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Katelyn Marie Crites 
Katelyn Marie Crites. Our MIRACLE from GOD....
Welcome to Katelyn's Web page. God blessed us with Katelyn on June 19th 2000. She has been a joy ever since. Katelyn has a little brother (Wesley) whom she loves so much and they are always playing together. She loves to read and play with her babies. Her favorite place to be is outside or in my lap (especially at bedtime). She also loves to dance to music. Katelyn is so full of life and she can lighten up any room with her presence. Katelyn is a normal 8 yr old girl. She plays with Barbie’s, brushes their hair, gets in her mom’s make up, changes her clothes three and four times a day and even helps me do dishes and clean the house. She laughs at jokes and rolls around on the floor playing with her brother and daddy. She looks at books and sings with her Karaoke machine. She LOVES talking on the phone. She washes her play dishes in the bathroom sink and grins at me when I catch her. She doesn’t like to get her hands dirty and she will get upset when she spills something on her clothes and wants a bath and a new change of clothes (my mom says she gets that from me). She can melt any heart with her smile and gives some of the biggest hugs in the world. She was there and hugged me when I cried after loosing my grandma and grandpa and wouldn’t leave my side until she knew I was okay.
Katelyn is an amazing person that has lots to share with her family and with the world. If you are coming to this page and don't know Katelyn, please remember that Katelyn is a normal girl first, she just has special needs.
Katelyn was blessed with two great sets of grandparents that love her dearly and she loves them as well. I don't know what I would have done without them over the last 8 years. When you read the next section, please rember this; having a child with a disability isn’t a burden. To our entire family it is normal. Katelyn reminds us of the innocence a person has and how caring people are. She reminds us that you need to slow down in life and look at the whole picture. She reminds us that it’s what’s on the inside not the outside that count’s.
We began wondering about her development when she was 3 months old and still not holding her head up. After numerous test and trips to Dallas, we were finally told she had hypoplasia of the pons and decreased mylenation. The pons is the relay station for the brain and hypoplasia means it is small. They said this is something that will never change. We were told she would develop slower than others her age. We have been told that Katelyn has an overall neurological disorder with no one specific diagnosis. Just that her neurological system didn't develop correctly during utero.
Katelyn first sat up on her own when she was 9 months old. She began crawling at 2 1/2 and took those first steps 3 months before her 3rd birthday. Katelyn still doesn't talk but she communicates through sign language. We aren't sure as to why she doesn't use words, but trust in GOD that one day she will.
In December of 2002, Katelyn had her first surgery. She had a lamanectomey of the C1 joint in her neck. She then had her second surgery in January of 2003. This was to release a tethered cord that she had. Katelyn was also diagnosed with a swallowing disorder in July of 2004. She had to have all her liquids thickened to keep from aspirating on them. Katelyn had her third surgery in February of 2005. She had to have her C2 and C3 joints fussed together. She had some ribs taken and placed in her neck and she is fussed from the top of her spinal cord down to the C4 joints.
Katelyn has been such a blessing to her daddy and I and all the wonderful family and friends that are a part of her life. I have been told by many people that GOD gives children with special needs to special people. I truly believe this. I believe that GOD choose us to be Katelyn's parents for a reason. We will always thank GOD for her and continue to remember that HE is working miracles in her life. She is now free from having to drink thickened liquids and has been surgery free for three years now. That's the longest we've gone in her life without being in the hospital for something. Thank you God for all that you've done and continue to do in her life and ours.
I want to thank you all for visiting the web page and I hope you enjoy it. If this is your first time to visit, please read the journal history to see what's going on.
Visit Katelyn's Smile Quilt Visit Katelyn's Quilt of Love

*HUGS* TOTAL! give Katelyn more *HUGS*
Get hugs of your own
I decided to put this poem back up on Katelyn's page....
Welcome to Holland
I am often asked to describe the experience of raising a child with a disability or special need to try to help people who have not shared that unique but wonderful experience to understand it, to imagine how it would feel. It's like this... When you are going to have a baby, it's like planning a fabulous trip to Italy. You buy a bunch of guidebooks and make your wonderful plans. The Coliseum, Michelangelo's David, the gondolas in Venice. You may learn some handy phrases in Italian. It's all very exciting. After months of eager anticipation, the day finally arrives. You pack your bags and off you go. Several hours later, the plane lands. The flight attendant comes in and says, "Welcome to Holland." "Holland?!?" you say, "What do you mean Holland? I signed up for Italy! I'm supposed to be in Italy. All my life I've dreamed of going to Italy." But there's been a change in the flight plan. They've landed in Holland and there you must stay. The important thing is that they haven't taken you to a horrible, disgusting, filthy place, full of pestilence, famine and disease. It's just a different place. So you must go out and buy new guidebooks. And you must learn a whole new language. And you will meet a whole new group of people you would have never met. It's just a different place. It's slower paced than Italy, less flashy than Italy. But after you've been there for a while and catch your breath, you look around and notice that Holland has windmills, Holland has tulips, Holland even has Rembrandts. But everyone you know is busy coming and going from Italy, and they're all bragging about what a wonderful time they had there. And for the rest of your life, you will say, "Yes, that's where I was supposed to go. That's what I had planned." The pain of that will never, ever, ever go away, because the loss of that dream is a very significant loss. But if you spend your life mourning the fact that you didn't get to Italy, you may never be free to enjoy the very special, the very lovely things about Holland.
Written by Perl Kingsley
Here is the second part to the poem above...."
The following poem was posted on Katelyn's website on her 5th Birthday Celebrating Holland- I'm Home By Cathy Anthony (my follow-up to the original \Welcome to Holland\ by Emily Perl Kingsley)
I have been in Holland for over a decade now. It has become home. I have had time to catch my breath, to settle and adjust, to accept something different than I'd planned. I reflect back on those years of past when I had first landed in Holland. I remember clearly my shock, my fear, my anger, the pain and uncertainty. In those first few years, I tried to get back to Italy as planned, but Holland was where I was to stay. Today, I can say how far I have come on this unexpected journey. I have learned so much more. But, this too has been a journey of time.
I worked hard. I bought new guidebooks. I learned a new language and I slowly found my way around this new land. I have met others whose plans had changed like mine, and who could share my experience. We supported one another and some have become very special friends.
Some of these fellow travelers had been in Holland longer than I and were seasoned guides, assisting me along the way. Many have encouraged me. Many have taught me to open my eyes to the wonder and gifts to behold in this new land. I have discovered a community of caring. Holland wasn't so bad.
I think that Holland is used to wayward travelers like me and grew to become a land of hospitality, reaching out to welcome, to assist and to support newcomers like me in this new land. Over the years, I've wondered what life would have been like if I'd landed in Italy as planned. Would life have been easier? Would it have been as rewarding? Would I have learned some of the important lessons I hold today?
Sure, this journey has been more challenging and at times I would (and still do) stomp my feet and cry out in frustration and protest. And, yes, Holland is slower paced than Italy and less flashy than Italy, but this too has been an unexpected gift. I have learned to slow down in ways too and look closer at things, with a new appreciation for the remarkable beauty of Holland with its tulips, windmills and Rembrandts.
I have come to love Holland and call it Home.
I have become a world traveler and discovered that it doesn't matter where you land. What's more important is what you make of your journey and how you see and enjoy the very special, the very lovely, things that Holland, or any land, has to offer.
Yes, over a decade ago I landed in a place I hadn't planned. Yet I am thankful, for this destination has been richer than I could have imagined
KATELYN'S PRAYER written by Mrs. Dobie (One of Katelyn's special teachers)
Dear God, I can't speak with words to you But you know what's in my heart is true. I know I'm part of your special plan So please help Mommy and Daddy understand.
Thank You God for my family, teachers, and friends. With them on my side there's no battle I can't win. And God help Mommy not to worry if you can. I know, just tell her you are holding my hand.
For Jesus Loves Me this I know, For the Bible Mommy reads to me tells me so. Little ones he loves the most, And when we hurt he holds us close.
Dear God, remember I love you, And watch over Mommy, Daddy, and Bubba too. And God don't worry, I'm not scared All because I've said my Prayer.
Katelyn and Wesley first day of school

Eating ice-cream at Skinner family reunion

Journal
Tuesday, February 24, 2009 4:04 PM CST Hello all,
I hope you are all doing well. We are fine. We have really enjoyed the last year in our new house. We've done so much to make it our home, and still have more to do. The kids both have their rooms painted to there liking and the living room is done to mine and Jimmy's liking. We're still planning on re-doing the kitchen with new cabinets and countertops. We are also going to do some more to the two bathrooms.
Wesley is still doing well in school. He was just in his first play last week and played Christopher Columbus and Thomas Jefferson. He enjoyed it. He's reading really well and has started bringing home chapter books in his reading folder. The weather has had is asthma acting up a bit, but he's getting over it.
Katelyn is also doing well. We actually pulled her out of school and she is being homeschooled now. She likes it and is doing really well with it. We have our own schedule and if for some reason we aren't ready to start "school" at 9:00, she's sitting at the table waiting on me.
She has a doctor's appointment with her neurosurgeon on March 5th. We'll talk about her bulging disk that she has at C7 and T1 and he'll just check her kneck. I believe we'll come home with good reports, since she has been doing so well. She'll also go to the dentist on the 24th. We are going to find out why some of her teeth haven't came all the way in and just get them cleaned.
Jimmy has enjoyed being able to stay home for awhile. He has been working in Paris since the first of December. It's so nice to have him home everynight. Not only do I enjoy it, but the kids are really glad he comes home each night as well.
I'm doing great. Staying busy being teacher to Katelyn. We are still going and helping in Wesley's class once a week. Not only does this give Katelyn a chance to be around other kids, but she's learning from it as well.
Well, we wish you all well. Talk to you later.
The Crites Clan, Jimmy, Krissy, Katelyn and Wesley
Read Journal History
Hospital Information: Patient Room: Katelyn's Room Home
Links: http://www3.caringbridge.org/tx/tate/ Follow my buddy Tate through his battle with HLHS. He is having his third open heart surgery sometime in the spring.
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