Tagswearing

DENVER PATIENT C: Part 1

Hope as a Doubled-Edged Sword If someone were to ask me to tell them an interesting fact about myself, I’d probably answer with something like, “Well, I am written up in a small collection of medical journals. In the world of islet cell transplants I am known as Denver Patient C.” It’s a bit of an interesting story, really. Some aspects are more of a torrid tale. Others the recounting of an epic...

LOW MOMENTS

Twice I’ve held my daughter in my arms unconscious and not breathing, praying our intervention was not too late. But by the grace of God, it wasn’t, though I choose not to dwell on those moments if I can help it. There were other scares, too many others, that I only learned about later. A call from the paramedics or her brother or her roommate or her after the immediate danger had passed. I have...

HEROES

“Teach us everything. We want to know what to do so Sophie can be with us.” Friends of ours came to us with this request just weeks after my daughter’s diagnosis. It may not sound like a big deal to anyone who does not have a child with diabetes. But it was one of the kindest gifts we’ve ever been given. I still get a bit chocked up when I think about it. I’ve written before about how diabetes is...

CURSING LIKE A SAILOR

A few months after my daughter was diagnosed, she and I were sitting in our car in the Target parking lot when, without warning, her face cracked like a pebble-struck windshield, and she started to sob. “I don’t want to have diabetes,” she wept. It was the first emotional response we’d seen from her regarding this new life that was thrust upon her uninvited, and I began to weep with her. “I...

Connect

I must admit, I am no social media maven. But I’m doing my best. I invite you to check out what I’ve got going on out there. Or if you like, connect with me so I can be in touch.