Blog 9—May 8
At the writing of this blog entry (days ago), Ian and I had spent 4 nights in a rehab hospital. Ian has been recovering 9 weeks and 5 days.
This night, the nurse needs to help Ian. He needs privacy. I need to be elsewhere, but it’s 2 a.m., so I lean against the wall, studying the abstract painting across the hall. We haven’t been at this facility long enough for me to know where to hide, to know what I might do if I leave his room so suddenly that I don’t have a book to read or my computer so I can write or grade.
I begin padding in my grey socks, fidgeting with the zipper of my sweat top, past this room, now this one. I hear television programs, a woman’s voice.
- “I can’t read it. I don’t have my glasses.”
Should I offer? I’m just waiting on Ian. I could go to her room and find them. But what if they’re at her home? I hear saying that she asked that man next to her to “look at those kitties” on the adopt-a-pet section of a local television news section but he wouldn’t look.
Somehow we sleep. I wake to get some ice at the nurses’ station before getting ready to give Ian’s gravity peg feed. Patients sit at small tables looking over newspapers while aides take their orders for coffee.
- “Coffee. Black.” The woman wearing a plum-colored sweater over a plum-colored tee-shirt, sat in her wheel chair clicking her nails on the table.
Wish I drank coffee. Wish I had a diet Coke. The vending machine wasn’t working.
But it was only 6:00 (a.m.). Maybe the vending man will come today.
Because Ian can sleep through his feedings so long as he is elevated to at least 30 degrees, I turn on the local news. It bleeds into the headlines of “Good Morning America.”
- “James Comey was a disgraced leaker.” –Sarah Huckabee; “Oh my God. My presidency is over.” –Donald Trump
Still? That’s still the news? The wall, the Mueller report, collusion. Ugh. Two months, still the same stuff. Maybe I need to listen to the weather. Maybe it will rain soon.
The therapist comes in at 9:00. I leave so he and Ian can make their way to the gym, sit at one of the small tables to grade papers but am flooded with nurses’ voices.
- “We need to get that medication. I don’t know if we have it on site.”
Who is she talking about? It’s not Ian. He has been here several days. He doesn’t need anything new. But maybe it’s not new. Maybe it’s something he is taking. Maybe, . . . Maybe I just need to stop trying to be nurse Mom.
My phone–
- “Ask if they are going to push him as hard through the weekend . . . . Also remind PT and OT he has a shunt and shouldn’t have his waist twisted too much and his head should not be . . . .” (The text was a 3 part text.)
(I jumped up and strode to find the physical therapist.) Oh, my word, do they know this? (I began my observation, “My husband was concerned that . . . .” To which the therapist began his reply with “Of course I know Ian has a shunt, and I . . . .) Oh my gosh. I should always remember to take a deep breath and not let someone else’s text prompt a panicked response on my part. (I thanked him for his information and patience and returned to sit in the dining area while Ian went to PT.)
Ian sleeps uneasily. The sounds make me want to wake him to offer him a puff on my rescue inhaler. He drags the next day. A nurse says she hears something rattling. He’ll have a chest x-ray. I can’t get ready to teach. Can’t manage my life while trying to let my daughter-in-law sit in the room alone by trying to sit in the main lobby. Can’t manage his life sleeping on a cot next to him, waking for every change in breathing as I would when he was an infant, waking to feed, unless I didn’t wake because now, I’m no longer mid-thirties, I’m early sixties. Now, I’m still a light sleeper, but the waking for aids getting vitals, Foley drains, blinking monitors, the disoriented man wailing, weeping down the hall sink me deeply into restless sleep. I miss Ian’s sounds. I wake as if staggering towards a shore I’ve waded too far from, through a changing tide, stumble into the bathroom to dress, whispering to myself.
- “Deb, you are such an idiot. You likely have let your son aspirate because you tried so hard not to call the nurses every 7 minutes to pull him up in the bed. You likely have caused him to have some sort of lung infection because of how you have been not doing his peg tube gravity feeding that the doctor wants you to learn well enough, right enough. You missed two meetings at school, didn’t finish the feedback on your grad student’s thesis chapter and had to reschedule her meeting, didn’t leave Ian’s room soon enough—even though your husband was already there to help Ian—to wash and DRY your jeans so wore a pair of linen pants backwards to teach. You haven’t . . . (here the litany begins: names of people whose names and requests I’ve forgotten, family and school tasks, like the major University committee meeting I’ve forgotten, I didn’t do, was too aggressive about, to0 closed-minded about, etc.). Ian doesn’t want you here anyway. He is SICK of your hovering, your voice, the sound of your feet padding on the floor, your yes/no questions . . . . (This, the strongest of all my inner critic voices, prompts all my nervous, hovering, fearful, controlling speech and actions while also blanking parts of my memory so it can continue to address me.)
I’ve brought myself to tears and duck my head against the nurse approaching me to see my phone screen light up. Who is texting now? What have I screwed up now?
This text is from K—:
“I will praise the LORD, who counsels me: even at night my heart instructs me.’ Psalm 16:7 Praying for peace, courage, comfort, and calm.”
The screen lights again. This time, lyrics from a praise song from J—:
“I raise a hallelujah
In the presence of my enemies.
I raise a hallelujah.
Heaven comes to fight for me!
I press four numbers and a symbol, open the door of the tiny kitchen-like room in which patient foods are stored, grab Styrofoam cups, straws, and spoons that I’ll need to mix the meds an nutrients for Ian’s gravity peg feed.
I enter his dark room, looking at his sleeping form silhouetted by the light of the open bathroom door, carefully place the items on the tray table and sit in the dark, waiting for the nurse, praying my texts.