things that suck.

71
skinny honkie wrote:Firmly on topic.
I'm a solo dad, and parenthood is by far the most incredible thing that will ever happen to me, or anyone else who involves themselves in the process.
I was a pretty young dad at 22, and my partner was a pretty hardcore feminist and career woman, and I became a housedad. It was awesome, better than your best band playing your best gig after your best album.
Just prior to his first birthday my son was diagnosed with a unique congenital heart defect, which was operated on to treat as best as possible. The image of my most loved with his chest open like a roast chicken on the operating table will be with me until I die.
Anyway, he grew after the op, and started to develop - he proved very bright, very cheeky, and very caring and considerate. He's an awesome boy.
At the age of four he was subsequently diagnosed with a very rare variant of an already rare disease called Focal Segmented Glolumerlosclerosis, which is a kidney disease, and prevents the kidney from filtering the blood properly.
Here's the rub: His heart cannot cope with high cholesterol/blood impurity in general, and his kidneys cannot do a particularly good job of filtering his blood. Put 2 + 2 together. Currently his cholesterol level is around 10, and this is whilst on a cocktail of drugs to deal with the condition (statins, anti-cholestrol agents, ABs).
His life expectancy is limited. I have been told that he will be considered a medical success if he lives to see his 20th birthday.
He is academically and creatively gifted, and has a 10ft-tall personality - he plays the drums, paints, draws, flirts like a gigolo - he is beautiful, thoughtful, and a wonderful human being. Every day with him is my greatest reward in the world.
I love him more than life, and he does not deserve the circumstances on his plate.


I don't even know what to say.

I'm sorry.

That doesn't do anything, obviously, but...I'm terribly, terribly sorry.
Life...life...I know it's got its ups and downs.

Groucho Marx wrote:Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnosing it and then misapplying the wrong remedies.

things that suck.

72
skinny honkie wrote:Firmly on topic.
I'm a solo dad, and parenthood is by far the most incredible thing that will ever happen to me, or anyone else who involves themselves in the process.
I was a pretty young dad at 22, and my partner was a pretty hardcore feminist and career woman, and I became a housedad. It was awesome, better than your best band playing your best gig after your best album.
Just prior to his first birthday my son was diagnosed with a unique congenital heart defect, which was operated on to treat as best as possible. The image of my most loved with his chest open like a roast chicken on the operating table will be with me until I die.
Anyway, he grew after the op, and started to develop - he proved very bright, very cheeky, and very caring and considerate. He's an awesome boy.
At the age of four he was subsequently diagnosed with a very rare variant of an already rare disease called Focal Segmented Glolumerlosclerosis, which is a kidney disease, and prevents the kidney from filtering the blood properly.
Here's the rub: His heart cannot cope with high cholesterol/blood impurity in general, and his kidneys cannot do a particularly good job of filtering his blood. Put 2 + 2 together. Currently his cholesterol level is around 10, and this is whilst on a cocktail of drugs to deal with the condition (statins, anti-cholestrol agents, ABs).
His life expectancy is limited. I have been told that he will be considered a medical success if he lives to see his 20th birthday.
He is academically and creatively gifted, and has a 10ft-tall personality - he plays the drums, paints, draws, flirts like a gigolo - he is beautiful, thoughtful, and a wonderful human being. Every day with him is my greatest reward in the world.
I love him more than life, and he does not deserve the circumstances on his plate.


I was going to whine like a little bitch about having two vans break down on me this week, but then I read your post and it kind of put things in perspective.

You sound like a great father and you clearly have a wonderful son.
Rick Reuben wrote:
daniel robert chapman wrote:I think he's gone to bed, Rick.
He went to bed about a decade ago, or whenever he sold his soul to the bankers and the elites.


Image

things that suck.

75
Skinny Honkie (your name's awesome btw), I've known 2 people in my life whose parents were told not to expect them to live past 10. Then 15. Then 20. And so on. Then the doctors gave up and admitted they can't really put number on it. I think some people just live as long as they damn well please and medical science can go eat a dick if it doesn't like it.
simmo wrote:Someone make my carrot and grapefruits smoke. Please.

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