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By Susan Mador
Tyler Dodge doesn’t think he’s an unusual kid. He rides his scooter, goes to
school, plays ball, likes fast downhill skiing, and watches “Survivor” with
his mom, Sharon, after his twin sisters Sarah and Caitlyn go to bed. Tyler’s schedule isn’t
much different from that of other kids.
But to people in Oak
Harbor and across the
state, 10-year-old Tyler is unusual. In fact, some people call him “amazing.”
Saturday, April 17, Tyler will be one of many
kids walking with their families in a Multiple Sclerosis Society walk in Bellingham.
However, unlike a lot of kids his age, Tyler
will have a reason for walking and raising money.
“I just want to help my mom,” Tyler
said.
Tyler’s mom,
Sharon Dodge, has Multiple Sclerosis, a disease of the nervous system that’s
tricky to diagnose and comes with a maddening variety of symptoms.
“Tyler is
amazing,” Elizabeth Griffin said. “At such a young age, he has a passion to
raise money for MS.” Griffin
is communications director for the MS Society’s Greater Washington chapter.
At last year’s MS Walk, Sharon Dodge was honored for her efforts in raising
money. Tyler
walked then.
“When we finished Tyler
said, ‘That was too easy, just walking. Next year I want to do it right and
raise money,’ ” Sharon
said.
Tyler set up
his own page at the MS Web site so people could e-pledge to him. He also
asked all his former and current teachers for pledges. No one refused. Julie
Fakkema, his teacher at Oak
Harbor Christian
School, did more than
donate. She joined the Dodges on Team Hope.
“I am so impressed with the determination and optimism Sharon and Tyler
have,” Fakkema said. “They are so committed to finding out how to get through
MS.
“Tyler shares
his mom’s determination and he’s very self-motivated,”
“Their positive attitudes are amazing and I want to be part of that. — to
show my support as a teacher and a friend,” Fakkema added.
By the end of March, Tyler’s
goal of $100 was long eclipsed. He’s raised about $700 for MS.
“I wasn’t expecting this much,” he said.
Tyler still
doesn’t think his efforts at raising money are anything unusual.
“Tyler gets so excited when another pledge
comes in,” Sharon
said.
Tyler could
have stopped once he met his goal, but he kept going.
“I know more money is out there,” he said.
Knowing the money will go to MS research pleases Tyler. However, 70 percent of the money
raised during the Bellingham walk will stay in
Western Washington, MS Society’s Griffin said. The rest
goes to research and national programs, with only a fraction going to
fundraising and administrative costs.
“Nationally, MS is highly committed to maintaining a low fundraising ratio,” Griffin said. The MS
Society spends about 20 percent of funds to raise more money. The national
average for non-profits is 25 percent, Griffin
added.
More than half of what remains in Western Washington goes directly to local
programs to help people who have MS and their families, Griffin said. All those programs, which
include physician referrals, newsletters, seminars, advocacy, support groups
and financial assistance, are free.
“Tyler’s
really excited about doing something that helps his mother,” his father,
Bill, said.
Sharon Dodge has relapsing-remitting MS. Like every other MS patient, her
symptoms were varying and being diagnosed with MS took some time.
MS killed Sharon’s
father Walter when he was only 49. And Sharon
said she was “shocked to learn” she had MS.
“MS isn’t inherited,” she said. “It’s very unusual for family members to
contract MS.”
Since being diagnosed, Sharon
has been on different drugs to battle the disease. Last year she took a shot
once a week and felt like she had the flu every time.
Earlier this year, an MRI showed new lesions on her brain, so doctors
switched her to a new drug. The new daily shot doesn’t make her feel sick,
but the shot is extremely painful.
“The first time I gave myself a shot, I yelled so loudly I woke up Tyler,” Sharon
said.
But she’s grateful for the drugs. “Many treatments today were not available
for my father,” she said.
MS doesn’t limit Sharon.
She does what she wants when she wants to do it.
“My mom’s lucky,” Tyler
said. “Lots of people with MS can’t walk.”
Sharon is
convinced a cause and cure for MS will be found in her lifetime.
“That’s why I’m here,” she said. “To raise money and awareness about MS.”
“Look at all the blessings our family has,” she continued while she watched
her children Tyler, Sarah and Caitlyn riding scooters and bikes. “Anytime I
get down I realize I’m wasting time. There is too much to do to spend time
being depressed.”
Tyler’s also
too busy to spend a lot of time worrying.
His mother being very tired from MS symptoms does frustrate him. But he has
plans.
“Lots of skiing downhill fast and doing the MS Walk every year with my mom,”
he said after jumping a curb on his scooter.
sidebar
What is Multiple Sclerosis?
Multiple sclerosis is a chronic, often disabling disease that attacks the
central nervous system. Symptoms may be mild or severe. The progress,
severity, and specific symptoms of MS in any one person cannot be predicted.
MS is thought to be an autoimmune disease. The body’s defense system attacks
myelin, the substance that surrounds and protects the nerve fibers of the
central nervous system. The damaged myelin may form scar tissue (sclerosis).
When any part of the myelin sheath or nerve fiber is damaged or destroyed,
nerve impulses can’t be relayed correctly.
Most people with MS cope with the disease, and live productive lives.
Source: www.nmss.org.
MS isn’t inherited but there is a genetic pattern, said Elizabeth Griffin of
the MS Society’s chapter of Greater Washington. People with Northern European
backgrounds are more likely to develop the disease. The distance a person
lives the equator also is a factor.
“In Washington, MS
is a very local concern,” Griffin
said.
In Island County, the MS Society has 106
clients. According to Griffin, 750 other
people from family and friends to coworkers and caregivers are affected by MS
in Island County.
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