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Book details
  • Genre:FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS
  • SubGenre:Death, Grief, Bereavement
  • Language:English
  • Pages:320
  • eBook ISBN:9780989914413

Dodging Dandelions

A Memoir of Love, Loss and Acceptance

by Ron Richards

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Overview
'Dodging Dandelions' is a feelings-filled male perspective on a family’s ability to remain positive despite, at times, seemingly insurmountable challenges that revolve around cancer and the struggles that come with trying to manage a child who is severely mentally ill. The book recounts how a husband, and his family, chose to travel the high road through multiple bouts with breast cancer; a daughter who regularly spirals out-of-control; and his two episodes with kidney cancer.
Description
'Dodging Dandelions' is a memoir from first-time author Ron Richards. The story is a feelings-filled male perspective on a family’s ability to remain positive despite, at times, seemingly insurmountable challenges that revolve around cancer and the struggles that come with trying to manage a child who is severely mentally ill. The book recounts how a husband, and his family, chose to travel the high road through multiple bouts with breast cancer; a daughter who regularly spirals out-of-control; and his two episodes with kidney cancer. In the opening chapters, Ron and his wife, Sara, deal with her initial breast cancer diagnosis when she is only 30 years old. After a six-year remission, the disease re-appears and causes another round of treatments. That occurs as their adopted daughter is only a year old and it’s becoming apparent she has significant behavioral/emotional issues. As she ages, her behavior becomes increasingly abnormal and by the time she turns seven, she is hospitalized and placed on a significant regime of medicines. As time passes, her behavior continues to deteriorate and she ends up hospitalized in locked, psychiatric facilities for virtually all of her high school years. After her first recurrence, Sara’s cancer remains in remission for nearly 11 years before the disease returns with a vengeance, tumors filling her liver to the point that she may not survive. An intense round of chemotherapy saves her life. Just as the eight months of chemo are coming to a close, and the couple is looking forward to time away from cancer and medical care, a coincidental ultrasound finds that Ron has a cancerous tumor in his left kidney. The disease is treated surgically and his left kidney is removed. After he recovers, the couple enjoys a few months respite from the disease but is jolted back to the cancer world when a scan shows Sara has tumors in her brain. As he considers their situation, Ron decides to change careers to serve as Sara’s primary caregiver. While that allows him to be with his failing wife on a daily basis the final 3+ years of her life, the reality is that his new career provides only a fraction of their previous income. The resulting financial strain compounds the stresses of Sara’s cancer in ways the couple could never have imagined. As this is happening, their daughter remains locked away in psychiatric care and the family wrestles with the mental anguish of dealing with a family member who has severe mental illness. As months pass, Sara has additional treatments and procedures and finally ends up having surgery to remove the most troublesome tumor in her brain. The surgery seemingly goes well but she loses her swallowing function, resulting in Ron feeding her four times a day through a stomach tube for the final 11 months of her life. Through it all, Sara never wavers in her commitment to ‘be the best patient I can be,’ and she – and the family – remains positive to the very end. As her 22-plus-year breast cancer battle comes quietly to an end, the family plans and conducts a memorial service that proves to be a testament to the lives she touched as more than 300 people fill the church sanctuary for a standing-room-only service. Throughout the book, Richards offers a genuine and honest husband’s point-of-view that is filled with feeling and emotion on a level rarely seen from a male perspective. He openly shares what he learned as he negotiated his way through the disbelief, fear, anger, sadness and uncertainty he faced time and again as his wife was losing her battle and he attempted to remain upbeat and positive as he kept the family together.
About the author
Ron Richards Author Dodging Dandelions Providing a refreshingly stark male perspective rich with feeling and emotion, Dodging Dandelions is a memoir from Ron Richards. Richards offers a heart-tugging, genuine look into the travails faced by a husband as he negotiates his way through a variety of family adversities. The story follows Richards’ experience as he deals with the twists and turns of his first wife’s cancer; the wild ride of parenting a daughter with significant mental illness; and, in the midst of it all, his own surprising bouts with cancer. The book honestly and thoughtfully examines Richards’ 22-year journey through disbelief, fear, hope, anger, humor, sadness and, finally, acceptance. While Dodging Dandelions is the first book from Richards, his life has been one of a communicator, writer and public relations executive. He spent much of his work life in the world of sports and entertainment and his experience includes working with the National Football League (NFL), National Basketball Association (NBA), PGA Tour, National Association of Stock Car Racing (NASCAR) and Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART), where he served as vice president of communications for more than five years. Richards also held positions with top consumer product companies, working for 10 years at beer giants, Coors and Miller. He spent the early part of his career as a journalist, working at the Pueblo, Colo., Star Journal and Chieftain newspapers as a sports writer and editor. While in Pueblo, Richards also worked in public relations for the University of Southern Colorado. When he isn’t writing, Richards works with communications and public relations clients through his Mitchell Canyon Communications practice, which he started in 2009. Much of his consulting work has been in the world of healthcare and medical devices. Richards, an Ohio native, is a member of the Colorado Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America, the Colorado Independent Publishers Association and the Colorado Authors League. He also serves as a volunteer for the Denver Hospice. Richards has a Bachelor’s degree in journalism from Colorado State University and a Master’s in Sports Administration from Ohio University. Richards has two adult children and he and his wife, Lisa, live in Castle Rock, Colo., with Lisa’s teen-aged daughter.