Wow.
When we moved
to Anacortes 12 years ago we didn’t know if “this was the one.” The town we would settle in. The town we would buy our first home in. The town we would raise our children in. But after only 12 months it was obvious. This WAS home. Peter and I bought an old home in Old Town
and we opened our business, KP Studios.
This town has
been taking care of us ever since.
When Madelyn
was diagnosed Leukemia when she was 4 ½ years old, each one of us received an
outpouring of support. Meals delivered
for a month by friends and people we didn’t know, church prayer groups focusing
their energies and blessings on my girl, stuffed animals and blankets from our
local Bunnies by the Bay, furniture and supply donations for our Seattle
apartment, pictures to remind us of home, activities and toys for the girls,
visits and daily calls from friends and family, a hat party when Madelyn lost
her hair, new clothes when Madelyn’s no longer fit due to the medications,
books for Peter and I to read, gift cards for restaurants close to our
apartment... Not to mention the calls, the emails, the letters, the cards, the
visits with people we loved and individuals that we didn’t know. People were thinking of us, worrying about us,
loving us.
But unlike
most cancer families going through the same thing, that love and support has
continued for 2+ years. Unwavering. Even as recently as just a few months ago Madelyn’s
counts crashed and we had to drive to Seattle Children’s ER for a fever. When we returned home, exhausted, 11 family
members were there in the drive way waiting for us with smiles and cheers. Then the Harrington’s delivered us a warm,
home cooked dinner.
And now… at
the very end… when families generally celebrate soberly and quietly together…
our amazing town says “No Way! Let’s do
this thing right.” That parade, my
friends, was truly the most astounding moment of my entire life. It is the people of Anacortes that make our
town so unique. Anacortes knows how to
create a special kinda beautiful person and cultivates love and
thoughtfulness. This village is a
family.
The whole week was a special one. From all the wonderful messages after she was officially declared cancer free, to the incredible amount of cards and gifts on Friday (her VERY last chemo pill day) and then the parade on Monday! And all I can
say is Thank You from the very bottom of my heart. Thank you for making Madelyn’s
battle AND victory something remarkable. Cancer touches every single person in some way. That parade was a celebration of lives lost,
lives won and the caregivers who spend every waking moment waiting and hoping.
Boy,
Anacortes, do we know how to celebrate life!!!!
There are so many things I have to tell you about this week and the parade... I will be writing a full account soon. For today I just to desperately say THANK YOU and I love you. All of you made her last chemo day and her end-of-treatment something both she and Sophia will NEVER forget.
Here are some footage/article links that I know about.
Skagit Valley Herald
Anacortes American
Anacortes Now
I am so glad King 5 did a piece on this. I couldn't be more happy that all of Washington State is going to find out how remarkable the people in our town are. It will air on King 5 tonight sometime between 5:30-5:45pm.
Here are a few of Peter's pictures...
What Madelyn found on her front door step Friday after school (Feb 1st) - last chemo day!!
Let's do this thing in style!
Last chemo pill down the hatch!
Then dinner in the hide-a-bed while watching a movie!
A little "Good Bye Cancer" chocolate cake!
Can you believe this? This, again, is what she found Feb 1st. After this, Peter and I kept saying "all this AND a parade!?? Oh my goodness."
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you for making them feel so special.
We decided they needed to sleep with all those balloons that night.
Saturday morning, Feb 2nd, we just couldn't keep all that gorgeous color at home.
Parade Day!! Feb 4th.
Our original plan was for Madelyn's best buds and family to be at school on Monday. When she came out we would all cheer and congratulate her. Then she would get in the police car and drive to our house for a surprise after school party with everyone. Chief Bonnie Bowers called and said.... "well, the police officers talked and we'd like to have a little parade down Commercial." We were both thinking a few police cars and a couple fire trucks. Well! It was a tad more than that! :)
Here are friends and family waiting for Madelyn to come out of school.
Here she is with her first grade teacher Ms Morrison seeing everyone for the first time.
Here we are at the Safeway parking lot, the staging area for the parade. That is Chief Bonnie Bowers holding Sophia and that is our radical chariot in the foreground. 1963 Ford Falcon convertible owned by Colleen Smiley.
Flower crown from Jean at Donatellos.
Check out these cool signs my good friend Shelly and graphic designer extraordinaire (aka Auntie Shelly) made for the parade.
YAY!!!! Seattle Children's!!!!!! Thanks Nicole and Shelly for making this happen!
Madelyn meeting the mayor Dean Maxwell.
Here Madelyn is seeing Miss Monique, Miss Virgina, Stacey and Nurse Emily from Mt Erie Elementary. She LOVED seeing everyone she new in the streets.
Mama having a hard time not crying...
Parade ended in front of our house!
LOVE this! Some of the police officers had their kids with them.
Here is Officer Leaf Jacobson with kiddos.
The two ladies of the hour... Madelyn and...
Chief Bowers ending the parade with a smile and a wave.
Yes, we had to sleep with all the balloons again. Definitely.
All my love to each an everyone of you...
Lisa