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Last updateMon, 13 May 2024 10am

Former resident shares inspiring story of fight with rare disease

    Recently, a former Drumheller resident shared her inspirational story of battling a rare auto-immune disease with The Drumheller Mail.
    Juanita Grande, 42, was born in Drumheller in 1970 to Sam and Doreen Grande. She was raised in Drumheller until 1978 at which time her family moved to Edmonton. Since then, she has lived in Vancouver, Japan, and now lives in Paris, France, working as a singer, songwriter, and voice-actress.
    Her aunt and uncle, Deborah and Serafino, and cousin,Sean, still reside in the Valley.
    On January 10, she was rushed to the emergency room with an alarming blood pressure of roughly 220/80. There it was discovered she was in acute renal (kidney) failure. She was then sent to a hospital specializing in Nephrology, where she stayed for two weeks connected to various intravenous solutions.
    In intense pain, the days following were filled by ultrasounds, CT scans, MRI’s, and blood and urine tests. Eventually, it was determined she was suffering from microscopic polyangitis, a rare disease in which her capillaries were being attacked by her own immune system.
  The disease can also target specific organs, such as the kidneys, heart, lungs, brain, sinuses, or teeth. In Grande’s case, her kidneys and joints were afflicted.
    After her release from the hospital, she was given nine different medications per day, chemo therapy, and a restricted diet.
    “I have to eat very specifically to offset the effects of the medication which means no salt, sugar, animal protein, saturated fat. Then I have to eat for renal health which is no potassium or phosphorous. There’s a plethora of things I cannot eat now,” said Grande. “It’s alright, because before I was a bit of a health nut. I didn’t have to make many changes.”
    There is one item she misses more than anything else.
    “I miss wine. I’m in France, come on. I haven’t touched it since New Year’s Eve, but it’ll come back. It’s just while I’m on chemo and heavy drugs, I want to give myself every chance to succeed,” said Grande.
    Prior to her fateful visit to the emergency room, she had experienced joint pain and intense migraines for years, but various doctors had dismissed her symptoms as not being serious.
    “The doctors didn’t take it seriously, because I was too young to have that much pain from osteoarthritis,” said Grande.
    However, Grande has been making the most of her life since returning from the hospital. To share her experiences and help others, she started a blog, “Juan Day at a Time.” In it, she describes her hospitalization, day to day life, and even recipes for those with the same affliction. Since she started, she has collected over 2,500 followers.
    “It’s doing pretty well. I’m getting more and more letters from people with the same disease asking how they can eat smarter and offset the effects of all the medications. By helping them, I’m also helping myself,” said Grande.
    “I had never thought that anyone would want to read what I have to say. It’s weird, you never think that way until something big happens. Since the first post, it just took off."
    Perhaps most importantly, through it all, she has remained positive.
    “Everything is just serendipitously working out. Maybe it’s because I’m handling it in a positive way and when you do that things work themselves out,” said Grande. “I can’t believe it, my life has never been better. There are so many people coming back into my life. Since I’ve been sick, I’ve been getting letters from all over the world and even got one from someone I went to Kindergarten with. It’s been a soul-lifting experience.”
    In the end, Grande has two pieces of advice for anyone.
    “Second-guess your doctors. If you have any concerns, get a second opinion. That was my big lesson, because I could have saved myself renal failure if only the doctors I saw had listened to me,” said Grande. “Another one would be to put the right food in the tank, because that’s the first step in fighting anything. If you eat badly, you’re kicking yourself.”
    To see her blog, click here.


Tennis Club working towards starting construction

    The Drumheller Tennis Club is gaining momentum and if all the right ingredients fall in to place, they are hoping to break ground this season.
    The Tennis Club in Drumheller was revived last year in hopes of constructing new courts and bringing more people back to the sport. They have been busy in the background working on how to make it happen and have been getting strong support.
    To date they are looking at installing two courts and a basketball court at DVSS. They have been working with the Friends of DVSS to make it a reality and have volunteered at a casino to help raise the needed funds.
    Jillian Augey says they are about $50,000 away from breaking ground and have some applications out for funding. Support has come from the Drumheller Lions Club, which has pledged $26,000, enough to cover the Sports Coat surfacing. The Kinsmen also came to the table with a $3,000 donation.
    “If we can earn another $50,000 in the next couple months we can start construction this spring and be playing pickle ball, tennis and outdoor basketball this summer,” said Augey.
    There is considerable work on the site as well to be completed to make it a quality facility.
    The Town of Drumheller has also found a way to support the project by agreeing to provide equipment and material to excavate the site. Augey explains the existing pavement is cracked and it will need to be excavated to repack the subsurface and install drainage to make it usable.
    To follow the Drumheller Tennis Club’s progress or to learn how to get involved, join the club’s Facebook page.

East Coulee artist completes Centennial mural at Three Hills School

    An East Coulee artist has left her mark on another school in the area, and this time it is to celebrate the centennial of Three Hills.
    Janet Grabner of Carocol Clay Studio has completed a mosaic mural at Three Hills School to celebrate 100 years of the town. This was her third and largest installation yet, spanning 12 feet by 8 feet.
    “It is the biggest I have done so far,” said Grabner, and they are very happy with it.”    
    Grabner completed a mural at Greentree School a few years ago. It was success and is enjoyed daily by staff and students. It has also been noticed by others in the school division. Last year she was commissioned to do her second installation at Westmount School in Strathmore and then this one in Three Hills. She said teacher Carmen Reece thought of the mural for Three Hills.
    “She saw my other murals and thought the school could use something for the centennial,” said Grabner. “She wanted an image of the old school house, the old tree that stood in the yard, and the three hills, and said I could go from there.”
    While Grabner is commissioned to do the artwork, it is a collective effort. She supplies students and staff with the tiles—in this case, 500—and they decorate them how they see fit. She takes the tiles back to her studio in East Coulee where she and her husband and artist John Dahm glaze and fire the tiles. The tiles are then brought back to the school where they are assembled into the installation.
    This project took her about month to complete. While it is laborious, with experience comes efficiency. She has learned to build these latest installations much quicker than her original piece.
    Grabner says she enjoys this type of project, taking her out of the studio and into the public. This was the first mural she has done at a school with high school aged kids, and she felt it was important for them to see her working.
    “I told the kids when I made the tiles that I got hooked doing art in high school. Nobody told me I could make a living as an artist, as a kid I had to figure that out myself. So I was nice for them to see that it is possible.”
    She has been talking with another school that is interested in one of her tile murals.
    “I would be happy to do one mural a year, that would be just great,” Grabner said.


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