Author: wdev

  • It’s hard to put into words what RMHC has meant to us

    When Noelle Johnson is asked about her son Jordan’s health, she can rattle off the dates of his three heart surgeries, his seven-month stay in the hospital as a newborn, when he got a tracheotomy tube inserted to help him breathe and the nights she’s spent by her 12-year-old’s side every time he’s come to Advocate Hope Hospital in Chicago.

    “This little guy has been through a lot. But he’s tough. He’s really tough,” she said.

    Yet when you ask her about how Ronald McDonald House Charities has helped her and her family by giving them a place to stay and comfort – for nearly free – she gets a little tongue-tied.

    “I can’t…I can’t… I can’t even find the words to say how I feel about what they’ve done for me and my family,” she said. “It’s hard to put into words. But it’s made a huge impact on my family that we have some place to stay.”

    Noelle stayed at the Oak Lawn Ronald McDonald House, kitty cornered from the hospital, from March-May.

    “It’s so nice to have other people around who understand what you’re going through. We’ve met three different families and when they have a good day, we steal some of their joy,” she said. “It’s so great to see someone else have a good day. And then, we’ll have a good day, and they enjoy that, too.”

    Noelle, her husband, Jim, and their two other children live in McHenry, Ill., near the Wisconsin border about a two-hour drive from Chicago. Their youngest, Jordan, was born at Advocate Hope Hospital when an ultrasound discovered that he had a rare heart condition – his left heart chamber was so weak it couldn’t pump blood. That started more than a decade of surgeries and long hospital stays. Now he’s back because he lost a tooth, bled too much, got blood in his lungs, then got a bad flu virus. He was on a breathing machine for weeks.

    Noelle will never forget her family’s stay in Chicago for Jordan’s first heart surgery. They stayed in a hotel room for a few nights, but realized they couldn’t afford it. Plus they were commuting back and forth because their other children were in school and Jim still had to work. “We were sleeping in recliner chairs in the hospital lobby and brushing our teeth in public restrooms,” she said. “It was awful.”

    Then RMHC opened this House in December 2008.  “I couldn’t believe it! We get a bed and a shower!”

    The local RMHC Chapter has five houses in the Chicago area and houses 153 families every night. It asks for a small donation of $10 per night, but doesn’t turn away families who can’t afford that. It also has three Ronald McDonald Family Rooms in hospitals where families can rest and relax in a space near the Neonatal Intensive Care Units.

    The 24,000-square-foot House in Oak Lawn where Noelle stays is on three-quarters of an acre and has 16 bedrooms with private baths. Four of those have living rooms and are for families that have to stay 30 days or longer. The House has a large kitchen, playroom, three living rooms and even a wheelchair accessible tree house.

    It’s not just the big kitchen with three sinks and three dishwashers and four refrigerators that has helped make her life easier, it’s the volunteers who come to cook lunch and dinner every day for the families staying there. “Sometimes the Brownie Scouts will come in and bake cookies,” she says, amazed still that it happens. “It is beyond words.”

    Noelle’s oldest son, Justin, 20, has been so impressed with the care his family has received that he gave a speech about the Ronald McDonald House for his speech class at college.

    “You don’t have to worry about anything but caring for your kid,” says Noelle. “It’s hard to put into words what it’s meant for us.

  • Your small change makes a difference

    Spare change dropped in RMHC Donation Boxes at McDonald’s restaurants can make a huge difference to families with sick kids.  Recently, because donations gave two Texas children and their family access to the medical care they needed, they were also able to share an experience of a lifetime together:  a trip to the 2016 Olympic Games.

    Brice Munoz, 12, and his sister Nadia, nearly 9, share more than the same parents and the same home in tiny Diboll, Texas. They also have the same rare genetic disorder, glycogen storage disease Type IV, which required both children to have liver transplants as toddlers.  Continued treatment at Texas Children’s Hospital requires the family to travel to Houston regularly.  Luckily, because they can stay at the Ronald McDonald House on Holcombe Street, receiving the care they need is not a problem.

    The House has been a safe, nice and affordable place to stay and be surrounded by kind, caring people for the Munoz family. Procedures, poking and prodding often await Brice and Nadia at the hospital, yet they are always excited about their stays at Holcombe House.

    “Nadia and Brice are siblings, and they are also friends,” said Leslie Bourne, CEO of Ronald McDonald House Houston. She has watched the pair grow up during their frequent stays.

    Because of their unique friendship, Brice and Nadia were among four pairs of children who were sent by McDonald’s to participate in the Opening Ceremony at the Games in Rio. McDonald’s Olympics Kids Program celebrates the spirit of friendship – a key message of the Olympic movement. Nearly 100 children aged 8 to 12 years old from around the world were sent to Rio to participate in this program.

    McDonald’s has sent children to the Olympic Games before, but this was the first year the children participated in the Opening Ceremony of the Olympic Games. As the founding mission partner of RMHC, McDonald’s felt it was important this year to celebrate the friendships the have flourished among kids and families because they have stayed together at one of the 359 Ronald McDonald Houses around the world.

    Without question, the RMHC Houston staff felt Brice and Nadia deserved this amazing Olympic experience.

    Despite all they are going through, it is rare to see either child without a smile on their face, Bourne said. “These kids never complain. They are two of the happiest, sweetest kids; a daily reminder of how lucky we all are. It is a model of how we should all be.”

    When one is sick and can’t go to school, the other immediately checks in when they get home. “They’ll ask, ‘Are you OK? How did your day go?’” said Brice and Nadia’s mom, Nora. When Nadia faces new tests and procedures, she consults with her brother because chances are he has been through the same thing already.

    Equally, when Brice faces new challenges, Nadia will stay by his side so she can alert her mother if he needs anything. And, in what is a touching, visible sign of their affection, Nadia insists on holding Brice’s hand when he has painful tests. Brice tries to do the same for his sister, but she won’t allow it! “Her brother’s gentle gesture makes her cry,” Nora says.

    Brice and Nadia had a great time in Rio!

    And, even more importantly, because of your generosity, they will always have a place to stay when they need medical care far from home.

    Help keep families close to the care they need. Look for the RMHC Donation Boxes at your local McDonald’s restaurant.

    Thank you for your generosity and support.

  • RMHC Welcomed Us into a Big, Loving Family

    At just three days old, my son Kaeden needed brain surgery. While he spent the next three weeks in the hospital, I was at his bedside as much as possible. I was struggling to understand all of the medical challenges facing Kaeden and the difficult road ahead of us. I felt completely overwhelmed. Thankfully, I was staying at the Ronald McDonald House of Columbia, SC. The staff and volunteers there did everything they could to take pressure off of me and I was so grateful. That was my introduction to RMHC. It was such a blessing to have a safe and comfortable place to rest and begin to cope.

    Five years later, Kaeden has endured more than 30 surgeries and procedures to treat his many conditions. Kaeden now sees specialists at Shriners and Greenville Memorial Hospital, over four-and-a-half hours from our home in Aiken, SC. We recently stayed at RMHC of the Carolinas in Greenville, and from the moment we arrived, we felt welcomed into a big, loving family. We were greeted at the door by a volunteer who helped with Kaeden’s wheelchair and seated us in the living room. He brought Kaeden a toy and offered me a cold drink while the receptionist checked us in. Throughout our stay, there was always someone there offering us love and support.

    The Ronald McDonald House is such a special place for our family. It eases my worries about where we will stay during Kaeden’s treatments. He has two more surgeries scheduled for this year, and knowing that we will be at the House really puts my mind at ease. I feel like as long as I can be close to Kaeden and his brother, Kendahl, everything will be ok. RMHC gives me a great sense of security; I know we will always find love and support at the House. I will always be so grateful to RMHC – and you, their generous supporters – for making this level of care a reality for families like mine.

    With love and gratitude,

    Carol Brockington

  • When “it happens to you,” RMHC is there to help

    Like many young students in Orland Park, Ill., Laurie Cepkauskas collected pop tabs for the Ronald McDonald House in town. And like her peers, she didn’t do it because she knew exactly what the charity was doing, but because that’s just what students did.

    “I really didn’t know anything about it except for seeing kids on the posters,” she said. She didn’t know that the Houses were for families with sick children who had to come from out of town to get treatment at nearby hospitals.

    “Like most people, you don’t worry about it until it happens to you.”

    Then it did.

    When Laurie’s daughter Emily was just three months old, she had her first open heart surgery.  “It meant the world to us that I was able to stay so close to her. Thanks to Ronald McDonald House Charities, Emily was never alone.”

    In 2015 when Laurie was 19 weeks pregnant, she and her husband Marcus went to the doctor for the traditional second trimester scan. At 33 weeks, they had the test that showed the baby also had Down Syndrome. “I found out I was having a daughter and you just picture this life and then somebody takes it away.”

    But her concerns melted when Laurie and Marcus saw Emily for the first time January 30th, 2016. “The second she was born it all went away. I just didn’t care anymore.”

    When Emily had her first open heart surgery, things were looking positive for the first 48 hours. Then she stopped breathing and the doctors had to revive her and insert a breathing tube. A pattern of hope and despair continued as the baby went through periods of stability and instability.

    Laurie’s friend had told her about her experience at the Ronald McDonald House, so on the day of Emily’s first surgery, Laurie asked the social worker to put the family on the list. Her surgery was on Monday, and Friday morning, Laurie moved into the house across the street from her daughter.

    For almost the full duration of the time Emily was in the hospital, Laurie made the House her temporary home.

    “I had friends there, I had my mail sent there, I had all my drawers packed, I lived there,” she said. At the beginning, Marcus stayed as well.  Tyler, their three-year-old son, lived with relatives so Laurie and Marcus could focus solely on Emily. But after two weeks, Marcus and Tyler returned back to their home in Homer Glen while Laurie stayed close to the hospital. Every night, Marcus would visit, sometimes bringing Tyler so the three of them could eat dinner together.

    When describing the community at the Ronald McDonald House, Laurie calls it “the best support group you don’t want to be a part of.”

    “It was awesome. I made life-long friends.”

    Although Emily has been home since August 18, she has to go back to the hospital for another surgery, something Laurie has prepared for by contacting the same Ronald McDonald House and ensuring that there’s a room ready for her when it’s time.

    “The convenience of being close to your kid when they’re sick…you can’t put a price on that,” she said.

  • RMHC Helped Us Cope Before, During, and After Bradley’s Transplant

    On February 17, 2015, my four-year-old son Bradley received a life-saving stem cell transplant from his twin sister Charlotte (Charlie). So far, it seems that Charlie’s donated stem cells have taken over in the line where Bradley’s cancer was. We are very optimistic that this treatment will prevent future relapse of Bradley’s leukemia (though I’m holding my breath as I write this). And we are grateful that RMHC helped us all cope.

    Leading up to Bradley’s transplant and for a month after, my husband, Brian, and I stayed at the Ronald McDonald House near Lurie Children’s with Charlie and our youngest son, Camden. We felt like we were being compassionately cared for during a time when we weren’t sure we could take care of ourselves. I know that was a huge factor in our ability to cope and keep it together during the scariest times. Being at the House really helped us get the rest and mental breaks we needed so we could take care of our kids and be there for them when they really needed us.

    About a month after his transplant, Bradley was released to the Ronald McDonald House. We were thrilled to be back together after several very difficult months apart. Bradley still had lots of appointments, but his health stayed good while we were at the House. We started to feel like ourselves again; we were able to transition back to being a family. Staying just minutes away from the hospital also gave us a great sense of security at a time when it felt like we needed training wheels as we learned how to take care of Bradley post-transplant. We were so grateful to be at the House where we could take the time we needed to get comfortable with our new reality.

    The Ronald McDonald House offered us so many great opportunities to keep busy and have a little fun. Things like painting eggs, decorating cookies, and other fun activities made a big difference to the kids. Bradley even met players from the McDonald’s All American ® High School Basketball Games last year, when they visited the House. He was so excited to watch the games and we have maintained friendships with two of the players. Staying at the House gave us time to laugh together, smile, and forget about cancer just for a little while. Those moments kept us going.

    Today, Bradley and Charlie are five and their little brother Camden is 18 months old. Bradley loves Kindergarten and all of his new friends. He is doing well and doesn’t feel any different than his classmates. We feel blessed that his health has been so good over the past year. His follow-up tests continue to go well and we are optimistic for the future.

    We will always be grateful for our experience with RMHC.

    With love,

    Jennifer Godish

  • There’s Nothing Like the Ronald McDonald House

    My wife Cynthia and I met our great-granddaughter Raylee when she was six-months-old and suffering from infantile spasms. She was having up to 60 seizures a day and would sometimes stop breathing. We were so lucky to find an amazing child neurologist to treat Raylee at Children’s of Alabama in Birmingham. That is over 130 miles from our home in Valley, AL, so it was then that we first came to Ronald McDonald House Charities of Alabama. We were so blessed that they had space for us!

    Each time we brought Raylee in for her seizure treatments, we would stay at RMHC of Alabama for two or three days. The staff here did everything they could to help us get a room when we needed to be in Birmingham. And while we were there, they took such good care of us – always going out of their way to be helpful. After more than two years of traveling back and forth, staying at the House, and bringing Raylee in for treatments, we were thrilled to learn that she was seizure-free.

    Things went well for a while. We brought Raylee home and enrolled her in a special needs school. But when she was four-and-a-half, Raylee was diagnosed with lymphoblastic lymphoma. Again, we were blessed to find a team of wonderful doctors who felt they could help Raylee, and so grateful to be able to stay at the House.

    Raylee endured 27 months of chemo and more than her share of complications and scary moments. We know in our hearts that we wouldn’t have gotten through this journey without our friends at the House rallying around us. We certainly wouldn’t have been able to hold on to our house or car without the support of RMHC.

    For Raylee, this is home. She loves it here. Each night after dinner, she can’t wait to go outside and sit on the bench with the statue of Ronald or rock in her favorite chair. Raylee has been through so much in our time here, but we have had a lot to celebrate, too. Last Christmas, we even got to watch out the window as Santa arrived. There truly has never been a better Christmas for our family.

    On September 15, 2015, we had our most joyous celebration of all. After 27 months, Raylee had her last session of chemo. We marched through the hospital and the cancer clinic waving our sign while all the doctors and nurses cheered for Raylee. Then we came back and celebrated some more with our friends at the House. Though Raylee’s health is still fragile, that was a joyous day for our family.

    For Cynthia and me, Raylee is the biggest blessing of our lives. We wouldn’t trade one second of the time we’ve had with her. And we know in our hearts that Raylee wouldn’t be alive today if it weren’t for Ronald McDonald House Charities. We are so grateful, but saying ‘thank you’ will never feel like enough. This holiday season, please give as generously as you can.

    With love,
    Gene White

  • RMHC helped us cope while our child was hospitalized

    I knew about RMHC before our daughter Autumn was hospitalized, but I had no idea what it would mean to us to be able to stay at the House. I had no idea just how much thought and effort staff and volunteers put into making life easier for families with sick children.

    Our eleven-month-old daughter Autumn was admitted to Nationwide Children’s Hospital in January 2014, and although my husband Brad and I knew she was very ill, we wouldn’t know why for several more weeks. After a week or so of sleeping by Autumn’s bedside, the hospital’s Child Life Specialist referred us to Ronald McDonald House Charities of Central Ohio. We were so lucky to be offered a room at the Columbus Ronald McDonald House. Brad, my mother, and I took turns resting at the House. We knew getting plenty of rest was key to us staying healthy so we could be there with Autumn, night and day, for the long term.

    It meant the world to our family that we didn’t have to take time away from Autumn to shop or cook. Not having the burden of mounting hotel expenses was a huge relief, especially being off work for such a long time. We are so grateful to RMHC for letting us focus 100% of our energies on Autumn during that time.

    After almost three months of watching Autumn get sicker and sicker, we learned that she had an aggressive and rare type of brain tumor. Days after doctors discovered the tumor, Autumn had brain surgery. After that, she endured 64 grueling weeks of chemotherapy.

    The four months that Autumn spent in the hospital were scary, stressful, and exhausting. Honestly, I don’t think that I would have gotten through it if Brad and my mother weren’t with me every step of the way. Throughout that period, when it felt like everything in Autumn’s life was out of our control, I’m proud to say that together, we made sure she was never alone. I will always be grateful to RMHC for keeping us close to Autumn when she needed us most.

    The best way to help RMHC support families like mine is to donate. Please consider making a gift today.

    With gratitude,

    Carrie Wehr