Friday, January 3, 2020

366 Books Day 3 - Now

Now by Antoinette Portis

Day 3/366

To live in the now. This book views life from a child's perspective. Giving child-like observations to the now of life. Enjoying each moment as it comes, for what it is. And making it the best. A gentle reminder about being present, living in the now, being grateful for the moment.

"This is my favorite tree. . .because it's the one where I'm swinging."

YouTube reading of Now

Grades : PreK - 1
Ages 3-6

This book can be found on our Wish List: 336 Days of Books Wish List

Please ship all books to :
Forever Got Your Six : Sammy
1300 S Watson Rd A114 PMB338
Buckeye, AZ 85326

Paypal link : Paypal.me/pumafamily - please notate Book Drive

Thursday, January 2, 2020

366 Books Day 2 - Life Doesn't Frighten Me


Life Doesn't Frighten Me by Maya Angelou, Illustrated by Jean-Michel Basquiat

Day 2/366

Why should we fear the unknown of life? This book takes a look at the things that may scare us. Uncertain situations. But also reminds us of the power in faith in ourselves. The powerful words of this poem, paired with the childlike art of Basquiat makes for a book full of courage and imagination.
"Life Doesn't Frighten Me is a poem for all the children who find courage to continue with their live, although they are scared to death."

"I go boo
Make them shoo
I make fun
Way they run
I won't cry
So they fly
I just smile
They go wild

Life doesn't frighten me at all."

YouTube reading of Life Doesn't Frighten Me

Grades : PreK - 3
Ages 3+
Guided Reading Level : NP

This book can be found on our Wish List: 366 Days of Books Wish List

Please ship all books to :
Forever Got Your Six : Sammy
1300 S Watson Rd A114 PMB338
Buckeye, AZ 85326

Paypal link : Paypal.me/pumafamily - just notate Book Drive

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

366 Books Day 1 - I Wish You More



I Wish You More by Amy Krouse Rosenthal
Te deseo mas by Amy Krouse Rosenthal
Day 1/366

I wish you more, as you enter this new year. I believe we all have hopes and dreams for the ones we love. We wish them world if it were possible. This book is whimsical and takes the reader into an adventure of wishes.
"I wish you more give than take."
Will you join me in giving more this year?

YouTube reading of I Wish You More
Grades : PreK - 1
Ages 3-6.
Guided Reading Level : I
English Translation can also be found on our Wish List: 366 Days of Books Wish List
Please ship all books to :
Forever Got Your Six : Sammy
1300 S Watson Rd A114 PMB338
Buckeye, AZ 85326

Paypal link : Paypal.me/pumafamily - just notate Book Drive

A Note to Share


Well a dear friend of mine, Kathy Ellen Davis, created a note for us to give you. A note to use if you are using your donation as a gift for someone else. A way to share about the Go Gold Book Drive and why your gift is important. Kathy Ellen Davis blew me away when she messaged me her idea and the beginning process of this little card. It is absolutely perfect. I am so grateful for what she has created. The perfect note to give.
She has created 2 version of the card. One for someone who made multiple book donation as a gift, and one for a single book.
All you need to do is print it out. Cut along the dotted lines, and fold. Fill out spot on cover with your name & a personal note on back. And give to someone you love as a gift. Her design also leaves a strip as a book mark! Hope you enjoy this card, as much as us. The perfect little gift to give.
Below is the links to access the cards.Single Book Donation card: https://bit.ly/38uXsT3Multiple Book Donation card: https://bit.ly/2t4MXFD

You can follow Kathy Ellen on Instagram @greatmailday.Also check out her book, Ta-Da! 

2020 Go Gold Book Drive


Welcome to 2020. The year of perfect vision. If only that were true on all fronts. But I want to share my vision for 2020 with you. And hope you will join our family in our 2020 Go Gold Book Drive.

Every day of 2020, I will be sharing 1 book. And will be adding it to our 2020 Vision Book Wish List, with the request for 6 copies. I will add both the English and Spanish translations of the book, if possible. 366 different children’s books to be collected for children fighting cancer in Arizona. Each book a new adventure just waiting to be opened and explored. I am excited to share so many books with you this year. And hope you will follow along.

On some very special days of 2020. I will share books recommended by special children/families. This year I envision supporting other families. I want to share about families and children who are overcoming the hardest medical diagnoses. Children who are now thriving despite all they have endured. I want to share the memory of children who fought valiantly, but no longer by our sides. I want to share their lives with you, through the love of books.

I look forward to taking you on this book journey in 2020. And excited to share about other book drives we will be hosting this year too! Follow along with our adventure in books on both Facebook and Instagram.

Facebook Group : Go Gold Book Drive Instagram : gogoldbookdrive Amazon Wish List : 366 Days of Books Amazon Wish List : Go Gold Book Drive for Sammy We accept any NEW books for donation. They can be shipped to our mail box. Forever Got Your Six : Sammy 1300 S Watson Rd A114 PMB338 Buckeye, AZ 85326 If you would prefer, here is our link to our PayPal. Please just notate Book Drive, so the fund get used for books. PayPal Link
Day 1 - I Wish You More Day 2 - Life Does't Frighten Me Day 3 - Now
Day 4 - The Heart and the Bottle Day 5 - One Day 6 - The Black Book of Colors Day 7 - Press Here Day 8 - Hello Lighthouse Day 9 - A Stone Sat Still Day 10 - Jabari Jumps Day 11 - I Am Enough Day 12 - The Book with No Pictures Day 13 - Never Let A Unicorn Scribble Day 14 - Strictly No Elephants Day 15 - The Big Umbrella Day 16 - The Invisible String - For Sammy Day 17 - Last Stop on Market Street Day 18 - The Invisible Boy Day 19 - The Name Jar

Grief with the New Year


The idea of another year without Sammy in it feels daunting. But time is a constant. It does not slow down. There is no pause button. It just keeps going. While I feel frozen in time. Trying to hold onto the past. A past that holds my son. While trying to live in the here and now, and look forward to the future. I feel pulled in two. Every minute forward, is a minute further from the moments with my son. The moment I held him. The moment I last heard his voice. The moment I felt his warm breath. Or felt a kiss from his lips. Every moment forward divides us farther. And it is terrifying.
The idea that my son only lives in memories. In photos. In videos. In the stories we tell. Is unspeakable. And every year forward, is one more year his brother grows, but he does not. And soon the little brother will out age the big brother. How does that work? And in that time we will tick towards a moment when our son has been gone from this earth, longer than he existed. And that moment weighs on me. It seems far enough off. But time keeps moving forward.
The ringing in of the new year, puts this burden on my soul. My child should be here. But he is not. And I have to keep looking forward, despite my pull to the past. It is overwhelming. And heartbreaking.
As we look forward to the new year, I just see all the time and space my child should exist. All the dreams we had for him, that went unfulfilled. An entire life, year by year, of missed moments. Watching his peers continue to age, while he stays forever frozen in time. The new year is complicated for the bereaved. I want to stay back, but time pushes me forward. A hostage to time.

Saturday, October 5, 2019

541 days


Time does not stop. It keeps moving forward. Second by second. Minute by minute. Hour by hour. It builds into days. Then into weeks. Into months. And into years. Time never stops. So somehow, I find myself here. On this date. Here I am. Today.

Today, my son has been dead for as long as he fought cancer. It has been 541 days since I felt the weight of my son in my arms. Since I held him close. Since he took his last breath. Since he died, and my world cease to exist the way I once knew. 541 days. And it was 541 days before that, when I was holding my son in my arms in the Emergency Room. The day it all began. The day I was told my son had a brain tumor. The day that forever changed our lives, and forever shaped our future.

Today marks another moment in a series of time. Of new marks in time. It will now be longer that our son has been gone from this earth, than he lived fighting cancer. Honestly, how is it even possible? How did I get from that first day, to his last day, to this day? How did time keep ticking forward without my son in it? I want time to stop. But it keeps ticking. Second by second. Moment by moment. Never stopping, not for anyone, for anything.

Here I am. I am on this ride and I want off. I want off this damn ride. The nightmare never ends. I want to wake up. The world is so disorienting. I feel like everything has been shifted. And the ground will not stop moving long enough for me to get my balance. Everything is spinning. Just spinning. I can not put my feet down because there is nothing solid to stand on. I want the world to slow down, and yet it seems to keep speeding up. I am still just trying to breathe.
For the first year of grief, the goal was to just get out of bed every day. To remember to eat. To try to sleep. To attempt to care for my surviving son. Something I had little choice in accomplishing. He needed me. Just because I had no energy, did not mean he did not need me. And it was exhausting. Just breathing felt like work. And time did not stop or slow down, just because I felt like I died when my son died. I had to keep moving. If no other reason, than life keeps moving. And I had no choice, but to attempt to keep up.

The reality of child loss is there is no one to care for anyone. My husband is hurting. My son is hurting. Everyone is hurting. Everyone is grieving. The grief does not stop. And it impacts every person of the family. Because it is a child. My child. Our child. Everyone is just trying to not drown. Everyone needs to be rescued. But there is no one to rescue us. Because everyone in our family is drowning. Each of us just trying to come up long enough for another breath of air.
No one made sure I was going to make sure I had food to eat. Or a shower each day. Or that I was engaging our living child. Ultimately, once again I had no choice. And many days I failed. Failed at just those few simple tasks. Many days the only thing I accomplished was the bare needs that our living child required from me. Most days it was just dragging myself out of bed to get him to school and pick him up. Throwing him an iPad or flipping on the TV, and letting Netflix doing the parenting. Meals were of simple demand. PB&J. Noodles. Rice. Fast food. Anything that did not require my time. Or focus. Or effort. Because I could not muster the energy it required to do the simplest of tasks. Everything was overwhelming. Breathing was overwhelming. Grief swallowed me whole. I skipped meals. I skipped showers. I skipped brushing my hair. Each and every task was a huge weight that took more effort than I could bare to give. I was exhausted from just breathing.

I have spent the better part of the last 18 months battling depression, anxiety and PTSD. Yet, my responsibilities have not changed from the day before our son died. Or from the day before he was diagnosed with cancer. They were the same then, that they are now. And there is no one to do it all for me. My spouse is suffering, just as I am suffering. Our child is suffering too. We are all spiraling, spinning. Truth is no one wins when a child dies. Because we are all struggling to survive, one day to the next.

I have spent the last 18 months failing. Failing at finding myself support. Failing at finding support for our living son. Failing at finding our family support. 18 months of floundering. Some of it was because it took so much effort, I gave up. I would hit a wall, and could not muster the strength to go around it, or over it, or through it. So the wall stopped me. And it took time for me to regain the strength to fight forward. To have the ability to keep calling.To keep fighting. To keep questioning. To keep turning over every leaf until the right one was found. 18 months. But the truth is, is should not be this hard. None of it should have been this hard. I should not have had to feel like I was climbing Mt Everest to get the right support in place. It should not have been so overwhelming. It should have taken a few calls at most. I have made hundreds. Truth is, it should NOT be this hard to get support in place for autism, for grief, for trauma. For our son, for us. It should not be this difficult. Life should not be this hard. I should not have to advocate this hard to find help.

Nearly 3 years we have been trying to get some of these supports in place, and we are finally starting to find the right things. But they are still not perfect or all in place. I am still floundering. It is all just so hard, and it sucks. I have lost my mama bear fight. I have lost my roar. I feel like I fail everyday. And I need someone to help. Truth is no one will fight for us the way I once did. I fought for years for our son before cancer. For autism, for his cognitive and developmental delays. I advocated for 3 years before cancer. It was a challenge then. But it should not be this challenging to find the therapies and support any family needs. It should not be this hard. It is extremely difficult under regular stress. And I wanted to give up over and over again back then. But with grief, it feels impossible. And I did give up. It has taken me years to do what once took me months.

Nearly a year ago, our living son was officially diagnosed with autism. I still have nothing in place for him support wise. He has no therapy in place. We have not gotten any of the services in place. We keep hitting walls. With referrals. With finding providers. With insurance. We are finally starting to get our answers. To find the right places to get support in place. But I feel like a failure because it took so long to get any of it in place. Or to just get to this point where we still have a long way before care is actually given.

I know I am not a failure. I know that I am doing the best I can under extraordinary circumstances. But the world does not know that. The world does not know that it feels like a 5 mile hike, just to shower. Or planning an afternoon outing feels like I am planning a 3 week long vacation. That cooking dinner feels like I am planning a dinner party for 20. Everything feels distant, overwhelming, and difficult. I am isolated because it is hard to maintain friendships. Friendships have significantly changed in the face of all we have endured. Partly because I could not give what most wanted from me. I could barely just do me. And most can not handle the reality of my life. Our life. So life has become very small, isolated. And yes, it feels like we are abandoned. To others it seems our worst is over. But that is the lie. The worst is living everyday without the person who should be by your side. Living everyday in wonder of who that child would become, who he should have been. Living each day with hole in every photo. The place our child should be standing. Knowing that to everyone else we are a family of three. But we are not. We are a family of four.

My faith has gotten me from one minute to the next. But my faith does not make my pain gone. The hole gone. It makes it possible to live. And have hope that one day I will see my son again. It helps me to not question why. It helps that I know each day is God’s and not mine. But none of that magically takes away my suffering. Even Jesus wept. He knows suffering, and pain. And while it brings me comfort. Faith is not a blanket that heals the suffering, the pain. The void will always be present in my life. Knowing our living child should not be an only child, but should be a younger brother. And while he may not always be an only child, there is no replacing his big brother. There is no child to fill the hole that is meant for our son who died.

So here I am. 541 days since our son died. I have lived those days without my son by my side. The same number of days I lived hoping, praying, comforting, holding him while he fought against cancer. We have now lived as many days without our son, as we lived the life of trauma because of cancer. And one day, not too far from here we will live as long without our child, as we lived with our child.

Samuel “Sammy” Puma is my child. Forever my child. There is no hiding from my grief. From my greatest loss. There is nothing that can be said in speaking about memories of my son that would hurt. Or cause me sadness. The only thing that hurts is feeling forgotten. Feeling left behind. Feeling like our son will fade and his life had no meaning, no purpose and that he will not be remembered. Sammy is my child. Forever my child. I will forever mark his place in our family. Because he belongs. And Sammy is mine. Ours. Our child forever.