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Happy Birthday Happy Glamper!

by Susan

Lorelei’s birthdays will always be a bittersweet thing for me. This year, due to our crazy start, we had a nice family dinner on her actual birthday, but decided to postpone the celebration until the spring. When it was warmer and there were less cold and flu germs floating around. HA! For those who remember last year and her “Winter ONE-derland” party in the middle of February… it was 75 degrees outside! This year, with the party in April, it ended up cold and snowing that “Spring” weekend! We pushed the party up an evening because of terrible weather on Saturday. In the end, so many people called out sick (germs are not welcomed in our home) or could not attend because of the date change…

But it was nice! We had a great time. Sweet Lorelei honestly had no clue either way. She was happy to be surrounded by her family and to be tasting a pink flamingo cupcake!

Speaking of cake… this amazing Happy Birthday, Happy Glamper theme came full circle with her cake. We have been so blessed in many ways by programs for kids who have life threatening conditions. I heard about Icing Smiles from another mom while Lorelei was in the NICU. Icing Smiles works with bakers all over the country to provide cakes for these kiddos. Normal bakers, who volunteer their time and their talent to help families like mine make memories of a lifetime.

Through a few emails (after an approval process) I told the local baker the theme of the party and the colors I was using for decorating. I literally said: “We are doing Happy Birthday, Happy Glamper - think vintage campers, flamingos, pink and aqua” and that was it. As a control freak, event planner, it makes me anxious not knowing what the cake will look like. This baker nailed it! She even added the adorable flamingo cupcakes! AND she made them gluten free for our family!!

This was their “fun cake”. Lorelei can receive a “fun cake” every year for her birthday, but one year she will receive a “dream cake” that is a three tiered, fancy, carved cake! And they also do “memorial cakes” and “sibling cakes” for families too. Such a blessing right?!

Okay, enough words. The pictures are worth so many more words than I can write!

For Lorelei’s first birthday, she wasn’t at a place where we could do a traditional cake smash. She wasn’t taking ANYTHING by mouth, had no interest in food, and threw everything up that we had her try. Truth be told, we are still barely eating anything by mouth (all 100% g-tube) but she now loves tasting and licking things. The more flavor the more she seems to like it! So we let her play with a ‘mingo cupcake this year. And, while it may be minor to most families, at her party, for the first time ever, Lorelei had food (hot pink icing) on her hand and moved it to her mouth on her own!! Guys, she has never ever put food in her own mouth until this hot pink flamingo cupcake. Be still my special needs, tubie mom heart.

While I laugh that no part of this party turned out the way I expected it to, I’m reminded that neither has my mom-life. But other than finding a cure for my kid, I wouldn’t change a darn thing. I have learned more from my nonverbal, non-walking-crawling-sitting, 2 year old toddler than I learned in 13 years of sales and marketing in the home warranty industry, 9 years as an event planner, 4 years as a restaurant owner, 4 years of college and all the schooling that came before it.

So kiddo, thank you for reminding us to celebrate life! Here is to so many more years with you, our ultimate gift from God, and so, so many more pink flamingo cupcakes.

Thank you to Icing Smiles for all you do for kids like Lorelei and hearts like mine. Thank you to our local baker, Barbara in Suffolk, VA. Thank you to the family and friends who came to celebrate and to those who celebrated from afar, keeping their sick germs at bay. Thank you to those who sent books for Lorelei’s NICU book drive! Thank you all for praying and continuing to pray for our little girl as she shows Mitochondrial Disease who is boss. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

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Filed Under: #FridaysWithLorelei, Birthday, Lorelei Elizabeth, Mito Mommy Life, Mitochondrial Disorder

#FridaysWithLorelei: Finding Joy. Hold on to Hope.

by Susan

We have been very cautious about sharing too many pictures of Lorelei on Facebook and social media for many reasons that I am not going to get into here. Last year I started doing a #FridaysWithLorelei post, once a week with an update and a picture on Facebook. And I love it. It allows me to share a tiny bit of our life and not overwhelm the world and myself with our on-goings. I thought maybe I should start that here on the blog. Make a point to do an update once a week. Or when I remember. Or when I have time. Because let’s be real - what’s a lifestyle blog if you aren’t actually documenting your life?

Like my facebook posts, I may only use one picture for these posts. I know it’s not normal for blogland - but bite me. I’m busy and I haven’t brushed my hair in days.

With that, I just can’t wait until tomorrow! So I give you the blog’s first #FridaysWithLorelei update:

mitochondrial disease fbxl4

What a week! Michael has been away for work so in addition to my normal Lorelei to-do’s (and work/life/etc) I am also picking up the 1AM medicine and refilling of the feeding bag shift every night. After a few days I am finally adjusting to the middle of the night wake up again. I have no clue how I was even functioning on no sleep while pumping every 3 hours for 8 long months…
Yesterday we redid her lab work (easily with one of our favorites from the VAT team). We got some good news and some not-so-good news. To avoid a long scientific post, I just ask that you pray for Lorelei as one of the meds hasn’t been working and it really needs to work. They are adjusting it to hopefully help balance everything out.
This life is so hard. For a few minutes, I let myself get comfortable. I took her to a park with a friend. I took her to Target. She didn’t puke much last week at all. I listened to so many who say “She looks so normal!” Hours before I found out the labs weren’t stellar I messaged a friend and said “I need a break, let’s go to Key West!”
The not-so-good news yesterday was a punch in the gut reminder for me. Her nephrologist called me and explained as much as he could. Her geneticist texted me for hours. The nephrologist used the sentence “It’s 2017 - Science hasn’t caught up and there really isn’t anything we can do.” Which, surprisingly, didn’t sting. It was honest and heartfelt. It was the reminder I needed.
There is no cure. Sure, we can manage certain parts of mitochondrial disease. But there’s no cure. We are hopeful to figure out the right dosing and the right medications to keep her little body functioning to the best it can. Hopeful (and thankful) for the team we have that is helping us manage her complications.
But there isn’t a cure. We can try our hardest to control the situation but the long and short of it is - she has a disease that will eventually take her life because a cure has yet to be found.
So as we always do, we keep going. We make the best decisions we can for her. We make the best decisions we can for us. We focus on the present and try not to open Pandora’s Box of worry and fear. We trust God. We check things off her bucket list like there is no tomorrow, with the hope of many, many years of adding more and more to that list. She is happy. Her hair is awesome. Her rolls are outrageous. Her personality is wonderful. In so, so many ways, WE ARE BLESSED.
The picture above was taken today in her stander that has been returned! Huzzah!
Please Note: I am not posting this so people feel bad for us or for Lorelei. Please, never feel bad for us. I am writing it because it helps me process. It helps me cope. And I hope it helps inform others about mitochondrial disease. So instead of “I’m so sorry” or “you’re so strong” in the comment section below, let’s mix it up a bit - you tell me what is on YOUR bucket list for you or for your kids?

We all have some degree of dark and scary, not-so-great shit going on in our lives - but we all need to find joy and hold on to hope.

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Filed Under: #FridaysWithLorelei, Lorelei Elizabeth, Mitochondrial Disorder

Feeding Tube Awareness Week: Our Journey with a G Tube.

by Susan

I heart a tubieAt a certain point, there must be an “awareness week” for everything under the sun… Polar bears? August. Gluten Free Living? November. Accordions? June. Feeding Tubes? February! I used to think that all of these “Awareness Weeks” were silly… I mean, come on… do Accordions really need their own week of awareness?! And feeding tubes… really? But yes.

(Well, I honestly can’t speak about the Accordions but Feeding Tube Awareness Week is actually important!)

As most of you know, my daughter is 100% dependent on her feeding tube. This silly tube and pump and button keep her alive. Without it, our journey thus far would probably have been even more bumpy than it already has.

Last summer, we were eating out in a restaurant with a couple of friends. Lorelei was due for her 12pm feed, so I unobtrusively set it up, leaving her feed bag hooked to the edge of her stroller while she slept and ate. There is usually one, quick beep when priming the milk through the pump. But nothing louder than a cell phone ring. We had some onlookers, a couple with probably a 10 year old son. My mom made the comment “Those people are very interested in what you’re doing.” I was in my groove. I didn’t notice what was going on. When we left, my friend said to me, “I’m shocked you didn’t go say something to them.” What I didn’t realize was that that entire family was pointing, laughing and taking pictures of my daughter and her feed bag. My initial reaction was anger. Who the heck does that?! But then I felt sad for them. For their young son. They didn’t understand. They made fun of what they didn’t know. They were ignorant of our situation and how this not-typical tube was saving my child’s life.

So maybe that is why we have awareness weeks. Maybe that is why these silly weeks are important. Maybe awareness weeks like Feeding Tube Awareness Week serve the purpose to educate and make these things a little less scary.

Baby with NG Tube: Feeding Tube Awareness Week

I had to learn everything really fast. In the NICU they throw words and phrases around like we all understood and spoke their language. Their words blurred over my head - all I knew was that my baby had wires and tubes, lots of wires and tubes, coming out of her.

Lorelei has had an NG tube (runs down her nose, throat and into her stomach, it is not permanent and easy to remove) and she now has a G tube (a button or tube that is surgically placed on her belly that puts food directly into her stomach, it is semi-permanent). I have friends who’s kids have GJ tubes (where food bypasses the stomach and goes directly to the intestines).

lorelei momy cottage selfie

The decision to switch from an NG tube to a G tube was tough for us. It was scary. It was the first semi-permanent (in our case it will probably be permanent) visible badge, telling the world that she is not typical, that she is a “special needs kid.” Our hospital doesn’t usually allow babies to leave the NICU with an NG tube. So if we wanted to go home, we had to opt for the G-tube. I was sad. I was angry. I was upset that her neonatologist just wouldn’t give in and let us leave with the NG. She would get there. She would learn to eat. She would get stronger.

I cried on the phone with a dear friend who is a speech therapist. I clearly remember her saying “Suz, as a speech therapist, I would tell you, it’s not a big deal. It will help her. As your best friend, I will tell you that this is breaking my heart too.”

Baby with Feeding Tube: Feeding Tube Awareness

Turns out, other than loving this baby unconditionally, the G tube was the best thing we ever could have done for her. Lorelei has fattened up. She is thriving as much as any kid with a terminal illness can thrive. She is defying odds. She is able to eat and sleep at the same exact time. (Be honest, haven’t you always wanted to have that super power?!) While it has been a scary ride, we owe so much to this tube. Without it, I honestly do not think that Lorelei would be with us today.

So really, what is the purpose of this long blog post? I want to take this opportunity to tell you to ask questions! Let your kids ask questions. Staring, pointing and laughing has never educated anyone. It just makes things more scary and unknown… and is basically poking the Mama Bear.

Feeding Tube Awareness: Kids asking questions about feeding tube

Little kids are curious. And that’s okay. It’s actually outstanding! I can’t speak for all tubie moms, but I much prefer conversations about my daughter’s condition or tube. Don’t hush your children in line at Target, let them learn. Usually I just tell them that Lorelei simply eats differently than they do. And most of the time, kids are completely okay with that answer and think her pump is the coolest thing ever. (Adults are often the ones who seem to be freaked out.)

Yes, sure I wish my child could eat the same way I do. I wish she could enjoy tasting food. I wish I could use bibs for more than vomit or capes. I wish that we could do a traditional cake smash for her first birthday next week. For crying out loud, I’m a foodie-lifestyle blogger. Food is important to me! Eating is a social event. I’m sad it is something we miss out on. So while I am thankful for her tube, I’d be lying if I said there weren’t days that I didn’t resent the damn thing.

So there you have it! My real feelings on the feeding tube. My bittersweet, love and hate, emotional journey as a mom of a tubie. I would love to do a follow up post with any questions you may have! What do you want to know? No question is stupid! What can I tell you to help spread awareness and educate people on feeding tubes? Drop your questions below! Let’s make feeding tubes “less scary” together.

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Filed Under: Feeding Tube Awareness, Lorelei Elizabeth, Mitochondrial Disorder

Mito Awareness: She is worth a cure!

by Susan

Lorelei has mitochondrial disease.

Prior to six months ago, the only time I had ever heard the word “mitochondria” was when I made a styrofoam cell for homework in my 10th grade bio class. Funny thing is, my mom tossed that silly cell last fall after it had been sitting in my childhood closet for 15 years… Timing, right?!

Now “mito” - short for “mitochondrial disease” - is something I think about every.single.day. Many times a day.

There is no cure for mito. According to the United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation (UMDF) every 30 minutes a child is born who will develop mito by 10 years old. On top of that, every single year, 1,000 to 4,000 children in the USA are born with a mitochondrial disease. Lorelei was “lucky” in that she was diagnosed within the first two weeks of her birth. Most children (and even adults) live without an official diagnosis their entire lives, making it hard to say how many people actually have mito. They do know that the number of children fighting mitochondrial disease is quickly approaching the frequency of childhood cancers. (You can read more here at UMDF - and I’m not gonna lie, I check their site once a week in hopes of a grand announcement of a mito cure!)

So what is mito? You can read the details at the UMDF Frequently Asked Questions page - or you can watch this super cute video I found online from The Lily Foundation in the UK.

Why all the details on Mito? September 18-24, 2016 is Mitochondrial Awareness Week.

Personally, as someone who is the mom to the cutest Mito Warrior ever, I feel as if one week isn’t enough time to raise awareness for the disease that has completely changed our lives. So get aware! Ask me questions! (My husband or our geneticist can give you all the scientific answers, while I can tell you all about how cute Lorelei is!) And then help me raise money to donate so they can continue to do research and hopefully find a cure!

Between now, August 23, 2016 and the entire month of September - I will be donating 25% of any money I make from my online income streams to the United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation (UMDF), including money brought in from my blog, Monat, Stella & Dot or my 2 Cats Creates Etsy Shop! What does that mean to you? It means, you better get shopping to help the brains behind UMDF try to find a cure for Lorelei and all of the other children with cattywampus DNA!

Guys - I want to hype this up and make it huge. Here are a few things you can do to help me…

SHOP!

  • If you have always wanted to try Monat’s natural hair products (because you saw one of my Monat reviews and have been wanting to give it a shot) - now is a great time to do so! Shop Monat here!
  • My Stella & Dot jewelry is never out of style! Shop for yourself or kick off your Christmas shopping early this year!
  • If you have not seen my updated “2 cats creates” etsy shop, I am restocking with fun keychains, wine glasses, party trays and more! Check back often as it grows almost daily!

2 cats & chloe: Organic Monat Before and After Pictures!

PARTY!

  • If you are local, I am throwing in an extra donation for each Stella & Dot Ladies Night that is booked and hosted through me in September!
  • If you are not local, let’s host an Online Stella & Dot Party! Remember, I am donating 25% of all my profits from all purchases, so the more the merrier! Bloggers, you can host this on your blog and social media outlets! You will earn free jewelry for yourself and I will be donating to UMDF! It’s a win win!

BLOG, SHARE OR CREATE!

  • If you are a blogger, I would love it if you could share what I am doing and help us gain awareness of Mitochondrial Disease, especially during the week of September 18-24, 2016. (Again, feel free to ask me for more details!)
  • The 2 cats team is always looking to expand! Not to turn this into a sales pitch, but ladies, I make a decent amount of money from my blog’s separate income streams like Stella & Dot and Monat. I basically get paid to wash my hair and wear fun jewelry! Wanna know how you can add a little (or a lot) of extra money to your purse? Let’s chat. I will donate $25 to UMDF for every new 2 cats team member who joins in September!
  • Do you have an etsy shop or other business? Consider making a donation to UMDF from your sales as well! Maybe you cannot afford to do it all month, but how about during September 18-24? Then tell your readers, followers and shoppers what you are doing and why! If you want to join, I will give you time on my blog and all my social channels to share your business! Again, a win win for everyone, but especially the mito warriors! (Additionally, I will create a separate page on my site to help promo any other shops or businesses who want to help spread awareness! So let me know if you’re interested!)

Maybe you don’t have any hair, you don’t like crafts, and you passionately hate jewelry - but you still want to help… share this blog post and then consider making a donation to United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation yourself!

So there ya have it friends… let me know if you have any questions about mito or Lorelei or anything else I have mentioned above. I know it’s a lot to process but if I can help you place any orders or if you have any other creative ways to join us in raising awareness and research dollars to help find a cure, hit me up! I cannot wait to see how much we can raise over the next month and a half!!

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Filed Under: 2 cats creates, Cause Worthy, Lorelei Elizabeth, Mitochondrial Disorder, Monat, Stella & Dot

Baby Lorelei & Mommy Suz Update

by Susan

You know what’s crazy? I have written several posts here, a few great and a few that are simply rambling thoughts… but I haven’t been publishing them. While I love the recipes, the DIY’s, home decor and trending products, the core of my blog always goes back to my words. I write to express myself. I write to get things out of my head. I write because it helps me feel better. But I don’t always share it with you.

A family friend, who knows nothing about my blog, told my mom that when he was praying a couple of weeks ago, he clearly felt like God was telling him to tell me that I need to write. Write for me. Write for others. Write for Lorelei. It didn’t matter, I just needed to write.

Tonight, as I scramble to get my life back to some sort of semblance of a life I once again recognize, I realize that I have been writing more and publishing less. So maybe I should click that publish button and let things fly out into cyberspace. Maybe that is one of the first steps toward finding myself again.

Gals and guys, having a baby is tough. Having a baby with special needs (notice I didn’t say a special needs baby!) is even more difficult. So, since I have left y’all in the dark, let’s catch up. Where are we and are how we surviving this adventure!

Lorelei is doing well. She is growing. Boy is she growing! Her calorie intake has been cut back because she was gaining about an ounce and a half per day! Our tiny little nicu baby, who looked like a drowning rat the first day I met her, now has so many rolls you could hide pennies in her folds. (To be fair, both Michael and I were chunky as babies… heck, I’m still chunky… apple doesn’t fall far I suppose!) As a mito baby, she has sleepy days and awake days. Some days she babbles, some days she doesn’t feel like it. Every now and then she will take a few sips from a bottle but at this point she is 97% fed via g-tube. She is 6 days away from being 6 months old. Six months of growing, fighting and pure badassness on her part. Six months of proving them wrong and surprising the doctors who thought she would never leave the NICU.

lorelei momy cottage selfie

How am I? Like I said, I am struggling to find myself. At 6 months into this adventure and I feel like I am finally starting to get over the PTSD of the NICU… and beginning to navigate through postpartum depression and anxiety. Finding joy is hard when your life, plans and dreams have been turned upside down. I still cry myself to sleep on occasion. But not because I’m sad about how my daughter “turned out.” I think cry because, in addition to simply feeling overwhelmed and exhausted, I am mourning the loss of the innocent, happy Suz I used to know. I liked her. She wasn’t jaded. She wasn’t numb.

That being said, I know I am processing and growing because I am finally at a point where cannot imagine my life any other way. I have tried. Trust me, I’ve tried so many times. But if life had gone as planned, with a full term pregnancy and a healthy baby with a normal life expectancy, I don’t know if I would appreciate things like the slightest babble or the weeble wobble of her head. If life had gone as planned, would some of my closest friends have gone missing in my life? If life had gone as planned, I wouldn’t have a handful of folks that I’ve met through the NICU, therapies or doctors, who have stepped up and stepped in as my support system where many friends have stepped back. I’m thankful and I absolutely adore my daughter and all of her quirks.

Enough rambling. I have a few older posts that I have written and saved - that maybe one day I will share. Maybe they will help other moms who are navigating through NICU life, postpartum depression and anxiety, or having a baby with extra special needs… but right now, those posts need to stay private. But coming up soon (because apparently Jesus wants me to write, share and create again) I have a confessions series I want to start, I have recipes I need to share, I strung y’all along with our house updates all last year so how about I show you a few of the finalized rooms?? I also have some big collaborations and business ventures to share with you! Are you okay if we keep things light, but trickle in some wordy posts here and there that may have been typed up on a keyboard covered in salty tears? Good, because it’s my blog so it’s my rules! 😛

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Filed Under: Family, Lorelei Elizabeth, NICU Mom, Ramblings

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A wedding planner, marketing junkie, and blogger. Obsessed with clean eating, glitter and adventures. Whether it is her home, her work, parties, conferences, projects or her style - Susan's goal is to appreciate everything and everyone around her, while making life pretty, one blog post at a time. Read More…

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Full Disclosure: All content and pictures on this blog belong to Susan Geoghegan and the 2 cats & chloe site, unless otherwise stated. If you pin a picture, please give credit. Some links on this site may contain affiliate links. Clicking on these links helps support this blog. A "c/o" in front of a product represents that that product was either gifted to me in exchange for the post or I was compensated by said company for my time. However, all posts are my own thoughts, opinions and reviews! Thanks for your support!

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