The first couple of
days after surgery were spent in the intensive care unit of the hospital. I thought the ICU would be a room with
interior glass windows or glass walls so everything could be easily seen and
observed. In reality it was located in a
round shaped building with a doctors/nurses station as the hub and pie-shaped
rooms around the circumference. My
recollection from those two days is hazy at best. I recall big bright lights, many people, they
seemed very tall, hovering around my bed.
Darryl was allowed to visit but only for a few minutes at a time. I don't know if the limited visitation was
for his benefit or mine. Really, just
how long can you stand there staring at your loved one who is pretty much in a
comatose state, devoid of color, with swollen eyes, a puffy face and is hooked
up to machines which makes communication impossible?
I remember a loud
alarming siren sound with people saying it was a fire alert false alarm. From time to time the intercom would blast
CODE BLUE, CODE BLUE. At other times it
would play a sweet version of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star or the alphabet song
on chimes. I later learned that this was
piped through the whole hospital and every time a baby was born the parents
activated the switch to play the joyous little melody as an expression of the
cycle of life, apparently to offset the
grimness of the Code Blue announcements.
At one point Darryl
was standing at the foot of my bed along with several others. I understood them to be discussing my
breathing tube. Before going to the
hospital I expressed to Darryl about how much I hated having to endure the
breathing tube down my trachea and the scope down my esophagus. Other times when this was done I was left
with a killer sore throat for at least two weeks. My thinking was that the sooner they removed
it the better. Lying there I became
paranoid that with Darryl advocating for early removal of the tube, it would be
taken out too soon and I would die. I
was thinking about that whole living will thing. I desperately wanted to tell
Darryl that I changed my mind and the breathing tube was no longer an issue,
but with all that stuff down my throat I couldn't communicate. I was also remembering how the psychiatrist
told me to handle my anxiety about it.
He said if I could remain cool and calm then everything could be handled
in a more timely manner. Cool and calm
quickly fell by the wayside as I tried to think of ways to communicate with
Darryl. Making hand motions and flailing my arms
wasn't working. Everyone was looking
more confused. After I made writing motions with my hand
someone brought me a pen and paper. That
didn't work either because I was unable to get the words from my mind to come
out through the pen. The paper showed only scratch marks. I felt my only alternative was to put a
death grip on the tube so they would know I didn't want it removed. Someone pried my hands loose and that’s all I
remember. The next time I came to, I was
breathing on my own.
I really wanted to
talk to someone about those pie-shaped rooms, but no one seemed interested,
that's until the cleaning lady came in.
When I mentioned it, she stopped pushing her Swiffer WetJet in
mid-stride, looked around the room and told me she'd been cleaning those rooms
for seven years and she had never noticed that.
She then gave me the biggest smile I had seen in days. It made me feel good to know I may have given
her a whole new perspective on those rooms that just might get her through
another seven years.
My chest had a big
bandage down the middle. There were
loose wires protruding through my skin that were attached to a temporary
pacemaker that would be pulled out when the time was ready. Two tubes protruded from my lower chest that
were draining blood and fluid into a large container. Probes were attached to a half-dozen places
on my chest that connected to a heavy little heart monitor box that was tucked
into the breast pocket of my hospital gown.
I was hooked up to a catheter and I had IV's dripping stuff into my
arms. Then they told me I had to get up
and walk. Walk? Surely they were kidding. They might as well have asked me to climb
Mount Kilimanjaro. They weren't
kidding. They said no one gets out of
ICU until they can walk. I was thinking
I could be there for a very long time.
Darryl said he didn't mind how long I stayed because they had some
really good-looking nurses. After much
prodding I got myself to a somewhat vertical stance and with a cart carrying
all the stuff attached to my body I took my first steps. With all that stuff pulling inward on my
chest there was no way I could stand up straight. Believe me, this was a very pathetic looking
walk. After making my way around the
nurses station and back to my pie-shaped room, I felt deserving of at least a
fake plastic Olympic medal. Yeah me! I was relieved to know I had to do that only
one time. My next trek would be out of
the ICU to the elevator. So what do they
have against using wheel chairs? They
kept reminding me that no one leaves ICU until they can walk out. I wanted to know just how far away this
elevator was and what happened after I reached it. They said a gurney would be waiting that
would take me to the heart care center on another floor of the hospital. By the end of my second day in ICU wearing my butt exposing bile green hospital gown I make my
exodus.
1 comment:
You ever get the feeling that it was all up to you and maybe they even made you do the surgery yourself?
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