April 8, 2011

First Communion

St. Mary’s Feeding Clinic helps child prepare for sacrament

Elizabeth Clawson hands an unconsecrated host to Rebekah Grider. The nine-year-old was born with Pierre Robin Sequence which causes her difficulties in chewing food. For the past eight weeks, she has been receiving treatment at the Feeding Clinic at St. Mary's Hospital in Evansville. Part of the treatment has included preparing Rebekah for her First Communion later this spring at her home parish in Pocahontas, Ark. Elizabeth is a licensed clinical psychologist with the feeding program. (Message photo by Mary Ann Hughes)

Elizabeth Clawson hands an unconsecrated host to Rebekah Grider. The nine-year-old was born with Pierre Robin Sequence which causes her difficulties in chewing food. For the past eight weeks, she has been receiving treatment at the Feeding Clinic at St. Mary's Hospital in Evansville. Part of the treatment has included preparing Rebekah for her First Communion later this spring at her home parish in Pocahontas, Ark. Elizabeth is a licensed clinical psychologist with the feeding program. (Message photo by Mary Ann Hughes) Click for a larger version.

By MARY ANN HUGHES (Message staff writer)

Rebekah Grider’s eyes light up when she talks about her First Communion dress. And she claps her hands with joy as she tells her mother she wants to wear a veil — not flowers — on her hair on that special day.

Her mother’s eyes fill with tears at the mention of the day, a day she thought might never happen.

Summer Grider and her daughter live in Pocahontas, Ark., but they stayed at the Ronald McDonald House in Evansville for eight week so Rebekah could receive treatment at the Feeding Clinic at St. Mary’s Hospital.

Nine years ago, Rebekah was born with Pierre Robin Sequence, a combination of birth conditions that can include a small or displaced lower jaw and a tendency for the tongue to fall back in the throat. Since she was two-and-half months old, she has depended on a feeding tube to get the majority of her nutrients.

Her younger bothers, Jacob and Matthew, born in 2004, have a milder version of the sequence.

In 2006, Summer heard about the Feeding Program at Children’s Hospital in Richmond, Va. She and her three children spent eight weeks there receiving daily therapeutic meals and speech and recreational therapy under the direction of Elizabeth Clawson, the behavioral director of the program.

Clawson explained that the children with the sequence “have trouble moving food from the tongue to the teeth and chewing.”

The act of chewing food is “so automatic” for most people, she said. “They think it comes so naturally, but it’s a pretty complicated skill. The tongue has to move. The jaws have to be strong enough, and the cheeks have to support the food on the teeth.”

Children with the Pierre Robin Sequence often don’t learn to chew naturally at a normal developmental stage “because they aren’t taking anything by mouth and learning to chew. They miss the window of development.

“It’s hard to go back to teach that later. And the older they get, the more scared they get.”

Clawson is now working at the Feeding Clinic in Evansville. Rebekah recently had jaw surgery, and she and her mom then traveled to Indiana to continue treatment under Elizabeth’s care.

While in Evansville, Summer mentioned that Rebekah was in the second grade, the grade when children traditionally receive their First Communion. The mother was concerned that her daughter would not be able to receive the consecrated host because she has difficulty chewing.

Clawson contacted hospital chaplain, Franciscan Sister Jane McConnell, who was able to obtain unconsecrated hosts from the hospital chapel. Those hosts became part of Rebekah’s therapy, allowing her to become familiar with the texture and thickness of the hosts and to learn to chew them.

The mother was also concerned about her daughter missing out on the preparation classes for First Communion at their parish, and so Franciscan Sister Elna Stemann was asked to help. She’s a semi-retired primary school teacher, and during Rebekah’s stay in Evansville they met once a week and reviewed religious education materials from Rebekah’s parish in Arkansas.

Sister Elna taught her young student to pray the “Hail Mary” and the “Our Father,” and they studied the sacraments together, “especially Reconciliation, Baptism and the Eucharist.” They talked about the life of Jesus, and the difference between an unconsecrated host and a consecrated one.

Sister Elna said her goal was to make sure Rebekah was “well prepared, and that she didn’t lose out on any instruction” even though she was so far away from her home parish.

Summer and Rebekah now are home in Arkansas.

They are busy making all the preparations that mothers and daughters make before a First Communion.

They have the dress, and they have shopped for the veil. Rebekah knows her prayers, and she understands that the Eucharist is a sacrament.

Soon she will make her First Communion at St. Paul Church in Pocahontas.

Her mom says, “It’s been a long journey with her. She was born with a lot of feeding problems. She had a feeding tube at two-and-a-half months, and she’s had jaw surgery.

“She’s making progress, but it’s very slow. After working at the children’s center, she can eat a whole chicken nugget. That doesn’t seem like a lot . . . ,” she says, pausing to reflect.

When asked about Rebekah’s progress, she says, “I couldn’t even explain it. It’s life changing.

“She’s a second grader, and she wants to be like everyone else. She wanted to come and learn, and now she will be part of the whole family when we go up to Communion.”

Summer’s eyes fill with tears as she says, “She’s a tough cookie. She’s a trooper. I don’t know that I ever thought she would be able to do it. She’s our little miracle.

“Sister Elna worked with her. She taught her her prayers, and she taught her about the Eucharist. They did a family tree, and they did Jesus’ family tree.”

Then one day, Rebekah was asked, “Do you know what Communion really is?”

Her mother remembers, “I was floored when Rebekah was asked ‘what is that?’ and she said ‘That’s God.’”

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