Lights, Camera, Action!
24/08/2016
I have often wondered what it would be like to be famous, to be photographed and interviewed. That’s probably my over active imagination at work again, but I suspect I’m not alone in being curious. Is it exciting, nerve wracking or just plain boring? Is it easy to trip over words, say the wrong thing or have your mind just go completely blank.
Well last month Hugo and I had a little glimpse into this world. Not so much the fame and fortune side, but the photos and interview.
The lovely people at Leukaemia Care charity asked if we would help out with their Childhood Cancer Awareness Month campaign and I was more than happy to say yes. I wrote an article for their Journey magazine and they sent a photographer to our house to get some snaps to accompany it. They also asked if we would be willing to feature in an awareness video they were making. I was a little more hesitant on this one, but the desire to help raise awareness was stronger than any nerves about appearing in front of the camera.
I can confirm that it is indeed nerve wracking and easy to trip over your words. I can also confirm that the moment filming stops your head is immediately full of things you should have said, words that suddenly seem incredibly important.
Unsurprisingly of the hundreds of photos the photographer took, only approximately 4 had all my family looking in the right direction and smiling simultaneously. It was however fun and for a great cause.
I don’t think they’ll use this one |
…or this one! |
Leukaemia Care’s theme for Blood Cancer Awareness Month and Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, both of which are in September, is ‘Upside Down’. They want to show how a diagnosis of leukaemia can turn your life upside down and affect the whole family. I hope we have helped them achieve this.
You can watch the final two videos here
And read my article below.
Hugo’s story – written for Leukaemia Care
14 months ago we were a normal family, living an ordinary life. Then in July last year, our 2 year old son, Hugo, was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. An unwelcome, uninvited guest that burst in with no warning and turned our ordinary life completely upside down.
When something this serious happens it feels like the world should stop, that life outside the door shouldn’t be carrying on, just as it did before. How can it when ours changed so drastically? But it does, life goes on. There was a temptation to wrap Hugo in cottonwool, to shut ourselves away in an attempt to protect him, but that wouldn’t be fair. He needed some kind of normality, we all did.
Each phase of treatment has been different and we have adjusted to the twists and turns as we go, trying to hold onto some semblance of normal family life. Earlier this year, Hugo started the fifth and final phase of treatment, one that will last until September 2018, and with it came the hope of a more normal, predictable life.
Every month is now the same. Hugo’s hospital appointments and nurse visits have become part of everyday life, sitting on the family calendar alongside parent’s evenings and birthday parties.
In many ways we resemble the normal family we were before this all began. Hugo no longer looks ill. His hair has grown back and he has put weight on. He has gone back to nursery and I have returned to work. We have even, bravely, booked a family holiday. All very normal.
Except it’s not, not really. It’s a strange life, a kind of limbo, in-between life, wavering between serious illness and normality, ready to switch in an instant. The shock we felt at diagnosis may have dimmed, but it is still very much there, along with the constant fear and worry of what might be. There is no break from it and it can be exhausting.
It’s a life with boxes of medication and a sharps’ bin, in addition to the usual toys and books. Where an overnight bag is always packed, in case a dash to hospital is needed. There is daily medication and their side effects for Hugo to endure. We have learnt to be vigilant, to not take any chances when it comes to Hugo’s health. To expect the unexpected.
A life in which big brother Henry has come to realise that on many occasions he is the ‘other child’ as the focus so often falls on Hugo. Where there are tough conversations about cancer, chemotherapy and the reality that children can die too. Conversations that no 7 year old should need to have.
This new normal brings with it dark and scary days, when the enormity of what we are dealing with seems too much. When I feel overcome with anger at the unfairness of it all. How dare this illness come into our lives with such ease and cause so much sadness. How dare it mess with my child, with my family. There is frustration at the restrictions it has placed on our lives. Leukaemia fills my head leaving little room for anything else and trying to be normal is a huge effort, often just beyond my reach.
It can be a sad and lonely life, as people struggle to fully understand what we are going through, despite their best efforts to try. A life filled with guilt, that even though I know there is nothing I could have done, I have in someway failed to protect my children.
But despite all this, there are bright spots too in this strange new existence of ours.
It has shown us all we have to be grateful for. That we can find joy in the little things we previously took for granted. The time we spend together, creating happy memories, is all the more cherished. This life is filled, not just with sad tears, but with happy ones too. Watching the boys play together, seeing Hugo laughing and behaving just like any other healthy 3 year old, a moment of total normality that makes my heart soar.
This life is full of love, support and generosity as our friends and family reach out to us. It has been heartwarming to see how much goodness there is in the world at a time when it seems to be dealing you the worst it has to offer.
Our new normal has taught as that we are stronger than we thought, that as long as we are together, then nothing else really matters.
Then there is Hugo who has been simply amazing. Who has shown a strength and courage far beyond his years. Who manages to keep a smile on his face and still see the wonder in everything. It hasn’t dimmed his spark, not at all. My heart breaks for all he is going through, but at the same time, I couldn’t be prouder. He is our strength.
So, we keep going. Taking it one day at a time, adjusting as we go, trying to make sure the good days outweigh the bad. We do our best not to let this unwelcome guest take anymore from us than it already has. We pull together as a family and try to find a way of living this strange new normal life.
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One Comment
Big Trouble in Little Nappies
Oh Lisa, this article has me in tears. Just beautiful and so, so well illustrated of your life and the reality for all of you. So very brave and eloquent, you are so talented (amongst everything else!). The video is just brilliant – you are all so natural with the camera! What a lovely, brave family you are. Hugo will be so proud looking back when all of this is a small memory to him. Much love xxx