Renaissance Trophy Wife

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Posts Tagged ‘perspectives’

Hello, my name is reality (Part III)

Posted by RenaissanceTrophyWife on July 31, 2010

Parts I and II are here.

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My daily stops became part of our routine.  I could tell she was having a hard time adapting to the reality of her new circumstances, though.  Her family visited regularly and she put on an optimistic face, but the permanence of “I may never walk again” is a hard pill to swallow for anyone.

We moved her from the ICU to the regular wards, to the rehab wing.  The team taught her how to use a wheelchair, how to transfer from bed to chair, how to take care of her skin to prevent bedsores and how to stretch muscles to prevent contractures.  Her part was the hardest, though– she learned how to accept help, how to express her anger and grief, and how to live her new life in completely alien circumstances.   Those lessons perpetuated long beyond her discharge from the hospital.

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She regularly took wheelchair cruises around the wards, and met the boy’s family and friends on numerous occasions.   In the evenings I saw her visiting him– parked next to his bed, reading him the cards and well wishes out loud.  Sometimes she just sat.  She told him stories and brought in pictures of her family and friends, making up responses about the people in his pictures dotting the walls. Sometimes she talked about the future, what would happen after they both recovered.

The socioeconomic differences disappeared in the face of common challenges– but the parallels were obvious in all ways except the most important.

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One morning after physical therapy, she asked, “Is he coming off the vent soon? Do you think he’ll go home too?”  Probably not.  And home may never happen. I don’t remember what I said to change the subject but she  didn’t ask again.

That week had been particularly challenging.  Organ failure and infection waged a campaign against his tenuous hold on life, despite multiple operations to clean out bone fragments and remove infected tissue, giving the body the best shot at making itself whole again.  Every time we went into the operating suite the risk increased, the opportunity for a good outcome edged just that much farther away until it was not clear that we could do any more good.

The care team had to present his family with the options: continue aggressive treatment that might not aid in recovery, or move to supportive care to make him as comfortable as possible.

No words will suffice at that point– the emotions come out in guttural screams and deep, soul-wrenching sobs.  It was in that conference that I first became acutely aware of the failings of the English language.  Unfortunately, it was not the last time I would recognize that fact.

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Over the following months I ran into her around the hospital, heading to the clinic to see her therapist and working on the psychological scars that persisted long after her surgical incisions healed.

The last time I saw her, we chatted in one of the rooftop garden niches that offer patients a respite from the antiseptic hospital walls.

“How are you?” I inquired.  “I’m glad to see you smiling more.”

“Yeah, I’ve done a lot of growing up.  It’s tough, but getting better.”

We sat without talking for a while, as leaves rustled in the breeze and the sun warmed the tops of our heads.  She broke the silence.

“I should go, my mom is picking me up downstairs.  Thanks for sitting with me.”  I walked beside her to the elevator bank and watched the lights ascend numerically.

The doors chimed and slid open.  As she wheeled expertly into the elevator and pressed the button, she looked at me.  “I haven’t told anyone this, but I think about him every day– that’s what keeps me going.  I’m one of the lucky ones.  And I know it.”

I stood there, watching her eyes well in a reflection of mine.  We raised our hands in the age-old farewell gesture as the elevator doors closed, leaving me looking at my own standing, breathing image.  Lucky, indeed.

Posted in Retrospectives | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

Hello, my name is reality (part II)

Posted by RenaissanceTrophyWife on May 30, 2010

If you missed part I, click here.

Progress is gauged by the level of music in the OR.  Routine procedure?  ipod blaring.  Tough cases have a soundtrack consisting of crisp orders and little else.

Both suites were vacuum-like and breathless.   After 8 hours in the OR, my residents sent me home even though the repairs weren’t close to being finished.  Even the senior guys were standing around observing since there was no room to assist the attendings crowded at the table like drunk bachelors bellied up to a Vegas bar.  The look of desperation was the same, too. You don’t know fear until you’ve seen the premiere surgical talent in the country get tense around the eyes. And then start shaking their heads.

I couldn’t believe it was the same city, same day, same life I’d woken up to.

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The following dawn I saw both of them.  In the ICU, he was suffering from acute renal failure, and all the blood products and iv fluids were being retained, distending a formerly athletic physique into an amorphous mass.  Down the hall, her neuro exam hadn’t improved although the vertebral fracture was repaired, and chances of her regaining function were slim.   Our rounds were a grim affair, led by surgeons who’d aged years overnight.

When we were done checking in on everyone, I went back to check on them.  He would be out for a long time, but she was up, with completely bloodshot eyes and crumpled tissues scattered across the floor.  I peeked in, not wanting to disturb her, and was greeted with a weak, “Hey.”

Three steps to her bedside closed the distance and simultaneously opened up an undeniable chasm between us.  As I started, “Can I do anything for you–” her eyes welled with tears.  And so I sat there, passing her tissues and trying to ignore the aching in my chest that gave me the answer to the unasked question: “How would you feel if it was you?”

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“Visitors aren’t allowed for another two hours.” The nurse’s face softened with recognition as I turned back towards the door at her announcement.  “I thought you were one of her classmates, sweetie.  Never mind.”

Posted in Retrospectives | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

Hello, my name is reality (part I)

Posted by RenaissanceTrophyWife on February 4, 2010

I’ve been blogging for a while but only alluded to some of my past.  This material is heavier stuff than I normally post but I felt like I couldn’t discuss my future without the relevant context.  So, my blog will be taking a slightly different turn for the moment.  Welcome inside my head.

**Certain elements of this story have been changed to protect patient privacy.**

I was 17 when I met them.

She was the quintessential blond, blue-eyed all-American girl next door, captain of the cheer squad with doting parents and 3 little brothers who hung on her every word.  He was a Hispanic kid from South Central with a quick wit, soulful brown eyes, and an enormous extended family, including abuelas who could fix anything with their legendary cooking.

In the land of the silver screen and dreams come true, it wasn’t such a stretch to imagine that they would cross paths eventually.  A bystander at the intersection, I was privy to a remarkable scene that encompassed those  themes explored in the great novels of our time– love, life, and loss.  This is their story, as I witnessed it.

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I was there when they collided, literally, in the ED (emergency dept).  She was airlifted in and arrived on a backboard, her dilated pupils causing her blue eyes to appear black, but somehow she remained calm– from fear? from disbelief?– as we sliced through her drenched summer clothes and placed lines to bolus fluids and meds through her vessels.  The abrupt halt of sirens punctuated by a crashing door gave only seconds notice before another gurney careened into the trauma bay and into the middle of our team, demanding attention.

The newcomer was drenched too, but in crimson fluid unstaunched by a Matterhorn of blankets.  Sheets maybe?  As the group divided into two complete but smaller entities, amoeba-like, to attend to both casualties, I couldn’t distinguish the beginnings and ends of the wrappings, but it didn’t matter.  Trauma shears made short work of the macabre paper mache while the histories came through in patches, like a TV with bad reception between channels.

18-year-old caucasian female, no known drug allergies…

…he was just coming home from summer school and playing with his siblings….

…She has lower limb sensory and motor deficits…likely vertebral fracture…

16-year-old hispanic male, no known drug allergies, presents with severe crush injury…

…Jumped into a lake and she barely touched the bottom… Estimated 40-ft height…

…The hammock was supported by a concrete pillar, which toppled…took an hour to get it off him…

And the hushed words continued to swirl, mingling with the sobs and plaintive questions from the waiting room.  We hung units of blood, confirmed OR prep, and readied for the mad dash through the corridors.  I tucked myself out of the way, taking care not to stand in the path to the doors, and in one small space between the alarms, she looked at me and asked, “it’s bad, huh?”

Confronted in my spattered scrubs and filthy shoe covers, I could only manage, “I’m not a doctor, but they’ll do their very best for you,” before the gurneys swept off in a parting sea of surgeons.

In the voided trauma bay I picked my way to the sink over the Jackson Pollock floor.  My exhalation echoed the whoosh of water from the faucet, incongruous in a space that had just witnessed its umpteenth episode of controlled chaos.  It felt as if I’d forgotten to breathe for the entire time.  The meant-to-be-comforting squeeze from the charge nurse and my few deep breaths only provided marginal relief, but like a shark, you have to keep moving.  The unspoken rule was, if you stop someone else dies.

As I headed blurrily towards the operating suite, even the running litany of to-dos couldn’t shut myself out of my head.

Head to OR, pull gloves for the residents, look up old charts–

you know, that could be you–

find films, check labs–

or your brother or cousins–

get the other teams up to speed, run the new blood upstairs–

there but for the grace of god….go I.

Yes.  Yes, I know.  But this is not the time for that, not when they’re on the table and in for the fight of their lives. This comes later.  Keep moving.

So I pulled on a mask, drew another breath (such a simple thing I took for granted) and stepped through the doors to the OR.

Posted in Retrospectives | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »