Showing posts with label childhood cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label childhood cancer. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

The Gonzo Mama Be the Match Fundraiser

GIGGLE FOR A CAUSE!

If you're new here, you may not know how passionate I am about supporting Be The Match National Marrow Donor Program. You may not know just why I care so, so much. Go ahead - go read. I'll wait.

Finished? Good. Moving on...

Even if you don't know anyone in need of a bone marrow transplant, you can still help Be The Match match potential donors to recipients in need by joining the registry or contributing in another way.





Did you know it costs about $100 to test cell samples and enter a potential donor into the registry?

That's why I'm donating $2.00 of my royalty from every eStore sale of Everything I Need to Know About Motherhood I Learned from Animal House during the month of September to Be The Match.


If we can help just ONE person join the registry, that individual may be the next one to save a life. Will you help? You'll get a really funny book in return, and the honor of helping to save lives.

Please, use the "ShareThis" feature below to share this post with your friends and family by email, Twitter, Facebook, or other means. If you're a blogger, please feel free to link to this entry.

Also, if you have a bone marrow or stem cell transplant story to tell, please share it with me, and I'll feature it here during the month to help others see why donation is so important!





Let's raise some money for Be The Match, and help save lives!

Note: Be The Match has no interest in and is in no way affiliated with The Gonzo Mama, Gonzo Mama Ink, Gonzo Parenting Zine, Everything I Need to Know About Motherhood I Learned from Animal House or Wright Consulting. This is an independently-crafted fundraiser, without coordination with Be The Match.

Monday, July 19, 2010

“Words that Sound Normal to Us, but Not to Others” - Please Help Detric!

Note: I am posting this week's Gonzo Mama column a couple days early, in order to help publicize the opportunity to help a young local cancer patient this weekend at the rodeo.



One of my e-friends, Mindi Finch, posted this tweet on Twitter: “Words that sound normal to us, but not others: ‘Go ahead and unhook yourself.’” She was referring to her son’s Gastric Tube (G-Tube).

Four-year-old Gregory Bibb is battling Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia (JMML), and his mom, Mindi, is chronicling his journey at http://thegreginator.livejournal.com. In addition to caring for Gregory’s extensive medical needs, Mindi makes time each day to connect with and advocate for families facing childhood cancer.

I thank the Lord that the most unusual phrases heard in our home are “Stop licking the dog” and “The toilet plunger is not a toy,” but I remember the changes my family went through when my brother was diagnosed with Erythroleukemia at age 17.

Massive doses of iron prepared my body for the donation of bone marrow to replace my brother’s. Post-transplant, the annual Christmas tree was replaced with an artificial stand-in and fresh fruits and vegetables were banned from dinner plates due to bacterial concerns. Salt was eradicated from the kitchen because of adverse effects of immunosuppressant medications. No one with even a sniffle was allowed within fifty feet.

Here in the Wright household, we’ve had our fill of “-ists.” We’ve seen neurologists, speech therapists, physical therapists, occupational therapists, sensory therapists and cognitive therapists… and those were just for Curlytop! At times, I only knew what day of the week it was by the office we walked into. Add in Snugglebug’s asthma and dietary issues, Pockets’s allergies, the collective broken bones of GirlWonder, Pepper and The Dude, and we’ve collected more -ists than I can shake a stick at.

To be clear, shaking a stick at the -ist du jour is considered poor form, no matter how frazzling the week has been. Trust me on this.

I am grateful for the absence of “oncologist” from the list above, and my heart is broken by the fact that for so many, “pediatric” must precede the title. As Mindi Finch says, I hate, hate, HATE childhood cancer. It steals away childhoods. It pushes parents to the breaking point. It frightens and frustrates siblings, who need care and attention, even though they’re well. It financially devastates families.

Warriors and advocates like Mindi give me hope. My brother’s 14-year post-transplant recovery gives me hope. Imagining a world without childhood cancer gives me hope.

Seeing the courage of kids like our valley’s own Detric Hernandez gives me hope.

Seven-year-old Detric has been diagnosed with Stage Four Lymphoma and Leukemia. You can help Detric and his family with his brave fight by donating at a local business, purchasing a Rodeo Lake Chelan t-shirt at the rodeo this weekend (all proceeds go to support Detric’s family) or by volunteering your time and talent.

Call Detric’s benefit campaign coordinator, Karyl Oules, at 509-682-9155 or email karyl.o@verizon.net to find out how you can make a difference. Visit http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/DetricHernandez to leave words of encouragement online for Detric and his family.

Above all, please pray. Pray for complete recoveries for Gregory, Detric, and children like them. Pray for the families who have lost children to childhood cancer.

Please, pray for a cure.

Photo from Detric's Caring Bridge photo page.