On April 23, 2003, Colin was born with cystic fibrosis. After undergoing surgery for a ruptured bowel at two days old and spending a month in the hospital, we attended our first CFF walk only two weeks later. We've never stopped fundraising since then. This (occasionally posted to) blog highlights some of the things we do to raise money and some of the news on the progress of cf research.
2010 Naperville Great Strides
We would like to invite you to come out to our annual walk for Cystic Fibrosis in honor of our son Colin. This year we are participating in our eighth walk to help find a cure for CF. Many things have changed since last year. First of all the date for our walk is in May this year. The walk will take place on Saturday, May 22, 2010 at the Naperville Riverwalk with an evening party option at our home as well.
The other big change this year is that we exhausted all of our attempts and options to help Colin to gain and maintain a healthy weight. After three long years of apprehension, we decided to take our doctor’s recommendation. Colin had a surgery this past November to insert a permanent feeding tube in his stomach. He now receives nightly feedings that amount to over 700 additional calories. The most exciting news for us is that this surgery and his recovery went very well and Colin has gained over 5lbs since November! The feeding tube adds quite a bit of work and time to Colin’s already busy routine of AM and PM treatments, medicines and therapies. However, we know we made the right decision and we are grateful that this technology and treatment is available to help our son.
The technology and treatments are what brings us to writing this very important letter and pleading for your continued help and support. Many important advancements and great strides in research have been made this past year because of your generous donations. However, there still is no cure for cystic fibrosis and we still need your help.
As always, we would love to see you out at the Naperville walk site. It is a really fun family day. If you cannot make it there come out to our house any time on the 22nd of May after 5pm. Most importantly, please donate whatever you can to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation under Colin’s Clan to help find a cure.
Colin has really grown up a lot. He cannot wait for his soccer season to start and is having a great year in first grade. He loves school and has become quite the reader and writer! He also is really starting to become aware of all the amazing people who continue to work towards finding a cure for cf!!
Thank you in advance and we can’t wait to celebrate the advancements in CF research made possible by all of you.
Please donate and help us find an end to this disease. Thank you so very much.
1. Online Donations: http://www.cff.org/Great_Strides/ChristopherWalsh5948 (Press Click to Donate at the bottom)
2. Join our team (5/22 at Riverwalk Grand Pavilion) and donate at the walk: http://www.cff.org/Great_Strides /ChristopherWalsh5948 (Press Join My Team at the bottom)
3. Come to our party and donate there.
A whole bunch of stuff I missed
As usual, I am behind in posting. I missed a whole lot of things between the Tri (post just below this one) and today. A few of the major points:
In late fall, Trisha held her second annual Naperville Uncork A Cure. Fantastic evening and we raised $50k for CFF that night. Gene Honda, announcer for the Sox, was our emcee and he did a fantastic job. Great guy. Along with Rosie Woods, I gave my first real bid for a cure speech. I am a huge fan of the bid speeches, just not from me. It was emotional, but it worked out for the best. I'll put a separate post out on this with pictures when I get a chance.
In late November, we finally were backed into a corner and Colin went in for surgery to get a G-Tube. We fought it for three years, looking for alternatives and maybe sometimes denying that he really needed it. The surgery was a little rough on him, as was the first day of recovery, but since then, he has gained his first pounds in over two years. He gained five in the first 45 days. This deserves its own post...again, I will get to it later, with pictures.
Working on the Sixth Annual Casino Chicago (http://www.cfholdem.com). Check out the site, this is a fantastic night.
For good and bad, we have met a lot of new cf families in the last few months. We've probably scared one or two by talking to them, but we try to give is as straight as possible.
I'll try to spend some time with real posts for the items above. They all deserve a little space (even if no one reads this thing).
In late fall, Trisha held her second annual Naperville Uncork A Cure. Fantastic evening and we raised $50k for CFF that night. Gene Honda, announcer for the Sox, was our emcee and he did a fantastic job. Great guy. Along with Rosie Woods, I gave my first real bid for a cure speech. I am a huge fan of the bid speeches, just not from me. It was emotional, but it worked out for the best. I'll put a separate post out on this with pictures when I get a chance.
In late November, we finally were backed into a corner and Colin went in for surgery to get a G-Tube. We fought it for three years, looking for alternatives and maybe sometimes denying that he really needed it. The surgery was a little rough on him, as was the first day of recovery, but since then, he has gained his first pounds in over two years. He gained five in the first 45 days. This deserves its own post...again, I will get to it later, with pictures.
Working on the Sixth Annual Casino Chicago (http://www.cfholdem.com). Check out the site, this is a fantastic night.
For good and bad, we have met a lot of new cf families in the last few months. We've probably scared one or two by talking to them, but we try to give is as straight as possible.
I'll try to spend some time with real posts for the items above. They all deserve a little space (even if no one reads this thing).
Tags:
2009,
2010,
Events,
uncorkacure,
wine
Team CF at the Chicago Triathlon and meeting with Steve
At the finish line, we bumped into Steve Ferkau. I doubt it was a total accident, Steve probably saw the CFF banners or knew someone competing. Steve is an amazing guy. Probably one of the most uplifting people we know, in fact. Steve has cf and about nine years ago, received new lungs. He was at 10% capacity at the time, wheelchair bound, and the outlook wasn't good. He had been passed over or the opportunity fell through a number of times for other lung transplants for him. Then, he received his gift. Unlike some transplants, this wasn't just an insert of a new organ and Steve went on his merry way. Steve received his lungs from a teen in Iowa who was killed in an accident. Steve made the connection with the family and to this day he carries around pictures and articles of the girl that saved his life. Within a couple months of the new lungs, Steve was climbing stairs at work that seemed an Everest to him in the past. Not only that, but he started doing the stair climbs in Chicago: Aon, Hancock, etc. He leads Kari's Klimbers in those stair climbs and raises a lot of money for organ transplant organizations. He tells this story way better than I do, so I encourage you to check it out here. And I highly recommend that you stop and talk to him the next stair climb you see him at. You'll never talk to a happier, more upbeat person.
Tags:
Chicago Triathlon,
Steve Ferkau,
Team CF
Racing to a Cure
The backstory: Beasley Allen is a national law firm. They have someone on staff with cf and to show their support, they give CFF a spot on their car for publicity. At the towns they visit for races, they try to put together a meet and greet with a local cf family. We happened to be that family in Chicago and we couldn't have been more thrilled.
We met the kids as they were getting out of school at 2:30 and headed as fast as we could to Joliet to meet up with Grant Enfinger, who drives car 83. He's also the mechanic, the rig driver, the janitor, you name it. He was an exceptionally nice guy and showed Colin around the car and even let him sit in it.
The PR woman mentioned that we could visit the winner's circle if Grant won the race that night. We figured it was a long shot, more of a tease than anything, but we hung out for the race.
Grant started the race in a position in the high teens, maybe even low twenties. On the final lap, he was in second place, a hair behind the leader. He crossed the finish line just a 1/2 length behind the winner. never have we been so involved in a race, jumping up and down and cheering him on the entire way. It was pretty exciting.
I was thinking about the race and realized that it's a lot like cf and fundraising to find a cure. Both are a long race. They take a lot of money, determination, drive, and it takes the best to even stay in the race, much less win it. In the end, Grant hasn't yet won, just like we haven't won, but he was so close. It was in sight, he could taste it, he could see the checked flag, but he hasn't yet won. Just like us. His day will come, and so will ours.
It reminded me of a story that was told to us at the very first event we attended for cf about seven years ago. We were the guests of the chair family, even though they had never met us. They wanted us to see a big event because someone saw potential in us way back then (or they saw suckers about to dive in head first into a whole lot of work - poh-ta-toe/pa-ta-tow). Anyway, the chair, a really down to earth, realistic guy sat us down and told us his view of this damn disease. It also had a car theme.
Cf is a car racing down the road. This is no Yugo or Bug. It's a big, old eight cylinder 4 ton caddy. Our kids are playing in the road. We'd do anything for our kids to push them out of the way of that barreling car, but there just is no way to put yourself in that position. There's no pushing them out of the way, there's no taking their place. So instead, we fundraise. We grab the bumper of that car (we fundraise) and we tell all of our friends to help us grab that car bumper. We dig our heels in and we don't let go. We're doing everything we can to slow that car down and give the scientists time to find a cure.
Whether it's a race that we almost just won or whether we're grabbing the bumper to slow the car down, we're super close. It's coming. It's going to happen in Colin's lifetime and it's going to happen soon enough that he'll be able to live to an age where he can almost forget it ever happened. Maybe he'll be racing cars....who knows, he has a long full life to decide.
Tags:
Beasley-Allen,
car,
Grant Enfinger,
race,
racing
Uncork A Cure
Please join us on November 7, 2009 at Maggiano's in Naperville for our second annual Uncork-A-Cure benefiting the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. More info coming soon.
09/06/09 Update: We now have tickets for sale online. There's an early bird discount, so please go out today and buy your tickets at UncorkACure.com
09/06/09 Update: We now have tickets for sale online. There's an early bird discount, so please go out today and buy your tickets at UncorkACure.com
Long overdue
Dear Family and Friends of Colin,
We wanted to take a moment to thank you from the bottom of our hearts for your continued support of Colin’s Clan and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. This year the walk on June 13th raised over $17,000 in Colin’s name for research to find a cure. It started out a little rainy, but we had a super turnout at the walk site and then a very fun gathering at our house that evening. Thank you all for coming out and supporting us in person and online. We are absolutely touched that you have made our cause one of your own, many of you even reaching out to your friends and family. We really do appreciate it and we continue to be in awe of all the generous people we know.
Your donations really are making a difference, allowing the researchers at the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to achieve so much. This year the drug VX 770 advanced to FDA phase three trials, meaning people living with cf tried the drug and saw a drastic improvement in the symptoms of cf after only two weeks of taking it. We are THISCLOSE to a cure, but there still is work to be done and we will continue working hard until we get there.
We would also like to take this opportunity to thank all the fantastic people who attended our first annual wine event this past November at Tango. It was a HUGE success, and the net profit of the night was over $36,000! We all had a great time and we are looking forward to kicking off to the holiday season this year when we bring the event back at Maggiano’s on Diehl in Naperville on Saturday, November 7, 2009. We love being with all of you at our events and having you with us on the journey to find a cure.
Colin is doing well and has just started a full day of school in first grade. He loves his teacher and is really digging all the time on the playground. He is about to start another year of soccer and is thinking about taking up swimming with his big sister. We are working through all of the kinks to get Colin through the full day of school with all of the medicines and treatments he does before, during and after school and trying to keep a handle on the most important part of his day, EATING. We are praying for a healthy fall, winter and spring season.
We want you all to know that you really are the best family and friends that anyone could ever ask for. We are forever honored and grateful for the amazing generosity you continuously show in our son’s name. Despite this uncertain economy, you came out in great numbers over the past year to support the many events we hold to raise money and awareness to help find a CURE for Cystic fibrosis.
Thank you and please keep the Save the Date postcard handy if you are a wine enthusiast or just like to come to a fun night out. We are deep in the planning stages for this event and if you can help in any way we truly appreciate it.
Thanks again,
Trisha, Chris, Colin, Allison and Megan Walsh
We wanted to take a moment to thank you from the bottom of our hearts for your continued support of Colin’s Clan and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. This year the walk on June 13th raised over $17,000 in Colin’s name for research to find a cure. It started out a little rainy, but we had a super turnout at the walk site and then a very fun gathering at our house that evening. Thank you all for coming out and supporting us in person and online. We are absolutely touched that you have made our cause one of your own, many of you even reaching out to your friends and family. We really do appreciate it and we continue to be in awe of all the generous people we know.
Your donations really are making a difference, allowing the researchers at the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to achieve so much. This year the drug VX 770 advanced to FDA phase three trials, meaning people living with cf tried the drug and saw a drastic improvement in the symptoms of cf after only two weeks of taking it. We are THISCLOSE to a cure, but there still is work to be done and we will continue working hard until we get there.
We would also like to take this opportunity to thank all the fantastic people who attended our first annual wine event this past November at Tango. It was a HUGE success, and the net profit of the night was over $36,000! We all had a great time and we are looking forward to kicking off to the holiday season this year when we bring the event back at Maggiano’s on Diehl in Naperville on Saturday, November 7, 2009. We love being with all of you at our events and having you with us on the journey to find a cure.
Colin is doing well and has just started a full day of school in first grade. He loves his teacher and is really digging all the time on the playground. He is about to start another year of soccer and is thinking about taking up swimming with his big sister. We are working through all of the kinks to get Colin through the full day of school with all of the medicines and treatments he does before, during and after school and trying to keep a handle on the most important part of his day, EATING. We are praying for a healthy fall, winter and spring season.
We want you all to know that you really are the best family and friends that anyone could ever ask for. We are forever honored and grateful for the amazing generosity you continuously show in our son’s name. Despite this uncertain economy, you came out in great numbers over the past year to support the many events we hold to raise money and awareness to help find a CURE for Cystic fibrosis.
Thank you and please keep the Save the Date postcard handy if you are a wine enthusiast or just like to come to a fun night out. We are deep in the planning stages for this event and if you can help in any way we truly appreciate it.
Thanks again,
Trisha, Chris, Colin, Allison and Megan Walsh
New home
You are looking at the new home of Cure CF Now. It's Sunday morning and I am monkeying around at the kitchen table while the kids get going. Anyway, I am not done moving over from the old hosted spot. Hopefully this coming week I will move over completely.
Why the move? A couple of reasons: 1. Blogger/Blogspot is a Google property. I recently began working at Google and decided I'd be using Google products. 2. Blogger allows some context specific ads in the right side of this blog. I get income from those ads, which I plan to donate back to cf research. Not a bad circle if you ask me: Google employs me and even allows me time to do this, I use their products which in turn pay me back, I donate that money to research and in the process can get matching from my employer. Win-win-win.
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