A Courageous Community

Origami: Finding Home by Andrew Wang

The greatness of a community is most accurately measured by the compassionate actions of its members. Coretta Scott King

It is August now, which means we are well past the halfway point of 2025. It’s been almost 9 months since I’ve come here to share anecdotes and updates from our lives. Much has happened, and while most of it has been good, the biggest development is that we did not move to Savannah GA. That was left field, I know!

For the past two summers we’ve contemplated relocating. We knew it was a strong moment in time for the sale of a house in New England, but the same cannot be said for a home purchase here. We liked the idea of making a pivot and as much as we would have loved the chance to move back West, after investigating Flagstaff AZ, Bend OR, Tucson and Phoenix AZ and Reno NV, we realized the financial gains to be found in the Southeast were more appealing. We listed our house for sale last winter without telling a soul, and then headed on a road trip to investigate storied Savannah GA. We found a special real estate agent while there and absolutely loved the area. Upon our return home, we had an offer on our New Hampshire house! It was go time.

We may never know if it was cold feet or common sense, but in this political climate of government budgeting scrutiny, I was worried by the prospect of reapplying for Sasha’s Medicaid. This health insurance that I am so thankful for is the backbone to navigating Sasha’s complex medical care.  What if her application in Georgia was denied? Then came the discussion of school options for Nika. We quickly learned how complex the public school system is in many parts of the south.  You are not necessarily guaranteed placement in your neighborhood school. Then of course came the sub-tropical climate. While Mike felt ready for a new adventure as did I, he particularly struggles with heat and humidity similar to the way that I struggle with gloomy winters. The weight I felt while reviewing this trifecta of cons made me pause. Yet with our home sale now under contract, if we were to pivot, it needed to be quick.

Over the past two years I’ve also been inquiring about in home nursing care at Sasha’s annual physicals. I was informed each time that while we do qualify for this service, our location in northern NH made staffing a challenge. Typically residing near one of the state’s larger hospitals made all the difference. I recalled this conversation to Mike as we shifted our home search back in state, and it soon dictated the radius for our research.

Beautiful Savannah, GA

So, at the end of April we found ourselves buying a home in Bow NH. We now live next to Concord, our state’s capitol city, and remain geographically just close enough for Nika to continue at her beloved preschool in central NH. Sasha meanwhile has obtained nursing care in the home 3 days per week. This has been tremendously helpful in offering respite from Sasha’s physical care, which has become arduous in recent months. Trunk strength has changed significantly for Sasha this year, and I am thankful for the days of rest from the increasingly physical tasks of dressing, repositioning, transferring and diapering.  

While I haven’t been writing here for several months, I want to share that I have been writing in a different space. Last month I started my first freelance position when I became a Blogger in Residence at Courageous Parents Network! CPN is a non-profit based outside of Boston MA offering vast online resources to both families and clinicians of individuals with complex medical conditions. This remarkable website aides in navigating the medical care for virtually all diseases effecting children and adolescents throughout the disease trajectory. An advocate for palliative care and champion in highlighting their services, CPN has been instrumental and intentional in clarifying misnomers between palliative care and hospice. Palliative care is supportive and is not care for end of life. CPN’s growth over the past 10 years has brought them to the forefront in the resource literature provided to families at numerous hospitals throughout New England and beyond.

My first post with CPN was published last month and can be found at this link: https://bit.ly/46lzZ7e. Future posts are coming soon as I will continue to write for CPN throughout this year and into 2026. Please follow them on social media if you haven’t already for the opportunity to peruse all of their resources.  (https://courageousparentsnetwork.org/) There is so much offered at CPN; intimate audio and video interviews with families navigating challenging decisions, clinicians sharing insights and pathways to help map specific topics of care, audio libraries, blogs by various writers and so much more. These tools can be helpful to not only a family navigating a complex medical journey, but to friends and families wondering how to be helpful or simply present within their loved ones world.

Additional areas of life have thrived in 2025 as well. I joined a community choir which performs three concerts per semester and culminated with the opportunity to sing with the New Hampshire Music Festival last month. Sasha had the unplanned, unparalleled opportunity to summit Mt. Washington once again this year when an athlete had to drop away from the event at the last minute. Also in July Sasha enjoyed a remarkable summer camp experience along with celebrating her 27th birthday! She is settling into her new home with ease, as she always seems to do, and we all are enjoying being closer to family and friends located in the southern part of the state, as well as being closer to so many medical services. We are excited to be closer to airports, the ocean, city shopping (I’m talking about you Trader Joe’s!) and yet to still have some woods to call our own and a quiet street for walks with the girls. We’re planning another winter road trip down south next year, and maybe we can say hello to our old real estate agent again along the way, but for now, we are happy to call this place home.

Leaving Savannah

Time Capsule

Time is the wisest counselor of all – Pericles

Origami Spiral by Pan Albers, 2019

November is here and well upon us. It’s hard to believe that it was back in late August, eleven weeks ago, that Sasha had her g-tube placed. It mostly feels like a lifetime ago now. I know of many parents who have said they can’t remember life without the g-tube, and I’m hoping that we get there. They celebrate the ease a g-tube brings; being able to travel more with meals being much more portable. Time opens up for many families as feedings having the potential to be hands free for a caregiver. Food preparation virtually ceases, no more pureeing foods and no more dual food prep – simultaneously cooking foods for the majority of the family along with other items that puree more readily. The quality-of-life metrics promise to be abundant.

For now, though, I have to be honest. I have great disdain for this device. The looks of it, the discomfort it causes Sasha and the representation that Sanfilippo Syndrome is really here now. I see Sanfilippo Syndrome almost more than I see Sasha most days, and I am trying to find some common ground within that reality. I will not let this become my new norm. I remind myself time and again that Sasha is in there, that she is the same Sasha post August 27th that she was on August 26th.

Following suit with her character, Sasha was a true champion throughout the procedure, stoic from start to finish. She tolerated the anesthesia well, the surgical procedure well and resumed eating orally within just a few hours. The nurses were absolutely amazing with Sasha. They were inquisitive and kind, asking thoughtful questions and wanting to know her story starting back so many years ago. As each nurse got to know Sasha, you could see them become increasingly comfortable caring for her. When we wheeled out of PACU after an extended period waiting for a room, the PACU nurse asked who uploaded Sasha’s profile picture to the patient portal: “because that doesn’t look anything like her” she stated incredulously. I smiled and told her she was right. At that moment I knew that after just four hours together, she deeply got Sasha. While I walked behind her stretcher headed to Med-Surg, I uploaded a new profile photo to the patient portal. It was from just moments prior, when Sasha had looked so present during her recovery in PACU.

It was difficult to know the best way to navigate the lead up for this particular situation, and it wasn’t until just the two of us were driving to the hospital that I spoke with Sasha about what was about to occur. For those who may not know, Sasha is significantly developmentally delayed, but we speak with her as we would anyone else. I sometimes think she understands incoming communication but simply cannot express outgoing communication in the way that most do. What I do know is that she comprehends intention. And so, in that pitch-black commute and solitude of a rural New Hampshire byway, I told her what we were driving toward. I told her I was sorry we had to get up so early. And I told her I hoped, I thought, that this would be a good thing. I’m not sure who I was convincing.

I am still grappling with the guilt of making a decision for Sasha that, many years ago, was something I ensured her I would never do. Shortly after her diagnosis in 2008, my care model was to keep invasive interventions at an absolute minimum. To my mind, that meant no g-tube. This was a non-negotiable. It was easy to have that bravado when Sasha, at nine years old, was eating enthusiastically and running all over the land. It continued to be easy for 15 or so more years, and I became complacent that we would never approach that bridge, where oral intake would slow and became work, taxing Sasha’s energy.

My staunch position became harder to maintain as Sasha began losing weight, while medical professionals urged me to consider the g-tube. “It’s an insurance policy” they reminded me. “You never have to use it”.

That last statement, so far, has been true. I have yet to use Sasha’s tube, other than maintaining daily water flushes to ensure that the line remains open (think of it as your home’s plumbing, you never want a clog)!. Yet I know that soon, I will need to use the g-tube for nutritional supplementation. I am bracing myself that, at next week’s weight check during her annual physical, it will likely confirm what I already suspect. And so, that first statement will prove true as well. I now have an insurance policy.

Like me, Sasha does not like the g-tube. It is uncomfortable and she often pushes my hand away during wound care. She still has some bleeding and looks deep in my eyes every time I access the tube. Questioning. On my best days I am thankful for it when she’s eating rather slowly, knowing it will come in handy soon. On my worst days in an irrational state of mind, I quietly consider scheduling an appointment to remove the whole darned thing, hoping to reverse time.

This past Sunday, I attended the funeral services for a very special young man named Sam, just 28 years old, who so valiantly battled MPS 1; Hurlers Syndrome. I met his amazing Mother during a 2020 trip to Washington DC for Rare Disease Week on Capitol Hill. This Mom, along with one other special MPS 1 Mom, and myself, had come to represent New Hampshire to push for legislation to add an MPS disorder to our state’s Newborn Screening panel. In an instant, I was greeted with enthusiasm by these two seasoned Moms when I stepped off the plane, swept into their worlds of advocacy work and adventure. We spent three days together, rushing up and down the steps of capitol hill, scurrying across wide, gleaming stone floors hurrying into meetings with the staff of our congressmen and congresswomen. We sat and shared the medical stories of our children with these complete strangers, knowing our time together on those deep velvet tufted couches was short. It was a time of such bonding. We knew we would gather again one day.

Meer weeks after our DC trip, a pandemic hit. Then, a surprise baby was born. We had plans of going for a walk with Sam’s Mom at our nearby outlet stores as soon as “life settled down some”. A chance for her to meet Sasha and for us to meet Sam, a formidable individual who himself had lobbied on Capitol Hill sharing his medical journey of 38 surgeries and a bone marrow transplant. Alas, time marched on as it insidiously does and eventually, Sam became quite unwell, with extended hospital stays lasting well over a month at a time. Yet I simply could not believe the news when I read last month that Sam had in fact succumbed to MPS. My count-out of eleven weeks since Sasha’s g-tube surgery seemed so insignificant, so superficial as I contemplated the same calendar that Sam’s Mom now looks at every single day.

And so, I am mindful to celebrate the moments in between. The moments when Sasha walks a full circle in our cul-de-sac, even if it requires some breaks. The moments when Sasha smiles just in being together in the kitchen while I prepare dinner. The moments when Nika asks to go into Sasha’s room to play with her hair supplies, or when Suki rests her head in Sasha’s lap. And soon, there will be moments when Sasha and I will explore the good that her g-tube may bring.