The University of Iowa is holding it’s 19th fund
raiser for childhood cancer. The
event is a 24 hour Dance Marathon, where hundreds of University of Iowa
students raise at least $400 each and all of the proceeds go to childhood
cancer—the kids, the families, research, education, support of survivorship
programs, you name it. The money
raised, which now tops a million dollars each year, changes the lives of
children with cancer and their families in Iowa for the better in many ways,
both emotionally and physically. They
provide the best information available about how to cope with childhood
cancer—both the treatment and the survivorship. They support summer camps for children with cancer as well
as one for their siblings—the experience of having a critically ill sibling is
terrifying, and no one showers them with attention. They also have little support and almost nothing in the way
of peers who know what they have been through—camp changes all that. They support college tuitions for
childhood cancer survivors. They
provide critically needed research dollars—they can fund pilot projects so that
investigators have the data to apply for federally funded grants. These are just a few of the good works
that flow from Dance Marathon.
We have reason to know—my youngest son had a brain tumor
when he was five years old and spent a year receiving radiation and
chemotherapy at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. While having a child diagnosed with
cancer is a catastrophe in so many ways, the actual experience of receiving
treatment was phenomenal for him.
He loved the hospital. The
inpatient unit had state-of-the-art technology available for every hospitalized
child is just one small example of what Dance Marathon has accomplished—the
depth and breadth of the entertainment that he could immerse himself in at the
bedside was breath taking. He
looked forward to being hospitalized.
To watch him, you would never know he was getting chemotherapy—except
for his lack of hair. He was so
happy. I know that money cannot
buy happiness, but the financial
resources that Dance Marathon provides to sick children and their families in
Iowa does in some ways translate to happiness in a very scary circumstance. He has been hospitalized at other
institutions and they just do not have the same atmosphere.
This year marks the first year that my youngest son will be
a fundraiser and dancer, but this is his 13th Dance Marathon. Every
other year he has reveled in being special for one day. This year he is giving back to an
organization that has helped him and his family to cope with some of the
darkest days we have had together.
If you would like to donate to his effort, here is the website: https://osl.iowa.uiowa.edu/dancemarathon/donate/4/8491
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