Sunday, November 17, 2019

One more year to celebrate






I celebrated turning 8 this week!
Two days after my birthday we all will celebrate my being cancer free for 4 years!

This fall I had fun being a chef for Halloween.





I had some fun carving pumpkins and doing things healthy kids do!






We went to the Shedd Aquarium with our German Foreign exchange brother and sister! 









We had a busy trip to the hospital around my birthday- I saw the ear doctor, the dentist and the endocrinologist. In a few weeks I go back to see my friends on the oncology floor. I have graduated to the Next Steps Clinic and don’t even have to get my blood drawn anymore. We just visit and measure my growth as pray the cancer never comes back. As long as I keep growing, and stay healthy, we will count our blessings! We brought books for the other kids who get treatment at Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin. I love restocking the book boxes in each of the clinics we visit.
















I had a breakfast birthday party today. We ate eggs and waffles.  It was fun! I got a lot of things about the FROZEN 2 movie and have plans to see it during school winter break! I got unicorn things too and an “Alexa” for my room. 

Overall it was a great day and it’s bound to be a great year! Thank you for being my friends and for praying for me. The fact that I am here is a miracle. We are all here for a reason. I’m glad you’re here with me!





















Saturday, October 5, 2019

October is Special

October is Down syndrome Awareness Month 


For October to celebrate - I’ll be sharing:
Things I’ve learned from Katherine Mary Grace.


1. Believe in Yourself!! This is a picture of a note Katherine wrote to herself on her math workbook page. 




2. Be brave. 
(Sleep Study. K did so well. What a trooper!)





3. Don’t let challenges get in the way of having fun. (Wear earphones and be ok with making your own modifications.). We went to a show - and Katherine wore her sound blocking earphones.







4. Find your inner creative genius. She worked on redesigning this water bottle for an hour today.
4 a. And don’t be afraid to talk to yourself.  Self encouragement goes a long way.  (See number 1) Children with Down syndrome often talk to themselves or to imaginary friends. Once Katherine started talking- she never stopped- even if she’s the only one listening sometimes. She gave herself art direction audibly the whole time she was crafting. 




Tuesday, September 3, 2019

September will always be Childhood Cancer Awareness Month

September will always be Childhood Cancer Awareness Month.

I was diagnosed August 24, 2013 with Leukemia.
I was treated in-patient until late September that year.
I was in too deep to know it was Childhood Cancer Awareness month- but I was keenly aware of what it was like to be a child with cancer.
Aware that kids like me get way more leukemia than typical kids.
Aware that a hospital can come to feel like home, and that home can come to feel like solitary confinement- because Mom didn’t let me leave much over the two years of treatment- except for hospital trips and Mass (where we’d sneak up to the choir loft so as not to get germs from highly populated places.)
Aware that steroids taste yucky and not even chocolate ice cream can cover up the taste.
Aware that spinal taps can come to be normal, and that blood transfusions are pretty close to the most generous gift one can give to another person.
In time, I’d be aware that only 4% of the taxpayer-funded National Cancer Institute’s annual budget is dedicated to Childhood Cancer- and that only 1% of the American Cancer Society’s budget goes to help the fight against cancer for pediatric patients.

I was made aware that people I never thought even knew about me were praying for me. I was made aware of the huge capacity for human compassion and I was the lucky recipient. I felt lucky having cancer. I was afraid that having Down Syndrome made me unlucky- but this cancer that came on that extra chromosome- brought love to me and prayers for me. It was an unexpected precious time for my family and I to be “stuck” together in our house- to get to be together like on a camping trip or a retreat. Thanks to cancer, the love they had for me grew. Afraid of my initial diagnosis, but now desperate for my survival, cancer made things change for the better. How odd.  The cancer was the side show and LOVE was the main event. The kids at my brother and sister’s school wore bracelets about leukemia - that said No One Fights Alone. They too got supported in this journey. We had friends bring us food, clean our house and many many philanthropic childhood cancer organizations send support each in their unique ways.  
There are some pretty special things that happened during my cancer journey.  Cancer for me for sure was no fun -as a toddler- so young and so desperate to understand my new normal, but out of the ashes grew many good things. I got better, the doctors and nurses were nothing short of amazing. I am cancer free now and this November I’ll be able to say that I’ve been cancer free for four years. I may not even remember my cancer because I was so young, but my family won’t soon forget the main event. (The love, not the cancer.)

We try to give back- because we were given so much. We are following the other childhood cancer families before us- participating in the fundraising where we can because it is so needed, when funding for kids with cancer is so low and the medicines are so old. We encourage blood donation as surely the gift of blood was given to me over and over and over. We like to work with Make-A-Wish and Give Kids the World as they helped to close the chapter on my cancer experience, and we want other kids to have those healing, resetting and rewarding family times too.

Thanks to everyone who was there supporting me when I was so so sick, and thanks to those who continue to help with us give back for the kids who just today were given a cancer diagnosis, or maybe it was last week, last month and maybe it will be given tomorrow. We want to be there to help and we’re grateful for those who can help with us.

September, to some, may be all about “Back to School” but for me it’s also about back to life.
Here are some pictures of the things I did the last few weeks: my Make-A-Wish walk, back to school pics, summer pics and a few cancer-days flashbacks.
God Bless.































Friday, March 1, 2019

Get your Socks Ready!

March 21 is World Down Syndrome Day.

The last seven years we have celebrated WDSD. This year will be no exception.

Want to celebrate with us? Just get some striped socks or silly socks and wear them on 3/21/2019 and show them to your friends and tell them how wonderful it is to know and love someone with Down Syndrome, like me (*sheepish grin*.)

Help us spread awareness, break stereotypes and make room for people with a little something extra in this world!

Here’s what I’ve been up to since Christmas- just normal 7 year old stuff.

I make breakfast now- all by myself! And, I eat it all by myself too. Since chemo, I’ve been kind of a princess, eating best when others feed me. I’m a big girl now and eat cereal all by myself! 




I’m an artist. 




I like to play basketball.


Lots of basketball.


Lots and lots of basketball.


I get dressed- mostly - all by myself.


I’m a good little sister and I love playing make up and hair stylist. 


I’m a good student, friend, cousin and daughter. I’m a good reader and sleeper.
I like to play piano and I still like to play with plastic food and I like to have tea parties.





I’m more alike than different- but that which makes me different makes me special. Just like you- 

Help me celebrate being a little different. 
March 21- wear some crazy socks and talk about them and why you’re wearing them. 

Thank you,
Katherine