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Archive for the ‘Fundraising’ Category

Today was Rare Disease Day around the world. It’s a day about raising awareness of all the approximately 7,000 rare diseases that affect nearly 30 million Americans. What is considered a rare disease? In the U.S., any disease affecting fewer than 200,000 people is considered rare. And because they are so rare, even many doctors don’t know much about them, and therefore many people are misdiagnosed – and therefore mistreated – for years. Learn more by visiting www.rarediseaseday.us or by watching this video. Or for a very personal account, visit my friend Monique’s blog about her experiences with Pompe Disease.

I met Monique during my very first month working at Genzyme, two years ago. She visited to share her story with employees, and we were all so impressed with her energy and determination for advocating for people with Pompe. And she made us realize how important what we do every day is to our patients. Genzyme is a very special company. It’s been developing and making therapies for rare diseases for more than 30 years now. For many people, their disease would have no treatment if it wasn’t for Genzyme.

What really makes the company is its people – and there’s a special group there who take the patient connection to the next level: the Genzyme Boston Marathon Team. The team has grown from a small grassroots effort by a few Allston employees to now an international team with 17 runners. Still completely employee driven, the team has increased not only its runners, but its ties with the patient community through an increased partnership with the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD) and by pairing each runner with their own patient partner. Great, lasting relationships are built out of these partnerships. Something that just doesn’t happen at other companies with their customers.

A major part of the team’s focus is raising money for NORD, through various fundraisers. They are always FUN fundraisers, and ’tis the season right now! And they are open to everyone, so join us whenever you can! I will post various ones as they come up – particularly watch for the fabulous online silent auction in late March. Here are a few:

  • Jessi’s VIP Beer Tasting Event – “The word on the street is that the brand new Harpoon Beer Hall is a wicked awesome place to have a good time. You are invited to a private, narrated beer tasting at a VIP room in Boston’s finest brewery. Harpoon Brewery 306 Northern Avenue, Boston, MA 02210 Wednesday, March 6 … 7:30 p.m. – 9 p.m. Not only is this the most fun you’ll have on a Wednesday night all year, but you’ll be supporting a good cause – the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD). Reserve your spot on the guest list today by donating $20 directly to Jessi’s FirstGiving page (http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/jessicacolund/bostonmarathon2013). All proceeds will benefit the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD) and my epic Boston Marathon adventure.”
  • Andrew’s Bowling for Rare Disorders – “I am hosting a bowling fundraiser at Jillian’s Boston to support the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD). You will get two hours of free bowling, tasty appetizers and a raffle ticket.  We will also have some great raffle prizes including gift certificates to local restaurants. Please come to learn more about NORD, meet new friends and socialize while supporting a great cause. For the 5th year in a row I will be running in the Boston Marathon raising awareness about rare disorders and running on… behalf of Kristin, who has a rare disease called Cowden’s Syndrome. Jillian’s Boston 145 Ipswich Street Boston, MA 02215 Reserve your spot on the guest list today by donating $25 directly to my First Giving Page – http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/andrew-scholte/bostonmarathon2013
  • Kai, Jen and Colleen’s Raise a Glass for Rare Diseases “March 16th at the Sherborn Inn in Sherborn, MA.  We have collected some pretty great silent auction items that we’re excited to share with you.  You’ll have a chance to bid on Sox/Yankees tickets, a baseball autographed by Red Sox closer Andrew Bailey, a beautiful canvas photo from photographer John Fischer, a massage from MacMed Spa, a basket of designer hair products from the Anthony Fredrick Salon, tickets to a taping of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, a $100 gift card to J. White Automotive, and much more!  Plus all guests will receive a gift bag containing items from NORD, Genzyme, and some of our wonderful sponsors.  There will also be wine tasting from 6-8pm, and some great appetizers.Tickets are $35 each. ” If you’d like to purchase tickets, please go to any of their FirstGiving pages: http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/colleendalton-petillo/bostonmarathon2013 , http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/kailenesimon/bostonmarathon2013 or http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/jentedstone/bostonmarathon2013.

Not able to attend a fundraiser? There are plenty of other ways to support the team:

And no, I will not be running a marathon any time soon! I am part of the Genzyme Running Club, and finally signed up for what I am praying will be my first 5k back (don’t want to jinx it): the BAA 5k on the day BEFORE the Boston Marathon. I am just a very big cheerleader for the team and love supporting them by helping with fundraisers and any other ways possible. They inspire me, as do their patient partners. They are a fabulous example of living the Rare Disease Day motto: “Alone we are rare. Together we are strong.”

So yes, back to Rare Disease Day! It was a great day, marked by our second annual relay race, and this time went international, with a virtual handoff from Ireland to Framingham. Folks then ran in multiple legs, 26 miles in total, from Framingham to Cambridge. The last leg was also the biggest, with more than one hundred people running from our Allston facility to Genzyme Center. It was awesome to cheer the employees, lead by a visiting patient, who spoke with employees before joining the relay, as they set out to complete the relay and raise awareness of rare diseases. The spirit of the original core Marathon Team has reverberated throughout the company, and is really building our rare disease community, as more and more people are, quite literally, running for rare diseases!

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The big L – that could be so many things, I’m not even going to venture a guess as to what you’re thinking! In my world right now it stands for lymphedema. Did you guess it? It’s not exactly a roll-off-your-tongue every day word, and I personally wish I didn’t know what it meant. But when I realized last night that the phlebitis had traveled into my hand and I held my two arms together, I had the feeling this might be happening. Then at work today my right arm was considerably more swollen than my left, and was confirmed by several of my colleagues. Off to Dana-Farber I went (hey, I had to be there for radiation anyway, so why not?) and it was confirmed: yup, lucky me, I can add lymphedema to the list!

It is early, so hopefully it will be contained. Without going into a ton of detail, I need to:

  • Wear my compression sleeve and glove during waking hours. Good thing I got it for the plane! Guess it’s not just for travel any more…
  • Keep doing the lymphatic massage that I learned last week at PT, as well as the exercises. Of course, this would be easier with a partner, but since I’m not with someone right now, it’s all me!
  • Ibuprofen – thank goodness I’m done with chemo and can have it again!
  • Warm compress

None of this is convenient or fun – especially this time of year when things are crazy enough. But it is what it is and I will deal with it and hopefully prevent it from getting worse. That’s kind of the name of the game right now – just deal with it. The daily trips to Dana-Farber for radiation – just deal with it. Taking the Tamoxifen (which I started Saturday) – just deal with it. The hot flashes – just deal with it. At least my hair is starting to grow back…

Oh! Speaking of hair, I got the sweetest compliment at work the other day: this older gentleman, who I have seen around but don’t really know, came up to me in the cafeteria and said, “I hope you don’t mind my saying this, but I have to tell you. I’ve always thought you were an attractive woman, but now that you’re bald, it’s obvious that it’s not hair that makes you attractive.” It was so nice of him, I really appreciated hearing that, especially so randomly.

Now speaking of random (or not so random) acts of kindness: I know I said I was done soliciting donations for Dana-Farber, but this is too good not to share. If you haven’t finished your shopping, consider giving the gift of a donation in someone’s honor. Now until December 31 you can use this special link www.dana-farber.org/yearend and your gift will be doubled! It only works through this link, and only until the end of the year, so don’t wait! And I guarantee anyone you give this gift to will truly appreciate it… I know all of us who frequent Dana-Farber thank you!!!

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My first radiation was fairly uneventful, which I consider a very good thing. I’m praying the next 24 will be just as anti-climactic. But what I observed while at Dana-Farber made me happy. I saw a woman who (apologies for judging a book by its cover) appeared to not be very well off be given a small tube of lotion that I paid $25 for without blinking. You could tell by watching and a bit of eavesdropping that she was incredibly thankful. I don’t know, maybe her insurance paid for it, maybe someone else, who knows – but what I do know is that Dana-Farber makes sure you have what you need, whether you can afford it or not.

So what do I want for Christmas? Well, to be honest, my first wish is for it to be last February, turning 38, with long brown hair, 25 pounds lighter, feeling like I’m on top of the world and ignorant of most things cancer. But since I don’t have a magic wand or fairy Godmother, that would be a waste of a wish. And I hate wasting something as special as a wish. This is what I want for Christmas:

I honestly don’t want anything more than this for Christmas. So if you insist on getting me something, please have it be a card saying you made a donation to support something like this – or wherever you want to help those who really need it. And if there isn’t something specific you want to contribute to, fundraising continues for the 2012 Boston Marathon Jimmy Fund Walk until December 31, so even if you already sponsored me, you’re welcome to do so again (I promise this will be the last time I solicit support for the 2012 walk… 😉 ) or visit my brand new Jimmy Fund donation page here. Seriously, supporting the place that has made this horrid year a little bit easier is my only Christmas wish. I can’t help thinking the same thing I thought last year when I was making donations for presents in honor of Mirany (and you can donate in her honor here) – what could we possibly need more than our health?

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