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Originally Posted by christiangirl
That's so great, Dreamful!! Praying for a full recovery for your mom. She sounds like a strong woman.
My surgery is tomorrow and I can hardly wait. I have been feeling so icky for so long and I'm relieved that this (hopefully) will be the end of it. Even though I'm nervous, I'm grateful that it wasn't any worse than this. 
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I'm also keeping Dreamful's mom in my prayers.
G is doing well. I talked to her for a while yesterday and she is handling the chemo well. She's not getting nauseous from it anymore. I don't remember the exact topic the group was talking about at one point, but she said "I would not pull the cancer card.. that's just wrong." What a sweet kid.
I hope you're doing well christiangirl and am keeping you in my prayers also.
And, I'm adding another of my daughter's friends to the prayer list here. "A" has been having seizures since October and with frightening frequency. We didn't realize the first incident was a seizure because nobody really saw it happen. They were warming up for band before a football game and she "passed out" according the kids around her. She just fell over. She got back up, was dazed for a minute and then performed the pre-game show. After the pre-game show, she said she wasn't feeling well and the band director asked my daughter to take A to the band room and call her mom to come and get her. My daughter realized she forgot her phone while they were walking to the band room and sat A down in our car and ran back to get her phone. When she got back to A, A was in a daze, not really responsive. hypoallergenic called me in the stands, I grabbed one of the band staff (a phys ed teacher who I knew was first aid certified from Boy Scouts) and we went to my car to check her out. She couldn't really move her limbs and was disoriented. Mom was called and local police who were at the entrance of the game were notified. The police called some paramedics over, ambulance was called, mom arrived and the young lady went to the hospital in the ambulance. They determined it was a combination of a sinus infection, anemia and dehydration and sent her home. None of us realized it was postictal state (post seizure recovery) because she hadn't had a seizure before and it wasn't on our radar.
A couple weeks later, A had a seizure in school and since people saw it happen, they knew what was going on. She's been through a host of tests and has been diagnosed with epilepsy and started on meds. However, Friday she had 3 seizures and yesterday, during their solo & ensemble clarinet quartet competition, she seized, about 30 seconds into the performance. Thankfully, her mom was there (her mom never used to attend any band events). She was playing and made a mistake and then made this face that looked like "I can't believe I did that" at first. Then her eyes started to change, I glanced at mom and she and I got up at the same time to get to her. The girls stopped playing, I took A's instrument while her mom "spotted" her to make sure she wouldn't fall out of her chair and I told the music judges "She's having a seizure". The judges weren't quite sure what to do and everybody just sat there. There were about 14 spectators with parents, siblings and other kids from their band. Nobody was sure how to handle the situation. They said the girls could perform again later in the day if they wanted, but mom said that A probably wouldn't be able to perform for a few hours. The judge said "I heard enough to know that they are really good." A's mom encouraged the other girls to continue without the bass clarinet and the judge kept saying "Are you sure?" I could tell hypoallergenic was trying not to cry... because she is very worried about A. Anyway, the judge ended up having them play because A wasn't ready to be moved yet. At the end, she said she could tell from the beginning that the bass clarinet had excellent tone and she was sorry she couldn't hear more of it but she'd heard enough to judge them. They received a 1 rating and will advance to the state competition.
These kids are going through a lot this year. In this band, this year alone we have had: one appendicitis at band camp leading to emergency surgery, a major allergic reaction to something at band camp leading to an ER visit, two kids diagnosed with seizures (one is photosensitive seizures, the other, A- no idea what the trigger is or if there is anything specific), G with cancer, two kids have had pneumonia and hypoallergenic went to ER twice with her asthma issues directly from football games (including the one where A left in the ambulance). The kids were nervously joking about being the disabled band and listing all these events this year. It's freaking all of us out, I think. What is up with the band kids having so many health issues this year?