Run the Creek for Batten Disease

By Laura Edwards

Spring race season is here; I’m diving in headfirst, with four races (two of them out-of-state) in the next eight weeks. Next Saturday, March 21, I’ll be at Charlotte’s Run the Creek 5K to run in honor of my sister Taylor as well as Brandon and Jeremy Hawkins, local kids and brothers both battling Batten disease.

We connected with the Hawkins family shortly after Taylor’s diagnosis in the summer of 2006; in fact, Brandon and Taylor went to the same astute pediatric neurologist. continue reading →


Running for Taylor in 50 States: Texas

By Laura Edwards

When I crossed the finish line of Charlotte’s Thunder Road Half Marathon blindfolded in November 2013, I knew the race would be a tough act to follow. But I didn’t intend to stop running for my sister, Taylor, and our fight against Batten disease and other rare diseases.

On National Running Day 2014, I shared my plan to run a race in all 50 states – a feat not as rare as running 13.1 miles blind but one that I hope will help me spread our story far and wide.

Yesterday morning, I flew to Texas for state number five and the Woodlands Half Marathon, the hometown race of local hero Will Herndon. continue reading →


The Launch of a Trial, and the Light at the End of the Tunnel

By Laura Edwards

Nearly five years ago, when my sister could still sing and talk and walk and eat ice cream cones on hot summer days, my mother met Steve Gray, a young investigator from the University of North Carolina Gene Therapy Center, at a conference in Bethesda. Since 2008 he’d been working on giant axonal neuropathy (GAN), an ultra-rare, fatal childhood disease that causes progressive nerve death.

A few months later, we drove to Greensboro to have dinner with him. We weren’t ready to take the leap then, but Mom believed in Steve since the first time she heard him speak about his effort to save children from a monster that turned them into quadriplegics unable to eat or breathe on their own.  When I sat across from Steve in our booth that night, I believed in him, too. continue reading →


The Hardest Question

By Laura Edwards

When friends ask how my sister’s doing, I don’t know what to say. Explaining gene therapy comes more easily to me than answering that question. And I majored in English.

Taylor has “good” days and bad days. But Batten disease has forced us to adjust our expectations.

My sister has fought a brave, tough fight for many long years. She’s overcome a learning disability; gone blind; struggled with her speech; lost her voice; suffered seizures; gotten a wheelchair and a feeding tube. But she’s also learned to read and write in braille and walk with a cane and run two 5K races without the gift of sight. Most of all, she’s never forgotten how to laugh. continue reading →


Running for Taylor in 50 States: World Rare Disease Day

By Laura Edwards

When I crossed the finish line of Charlotte’s Thunder Road Half Marathon blindfolded in November 2013, I knew the race would be a tough act to follow. But I didn’t intend to stop running for my sister, Taylor, and our fight against Batten disease and other rare diseases.

On National Running Day 2014, I shared my plan to run a race in all 50 states – a feat not as rare as running 13.1 miles blind but one that I hope will help me spread our story far and wide.

Three weeks from today, I’ll run my second race of 2015 in the great state of Texas: the Woodlands Half Marathon outside of Houston. continue reading →


Why World Rare Disease Day Matters

By Laura Edwards

There are a million special recognition and awareness “days.” I worked in healthcare for eight years. Many of the patients and families and doctors and nurses and service line leaders I worked with throughout those eight years had a day that was special to them because it recognized not their disease or condition, but the courage and strength it takes to face the disease each day and the determination and belief in miracles it takes to fight for a better tomorrow. Even if some days are so dark you can’t see what’s coming. continue reading →


Run or Walk for Team Taylor’s Tale on January 31

By Laura Edwards

In February, I’ll knock out the first state of 2015 in my quest to race in all 50 states for my sister Taylor and the fight against Batten disease. Originally I’d planned on taking January off, but it’s been two months since Charlotte’s Thunder Road Half Marathon, and I’m antsy. So on a whim I signed up for The Village 10K in Waxhaw, right outside of Charlotte, on January 31.

I’ll be running for Team Taylor’s Tale in Waxhaw that day, and if you live in Charlotte or close by, I hope you’ll consider joining our team for the 10K or 5K event. continue reading →


Running for Taylor in 50 States: 2015 Preview

By Laura Edwards

The winter running season is long and lonely. Marked by cold, short days and diminished race calendars, it can make even the most allergic runner long for the blossoming of spring. I ran my last major race at Charlotte’s Thunder Road Half Marathon in November, and I have eight more weeks to prepare for my first race of 2015. I can’t wait to get back out there for my sister Taylor. continue reading →


Love Song to 2014

By Laura Edwards

This year got off to a rocky start. Never much for flashy New Year’s Eve parties, John and I joined my parents and my sister Taylor for a simple dinner at one of our favorite local pizza places. We felt sure we’d made a safe choice. But the staff had distributed noisemakers to the kids packed into the family-friendly restaurant, and the shrill sounds reverberating off the high ceiling sent Taylor spiraling out of control.

Before the pizza came she was lost in a new kind of seizure we’d never witnessed before. We whisked her out of the restaurant and back to my parents’ house, where we tried in vain to pull her out of a black hole. Though that episode ended, we all knew even then that it was a harbinger of things to come. We knew 2013 was officially over and life would never be the same. As if on cue, Taylor’s first wheelchair arrived on Mom and Dad’s doorstep several days later. Then this summer, when my sister should have been swimming at the pool or going to camp, she spent a week at Levine Children’s Hospital to have a feeding tube placed. This fall she underwent a second surgery, getting an implanted device that works like a pacemaker for the brain and is supposed to help control her seizures.

It’s been a tough year. But somehow my sister, whose voice Batten disease also silenced in 2014, still laughs at Stephen and John’s jokes and cracks a smile when she can sense the friends and family she loves are nearby. Somehow my sister, who at 16 has already lost more than anyone should have to lose in a lifetime, still finds moments of joy.

So as difficult as 2014 has been–as much as Taylor has lost and as painful as witnessing her immense loss has been for the rest of us–I have only gratitude here in the final hours of the year. Because every moment with Taylor is a great blessing.

What are your defining moments from 2014? What do you look forward to most in 2015?

Taylor laughing