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Celebrating a double decade of determination
How one family puts limitation in its place
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Ten year old Josh Loux plays his guitar at
the celebration of life held in his honor
in April. Photo by Mindi LaRose |
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
Josh Loux was 10 years old last
September. Not too many years ago, that decade might
have been an entire lifetime: Josh is one of 30,000
young Americans living with Cystic Fibrosis, a
life-threatening genetic disease that affects the lungs
and digestive system. On April 20, his family held a
second celebration of his life to raise awareness for
another milestone: the 10-year anniversary of the Gig
Harbor “Great Strides” fundraising walk for the CF
Foundation Washington/Alaska Chapter, coming up in
mid-May.
Josh was 3 months old before his
parents, John and DeeDee, had a name for his distress.
They knew something was wrong. Josh wasn’t growing; he
weighed only a few ounces more at 3 months than he did
when born full-term, and still wore newborn clothing. He
cried all the time and was fussy. After diagnosis, he
was placed on a series of daily treatments and
medications that will continue throughout his life, and
his body weight and development “all averaged out by age
1.” The Louxes already had one son, Christopher, who was
a healthy 2-year-old.
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Fundraising walk
A “Great
Strides” fundraising walk
to benefit the CF Foundation will be
held in Gig Harbor on Saturday, May 12.
Check-in is 10 a.m. at the Rush
Companies, Inc. building in Park Plaza.
The 4-mile walk commences at nearby
Cushman Trail, and winds back to the
starting point, to a free barbeque for
walkers.
For more information or to register, visit
http://greatstrides.cff.org or call
1-800-647-7774. |
CF, as the family calls Josh’s
condition, changed everything, says DeeDee. She and John
had planned to have a large family. While testing their
baby and the parents to find answers, doctors discovered
John and DeeDee carry a gene for the disease. They are
among more than 10 million Americans who are symptomless
carriers of the defective CF gene. (While progress has
been made, there is no cure for this fatal devastating
disease.) There was no history of CF in either family,
yet any child they conceived would have a one in four
chance of having the same disease. Daughter Aleisha was
born healthy three years later.
DeeDee says the family has a “new
normal”: daily treatments, medications, and more doctor
and hospitalizations for ailments that wouldn’t much
slow other youngsters down. This year, Josh is going to
school; his brother and sister are still home-schooled.
DeeDee’s intuition, and Josh’s behavior, told her he
needed some breathing room — she was mom, nurse,
teacher, pharmacist. School “has been wonderful for
him,” she says. During a recent hospitalization,
classmates sent him cards. Josh insisted on a
post-hospital visit to school before spring break to
thank his friends.
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About 200 family members and friends joined
Josh at the
event, which also raised awareness for a May
Cystic fibrosis
fundraising walk. Photo by Mindi
LaRose |
Josh is nearly the shortest kid in
his third-grade class at Hosanna Christian School in Gig
Harbor, except for one smaller girl who wears
high-heeled shoes to make herself taller. That makes
Josh the shortest by default — and his good third-grade
friend, Austin, is the tallest. These important
distinctions are not lost on Josh. When asked what he
like most about school, he quickly named math — and
food. He reports he eats his own lunch, goes back for
seconds, and takes any classmate leftovers offered.
“I eat a lot,” he says, fidgeting
with his stocking feet on the edge of the coffee table
in front of the sofa where he sits, “and I still never
grow.” DeeDee says Josh takes pills before every meal
to help his body retain nutrients, and reminds him he
has grown two inches since last December. “No,” he
corrects softly, still studying his toes, “Just one and
one half inches.”
“I feel different,” Josh says,
unable to explain how. He longs to be just a boy who
plays outside before school, who needn’t “waste my time”
with treatments. In another life, this wiry, plucky kid
with a first-class pitching arm (and trophies from three
years running to prove it) would probably have other
kids lined up to paint the fence while he whistled off
with a fishing pole. Instead, he gets up an hour early
every morning, plugs two hair-dryer type hoses attached
to a small machine into a black nylon vest. He slips the
vest on over his pjs, fastens the front snug with two
straps and flips the machine on. Like an inflatable
scuba vest, the device fills with air and hugs his chest
and back. While he watches a video or plays a game and
wears a medicated nebulizer mask, the activated vest
pulsates against his body, “jiggling” his chest and back
to give up the mucus that collected in his lungs
overnight. Every morning. Then pills with breakfast.
Nothing he wants to share with classmates during recess.
When DeeDee was pregnant with Josh,
she became reacquainted with a classmate at her high
school reunion. There was something “different” about
this friend while they were in school; she coughed a
lot, missed classes. Turns out her friend, now married
and on a career track, has CF. DeeDee asks her advice
occasionally; the two have something in common — one
leading a full life and beating the average
life-expectancy odds, with a disease doctors told her
parents would bury her before kindergarten, the other
raising a son to “work hard and take care of himself.”
Josh’s family is honest with him.
They talk about the hard things; mostly they tell him
there are no guarantees — for anyone.
CF kids live with tangible
isolation and experience the kind of loneliness that
comes from being “the only one,” because CF people don’t
congregate. There are no “camps” for CF kids, no special
events where they mingle. In a cruel twist, bad bacteria
from one strain can be communicated from one affected
person to another affected person, and the result is
more sickness that cannot be reversed. When parents of
CF kids occasionally attend network functions, their
children are not present. In their “new normal,” DeeDee
says they tell Josh, “CF is a part of your life; it’s
not your whole life.”
Doctors now know the more active CF
kids are, the better — the more their lungs get a
healthy workout, the longer they retain the capacity. It
is information that Josh regularly puts to the test. If
he could meet another kid with CF, he knows what he
would ask: “How many times are you ‘doing the vest?’” It
is a question that connects the dot back to “different.”
Josh wonders how another kid would fit the vest
treatment in — he is eager to be just a kid growing up,
throwing fastballs, drawing, playing his guitar. Way too
busy to be bothered with CF.
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News, all rights reserved.
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