Lussier family a test of faith
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Rick Devereux
Faith is a strange thing.
Most people have it when it is useless and lose it when they are
in most need of it.
No one needs faith when things are going well, it might seem. But
despair sets in once the tide shifts and faith is gone.
But not Bob Lussier.
He has faith even when Job of the Bible would start to have
doubts.
Lussier, 42, grew up in Fountain Valley and was on the high school
football and track and field teams. He played in some park softball
leagues after graduating and enjoyed riding his bicycle.
He was a model of health and well-being.
He found it hard to meet the right kind of woman, so a friend set
him up on a blind date. Ten months later he and Debbie were married.
Their faith was tested after a miscarriage, but the two stuck
together and eventually had a daughter, Emily.
Two years later Bob and Debbie had twin sons, Keith and Kyle.
Their faith was tested again.
When the twins were about 1 1/2 years old, the Lussiers
suspected something was different about their sons.
“Their language skills were not coming quick,” Debbie said.
A speech pathologist told the couple the twins exhibited autistic
traits.
“We were in denial,” Debbie said. “When they were 3 years old we
sent them to the Orange County Regional Center in Santa Ana. They
told us in three minutes it was autism.”
Autism is a developmental disease that falls on a spectrum scale.
The more severely affected individuals are dependent on others for
nearly everything. Those less affected are able to live independent
lives but still lack social skills.
Keith and Kyle have mild autism, but still require special
attention.
“The best description is that they receive all of the stimulus of
what is going on in a room,” Bob said. “The music playing, the people
talking, the cars in the street. But it is all coming in and they
can’t focus on one thing. All of it is hitting them as hard as
everything else. They have an inability to sit still and focus.”
The disease is so hard to deal with, marriages usually fall apart.
“Over 80% of marriages with one autistic child end in divorce,”
Debbie said. “We made a decision that we would not let that happen to
us.”
Debbie was a stay-at-home mom while Bob worked as a salesman.
The day-to-day grind got to be overwhelming, but the couple stayed
supportive of one another.
Then their faith was tested.
Bob was admitted into a hospital for a heart attack. He had an
angioplasty -- a procedure designed to reduce or eliminate blockage
of the coronary arteries.
Everything was fine and the Lussiers were able to resume their
lives of caring for a growing daughter and autistic twins.
Then their faith was tested.
Debbie was diagnosed with fibromyalgia, a condition that causes
chronic pain, stiffness and tenderness in muscles and joints. Fatigue
causes the pain to worsen.
Debbie was able to deal with pain, even though chasing after three
children -- two with a social disorder -- caused severe fatigue.
Then their faith was tested.
Emily was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD).
A stay-at-home mom that isn’t supposed to be exposed to fatigue
had to deal with a daughter whose hyperactivity made the autistic
twin sons demolish the house.
“In a lot of ways her ADHD was harder than autism,” Debbie said.
“She could hype up the whole house and get the boys going crazy.”
But the Lussiers stayed together.
Their faith in each other kept them going.
“We are a team,” Debbie said. “We aren’t going to abandon our
teammate.”
Then their faith was tested.
On Sept. 29, 2003, Debbie and Bob were moving book shelves. Debbie
went to the grocery store, so Bob decided to move the last shelf by
himself.
When Debbie came home, Bob was complaining that his arms felt
funny.
“Something told me to stay close to him,” Debbie said. “I watched
him get up, and he was walking like he was drunk. And I could tell
his tongue was swelling up and he had trouble talking.”
Debbie called a nurse, who told them Bob was showing stroke-like
symptoms. Debbie called her sister to pick up the kids and then she
called 911.
Bob indeed had suffered a stroke.
The doctors think the stroke was caused by a head injury Bob
suffered the day before, which resulted in a blood clot in his brain.
Because of his age -- Bob was 41 at the time of the stroke -- the
doctors suggested the recovery process would take three to six
months.
“I remember thinking three to six months sounded like a real long
time,” Debbie said. “It’s been a year and half since his stroke and
three to six months sounds like nothing.”
Bob has trouble with tasks that require concentration. He is
unable to write with a pen and paper because he has limited mobility
on the right side of his body.
Bob lost his job and is living off his disability insurance.
But the Lussiers stayed together.
They actually viewed the stroke as a blessing in disguise.
“I was able to spend all day with my wife and kids,” Bob said.
“There aren’t too many married couples that are able to do that. It
has really brought us closer together. If she wasn’t before, she is
certainly my best friend now.”
Through it all the Lussiers were still trying to figure out how to
deal with autistic twins.
They heard about Angel’s Run, a charity walk-a-thon at Corona del
Mar High dedicated to helping children with special needs. They heard
there would be information about autism, plus the Lussiers wanted to
help with the charity.
While at the event, Bob saw people with T-shirts that read, “Train
to End Stroke.”
The group used running to raise money and awareness for stroke
research. Bob was immediately hooked.
He started training with the group and had plans to participate in
a marathon in Hawaii in December, but he started getting headaches
and had to stop.
The doctors have cleared him to train again and he plans to
participate in the San Diego Marathon in June.
“It’s easy to get depressed and lay on the couch and watch TV,”
Bob said. “But I need to stay active. I think it’s the
competitiveness in me. I may be down, but I won’t be down for long.”
Bob trains at the CdM track, through the Back Bay trails and
around Costa Mesa. He incrementally increases the number of miles he
covers each week, but the stroke has caused some difficulties.
“When I get fatigued, I drift to the right because of the limited
motion,” he said. “And I wouldn’t call what I do ‘running.’ It’s
hardly even jogging. It’s more like a fast walking.”
The whole family is getting involved with the training.
Bob takes Emily out for six-mile walks, which help with her
hyperactivity. The twins enjoy being out and active with dad. And
Debbie is planning on traversing part of the marathon with Bob.
“There are plenty of times when I don’t feel like getting up and
training and just want to stop,” Bob said. “But I think about the
example I am setting for my daughter and two sons. I don’t want them
to quit so I can’t quit.
“There are times when I wonder how much more can we handle,” Bob
said. “But then I realize we aren’t supposed to handle any of it. The
real test is to see how fast we can turn it over God.”
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