Five years ago around this time, I was told my 8 year 
old daughter would not survive the status seizure she had on Jan. 13th. 
 It wasn’t her first status seizure.  She had many in her 8 years.  Each
 time we held our breath and prayed that she’d wake up and we’d go home.
 So many times she did just that.  Not this time however.  This time her
 kidneys would stop working, then her liver, and then her lungs.  This 
time she would not wake up.  Her daddy and I would have to make the 
decision to take her off life support.  I never dreamed in a million 
years we’d have to do something like that.  No parent does.  I can tell 
you that it is the single most horrific experience of a lifetime.  It 
feels both cruel and kind at the same time.  My baby girl was going to 
die and I’d never play with her, sing to her, take her to school, fix 
her chicken, or kiss her beautiful forehead ever again.  Not in this 
life.  
I wasn’t prepared for the massive hole in my world that 
her death would bring.  Its five years into this thing and that hole is 
just as big as it always was.  I’ve tried hard to find ways to honor her
 life any way I can.  Even through the work I do on a daily basis at my 
job.  Still the hole remains and I’ve decided it will always exist.  
It’s another reminder that I loved that girl so much.  I sure did and do
 love my Hannah.
I was told that we’d find a new normal.  I resisted it 
for a while, but it is true.  You do eventually settle into a new way of
 life.  You do holidays differently, you build cemetery visits into your
 calendar, and you create new relationships.  That’s something else, as a
 special needs parent you are so consumed with your child, and you build
 these friendships through forums, and websites, and face to face 
groups, and then your child is gone.  The need for those daily 
interactions with people that had been your lifeline is gone or it 
changes; becomes awkward.  You are living their worst nightmare.  
Everything changes while you long for what was.  You wouldn’t in a 
minute trade the worst days with your child all added together over 
this.  You’d choose every hard moment all over again if given the 
choice, but you’re not given the choice.  You’re only choice is to 
figure out how to do life without your beautiful child.
Epilepsy is evil.  When Hannah had her first seizure the 
neurologist that saw her told me, “you can’t die from a seizure.”  I 
remember so many times using his comments to relieve my anxiety.  On my 
bad days I want to take him straight to my daughter’s grave and have him
 look me in the eye and say that now.  I’ve written him a letter asking 
him to never tell a parent that again, that doing so actually puts their
 child in danger, and that he is not helping. He never responded.  Not 
surprised.  Not enough research is being done.  More now than in the 
past though, and my prayer is that it continues.  I can tell you that 
living in the epilepsy world is not a fun thing.  Fighting for 
medications, fighting for treatments, fighting with people to understand
 how serious it is because they’ve been misinformed for years, and 
watching people die and it be treated as one of the minimal risks of 
life with epilepsy.  It’s infuriating, and needs to change.
I said all that to say this, I’ve survived the death of 
my daughter, I’ve created a new normal, and I have a good life.  I have a
 wonderful marriage to my husband of almost 25 years, I have two great 
boys, fantastic friends, a great church, and a house I love.  I am a 
business owner, and an advocate for families who live with epilepsy, and
 I mentor and am on the board of an organization that helps those who 
have suffered sexual violence.  We help them get their lives back.  I 
have a good life.  If you had told me this is what my life looked last 
post Hannah, I’d have said you were crazy.  Hannah was my life.  I felt 
like she was my purpose.  When she was gone, I felt totally lost, like 
my purpose for living was lost.  But I am here, and I’m happy.  I miss 
her like crazy, but I’ve made it.  
I’ve made it because people who didn’t even know Hannah 
came beside me and loved me.  They supported and knew I’d need to find a
 new normal.  They helped me.  I’ve made it because my old friends who 
knew Hannah send me messages and remind me of how much she meant to them
 and the things she did that impacted their lives.  I’ve made it because
 I have a faith that gives me hope that although I will not see Hannah 
in this life, I will see my girl again.  I’ve made it because I decided 
the best thing I can do for Hannah now is to honor her life and live 
life the way she did; facing whatever came her way with a smile on her 
face and love in her heart.  I’ve made it because that same stubborn 
determination I so admired in my girl, was a gene passed to her from 
me.  I’ve made it because I had to.  The alternative was not an option. 
 I’ve made it.
To my sweet sweet Hannah…It’s been 5 years and we’re 
still surviving your loss beautiful girl.  I would have never thought we
 could.  You taught me how.  Thank you!  It’s because of all that you 
showed me and taught me through your life that I can be happy in your 
absence.  I still feel guilty sometimes for being happy, but then I 
think about you and know that I’m happy because I had you.
Thursday, January 29, 2015
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