Friday, May 1, 2009

Prayer Request Update!

Wow. Just WOW.

Caleb's mom had this to say on Facebook at 11:00 last night:

It's just CONFIRMED BY MRI..THEY GOT IT ALL, THE TUMOR'S ALL GONE!!!! bye bye, zip, zero, nada, nothing left...THANK YOU JESUS, PRAISE HIM!!! the doctor's & nurses are all amazed & don't quite know what to do with us...Caleb is walking, talking, eating, moving all of his extremities and his smile is wonderful! Now we wait for more pathology & oncology to plan our next steps and wait on Jesus to tell them. :)

I just received this update via email from someone who had just spoken to Caleb's dad:
Caleb is on his way home from the hospital! He had an MRI today to make sure all the tumor was gone and it confirmed that it was all taken out by the second surgery. He continues to be able to move everything. Caleb recovered from surgery much quicker than normal. He was eating within hours of the surgery and has experienced minimal pain. In the days to come they will be doing pathology on the tissue that was taken out and determining future treatment, but regardless of the results, a positive outcome is expected.
They hadn't even expected to release him until Sunday. Unbelievable!!

Thank you, Jesus, for the doctors at CHOP, the amazing strength you have given to Caleb and his family, and answering the prayers of all of us.

Prayer works, people. God. Is. LOVE.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Prayer Request

Please pray for Caleb, an 18-year-old boy who is having surgery at this moment to remove a malignant brain tumor. Caleb is the son of one the pastors at my church. This is the 2nd surgery he has had for this tumor, which is stage 3 and a fairly rare, aggressive form of cancer.

I'd like to write more, but I can't seem gather my thoughts. Jason Mitchell, our middle school pastor, wrote an excellent blog about this yesterday, so please check it out. Caleb's strength and faith through this ordeal have been truly inspirational.

Please keep Caleb in your prayers, as well as his family, the surgeons, and all involved in his surgery and treatment.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

April is National Autism Awareness Month

What would you like people to understand about your child/grandchild/student/friend with autism?

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Intensive Programming for Students with Autism

I'm doing a paper on the above for an Early Intervention class I'm taking right now. If anyone has a child on the autism spectrum and would be interested in providing input about the various therapies their child has received, please let me know.

You can email me directly if you prefer: npeace414(AT)gmail(DOT)com

Thanks!!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

To rejoin or not to rejoin, that is the question.

My weight has been a constant battle for me, probably since middle school. I've lost, regained, re-lost, and regained over and over again. Every time I regain the pounds, they bring their friends along and I end up weighing more than I did when I started.

The most I've ever lost was in 1999/2000. My friend was getting married, and I was one of the maids of honor. One night in June (1999) she and I went to look at bridesmaid dresses, along with a few of the other attendants. I was a size 26. The other girls ranged from sizes 2 through 8. It was ok until I came out of the dressing room and looked at myself in the mirror. For the rest of the time we were in the bridal shop, I bit back tears. When I got finally home, I just sobbed.

The next day, I joined Weight Watchers. I was so motivated and so disciplined that I lost 8 1/2 pounds in the first week. By the time Michelle's wedding came around I had lost 62 pounds. My dress was so big on me they had to take it apart and practically rebuild it. It was WONDERFUL.

Me & Michelle, June 2000
(not the rebuilt dress, but you get the idea)


Me & my brother, Christmas 2000

I kept the weight off for a little while, but over time, with help from various factors, it all came creeping back. And, as usual, it's brought friends. Today I weigh about 25 pounds more than I did the day I'd joined Weight Watchers in 1999.

Larry, Lucas & me, October 2008

I've tried to lose weight again several times since, but never with the same resolve that I'd had back then.  I've struggled with not caring, then "I am the way God made me; God doesn't make mistakes" and now... "I should be taking better care of the body God gave me." Someone else recently put it this way - she doesn't feel she can do God's work if she isn't taking care of her body (I'm paraphrasing - I didn't write it down at the time).

Those last two statements are the ones I'm dwelling on now. I should be taking better care of the body God gave me. I'm not going to be able to do His work if my knees and back are causing me so much pain. This was very evident to me one night recently when I was serving at church and I'd needed to get up and down from the floor four or five times. How am I going to teach small children (or play with my own) if I can't move?? At 36, this should not be the enormous struggle that it is.

This realization should be enough to motivate me, right? Apparently not. I know HOW to lose weight. I know WHAT to do. So WHY don't I do it?

This has been weighing so heavily (no pun intended, but it sure fits) on my mind lately. I hate the way I feel. I see my reflection in a glass door and I hate the way I look. I see my face in my car window and think I look fat and angry. I am fat. And I am angry. I'm angry at myself, for not fixing this.  I'm angry at myself for letting it get this bad in the first place.  BUT... in church right now we're talking about change, and how we can't change ourselves but follow God and let Him make the changes within us.  (I hope I'm getting that right... anyone??)

I debate about joining Weight Watchers again. It has to be the online version, because I don't have time for meetings (I'm in school 3 nights a week) and meetings cost so much more. I do this bit in my head: "I don't want to spend the money. I don't want to track every little thing I eat. I don't want to be limited." Then again, I don't want to go to work every day, but I do it because I have to.

So the question remains... do I rejoin, or do I not? Why is it such a difficult decision?  Am I trying to change myself, or is this inner battle I seem to be having right now God's way of making the changes in me?  And if that's the case... why am I resisting Him?

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Prayer Request

Friends of mine are going through a very hard time right now.  I won't share their names, in the interest of privacy.  They have six children; the three youngest were adopted through foster care.  One of the twin boys they adopted has bipolar disorder, and today had to be admitted to an inpatient treatment program.  He's five years old.  

As difficult as this decision was for them, they had to do what was best to get him stabilized, and for the safety of the other children.  I never knew until now that children could even be diagnosed with bipolar disorder, much less that it could be so, so bad.  It seems, from what I've read, that it's even more difficult to treat in children than adults.  

My heart breaks for this family.  Fortunately, they have an amazing support system, and incredible faith that God has a plan and will pull them through this difficult time.  If you believe in the power of prayer, please help me lift up this little guy and his family.  I think they could use all the prayer they can get right now.

Monday, February 9, 2009

No matter what challenges I may be facing...

...they pale in comparison to the what many people around me are dealing with.

I'd do well to remember that. Still... I feel like crying today. I'm not even sure what to pray for. I just can't find the words.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Introducing Cleo! -OR- How to hit the snooze button on your biological clock.

This is our new Boxer pup, Cleo. She turned 8 weeks old yesterday.

Cleo!

Monday, January 19, 2009

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Spring Semester

Two days ago I was slightly dismayed to realize that there was only a week left to my Winter break. Now that I've gotten over the initial shock, I'm getting excited for my classes. It seems that, aside from a lab science, all the courses I need yet are my major requirements, which makes it much more interesting for me.

I'm not crazy about the schedule, as I'll be out of the house Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday evenings until almost 9pm, but I'm excited about the classes:
SPED 318: Special Education for Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers with Developmental Disabilities
Examines the implications of federal mandates for providing educational and supportive services for infants/toddlers/preschoolers with disabilities and their families. Includes identification of, and leadership responsibilities of, personnel involved with infant and early intervention programs and assessing, analyzing and interpreting data from formal and informal sources to be utilized in developing the Individualized Family Service Plans (IFSPs) are discussed.

SPED 328: Formal and Informal Assessment in Special Education
The administration, scoring and interpretation of assessment devices typically used in psychometric evaluations are stressed. Critical evaluation of such devices in terms of reliability, validity and norming groups is also developed. The integration of the interpretive results of psychometric evaluation with behavioral observation, task analysis and other assessments developed in prerequisite courses is demonstrated.

EDUC 433: Gender & Race Issues in Children’s Literature
(No description in the catalog)
I'm FINALLY starting to see the light at the end of this tunnel... and so excited to get out of the office and into a classroom!