From the Newsroom -- Tony Dodero
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For years, we in the newsroom have been left to watch the CHOC follies
from afar.
Conducted at the El Toro Marine base for its first few years of
existence, the annual fund-raiser for the Children’s Hospital of Orange
County was well out of our coverage area.
So I was happy to see that change this year as the follies moved to
Costa Mesa into a tent across from the Orange County Performing Arts
Center.
Readers may have noticed that we have unleashed our reporters on this
worthy event.
I was happy for the move, not just because that meant that we could
now cover this extravaganza, but because now I could put in my two cents
worth of gratitude toward the children’s hospital that had cared for my
little girl, Kristen Elise, when she was stricken with a serious
respiratory ailment.
And I wasn’t the only one with a personal story to tell of CHOC.
Costa Mesa Mayor Linda Dixon, was also glad to see the follies come to
her hometown, as it would give her a chance to personally thank the
hospital that cared for her son, who was rushed to the Mission Viejo
facility when he was just 16.
“He was experiencing mini strokes,” Dixon said of her son, now a
healthy young man. “He was in intensive care for a month because they
didn’t know what was happening to him.”
Dixon said the hospital ran a battery of tests on her son and during
his stay, the nurses and other staff people would bring him pizza or play
cards with him.
“It was just a really good experience,” Dixon said. “They were caring
and they were warm. They did everything to try and put us at ease and
make him feel comfortable being there.”
As for me, I will always be indebted to the doctors and nurses at CHOC
who took such good care Kristen.
When she was one month old, Kristen came down with a bad cough and
cold. My wife and I tried nursing her back to health. Then one horrifying
night she had a wheezing and coughing episode that had us rushing her to
the emergency room at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Orange at 1 a.m.
After a few hours in the emergency room, the doctors decided to admit
Kristen into CHOC, which sits right across the street from St. Joseph’s.
Kristen was diagnosed with RSV, or respiratory syncytial virus, which is
often cited as the most frequent cause of serious respiratory tract
infections in infants and children younger than 4.
It was heartbreaking for me to see her in the hospital, oxygen tubes
hooked to her nose, her big eyes staring out at me from the plastic crib.
RSV can be deadly and can sideline a young child often for as long as two
weeks.
Thankfully, though, Kristen only stayed in the hospital two days. Now,
a spunky little 15-month-old girl, her rapid recovery I’m sure had
everything to do with her strong nature and the great treatment she
received while she was at CHOC.
Still, for all the fright that Kristen put me and my wife through, my
story pales in comparison to that of her honor the mayor, who must have
been beyond scared when she learned of her son’s illness.
So when CHOC Follies visionary and organizer Gloria Zigner asked Dixon
to take part in a singing and dancing number for this year’s festivities,
the mayor was more than happy to oblige.
“It’s a small way for me to give back to CHOC for everything they did
for my family,” she said. “If coming to see me sing and dance will
encourage people to buy tickets, I’m willing to do it.”
Dixon will be teamed with about 90 other community members to perform
in this year’s production known as “The Slipper and the Surfer: An Orange
County Cinderella Story.”
“I am having a wonderful time,” she said. “I am amazed at the talent
because these are not professionals and they are so talented.”
And while Dixon’s newfound show biz career probably won’t derail her
reelection bid next November, there’s always a chance she could be
discovered by a talent agent, she joked.
So if you have an interest in seeing the mayor sing and dance or you
just want to give a little help to a hospital that does good work for
sick young children, then make sure you catch the CHOC Follies this
coming weekend. Here’s the info for how to do it:
FYI
Times:
Friday 8 p.m.
Saturday 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.
Sunday 2 p.m.
Prices: Tickets range from $25 to $100.
Information: 714-532-8690
***
Finally, a reader called and pointed out to me that I made an error in
my column last week. I mistakenly referred to my parents as “kettlers,”
mangling a popular nickname for bowlers.
The real nickname is keglers. I apologize for the goof but it just
goes to show you that everyone needs a good editor, even an editor.
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