Archive for » October, 2007 «

China, Clefts and Other Serious Subjects

I get a lot of traffic to this blog because of my pictures of Maya’s cleft lip and resulting surgery. I also confess to being overly emotional (read: completely nuts) when I found out about it because I was so terribly afraid. Would I spend time reading up on cleft lips and palates if my child didn’t have one? Probably not. However, it has been a year since Maya’s surgery, and I’d like to post a before and after photo here so you can see how amazingly beautiful she is (I am totally not biased).

Here she is before surgery:

Cleft lip before.JPG

This is about six months later:

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And this is her, two weeks ago:
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As you can see, the scar has really faded and can hardly be seen. Most people don’t notice it at all; they ask if she got a scratch, if at all. Her nose seems to be growing just fine and isn’t flat or strangely misshapen. Her left nostril isn’t quite as symmetrical as her right, but I hardly think it will be an issue. She has become a beautiful, fierce, active toddler who is very strong-minded and very, very loving. She walks as if she owns the world and I am so glad to be blessed with such a strong child.

However, that being said, not all parents look at cleft lips or palates this way, particularly those for whom it would hold a strong social stigma, or who could not afford the surgery. Recently a Chinese woman recorded aborting her six-month old fetus because of a small cleft; the response was world-wide, with even those defending abortion stating that aborting a fetus for such a small and fixable defect overwhelmingly reproachable.

However, the reality of the lack of surgery for clefts world-wide is appalling. I was talking to a friend last weekend about Chinese orphanages and the number of babies who starve to death because of cleft palates. Of course I said, “Don’t they use Habermann feeders?” and she said, “We were lucky to have a bottle, half the time we had to feed them with a spoon.” Of course I started looking around the Internet to see if anyone was addressing this problem, and I came across GlobalGiving.com’s site for cleft lip and palate repair for Chinese orphans.

I know there are groups, such as Smiles, that provide cleft surgery for impoverished children and orphans in Mexico, that are also wonderful and can always use support. The SmileTrain is another charity that operates worldwide (caution: very scary cleft picture). I also have to say a huge thank you to the Shriners, who offered to pay for Maya’s cleft surgery for us (luckily our insurance covered it).

I cannot imagine having an abortion because of Maya’s cleft, but I cannot condemn this woman either – it is not my place to do such a thing. I know it is easy to point a finger and say, but a cleft lip is so minor and so fixable! And that is the honest truth. It is. But I know that even I became depressed and suicidal during my pregnancy and had to take depression medication. My problem was that, what with all the hormones and such that pregnancy brings, I “borrowed trouble” and expected the worst. I was afraid Maya had a chromosomal defect and would not live out her first birthday, and to me death seemed preferable to watching my baby die slowly over the course of several months. I know this was not reasonable – we were not able to do the testing for chromosomal abnormalities because of risk and timing – and I did not know if she would be healthy or not. The uncertainty is what put me over the edge. Luckily I had a good doctor who understood and put me on the safest antidepressants available pretty much immediately. I also had the option of going out of the city to get the best surgeon I could find for Maya. I was lucky and blessed to have good insurance, good advice and a warm and loving family to support me.

I grieve for those women who choose to end the lives of their own children because of a birth defect (or for any other reason, really). Their pain must be a terrible burden. The first time I held Maya in my arms was breathtaking. I could never give that moment away, not for anything, because it was probably the best moment of my entire life — knowing she was healthy, knowing she was safe. She was beautiful then, and she’s beautiful now. She will always be my beautiful baby girl, and I thank God I have the opportunity to be in her life.

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Quote of the Week

“When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross”. -Sinclair Lewis, 1885-1951

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From Marti

A little too close to home…

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Final Moves

Well, we finished bringing in our final boxes, which I guess means our move is over — or will be, when I finally unpack them. We’ve been cleaning out our storage unit so we can, you know, stop paying for it. And that completes our cycle of insanity this year.

So many things have gone wrong this year that sometimes it’s hard to focus on what has gone right. Really, though, a lot of things have gone right, right in the middle of it all.

Marti is back in school full time. It’s hard for all of us to adjust; we’re so used to him being home a lot, and now he’s gone for labs and classes and he leaves for work at 6:30 a.m. to make up for the time. That’s hard. But it’s also great, and even though I totally suck as a housewife I’m glad I can be here for him, that we can finish this. When he’s done with college, he’ll have that degree and nothing can take that away from him. (Okay, nuclear war, or a major government takeover, possibly, but otherwise…) We only have three more semesters and it will be over. I’ve never been good at delayed gratification but I’m trying.

I’m home in all my grand inefficiency as a housewife. Yes, housewife. Practically every day I run into a colleague or someone I know (I frequent the library) and they all are very polite, but they all ask very pointedly about school. Like, when are you going? And when will you come back to work? All the while I’m fairly bursting because today! Today I did not have to do my hair! And Maya looked cute, snuggling next to me, as we slept in. Oh, and school? Yes, yes, I’ll be going back to school. But did you notice how cute Maya is?

Because I’m home I get to volunteer at Ben’s school a couple days a week, and I get to personally hate his kindergarten teacher. Yes, she’s one of those teachers who say “we,” as in, “we didn’t follow the rules, did we? This must be so terribly embarrassing for us.” And I forcibly prevent myself from throwing a shoe at her head by pounding my head on the table, ever so quietly. But what if I was working? I wouldn’t get to know how truly irritating she is, nor would I have such profound sympathy for Ben. So there, there’s a good thing, right there.

We’re simplifying our lives. That’s another good thing. We’re downsizing. And it’s hard, a little like pulling a band-aid off a wound, but our lives and schedules had gotten so complicated. Now I spend more time on my front porch with a cup of coffee, watching Maya “help” weed the front yard by pulling all the flowers up. But even though we’ve had a rocky time the past months, right now I feel I am truly focusing on what’s important. I’m getting the opportunity to see my kids grow up, be irritated by them, yell at them, love on them, watch them cover themselves with creamed carrots, and take more pictures than is strictly necessary — and I like it.

So it’s been a rough summer. A rough year. But I think we made the right choices.

After all, they grow up so fast. The time never comes back.

theygrowupfast.jpg

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