Tanner update 6/2

Dear Friends:

tanner-curls-with-backpackSo much has happened in the past two very long days.  Let me start by saying thank you to all of you for your prayers, your loving messages, your extraordinary kindnesses and thoughtfulness towards our family in this terrible time for us.  Your emails keep John and I going through the day; we feel wrapped in love at a time when we need it most.

Yesterday was another exhausting day, but Tanner’s surgery to insert the chemo port and her spinal tap went well.  Her spinal fluid showed no leukemia cells, thankfully, but they inject chemo into her spinal fluid either way, though to prevent any cells from forming there.  This &^%^$#!! disease is so hideous that it actually hides in your spinal column since it knows that the chemo injected into her bloostream doesn’t work there.  Your body protects your brain and spinal column so thoroughly, that unless they inject the chemo directly into the spine, the leukemia can hide there and come out later to begin it’s path of destruction once again.  Unbelievable.

Tanner handled yesterday beautifully, and mercifully, emerged from her surgery a new girl.  One of the medicines they have given her to help with the pain finally kicked in after building up in her system for a few days and has made it possible for her to be much more comfortable while still and less tender when moving, although moving is still extremely painful.  That very morning, she was either completely doped up on morphine or she was panting from the excrutiating pain of just lying in her bed; it was heartbreaking.  So, we are so grateful she is a little more comfortable and some of her personality has come back.  She tires easily, though and sleeps often.

Today was the day that Tanner Page, age 5 and three quarters, had to accept that she has cancer.  The endless march of medication, the length of time she will be in the hospital, and, most devestating to her, the fact that she will lose her hair.  She ended the day by refusing to take medication (in only a way that Tanner could refuse!) and then realizing it made no difference whether she refused or not.  Before she went to sleep, she looked up at me with tears streaming down her cheeks and said, “I hate this place and I hate Leukemia.”  Amen to that.

She also had first dose of chemo today, which is oddly anticlimactic.  They just shoot it into the IV line that runs into her port (which feeds directly into the blood vessels leading to her heart) and that’s that.  I didn’t notice any real side effects today except that her food seemed to not taste good to her.

John and I spent the morning trying to digest the treatment plan, which is just so unimaginable.  It seemed like they discussed about a hundred drugs with us, to be administered in every way possible.  We will have honorary medical degrees before this is through.

So, enough said about the awful stuff… here was the good stuff:  my child, head pealed back in hysterical laughter as she snatched the hair off a puppet named Slater to reveal his leukemia inspired bald head; the immeasurable kindess of our friends who are doing things for us we didn’t even realize we needed; a darling little 8-year old named Lily who is friends with one of Tanner’s friends is 7 months into Leukemia treatment and wrote Tanner a note in crayon telling her that chemo is hard but she knows that Tanner can do it; my son saying to me as I left the house (again) this morning, “Mommy come back?” and then running off happily to play with a friend; and the doctors and nurses at this amazing hospital where they have thought of anything and everything a family could ever need and who treat our daughter like she is their own, even though they see this stuff every day.

Forgive me for the length of this post.  It’s ridiculously long, but helps me process this thing that has hit my family and turned our lives upside down.  A good friend has created a blog so that I can keep this up and disseminate information more easily.  You can reach it at http://www.tanner.celiamusic.net.  It will probably post tomorrow.  Thanks, Ron. [editorial: You’re welcome, glad I can do something helpful, — Ron]

One last thing — people keep asking how they can help… right now we have everything we need, but if you want to help us find a way to end this horrible disease, there is one thing you can do.  The little girl I mentioned above has a website, lilysgarden.org, where you can donate money to research for children’s cancer.  Any donations made in Tanner’s honor would be amazing.

Time for bed.
Love,
Beth

Tanner’s diagnosis

Dear Friends and Family:

190px-acute_leukemia-allFor those of you who are receiving these email updates for the first time, let me start by saying that Tanner is in the hospital again and has been since Thursday. Finally after many days of intense pain, fever and unexplained abnormalities in her blood work, we have a diagnosis, but it is not any from which we can find any comfort. Tanner has leukemia… my sweet, funny little girl has cancer… so hard to believe, but writing this helps me cope somehow.

It is midnight and I have just finished signing the paperwork for her to have a chemotherapy port surgically implanted into her chest tomorrow so we can begin treatment immediately. She will also have a spinal tap. This is following a bone marrow biopsy today, so suffice it to say, not a good couple of days for her.

Odd as this sounds, if you are going to have leukemia, this is the type to get. She has ALL [read more at Wikipedia], which for a girl her age, has a 95% cure rate. We will be in the hospital for treatment for 2-4 weeks, followed by outpatient chemo treatments once a week for many months to come. That will eventually change to once a month. Her total treaments will last 2 1/2 to 3 years — a fact that I still cannot come to any terms with at all. I think getting through tomorrow will be my goal for now.

I sent my poor exhausted husband home to get some rest, but the nurses and doctors are quickly becoming friends now and have been super, so I don’t feel alone.

Her intense back, neck and leg pain, which doctors found to be incompatible with Leukemia, is due to a high concentraction of leukemia cells clustered in her spine an legs, which is apparently not seen often. 90% of the cells in her bone marrow are leukemia cells — how could that be when she was riding her bike so enthusiastically just three days ago?

Usually, she is pretty comfortable as long as she remains completely immobile, but just minutes ago developed a pain in her side that is hurting her now even when she rests. She calls it a needle pain and when it flares, tears roll down her little cheeks and her eyes grow wide in helpless suprise. She looks at her Mommy to fix it, which of course, I can’t. The doctor orders more morphine and now she is trying to go back to sleep.

You wonderful people have been calling and emailing asking what you can do to help. Tomorrow we will get a better idea of what the next few weeks look like and let you know. For now, I know she can’t have a lot of visitors, due to immune suppression issues. On this unit, each room can only have two visitors, including parents. I know seeing kids would boost her spirits, but we have to be very careful that they are healthy kids and limit the number of different people she is exposed to. Cards, letters, pictures or any kind of little things that would remind her of her friends would be appreciated. Even a little video of a friend wishing her to get well that we could play on the computer would be great. Anna Lynn Whitfield from our church is coordinating meals, which are also greatly appreciated. For now, my parents are taking care of Jake, but we may need some help with that eventually.

I don’t know what else to say. My heart is broken, but will need to heal itself by tomorrow so I can be strong for my little girl.

Love,
Beth