This planner is no longer available. We're actively working on enhancing ways for your friends and family to assist you. In the meantime, feel free to use journals to share your requests for help.

Add Request
Accepted
Export
List
Day
Week
Month
May 19-25

This Week

Darlene hasn't added requests yet
Leave a Well Wish to encourage them to add to their planner or ask how you can help.

Latest Site Updates

Journal

This is my first journal post as I start this journey of facing the reality of my illness and finding healing. I was laying here, in pain, weak and feeling as if my respiratory muscles just dont want to work. I was however,  thinking of some amazing medical miracles in my life. I want to start my journal with those wonderful stories of God's awesome power.

The first miracle was in 1989. I was admitted for a open lymph node biopsy. I had developed a huge, golf ball sized node under my right arm. I had nodes above and below my diaphragm,  night sweats, rigors, weight loss, and an enlarged liver and spleen. The presumptive diagnosis was disseminated lymphoma. 

While I was undergoing surgery my Dear Mother prayed without ceasing in the waiting room. She walked the floor rebuking cancer and claiming they would not find evidence of the dreaded disease. After the surgery the surgeon came in to talk with my Mom. What he had to tell her confirmed to her prayers answered. 

The surgeon told her he had felt the node before opening me. It had been so large it was adherent to underlying muscle. Yet when he made the incision he could find only a normal lymph node. No mass, no swelling, normal. 

The biopsy turned out negative. I believe I was healed of something that day. Though I would go on to be diagnosed with Lupus that was a prayer answered. 

The second miracle involves the birth of my precious son. I had not been putting on weight and my son not growing well. After a particularly stressful, and upsetting few days I went to my OB appointment with the nurses favorite, great OB Doc, Dr. Zenakis. I had not slept for two days and was apparently a little disoriented because Dr. Zenakis herself came to the waiting room to ask me what was wrong. My appointment was not scheduled for that day. She decided to see me anyway because she said "you dont look good."  
The sonogram revealed an emergency placing my son's life in danger. I had lost almost all the amniotic fluid. She quickly admitted me to the hospital where at only 35 weeks gestation I underwent an emergent C section. My son was born not breathing, and required brief CPR. I remember hearing them saying "his heart rate is 40, start compressions". I turned my head and prayed to God " No Lord, not my son. I claim he shall live." And he did.
Had he not been delivered right when he was he would have died intrauterine. As it was he was only 4 pounds but would come home after only 4 days in the NICU. He is now a 25 year old, 6 foot, healthy, awesome young man. Praise God. 

The third involves the again saving of my son's life. My boy was only 18 months. He had fever above 105, and a reddish blue rash. His feet and hands were swollen, and he had red lips and eyes. I took him to the ER and he was diagnosed with scarlet fever and given penicillin.  The next day however, he was barely conscious,  swollen with a much worse rash. I decided to take him to his pediatrician who was the best pediatric doctor I had ever worked with. He immediately. suspected Kawasaki's disease and had us admitted to the hospital I worked at, University Hospital. Labs confirmed the diagnosis.  Dr. Roger's from pedi cardiology met us on the pedi floor. He took one look at my boy and said "that's textbook Kawasaki's."  He told me after one bag of immunglobin intravenous my boy should turn around like flicking a switch.
Well the immune globulin finished infusing over hours and still no change. My son still lay in my  arms lifeless. He was now in renal failure with fever of 106.7. We administered a second liter of immunglobin while I prayed and prayed. And this time he woke up, fever down and for the first time in 24 hrs spoke and took fluids. He went home a few days later. 

My forth story is about me. I had developed abdominal pain while at work. I finished my shift and even when in and worked the next night. I had been having episodic abdominal pain for years and always toughed it out. By the third day I knew I has an acute abdomen.  I went to see my PCP who told me to go home and take Metamucil. I did go home but something told me to skip the metamucil. By morning I was worse. I called my Gynecologist, Dr. Vincenzo Sabella. I had worked with Dr. Sabella at University Hospital for years. He had been the Director of Ob/Gyn and was a phenomenal surgeon. I knew I needed a surgeon and I knew he would help.   He did a sono and saw a pelvic abscess. He cleared his schedule and booked me for surgery two days later after a CT scan and prep.
That night the nurse in me knew I was developing sepsis. I went to where I now worked in the ER. I told them about Dr. Sabella planning to do surgery. They called him though he was staff at another facility.  Just as I was being taken upstairs to a bed for a possible ruptured appendix with 2 abscesses,  Dr. Sabella arrived. He looked at the CT result and decided I needed to go to the OR now. He called Dr. John Metersky who had been our trauma Chief at University.  They both met me in my room. No OR was immediately available where we were at so Dr. Sabella and Metersky had me transferred to the sister hospital where they had privileges. I was in the OR within an hour. 
I had perforated my bowel and had a septic pelvis. My appendix was intact. I had fibrous tissue throughout my pelvic cavity.  Whatever this was it was bad and had been there developing for years. I underwent the removal of my distal ileum and cecum and an anastomosis.  Surgery took four hours and was beyond complicated. Later, Dr. Metersky told me once he had me wide open he looked up at Sabella with tears in his eyes and said "I have never seen such a mess. I'm suppose to be the general surgeon and I have no idea where to start." Dr. Sabella replied "well we cant close her like this. Let's dive in or else she will kill us."  They both knew me well. 
That day my life was saved by two surgeons who went above and beyond. The compassionately cared for me throughout my 10 day hospital recovery. God had come through again. And I'm believing he will again now!!  

Read the latest Journal Entry

1 Heart

SVG_Icons_Back_To_Top
Top