When Robert and Katie Zadak found out their son, Nick, would have a break from chemotherapy treatment, they knew exactly what to do with the free time.
First, they told Nick’s doctors. Then they called a friend, who is a travel agent, and arranged logistics. Then they grabbed Nick and their daughter, Anna, hopped in the car and started the nearly seven-hour drive from Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford in Palo Alto, Calif., to Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif. Over a three-day stay at the theme park last year, Nick was all smiles. He rode “It’s a Small World” each day. He ate breakfast with Disney characters, including Daisy Duck, his favorite. Those are a couple of the moments that made Nick’s life full, even though he died at age 4 from pediatric liver cancer in February.
“As horrible as it was, we were happy that we got to do everything with him that we did,” Katie said.
Nick’s parents, who live in Vancouver, planned and executed a bucket list of about six things before he died. There was Nick’s first day of kindergarten, where the Tukes Valley school system sent a bus to his house just for him. A teacher stayed after school to teach him for a couple hours. And there was the tour of Washington University’s Husky Stadium, where Nick played on the field. That was an important moment for Robert, a UW alum. And there was the time Nick rode around in the cabin of a construction truck screaming with joy while it plowed dirt at the Clark County Fairgrounds. And who could forget the packed 36 hours when Nick watched his younger sister Anna’s baptism, then received a blood transfusion and then saw local firefighters and fire trucks visit him at the hospital? Since Nick’s death, Robert, 36, and Katie, 35, have used distractions to power past grief. They have Anna, their “favorite distraction.” Robert, who’s in the National Guard, joined a rock climbing gym. And Katie, who manages a local Wal-Mart, did a blood drive on Nick’s birthday this year to stay distracted. But sadness still creeps in.