Thanks to several amazing, selfless people, we blew our first goal of $500 out of the water. Then I got cocky and bumped it up to $1000 and the donations just kept coming. So, in a moment of madness, I raised our goal to $3000. That's $1000 for each of my precious little boys. 39 people have already donated a total of $955. I am in awe of their generosity, but I am not surprised. People from all walks of life have shown us limitless love and support over the past 15 months. I am so grateful that they are now helping us raise funds to help other families like ours, families who may not have the readily available support system that we do. I would absolutely love to reach our monetary goal, but more importantly, I want to raise at least $1 on each of the remaining 30 days before our walk.
Want to donate, but you're low on funds? No problem. Pick one day before Feb 18, any day, and turn over $1 of your hard earned cash. Wish you could donate, but can't spare a single bill? No problem. Share our Team Linus fundraising link on your FaceBook wall. If you blog, embed a badge on your page. Tweet about us. Pass the word along to your friends in an email or over coffee. There are so many free ways you can help. As always, I am forever grateful for each and every one of you.
KTB Walk 2012 from It's My Heart on Vimeo.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Monday, January 16, 2012
Keep The Beat
I am excited to announce that our family will be participating in Keep The Beat, the 6th annual CHD Awareness 5K Walk on Feb 18. With your help, I know we can meet and exceed our meager fundraising goal of $500. Please visit our Team Linus fundraising page if you'd like to make a donation or if you'd like to join our team and walk with us. All proceeds benefit It’s My Heart, an organization dedicated to supporting families living with congenital heart defects as well as pushing for more research to specifically help children with CHD.
As many of you know, despite his radiating smile and sunny disposition, Linus has struggled his entire short life with congenital heart and GI defects. He was diagnosed with Critical Aortic Stenosis and 3 VSD's when he was not quite 48 hours old. A few short hours later he was transferred to Texas Children's Hospital and taken in to emergency surgery. Over the next several months he gained more and more diagnoses such as left ventricular dysfunction (downgraded to diastolic dysfunction), mitral stenosis, mitral insufficiency, enlarged left atrium, congestive heart failure, failure to thrive, pyloric stenosis, low GI motility, chronic anemia and more. He has spent over 5 months in the CVICU and on the cardiac floor during 5 separate admissions. He has had 4 cardiac catheters (3 ballon, one diagnostic), 2 open heart surgeries (1 aortic valve repair, 2 mitral valve repairs), 22 blood transfusions, a g-tube placement, an endoscopy and a pyloric dilation. Linus takes 13 medication doses, 1 vitamin dose and 1 probiotic dose every day. Since he can only handle 1-2oz of 27cal formula every 15-30 minutes and vomits up nearly every single tiny bit of food he eats orally, he has been primarily tube fed for all but 2 of his 15 months. He gets a tube feed during his nap and is also on a continuous tube feed overnight. Each month Linus has 3 physical therapy appoints, 3 speech therapy appointments, 2 dietician appointments and usually 1-3 pediatrician visits. He also has GI and cardiology appointments every 1-2 months where he gets an EKG, echo, blood work, x-ray and exam. He is weak and uncoordinated. He vomits 1-10 times every day and night. He is plagued with reflux pain. His heart is so enlarged he can't comfortably lay on his back or even be reclined without grunting. Needless to say, his life is not an easy one. If you looked at him, you'd never know it. Linus is vibrant and full of life. He is one of the most charming and happy little guys I know. I'm not sure how he manages it, but I envy him. Seeing that killer smile, listening to him giggle, watching him learn new signs to make up for his delayed speech, witnessing the pride he has in himself for finally being able to crawl, it's easy, even for me, to forget how hard he has it and what a long, rough road he has traveled to get here.
Below is a set of photos that document all that Linus has endured. It's nothing you'd want for your child, for any child. It's not what we focus on or even think about during our day to day. It's hard to look at, but this is Linus's past.
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