Ava had surgery on Wednesday, March 27, 2013 and just over a week later she was admitted for her first full treatment of chemotherapy. None
of us understood what a cancer patient had to go through to get well again.
Ava spent most of 2013 either inpatient or at the clinic. We watched our daughter lose her hair twice. She was in a wheelchair for such a
long time. She had countless surgeries, and she has to be home schooled.
As of this summer, Ava is still fighting cancer. She was just hospitalized with a fever at the end of July. Almost every time she's been
in the hospital she has to be on isolation. No one can come in her room without gowning up. Ava loves her friends, but cancer is very
isolating. Cancer has taken part of my daughter's childhood away. She will never get these years back!
Ava still has a year left in her treatment, and it is heart breaking watching your child go through such a horrible disease! Since Ava's
diagnosis I've done a lot of research. It's really sad to me what I've learned:
Childhood cancer only receives 4% of federal cancer research funds? That's just wrong!
There have only been two new drugs developed in the last 20 years to treat childhood cancer, because it's not profitable enough? There
needs to be a change.
I watch my daughter and other kids with cancer and I just can't accept that some of them might not make it. It's not fair, and
it's not right. Kids deserve more funding.
Have You Considered
Leaving A Legacy?
Have you considered leaving a Legacy to your lodge, St. John's Lodge No 2? If you have, please make sure that St. John's Lodge No 2
is included in your Wills and Trusts so that your legacy can continue to help promote Freemasonry in the State of Delaware
long after you have left your brethren behind. Freemasonry in Delaware has just celebrated its 200th anniversary. With your
help, maybe it can celebrate its 300th one day.