I was watching a show the other day about the training of special forces for various branches of the military. One episode featured a final exam called The Longest Day. It began with paddling a rubber raft through crashing waves, carrying it through the trees, completing a mission and walking the miles back through tear gas without masks. Somehow that sounds worse to me than brain surgery, but maybe it's because I know I can make it through it.
This day last year was my Longest Day. It was the scariest, most painful day of my life and I know I'll never forget it as long as I live. Right about now, I was finishing up my "stim test", where each electrode on my brain was reverse stimulated in turn to see what would happen. The doctors would press a button and my hand would jerk, or my eyes would move or my tongue would stick to the roof of my mouth and I couldn't breathe. Each time I heard one call a set of numbers to the other, I would wait for the shock and pray to God that nothing would happen. They were looking for my motor strip and I wanted so badly for it not to be under my seizure origin point, what they had come to call "the birthmark". I sat in my hospital bed, clutching the small, stuffed dog that my parents had gotten me in the Mayo Clinic gift shop. I was so scared. I focused on the sign my sister had made me that hung in my hospital room: We Love Our Erica. I traced the patterns with my eyes, drank in the colors and tried to stay calm.
In an hour and a half, my surgeon would come in and tell me that the birthmark was not on my motor strip, but right up against it. I was a candidate. I exhaled with my whole body, my whole spirit. I was a candidate. He told me that I could have the surgery, but there was a chance I would lose a good amount of sensation in my hand - I would have a hard time knowing how much pressure was needed to hold a fork, being able to recognize the shape of my wallet in my purse by touch. There was a chance I would lose some speech, some short term memory, though it wasn't very likely. "Do you still want to do it?" I paused for only a moment, because what stood firmly in my mind was that nothing had gone wrong yet, so there was no way it would start now. I lifted my right hand, covered in white tape to hold the IV in place, to the plastic table over my lap and signed the consent form.
Not until about 4pm was I finally brought down to the operating room. I remember a cleaning woman in the elevator as I was rolled in by a nurse. I said, "Hi, how are you?" as cheerily as I could. She looked startled but then smiled. I tried to be brave in the pre-op room among dozens of other patients in blue and white polkadotted smocks, lying in rough, white sheets on a plastic bed. It was easier the first time, when I didn't know what would happen, when I had no idea what I was getting myself into. Somehow, this time it was terrifying. A couple nice doctors, nurses and techs stopped by to explain a few last details, but I didn't care about the information, I just wanted their smiles and calming voices. A few layed hands on my shoulder or foot, and just a simple touch like that brought a sliver of peace.
The OR was brighter, more sterile, more ominous and more lonely than I'd remembered. Cindy wasn't there this time; she'd placed electrodes on my scalp for my monitoring the day after Thanksgiving and the grid on my brain during my first surgery, but since they were removing it, a much less delicate process, she was somewhere else. I didn't know anyone there. It was like the first day of kindergarten: terrifying and, as yet, the biggest day of my life. One man in blue scrubs came closer and smiled through his mask; he said Cindy had told him to take good care of me. I relaxed a little as he held my left hand and someone else took my right while a clear mask was lowered over my face.
I try to forget what happened when I woke up in post-op recovery. I try to block out the pain that was so terrible I screamed; the way I writhed on the bed, the bright light that stared me down when the doctors made me open my eyes, their hushed voices when I sobbed that my pain was a twelve and begged them to help me. That scene is burned into me. It felt like an eternity as the hysterical crying I realized was my own melted to a pleading whimper. This hadn't happened after my first surgery. Couldn't anyone help me? What went wrong?
Last night it came to me like it sometimes does. A wave of remembered trauma, pain, relief and gratitude smashed over me, its full force against my mind. Wet tears slid down my face and as my rock held me in his arms, they turned to sobs that wracked my body and tore sounds from my throat despite my efforts to stifle them. I could see the wet collecting on the collar of John's blue shirt, turning it dark and shiny. I began to calm down at the insistence of my nose that it needed a tissue. I went through three before I could breathe steadily again. I clutched John's back and laid my head on his chest. "It's okay, baby, it's gonna be okay. You've been through a lot." I have.
Thank you to everyone; all of you who have been here for me, with me. Thank you, God, for the blessings you've given me. Thank you, John, for listening, understanding and supporting me every day. Thank you, mom and dad, for holding my hands; sitting quietly when every little noise hurt; making up stories when I was scared; spoon-feeding me; forcing me to sit up, stand and walk despite my dirty looks and petulance; fixing oatmeal and fruit every morning; re-teaching me how to knit so I could regain the function of my hand; making me take naps even when I didn't want to; taking me on slow walks around the block in freezing cold January weather; but most of all, teaching me how to live the kind of life that makes me happy and fulfilled.
John asked me what I want to do tonight to commemorate my anniversary. I haven't decided yet whether I want to go out and celebrate or stay in and remember. Either way, I'll remain, as always, eternally grateful.
I was once told that thoughts are energy and words are power. In this blog, I'm putting my story into words. Here, I'll talk about what it's like to grow up with and live with simple partial epilepsy. Hopefully I can give insight to those who don't live with it and can give a sense of camaraderie to those who do.
Showing posts with label monitoring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monitoring. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
The Longest Day
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Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Guest Post
Check out a guest post I wrote for UKEpilepsy about surgery: http://www.ukepilepsy.com/epilepsy-stories/best-decisions-of-my-life/
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Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Six Month Anniversary
The deep throbbing just behind my left temple beats a syncopated rhythm into my head. I chase two Advil gel caps with grapefruit juice and hope that it goes away soon. The headaches are fewer and farther between these days, but every once in a while they come out, reminding me that six months isn’t as long as it used to be.
I spent the morning job hunting: getting back to emails, contacting anyone who might know someone, applying online, scheduling an interview. Cooking, cleaning and writing fill out my to do list for the rest of the day. As I take a pen to my green notebook and fill it with, “email so and so”, “unpack suitcase from Minnesota” and “print out shipping label for Kindle return” and cross off, “exchange printer ink and get printer paper” and “put in maintenance request for air conditioner”, I can’t help thinking how different my day is from the same one exactly six months ago. At five thirty am on January 20th, I ran through the early morning dark, bundled against the negative twenty degree weather in a black puffy coat and boots, to the hospital across the street from my hotel, mom and dad in tow. We scurried along the perimeter of the building, trying to shield ourselves from the wind, and picking up pace when we rounded the corner and saw the light from the entrance. My nose started to run as soon as we stepped inside and I jumped the admissions line to get a Kleenex from the desk. The weather in Denver today mimics the difference between that day and this: ninety degrees and mostly sunny. When I step into the air conditioned inside, I notice the sweat on my body and crave a shower rather than a Kleenex.
As I look at the clock on the bottom right corner of the tool bar on my computer, I wonder what was happening at 10:26am that day. I was in surgery by then. My head had been shaved and placed in a vice. I put aloe on the oval-shaped scar on my forehead from that same vice this morning. I put aloe on the scars on my left hand and wrist from the IVs that pumped the anesthesia into my body. The surgeons cut through my scalp, pulling it back and removing a quarter of my skull with a saw. At 5,280 feet above sea level, the atmosphere in Denver is thin, so I’ll put spf 50 on my semi-circle scar before I go out, even though my hair has grown to almost three inches and mostly covers it.
Over the next few hours, 180 electrodes would be placed on the surface of my brain. The email my mom sent to our family between rosaries conveyed the updates given her by the nurses. The email she sent me this morning included an invoice from a follow up appointment I had in June that’s still being processed by my insurance. She said she’s at the office catching up on work from last week when she and dad were at the cabin with me, my sisters, my nieces and nephews, brother-in-law, and boyfriend. She says the weather there is still really hot and muggy.
My parents got to see me around 3pm. I was still coming out of anesthesia and don’t remember it, but they were there. Today at 3pm I have a phone interview scheduled. Somehow, more exciting than that is that I slept on my left last night! In the hospital, I couldn’t even turn my head to the left; I made everyone who visited me sit to the right of my bed so I could see them without putting any additional pressure on my fragile, skull-less brain. For the better part of twenty five years, I’ve slept on my left, but for the past six months, I’ve had to sleep on my right to spare my tender head. Waking up on my left side at 7:30 this morning felt amazing. Absolutely amazing.
I guess, in summary, I have a ways left to go, but in the last six months I’ve been given a new life. My body is lighter, sweeter, and I’m happier than I can ever remember being. I feel loved, blessed and so grateful.
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Sunday, June 26, 2011
Kind of Exciting
The Epilepsy Foundation of Minnesota just released their July issue, and there's an article on my blog! Pretty cool, huh? In case you want to check it out, click here and it's on pages eight and nine!
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Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Emails
I’m working on the surgery section of my book today. I just put a disk sent by my mom into my computer and opened up the files: 129 emails sent by my parents while I was in the hospital. I want to include them partly because I was so unaware while lying in my bed, and partly because this was a big, impactful and hard experience for my parents, too. The only problem is that I have to read them.
I’ve become really good at breaking down when I go back to the hospital in my mind. Now reading through the lines and seeing the pain and fear behind the words pulls the tears up into my eyes.
But no, it’s not just the pain and fear, it’s also the love and hope. The pain and fear remind me of mine and compound it by adding the guilt I feel as a reflex for causing that in other people. All of that suffering makes me want to hug myself so I can hold that girl, the one who lived that blessed and graceful nightmare, and tell her it’s all going to be okay. But then the love. I read an email from my little sister to the rest of my family in response to an update my mom sent out after the second surgery:
“Erica and our whole family come from the most amazing support group. I get tears every time I see all these prompt responses, prayers, good wishes, blog hits, and love. I am in awe and so grateful for all of you- but most of all my sister who is the absolute epitome of kindness and positivity.
Thank you all for showing me and each other how much one person can be loved and supported by family and friends.
With gratitude and love,
Greta”
There was so much love surrounding me, so many people telling me I was courageous and inspiring and all of these things that I never would have thought to call myself. Where was it coming from? How could all of these people care so much? Who the hell was I to be on the receiving end of so much? I didn’t get it. I still don’t. But Lord, do I appreciate it.
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