Kris Belcher's son Benjamin has inherited the gene that caused her retinal tumors, which took away the last of her eyesight. She says Benjamin "heals her heart."
Laura Seitz, Deseret Morning News
LEHI Kris Belcher has met challenges head-on since she was a baby.
Diagnosed with retinal blastoma cancer at seven months, she's never enjoyed 20-20 or even 20-200 vision. She's also never been totally free of a number of physical challenges including cancer and spinal meningitis.
The dark-haired, determined woman has fought through life pretty much relying on severely limited vision in one eye. She graduated from Brigham Young University with a degree in recreational management, and she served an LDS mission to Kentucky.
Now, at 33, with two young boys, a new business and a husband to care for, she's totally blind.
But she's not giving up.
She's scared but she's not discouraged, even though she's been through three traumatic surgeries since December after doctors found tumors in her right eye tumors caused by the radiation treatments she'd had as an infant.
"It's OK that it's not fair. I don't feel mad. I'm not pleased, but I'm not the one in charge," Belcher said, holding 1-year-old Benjamin on her lap while 5-year-old Christopher takes flying leaps from a plastic jump toy.
"We're just grateful for what we have because there was a real serious week where we didn't think I would live. We were scared to death."
"The biggest reward is that we're still a family," she added. "Somehow I'll learn to be a wife and a mother again. Somehow our little family will get stronger."
James Belcher says he has no doubt his wife will survive and surprise those around her.
"She's a survivor. She's never been the kind of person who is defeated by anything. She comes through," he said.
The Belchers had just opened a flower shop in an old home on Lehi's Main Street when Kris Belcher noticed her vision getting steadily worse.
"If we'd known what was coming, we probably wouldn't have opened the business," James Belcher said. "We would have put it on hold simply out of fear of the financial implications."
While Flowers on Main continues to grow, start-up costs and old medical bills make it hard for the family to break even. Owning his own business, however, has allowed James the freedom to come home as necessary to help his wife.
"James is the talent. He creates unique and beautiful designs," Kris Belcher said.
- Is this dress too short? Tooele teen gets...
- KSL TV news icon Bruce Lindsay calls it a career
- Sarah Palin catches flak over her Orrin Hatch...
- Search & destroy mission under way in Utah...
- Homeless court metes out justice in...
- 6 arrested after police say they tortured...
- Bus driver's arrest prevented potential 'mass...
- Top recreation areas to visit during Memorial...
- Is this dress too short? Tooele teen...
42 - Stay-at-home mothers find challenge,...
41 - Stained-glass ceiling: Study says...
36 - Orrin Hatch is now the hunted —...
30 - Billboard battle heats up as company...
29 - Sen. Mike Lee forced to sell...
27 - Matheson, Love engage in lively...
21 - Liljenquist TV ad aims to pressure...
20






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments