I will never forget the date. It was Thursday 1 October 2009, 16 days after welcoming my precious new baby into the world when I received a phone call that would change my life. Within hours, my husband and I were sitting with our baby in a hospital room being told my child had a chronic, life shortening illness – Cystic Fibrosis.
Cystic Fibrosis? I had never even heard of it, yet it was a genetic illness that we had unknowingly passed on to our little boy. How could this have happened? I was numb. The following day we were whisked up to Brisbane’s Royal Children’s Hospital and were welcomed into the world of hospitals, doctors, medications and worry. It was a worry I had never experienced before. A worry that has never left.
I often feel robbed of the blissful experience of having a newborn. While my friends were basking in the glow of their perfect little babies, the first year of my son’s life was incredibly hard, unnatural and utterly overwhelming.
I always thought I would be a relaxed, carefree mother but cystic fibrosis robbed me of that, just like it has robbed my family of a lot of things. The mental and emotional stresses this disease places on us is enormous and at times it seems unbearable.
Christian is now four and we have experienced many ups and downs with his health. Cystic Fibrosis affects many of the body’s systems, including lungs and digestion. To look at Christian he looks perfectly well. Actually, as many people have told us, there is just something special about Christian.