DENNIS WILDFORD AUSTRALIAN UPDATES, BEST 5 NEWS EVER, BEST NEWS, NEW BEST EVET,TOP 10 NEWS, TOP NEWS, UPDATES
ARTICLE SOURCE: TODAY NEWS
Alexandra Zaslow
The moment Lucas St. Onge had been waiting for all his life turned bittersweet when he learned that he would have to miss his pre-K graduation in order to stay in the hospital.
Lucas has both short bowel syndrome, a condition that makes it difficult to absorb nutrients, as well as severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome, making him susceptible to serious infections. But on May 21, which happened to be his fifth birthday, he received good news.
COURTESY OF KATHERINE C. COHEN/BOSTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL LUCAS WAS ALL SMILES IN HIS GRADUATION CAP.
He was scheduled to undergo multivisceral organ transplant surgery — to get a new stomach, pancreas, liver, intestine and spleen — the very next day.
His parents, Heather and Anthony St. Onge, from Lowell, Massachusetts, knew Lucas would still be recovering at Boston Children’s Hospital during his graduation.
“I felt so bad because I knew he and his classmates had been practicing singing songs and walking across the stage for a while now, and he was really looking forward to it,” Heather St. Onge told TODAY.
St. Onge asked his teacher, Laurie Archambault, if she could FaceTime them during the ceremony, but when that proved too difficult, “Miss Laurie” had another idea in mind.
COURTESY OF KATHERINE C. COHEN/BOSTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL LUCAS RECEIVED A DIPLOMA FROM PRESCHOOL TEACHER LAURIE ARCHAMBAULT.
Right after the graduation Lucas was supposed to walk in, Archambault and three other teachers surprised him at the hospital with a cap, diploma and his very own ceremony.
COURTESY OF HEATHER ST. ONGE LAURIE ARCHAMBAULT PUT ON LUCAS’ CAP THAT SHE BROUGHT HIM BEFORE THE GRADUATION CEREMONY.
“I’ve never seen him so excited before,” St. Onge said. “Just by his reaction, you could tell how much he loved going to that school.”
COURTESY OF KATHERINE C. COHEN/BOSTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL LUCAS PROUDLY SHOWED HIS DIPLOMA WITH HIS TRANSPLANT SURGEON, DR. KHASHAYAR VAKILI.
Archambault made the graduation feel as real as she could. When calling his name, she referred to him as a “graduate of Hellenic American Academy’s class of 2016,” which had everyone in tears — including those passing by.
While Lucas is taking it easy over the summer to recover, he can’t stop talking about entering kindergarten in the fall.
COURTESY OF HEATHER ST. ONGELUCAS AFTER HIS GRADUATION
“When you have a transplant, you’re kind of secluded from other people,” St. Onge said, “so it means the world to us to have teachers who care enough to go above and beyond for Lucas.”
SOURCE URL: TODAY NEWS
No comments:
Post a Comment