Doris, You Will Be Happy…

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Bath, originally uploaded by blehargh.

I have officially joined the Flickr Nation. Woo hoo. What’s my most viewed and popular photo? Why of course, it’s a picture of my most favorite, extremely photogenic nephew, Vince. 🙂 119 views in like a week. All my other photos are at a scrapping 3 views.

Eat!

Edda has a tendency to not sleep well if she doesn’t eat a good dinner. Since we have very poor memories, we relearn this lesson every few weeks or so – including last night. So to insure a good night’s sleep for everybody, here’s Jeremy encouraging Edda to have “just one more bite!” (Jeremy looks funny because he’s sucking in his tummy! Why? I have no idea.)

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I started knitting some socks today. My shawl is getting too big to carry in my purse and I like having a portable project with me.

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Scientific name: Bixa orellana
Common name: Achiote, Lipstick tree
Location: Singapore

Family portrait.

Vince needs a family photo for school on Monday.

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Today was the first time I heard Vince explain to a stranger why Edda keeps sticking her hand into her mouth and is a little tippy when walking. We were at the park and he was playing with another family (for a total of about 30 seconds) and Edda walked over and he launched into enthusiastically introducing Edda (She’s my sister!) to them and explaining why she mouths. It was kind of cute, but also a lot of information for some folks you’ve known for less than a minute.

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Did you know that aloe grew this red flowers?

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Scientific name: Aloe (about 400 species – not sure which one this is)
Common name: Aloe
Location: Austin, TX

Knitting progress and pooping progress.

So I’m still working on this (a gift from a secret pal):

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I’m finally at the frilly border so maybe I’ll be done in a few months or so.

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We had occupational therapy today. Vince and I sit in the waiting room for the first 30 minutes and he plays blocks and I play – “I wonder what sort of ailment all the kids in the waiting room have, ADD? Dyslexia? Cerebral Palsy? Anxiety issues? Hmmmm…” So many things to wonder about. I know the other moms are wondering the same about Edda who of the 3pm Friday afternoon group has the most visibly apparent issues.

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Nice session with Yaiu Chi. Some hand over hand work. I wonder if Edda will be able to regain some hand use. It’s pretty far gone now, but I’m still hoping!

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Oh, yes the pooping progress. Edda pooped in her potty today. Pretty cool.

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Scientific name: Ilex vomitoria
Common name: Yaupon holly
Location: Austin, TX

Stem cell transplant!

When we were going through all the diagnosis stuff with Edda, I did a lot of reading on different genetic disorders, some apparent at birth, some apparent when the kid is about 2 (like Rett) and others which don’t show up until later in life. Many are devastating and heartbreaking illnesses. I learned of a new genetic illness today, Batten’s Disease – which can strike kids when they are 5-8 years old when there is a regression in skills and is usually fatal by the time the child reaches their 20s. Anyhow, there is some good news regarding this disease (which like Rett involves the brain) and stem cell transplants. This is from a mom on the RETTNET forum, encouraging news!

A year ago, I wrote about Daniel, the son of a friend of ours who has Batten’s Disease which is terminal, and a particularly heart wrenching disease often starting out with normal development and then progressing to the point where a child becomes deaf, blind, losing all motor skills – unable to move and becoming bedbound before death. . He was on 60 Minutes and was the first child approved to have a neuronal stem cell transplant. It was first thought that he had Rett Syndrome. I complain a fair amount about Rett Syndrome and the impact it has on our daughter and our lives and feel sorry for myself, but life seems like a walk in the park compared to what they have been going through.

Anyway, as many of you know from the hundreds of articles in the newspaper and reports in the news media, Daniel had the stem cell transplant done in Oregon in October and returned home in December. His family had suffered through a excruciatingly difficult and painful year before the procedure. It is such a terrible disease with a devastating impact.

There is so much I could say, but the bottom line is that procedure went great! His parents are thrilled because at this point, not only has his regression stopped, but he has been making progress! He is speaking some words again, has more control over his neck and head, is regaining hand use and reaching out and grabbing things. He is much more responsive and interactive and his neurologist has removed the word “terminal” from his diagnosis. I just can’t put in words how exciting this is!

All over the world.

It’s incredible how far flung our immediate family members are right now! Here’s the breakdown:

Jeremy’s parents, Bob & Katherine – Eastern Europe
Jeremy’s sister, Louisa – Washington, DC
Jeremy’s brother, Ben – La Paz, Bolivia
Jeremy’s sister, Emily – NYC, USA
my dad, Noel – South Carolina, USA
my mom, Rena – Guangzhou, China
my brother, Donald – San Jose, CA, USA
us – Singapore

So we’ve got: North America (both coasts and the south), South America, Europe and Asia. We are on the move!

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I’m behind on my plant IDs.

Scientific name: Tillandsia recurvata
Common name: Ball moss

Location: Austin, TX

42

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Yesterday was Ruby’s birthday. She turned 6 or 42 depending on whether you count in regular years or dog years. Can you see that she’s turning gray around the muzzle? Ruby was born in the back of a beat up old Volvo in Austin, TX 6 years ago. She has 4 brothers and sisters – there’s Rio, Zuni, Hoss, the black one who’s owner didn’t give him a name even a whole year later. Was there one more? I can’t remember. Anyhow, we gave Ruby a whole juicy steak to celebrate. She seemed pleased.

Hate the haircut.

I hate Edda’s new haircut. It’s the first one done by a professional and we were so worried that Edda would flip out on the chair with the pointy scissors pointed at her eyeballs that we didn’t pay so much attention to the style. I’ve now tried for three days to like this hair cut and I can’t convince myself that it looks good. It’s a very Singaporean haircut – very wispy and full of fringe, it brings her cute factor down. Oh well, at least with hair it grows out.

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