years. Every child should have that kind of relationship with their grandmother. It was perfect and so full of love. She meant to the world to all of them.

Cancer stole these women’s hearts, too.

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Day 11

She never cared who was watching. She was always on stage in her mind. It didn’t matter what song was on, she was dancing. The videos that I have of her dancing to Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Katy Perry or even “Baby Got Back” still make me laugh to this day. They are videos that capture her in her element. Nothing about these videos shows sadness, sickness or cancer. I wish I had more videos like these.

Cancer stole the best (and worst) dancer in history.

Day 12

This video is such a dramatic change from the video of her dancing a day ago. This is my least favorite video of her. It’s Stuart’s birthday and she tried so hard to get out of bed to sing to him. She has started to close one eye in this video because the cancer in her brain was taking her vision. She died four days later in those pink pajamas. The last couple of years, Stuart’s birthday has been miserable. He just can’t shake her on that day, no matter how hard he tries. I’m not sure if he will ever be able to enjoy his birthday again.

Cancer stole my husband’s special day.

Day 13

Stuart and Grant surfed the day away. I sat in my beach chair as Sophia played next to me in the sand for hours without her. Very rarely did Isabella and Sophia have something they enjoyed to do together because Sophia was so young. But when we were at the beach, it was where they connected. They would bury my feet, build sand turtles and make castles until they were covered in sand. Isabella would give her direction and she would do the best she could with her chubby little hands.

Cancer stole a sand castle builder.

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Day 14

Isabella had lots of special friends. But there are a couple who were really close to her heart. Soleil was her opposite in looks but they met when they were 2 and became fast friends. Nothing would cheer her up in the hospital like a visit from her BFF. Julia was a new friend she met in kindergarten at Calvary. She carried Isabella around like a baby and protected her from everything. Dylan was her new Marvin friend who was a little cutie like her. They bonded over their love of kittens and bunnies. Madison lived next door and whenever Isabella was healthy she wanted to run over to be with her. It seems crazy when I see these girls now, because they are huge. I can’t even imagine Isabella like that. I wonder if Isabella will stay in their hearts forever like she does in mine. I’m so thankful for what they each gave her.

Cancer stole their best friend.

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Day 15

We watch the Carolina Panthers and I am reminded of our little cheerleader. Make A Wish and the Carolina Panthers Top Cats made her an honorary Top Cat for the day in November of 2011. She was low on energy but she muscled up the strength for the day, even catching a “cat” nap at halftime. The crowd was so amazing to her and everyone in the Panthers organization laid out the red carpet for our family. It was one of her favorite days of her life and she had an instant connection to all the girls. I can never thank them all enough for what they gave her on that day. Her picture still hangs in the Top Cat locker room.

Cancer stole a little Top Cat.

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Day 16

It feels like the majority of my time with Isabella was spent this way. From the time she was diagnosed at 2, we began this sleeping bond that lasted up until she took her last breath. She would curl right up next to me and our bodies became one together. All those nights in a twin hospital bed will teach you how to get comfortable. I would curl up against her bald head and fall right to sleep when I knew she was OK that night. Or there were times when I held her tight and would cry and plead for the cancer to not be inside her little melon. For years, when Stuart traveled, I would bring her in bed with me. It was our little secret. All I know is that we both felt safe like this. It’s one of things I miss the most.

Cancer stole my security blanket.

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Day 17

Isabella always had the smallest hands and feet. She was a regular at the nail salon with me, always going for those obnoxious bright colors with a layer of rainbow sparkles over the top. Her hand felt so perfect in mine. It seems like her feet were a size 10 for about three straight years so you would think buying shoes would be easy. But, like most things with Isabella — it was a struggle. Nothing ever fit her feet right… according to her. We would buy shoes and she would never wear them, preferring to be in flip-flops or barefoot. Her feet would sometimes swell during treatment and give her “potato feet” as she called them, which added to the shoe issue. Now Sophia is a size 10 shoe and is getting lots of use out of her sister’s favorite (and not so favorite) shoes, as you can see in the third picture. I can still picture everything about her hands and feet and wish I could kiss them.

Cancer stole her tiny hands and feet.

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Day 18

When you have a child who has immune system issues, you have to find things to do inside to entertain them. So that’s just what we did. Isabella loved to bake and would spend hours in the kitchen making the perfect cupcake. Magnolia Bakery allowed her to take over the store for her own cupcake decorating session on this day. She was in heaven. Each cupcake was decorated as a standalone masterpiece. I remember it well because I stepped outside to take a call from the hospital to tell me that her scans that week showed that she had cancer all through her body. I had to come back and watch her little hands decorate cupcakes as best as she could while she battled a headache, which was ultimately cancer in her brain. Without her here, we do very little baking. If I buy pre-made cookie dough now, it’s a special occasion. Baking has come to a complete stop in our home because there is no one to decorate the cupcakes I make.

Cancer stole my little pastry chef.

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Day 19

The worst part about Isabella’s relapses was answering her first and only question, “Am I going to lose my hair?” We hated having to tell her yes, so to calm her nerves, we would dye her hair red like Ariel’s. She LOVED it. It never lasted more than a month but I love all the pictures that were captured with the red. It feels like when she was at her best. So, every year for the race I attempt to dye my hair red in honor of her. I’m never as brave as she was with that Ariel shade, but I do my best. She loved when we would go red together. I did too. This one’s for you, Ib.

Cancer stole my favorite redhead.

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Day 20

We are all running around crazy doing everything we can for the race. I have to stop and remind myself to breathe. It’s so hard to find the motivation at times now that she is gone. Especially because she fueled this engine for so long. She would wear the shirts, pass out flyers, attend the events, be on TV… whatever you needed her to do. She would walk right up to people and ask them to come to her race. She wasn’t shy about calling you out because she knew how important it was. I would just stand in her shadow while she put all the puzzles in place. Isabella would be dragging you to the race, hugging you as after you crossed the finish line, then dancing with you until the music stopped. I can’t even imagine what this event would look like if she were still here today. We can never compete with her enthusiasm; we can only hope to make her proud.

Cancer stole our biggest ISF supporter.

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Day 21

All she wanted to do was to grow. Her friends towered over her and even her younger brother was passing her by. She wanted me to buy her shoes with heels or a wedge on them that she could wear so she wouldn’t stand out so much. The treatments put her growth on hold for what seemed like forever. We would measure her in the garage but that line never moved much. If she were here today, she would be a 9 1/2 year old girl who was 52 inches tall. Which ironically is exactly how tall Grant has measured. Instead, she never reached more than 42 inches. Our last measure of Sophia (age 4) just last week clocked her in at the height Isabella was when she passed away. I look at Sophia and it seems crazy to me that I’m looking at a shell of Isabella. “I’m finally as tall as Isabella, Mommy!” Sophia has been waiting on this day forever. I have been dreading it.

Cancer stole her growth.

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Day 22

I loved holidays. I loved them because she got excited about each and every one, from Valentine’s Day to Christmas. We made decorating plans, we made special crafts, we baked special cookies, we sang songs… we did it all. Now every holiday is a bitter reminder that she is gone. Her handwritten turkey place card holders, everything on the Christmas tree, her handmade Valentines. We trip over her during these times. I want so badly to be like the other parents at the Mother’s Day celebrations at school. I want to smile as Sophia sings songs to me and not be the sobbing Mom in the room. I want to feel truly happy watching them come downstairs on Christmas morning and tear through Santa’s presents. I try so very hard to be present in these holidays for my kids, but it’s hard. At times I feel her just standing behind me, with her hand on my shoulder telling me that it’s going to get easier. I need it to be.

Cancer stole EVERY holiday.

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Day 23

Isabella’s name is coming out of our mouth every minute lately. So no wonder Sophia has become obsessed with her too. She told me that she wants to bring her scooter or her bike out to her so she can ride it. I tell her that she can’t ride it down here with us but maybe in heaven. I ask Sophia what she thinks Isabella is doing in heaven. She tells me that God is busy teaching her all the things that he knows how to do and she is busy all day being her guardian angel. (I oddly have the most religious kids on the planet.) I hope that Phia is right. So today I let her pick out a gift to bring her. A big dragonfly balloon, a Frozen balloon and lots of pink and purple balloons. She always touches her name plate and kisses it. “Hi Isabella, it’s me, Sophia,” she always says.

Cancer stole her big sister.

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Day 24

I always knew that when I gave her a coin to throw into a fountain, she was wishing for two things. First… no more cancer. But second would always be to go to Disney. We went, thanks to Make a Wish, and became very repeat customers of theirs for many years. She would come back from relapses and sickness out of nowhere because we had a Disney trip planned. Of course Disney always laid out the red carpet for her, too. First class all the way. We took her for the last time a couple of weeks before she died and it was a tough trip. She was thin and weak and couldn’t enjoy it like she once did. She began to lose her vision due to cancer taking over her brain on the “Small World Boat Ride” as we called it. We spent the majority of the time in a blacked-out hotel room, listening to the boats go back and forth to the Magic Kingdom. We have tried to take Grant and Sophia back, but the trip is so painful for Stuart and me. Everywhere we go is a reminder of her, and it’s hard to stomach the trip. Our poor kids ask to go just about every day, but we just can’t do it. Hopefully one day we can find our happiness there again.

Cancer stole Disney World.

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Day 25

Her voice was so adorable. It was so high pitched and yet so soft too. There are times when something plays in the house that has her voice in it and it stops us all dead in our tracks. Sometimes I can’t deal with the emotions that come along with it and I have to turn it off immediately, but sometimes it catches me and I become lost in it. I miss having her little voice around the house, I miss hearing her sing in the car and I miss hearing her laugh. I miss the way that she would call out Grant and Sophia’s names when they would be playing. I miss the way she screamed “Daddy” when he would come home from work. I miss the way she said Mommy to me every single day of her short life.

Cancer stole her sweet voice.

Day 26

Grant and Isabella were thick as thieves. He was her only playmate most days, and he loved the role of taking care of her. Bedtimes were all about wrestling and laughing until finally we would put them to bed. Sure enough, we would always hear one of them out of bed every night. They just wanted to give each other another kiss good night. Now, he listens to a recordable frame of her picture with her voice saying good night and falls asleep listening to “The Little Mermaid.” It’s how I know he thinks of her and misses her when he falls asleep.

Cancer stole a good night kiss for Grant.

Day 27

Isabella always had the most gorgeous blue eyes. I’m sure that they stood out to us more once she lost her hair, but they just captured you. Her pupils were so large, a result of the treatment she received which made her so sensitive to the sun. I always remember when she would look right at me and say, “Mommy, I can see myself in your eyes.” I know she was just talking about her reflection, but to me it meant more than that. One of the hardest things about her death was the fact that her eyes no longer closed that last day she was alive. It was at that point that I knew that she was already gone, because the light in her eyes had vanished. It was so hard to look at her because her eyes always spoke so much to me and then all at once, they were silent. Even after she passed, they remained open, no matter how hard I tried to close them. It was a vision that haunted me forever. But when I look at this picture, I am reminded of their beauty. I find myself staring at her eyes in pictures because they bring me right back to her.

Cancer stole those eyes.

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Day 28

Time to open up the vault a bit. These pictures were taken in her last week by my friend Angelo Merendino. I don’t share them often because for one, I look really rough in the pictures. (Ange refused to do touch-up!) But also because they are oddly very personal to me. Ange captured moments when we didn’t know he was taking a picture. He captured REAL moments between the two of us. I loved that I wasn’t overtaken by grief in these pictures, I was just being her Mom, she was being my daughter and we were just loving on each other like we normally did in private. This is what a lot of my time with her looked like, just making her feel comforted and loved. It just wasn’t captured much in pictures. I miss these times… just her and me… together. I LOVE these pictures and wish I had a million of them.

Cancer stole my daughter.

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Day 29

This is the last family picture I have of the five of us together. She left us just a couple of days later. I look at this picture and my heart sinks. These poor people have no idea of the storm that is about to descend on them. We just thought we were taking another family picture. We didn’t know it would be our last. Now we have to live the rest of our lives without her.

Cancer stole our heart.

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Day 30

This is our first family picture that we took without her. It took some time until we were ready to do it. Pictures just never seemed complete with the four of us. You never stop thinking you are a family of five. You never stop answering that you have three kids, or two daughters. It never stops feeling like something is missing, because something always will be.

Cancer stole my family.

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