Our Bittersweet EA/TEF Symphony
A bittersweet EA/TEF symphony. That’s how guest blogger Janae Copeland describes the life of her daughter who was born with EA/TEF in 2010. In today’s post, Janae explains how she learned to read the music of her daughter’s life. What a fitting and rousing finale to EA/TEF Awareness Month, 2018.
All my life, I trained for sound. Specifically, I was trained to make musical sounds and improve the musical sounds of others. Until that day in August, I never dreamed I would be thrust into a small pod of a room, surrounded by sounds that could no longer be shaped by my words or gestures, but that were completely at the command of my daughter’s tiny body and its ability to function despite the many EA/TEF challenges she faced, minute-by-minute.
The first time I saw her, about 48 hours after she had been rolled out of the NICU in our local hospital to take her first life-saving flight, she was fully sedated, a few hours out of surgery. My only instinct was to sing, standing on tiptoes to lean over the plastic bedside. Was it to comfort her or me? I’m still not sure. But the semi-tonal melodies produced by the monitors invaded the space and provided an accompaniment that mirrored the cacophony that would come to define the next few weeks.
As the hours passed in the pod, the lack of rhythmic synchronicity became my nemesis. I longed for a strong pulse that each bing and beep would willingly follow, but finally began to accept that the polyrhythms were reminiscent of the elite drumming ensembles of West Africa. They could be enjoyed, or at least appreciated, even if they never settled into my Western ear.
Perhaps the most humbling part was the realization that I, the teacher, had become student again, with an entirely new vocabulary to learn. I figured if I had once learned the meanings of sforzando and Sprechstimme, I could begin to understand tracheomalacia and brachycardia. Unfortunately, my teachers weren’t even aware of their roles, so the instruction was quick, mumbly, and often happened a little after 5 am, when my brain was barely even aware of its surroundings. Failure was not an option, so Google was my textbook, other parents led my online tutoring sessions. Using available resources meant standing close enough to the door during rounds to hear the “real talk” before the medical students came in to present their monologues, obviously intended more as an audition for the longer coats than as information for us.
Now, 6 ½ years later, I reflect and realize that every day in the hospital was a rehearsal of the bittersweet EA/TEF symphony that is our life. These days, we usually agree on a moderate tempo, plugging through each of our countermelodies with near-mastery. There are moments of difficulty, where a new challenge presents itself, and we go back into rehearsal mode. Sometimes it’s an all-night coughing sessions, or a few hours of wondering if there’s a stuckie causing her discomfort and difficulty breathing. Or, like this past weekend, we endure a 3-night stay in the PICU for pneumonia, after catching an illness that, to her classmates and sister, was just a cold.
Even so, we couldn’t be more grateful for this composition of ours. Each challenge simply serves to make this bittersweet EA/TEF symphony more beautiful and interesting. My daily prayer is that I will always remember to stop and listen to the beauty around me and never take one measure for granted!
Do you like what you see at DifferentDream.com? You can receive more great content by subscribing to the quarterly Different Dream newsletter and signing up for the daily RSS feed delivered to your email inbox. You can sign up for the first in the pop up box and the second at the bottom of this page
By Janae Copeland
Janae Copeland is a wife and mother of 3 daughters. She lives in Jacksonville, NC where she is a K-5 music educator. She became a Different Dream mom when her oldest daughter, Jayda, was born in 2002 with hydrocephalus and cerebral palsy. Nine years later, her daughter Clark was born with EA/TEF and right microtia/atresia. Janae is grateful to have been entrusted with the care all 3 of her special daughters and seeks out opportunities to help other young mothers who may need support as they begin these same journeys with their own blessings from God.
2 Comments
Submit a Comment
Subscribe for Updates from Jolene
Related Posts
God’s Plans for our Children are Like a Puzzle
God’s plans for our children are like a puzzle larger than any Sandy Ramsey-Trayvick has ever completed. In today’s post she describes how putting together jigsaw puzzles had shown her to trust in God’s plans for her kids. I began doing jigsaw puzzles again while we...
Middle-Grade Fiction about Kids with Special Needs
Guest blogger Lisa Pelissier introduces and explains her latest middle-grade fiction for kids with special needs.
God’s Power Is More than Sufficient to Answer our Prayers
Guest blogger Mark Arnold demonstrates that God’s power is more than sufficient to answer our prayers for our kids.
My wife is a passionate woman that ALWAYS puts the needs of others before her own. She is extremely smart and wants to learn something everyday to become more knowledgeable about the needs of our kids. She pours into other people’s children as if they are her own. I’m blessed that we are in the same orchestra, day in and day out!! I love you, Nae.
Your God- given gifts of music, intelligence, and compassion have served you well, Janae. You are truly following God’s plan for your life !