Pink and Smooth

Surprises are foolish things. The pleasure is not enhanced, and the inconvenience is often considerable. -Jane Austen

In early June of 2011, my daughter Sammi had the final endoscopy in a series of eight, each one marking a phase of her six-food-elimination diet for eosinophilic esophagitis. Each scope after the first one — the one that provided the diagnosis — was to test for the effect that a food had on the surface of her esophagus. A negative reaction would look like eczema in that muscular tube running from her throat to her stomach — patches of white, clustered cells, sometimes so thoroughly irritated that long, deep ridges would form, as though the disease itself had run a fingernail down the tissues there. That was the state of things when she had been diagnosed in June of 2010. Continue Reading…

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One Food at a Time

Five years oldThe words “elimination diet” implied, when I first heard them, the opposite of the process through which we put our five-year-old daughter. I thought an elimination meant taking things out of the diet, one by one, until Sammi felt better and her esophagus ceased to have eosinophils coating its walls. In reality, the process worked in reverse. This was what her fifth year looked like: Continue Reading…

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Mother Blessing

tostados

More than ten years ago, I attended a mother-blessing, also known sometimes as a blessingway, for one of my closest friends. Andrea was due shortly thereafter with her second child, a daughter. Surrounded by a small group of powerful, loving women, Andrea and her still-gestating daughter were touched by healing hands and given tokens of energy and affection in the form of beads to make a bracelet Andrea could use as a focus in labor.

Mid-way through the evening, we gathered in the kitchen of the host, Andrea’s friend, for food and drink. She bustled around in front of the stove and returned with a steaming ceramic bowl of refried black beans, smelling strongly of garlic, and a platter of corn tostados. We all slathered the crunchy, oversized tortilla chips with the savory beans, and I knew that, perhaps in small part due to the circumstances heavy with love and support, I’d fallen in love with a food. Continue Reading…

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Endless Meals

Sit down and finish your dinner.

Are you done or are you just distracted?

All the rest of us are done. Could you please eat your dinner?

Just FINISH. If you want that food, then EAT IT.

For CRYING OUT LOUD, Sammi, FINISH YOUR DINNER!

I can’t sit here with you anymore. Eat what you want and then bring your dish in.

My husband and I had decided early in our children’s lives that we would eat together as a family whenever possible. We had both grown up that way, largely, and especially given the research that showed how valuable a family meal is to raising connected families, we’ve maintained this policy even as our children have gotten older and busier. Seated at the end of the dining room table closest to the kitchen, the four of us have always used the time together in the traditional manner — catching up on our days, joking around, planning family events together.

But when we were done, there was Sammi. Still sitting there. Still eating.

Unlike other families I knew who struggled with a picky child at mealtime, Sammi’s issues were seldom that she was refusing to eat what was on the plate in front of her. In fact, if we suggested that she might be finished, she would often tell us that she was still eating. Then she would take a bite, chew it slowly, and begin a conversation. Five or six minutes later, we’d realize that she was not using the time when someone else was talking to take another bite — instead, she was watching, nodding, interacting, but not eating any more.

Pick up your fork and put some food on it, we’d say, rolling our eyes. You know how to eat. Just eat your dinner!

Thirty minutes would pass, and the other three people at the table would be long done with their meals. We’d linger, chatting. Maybe one of us would get up to switch a load of laundry, rifle through the mail, answer the phone. Those left at the table with Sammi would keep chatting, fussing with our dishes, maybe having another helping of something, just to pass the time.

An hour after sitting down, Sammi would still be spearing pieces of food, now long-cold. By now, her sister Ronni would be off and playing, or reading a book in a chair nearby. Either David or I would have lost the ability to sit at that table a moment more, and would be in the kitchen doing dishes or hanging out with Ronni. The parent left at the table might start reading to Sammi or to him or herself in an effort to stave off the frustration and boredom of still being at the dinner table.

After ninety minutes, it would be nearly bedtime. If Sammi was still sitting at the table with her food, we often began a countdown to the end of the meal.

In ten minutes you need to get ready for bed. Eat whatever you can finish by then.

Bedtime is coming in five minutes. Finish.

It’s almost time to go upstairs!

Dinner time edged right up to bedtime for years and years. There were never, ever any family board game nights. We seldom had dinners in front of a movie, lest the adults lose our focus or vigilance over the state of Sammi’s plate. A summer walk at sunset? Never — we were still at the dinner table.

It helped to know that Sammi’s slow eating was likely a symptom of eosinophilic esophagitis, or reflux, or both. It helped, but not enough. I kept feeling that nagging, nagging sensation in my own belly — something else was wrong. This was nearly her only symptom. Why did the problem of slowness persist even with drinking? She drank like a toddler even at age 8, puffing her cheeks out to fill them with water and letting it down a tiny bit at a time. It seemed wrong. It seemed strange. I sat there, night after night, staring at Sammi eating in slow motion, musing and, despite myself, fuming.

We watched her, the sound of doctors labeling her “failure to thrive” whispering through our heads as she delicately balanced four peas on her spoon. Feed her more calories, they told us. She needs more nutrition, they insisted.

Let THEM try, I thought, over and over, waiting for the end of another interminable meal.

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What Will It Be?

hourglassThe methodology of the six-food-elimination-diet to treat eosinophilic esophagitis is this: the top six most common food proteins are eliminated from the diet for six to eight weeks. That means no dairy, egg, soy, nut, wheat, or fish products could cross my five-year-old daughter’s lips during that time. After that point, she had an endoscopy to see if, after removing all those foods — even foods prepared on the same equipment with those foods — her esophagus would no longer be coated with eosinophils, the nasty white blood cells that had congregated there, ostensibly to fight against whichever protein or proteins they saw as poisonous to her body.

That was step one: all six foods. The endoscopy showed no visual sign of any eosinophils, and multiple biopsies gave us the same result. The verdict? Ah-ha! The culprit must be one of those foods! Or two. Or all of them. But this diet — it worked!

Step two was adding a food to her diet and repeating the six-to-eight week elimination of all the other foods, and then following it with another endoscopy. The methodology was simple: add a food, let her eat it for a while, check the esophagus. If the esophagus is clear, that food is not the culprit. Then you add another food and try again.

This process took nearly a year.

During all that time, Sammi’s reflux-like sounds came and went, tricking us into imagining that we’d found the culprit, over and over. When she started eating eggs — the first food she chose to add back —  she started making that sound again, that urpy, gurgly sound, and telling us “the food is coming up again.” Ah-ha! we thought. It’s eggs!

But then, the day of her third endoscopy (the first was diagnostic, the second was after the full six-food-elimination), the doctor came out of the operating room and showed us a picture of Sammi’s smooth, pink esophagus. “It looks great,” he said. And the biopsy confirmed it several days later.

This meant we hadn’t found the culprit, and we were mostly glad — eggs were a favorite protein in our vegetarian home, and we didn’t want to lose them forever. On the other hand, it meant at least six more weeks of not knowing the shape our lives would take.

Would the culprit be soy? That would be hard but not impossible. We’d lose tofu and soy milk (our “milk” of choice in normal circumstances), and eating out might be hard, but that was doable.

Would the culprit be nuts? That would be our first choice — always well-labeled due to all the people with nut allergies, they’d be easy to avoid. More importantly, Sammi didn’t like nuts at all — something we mused might be a sign.

Would the culprit be wheat? This was the worst possible option for us — mostly for me. A passionate baker and utter cookie-freak, I would deeply mourn the permanent loss of our weekly challah at Shabbat dinner.

Would it be dairy? That would be easy too, I mused. Severely lactose intolerant myself, I already knew where to find dairy free cheese, yogurt, ice cream, baked goods. Vegan restaurants are fairly easy to find in our area. Even Starbucks has dairy-free milk.

We waited, six to eight weeks at a time, to find out how we’d live our lives. We waited, followed the regimen, experimented in the kitchen, and had no choice but to let the sand pass through the hourglass and reveal the future.

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