Get Swabbed

Eleven years ago we were told that Jack had Adrenoleukodystropy and that the only way to stop the progression of this hideous disease was a stem cell transplant (bone marrow transplant). Anna, who was 6-years-old at the time, would have been the best option, but she was not a match. Our doctors were forced to look on the bone marrow registry for a potential donor.

Imagine being told that the only chance of saving your child’s life is if a stranger is willing to make a donation.

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At the time I didn’t know much about stem cell donation. Online research did little to calm my nerves. At any given time, over 7,500 Americans are actively searching the national registry for an unrelated donor and only 2 % of our population is on the registry. And, what are the chances of finding a donor? Caucasian patients – 75%, hispanic patients 45% , asian patients – 40%, african-american patients – 25%, and multi-racial patients are faced with the worst odds. Over 3,000 people die each year because they can’t find a match.

Jack was lucky. Although there were no matches on the bone marrow registry, a stranger had donated their daughter’s cord blood (another option for a stem cell transplant) and Jack received those precious cells which stopped his disease and saved his life.

We’ve helped host many drives in the last eleven years and there have been at least three lives saved by spreading the word and helping people register. We are doing it again this weekend thanks to our friend, Elizabeth Sarkisian, and our local YMCA.

If you would like to learn more about bone marrow donation or would like to add yourself to the registry (and are between the ages of 18-55, not active military, in good general health, and over 105 pounds) please join us on Saturday 12pm-3pm at the YMCA in Maplewood.

Love, Jess

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Please keep in mind we are looking for people to register that are committed to donating if called. Otherwise there is false hope and wasted time for patients. Thank you!!!!!!

GOOD > BAD

Enough with the hard stuff – let’s celebrate!

A crazy few weeks around here and most of it has been WONDERFUL.

Last week, Jack and I had the honor of speaking at an event for CPNJ (the parent organization of Horizon High School). 150 employees were celebrating 5, 10, 15, and 20 years of service to CPNJ. We were asked to speak representing CPNJ families and sharing a bit about how their team has helped us. My nerves still cause me to jitter a bit when I speak publicly, but overall I think I’m doing a better job. And, looking out at a room full of so many people who have helped our boy, I felt extremely grateful. I did the majority of the speaking, but when Jack joined me on the stage, he really did steal the show. His smile is electric.

 

Then yesterday, we shared our story in a whole different way. Through Jack’s school, we were approached by a Taiwanese television station that is making a documentary about children with special needs and adaptive equipment. A large crew of people and cameras arrived bright an early to catch our morning routine (I took care of some early morning messiness before they arrived – THAT would have been a little TOO real). The crew followed JackO around throughout his entire day, and by the time they arrived back from school, they all seemed like old friends. It’s amazing the connections our silent boy is able to make. The documentary is following children with disabilities from four different countries, discussing different approaches cultures have towards the special needs community. It’s scheduled to air in Taiwan in the Fall. They promised to send us a copy. I can’t wait to see our boy on the screen (and to see if my need of highlights is distracting;-).

 

It’s not just our boy who has been getting some attention. Anna received a wonderful invitation last week. On Monday, Boxes of Fun is being recognized as a recipient of the Friends of Child Life Award at New York Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital. We’ve been making Boxes of Fun for the children on the Bone Marrow Transplant floor at the hospital for eight years. Last year, Anna asked to take over and started a club at her school with her dear friend, Jane, to help raise money and fill the boxes. No surprise, they dove right in and have not only raised enough money to extend the program to Hackensack Hospital, but they have raised awareness for both Boxes of Fun and paying it forward. Kids these days . . .

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Our lives are complicated. Big things like fighting with Social Security and little things like Jack developing a habit of soiling his bed overnight. Some days I feel like we are dealing with more than our share of sh*t, but when I step away and look at the big picture, I am reminded that the good still outweighs the bad by a long shot.

I am beyond proud of both of our children. Each with such different lives. Each extraordinary.

 

Love, Jess

 

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Michael and Hans (I mean, Pierre) Part 3

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Eight years ago our family hosted a party to celebrate Jack’s second transplant birthday. There was a cake and balloons and (like any good party) a table so that people could sign up for the Bone Marrow Registry. 79 people signed up that day. One was a friend of a friend, Michael Steiner. I’ve shared his story before, but it continues — here’s the update:

So I did the marrow (“Drill baby! Drill!”) donation back in September 2015. Then a few months after that I did the white blood cell donation (“Spin baby! Spin!”) for my cousin, … because we’re all cousins. #ScienceIsReal

I knew he was in Europe, but I guessed he was in Germany (biggest country, my dad is ethnically German… so odds were on Deutschland over all others.). But it turns out Hans, is not Hans; he’s Pierre. Yes, he’s in France. I was thinking I would call him Francois, but I can never be sure to spell that with i-o or o-i. Oy!

Anyway, I found out the France part because Be The Match called me again in December 2016 to do another white blood cell donation, but this time a nurse would jack me up with some filgrastim over 5 days before the “harvest”. The filgrastim would make my body over-produce the white blood cells so the machine can spin out a better dose for Pierre.

The procedure was set for February 1st (aka “February Fools’ Day”).

I didn’t have many side-effects from the filgrastim. Only some sleeplessness and a low fever because the body gets confused with all those white blood cells around. “What’s the matter? What’s with all the white blood cells? Are we sick? What the heck?” HA! I got to stay in a hotel in the city the night before the harvest because my appointment with the needles was at 7:30am.

Since white blood cells only last a few days, Pierre got the “booster pack” within 24 hours of the harvest. I thought that was pretty cool.

Unfortunately, I’m very unlikely to be able to help Pierre again, at least with regards to his Leukemia. My handler at Be The Match told me I’m “getting to old for this s**t.” (Roger Murtaugh – Lethal Weapon). But seriously, I can be in great shape, but I’m already 45, and my cells aren’t going to be helpful to Pierre after a certain age. (I imagine the bag of white blood cells arriving in France and them saying “Ça sent un vieil homme.” Don’t you love how “old” in French looks like “vile”?)

I probably won’t get an update on how Pierre is doing, and I don’t need one. I hope he hangs in there for a long time, but I know how it all ends!

A big merci beaucoup to Jesse Cappello Torrey who had that “swab party” those years ago.

Merci to you Michael!!!!

Love, Jess

Birthday love

 

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Today our family celebrates John Redmond Torrey’s 9th birthday. Yes. I know that Jack was born nearly 18 years ago,  on August 5th, 1998. But on May 30th each year, we celebrate the day that Jack was given life – again. Today is his “other birthday. “

Nine years ago, Jack was living at Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital in NYC. He had been diagnosed with Adrenoleukodystrophy just one month earlier. Thanks to our team of amazing team of doctors and nurses, he received a stem cell transplant from an anonymous donor. The entire procedure took less than 15 minutes. In keeping with Jack’s relentless attitude and irrepressible spirit, we played Aretha Franklin and danced and laughed in his hospital room as the stem cells slowly dripped into his arm…. and eventually gave him a new life.

That was nine years ago. Now my son is a happy and healthy teenage boy. The same old Jack – just taller, and with more and more with facial hair. I am so so proud to be his father. And so thankful for every day that we have him in our lives.

Jack — I love you very much!

Love, Dad

May the force be with you.

IMG_4310Entertaining is one of our choice pastimes. Sometimes the cocktail hour is extended and dinner gets a little held up, but our guests never complain (at least not to our faces).

Dinner parties for eight are a favorite over here, but we’ve also enjoyed a few full houses — celebrating 40th birthdays, college reunions, etc. All good times, but only one party resulted in lives saved. Six years ago we hosted a party that we called Jack’s Bone Marrow Birthday Bash. It was just after Jack’s 2nd transplant birthday and right before his 11th traditional birthday. We made hundreds of sliders, had coolers of juice boxes next to a keg of beer, and my mother made a beautiful cake. The only price of admission was that you needed to walk through our front door and consider joining the Bone Marrow Registry.

Several of our friends helped manage our dinning room filled with information. We had the necessary paperwork and were ready to swab the cheek of anyone 18 or over. We didn’t put undo pressure on our guests, but we did remind people that Jack was celebrating his birthdays because of the kindest of a stranger. We registered 79 people that day.

Yesterday I got a note from a friend of a friend , Michael Steiner, who stopped by that day to give his DNA. Last month he donated bone marrow to a boy in Germany who is fighting leukemia. Michael is the second person from our party who has given hope to a family. Statistics show that 1/540 people will be a match in their lifetime. Our statistics seem to be more like 1/40.

Here is a note from Michael. I think you will enjoy his honestly and sense of humor.

There’s a scene in STAR WARS (1977) where Obi-Wan Kenobi gets the message from Princess Leia: “Help me Obi-Wan Kenobi, you’re my only hope.”  What a terrible movie it would have been had he said “Nope.  I’m fine here in my cave.  I got my Tusken Raider (Sand People) neighbors and those creepy, feely, midgety Jawas all over the place.  I got a good situation here, and I’m staying put.”

When the call came from Be The Match (“Leukemia … some teenager somewhere … very, very sick … you’re the best match … more testing … you might be able to help him … “)…  My immediate feeling was I had won something.  Like the numbers on my lottery ticket matched the numbers in the newspaper.  (Nice branding, “Be The Match”)  

And I couldn’t say no, no more than Obi-Wan could have said no.  Had he said no, that would have been the end of the movie, the end of the franchise.   We live for sequels.

… 

Some time mid-June I got a call and letter from Fran from Be The Match.  Fran prepped me for the following:

— Some teenage boy in Europe was sick with Leukemia, and I was found to be the best match for a marrow donation.  Turns out, the organizations don’t share more information than that.  Before Fran shared the little bit of info about the recipient, I tried to tell her I’d rather not know anything about him/her; the idea was that some people, like my wife, would never be satisfied with any level of detail.  Plus I was just happy to help someone.  Who the person was was completely irrelevant.
 
— I can’t just walk in and donate tomorrow.  I need to have a battery of tests and clearances, and I needed to donate a pint of my own blood, which I would get back after the “harvest”.  (Love the word “harvest”.)  None of the prep was very interesting, but I did get to take my shirt off a few times in front of doctors and nurses, and that was nice.

— Gunter (my name for him because I figured he was likely German) would have 10 days of aggressive chemo before my donation that would just about kill him.  This was the only frightening part of the entire process for me.  They were sharing this information with me because if I bailed at the last second, Gunter would perish shortly thereafter.

— The “harvest” would consist of general anesthesia, me on my belly, tube down throat for breathing, doc drilling above glutes into pelvis in 4 places and sucking out about a liter of marrow.  None of the details were very interesting to me.  I was just looking forward to having some scars on my ass that I could justify dropping my pants for people to see.  

When I told my friend Joe that I was going to do it, he said, “Don’t.  This is a horrible idea.”  Then I said, “Wait, you don’t understand.  I’m going to be almost completely naked, unconscious, lying face down, with people standing around me in white gowns and poking at me…  It’s going to be just like college.”  And he said, “Wow, that does sound like fun.  You should do it, and see if they can get some good pictures of you while you’re out.”  

When I told my wife, she said, “You know I don’t like driving in New Jersey, so you’re going to have to find your own ride back and forth to the hospital.”  She admitted that she would do it too, if she got the call, but she’d be very uncomfortable with the whole thing.

When I told my neighbor Ford, he said, “I’m so jealous,” and I said, “This isn’t about you, you know!”  HA!

When I told my neighbor Dina, she just said, “Sounds fun.  You need a ride?”

When I told my parents, they were very happy for Gunter, and for me.

Another time when I was sharing the Obi-wan reference with Joe, he said, “Yeah, but you know Obi-Wan dies, right?”  And I said, “Duh!  Everyone dies, stupid.”  And he said, “Good point.”

— My recovery would take from 2-10 days … but count on 7 days of ice, rest, pain medicine as necessary, taking-her-easy, no heavy lifting etc.  This is not because the bone is weakened.  It’s because of the trauma to the muscle in the harvest area, and the achy pain there could throw me off my game of whatever I was doing.  My eyes got very tired very quickly from all the rolling.  I knew an up-sell when I heard it; Fran and the doctors and nurses had to make sure I was prepared for the worst.  My recovery was easy: 3 hours of sleep immediately after getting home from the hospital, the next day I could walk albeit slowly, but by 48 hours after the procedure, I could walk up stairs two at a time.  The only things left were a sore throat and a stiff neck from the tube, and a dull ache above the buttocks. 

I cannot remember who or what brought me to the Torrey’s house 6 years ago.  Most likely it was one of their      neighbors who invited me to stop by her house party to do the swab, and I’m not one to go to a party and pass on putting something in my mouth, especially if everyone else is doing it.

And I’m glad I did.  It’s nice to think about a part of me living on and helping out a relative (we’re all related if we go back far enough).

It’s one month since the surgery.  According to Fran, different countries have different rules about what they will share about the recipient.  But every country that participates in the registry is required (at a minimum) to tell the registry if the recipient dies after receiving the donation.

So “no news is good news” as they say.

And as they say, “May the force be with you, Gunter.”

May the force be with you, Michael!!

Love, Jess

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