Always and Forever: Our experience with marriage and Duchenne

We were 19 when we met, 21 and 22 when we married. We were young and goofy. We habitually said “Always and Forever” sometimes instead of “I love you.”

I was a hot mess when I met Jason, but thankfully, God took things over, and a little divine intervention led me right down the aisle, and I married my best friend.

We will celebrate our 20th wedding anniversary in June. We’ve had more good years than bad, but I could argue that the bad ones are the ones that have shaped us into the couple we are today. Our most challenging years were the year following diagnosis, the year my sister and his dad died, and the year before our son Rowen stopped walking).

The boys were first diagnosed 10 years ago. At diagnosis, we were told how hard it would be on our marriage. It was an accurate statement. We’ve been through many ups and downs and will surely be through lots more. Sustaining a marriage through a rare disease has been like a dance. We move around or with each other, depending on the stage. Sometimes we’ve danced alone and didn’t want to be on the same dance floor.

The diagnosis broke me. I was filled with grief and pain and fog for the earlier months and first year. Our marriage suffered because I was so full of sadness and hurt that there was little room left for him. I suffered because I wanted him to be hurting as much as I was, I didn’t want to be alone in my pain, but I wanted his pain to look just like mine.

The first lesson I had to learn was that men and women react differently to grief and heartache. He felt broken, too. The little boys that numbered nearly enough to field a basketball team would never play, and that realization was minor when compared to the fact that he, like me, was scared they wouldn’t live long enough to experience a rich and blessed life.

He was hurting, too; it just looked different for him. I was not kind or filled with grace when I didn’t understand his feelings, and he stayed, and he kept us going when all I could do was actively mourn the life I thought we would have and inactively live the life we had right in front of us. He later told me that watching me hurt so badly killed him because he couldn’t fix it.

I came out of that mourning period convinced I would save our boys. I became a super mom. I did everything. I found the best doctors, I found a clinical trial, I started the stretches, I started advocating, I started raising awareness, I, I, I… I did everything I could possibly think of to save my boys. But, you know what? I left him out. I alienated him. It wasn’t good for us because I was taking out the “us.” I needed to know I did everything, afraid I wouldn’t be able to live with myself in the end if I didn’t. I didn’t leave much for him to do, and then I would get mad that he wasn’t doing what I was doing. Slowly, we found our way, but it wasn’t without growing pains.

Then another life hit; non-duchenne life. We both lost people close to us, and we learned that there is more than one kind of grief, and to balance both, we had to lean on each other. It wasn’t as easy as it reads. He was angry that his dad was gone, and I was shell-shocked that my sister was gone. Love and faith made it possible to learn to care for each other and our family when the other needed time to grieve.

During all of this, we were also fighting the FDA for approval of a drug therapy we believed was helping sustain our children’s health. While trying to come to terms with our losses and fight the biggest fight, we had People magazine, Newsweek, and every local media outlet interviewing us and recording our reactions as we tried to make our way. We never really had a minute to stop. We felt like we had to do it, to use our story to try to save our boys. It really does feel like life or death sometimes in rare diseases, and rather than let our boys down, we let parts of ourselves go. But I remember his self-sacrifice, and he was mine. I loved him more because of it.

We did well for years. We watched our children grow and learn and change, and we cheered our oldest through high school and into college.

Then, parts of Duchenne that we were not prepared for hit us like an anvil. Our oldest son started suffering from anxiety. He was afraid to sleep, and Jason and I did not sleep much for nearly a year. I was with our son because it was the only thing to help him sleep, and he was on the couch. My husband and I were never together, not even for sleep. It wasn’t healthy for us. We drifted.

This was also when our middle son was approaching the day he would no longer walk. I grieved that hard. I was mad, and it was easy to stay mad because I forgot the first lesson I learned and wanted Jason’s hurting to look like my hurting. We responded in different ways. We spoke only to talk about what we needed to do to get our kids through the day (what’s for supper, who needs to be here, what still needs to be done, etc.). There were lots of tears and arguments during those months.

Then, the day came when our son did stop walking. It was sudden, a broken leg, and overnight, we had to figure out how to bathe and shower him, dress him, and care for him because he could not do what he had done even the day before. I could not do it alone. I often wonder if my husband had waited almost a decade for me to realize that. And he was THERE, BIG TIME.

He became the one to bath him because he was the one strong enough to lift him. He became the one to dress him and help in the bathroom. The tenderness and compassion I see when he cares for our son is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen. A loving, caring father. I fall more in love with him every day by watching him.

It doesn’t get past me that Jason, a loving earthly father who patiently waited for me to let go of the reigns, did just as our heavenly father does when he waits for us.

My husband is so strong, but I wiped tears from his cheek at a breaking point a couple weeks ago. Vulnerability is changing us. That week a couple weeks ago was hard. It was full of sleepless nights, tears, and ungraceful moments. One night, at nearly 2AM, I fell back into bed, where he lay awake. I had been with one of the boys. Jason asked how he was. I answered and said, ” Our life will only get harder.” His response was “Yes.” Exhausted, we fell asleep without another word.

Our life is hard. I read it phrased this way recently, and it is true: we are watching our flesh and blood deteriorate in front of our eyes. It will always be hard.

We try hard to give our boys the best life, full of love, laughter, and memories. We see so many beautiful things. We’ve been on the receiving end of lovely gifts. We have met many other families living relentlessly brutal experiences but relishing in successes and joys. We know people celebrate every day. We have people celebrating our boys with us. (I attended noon Mass today, and it was offered to my son. I had no idea.) We have a home we love and doctors and providers that are amazing. We have a goofy dog. We have love. We are blessed by this hard life. We are blessed to share this life together.

Marriage is not two perfect people. It is two imperfect people loving each other through imperfect situations. We continue to grow and learn how to do this life. We honor the promise we made each other on our wedding day, always and forever.

A PIECE of ME was lost when my son stopped walking

I lost it today.

That is the truth. But the more I think and mull it over, the more I know I didn’t lose it today. I simply lost another piece of me. I will never be the same after today. Nothing happened today but more a culmination of everything over the last several months.

It is all happening so fast. Over the past 8 months, my life, just like everyone else’s, has been flipped upside down. I’m so overwhelmed. I am genuinely an introvert in every aspect of the word. I can speak so many words a day before I hit exhaustion. I need time to myself. I draw my strength from the time I spend alone. I have not been alone since March.

I am running on fumes. I had the best respite before Covid. Now, it’s unsafe to let anyone into the house for fear they could expose one of the boys. Not only that, but the care needs of our boys have changed so much in the last year that there are very few, if any, people who could come in and care for them.

I’m grieving. I haven’t had time to do so. I am sad that my son is not walking anymore. It hit me hard today because he didn’t want to go out and play in the snow. It’s just not the same for him anymore. I love that he has his chair, and we are finally getting the house so he can move freely around without hitting anything. I am grateful because he seems happier. But I must admit that every time I look at the dining room table and see the one chair missing, it punches me in the stomach. We should not have removed one to make a space for his chair. He’s 11 years old, he should still be walking.

I’m so damn mad. My son is losing strength. He can’t bend over, he can’t pick anything up off the ground, he can’t go up steps, he gets tired more and more quickly, and I see him losing pieces of who he is, too. Anxiety has wreaked havoc on him for years now. His friends are gone. He is lonely and sad. I am mad that losing his muscles isn’t enough, but God has given him so much more than that to carry. I want to take it all for him. I can help him stop walking, I can be his legs, and I can bring his things, but I can’t take away this hurt he is experiencing. It’s worse than anything I’ve experienced in parenting so far.

Many of these challenging moments over the past few months have been met with no grace from me. I’m so cranky. I’m short. I don’t like me in the midst of all of this. Where are the showers of grace I’ve been praying for?

I feel very isolated and alone. I had a few refuges before, but now, because of the level of safety we need to maintain for our boy’s health, I don’t go anywhere where masks are not worn or social distancing can’t be observed. I also feel so mad at myself because I know I can’t feel that way when our community has given us a new van and showed up at every fundraiser. Our community of friends and family will pay for the ceiling lift we are working on.

My dear husband. He just holds me and says feeling this way is perfectly okay. The constant barrage of things stacking on each other is hitting me in the real feels. It is so true; there is a physical pain in my chest like it’s been beaten.

I spent the day stressed, then grateful, then heartbroken and sad. I cried, dried my eyes, went to appointments, and then I cried and made supper. Now, I’m in my room, letting my husband be a single parent and writing because it is one of the few things that gives me peace. I’m over the people judging me for sharing these vulnerable, messy, hurting parts of me. I’m not perfect; I’m just a mom who’s been given a tough ask, trying to do my best. I am so absolutely human and feel those human failings so intimately today. Today has changed me. I lost a piece of me today.

I will leave you with these quotes. These quotes won’t leave me in the midst of losing my peace today.

“Every time the anxiety builds, God whispers: I have a plan.” -Lauren Fortenberry

I can only hope that the little piece I lost today is his plan. That it is a piece I don’t need anymore, than He will replace it with something better, something more like him.

“Remain in me, as I remain in you. Just as a branch cannot bear fruit on its own unless it remains on the vine, so neither can you unless you remain in me.” John 15:4

Here I am, hurting and mad, but remaining.

Max’s Birthday

Today is your 13th birthday, but the story of you started years before that.

It was just me and dad and Lexi. We were happy but something was missing. Lexi and I especially thought so. We convinced Dad too, that we needed a baby, that we needed you.

13 years ago you were born at 10:03 pm. You weighed 10lbs 3oz and were 23 1/2 inches long. Just as we were laughing with you last night, I’m don’t know how you ever fit in my belly the last month. The nurse at the hospital that day thought you might have broken the record for longest baby born at Mary Lanning.

Max Joseph Vertin, 2005

I should have known then that you would always be the one to break the mold.

You are brave and funny and interesting and wonderful, but life for you is not without struggles. Living with Duchenne is a challenge, but you do it with strength and humor and love.

The list of things that Duchenne limits for you seems endless and yet, you’ve tried everything you wanted to. The fact that you love the stage so much and can share yourself so freely is greater than anything I could have dreamed for you. I smile every time I see you perform, especially for the private performance those of us lucky enough to be your friends and family get to see at home or out to eat or at a ballgame!

Father Christmas in Narnia, 2018

I remember a day during the summer you were 4. We had just spent the day in Omaha where you were diagnosed. After travel and tests and all else we endured that day you were exhausted. You slept the entire drive home and continued to sleep throughout the evening. For what seemed like hours I held you as you slept and I wept.

Summer following diagnosis, 5 years old

That day, I was told that boys with Duchenne stop walking at age 12. We both know that not walking will not be the end of the world, just a change in ours; but today you turned 13 and you are still walking. The expectations that specialist put on you so many years ago, never defined you. You have always had the gift to just be you. You are the truest person I know.

We are doing things that have never been done before. You and I both know nothing we try is guaranteed to help, but you try anyways. You also blaze a trail for your younger brothers. You are braver than you will ever know. Sometimes I’m scared and you are the one whose lead I follow.

And son, I’ve never seen a middle school boy be embraced so warmly by teachers and peers and friends. There is magic about you. Your smile, your laugh, your wicked since of humor. People can’t help but love you.

Max and friends enjoying the county fair, 2018

But on this day, your 13th Birthday, know that their isn’t a soul that loves you more than I do.

Happiest Day to you, my beautiful boy!