Read Kaylee's story from her mom, Sherry:
"Kaylee's entrance into this world marked the commencement of a miraculous journey- a journey of challenges and obstacles, a journey of beauty, grace, and hope. She made her entrance with a small deletion on her 1st chromosome, and so began our family's walk with 1p36 deletion syndrome. Despite a small deletion on her 1st chromosome, Kaylee provided our family with multitude of blessings, trials, and lessons. Her small body arrived with feeding difficulties, acid reflux, infantile spasms a catastrophic seizure disorder, hearing loss, umbilical hernia, blocked tear duct, farsightedness in both eyes, and hospital stays at Driscoll Children's hopsital in Corpus Christi. As always, Kaylee flaunted her feisty spirit and persisted on to complete a two month duration of ACTH therapy a very strong sterioid injections. We are blessed to say Kaylee's seizures finally were brought under control with ACTH therapy, a drug that gave Kaylee the upper hand on epilepsy. But to limit Kaylee's existence and achievements to the confines of a genetic condition would be the ultimate disservice to our little fighter girl and our God. Kaylee is a testament of God's faithfulness and timing. Kaylee is a beacon of light in a shadowy world of hardship. She is an illustration of perfection in her innocence and resiliency. She is a representation of all that is good. She is a daughter and a sister who has been the guide for her family and their faith on a walk into the unknown. She is an expert teacher on living each day and each moment in the present. Though her strides thus far have already been numerous, she undoubtedly has much more to share with this world.
During this past year, our family has witnessed the most incredible outpouring of love and support from our family, friends, and complete strangers. More kindness and compassion and unselfishness, then we could have ever, ever imagined. I have, along the way, also met the most magical children and families that I would have never had the opportunity and the privilege of meeting had it not been for this journey. I have watched with immense joy and hope, the children and families who are accomplishing many wonderful milestones, some small or big, but equally awesome accomplishments. I have also watched with equal pain and sorrow, the faces of families whose children would not make it. A year ago I would never, in my wildest dreams, have imagined having to watch parents and siblings and loved ones, say goodbye and journey forward in this life, without their precious children. That part of the journey I will never be able to reconcile.
Each 1p36 child is so unique and each one of them have their own time frame of when they will reach their next milestone. A certain few of these children appear from the outside, to be flying through life and it's milestones, but many harbor within them, medical issues and impending obstacles, waiting for an opportune time to show their faces. Others fight everyday, every moment, just to be here with families who would move mountains to keep them here with them. One thing they all have in common is that they are all brave mighty fighters. Our children indeed teach us so much about life and how to be grateful for the "little" things. I am forever grateful for my Kaylee, "my little miracle".
Article originally appeared on 1p36 Deletion Support & Awareness (http://www.1p36dsa.org/).
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