Showing posts with label believe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label believe. Show all posts

Monday, November 7, 2011

My first 50k = 31 Miles ... Mendon Ponds Park on Nov. 5, 2011

‎"I never feel more alive than when I'm in great pain, struggling against insurmountable odds and untold adversity. Hardship? Suffering? Bring it! I've said it before and I've come to believe it: There's magic in misery." - Dean Karnazes 
(I liked this quote, but honestly he is just talking, since Dean can't feel any pain!)
 Mendon Ponds Park, Rochester, NY
November 5, 2011
The Mendon Ponds 50k race...
50k runners had to do the 10k loop- 5 times!  There was also races here the same day that began at 9:30 for a 5k, 10k, and 20k. 50k race began at 8:00am.


(A photo essay... There were a lot more pictures but I only selected a few of them.)


I did the 20k at this race in 2009 and figured I'll do it again (last year, I was at NYC Marathon, the same weekend.) I was filling out the registration and saw there is ALSO a 50k race! I thought to myself "I can do that... hmm, what if it snows? ...I don't want to run THAT far in bad weather! ... What if I'd rather sleep in that morning?  What if..."  RIT Running Club informed me that I needed to sign up a couple of weeks in advance, to credit it towards club donations, so I agreed and signed up. I paid the $20 entry fee, still thinking if it snows or cold rain, I can switch to the 20k and just lose $5.... The weather was basically perfect, although I can admit the longest training run I'd done in the month prior to it was 18 miles...
This was the START line for the race... amusing because start line signs for races are generally a good bit larger. Western NY Ultras wanted to do it differently! 
A view of a couple of people on top of the hill, from the starting line...
55 people came out for the start of this race... 49  people finished this race...
Near the end of first loop, sporting my awesome sweatshirt from Sehgahunda Trail Marathon, from May 2011. It was 26 degrees at 8:00am but warmed to about 48 by the time I finished, and the sun was out through the day. 
...This was when I started telling the photographer that there was a golden back that a way. (turns out it was his dog.) ...I'm used to seeing deer along a trail, but I had just been getting into my runner high, when a gold retriever with came dashing through the woods and across the trail!


 Blazing a hill on the course during my 2nd or 3rd loop... that hill is a LOT tougher than it appears to be, due to being loose small rocks and dried dirt.
Thank goodness... my ankles are still attached...


A pretty photo of some of the race trail. It was some wide carriage like trails and some very narrow single-track trails. 


This is me finishing my 3rd loop, when I decided  I had warmed up enough to ditch the wind-breaker.


This is me finishing my 4th loop...


This man is asking if I am done and I said I still have ONE more loop!


Beginning my 5th loop... ouch :o)


Wow, there's so few people there that 

the birds became the main attraction.


More birds...


There were benches sort of like these scattered in random places, along the trails of the race course (as well as equestrian horses and couples young and old- enjoying walks) ... When you are running ALONE for 98% of that 31.5 miles, these benches can play mind games... wanna rest or will you keep running? (I never touched any of them, but I'm just saying it was tempting, on 4th and 5th loop.)


Striking a "Prefontaine pose" as my friend referred to it as, while I finish for last place, which is the hardest place. (I did however win my age group though and I was the youngest female finisher, only female finisher under 30!)


I finished in 8 hours, 24 minutes, and 9 seconds.  My legs were just totally killing me, especially the way that my left leg was getting mad at me, for my mind making it do double the work, after my right leg decided to basically go into fail-mode, by the 2nd loop.  (I'm having surgery in 3 weeks for a tumor on my right femoral nerve, and it has been causing great deal of weakness to that leg.  It is the hope of me and my doctor that the muscle there will be able to regain some strength, with work of course, after the tumor is removed.) 
Time for a 6th loop, eh?









Getting my finisher's medal
<-- Food that way (the little sign says "soup & bagels"!)







Monday, October 17, 2011

Calling... (Contributed with permission by Jess S.- Julia's daughter)

It starts as a whisper.
Many won’t hear it, but those that do...
Will start searching for it.
Some will look high.
Some will look low.
Some will look in.
Some will look out.
Some will look over.
Some will look under.
Some will look in the dark.
Some will look in the light.
There will be some that take to the skies.
And some who will take to the seas.
And deep into the forest.
Those that find it...
Will do many things.
Be they big or small.
Great or Grand.
They will change the world.
Because they found their calling.
So if you hear a whisper.
Go catch it.

Silenced Marathon


(WRITTEN IN 2008)


For eighteen years in the hearing world in which I lived I thought “deaf” was the worst insult anyone could fling at me. When a doctor told me in the fall of my senior year of high school that I would become deaf at some point in my life, I responded, “Yeah, maybe when I’m 80!” I never dreamed that six weeks later, I would lose the hearing that I had taken for granted all my life.
**** Prettiest Smile ****
It is a hot summer day in 1996; I am nine years old. (Yawn!) … “Anne… Sweetie… Wake up! It is Saturday. Will you help me make the pancakes? Shhhh… Mommy and Ken [my little brother] are still asleep,” I hear Dad say. I am hungry, so I bound out of my cozy old double sized bed that lies in the center of my big bedroom, with light green painted walls surrounding me. I dash downstairs, as if I were running from something. I get out Aunt Jemima Buttermilk pancake mix, 2% milk, 2 eggs, Canola oil, syrup, a bag of Nestle-House chocolate chips, and a brown-speckled ripe banana. As I mix the ingredients in a large bowl, and enjoy the feeling of squishing the unpeeled yellow banana running between my tiny fingers, Dad tells me that he got more Olympics tickets for my family to see some games in the next few weeks. “Maybe I can be in the Olympics someday”, I think to myself. I watch Dad flipping the oozy slabs of light brown batter into the air, and then like magic each one lands perfectly back on the hot griddle. I walk outside to feed our old yellow Labrador retriever, Destin. I feel the heat of another summer day in Atlanta as the sun bakes against my youthful pale skin; it is a perfect day to go to the neighborhood pool.
(Squeak) I swing the kitchen door open. I see that Mommy is awake now, and the smell of scrumptious pancakes fills the air. She is taller than me, beautiful like a Dalmatian, dark brown hair, smells of flowers, Pantene shampoo, and Lever 2000 soap. She is wearing her long pink terry bathrobe, as I run up to hug her. She whispers into my ear “I love you.”
Mom, Dad, Ken, and I sit at the circular kitchen table; I happily gobble down my pile of pancakes. Mom comments to Dad; both look at me and ask why I am making goofy faces. I tell her that I’m not making silly faces or playing childish games. Mom walks me to the bathroom; she tells me to look into the wide mirror, which covers half of the wall. I obey. I look into the mirror, but I walk away as I deny seeing anything. It is the summer after second grade. One side of my face has become paralyzed, overnight.
Within ten days my parents had me on a plane to California for surgery to remove a tumor on the auditory nerve of my right ear. I was already functionally deaf in this ear since I was seven years old; that was also when I had learned that I have Neurofibromatosis Type 2 (NF2), a rare genetic disorder affecting 1 in 25,000 birth, which commonly causes benign tumors on the auditory nerves and spinal cord. While I was very scared, I knew the surgery had a great outcome, because I woke up grinning from ear to ear, something that I couldn’t do before going into surgery. With the medications and lack of activity, I gained a lot of weight that summer. When I returned to school to start third grade, I had a horrible time. I was living in a nightmare, a nightmare that I couldn’t wake up from. At night I cried myself to sleep. There was a mean girl and her friends on the playground who harassed me every day and called me “pregnant.” My friends from Girl Scouts didn’t know what to do at that young age, and stopped sticking up for me. I wanted to hit her, but I knew that was not right; I ran away and cried.
**** Cookies + Brain Surgery = Babies ****
I am chubby. I am ugly. Half of my head is shaved. I wear a bandana, trying to hide, to hide from the world. I wish I can disappear. I am only nine years old, and those mean girls call me pregnant. I am a child. I am not pregnant! Now, my friends have left me; they walk away. I run. I run far, but then I stop. I am breathing harder than I ever have. My tiny legs do not take me as far as my aching heart and trampled mind have the desire to go. I feel like a baby bunny in a field of big bulls. The bulls are chasing me. I will die, not because I am small, but because they are huge, mean, and hungry. Surely I will die. I will wait until I get home before I cry. I am a big girl. I am strong. I have dreams of flying away, like Peter Pan, I want to fly away.
The surgery and its effects caused me to have a horrible time fitting in at school. I went through a lot of changes in my schooling. Situations similar to what happened in third grade repeated through elementary school and middle school. When it was time to go to high school, I decided to go to a large public high school with magnet programs in arts and sciences. I was a chubby little girl, but when I got to high school, I went out for cross-country, lost every ounce of “baby fat,” and through pure determination and diligence transformed myself into a dedicated athlete, lettered in three varsity sports and ultimately became a marathon runner.
**** Running ****
Why do I run? When I started running, I could barely run a lap on the track. I struggled to run a 5k. I pushed to run a 10k. I went for a run, continued for nine miles, so I decided to run a half marathon. I didn’t think I would finish, but I never gave up and each time that I ran farther, it made me hungry for more. I fell in love with running and I had to prove to myself that I could go farther. Some friends and even my mom were worried about me finishing a marathon, so I had to prove something to them.
When I got to high school, I became friends with Rachel in my English class who was deaf. She had a cochlear implant, spoke well, and did not use sign language. Most of the students knew this, but did not view her differently. She knew that I was deaf in one ear, so we had something in common.
**** “You Will Be Deaf!” ****
Nine years have passed; it is fall 2005. “I’m a senior! Class of ’06!” I’ve been waiting for this all of my life! I’m excited that I will go to college next year. Finally I will get to fly away. I am sad because this is my last season running on the high school cross-country team.
It is October 20, 2005. I stand in a long line at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, and soon we are soaring to the sky. I am flying with my parents because I have doctor appointments in Boston, even though I would much rather be in Senior English, AP-Art, and even my awful Algebra III classes today. Boston is chilly with strong winds. We get a taxi from the airport and find where to go. At Harvard Medical Center, upstairs and down the hall, a large sign reads: “Massachusetts General Hospital - Neurofibromatosis - NF2 Clinic”. I check in at the desk and then sit down to wait. There are a few other chairs and an old lady knitting a blue blanket. I feel a little queasy. “Ann-ee Shi-t-gii-ley” (stupid people always say my name wrong), the nurse bellows to me from the door. She leads me to a room around the corner and tells me to wait. The doctor comes in. After looking over my files and MRI scans, she looks straight at me and says: “You might, well probably will, become deaf at some point in your life.” I am shocked. I can understand her perfectly. I respond, “Yeah, maybe when I’m 80!”
The doctor’s old golden retriever, a retired rescue dog, is in the office. Like a little child, I walk over and pet Madison’s soft coat, as if she can make my awful reality disappear. I am feeling sick, confused, mad, and betrayed. I have been punched in the guts. I think the doctor is crazy. Somehow, I have the knowledge to realize that even a friendly dog, cookies, or ice cream can’t ever take away the truth. My parents and I catch another taxi to Logan International Airport, and board a plane back to Atlanta. I am sitting in my seat on the plane and the engine is loud. I am really upset, and I don’t want to make a scene in front of all those strangers, so I write notes back and forth to my dad, who is sitting across the aisle from me, on my right. My mom’s tired head leans onto his left shoulder as she drifts off to sleep. I remember the conversation:
Me: I hate you! … My life sucks! … That doctor is crazy and wrong! … How would you feel if your doctor told you that? I’m not going to be deaf!
Dad: I’m sorry you feel that way. I understand that you are upset. I am too. I think that you will be okay. They could fix it with stem-cell research, if that happens in ten years.
Me: I hate you! … You knew this would happen! Why did you never tell me? You knew I’d become deaf! She said I’m going to be deaf! What the fuck? When?
Dad: Watch your language, kiddo. I knew that it was a possibility, but we didn’t talk about it because we didn’t want it to hold you back from accomplishing your dreams. I don’t know if that will happen or when. Maybe it will be years from now, after college, when you have a family, or when you are an old lady. You might want to go to the bathroom to wipe your tears and try to calm down.
Me: What if you were deaf? I think you would lose your job! How would you feel?
Dad: I would be very sad. …
Me: I still hate you! …
I was angry at the doctor, my family, even at God. I didn’t know what to do, so I left my seat to go sit in the back. In the plane’s tiny bathroom, I cried my eyes out, like streams go into rivers, forming the flow the creation of ponds and oceans. I vomited into the airplane toilet. My heart hurt deep inside.
**** Tears. Blood. Tumors. Senior Year. ****
I go back to school on Monday, still thinking about what the doctor told me. I try to keep my thoughts and emotions hidden as deep as I can. I usually wait until I get home from school to cry because I don’t want my friends to see. I have a hard time focusing on my classes.
Today is a mild day in late October. I can’t hold it back at my cross-country meet. I have just run as hard as I can in the Boling Park Invitational, but I have fallen twice and finish three minutes slower than last year. I am upset, not about the race, but about my life. I gulp down a little paper cup of Lemon-Lime Gatorade. I do not know that I have four stress fractures on both legs, but I feel the agony and anguishing pain of the grinding bone, along with strained muscles. I feel a pat on the shoulder; “good run,” my coach says. Blood streams from my knee down to my muddy sock, my face is red as a tomato with a small tear that rolls down my cheek. I limp across the damp lush green grass, a little into the edge of the dusky woods, just yards from my team, find a stump, sit down and cry. My shins hurt and my back aches, as if a thousand needles have stabbed me. I use ibuprofen because it helps a little with pain, but I am hurt; my heart is bleeding. I feel as though nobody can possibly understand what I am going through. Do people even know about NF2? Do they know about benign tumors on the spinal cord and auditory nerves? Do they know that I am hurt?
Two months later, the doctors gave me a steroid medication in hopes of saving my hearing. I returned to Boston on the second day of December. I had surgery two days later to remove the three tumors on my spinal cord that had been altering my running gait, causing a lot of physical and emotional pain during the last cross-country season. Thank God, that was successful and I could still run! As soon as I got discharged to leave, rather than going home, I was on a plane to California for another surgery. Two days later, the surgeon operated to decompress the auditory neuroma tumor of the eighth cranial nerve on the left side, which was caused by my rare genetic disorder. That surgery did not help. On Christmas Eve I had another one. I spent Christmas in a hospital room in Los Angeles where I could see the famous Hollywood sign from my window. My dad gave me a small white iPod wrapped in shiny gift-wrap; it was quickly exchanged for a portable DVD player and two movies: Forrest Gump and Four Minutes.
The New Year came, 2006. I was in a complete state of denial, because I was not ready to accept such a sudden and drastic change to my life. I had viewed myself as hearing, all of my life. I didn’t see that there could be anything in between. Just hearing and deaf. I could still hear a lot of sounds at that point, so I knew that meant I was not deaf. I figured I was hearing, even though I could not understand speech. I probably had tinnitus, which is a roaring sound in the ears. Suddenly, all communication had to be written. It was a strange transitional time for me. The only required course remaining for high school graduation was a quarter economics class, which I took with the help of a captionist who sat next to me with a laptop computer. I didn’t know anything about deaf people, culture, or sign language. So I began taking an American Sign Language class at a community college while I was still in high school, but I really was not emotionally ready for that. I went to deaf gatherings and introduced myself at a meeting of the Association of Late Deafened Adults at the Jimmy Carter Presidential Center. I felt like God was punishing me.
**** “Can You Read My Lips?” ****
Reality begins to sink in. I spend a lot more time alone now. I don’t know how to communicate with people that I love, so I pretty much take our dog Daisy running, hang out with the dog, and even talk to the dog. There are no communication problems between me and my dog; she loves me and I love her. If people do try to talk to me, it goes something like this:
Person 1: eifef ndjf ferf jkf geraf rfer pust dosesee fssdu sfed fhc? (cannot understand)
Me: Hi. How are you? Wait, what? (Tries to read lips, but the speech is too fast.)
Person 1: nefirbind. Arrr yru detvf orr sobethieg?
Me: Um…
Person 1: (turns away to talk to another person, and then looks back at me, laughing…)
Person 2: (slowly shouting) CCAANNN YOOUUU (points at me) RRREEEAADD MMMYY LLLIIIPPPSS??? (Person points at mouth, laughing, and looking at the other person.)
Me: *** I don’t know what to do, so I leave. ***

Don't laugh at me
Don't call me names
Don't get your pleasure from my pain
In God's eyes we're all the same
Someday we'll all have perfect wings
Don't laugh at me
- Mark Wills

**** Maryville College ****
It is the middle of August and I’m packing my things to leave home and go to college. I have been accepted at my first choice, Maryville College, a small Presbyterian college located in the foothills of the Smoky Mountains in eastern Tennessee. A month ago, I got a letter in the mail: “Congratulations! You have been selected for the Church and Leadership Scholarship!” Mom jumped up and down, she was so excited. The school offers sign language classes, so I will take that. Before I lost my hearing, my parents thought Maryville would be a good choice for me since they knew there was a chance I would become deaf at some point in my life, but hoped medicine would advance before that happened. They never imagined I’d be deaf before I finished high school. They thought I could go there and learn sign language while in a normal college setting, just in case I ever did become deaf. I haven’t even started college yet and my ability to understand speech is already lost. I do not understand why God chooses this fate for me, but I pray for a miracle that He can make my hearing come back. At least, I’ll get to run cross-country again! I will enjoy my time at Maryville, although communications will often be bitterly frustrating. I see friends laugh, but what is so funny? What? “Never mind”, they say.
They are my friends, but they don’t know that they hurt me. “Never mind”, “It doesn’t matter.”, “I’ll tell you later,” is so frustrating. I want to know! They talk too fast for me to understand anything they say, but just a few months ago, I could understand that fine. I’m having dangerous thoughts, but I don’t have the courage to attempt anything serious. What is happening to me? Who am I? What have I become?
Maryville would have been an ideal small liberal arts college for me if I were still hearing. I took the first class in ASL, but no one wanted to practice out of class, so I didn’t progress very fast. I made a lot of friends even though communication was difficult, volunteered at a small church, and ran on the NCAA-Division III Women’s Cross Country Team.
**** “Suck It Up!” ****
By a year later, 2007, I realized that I really am deaf. On January 29th, I received a letter via snail mail, informing me that I needed to have surgery again because that same tumor had grown more. I knew that when I woke up, I would hear no sounds, but I didn’t know what total silence would be like. At the same time that I had that tumor removed, I also got an Auditory Brainstem Implant (ABI). It is similar in concept to a cochlear implant, but works differently. It has fewer sounds, and is made for people with detached auditory nerves. I was scared but I sucked it up, just like my cross-country coach always had told me to do, when I ran hill repeats or speed intervals. No pain, no gain. “Ya aint gonna get nowhere in life, if ya don’t learn to suck it up.” Complain about heat, cold, injury, or fatigue and coach yelled “suck it up!” My doctors said that it had to be done, or I could die from the tumor’s pressure onto my brainstem, so I bit my tongue and sucked it up.
It was a tough decision but I decided not to return to Maryville. I felt like my deafness and the people around me formed a tall brick wall and I was a little bird with clipped wings. There is a world of opportunities on the other side of the wall, where I was before my wings were clipped and the wall was built. I wanted to move on in life not dwell on my loss. I researched and found out about RIT/NTID and the large deaf population in Rochester. I talked to a few students that I found through friends in a Facebook group, and they were helpful. Having lived all my life in the deep South, wearing flip flops to school most of the winter and seldom seeing a snowflake, I imagined freezing to death in New York. I talked to my parents about it, and we all came to visit during my spring break. I saw hands flying everywhere and only understood a little of it, but for some reason it seemed right. I met up with some friends I had met though a Facebook group, more cool people, and visited the deaf Bible study which was amazing.
**** 26.2 Miles ****
After visiting RIT, I returned to Atlanta to run the ING Georgia Marathon, my first full marathon, with the Children’s Tumor Foundation NF Marathon Team. Five girls from my Bible study group at Maryville drove down from Tennessee to cheer me along the route and joined my family for lunch afterward. A photo shows my fans all in bright yellow t-shirts and mom waving her big South Carolina flag; I stand smiling, sweaty, tired, wearing my big marathon medal around my neck. I felt great accomplishment and happy that I finished. I felt sore, tired, and wondered how I would make it up four flights of stairs to my writing class the next morning. I returned to Maryville for just a couple of days after the marathon to pack up my stuff and move out of the dormitory before flying across the country.
**** Eating Jell-o In Silence ****
Today is April 2, 2007. I am on a plane flying to Los Angeles, California. My parents, Ken, and his girlfriend Nicole are with me. Tonight we will go to Santa Monica Pier, hang out, go run and get dinner. Tomorrow morning, I will check in to House Ear Institute / St. Vincent’s Hospital, because I have to get a lot of tests, EKG, blood work, even another damn hearing test, and have surgery the day after that. I wish I could fly away.
Two days later, the day I dread is here. I glance at my Timex watch; it reads “5:02AM. – APR. 4.” I ran my first marathon just ten days ago, but now I am told I will not be allowed to run until the middle of May. I’m thirsty, but I am not allowed to eat or drink anything now. I’m scared, but I act mature and courageous.
It is another surgery, just another damn tumor,” I think to myself. I am rushed early in the morning, as I hear the sounds around me. The sounds sink in. I remember how things sounded before last year, and I know how they sound now. My parents and I go sit in the waiting room. A nurse walks up to me and directs me to a desk. She holds a stack of papers, and then points to where I need to sign. I sign my full name on the line below the long paper, which I don’t bother to read. I already know that it is about the surgery and death warnings. She straps a plastic bracelet with my name and numbers printed on it, while she continues to talk to my parents. I sit, fumble, and observe my surroundings. There are chairs, people, and that strange scent of blood, cleaning spray, and bactericide soaps. Dad writes notes to me; he tells me to not be scared. Soon I am lying on a stretcher, wearing another hospital gown and the weird no-slip socks. I am still scared as I grasp my mom’s hand for comfort; I try to remain calm. She lets go, after the surgeon shaves half of my hair off. He gives me a shot, and I fall asleep.
Many hours later, I wake up. I am groggy with drugs and wired to machines. My head hurts; a white gauzy bandage that looks like a large turban is wrapped really tight around my head. I hear sounds, but I soon realize those sounds are not real. The sound is silence; now I know what silence sounds like. Silence sounds like static, but sounds can be felt by vibrations. I have been told that silence is golden, calm, peaceful, a sanctuary, holy. Wrong! Silence is dark, empty, mute, speechless, scary, sulky, and black like death.
Tomorrow I will move from ICU to my own room and eat real hospital food, not just urine-colored lemon-flavored sugar-free Jell-O. I hate Jell-O! I continue to improve. I am mad when I see the signs outside my door; one says “FALL PRECAUTIONS” and the other “HEARING IMPAIRED.” I get a huge pile of get well cards! I am so drugged that I manage to start speed-walking laps around the nurse’s station two days before the rehab person brings a walker to my door, which I refuse to use. I am a marathon runner, so I will not touch that walker; I am deaf, but I am strong. I am independent, always independent, just like the “Miss Independent” award I got when I was in pre-school.
Two weeks later, I was back at home in Atlanta. I slept a lot, ate a lot, felt sad, and wondered, “Why am I deaf?” Sometimes I slept all day, and then went downstairs, where I slept more, watched television, text messaged, and daydreamed – all day. As soon as I was allowed to drive again, I went to visit my friends at Maryville College. They ran over and hugged me so tight, it was like they wanted to break my ribs! I was very happy to see them. Some asked me silly questions like, “Can you hear?” I wanted to fly away.
I became eager to run, but I was told to wait. I took the dog for walks, and by the next week, the dog walks had greatly increased in length. I was surrounded by sounds, but all I could hear was silence. When I saw people talk, there was only the sound of silence. This was my life, a silenced marathon.
It was the beginning of May 2007, and my long walks became walking, then jogging. It did not hurt; it felt good, so I kept going. Within a few days, I got in trouble, because I was not allowed to be running yet. My dad looked angry as he quickly scribbled notes to me.
Dad: Were you running?
Me: (shakes head, no)
Dad: Jogging? Why is your shirt wet?
Me: It is hot outside.
Dad: If you run, before your doctor says you can, you could displace the electrodes in your implant. You MUST let it heal! If you ruin it, they cannot fix it! You will NEVER hear anything! You may have already caused a LOT of damage! Do you understand?
I was angry. I probably slammed the door, a silent slam to me. I went to the bathroom. I cried, silently. I knew I jogged a little but I didn’t know it could harm the ABI. I wondered why he had not told me that. Inside of me, I was scared. I was told I had ruined my expensive implant. I waited two weeks before I was allowed to run; I waited two months before I knew if jogging a few miles had ruined my ABI. I wanted to fly away.
**** New Sounds ****
Two months have trickled by. Today is June 6th, the day after my 20th birthday. I flew back to California yesterday, and now I am sitting in a waiting room with my mom. We are eager to see if and how my implant will work. Little butterflies flutter in my stomach. I am nervous, scared, maybe excited. The audiologist finds me and leads me to a small room with three chairs and an old PC computer. He shaves a one inch circle on my head, just behind the ear, and attaches a small sticker that has a metal disc in it. I get hooked up. How strange to have a plastic thing hooked over my ear and a small disc on my head with another wire coming down from that to the processor. I sit and wait as the audiologist presses buttons; suddenly I hear “BEEP!” I have never been so eager in all of my life to listen for a little “beep.” Whoa, that is loud! Loud, quiet, high pitch, low pitch, all of the sounds are different, all ten of them. I hear my audiologist and my mom speak, but I cannot comprehend the sounds.
Audiologist: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, baseball, hotdog, airplane.
Mom: Hi, sweetie. Can you hear me?
Me: Um, you sound like a…. a…. a…. dying cow and a sick frog!
Mom laughs; she looks a bit horrified, but the audiologist explains that it will take time for me to get used to it. I immediately think that I will not use it, because I cannot comprehend any of these sounds.
It has been a week since I got my implant turned on. I will now go to be a counselor at my church’s summer camp for high school students. This is my sixth year of camp, second year being a counselor. I fear communication problems, but I know I will have fun.
From my camp journal:
June 16, 2007
Dear God,
Sometimes I want to think that I am strong, but really I know that you are strong and I am weak. Please Lord; help me to hear your voice calling to me, and to recognize it, even though communication with others can be difficult. I got this new ABI turned on just a little over a week ago, because now I am deaf. Maybe I need your help with accepting that reality? Or have I already? I am not sure. Anyways, when I turn on my ABI, I can hear sounds, and maybe I will be able to understand more than in the silence. Perhaps I can better hear your words without it? I want to hear my friends, too. If many are talking, the sounds are much more confusing. Where should I go in life? Please listen and call to me; help me to hear you! Allow me courage to fly.
- Me
My prayer partner, Juliana, and other awesome friends patiently repeated things, wrote notes, and learned to fingerspell, which meant a lot to me. They went that extra mile to write notes like they would for classes, for a counselor meeting, evening speaker’s story, or which song we were on. They wanted to make sure I didn’t miss anything; they helped a lot. I decided to give the ABI a chance, even though some people seemed to think it was magic hearing plastic.

Dance as though no one is watching you.
Love as though you have never been hurt.
Sing as though no one can hear you.
Live as though heaven is on earth.
- Souza

**** Epilogue****
**** Acceptance And Flying At RIT / NTID ****
I decided to transfer to RIT. Since coming here in the fall, I have made a lot of friends, improved my signing, as well as lip-reading / listening with ABI, and learned more than I had ever imagined. My time here thus far has helped me to change for the better and has helped me begin to accept myself for who I am. I still run, perhaps I run to escape the world or for the thrill. If you wonder what I am running from, it’s nothing, really. Now, I am not stuck in a shell. I believe in myself. I believe I can really fly...
I believe I can fly
I believe I can touch the sky
I think about it every night and day
Spread my wings and fly away
I believe I can soar
I see me running through that open door
I believe I can fly
I believe I can fly
I believe I can fly
- R. Kelly

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

My Experience with NF2



My name is Bonnie, I'm 24 years old, and I was diagnosed with NF2 when I was twelve.






I was in the midst of puberty, that awful, confusing period where things just start happening to your body and you have no idea how to stop it or control it. Puberty hit me pretty hard. My hair was frizzy and I needed braces and I just had that feeling and look of awkwardness. While the other girls in my grade all seemed to be perfect, with shiny hair and straight smiles, I was the freak with Sideshow Bob hair.






As if puberty isn't bad enough, not long after I got my first period, I started experiencing discomfort, twinges mostly, in my right thigh. We were on vacation at the time and I mostly ignored them, thinking I had pulled a muscle in gym. Eventually, though, the twinges became less annoying and more debilitating and I told my parents. I was taken to a doctor, where he diagnosed me with scoliosis and prescribed an MRI.






I was terrified. I was twelve years old and my mom patiently explained to me that I would be going in a tube for an hour that was loud and it seemed like the end of the world. To me, my first MRI experience felt like being trapped in a coffin--a white, incredibly LOUD, coffin. The only upside was at least I got to listen to music.






A few weeks later, the doctor called my parents with a diagnosis. I had neurofibromatosis type 2, or NF2, as us cool kids call it. I didn't understand the connotations at first. My parents sat me down and explained but all I heard was a lot of medical jargon that made no sense to my addled preteen mind. I just wanted to watch Buffy the Vampire Slayer, thank you.






It wasn't until a year later that the reality of the situation hit me. I was 13, we were in the pediatrician's office for a checkup, and my dad mentioned I had tumors. In my mind, tumors equaled certain death. I cried all night until I was reassured that they were benign and weren't terminal and as long as they were watched closely, I would be fine.






I had my first NF2-related surgery that year. Previously, my only two experiences with the hospital was when I was 3 and had to get my appendix out and when I was 9 and 30 lb weights fell on my fingers, requiring surgery. So this was a pretty big deal for me. I had to have spinal surgery, as one of the fourteen tumors there was pressing on my nerve, causing pain. I was in the 7th grade and I had to be homeschooled for 3 months. At first, this seemed, well, awesome. I wouldn't have to wake up at 6 am anymore! No more immature classmates throwing stuff at me and making fun of me for being awkward. Success!






After awhile, though, this situation became quite lonely. I was in the hospital for a week recuperating from surgery. My roommate was an 8 year old boy who had just had brain surgery. It was terrifying for me. My mom stayed with me the entire time, sleeping in a hard-backed nylon chair. I was 13 and the idea of staying in the big, bad hospital alone was unfathomable. This was Columbia Presbyterian, a hospital that would come to mean hell in my eyes.






As the years went on, I needed to have a few more surgeries, but the NF was mostly an annoyance. At 14, I had my first brain surgery, which took the hearing from my right ear. THe doctors said it would come back eventually, which obviously never transpired. I would have to miss a lot of classes because I wasn't feeling well, or I had a doctor's appointment in the City, but other than that, life was relatively normal.






It wasn't until after I graduated that things took a turn for the worse. I had spinal surgery right after graduation and, a month later, I came down with meningitis as a direct result, an infection. That took the hearing in my other ear. Suddenly I was 18 and deaf. I couldn't hear my friends when they would call on the phone to check up on me. I couldn't hear the doctors. I couldn't hear music. My entire life was derailed.






While I was at the hospital, there was a lot of screw-ups. For 4 days, the doctors had no idea what was wrong with me so I remained in the ER all that time. When they finally figured it out, I was, among other things, forced to wake up at 2am for a CT scan that, as it turns out, I didn;'t need; the results weren't given to us until n oon the following day, after my dad complained countless times. I had a pick line inserted (like an IV inside the body) and I was told I would be under anasthesia and not to eat all day. I didn't, and no anasthesia. My back kept opening up , leaking spinal fluid, because they told me nhot to lay on anything hard then promptly put me on a cold, HARD, metal examining table.






My parents wanted to sue for malpractice. Our lawyer said we didn't have a case so we just switched hospitals. I now go to NYU Medical Center. My doctor is John Roland and he's been caring for me for the past six years.






I have an ABI, but it doesn't work; it abruptly quit on me 3 weeks after I got it. For 5 years, I pretty much did nothing but laze around the house, crying because a lot of my friends had abandoned me, and I felt very alone. Then came RIT.






I was 23 and a Freshman at RIT/NTID, the National Instutite for the Deaf. Suddenly, I had so many experiences that were lacking in my life before. I made friends. I fell in love (with an awful excuse for a human being but that is neither here nor there). But still, the NF haunted me. In 2008, I had major brain surgery to remove a tumor and, as the brain controls everything, for months I couldn't even walk myself. I had to use a walker, a wheelchair. My hand shook terribly. Now I have mostly recovered but I still have issues with balance. I trip over air, and not in that adorably klutzy Twilightish way either. I can't walk in a straight line, making me appear intoxicated all the time. the vision in my right eye is blurry and the eye is very sensitive. Just the slightest irritation will turn it beat red. It...well, it sucks.






My biggest fear is that I won't find someone to share my life with because of my condition. My last boyfriend said he understood then did everything wrong and couldn't cope. I'm 24 and most of my friends are either engaged, married, and/or parents, and I don't want to miss out on all of those wonderful things because of the NF. Most people have large goals--to be CEO of a company or have riches and fame. All I want...is to be happy.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Thank you...

Thank you to the father who took me to that first cross country practice at 6:30am and who sat in his car, watching me struggle to run half a lap on the track.

Thank you to the mother who has always been my #1 cheerleader, but I know she had some doubt and fear about me finishing my first marathon.

Thank you to the student who once told me that he didn't think I would still be able to ride a bike, due to my loss of balance. That week I bought a cheap new bike.

Thank you to the NTID faculty person who I understood to have had told me that she thought I was too smart for those classes.

Thank you to all of the coaches I've had through six years of cross country and three years of track, but I thank one most of all, my first running coach.

Thank you to the endurance team that has supported me through everything, even though we are too spread apart to actually train together.

Thank you to the doctor who took some junk out of my back, sewed me up, asked how I was feeling and laughed when I said okay and then puked on his shoes.

Thank you to the friend who I met through facebook.com, before I came to RIT, and helped me realize who I am, even if she was blunt or harsh, I love you.

Thank you to the running club that patiently waits for every single person to finish every group training run and every race.

Thank you to the wonderful family who has opened their home to me and a group of amazing young ladies, numerous times, even though I'm always causing trouble.

Thank you to the NF doctor at Harvard who told me that I really should not swim at all, especially in open waters, due to my loss of balance. With caution, I ignored.

Thank you to my long time best friend, who has always been there for me, through the thick and the thin.

Thank you to the teacher who when I brought in a 23-page memoir draft for a 15-page assignment, told me I ought to write book, but I basically need to start over.

Thank you to the random people who have asked me how far I've ever run and when they get an answer, their jaws hit the floor and they called me insane.

Thank you to the doctors who have dealt with me, cut open my head - on numerous occasions, and gave me my ABI, so I can "hear" again.

Thank you to the wonder boy, my fiance, who always makes me feel like the most beautiful woman and loves me no matter what.

Thank you to everyone else who has made any impact on my life.

Thank you to God for making my life wonderful and continuing to do so!

Friday, October 7, 2011

My World Without Sound

I live my life in a kind of isolation, a nothingness. I see things
that aren't meant to be seen. My fifth sense has been snatched
away from me, without warning, without preamble. Growing up
all my life with sound, children laughing, birds singing, waves crashing
along the shoreline, only for it all to be taken away. I am lost,
I grieve as if I have witnessed someone close to me slowly perish. For years, I
had no control, over myself, over my life, over anything. I was simply forced
to watch while everything I knew, everything I'd once taken for granted, was taken away.
It is my world without sound. I "hear" things that aren't really there, memories,
recollections of how it should be, but isn't. As I drive in a car, I see a
neighborhood boy bouncing a basketball. I hear the thump-thump as the
ball smacks against the concrete, but it is not really there. When the dog barks,
I "hear" it, but it is not really there. When a child laughs, so innocent, I "hear" it,
but it is not really there. My world without sound. I would do anything, give anything
to hear the waves crash along the shore again.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

I Would Still Run

If I found out tomorrow that my son was misdiagnosed--that there was another explanation-- I would still run. I know because of the people I have met. I see the look in the eyes of mothers whose children suffer from NF, and I think, "I must look like that to other people." Until there is an answer to all the questions. I will run.


Sunday, October 2, 2011

Quilt of runner...

Okay, so I thought I should post this on here, after another blog-author (Ellie- 2 posts down) said that she was "not a poet or an author, if only she could have sewn a blog"... (that made me think of this quilt) This is a quilt that I made for a quilt elective class that I took last year, and this photo was taken on one of my many trips to HEI in Los Angeles (I'm also wearing the yellow NF Endurance Team t-shirt)  Steve Otto, my audiologist that programs my Auditory Brainstem Implant commented on the large bag I was lugging around, though I was there for only one day, and I explained that I brought the runner blanket I made, for my red-eye flight back to the Atlanta, so then he wanted to see it and get a picture of me with it!

A Tribute to the Parents of NF

It all began with “coffee” marks on my precious new baby’s otherwise perfect skin.
When the doctor said Neurofibromatosis, we entered a new world.
We didn’t ask to go to this new place. We didn’t buy plane tickets or get a triptik.
But we got there nonetheless.
...In this new world there were things we’d never heard before.
There were bone abnormalities called dysplasias, bowing, pseudoarthrosis, scoliosis…
There were tumors called plexiforms, neurofibromas, gliomas, astrocytomas…
Learning disabilities and developmental delays opened us up to things we knew existed, but never thought we’d experience.
Things like special ed, speech therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy, social skills groups, CSE, IEP...
And there were tests.
Many kinds of tests: MRI, EKG, EEG, Neuropsychological, CT scans, x-rays, and the dreaded pathology reports.
Our lives hung on the news from those tests every three to six months, if we were lucky, every year.
It was a scary new world because you never could know what to expect.
The doctors all said, “Wait and see”.
It was all they could say. They didn’t know what the future would hold.
We learned to study statistics and pin all of our hopes on them.
Numbers and percentage signs, such powerful things in this world.
Prognosis was not a word in the vocabulary of NF doctors.
The doctors…
They were scarce and we had to search them out.
They weren’t always in our neighborhoods.
Often we traveled distances to find them.
They were specialists who we revered and respected.
There were Neurologists, Orthopods, Neuro Opthamologists, Radiologists, Anesthesiologists, Neuropsychologists, Oncologists, Cardiologists…
We hung on their every word in hopes that this time it would be good news.
We set up websites to share this news because telling the stories again and again became exhausting.
In this world we learned so many lessons.
We learned to look at our children in a different light.
We learned to cherish every moment even the impossible ones.
We learned to hug them and kiss them until they couldn’t stand it anymore.
We learned that they wouldn’t always be given the opportunities we used to take for granted.
We learned not to take anything for granted.
We learned how powerful a child’s smile could be.
And some of us learned how to say goodbye long before we were ready to.
Others learned how to console and many of us learned the power of prayer.
We learned to have faith because we couldn’t cope without God, an almighty power capable of such enormous things.
We learned to advocate, educate ourselves and others, raise money and awareness.
Our lives were changed forever.
But that wasn’t what we couldn’t handle.
Our children’s lives were altered to a degree of which we could not be certain.
Not knowing.
That was the part of this new world that consumed us with fear, got us on our knees to pray and that clung to every fiber of our being from the day we entered the world of NF to they day we leave it.
And when the cure is found, we can rest.
By Jesse's Mom

Little Brother


Here are the lyrics to the song "Little Brother" written by Ben, for his brother Drew. Drew has
schwannomatosis, the rarest form of NF. It speaks to the unrelenting pain Drew and others with schwannomatosis cope with every day.

Verse 1:
Little brother don't be afraid
this pain will be gone one day
little brother I'm by your side
I'll help you to endure this fight
you are so strong and yet you are so weak
you'll overcome determined to succeed

Chorus:
the birds still sing
the sky's still blue
you've got Somebody watching you
watching you

hold your head up
march right on
we'll be right here 'til the war's done
(the war's...)

Verse 2:
Little brother don't shed a tear
you've got the strength to persevere
little brother I pray for peace
and ask a cure for this disease
now lead them on the world is in your hands
they'll follow you now give them your commands

Chorus:
the birds still sing
the sky's still blue
you've got Somebody watching you
watching you

Hold your head up
march right on
we'll be right here 'til the war's done
(the war's...)

Zenith

I wrote this poem in 2008, it is about keeping my faith and overcoming obstacles.

Zenith

The road is the path,
Where it leads me
From foot to foot
I will take it.

Many summits and canyons
Will come on my course
Challenging me so many times,
I will run them all.

Never looking back
Eyes looking on the horizon
Keeping my measure
I move onward.

In many ways
The people I meet
I will always keep
In my heart.

A myriad of crossroads to choose
The ones I adopt
Have reasons to be journeyed
To continue the legacy of the road

Friday, September 30, 2011

Girl's Best Friend...

I first began running when I was 15 years old. Since then, running has been a perpetual part of who I am....it is where I seek shelter from the challenges of life and where I find bliss and serenity.
Through various phases of my life, running has been a constant. Like a best friend, it is always there to provide comfort and pride! I have never felt regret after a run; running has never let me down. I believe in the run because I know that no matter what I am facing, it will provide clarity and peace! 
I run to celebrate, I run to mourn. I run to forget, I run to remember, I run to relieve stress, I run to eat cookies and anything else. I run because it feels good, I run because it hurts. 
I run to help find a cure for NF! 
I may not always like to run but I will always love it and believe!