It’s a palpable feeling.
A blast of anxiety causes your heart to speed up and your breathing
become shallow and too fast. You can
almost feel the adrenaline surge through your body as all of your senses kick
into hyper drive.
Everyone, I mean everyone feels it at some point in their
lives. I don’t like the way if feels, it’s an uncomfortable feeling but it’s an
important part of our survival mechanism, it’s our bodies way of reacting to the
powerful stimuli of the vagaries of life.
For me it’s a very keen, borderline obsessive alertness. I liken it to a really good German Shorthair
on point, everything rigid, all senses hyper aware. Just like the dog my tail sticks straight up
in the air (not a great look for a 63 year old man). It’s like someone is squeezing the adrenalin
out of where ever it comes from and it floods your body and boom, a magnified
anxiety and sense of awareness has taken over your very soul.
Sometimes I forget how it feels. I like that I forget.
As good as our lives have gone lately, as healthy
(relatively speaking) as Marty has been it just takes a moment, an event, an
instance and the flood of bad memories, the overwhelming anxiety comes back.
Marty threw up the other day and that’s what revived all of
those feelings.
We were eating a peaceful supper (okay, I’m from the
country, I call it supper, you call it dinner) when she started doing that
heaving thing we all do as a precursor to puking. And then, of course came the real thing. As bad as it sounds, at least if you are at
the table you have a plate to collect the stuff coming up.
The only good thing about this event is there is no
thinking, there is no muddling around thinking wondering what to do. Marty pukes, we go to the ER, it’s just the
way it is because when Marty does that thing there is something wrong that will
not get better by ignoring it.
This was about six p.m. (obviously….it’s supper time). The ER was really crowded so we had to wait
and wait and wait some more. We finally
got back to an ER room about 7:30. I go
into my spiel, trying to explain and convince everyone who comes in that we
actually have done this before and we know Marty is sick, we know it’s not a 24
hour virus, it’s something else. It
helped that her blood pressure got too low and that always gets everyone’s
attention.
Suffice it to say I pace a lot, I talk a lot, I explain a
lot, I ask a lot of questions and I had to explain the real meaning of supper
to a doctor and then we discovered Marty had pneumonia. I was wrong because I would have sworn it was
a UTI. Oh well.
We got up to a room about midnight or so. With the help of really great nurses and
Nykkie, our care giver, we got Marty settled into a room at Providence 3
south. It was a year, almost to the day,
since we had been there last.
Our good doctor, Great and Wise, who normally checks us into
the hospital and follows Marty’s care was out of commission due to his own illness. It was bad timing for us, we really didn’t
want to be sick when Great and Wise was broken.
Since Marty’s strokes I have discovered the value and
importance of continuity of care for someone with a chronic illness. Having to explain our situation to new
doctors, listening to them ask familiar questions, having new doctor’s orders
issued that are really old orders we have done before, and repetitive tests
done remind me of how important that continuity is. Besides, we miss the comfort and confidence
of his face.
We worked our way through the strange doctors; they are well
meaning and highly skilled men and women.
Mostly it means we have to be more attentive and aggressive in our
advocacy for Marty, and that’s fine, that’s why I make the big bucks.
We only stayed a couple of days and found our way home on a
Saturday. We washed the hospital funk
off Marty’s body and out of her hair and were back in familiar confines with
the pneumonia well in hand. I know Marty
always loves that first post hospital washing.
As a result of this little foray I am reminded of a couple
of things: there is a real adrenaline
rush when Marty gets sick and I don’t like that feeling at all, we have been
really lucky this year avoiding any real hospital kind of illnesses and we
really value the skills and love of our own Great and Wise.
And just as an aside, in spite of the recent downtime, I can
still catch Marty’s vomit in a bucket and not puke myself. I still got it baby.
1 comment:
Well hopefully y'all beat the Holiday rush. She has been healther this year than usual. Us "Stroke" folks seem to go in circular patterns. or STROKE OF LUCK ~~
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