Sunday, April 30, 2017

Another Bump On The Bumpy Road

last Saturday April 22nd  Earth Day
I ended up in the Emergency Room

the night before I spent an hour in bed
quivering
teeth chattering
right leg twitching with muscle pain
it might have been two hours
felt like forever
but then I fell asleep

in the morning
I felt better
but by afternoon
I was burning up
Jackie took my temperature
it was 102

We left for the hospital
Howie with Jackie and me
Andrew following behind
once there the testing
and needles began
first diagnosis-UTI
admission and off we go. . .

*

Snippets from a hospital stay:

it’s time for bed
11pm room 131
Bozeman Deaconess Hospital
I can’t get comfortable
my hands on the pillows
curl into balls
I can’t relax
Jackie gives me
my homeopathic anxiety drops
I am scared of the night

*

Dr. Herring

The first hospitalist
very attentive
his voice
as he discussed
my situation
put me to sleep
every time
he set me up
for recovery

*

Dr. Sauerwein

tall, confident, quirky
wearing a funny surgical hat
looking and sounding like Henry Kissinger
Bjorn Sauerwein explains to us
my bladder has been weakened
by the ALS
it can no longer
store my pee
which explains why
I have had so much trouble urinating
my urine has backed up
into my kidneys
causing an infection

he will need to see me in his office
once the infection has cleared
in the meantime
I have a new internal catheter
which immediately drained
a huge amount of urine
relief
but no more peeing for me

*

CT Scan and Swallow Study

it was very difficult
to hold my breath for the CT scan
it took a lot out of me
especially after the slide board transfers

then I lay in my bed in the hall
waiting for the swallow study
broken air mattress deflating
while the anxious techs ran around
looking for yet another spare battery pack

another slide board transfer
to a chair that laid flat 
then went upright
for me to sit in front
of an x-ray machine
where I swallowed poison  
in various consistencies
in order to get a better handle
on my eating and drinking abilities

*

Cheri, Speech Therapist Extraordinaire
(aka Dragon Lady)

wearing a colorful
fitted lead dress
and special x-ray glasses
told me the bottom line
that I am aspirating
when I swallow
and now had the x-rays
to prove it


*

Dr. Sullivan

the pulmonologist with a belly
and a mustache
continuously tells me
I am doing great
on the non-invasive ventilator
he is very impressed
considering how difficult
it was for me at first

he often repeats himself
our conversations circle around
my need for a feeding tube
how strong my voice is
my ability to use the ventilator
my weakening diaphragm and lungs
my ability to survive
the procedure to install the PEG
what to do if things go south
whether to get a trach or not

he smiles a lot
talks too much
makes me anxious
but he is doing the best he can
he has a very difficult job
I am not an easy case
though I am an easy patient

*

The Hoyer Lift

they roll you over on the bed
put you in a canvas sack
the nursing staff all joke
they have done it
themselves in training
but I doubt they ever
got hoisted from a hospital bed
to a commode
with their bare butts
hanging out of a hole
backed up, arms useless
in the way, stiff and in pain
they kept remarking
how it was like a hammock
but it’s no backyard swing
on a relaxing Sunday afternoon

*

OT/PT

Brooke or Carly
part of my OT team
came by every day
to work the stiffness
out of my arms
sometimes they came
with Tamara, the red-shirted
head of in-patient PT
I have a good memory of Carly
stopping by with another
red-shirted PT
who worked my legs
while Carly worked my arms
soon after I got a ride in the hoyer lift
‘cuz I had to go poop

*

Dr. Marley

Dr. Marley listed every drug in the world
every pain killer
every pain blocker
young and knowledgeable
a typical hospitalist
who knows nothing about you
to change the subject
I asked him where he went to school
big boyish smile
Jackie gave him my blog address
he turned out ok in the end

*

The Nurses

Tina 

my first night
gentle and strong
confident and not afraid
of this complex patient
burning with fever
she set me up in bed
with pillows
I slept on the ventilator
for three straight hours

she was my nurse again
a few days later
feeling much better
she insisted on taking me
outside for fresh air

Allison

her mother-in-law, Lois
used to work for us
Allison was in charge of my enema
covered the bed
with a hundred quilt and chuck pads
she also gave me a suppository
and had to deal with my emptying out

Becky

my night nurse
for three nights in a row
she was great at
setting me up
on my left side
perplexed by my inability to sleep
and wanting me out of pain
she offered me norco every four hours

Kelsey

a full time nurse
a full time hairdresser
mother of teenagers
she was my nurse one day
my case manager the next
instead of “I voted today” stickers
she thinks we should wear
“I pooped today” stickers
every time I pooped
I got a kiss

Andrew

the only guy
rock solid
never assigned to me
he inserted my catheter
asking me if I could
feel things down there
when I told him yes
he numbed me up
asked me if it hurt
well it’s not pleasurable
we all laughed

Katie

awesome positive energy
night nurse for the last two nights
I didn’t sleep well either night
but no fault of hers
the first night
I had a bad reaction
to Adavan which I took  for sleep
on Dr. Marley’s recommendation
I kept saying I was lost
felt anxious, couldn’t sleep
another drug
working backwards on me
Katie massaged my feet
for over an hour
she and Jackie
bonded over my bed
sharing stories
Katie met her boyfriend
when his car broke down
in the town in Michigan
where she lived
He left for his summer job out east
but turned around an hour later
back to Katie
I don’t blame him

*

Dr. Popwell

Dr. Popwell was talking about
palliative care and acute hospital care
“waaa waaa waaa waaaa waaa waaa”
I was falling asleep
it was serious and well thought out
but it was time for him to stop talking
I told him
you’ve talked enough
we all burst out in laughter
then I told him I appreciated his care
he was in tears
I can tell he cares a lot about me

*

Our Angels

they visited me one by one
filling up our room with love
brought us enough food
to feed an army
some of them helped us
navigate and understand
the doctors’ words
marking the future
friends I hadn’t seen
in months even years
appeared with tears in their eyes
Jonell came with Peyto
who on arrival vomited
on the floor of my room
admitting physician, Dr. Gaylord
a sweet man from Texas
stopped by in his street clothes
on his way home
to check on me
remarked how my positive attitude
was key to my recovery
and my daily life with ALS
Tracy on her birthday
Gail every morning
Alex every day after school
Josh and Debby with dinner every night
Curly who is always there for me
Barbara and the Middleton family
taking buddy for the week
even getting him groomed
Rita coming by
to trim my nails
on departure day
Nettie, Dan, Taylor,
Patty, Candice, Tim
cards from Jayden and Brodie
flowers from Leslie
a super soft blanket from Rachel
Soup from Shannon
home repairs by Tim S
Louis, my oldest brother arrived
just in time to help take me home

*

Rabbi Ed

we texted him to come after six
he showed up at four
joining Alex, Curly and Louis
he asked me how I was doing
and then asked if I had
written my ethical will
I have not
but I told him
I want to be buried
not cremated
he wanted to know
If I wanted a traditional
Jewish burial
with the ritual of tahara
He told me about a “green” burial
where you are buried in a wicker basket
he told me that cremation
is a major cause
of greenhouse gasses
in the world

eventually he went to find Jackie
who was having an intense
conversation with Dr. Popwell
at the end of the hall
when he arrived
after a few minutes
I looked at Alex , Curly and Lou
and said
give Jackie a break
go tell the Rabbi
I’m dying


*

Jackie

six days and nights
together in a 200 square foot room
she never left my side
need I say more

*

Home At Last

made it home in time
for Howie’s birthday
and the Mets Nats series
a pile of cards
I still haven’t opened
Buddy and the cat happy to see us
the clean house
made ready by Candice

it’s good to be home
but I still have ALS
my nervous system
has no patience
my useless hands
cannot tolerate touching anything
plastic or metal
nerve pain in my right wrist
my shoulders, biceps and triceps
still tight
the gabapentin helps
but makes me groggy
intestines still angry
still it’s good to be home

Tracy sent us a photo
of a local family
also touched by ALS
who were in California
at a fundraising walk
the large family
were holding signs
one of them read
we love Marky Moose
made by Aaron
our sweet produce manager
signed by staff, vendors, customers
carried to California
by Whitney

seventeen years ago
we were at Bozeman Deaconess Hospital
on April 28th waiting to get a medical induction
it was a busy day
in the under renovation
maternity ward
we had to wait
until 11:30 pm
before Dr. Wong
could induce Jackie
Grandma Peggy in charge of Andrew
Tracy in charge of Micah
four hours later
we all met Howie
now he is taller than me
helps take care of me
he is a young man
spent the week
home alone
getting to school on time
studying for AP exams and the ACT
we celebrated his birthday
a fajita bar
and chocolate moose cake
prepared with love
by Lindsie, Jamie
and our CK crew
Tracy and the kids
Wades and Schumachers
Ethan Schumacher
born just a few days after Howie
they had their first sleepover at BDH

I have spent
most of my first few days at home
writing this with Jackie
exhausting
but so necessary
for my well-being
the bumpy road continues







 























8 comments:

  1. One of my favorite posts of yours. Thanks for the update. Glad you are home. I love you. Anna

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  2. So glad you are home!! Hugs to all!!!

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  3. Hi Dr. Saurwein is Chas's urologist too!!! Did you know he has an md and a phd in Chemistry and that he taught at the nursing school at Idaho State for about 10 years. You are in good hands with Bjorn and his wonderful sense of humor. Glad to know you are home again.

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  4. I can't imagine how much energy it took to write so much, but I also know how good it feels to get it all out. And it is also good, but hard, to read it all for all of us who love you. Reassuring, but also hard. You are still here: your same sense of humor, your same turn of phrase--in the photos, your same kind eyes. I love you--Barbara

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  5. Loving you with every post and every day in between, Mark. Thank you for sharing with us xoxo Amelia

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  6. Marky, you and your entire team are true examples of bravery and courage. What a gift your writing is to all of us. I am humbled by your stories and gift and inspired to live with courage. Your "funny lady" misses you and deeply admires all that you are.

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  7. Mark, I am so glad you and Jackie shared your blog with me. Reading your words is such a wonderful reminder of the patient's view that sometimes in our day to day gets overshadowed by tasks. You are a man full of courage and humor. It was such a joy working with you and Jackie during your hospital stay.

    Hugs and foot rubs,
    Katie (the night nurse)

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  8. I've circled back to read this post again, it is one of my favorites. Thank you for sharing Mark, you are an incredibly talented writer. The rawness of your words and journey are so moving. Sending lots of love to you and your family.
    XOXO - Ben & Mackenzie

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