Tuesday, January 22, 2013

So many ways...

This disease has changed Emily's life in so many ways.  This morning my husband made the mistake of using the word skinny and Emily began feeling bad that she was not skinny, like she used to be.  She means she doesn't look the same anymore; the steroids cause puffiness which gives Emily the appearance of being overweight.  In fact when she take her anywhere and she rides in the stroller, like the zoo yesterday, people will often stare at her and I feel like they are probably thinking something like "Why is the child in a stroller, she should be walking" or perhaps the term "childhood obesity" goes through their mind.

Even with the weight gain Emily is only in the 30% for height and weight so she is not overweight at all and she is very active, but until we shake the steroids completely we won't be able to shake the puffiness.  Even once we do get off steroids we won't be able to shake this nasty disease.  It's here to stay and there are so many things it impacts.  Going somewhere like Disney Land, that would be a monumental task because steroids + exhaustion + stiffness and pain from an all day adventure = super tantrum or at the very least extreme whininess. 

We have to be careful what we say; we don't talk about weight (or try not to) instead we talk about getting plenty of exercise and eating healthy.  We don't talk about Emily having children, instead we are sure she understands that adoption is a great way to become a mother too and we encourage her to learn and say maybe you could be a doctor or a scientist someday.  Someday we will have to explain to her that these new medicines could make is hard for her to have children.  I imagine when she marries that will be a scary point for her, when her husband and her decide to try she will wonder...

Dentist visits are another thing we learned yesterday.  Cavities are common with this children because they are immune suppressed and cavities are caused by bacteria.  The medicines can also reduce saliva in the mouth and make her teeth and enamel more susceptible to decay.  Now she has a cavity to fill and I don't want to put her through that, but we have to because cavities are because by bacteria and we need to get rid of the bacteria.

We talk about finding the good out of the bad.  I'm afraid I have yet to find the good out of this nasty disease, but I still have my sweet girl and if this had been five or ten years ago I would not and so I can at least say treatments have made progress.  I wish more people knew what this did to these sweet children.  I read a post in a Facebook group about a SOJIA child who tried to commit suicide.  These children are in pain all the time.  It breaks my heart to think what that mother is going through right now.  We've just got to keep showing Emily all the good in life to help the puffy badness of SOJIA maybe not seem quite so bad.  I hope we can do that as she gets older.

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