What is very much a miracle of modern science seems rather anti-climactic when it's actually happening. Receiving a stem cell transplant looks a lot to the untrained eye like getting blood. There are small bags of pink-ish fluid (the stem cells) that are hung from an IV pole and given to you just like you are getting blood.
Just a few LIFE SAVING stem cells, recently flown over from Germany. |
And so as the hours stretched from late on the eighteenth into the wee hours of the nineteenth, a new immune system was born. An immune system that would hopefully (a) not attack my own body so badly that it crippled or killed me and (b) attack any new cancer that would try to grow and quash it. It was and is the opportunity for life, in the face of a disease that would certainly take that away from me.
Three hundred and sixty five days ago I was terrified...and sick...and very hopeful. Today? Well I'm still a bit terrified. We've had some bumps over the past year and mine is an aggressive cancer with few further treatment options, and so I think one necessarily carries a burden of worry. And I'm still a bit sick; the GvH from the transplant making the inside of my mouth raw and sore in addition to causing other issues. But most of all I am immensely hopeful...and grateful...for this last year and for the future.
I've had 365 more days to watch my daughter grow and mature. To enjoy her successes and be supportive at times she's had less success. She has made art and had boyfriends and joined her school's winter guard team. And I was able to be here for that. To go to her competitions and bring her flowers and stuffed animals for a job well done.
See what I mean about the growing and the maturing! |
Mammaw on election day. |
I guess what I'm saying is that for my one year transplant birthday, I want to celebrate all the extra love I've been given in 365 days. The experiences that would have been stolen from me. The wonderful-beyond-words people who make up my world and are the reason this past year and every year are precious. I've gotten to have it all.
If you are between the ages of 18 and 44 and you haven't already, please register to be a stem cell or bone marrow donor at http://marrow.org/Join/Join_the_Registry.aspx And encourage others to register! You are more than welcome to share my story and this post.
Give the gift of birthdays. It's free and easy (you are sent a kit and swab the inside of your cheek). You could give someone 365 more days. You could give them years. You could give them a life filled with love and friends and joy. Just like you've given me. Thank you.
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