Friday, October 30, 2015

My Older Son is Not "Jaxson's Brother", His Name is Jeffrey and He is Amazing



All too often, siblings of special needs kids go overlooked and underappreciated. These children go through so much, and people don't even realize how strong they are. This week I realized just how much our family has to sacrifice on a daily basis to meet Jaxson's needs. The impact of Kabuki Syndrome on Jeffrey is wildly evident during the holidays.

This week, the final week in October, is typically filled with celebration. Kids bounce off the walls in anticipation of Trick or Treat, parents do their best not to rip out their hair, and it finally feels as if fall has arrived. With fall and the return to school, germs and bacteria are spread in vast arrays all over the country. A typical child will get the cold or whatever bug happens to be ravaging the school, and recover in a short period. Kids with depressed immune systems or who are more susceptible to illness are not so lucky.

Thus is the case with Jaxson. He has not been diagnosed with an immune deficiency yet. I say "yet" because it is possible that he will develop the problem as he gets older, it is very common in Kabuki. Jaxson also has a slew of issues that make it hard for him to fight colds, and a bout of any respiratory problem is bound to land him in the hospital. His mitral valve is causing blood to back up into the right side of his heart and put pressure on his lungs causing them to retain fluid and he has pulmonary hypertension. On top of that, Jaxson has Reactive Airway Disease, which is a step below asthma. He doesn't have attacks, but his airway is extremely sensitive. Nasal and sinus drainage give him major coughing fits, sometimes to the point he gets sick, and his body can't protect his lungs from such drainage properly. So when Jeffrey stayed home for a week with what we thought was a virus, we did our best to keep him away from his brother. Any parent knows how impossible that is.

I knew when Jeffrey got sick that Jax was going to get it and eventually need admitted. I hate being right, but I guess mom's just know their kids. Because of Jaxson getting sick, the boys didn't get to have the celebration we had planned for them. On Sunday, there was a Halloween party for kids with congenital heart disease through Mended Little Hearts of Columbus. We RSVP'd that we would be there, but Sunday was the day Jax was admitted. When we couldn't go to that, Jayson was sweet enough to take Jeffrey to a local event so that he could still have some fun even though he was bummed we missed the party. He and daddy also painted his pumpkin while Jax was in the hospital, Jayson wanted to give Jeffrey a distraction and show him some special attention. He's such a good daddy! But missing out on those things wasn't all. Jaxson could not go Trick or Treating last night because he's still fighting the remnants of the flu, so Jayson took Jeffrey with some friends while Jax and I stayed home. I tried to have him paint his pumpkin, but he wanted nothing to do with it. I know he was upset he didn't get to go, even if he can't voice it. And now today, Jeffrey has his Halloween party at school. Last year I dressed Jax in his costume and we went up to hang out with his class. I told Jeffrey this morning that we wouldn't be able to go, and he just says, "I know," and looks down at his donuts sadly.

Seeing that broke my heart. Jeffrey is such an amazing kid, and he's all too often swept to the side because Jaxson needs extra attention. Jeffrey will be 7 at the beginning of December, and for the last three years he's had to do things separately from his brother, which is unlike anything he's used to seeing. All the other kids he knows get to have regular celebrations and do all kinds of fun things with their families. But he doesn't complain. He gets sad sometimes, and sometimes he acts out, but he's also a 7 year old boy and they just do that. Jeffrey just has an extra reason to behave that way sometimes.

Jeffrey is the most empathetic child I have ever seen. He gets so upset when Jaxson is inpatient, he cannot stand to have the family separated even if we are close by. He's so smart, and silly and wild and crazy and all of the things a 7 year old boy should be. He loves his brother so much and will do anything to help keep him happy! God could not have given us two more perfect children. I want to find a way to show Jeffrey just how much he's loved and appreciated, but it's not easy at his age. Sometimes nothing is enough, and that's normal for a lot of children. So we do our best, but we never feel like it's enough to compensate for everything he's had to go through.

Not only is Jeffrey affected, but Jayson and I are too. I am the one who typically stays with Jax for a variety of reasons, so I miss out on a lot of fun things with Jeffrey. But we do try to take turns, so sometimes it's Jayson that misses out. I had to quit my job and stay home with Jax because of his health issues, and although now I'm working from home, I don't get the breaks I did before. Jayson has had to deal with numerous employers who refused to understand and allow him time off when he needed it (his current job has been great, except for one incident). We do not have the financial means to give our children the things that they want, and sometimes the things that they need. Jayson and I will go without eating if we have to, to make sure that Jeffrey has food and Jaxson has diapers. We live in a not so nice area of town because we can't afford to live anywhere else. Things are on the upswing now, but it's taken a long time to get where we are.

The impact of a medical diagnosis on a child affects everyone in the household. People always say we're so strong and that Jaxson is the toughest kid they know, but let me tell you something. Jeffrey is tougher than Jaxson. He may act like a sensitive, whiny brat at times, but all kids do. Jeffrey has more mental strength than any kid his age should have, and he's learning to control his emotions already which makes me sad. We would love for our boys to have some semblance of normalcy, like a family with "typical" children. We will never have that. Jayson and I, we are fine, we get it and we will do whatever it takes to care for our kids. But Jeffrey deserves so much more.

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