An Opus For God – reprised

Tommy (middle) with friends at a Young Life activity
An Opus For God – reprised

Today is my son’s 25th birthday and the feast day in the Catholic Church calendar of St. Thomas Aquinas for whom he was named. I have posted this story before, but I do so again today as a prayer of thanksgiving to God for the gift of his life for these twenty-five years and the inestimable blessing he has been to us and so many others.

* * * * *

Although it was her 44th birthday, my wife is the one who came home from her doctor visit with a surprise for me.  Madeline was pregnant.  I stifled the question “How is that possible?” as it tried to force itself past my lips.  After six children, I guess I knew pretty well. 

Our youngest was then nine years old.  Each milestone he passed had given us a growing sense of freedom: last one out of diapers, last to tie his shoes, ride a bike, learn to swim, go to school.  We had already negotiated our mid-life passage without the proverbial crises.  Madeline pierced another hole in her ears for a second set of earrings.  I started wearing contact lenses because she told me it made me look younger.  We were more than ready for a new and exciting chapter in our life.  But we weren’t ready for this.

For the next week we walked around in a daze.  This can’t be happening, I thought.  We have to start all over again?  What about the new season for our marriage?  I’m not ready to accept another child!

Don’t misunderstand me.  I love our children.  I love family life.  And I love my wife.  Ever since our dating years in college, we had tried to cooperate with God’s will for us.  But it took this unwanted announcement to show me how much selfishness was still in my heart, and how much I still preferred my will.  Yet as each day passed, I became less resistant, more accepting.

Dazed and Confused

My fledgling hope soon confronted a new challenge.  The sonograms indicated that something might be wrong with our baby.  We were sent to specialists with more sophisticated equipment.  I’m sorry, the doctor said.  There appear to be multiple complications.  The “fetus” appears to have club feet.  There is no sign of the presence of a bladder.  It may be external to the body.  And the brain is not developing as it should.  There is an empty space at the base of the brain.  They rarely make it to full term in cases like this.  Those that are born are likely to die within the first year.  Madeline began to quietly cry.  I presume you’ll want to talk with our geneticounselor about terminating the pregnancy, he added.  His comment ignited an anger in me that fashioned an instant determination.  No, I quickly responded.  That is not an option!

Still something in me grasped at his bleak outlook.  It’s better that our baby dies than to live with so much suffering.  Lord, please don’t let our baby suffer long.  Let death come quickly.  It’s better that way.  But better for whom? I thought.  Better for me, of course.  For Madeline and me.  I didn’t want us to go through the pain of watching a child suffer.  As I look back now, it is so humbling to see how quick I was to accept the word of a man, and how slow to seek and accept the word of God.

High Risk – High Reward

A more definitive diagnosis could not be made without an amniocentesis.  At Madeline’s age, this was considered a high risk pregnancy.  She decided that she would rather be prepared than live with uncertainty for the remaining six months.  The results came back on Aug. 30; our 21st wedding anniversary.  Our child was a boy – and he had Down Syndrome.  The brain diagnosis was described as possible Dandy Walker Syndrome.  His urological condition was called Bladder Exstrophy.  It had no connection to his Down Syndrome.  This rare disorder occurs in only one out of every 30,000 births.  The prevalence of Down Syndrome is approximately one in every 800-1000 births.  The odds of a child being born with both is exceedingly rare.  We began to affectionately refer to our son as “one in a million”.

These newest developments forged a stronger bond between me and my son.  He was so fragile and weak.  He would need me perhaps more than any of my other children.  Then it dawned upon me.  I could give him my name.  Although I had 5 other sons, it had never seemed appropriate before.  Now it seemed perfect.  I would be proud to have him take my name; proud to identify with him.  That same day my wife came to me with an idea she had gotten in prayer – the notion of naming our son after me.  His name would be Thomas.  It was a small sign to us that God was very much involved in the details of our lives.  He was still in control of this seemingly uncontrollable situation.

The months went by in slow motion.  We passed the time trying to learn all we could about our son’s genetic and medical conditions.  One specialist who would be on the team in the delivery room tried to prepare us for the many possibilities.  Don’t worry about his urological condition, he offered in a helpful tone.  If there’s not enough tissue for male genitalia, we will be able to form female genitalia instead.  With hormone treatments, you will be able to raise a daughter, and she will never know the difference.  We nodded our heads stoically.  When we got in the car, we looked at one another in disbelief, and suddenly started to laugh.  It was either that or cry.  He acted as though this were the most normal thing in the world, never considering that we might oppose such a procedure!

The Opus Begins

On January 28, our waiting ended.  At 6:45 p.m. he was delivered without complications.  I was the first one to hold him.  I held my breath as I checked for all the abnormalities.  Hands, feet, fingers, toes – everything looked normal.  He was breathing on his own, too.  Not an automatic thing for babies with Down Syndrome.  You made it, Thomas.  You did it!  You proved them wrong, I kept telling him. I wanted to take him right then and there to the prenatal specialist and say “Look at our beautiful son.  You didn’t even want to give him a chance!”  His bladder was indeed outside of his abdomen, but the urologist had assured us that this could be surgically repaired in the first 48 hours.  As I drove home that night, it occurred to me that it was the very day of St. Thomas Aquinas’ feast, after whom our son was named.  He may have disabilities, I thought, but he knows how to honor his patron.

Thomas was in the hospital for three weeks during which time the neurologist tested for brain anomalies.  At last the results came back – no Dandy Walker malformation; no apparent brain dysfunction. We thanked God for the many family members, friends, and unknown prayer warriors who had interceded for our son’s healing in utero.  Still, his first year was not without difficulties.  The urology surgery required that he be immobilized from the waist down for six weeks.  During that period he developed a serious urinary tract infection and had to be hospitalized again.  At six months, the audiologist who tested him told us that he wasn’t hearing.  Three months later that diagnosis was reversed. Initial misdiagnosis or the results of prayer for his healing?  

Conducting

In his first four years, Thomas had four surgeries, five outpatient surgical procedures, and an untold number of tests and examinations.  But he made progress, too.  He sat up for the first time at twelve months.  He took his first steps when he was three years and two months.  He needed a walker for a while, but now only requires braces on his ankles.  He said his first word at two and a half years.  He has yet to put together words in a sentence.  It is too early to assess the level of his mental retardation.  Still, each minor development feels like a major victory to us.

One day I was reflecting with Madeline that we were back to checking off milestones again.  I joked that God was like an orchestra conductor saying, “One more time, with feeling.”  Then I saw that the image was more fitting than I realized.  Our family has been our life’s work – our “Opus” for God.  In a symphony, the ending often slows down significantly to emphasize each note and bring the piece to its dramatic culmination and conclusion.  The musical term for this is “ritardando” (the double meaning was not lost on me).  Thomas is the culmination of the Kneiers’ Opus.  He has already brought us some of our greatest joys and our deepest sorrows.  But then, tears and jubilation are inextricably entwined with any great masterpiece.

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8 Responses

  1. What a beautiful story. What a beautiful family. How blessed I was to serve with you Tom. How blessed this world is with Tommy. You, Madeline, and Tommy continue to be a great inspiration. Peace DC

  2. How well I remember his birth…..Madeline’s strength, and calm composure. But I most remember you holding him in those first minutes. His beautiful, bright and alert eyes searching yours and finding all the love he would need to navigate this life! Tommy……such a holy gift! Happy Birthday, Thomas

  3. Each and every time I read this, I get teary eyed. Partly because to know Tommy is to love Tommy.
    But also because the last paragraph is so profound. And it’s only so profound, because it’s true.