(This Christmas letter
was sent to friends and family along with a box of chocolate-covered
cherries.)
What a terrible way to
spend Christmas! My oldest son, Cameron, had been diagnosed with acute
myleoblastic leukemia on June 30, 1997. After a harrowing ride in a
military helicopter to Walter Reed Hospital, three rounds of horrendous
chemotherapy, an excruciating lung resection and a disappointing bone marrow
search, now here we were…at Duke University Hospital. Cameron had a cord
blood transplant, a last-ditch effort to save his life, on December 4. Now
here it was…Christmas Eve.
A very small room on
ward 9200 was a different place to spend Christmas. We had always spent
weeks baking cookies. Now the cookies were sent from family and friends
because I wanted to spend my time with Cameron, trying to ease the long,
tedious hours. He had been in isolation for weeks because he had no immune
system, the result of even more chemotherapy and drugs that would hopefully
make his new bone marrow engraft. As some presents had arrived in the mail,
we opened them immediately…anything to make a bright moment… here or there.
Christmas Eve, 6:00
p.m., was always the magic hour. The time when my family, in
Iowa…Wisconsin…California…or Washington, D.C…all opened our presents at the
same time, somehow bringing the family together, even though apart.
Cameron’s father, stepmother, sister and brother would also be opening
presents at their house in Fayetteville, North Carolina. This Christmas, it
would just be Cameron and me in the small room with few decorations, since
they weren’t allowed in the sterile environment.
With the drone of the
HEPA filter and the beeping of his six infusion pumps hooked to a catheter
in his heart, Cameron waited until 6:00 p.m. exactly. He insisted we follow
this small tradition, some semblance of normalcy abandoned six months
earlier. I gave him a few presents I had saved, his favorite being a Hug Me
Elmo that said “I Love You” when you squeezed him. It was over too
quickly. Christmas was over. Or so I thought.
Cameron carefully
reached over the side of his hospital bed and handed me a small green box.
It was wrapped beautifully, obviously by a gift store – perfect edges, a
folded piece of ribbon held down with a gold embossed sticker. Surprised, I
said, “For me?”
“Of course. It wouldn’t
be Christmas unless you had something to unwrap from me,” he replied. “But
how did you get this? Did you ask a nurse to run down to the gift store?”
Cameron leaned back in his bed, and gave me this most devilish smile.
“Nope. Yesterday, when you went home for a few hours to take a shower, I
sneaked downstairs.”
“Cameron! You aren’t
supposed to leave the floor. You know you are neutropenic. They let you
leave the ward?”
“Nope!” His smile was
even bigger now. “They weren’t looking. I just walked out.”
This was no small feat,
because Cameron had grown weaker after the cord blood transplant. He could
barely walk, and certainly not unassisted. It took every ounce of strength
just to cruise the small ward halls, pushing the heavy medication and pain
pump IV pole. How could he possibly have made it nine floors to the gift
store? “Don’t worry Mom. I wore my mask, and I used the cane. Man, they
gave me hell when I got back. I didn’t get to sneak back in; they had been
looking for me.”
I held the box even
tighter now! I couldn’t look up. I had already started to cry. “Open it!
It’s not much, but it wouldn’t be Christmas if you didn’t have something
from me to open.”
I opened the box of
gift-store-wrapped chocolate-covered cherries. “They are your favorite,
right?” he asked hopefully.
I finally looked at my
poor eighteen-year-old baby, who had begun all this suffering so soon after
high school graduation and who taught me so much about what being a family
really meant. “Oh…absolutely my favorite!”
Cameron chuckled a
little bit. “See, we still have our traditions, even in here.”
“Cameron, this is the
best present I’ve ever received, ever,” I told him, and I meant every word.
“Lets’ start a new tradition. Every Christmas, let’s only give each other
one box of chocolate-covered cherries, and we’ll reminisce about how we
spent Christmas 1997 at Duke University Hospital, battling leukemia, and
we’ll remember how horrible all of it was and how glad we are that is
finally over.” And we made that pact right then and there, sharing the box
of chocolate-covered cherries. What a wonderful way to spend Christmas!
Cameron died on March 4,
1998, after two unsuccessful cord blood transplants. He was so brave –
never giving in, never giving up. This will be my first Christmas without
him. The first Christmas without something from him to unwrap. By Dawn
Holt
First Christmas in Heaven
First Christmas in Heaven!
Oh what would it be
Thus to begin
Fair eternity!
Not tinsel, but glory:
Not presents, but HIM.
And the old Christmas story
Unmarred by earth’s din.
Not bells, but angel’s song.
Not lights, but The Light:
Not joy one day long,
But eternal delight.
Not a dying fire
At the close of the day
And children who tire
Coming in from play.
But sparkling strength:
No weariness there”
A day without length.
With no strife or tear.
And so, dear Lord, as we gaze upon
Our little Christmas tree.
We thank you that our dear ones gone
Are spending Thy Birthday with Thee.
By Sybll Beck