Showing posts with label Amazing Kid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazing Kid. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

The MOST AMAZING Little Engine that Could production EVER!

Ben's kindergarten class performed The Little Engine That Could yesterday. Of course Ben had his fan club & entourage present for the big production! Daddy had to work. :(

It was sooo cute and the kids had such a great time with it. With Fine Arts at the bottom of the priority list in public schools, I am so grateful to Mrs. Salley for all of her hard work and giving the kids this experience. Ben loved it and had been anticipating this day for about 2 weeks.

When we decided that we wanted Ben to be in Mrs. Salley's class we knew that she would be a great teacher for him. She and my mom share a kindergarten class- my mom in the morning and Mrs. Salley in the afternoon. She's known his story since he was born and appreciates all his triumphs right along with us. She has never done this play before (she's been teaching kindergarten for more than 20 years.) Ben and his triumphant spirit were the inspiration to do this play. That's why, of course, he is the main character. It's very special for us that Mrs. Salley thinks so much of him! But I can understand why!!! I always smile when I think of the miracle that he is.

I was studying for finals all month but really wanted to help out as much as I could. Since I couldn't be in class a whole lot, I volunteered to help with the costumes. I made the soldier costumes and Ben actually helped me sew them. It took us about 2 1/2 "Lost" episodes to complete. (he,he,- I have to fit in "me" time somewhere) The hats went home with the kids but we kept the vests just in case we can use them for another production. I did a super quick face painting job with the girls but I think they are so cute they'd look cute anyway. Xochile's wonderful grandmother, who is always involved, helped out with that too. Mrs. Mason, Thomas's mom, helped out by bringing all the boxes and corrugated cardboard for the trains and backdrops and helped the children paint them. All in all, it was a great success! There were some nerves and a line or two was forgotten but for 5&6 year olds I thought the performances were Oscar ready.

Look out Hollywood!!!



Sleepy little stars.





The cutest train engineer I have ever seen! Such a beautiful child.




Ben and Grampy have the same smile!


We used our connections for exclusive backstage access to the star.



Even big brothers made it to the performance, Mrs. Salley invited their classes to be part of our audience, she's so sweet! It was pouring when biggest brother made his way over.


Silly Peter!I found a foxy man with gorgeous hair in the audience. I think I'll keep him. (His chin is like this because I left my razor in the shower and he thought he would shave- ouch! I learned my lesson.)



* This was not the video I meant to post- I wanted to post the video of the play but I guess I chose the wrong one. Here you see Stinky Sam harassing Bennie Pie. Ben likes to practice balancing- naturally it's very difficult for him but especially so when a stinker is around.

Friday, November 21, 2008

A Miracle!



Image: Janice Kraser, Billy Kraser
Janice Kraser sits next to her 9-year-old son, Billy Kraser, at their Scranton, Pa., home Sunday, Nov. 9. Billy has spina bifida and has undergone an experimental surgery which reroutes his nerves in attempt to attain normal bladder and bowel function.

There is an amazing new surgery that possibly could change our lives with Ben. This is really new and I am still researching it but I was so overcome with emotion that I couldn't finish reading it out loud. Here is the some of the amazing article that fills my heart with hope:


WASHINGTON - It’s a delicate and daring experiment: Could doctors switch a leg nerve to make it operate the bladder instead?

Families of a few U.S. children whose spina bifida robs them of the bladder control that most people take for granted dared to try the procedure — and early results suggest the surgery indeed may help, in at least some patients.

With the technique, pioneered in China, the kids are supposed to scratch or pinch their thigh to signal the bladder to empty every few hours. But surprisingly, some youngsters instead are starting to feel those need-to-go sensations that their birth defect had always prevented.

For the entire article go here

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Fall School Pictures, Starring My Foxes!









Here are the boys' school pictures. I will be sending out pictures soon but thought I'd post them for all to see. Eric and Peter liked theirs but my lovely Ben was so distraught with his; he thinks he smiled too big. Poor little guy! I think it's a lovely picture of a guy who is excited to be in kindergarten.



I volunteered at school to help with pictures and to my grateful surprise I got 3 free packages valued at over $150.00. Cool deal, huh? Anyhow, the package included c.d.'s with these three different tones for each kid. Aren't they handsome little boys? I think so!

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Sunday's Record













This picture was in Sunday's Stockton Record. Peter was interviewed for a reading program with dogs that his school is involved in. It's called Paws to Read and the caption for the picture was "Paws-itive reinforcement."

I have no idea who the lady next to him is, she is a volunteer I've never met. If you want to read the article here's the link http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080921/A_NEWS/809210315&emailAFriend=1

I didn't really care for the article. It painted Peter BroggER (they mispelled his name) as a child lacking confidence who may have suffered some abuse and needs anger management. The real story is that the little girl who was originally intended for the article was absent and they needed someone quickly so they sent Peter. He is an excellent reader and has not a shy bone in his body. Anyhow, Peter looks adorable in the picture.


Totally random: Sid the Science Kid is on in the background while I type this. Is anyone else horrified by his creepy grandma? Her laugh is the scariest.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Sam's big move!


Last night there was much excitement in the Brogger home. Why?, you may ask...
well friends, Sam Brogger finally pooped in the big boy potty!!!


At 2 years, 3 months old we were so ready for this day to come.


yippeee!

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Pete's last day of kindergarten




While I was in Sacramento with Ben, Peter had his "graduation" from kindergarten. Dan went along with Pete and took these pictures for me. I liked the graduation caps- they all had tassels, the kid's names, and "2008" on the back.

The boys are excited about school next year. I had considered homeschooling them but since I had the option of putting them at my mom's school, we opted for that. Home school is still in my head, but not so much in Dan's. I am trying to convince him that not all home schooled kids are bizarre-socially-awkward-weirdos and pointed out that there are plenty of those in public school as well. ; )

In the mean time, they will be at the same school my mom teaches at. In fact, Ben will be in my mom's kindergarten class! Kind of, he will be in the afternoon class and my mom teaches the A.M. class. She'll still be there everyday in the same class as he is since that's when she does prep work and helps out the afternoon class. I just didn't think I could trust her to treat him like every other kid not to mention weird parent teacher conference. I love this set up and that's why we've moved the boys from school. As they get older though, I would like to be in control of their environment and curriculum. I think there's a lot of unnecessary nonsense for a Christian kid in public school and with 4 guys, private school is far off. We'll see..

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

The Journey to Shriners


Driving to Shriners Benjamin James Brogger wasn't nervous at all. He was ready.


Dad and Ben in the lobby waiting to be taken to Ben's room.

Ben being Ben.


Our little Sammy came along while big brothers were at school.

In his room, getting his vitals taken.

At Shriner's


Here is my mouse resting in bed, obviously after nurses took the NG tube out. He slept so much better. This picture reminds me that one day I asked him why he has such giant lips and he looked at me like I was a space alien and said "Well, (he loves to say well) my mother has giant lips." Of course!
Dad made him feel so much better.


My baby was such a trooper! Baby Jaguar was a constant companion.


Getting ready for bed.

Home and healing...

Here he is at home after a sponge bath. He has had lots of visitors and well wishers. Thanks to everyone!

This experience has shown me (again!) the amazing love that God has for us and how he places angels on earth to help. We have been overwhelmed by phone calls, text messages, e mails, and visits from people who have taken our Ben into their hearts. We have had people bring over food, stuffed animals, cards, balloons, and an endless array of gifts to keep him happy. The most special thing for me however, were the teams of prayers coming from all over the world from people who knew somebody who knew somebody who knew us and heard about Ben and called to know how he came out of it. This touches my heart so much. It is so heartwarming to know that at a time that when we were dealing with so much, there were strangers praying for our guy.

The surgery went well but it was more complicated than what we had thought it was going to be. Because Ben is an otherwise healthy, fit little boy, doctors had thought they could get in with just 1 or 2 incisions. His appendix was hiding up very high under his liver and curled up, that was unexpected and made the surgery go longer than what we were expecting. Doctor told me that he didn't think the appendix was going to stretch all the way to where they needed it to, to the belly button and had thought they might need to create an opening at the side of his stomach. I had already said before surgery that I didn't want that to happen. I just think he has enough to deal with and an extra hole on the side of the belly doesn't help. Well, miraculously, ( I KNOW because of the power of prayer and faith) Ben just happened to have a really, really long appendix and doctors were able to create the stoma at the belly button, very inconspicuously. It was a total of 4 incisions.

The actual surgery was the easiest part of the entire ordeal. The worst was the NG tube. That was so traumatic. I'm still upset that they didn't use a local anesthetic or something to help with that. To have a little 4 year old with a tube up his nose and through his throat into his belly screaming "Mommy, I'm trying, I;m trying to be brave but I don't think I can!" is so difficult. Of course I couldn't cry in front of him but holding back those tears while he went on for 3 hours was so hard. He truly is the bravest though, I am so convinced of that.

Speaking of brave though, I must include some women that I met while I was in the waiting room during the surgery. They were 2 women whose sons were also in surgery, both of their boys have CP. One is a mother of a 15 year old who is in a wheelchair and despite having very poor motor skills has taught himself how to play video games and is so good at it that he is trying to convince her to take him to Japan to compete in gaming tournaments. I was so amazed by her description of his dedication to his craft. The lesson there was, there is always something you CAN do and that's where the focus should be. The second mother was a younger mother. Her son is three years old and she and her mother told me that when he was born the doctors told them that the best thing for him would be to unplug all the machines that were keeping him alive. He is quadriplegic, visually impaired, mentally delayed and cannot speak, and so they explained that he would have no quality of life. I was and am amazed by the strength and courage of these women to raise their baby and tell the doctors that they had no right to judge a human life. If God had given him life, they were going to see to it that this boy was taken care of. I met him after he came out of surgery and I was so touched by how proud of him they were. He had adorable p.j.'s on and looked like he was very loved. The lesson there was that I felt 100% humbled.

I am so grateful for my son, I am grateful for our trials, I am grateful for his accomplishments but most of all I am grateful that I don't wonder why anymore. I am human and when we received the diagnosis before Ben was born I couldn't understand why. I am healthy, so is Dan. I have never smoked, drank or used drugs (not that having done any of the above would be a reason but you know what I mean) I live off of green leafy vegetables, I am active and healthy, had had two healthy boys before him. And then all of a sudden. I couldn't get why, I wanted to know why. What had I done in my life to warrant this trial? What hadn't I done? Had I have been better, smarter, more faithful, something, would this not have happened? That was how I felt for weeks. Dan and I took part in genetic research, submitted DNA samples, read everything on the subject and wanted to know why. When he was born, those feeling subsided of course because he was so perfect. Just like every mother, I saw his perfections rather than imperfections but I still wondered why. Through the years I still have ups and downs but I don't wonder why anymore. It really doesn't matter and is of no consequence so it doesn;t take up any of my time. I have learned to just enjoy him. The hard thing for me these days are his AFO's or ankle foot orthosis, that will help him walk better. I am so apprehensive about them but only because up to this point this whole spina bifida thing has been something that we deal with in our family. People don't see his kidneys and don't watch us cath him or watch our bowel routine, so it's easy for other people to not even know he's dealing with something else. With the AFO's it will be a visible sign and being his mother, I just don't want him to be hurt or feel different. I know that the best thing we can do is to keep him as happy as he is knowing that his validation comes from inside. It's just new, so it's scary. I just have to say welcome to Holland more often.




* So I just read this and realized that it doesn't make sense unless you know the Welcome to Holland story. Here it is:

c1987 by Emily Perl Kingsley. All rights reserved


I am often asked to describe the experience of raising a child with a disability - to try to help people who have not shared that unique experience to understand it, to imagine how it would feel. It's like this......

When you're going to have a baby, it's like planning a fabulous vacation trip - to Italy. You buy a bunch of guide books and make your wonderful plans. The Coliseum. The Michelangelo David. The gondolas in Venice. You may learn some handy phrases in Italian. It's all very exciting.

After months of eager anticipation, the day finally arrives. You pack your bags and off you go. Several hours later, the plane lands. The stewardess comes in and says, "Welcome to Holland."

"Holland?!?" you say. "What do you mean Holland?? I signed up for Italy! I'm supposed to be in Italy. All my life I've dreamed of going to Italy."

But there's been a change in the flight plan. They've landed in Holland and there you must stay.

The important thing is that they haven't taken you to a horrible, disgusting, filthy place, full of pestilence, famine and disease. It's just a different place.

So you must go out and buy new guide books. And you must learn a whole new language. And you will meet a whole new group of people you would never have met.

It's just a different place. It's slower-paced than Italy, less flashy than Italy. But after you've been there for a while and you catch your breath, you look around.... and you begin to notice that Holland has windmills....and Holland has tulips. Holland even has Rembrandts.

But everyone you know is busy coming and going from Italy... and they're all bragging about what a wonderful time they had there. And for the rest of your life, you will say "Yes, that's where I was supposed to go. That's what I had planned."

And the pain of that will never, ever, ever, ever go away... because the loss of that dream is a very very significant loss.

But... if you spend your life mourning the fact that you didn't get to Italy, you may never be free to enjoy the very special, the very lovely things ... about Holland.




Getting fitted for AFO's.


He's had two pairs before but never wore them because he hated them. Now, though with his body growing and getting heavier everyday, it is too much of a strain on his knees and ankles.


Ben was having a good time but I look sooo done and ready to go home. Kids are so much more resilient than we are.