The cost & courage of caring - stories that spark resilience.
Welcome to the Caregivers Podcast.
I'm your host, Dr.
Mark Ropeleski.
You can call me Dr.
Mark.
Many caregiving stories don't
begin with conviction.
They begin with a quiet sense
that something isn't right.
Today's guest, Cynthia Nielsen,
learned that her daughter,
Claire, was living with a rare and
serious heart-lung condition, one
that came with a
timeline no parent is ever
prepared to hear.
This conversation isn't about
diagnosis.
Today's conversation is about what
happens after, what you're told,
what you're not told,
and how you raise a child honestly
without stealing their childhood.
Cynthia, welcome to the
podcast.
Cynthia Nielsen, welcome to the
Caregivers Podcast.
Thanks, Mark.
Cynthia, do you remember
the exact moment when you realized
that this wasn't going to be a
small or temporary issue with your
daughter?
I did.
I can remember it so clearly like
it was yesterday.
It was, I'm trying to think back,
it was 13 years ago, so quite a
while ago.
My daughter had an earache, so she
was around two at
the time.
I took her to the hospital.
They were, you know, looking in
her ears.
She had an ear
infection, pretty standard for a
two-year-old.
But a med student came in and
asked like, oh, can I just do
like a routine checkup on like to
practice like in the pediatric
space?
I said, sure, no problem.
And
she started listening and she
said, oh, her heart just doesn't
sound quite right.
I think I'm going to
refer you to a cardiologist.
I thought it was maybe overkill
because, I don't know, she was a
student and
I'd never really, there had been
no other issues with Claire.
And so we were referred to have an
ultrasound done.
And I think that was when the
moment I knew things were going to
forever be
different.
The ultrasound technician started
doing the ultrasound and she said,
well, obviously, you
know, Claire has a very large hole
in her heart.
And at that moment, we were
unaware of that.
And my
heart sort of sank.
And I looked at her and I think
she looked at me and we had this
moment of, I think
she was a little stressed that she
had relayed this information.
And I was stressed hearing this
information.
And I knew from then things would
be potentially different forever.
So moving forward a little bit
then, so what was Claire's
diagnosis eventually?
And how was it explained
to you in the room?
So Claire is a bit of a
complicated diagnosis.
So the moment I just described,
she was diagnosed with a large
ventricular septal defect, which
they eventually repaired
surgically.
So we were sort of immediately
sent to sick kids.
So that's a hole between the two
main chambers of the heart, the
two ventricles.
Correct.
Yes.
Okay.
Yeah.
So we were referred to sick kids.
We saw them, I think the next day.
They did some exploratory
testing.
Yes, she did have quite a large
hole.
With that, testing also revealed
that she had
pulmonary arterial hypertension,
which is called group one
pulmonary hypertension.
It's basically
when there's high pressures in the
blood vessels going from the heart
to the lungs.
It's a chronic
disease.
It's a rare disease.
There's about 2,000 to 5,000
Canadians who have it.
That's the group
one.
There is five groups.
And so her diagnosis was, I guess,
those two things.
The plan was to
surgically repair the hole with
the hopes that the pulmonary
hypertension would resolve itself.
In terms of how it was
communicated to us, we obviously
were already aware of the hole.
It was nice to have like a bit
more of an explanation.
It was, they assumed she was born
that way.
The pulmonary hypertension was
idiopathic, so they didn't know
what caused it.
I would say they didn't...
It wasn't caused by the hole.
They don't know.
They kind of described it as like
a chicken and the egg.
Did the hole create the
pulmonary hypertension or did the
pulmonary hypertension create the
hole?
Like, I think they just,
it's unknown.
They did a really good job of
explaining in sort of like
layman's terms what was happening
and
what the diagnosis was.
We were also immediately assigned
a child life specialist.
They have a team
at SickKids who work with children
and explain things in very
simplistic terms and then support
your child in various tests
throughout.
And they entered the room as well.
And I mean, it's great
for kids to understand things in
an easy way, but we also needed it
as well.
I needed to hear it a few times.
But it was good.
I felt really well-informed, which
was reassuring.
I think I'm like a
knowledge-hungry type person.
So knowledge was power to me at
the moment.
Especially with your daughter
there.
Yeah.
And that was at SickKids Hospital
in Toronto.
Yeah.
So our listeners understand when
we talk about pulmonary
hypertension, the right side of
our
heart part pumps blood to the
lungs.
And when there's high pressures in
the vessels of the lungs,
the heart has to work a lot harder
to get the blood there.
And it has effects on the heart.
At some point in that early
conversation, timelines must have
entered as a topic.
What were you told
even then?
Or could you be told anything to
assuage all the racing thoughts
about how long Claire might
live?
And what was the scariest part of
that conversation as a young
parent?
Yeah.
That was my very first question
is, is she going to survive this?
We, I would say medical
professionals tread cautiously
when giving timeframes.
I kept hearing
the phrase, we don't have a
crystal ball, which, you know, I
guess is reassuring, but
frustrating as
a parent.
I think you just want the answers.
And it wasn't that simple.
They had told us that
they wanted to go in and close the
hole.
And that if we did not pursue
medical intervention and do that,
her lifespan would be around 12
years.
What the recommendation was, was
to go and
put her on a course of medication
for approximately a year.
Because at the time of diagnosis,
the
pressures were too high in her
heart to actually safely do open
heart surgery.
So the idea of waiting
a year to wait and see how things
were going to be and if surgery
was going to be possible was
extremely frustrating.
It was anxiety provoking.
It was like an emotional roller
coaster.
They did say, and then I obviously
asked the question of, you know,
if we do the surgery and things go
well, like what will her lifespan
or quality of life look like then?
And at that point, they couldn't
really
provide an answer.
They said like, it's
unpredictable.
It depends on how the surgery
goes.
There's a lot of
factors.
She's young.
Things will change with growth.
So that unknown, I think, was
probably
for me the, the, the worst, the
worst part of it.
So that year of waiting on
medication with the medication,
hopefully reducing the pressures
and
the strain on the heart.
Uh, there were so many
conversations, but in the days
that followed after
some of these conversations,
especially early on, what was the
first memory you have of ordinary
moments that suddenly didn't feel
ordinary anymore when thinking
about your child and your family
life?
Yeah.
I can remember a couple of days
after we'd come home from the
hospital, after, you know,
quite a few days of tests and I
was pregnant at the time.
Um, and I was exhausted and, um,
I remember putting Claire to bed
and bedtime was always like a
very,
you know, fun and like joyful
time.
My husband and I both work full
time.
So, you know, she was in
daycare at the time.
That window of when you return
home and when they go to bed is
very small at that age.
Um, so it was usually, yeah.
So it was usually filled with
like, you know, uh, negotiations
about
dinner, bath, book, all those
things.
Bedtimes looked extremely
different in those early days.
So Claire had been, um, she was
using oxygen at night.
So we had to explain to her like
what this
machine was.
She was, you know, tethered to
this machine that she couldn't get
herself to the bathroom.
We had, um, they tape, like sort
of use medical tape on small
children so they don't pull it
off.
So there was like all this
equipment on her.
Um, there was an entire routine
around medication.
Um, it just, it felt like the
hospital had like invaded my
personal space.
Like bedtime felt like
a medical event.
Um, and it just really, um, I, I
kept having thoughts about how
many more
day-to-day activities are going to
look like this and how can we, as
parents, my husband and I make
things feel as normal as possible
for a two-year-old who really has
no comprehension of what's going
on.
And those conversations were, were
kind of meaningless at that time
to her and with her.
You know, before Claire's
diagnosis, you've said before that
you had a gut feeling that
something wasn't right.
Looking back now, what were you
noticing that you just didn't have
a
language for to describe it at the
time?
Yeah, I've done a lot of like
reflecting on this.
I think
I was a first-time parent with
Claire.
Um, I think when I, when she was
born, I tried breastfeeding.
I was unable to breastfeed.
Um, we spent a lot of time at,
with a lactation consultant at the
hospital
and they kept saying like, we're
not sure what's going on.
She just doesn't seem to want to
like,
she seems like not strong enough
or like she's just not trusted in
eating.
I thought, okay,
I guess maybe some kids just,
that's just how it goes.
I, I didn't know what I didn't
know.
Um,
so I felt like this seems strange.
Um, but that's fine.
Um, she also was like not hitting
developmental
milestones like other children.
So she never really crawled.
Um, she did walk, but it was a bit
delayed.
I would say she, um, she slept all
the time.
So I remember I had, you know,
other moms who had
children the same age and I was
hearing all the horror stories
about like sleepless nights and
colic
and they were exhausted.
And I was like, I don't know,
Claire just sleeps all the time,
like 24 hours
a day.
Like I have to wake her to feed
her.
And they're like, oh, that's,
you're so lucky.
Um, but
I mean, in looking back, like I
was not so lucky, like she was
just so weak.
Um, and then I think that
was the determination around
breastfeeding.
It just takes a lot more, um,
strength from a baby
to breastfeed than bottle feed.
Um, and so she just didn't really
have the stamina at one
point.
I just felt like, I don't know,
she just doesn't seem quite right.
And of course I
talked to our pediatrician and he
said, oh, no, no, you're just a
first time mom.
You're just
worrying.
And I thought, okay, yeah, no, I'm
paranoid.
Um, I'm sure everything's fine and
let
it go.
And then, you know, things just
kind of carried on.
I mean, I wish I knew what I knew
then, but, um, I would say like
medical intervention was still
pretty timely for us.
Um, however,
if we had known what we knew, they
probably would have repaired the,
the VSD, um, in utero.
So we may
have had better outcomes with the
pulmonary hypertension, but we, we
might not have.
Um,
it's so hard to know, but, um,
yeah, I just felt like something
wasn't quite right, but it's hard
as a first time parent.
Um, you're so exhausted already.
You're second guessing yourself.
You're tired.
Am I overreacting?
Yeah.
I was pregnant.
So I thought, oh my goodness, the
hormones and
all the other things, like it's
just in my mind.
Cynthia, what happens inside a
parent?
We think now between years two and
three,
what happens inside a parent when
the future you had been quietly
imagining
for you, your family, for Claire
suddenly collapses?
I think there was like a whole
host of emotions and I think every
day brought on an unpredictable
feeling.
So I think it, you know, it
started as, you know, shock and
numbness, um, to,
I have a very sort of like type A
personality.
I was like on the path to like
getting the answers and
putting all the things in place
sort of on that autopilot and very
effective at compartmentalizing.
I think for me to, to survive that
year, it couldn't be front and
center in my whole world.
Um,
I had a lot of doubt and blame
about, did I cause this?
Is there something genetic in my
body or my
husband's that, you know, has
created this?
Um, there was fear, um, guilt, uh,
anger, like why me?
I'm a healthy parent.
You know, I, I don't smoke, I
don't do drugs.
I drink relatively little.
I
exercise every day.
I eat healthy.
Um, I try to balance work stress.
Like I felt like I've done
everything I could do to produce a
healthy child yet this has
happened.
So I think it was, I was
frustrated.
Um, and I think to cope in that
year, like I said, I, I did a lot,
a lot of compartmentalizing.
I was still working full-time as
well as my husband.
I was pregnant.
Um, and I, I think I,
I started seeing a therapist, um,
and that really helped.
I'm fortunate that I had really
good social
support.
So I was really in it with my
husband.
Um, at the time we had both had
living parents.
Um,
none of our family lives in
Toronto, but quite close, just a
couple of hours away in Ontario.
Um, so we had that network.
Um, I had like a, an excellent
community of friends.
Um, and so I think
I just really tried to learn to
lean on people when I, when I
needed to.
And, um, it was every day brought
a bit of a different experience,
but I think a part of you just, I
don't know, it, uh, it's a worry
that
will sit in my head all of the
time and just trying to manage
that, um, day to day is like
something that I just have to work
on and get through.
Although 12 years out, um, looking
back now, what do you wish you
could say to yourself
in those days back then?
You had to give yourself advice.
Yeah.
I think I would tell myself to
give myself a bit of grace.
Um, I think I probably didn't take
the time I needed, like I didn't,
um, I didn't take time off work.
I mean, I took obviously days
here and here and there, but like,
I probably needed to just step
away a bit from life and reflect
and,
and get away and regroup.
But instead I sort of like pushed
through and, you know, made the
to-do
lists and went on autopilot and
compartmentalized and did all of
those things.
And I wish I could have
just maybe been less numb and, and
felt a bit more.
Um, and I would have these
triggering moments
where you would, I would go into
the hospital or I would, you know,
see a kid playing or a healthy
child or I'd see a, there was this
one thing and I always come back
to this.
I remember watching a
commercial and people watch
commercials and I don't remember
who put it out.
I think it was,
it was a mental health
organization and it was a woman in
an elevator and she kind of gets
in and
she's like taking up a lot of
space.
And the other woman is looking at
her kind of like growly
thinking like, Oh, you know, she's
taking up all this space and like,
what, you know, can she be
more respected, respectful?
And then it shows like what's
actually happening in her life.
Like this
sort of woman that gets in and,
um, and it shows like, you know,
her, her dad was sick.
Uh, you know,
her mom had health issues.
She had just lost a child.
And the, the caption was like, you
never really
know what's going on in other
people's lives.
And I felt like in that moment, I
was that woman.
I was
pretty private about what was
going on.
And you know, my colleagues didn't
work or sorry, didn't, um,
weren't aware of sort of all of
the details, but I felt kind of
trapped in my body.
Like I had all this
information on all these feelings,
but I didn't want to like, I don't
know, burden people.
And I think
that really has, has still sits
with me today.
Um, I think over the 12 years, and
I'm sure we'll talk
about sort of how things have
evolved.
I've found different ways and
different outlets to sort of
cope in a, probably a more
productive way than in the early
days.
And I, I wish I would have had
this
same kind of insight, but I think
hindsight's 2020 and I was just so
in it at the time.
You know, hearing so many stories
and reflecting even on my own
life, uh, it's amazing how
self-directed
kindness, self-directed
compassion, uh, grace towards
oneself is one of the biggest
challenges
when we strive to just keep it all
together.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Claire was young.
She was very young.
At the beginning in those days,
um, as she started becoming
more aware, how did you go about
deciding what you were going to
tell her and not tell her
as she became more aware?
This was really tricky for us.
I didn't really know how to, um,
speak to her
in like an age appropriate way and
like what stages, what was
appropriate.
I would say, um,
we really leaned on the child life
specialist that we were, uh, we
worked with at SickKids and they
do
have kind of like, um, a resource
that shows like at this age, you
should be talking about this.
And at
this age, you can start talking
about this.
And I took a lot of honestly
accused from them.
We're also
lucky, um, in the, the cardiac
department that we, um, that
Claire is a patient.
Um, her nurse practitioner
has been with her since the very
beginning.
So since the point of diagnosis
and until today, um, we're still
with the same nurse practitioner
and she's fantastic.
Claire and her are so close.
Actually, they actually
went to a national conference, um,
a couple of months ago and, um,
presented together.
It's, it's a definitely
a powerful relationship.
Um, but I took a lot of cues from
her too, because I think she could
be a little
bit more, um, objective and, you
know, does this every day.
So I think we tried to just like
get good
advice, um, from people.
And I also took my cues from
Claire.
Like I think at the beginning, we
told
her very little other than like,
you know, we had to explain why
she was wearing oxygen.
And I had this
moment and I, this is another
moment that I'll never forget.
Um, Claire was maybe, I don't
know,
seven or eight and she went to
want to sleep over to friend's
house.
And we said, yes, um, you know,
she could bring her oxygen.
We knew the family very well.
And Claire got into this
girlfriend's room
and she said, oh, where's your
oxygen machine.
And it was at that moment that it
struck us that
Claire actually thought every
child slept with oxygen.
Like that was the norm for her.
Um, so,
I mean, that was a bit of an eye
opening moment in that, like,
okay, you know what, maybe these
like
age appropriate conversations
haven't stayed where they needed
to.
Um, Claire is a very, um, curious
child.
Um, she's quite extroverted and,
um, isn't afraid to, to ask
questions.
Um, so our cues a lot
came from her.
So she'd say, why do I still have
to take this medication?
Didn't they like sew up my
heart?
Like, this is still a lot of stuff
to take, or I have to go to the
hospital and get blood every
month.
Like, why is that?
What are they looking for inside
of me?
And so I think that was a good cue
for us to be able to respond.
Um, but it's been tricky.
And, and I will say those like
adolescent
years, like 10 to now, um, have
probably been the hardest, more
difficult conversations, um, more
questions that, um, are come out
of the blue and kind of throw us
off.
And it's, it's become more
challenging actually to like
evolve with her than I was
expecting.
You mentioned the word we often,
and I surmise that's you and your
husband who are making those
decisions and those early little
steps and journeys together.
But how did you accomplish that?
Especially
if you may have found yourselves
with different coping mechanisms
emerging?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, it, um, unfortunately for
us, um, Claire's sort of course of
treatment and action
was very, um, derived from the
medical team.
And so we didn't have a ton of
flexibility in
medical decision-making.
So the two of us didn't really
have to compromise on that.
It was kind
of like, this is the option that
we're recommending.
And we both agreed that to take
medical advice
sort of as a team.
I think some of the negotiations
at home, um, I think we were
pretty aligned.
We had like, I, again, like if we
couldn't agree on something, like
I'm a little bit more, um,
out of a worrier or a bit more
risk adverse maybe than my
husband, but, um, I would say,
okay, let's just ask the NP or
let's ask the child life
specialist what they think.
Um, so we often did
rely on sort of like an outside
source to, to sort of help check
that.
But I think it was just a lot of
like open communication,
negotiating and getting Claire
involved in the conversation.
Like it,
it really was a team effort.
I can't imagine what it would have
been like doing this on my own.
Um,
and there was moments where he
needed to step away and I needed
to step away.
And having that break was
like, I don't know, a godsend.
Like, I think there was just times
that your mind does go in
to dark places and you want to
show up for your child in a way
that's not so scary for them.
And
being able to balance that between
the two of us and, or friends,
like we may call someone and say,
the two of us need a night out.
Like, can you just come over and
spend some time with, with the
kids?
Um, and we just really, we needed
to be able to ask for help outside
of, you know,
the relationship between the two
of us.
So important to ask for help and
often help is at you there and
waiting, but we never ask.
Mm-hmm.
Was there a moment where you
realized that the story you'd been
telling Claire needed to sort of
shift,
frame shift as she started getting
older?
Was there an evolution?
Yeah, I think so.
I think that the evolution was a
lot of the time tethered to like,
I don't know what I say is like
milestone moments or like bigger
events.
So a good example is like
the transition from school to
daycare.
And so we knew when she entered
school, we were going to have
to have some of these
conversations with her.
So you take medication at lunch,
but most of your friends
won't.
Um, you know, your bedtime is a
lot earlier than other kids'
bedtime because you need more
sleep.
I mean, she, cause at school you
start talking about, Oh, did you
watch the show or what time do
you go to bed?
Or, um, and so some of those, like
when she became more of like a, I
mean, she's always
been social, but able to like, you
know, in engage with friends
independently, we had to have some
of
those conversations more.
Um, another great example is
COVID.
Um, so Claire was in grade four,
um,
when COVID happened, it was a
scary time for us.
Um, and when people started like,
okay, well,
we'll just like increase our
bubble a little bit, or we'll
like, we'll take this calculated
risk or we
won't do this and we won't do
that.
Like we had to always be stringent
on the strict side.
And Claire
was like, it's not fair.
Like my two friends are at the
park together and like, why can't
I be there?
And I think like those triggered
conversations that revealed or
provided more depth into like
the seriousness of, of Claire's
disease.
I would say the most recent one,
and this was something that,
um, I had anxiety about maybe
since the point of diagnosis is at
what point is Claire going to
realize her life trajectory is not
the same as her friends.
And I became involved with, um,
like the pulmonary hypertension
community a couple of years ago.
I just wanted to seek out people
who
are going through the same thing
as me.
It took me a very long time to get
to that point.
I was very
reluctant to enter that space and
I kept Claire so firmly away from
it.
Um, I was, I can vividly
remember the first, um, family
conference I attended and I looked
around and everyone looked
sick.
They were on oxygen.
They were in wheelchairs.
Um, they had all the classic, more
advanced symptoms
of pulmonary hypertension that for
Claire, if you just looked at her,
you actually, her disease is
fairly visible and sorry,
invisible at this point.
And I thought, oh my God, if
Claire was with me,
she'd look around and this is her,
her future.
This is what her future is going
to hold.
And I just
couldn't face that until just the,
in the last few years, um, I
realized I joined, I became, um,
a director, um, for the board for
the pulmonary hypertension
association of Canada, which is a
national, uh, not-for-profit
organization that supports
patients and families.
Um, and, um, I got
really involved in that community
and it was through that that I
realized Claire actually needs to
make
the decision on her own about how
much she wants to know and engage
with people who have the same
disease as her.
And that has triggered a whole
other host of conversations.
So I think it's been
these sort of like pivotal moments
or milestones where conversation
and openness has shifted.
So how do you decide then how much
truth a child can carry at these
different ages and stages without
overwhelming them?
I think it's trial and error.
Like, I think you're going to say
too much.
Yep.
You're going to take the leap.
You take the leap and you're going
to say too much and they're
upset and you deal with it and
cope with it.
Um, you know, Claire regularly,
um, sees a therapist
and they can process it.
And then there's times you don't
say enough and then they learn it
on their
own anyways.
Um, I think as, you know, as
Claire gets older, I mean, she has
information at her
fingertips.
Um, it's just a different
generation.
And the concern is if she goes off
exploring on her own
versus hearing it in a sort of a
controlled environment with good
advice, taking the leap and
getting ahead of it from, at least
that is the way we have handled
it, um, has, I think been helpful.
Um, but sometimes I do worry like,
oh, maybe she doesn't need to know
this yet.
And it's tricky.
I
think it depends on like the
maturity of your child and what
they're asking.
Again, I've just tried to
continue to take my cues from her.
And if I see she's like, you know,
poking around online, looking at,
I don't know, like what's the life
expectancy of this, or I just try
to get ahead of it.
Yeah.
Was there a point when parenting
stopped actually feeling safe,
where you found yourself
constantly watching for something,
a sign that something might be
evolving towards going wrong
with Claire and her health?
Yeah, I think it was also tied to
these like developmental
milestones.
And like my husband
and I always agreed that we would
try to support Claire to live a
life that was as full as it could
be and provide her with all the
opportunities other kids have.
And just in a more creative
way, maybe.
So to give you an example, Claire
really wanted to go to overnight
camp.
Kids go
to overnight camp.
Her friends want, we kept hearing
about it.
I was like a bit reluctant.
I had like the
fear and like, what happens if,
you know, she gets into trouble?
And you know, a lot of the summer
camps
are, you know, in like Northern
communities or in areas that, you
know, healthcare isn't as like
readily available.
And so I was making decisions out
of fear.
And at one point, Claire, I
remember said to
me like, I know you're worried,
but I can do it.
And I know I can do it.
And so I said, okay, you know
what?
Like, let's just figure this out.
And I researched like, oh my
goodness, you don't even know,
like 20 camps.
I found one camp in Ontario that
was going to allow Claire to bring
oxygen.
This was
sort of the hiccup for us.
They had never had a child with
oxygen before, but they did have a
full-time
physician at camp.
They said, okay, we're comfortable
with going down this path.
And so we, we made it
happen.
But I think it was like in these
sorts of moments where my fear was
starting to stifle Claire
from being able to do things that
she really wanted to do.
And I was making decisions for her
that maybe in the early days I
needed to, I am the parent and she
is the child and she doesn't have
the knowledge to do that.
But as she gets older, I make
decisions and she says, she pushes
back and
says like, let's think about that.
Travel is another one.
So I was very worried about her
traveling.
So she
needs to bring oxygen online or
online, um, on the airplane.
Um, and then to the destination we
go to,
and it was sort of stifling
vacation.
Like I was worried about like, oh,
the flight.
And she said that
we can do this.
Lots of people travel with this
disease.
Like, and I think we, we, we
figured it out,
but I'm really glad that, um, she
pushes me, my husband pushes me
because I think we could live a
life
of just like feeling stuck and
being a little bit, um, unable to
like move forward and, and live.
Like, I think that is what I keep
coming back to.
Like, I think we need to take some
chances and just
like allow her to be able to try
to lead a life that she wants to
lead.
Like in two years, she will not
live in my home.
She will be out in the world.
And the thought of that is
terrifying, but we are trying
to do everything we can to set her
up for success, to be able to make
those decisions and have the
conversations and educate the
people around her in our absence.
And that has been like a real hard
thing for me to do.
What I'm hearing is that these
normal childhood milestones and
experiences and
family experiences suddenly become
like stress tests.
Oh yeah.
Did you find yourself in that
position
as a, as a mom where you were just
all eyes and ears open waiting for
something to go wrong?
Or as you
started and engaged in going
through some of these experiences,
aka stress tests, did you actually
feel
empowered?
Um, I'm not sure if I'm there yet.
I think I still am failing a lot
of stress tests.
Um, you know,
there's Clara's in high school
now, um, entering into high school
created a whole other host of
things I never thought about.
Um, you know, the conversations
around vaping and drinking and
parties and medical alert
bracelets and all the things.
Um, I think it was, it's really
about like
relinquishing control.
And I think the stress tests of
like, you know, staying up at
night until she gets
home and like walking around with
my phone.
And I don't know, I think, I don't
want to speak for
other parents, but I think
regardless of the health of your
child, every parent worries and
you'll worry
about your child forever.
Um, it just looks different.
Um, I think I do have this, like,
I think every
small little change or things
outside of my comfort zone do feel
like a stress test.
And it's,
it's a lot, it's, it's a lot to
carry.
It's, it's overwhelming.
It's emotional.
Um, it's trying
to be able to like, you know, talk
myself into like, it's going to be
okay.
And we've, but it's,
it's a lot and it is, I don't know
if it gets easier.
I'm not sure.
Tell me, tell me about how it
affects you emotionally on an
ordinary day, not one of those
stress test days,
but just an ordinary day.
Yeah.
An ordinary day.
I would say some days, I mean,
we're, we're in such
a routine on like, you know, take,
put the oxygen, take the, take the
pills, make sure the lunch is
packed, get the steps in.
Like, I think we're in like a good
groove and on a day-to-day basis,
I would
say the, the fears and the
feelings aren't front and center
for me.
Um, but there are days where there
is a, there is a trigger, whether
it's, um, you know, a medical
appointment.
Um, we see some sort
of deterioration in her health.
Um, she's, you know, I call her a
freak, we call her, we call her a
frequent flyer at SickKids.
And when we're there for like a
non-emergency routine thing, I
still have
like stepping into those four
walls of the hospital is like
anxiety provoking.
There is a lot of feelings
there.
And I think on an, an ordinary
day, I think things are, are okay.
Like I can manage it.
And,
um, like I said, just leaning on
social support, I would say
getting involved.
Like I mentioned before
in the PH community, when I have
those like ordinary days, it still
feel kind of like sad and rough.
I can
like reach out to the, I don't
know, Claire and I described them
as like her people, like the
people
that really get it, that live day
to day with the exact same thing.
And I think, um, having that
community really helps on the
ordinary days, I would say like in
the days of crisis, it's like
all hands on deck, you know,
bringing people in to help.
Um, recently my daughter had a
hospital stay
and it was a scary time.
It was like, we'd had a lot of
ordinary days, um, consistently.
And you almost
sort of, I mean, this is a great
thing.
And you, you sometimes forget, I
forget that she's sick.
And,
um, you know, I have an 11 year
old son and they interact and I
don't think about it.
And then you
have these moments where, you
know, she's in the hospital and my
husband was traveling for work.
And I thought, oh my goodness, I
have a really sick child.
And like, this is, it brings all
the
feelings back.
And those ordinary days following
the crisis days are tougher, but
you kind of just
settle back into a routine.
I think, uh, as a caregiver, you
just really need to come up with
ways to,
to cope and to like reflect and to
digest and like give yourself a
bit of grace when you have those
tough days.
It's, it's a lot.
Can you maybe share with our
listeners how you need to sort of
approach
processing the fear, the grief of
the moment so that it doesn't just
quietly take over your life?
Yeah.
I think I do it in a few ways.
I think, um, I was resistant, like
I said, I was resistant to
entering into that community and
hearing people's stories of others
who have the same disease as
Claire.
Um, and I think as I've, so part
of the way I've kind of coped is,
um, just learned more and
really understood like, what does
life look like in the longterm for
people with this disease?
And I think
that's been the, the pathways in
the stories vary a lot and we, we
don't have a crystal ball and I
don't know if she's going to be
like this person or this person or
this person or need none of these
people.
So I think that has been one way,
like really getting involved in
that community.
I would
say the community is very, um, I
really focused on the patients in
that community in the beginning.
And I think my, my shift in focus
has been to connect with the
caregivers in that community.
And so, um, with every patient in
that community, there is
caregivers surrounding them,
whether it's,
you know, medical caregivers or
family caregivers or partners, et
cetera.
And we've developed like a
community.
We're all going through the same
thing.
And I think, um, the, the power in
just
talking to people who know exactly
what you're going through has
really, really helped.
I think, um, you know, other
things that I've done is like, I'm
a firm believer in, you know,
physical activity and it is an
outlet for me.
Like I, it is, I need to exercise
every single day.
I need
to be outside every single day.
Um, I think some of those like
self care things, um, I know in
myself,
when I start becoming like angry
or like short with the kids or
frustrated, um, or I can't
concentrate at
work.
I know I need a bit of a, like, I
need to take a step back.
Like I need to, you know, have a
longer
conversation with my therapist or
I need to like take a vacation or
I need to just step away from home
life.
Um, whether that's a day or two or
like getting to the cottage for a
weekend and seeing my parents.
Like I just,
I think I've become really good at
reading my own personal cues and
taking what I need.
Um, but it's
taken me a long time to get here.
There's a, there's a huge moment
here.
And I just, I heard
you say it and it just sort of
resonated.
You said, I need to do these
things.
You didn't say I have to
do these things on the list
because that's, you know, that's
what that, those are the five
things I
need to do or that they say I need
to do or I should do.
But I heard in you, I need to,
because
those things are custom fit for
you and they work.
And I think that's a huge message
for
caregivers everywhere who are
listening, no matter what vocation
or whether you're parental,
whether you're looking after a
senior in your family, whether
you're a professional caregiver
doing shift work, but it's what I
need that's, I can choose and
that's going to work for me.
And
that's, I think that's a priceless
realization.
Uh, the other thing I'm hearing
from me, which is
really important and resonates as
community.
And I've spoken to many people now
and it's always the
same thing.
Find the community if you can, and
if it's geographically distanced,
use the tools that we
have now, uh, including, you know,
groups that gravitate towards each
other on social media to be able
to
provide that kind of community
support, even though they're
spread across long distances for
stories of
friends who've met in these media,
uh, in these communities who never
meet in real life,
but are very important in
providing support for each other
as caregivers dealing with their
different
journeys.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, like, as I mentioned
earlier on, um, Claire has a rare
disease.
So, I mean, 2000 Canadians have
what she has and that is across
the lifespan in the pediatric
population.
You can imagine it's even tinier.
Um, and so finding your people is
much harder.
Like I don't have people
in Toronto that I can regularly
see, but like you said, developing
that network, whether it's
virtually
has been really powerful.
And, you know, there is a national
conference that, um, PHA Canada
hosts
annually and it's the time that I
get to see these people in real
life.
And it is magical.
It is, um,
I, you know, I've, I've been to a
couple now and I brought Claire
for the first time this, this
fall.
Um, and seeing that experience
through her eyes was like nothing
I ever imagined.
So I'm, I'm glad in
that instance we, we took the leap
of faith.
You've taken many leaps of faith.
You've taken, you've set or gone
through milestones.
You've learned
how to live with fear, but over
time, what boundaries with other
people and other groups
or other thinkers did you have to
eventually set, even if it meant
saying things to people
that they didn't want to hear, but
all with the goal of sort of
protecting Claire?
Mm-hmm.
I haven't had to set a ton of
boundaries.
I would say, like, I think because
Claire was so
young when she was diagnosed, the
like boundaries that I set with
like, um, grandparents, like my
parents and my husband's parents,
because they, you know, would take
her for a week or two, um,
was pretty easy.
Like it was, we were all kind of
in it together from the beginning.
I would say
boundaries at school were
challenging, um, constantly be
feeling like you need to educate
the people that surround your
child on a day-to-day basis is
exhausting.
Um, and I think Claire, uh,
holds a lot of that burden now,
um, being, you know, 15, she can
certainly advocate for herself.
But I think, um, I think the
biggest boundaries has been
boundaries with Claire, um, and
trying to like,
you know, we establish these
boundaries and like, you know,
whatever these rules.
And
we always are saying like, we're,
we're doing this in the best
interest of you and for you.
And
you know, she's a teenager, like
they don't like boundaries.
They don't want to be told what to
do.
And that has been really
challenging.
She, you know, she pushes as she
should.
Um, and it's hard to know,
like, have I set a personal
boundary that's actually
unreasonable for her?
And because I have lived,
you know, a decade of boundary
setting and fear, or can I just
like relinquish a little bit and
take
my lead from her?
So I would say boundary setting
with her has actually been
probably the toughest,
but in my surroundings, it hasn't
been that bad.
Um, I would say I have like my, my
friends, um,
and my social support group are
very respectful of boundaries.
I think they know when to check in
and ask me if I need help.
And, um, I think my friends say to
me, I, I think I can be a little
bit,
uh, robotic or stoic in these
moments of crisis as, as we talked
about.
And they, they, I have heard many
times from many of them to say,
it's okay to just be upset.
Like you can just be mad.
If you want me to
come over and you want to just cry
the whole time and you not be good
company, that's okay.
And I think
just understanding the boundaries
and having friends that can
respect that sort of emotional
connection that sometimes you need
is really important.
And I think if I had friends that,
you know, couldn't respect some of
those boundaries around like
mental health and being
emotionally
intelligent, I think what we
probably wouldn't, I wouldn't have
stayed friends with them.
My friends
would have had to have changed
based on my boundaries, but I'm
fortunate that my social
circle is so supportive.
It sounds like they help keep you
visible and they prevent you from
going
numb.
Yes.
Yes.
And like accountable to say like,
look, this is, you know, as, as I
mentioned, my,
my daughter was in the hospital
last week and just even hearing
them say like, this is scary.
Like,
it's okay to be scared.
And you know, I'm reorganizing my
life of like, I've got to get
my son here and this, the here and
this there.
And they're just like, none of
these things are
important.
Just like be with your daughter
and we'll figure it out.
Like things, if the garbage
doesn't go
out on Wednesday, it's not the end
of the world.
And sometimes I just need to hear
that, that reality
check of like, you need that.
I think that is as a caregiver,
you, your to-do list is constant.
It is, you're adding to it and
you're just on autopilot just to
get through all the tasks.
I think there's like an additional
load with the caregiver.
You have your everyday life of
like
your work and your family and your
other children and your, and then
you have this like huge other
piece that like just sort of sits
on your shoulder and that's like,
you know, filling prescriptions,
attending medical appointments,
negotiating with teachers,
negotiating with her, you know,
trying to think about the longterm
and the present.
And there is this like mental, uh,
like
rat race in your head and like
keeping that race quiet day to day
is work.
It takes practice.
And
for new caregivers, it is the
hardest thing I think that I
experienced.
You go, it's such a huge challenge
when you're going from a
protective
mindset to preparing your child to
actually have a voice and to be
able to speak
for herself.
With the experience you've been
through so far, what advice would
you give
parent caregivers out there
navigating this journey?
This has been a hard one for me, I
will admit.
Um, so I'm lucky.
So when Claire goes to medical
appointments, you know, it starts
with, she is playing in the corner
and is not even a part of the
conversation for, you know, age
appropriate reasons.
And then it was no, Claire's now
going to sit and
she's going to listen and, and
we're going to do that.
Then it evolved to Claire is going
to sit and
listen.
And, um, my goal with Claire is to
say, during the conversation with
the medical team,
you're going to ask a couple of
questions.
And it started with things like, I
can vividly remember
the first question she ever asked
was, what are you going to have
for dinner tonight?
To our cardiologist.
Totally unrelated to the
conversation.
She also at one point asked if he
had a dog,
what his favorite color was, but
she was still like developing a
relationship and that was all part
of
it.
And then it evolved to like, okay,
now we're going to transition to
like medically relevant
questions.
So she might say, sometimes in the
morning, I feel like a little bit
of extra, I feel
extra tired when my oxygen isn't
on at night.
Like, why do I feel that way?
And we started just like
evolving.
And then it was, I'm going to sit
in the back and Claire is going to
participate and
speak in the meetings.
Now it's, I come in and the NP and
the cardiologist say like, get out
of here,
mom.
Like Claire is going to, and of
course there's always some like
follow-up questions, but, um,
that like, if, if forcing,
twisting my arm to evolve has been
the best thing and the hardest
thing for me.
Recently, when we were at the
hospital last week, we went and
saw a different specialist.
Claire also
has, um, von Willebrand disease,
um, which is a disease that, um,
causes it.
It's challenging for
her blood to clot.
It's like hemophilia, but a bit
different.
Um, and so we were, we were
talking to
those, that team.
And of course I'm on autopilot.
They asked me a question.
I'm sleep deprived or they
ask us a question and I'm talking
and Claire looks at me and she
says, excuse me, I think I can
answer
these questions about myself.
And so it's in that moment that I
was like, yep.
Okay.
No, I got it.
I got
it.
And I'm like that moment.
I'm really mad at her.
Um, because I think I can answer
better, but then
I'm also like, I've, I've done my
job.
I have accomplished exactly what
we have been working on for 12
years.
Like she wants to advocate for
herself.
Does she do it perfectly every
time?
Absolutely not.
She's
15 years old, but we'll get there.
And I think as a caregiver, it's
like, you need to
really think about what your role
as a caregiver and what is the
role of the patient in having a
voice.
And I think like, you know, my
advice would be that those two
voices are extremely distinct and
not one
more important or more powerful
than the other.
There's a time and a place for
both.
And tethering
between those has been, is, is
challenging, um, as, as a
caregiver of a child.
Um, yeah, so it's...
What did, uh, what did it feel
like the first time you heard,
mom, we need you to step out?
Or mom,
can you, can you go into how we
need to speak to Claire alone?
Oh, I was mad.
I was not happy.
And I
was like, what?
She doesn't have all the
information.
Like I know the answers.
I've been on this journey.
I do this and I, and it was, I
made it about myself and it has
nothing to do with me.
It is about her and it is
about empowering her.
They have her best interests.
The like very, you know, rational
part of my brain
understands all of this, but the
emotional part, I was just like,
but I, I know I am the caregiver.
I am the, um,
so it was frustrating.
It was like a bit of a like hit to
the ego.
I'm not going to lie, but, um,
it's good.
Like I, I, we need to get there.
Um, and you know, she's going to
transition to adult care, um, at
18,
which feels like it's far away,
but it's not.
Um, we've already started doing,
um, there is a
transitions program between, um,
SickKids and Toronto General
Hospital for, um, patients like
Claire.
And
we're already starting to build up
to milestones to make that
transition because when she's 18,
I will
not be in the room.
So I am mentally getting my head
around that, uh, in, in
preparation for this.
So it's,
uh, yeah, it's, it's tough, but
you, you get there, I think as a
parent.
Sounds to me like she's already
starting to take steps towards
ownership of her own journey and
her
illness.
And which is such a huge thing.
We do see lots of transition, uh,
transitioning in chronic
inflammatory bowel disease, where
we spend a lot of time speaking
about how you're in charge of you
now, or you're learning to be in
charge of you and we count on you
to be in charge of you.
And
it's, it is, uh, I can only
imagine in Claire's case, a
process that does need to start
three years
before, because there's so many
steps involved.
So she's 15.
Yep.
Driving lessons next year.
Oh God, don't remind me.
I told my husband I want nothing
to do with those.
Well, so with so much independence
though, I mean, there's potential
independence, at least there's,
there's a risk of real medical
risk.
How do you avoid protecting your
child, Claire, so much
so that you don't actually make
things shrink in her life?
Yeah.
I mean, I think that's been like,
uh, our lifetime goal and biggest
struggle is to like,
and I think I had said this in the
beginning, like we wanted her to
live a life that was as
full as she could live within like
the, you know, medical boundaries
that she has.
And so I think
we've become very good and she's
become very good at like looking
for alternatives in her life to
still
feel fulfilled and doing things
like her friends, but maybe it
doesn't look like her friends
exactly.
So, you know, a good example is,
you know, my, my son is very, um,
athletic.
He loves sports.
He's,
you know, in, you know, plays very
competitive sports.
And my daughter's really never
been able
to play organized sport.
Um, she just doesn't have like the
cardiovascular stamina to do that.
Um, so we explored like, what does
like fun feel like in your body?
What does it look like?
What do you
like to do?
And, um, she got really interested
in art.
So, you know, she started drawing
and painting
and doing art lessons and, you
know, she's a fantastic artist.
And I think we just tried to
like really normalize that like
everyone's journey and interests
and life path are going to look
different, whether you have a
chronic disease or just different
interests or whatever, however it
may
look.
So I think that's what we've
really done to not sort of shrink
her life down and try to like
be really, you know, realistic,
um, with what she can do and not
do.
And, you know, just have some of
those frank conversations.
I think, like, I think even, um,
you know, if her, her friends are
like,
you know, going out for a couple
nights in a row and I'm seeing
that she's getting really like
worn down.
Like, I really don't want to, you
know, stifle her ability to be
social and
have a teenage life.
But like to, to your point, like
there is a part, a point in which
we need to
sort of medically intervene to
say, like, you're going to start
seeing some pretty nasty effects
if
you don't rest and eat properly
and get some exercise, et cetera.
And so we tried to trade
lightly and try to keep that
balance and just find alternatives
to be able to, to prevent that
sort of
like shrinkage of life.
In the face of that though, what's
it been like to have to slowly
hand over that responsibility
for explaining her condition
herself from you to now to her and
then to her peer group?
I would say that, um, it's been,
it's been okay in that we, again,
like through that transition of
explaining brought Claire in, in
like an age appropriate way.
So, you know, I would have the
conversation with the teacher and
Claire would obviously be absent.
And then we would graduate
to like, when I sat down with her
classroom teacher that year,
Claire would sit in and she
would hear what I was saying to
the teacher.
And then I was like, okay, the
next year I said,
we're going to meet with the phys
ed teacher.
You're going to tell her or him
why, what is going
on and what they need to, to watch
out for.
So Claire would say, um, when,
when we do laps
around the gym, sometimes I need
to stop and you need to not yell
at me and tell me to keep
running because I feel really
tired.
And like, and I would say to
Claire, I need to prompt her a
little bit to say like, what does
that look like?
And she would say, my lips go blue
and my heart beats
really fast and I feel dizzy.
And that's when I know I need to
sit down.
So we sort of did it like
incrementally.
Um, so she, we, we tried to sort
of model, um, that how to have
those conversations.
And then she sort of slowly
stepped in to have them herself.
And now she's in high school.
I don't call
her high school teachers and
educate them on her disease.
Um, she does that herself, but
there is
moments like, you know, she took
phys ed last year where, you know,
the teacher was like doing some
things that I wasn't thrilled
about and she was trying to
advocate for herself, but there is
moments
where I, you know, we do get
involved.
Um, but, um, yeah, I think it's
like, she's been able to really
explain, um, her, how she feels
and what she needs on her, in her
own terms.
Um, the other thing we did,
as I mentioned, um, we attended
conference, um, together in
September, which was the first
time
that she, she calls them her
people.
She met her people and, um, she
spoke on a, on a panel, um,
as the keynote.
And I was like pretty worried
about this.
I was worried, like, what's she
going to say?
What kind of questions are we
going to get?
We did it as a team.
Um, there was a couple of
caregivers
actually, and patients, and it was
really interesting.
And, um, I was like, wow, she can,
she gets this.
She can really articulate, like,
what is going on with her.
And I remember someone
asked a question and I, of course,
my inclination was to answer and
Clara, like, kind of did hit me
and
she answered it.
And so I think she's like gotten
better words to be able to
articulate what she has
to others as she hears people like
her explain what's happening.
So I think she's just like,
she's just getting the, the words
and the vocabulary as she gets
older and just has that
more readily at her fingertips.
Sounds like a, a, a beautiful
emergence of empowerment.
Yeah.
That's off to you.
You know, given what you were told
at the beginning in, in those
early years about
her future and your future, by
extension, what does it feel like
today to actually be standing
here,
still loving, still living, still
hoping, yet with uncertainty?
It feels good.
Um, I had no idea how long and
what our path was going to look
like,
sort of post-surgery.
Um, you know, Clara is doing quite
well.
Um, and so that brings me a
sigh of relief.
I feel like some of these things
we've talked about today of like
seeing her be able
to like describe her medical
condition, advocating for herself,
surrounding her with herself, with
friends and people who are
supportive is all like, I feel
like a, a success in my mind.
I feel a lot of
pride.
I think we've done a good job and
she's done a great job of like,
aging and really trying to be able
to, um, live with a complicated
disease.
Um,
yeah, I think it's, I don't, I'm,
I'm not going to lie.
Like there are moments of the day
that are
deep and dark and scary for me.
Like, I don't think this is going
to be the reality for us forever.
Claire will, there is no cure for
this disease.
Um, there is, um, medication that
obviously help
alleviate symptoms, but there is
no cure and it is a rare disease.
So the realities of a cure are,
I'm realistic about that.
Um, I think, um, one of the ways
that I kind of keep like carrying
on or
think about the future is continue
to be involved.
I think organizations, um, like
PHA Canada who are
advocating for better access to
medication, um, you know, the
release of the rare disease
strategy
recently is like a huge win, uh,
governments paying attention to
rare diseases and getting,
um, access to medication in rural
and remote areas or where there's
less access has been
really important.
So I think I see my part as like
raising awareness and doing some
of that
advocacy work as well as, you
know, my work with, in my family.
So I think it's, it's still scary
to
think about the future.
I have no idea what the future
holds.
I, I think like a lot of moms
think about,
like, I picture like, what will
her wedding day look like?
What will her like family planning
look
like?
What were her, what will her, um,
work years look like?
I think, you know, when I look
across
patients, adult patients with this
disease, many don't work.
Um, fertility and family planning
looks
very different.
So I think there will be lots of
hurdles for us in the future or
for her, um,
us obviously providing support.
So I don't know, I don't want to
use the term like out of the
woods,
but this will be something that I
live with my whole life and she
does and us kind of going through
it together.
Um, it's not going to ever go away
and just trying to think about
ways in which I can
carry on and be productive and
like, you know, self-regulate and,
um, take what I need and give her
what
she needs is going to be like a
lifelong piece of my life that I
just is the reality.
It sounds to me though, that every
step along the way has gotten you
prepared for the next step
that's around the corner.
You couldn't imagine.
That's kind of like favorite
analogy of mine.
It's
hard, it's hard to back out of
your driveway when you live on the
freeway.
Yes.
So all of, all of those steps
involved to date have gotten you
ready for what's around the
corner because we'll be that much
more empowered to take that on.
Yeah, I hope so.
I mean, honestly, I remember when
Claire was, you know, three or
four and thinking about,
oh my goodness, like, how am I
going to handle a teenager when
she's a teenager?
Like having to have
these really hard conversations
and telling her she can't do this
and she can't do that.
And, but I mean,
I think it's like I, in that
moment of when she's three, you
forget that is, it is an evolution
and
she will evolve with me.
And it's not just, you don't go
from three to 13.
Um, so I think I'm trying
to create that same mindset of
like, we're not going to go from
15 family planning.
Let's hope not.
Um,
and so it's, you know, it's going
to evolve.
So I just need to be patient with
myself going back to
that question of like advice you'd
give yourself 10 years ago or 12
years ago is like, just be
patient.
Like time is on our side and there
is no rush to make decisions and
get ahead of ourselves.
And
that is a hard thing as a
caregiver.
I think you, you jump to worst
case scenario, at least for me,
that is kind of my, my default.
Well, it's hard not to think of
the future because we always have
that
grip on the thinking about what's
around the corner, but caregiving
must have taught you.
And that's what
I'm hearing that it is possible to
loosen your grip on that constant
think of the, uh, think and
thinking about the future without
abandoning hope or presence in the
moment.
Absolutely.
If you could speak to a parent
early on the road, similar road
that you've been on,
someone who's sitting there in a
state of shock, possibly staring
at lab results, staring at reports
or letters, what would you want
the most to hear in that moment
from you?
Mm-hmm.
I think maybe two things.
One is knowledge is power.
I think like, don't be afraid to
ask
all the questions and to really
understand what's happening.
Um, I think that, I mean, I guess
it
depends on your personality, but
for me really having the knowledge
to be able to help to make good
decisions was really important.
But I think the other one is like,
find your people.
Um, I think I,
I didn't do this.
Like I didn't, I mean, I had a,
like a strong social network, but
I didn't really
look for people who were going
through the same thing as me.
And I was like, oh, support
groups.
I don't want to do that.
And I don't want to know what the
future holds.
And, but I really wish that
I would have gotten more engaged
in that community.
I think that, you know, these
organizations that are
dedicated to supporting families
and patients are like such a
valuable resource that can often
be
really underused.
It's like they have peer support
programs and group and webinars
and, you know,
resources and checklists and like
all these things.
Like I wish I knew about those
resources
earlier on.
I think it would have really
helped me.
And then I guess the last one
would just be like,
give yourself some grace.
Like it is hard and you're going
to have really hard days.
You are going to sit
in your room and you're going to
cry all day.
And then you're going to have days
and you're going to
go out into the world and you're
going to function like nothing's
ever happened.
And I think that is
like a totally normal reality of
caregiving.
You have these days that are
really, really hard and you
have days that just feel kind of
normal.
And I think like being on the
emotional roller coaster
to normalize that I think is
really important, but then to find
ways to make that roller coaster
less
steep, to like try to flatten the
roller coaster has been like my
sort of like personal life
mission.
Like living like this is really,
really hard.
Um, if you, the, the, the more
that you can get off the
highs and the lows, I think the
easier it's been, at least for me.
And I think doing that is through,
you know, knowledge, social
support, um, having frank
conversations with friends,
et cetera.
But I think it's, I think that's
what I would tell a new parent.
It's scary
or a new caregiver, whether it's a
child or an, uh, a partner or et
cetera.
Have you built a sense of peace?
Have I built a sense of peace?
I think so.
I mean, if I think about my state
of peace now versus 10 years ago,
I'm really peaceful.
Um, but I think so.
I do still have the moments of why
did this have to happen to us?
What, why me?
You know, I wish that she could
have an easier life.
I have the like comparator of a
healthy son,
which sometimes I can, brings
moments of like, oh, this sucks.
Um, but I think so.
I, I, I think I'm almost there.
You've managed to build a sense of
peace without ever having the
certainty of knowing what to
expect.
And I think that's a tribute to
caregivers abilities highlighted
in your efforts in your story, uh,
to build the life that they want.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you for joining us today,
Cynthia.
You shared with us a stir, uh, a
story of courage, a story of
reality, a story of stepping up
and it, uh, inspires and, uh, it
teaches.
And, uh, we thank you for sharing
with us.
Thanks, Mark.
Happy to be here.
That wraps up another episode of
the Caregivers Podcast.
I'm your host, Dr.
Mark Ropolesky.
We'll see you next time.
Before we wrap up, I wanted to
remind you of something important.
The conversations you hear on this
podcast are here to inform, to
support, to spark reflection.
You're not a substitute for
professional medical advice, care,
therapy, or crisis services.
Listening to this podcast does not
create a doctor-patient or
caregiver-client relationship
between us.
If you're facing a medical
concern, health challenge, a
mental health challenge, or a
caregiving situation
that needs guidance, I encourage
you to reach out to a qualified
professional who knows your story.
If you're ever in crisis, please
don't wait.
Call your local emergency number
or recognize crisis hotline right
away.
You deserve real-time help and
support.
The views you hear on this show,
whether from me or my guests, are
our own.
They don't necessarily reflect any
organizations we work with, are
part of, or have worked with,
or been part of in the past.
This podcast is an independent
production.
It's not tied to any hospital,
university, or healthcare system.
Thank you for being here, for
listening, and most of all, for
taking the time to care for
yourself while you continue to
care for others.
I look forward to hearing from
you.