Having a child with a rare disease makes you feel very helpless. I feel very helpless. It does not help that my child refuses, almost always, to take any medication to make herself feel better. LillyAnna is still in the midst of her flare which means continued vomiting, fevers, pain, headaches and belly pain. I have been wondering where the lesions are and it looks like we found them. When I mentioned to Dr. R that she was having pain in her 'throat' I thought it might be reflux. But oxycodone would not take reflux pain away. He wondered if she has a lesion inside her airway. This would make a lot of sense with her current symptoms. She has a hard time catching her breath lately and the inhalers are not working. She coughs frequently especially when she does any kind of exercise. She is also eating less. So last night I did a mouth and throat check. Sure enough I found a lesion. This one was on her tonsil. It was almost impossible to get a picture of it. I got one but you can hardly see it. I also saw what I think is one on her tongue (I see another one like it this morning) and the one in her mouth is enflamed again. When I told Dr. R, he told me he is not surprised.
I was. We have had such a nice couple of months. I thought things were going so well and that the increase in Humira was going to be our ticket but I feel like all it did was fool me. It fooled me into thinking we were safe. But what has really been happening is that this horrible disease has done a sneak attack and decided to go incognito on us. Instead of creating lesions where we can see them, it is creating lesions where we cannot see them... as easily. But they hurt just the same. And I am helpless, even more helpless now than I was before to help my baby because I cannot see what is hurting her. I have to guess. I have to guess. I have to guess.
My four year old, almost 5 year old, drinks bottles. These bottles are probably the reason we are not in the hospital right now for dehydration or would not be in the next couple of days. She is sitting in my lap right now drinking one, grunting in pain. It hurts to drink. It hurts to eat. I am wondering when she is going to stop doing both. Or, the flare will stop and we will be ok. I have no idea. I have no one to ask because there is no one to ask. There is no Infantile Idiopathic Pyoderma Gangrnosum group. Or even one other mom that I can ask. Lil's symptoms are all her own. I feel overwhelmed and I feel helpless and I feel scared and my baby hurts. But she looks so healthy and she plays and she pushes through because that is what she does and it is what she always does. They tell us it is because she has known pain her whole life. She has known pain her whole life. She has known pain her whole life.
You have all heard this before. You have heard it many times. If you continue to follow our story you will hear it many more times because this is our life. It is up and down. It is in and out. It will not change and it will not go away. It will not change and it will not go away. It will not change and it will not go away.
We are moving in a week. I am so lucky to have my support group because if I did not know all of the extraordinary things those families do under extraordinary circumstances I do not think I would believe we could pull this off. But I do know them and I have seen what they do and so I know that we can and we will get it done because that is what we do. We get it done. I am going to try to not worry. We will get it done. We will get it done. We will get it done.
Thank you for listening.
Love you Gina and Chris and family. Prayers for all of you. Maryellen Strohm here.
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