Wednesday, May 14, 2008

things change.

Why do things feel so different than they did on January 19 and before? Sometimes everything feels different...all the relationships in my family, individual relationships, chats, everything. My mom and I are best friends now, we tell each other everything. I am so thankful for that. All of this has opened my eyes to myself and lots of things going on inside me. I am now questioning so many things I do and my actions. Do I want to waste my time being passive and not really stating how I feel? Do I really want to put up with the criticisms and annoyances that I always have? My mom has taught me life is too short for this. I am not content with just dealing anymore. She and I both have become stronger people and are standing up to those around us. I am my own person and I am going to live my life how I want to live my life. We only get one chance to do so. I am thankful to my mom, my inspiration, for teaching me this.

things change.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

i am so thankful.

So it was my 2nd wedding anniversary two days ago, yes, on April Fool’s Day. It feels like just yesterday we were married but yet so much has happened since then! My mom had us over for Easter and I gave her a framed picture of us from my wedding. It was the back of our heads standing at the Mary statue during mass. She was so touched and grateful for this picture, showing everyone who was there. I think these little mementos really set in for her as well how close we are and especially how close we have become in the past few months.

My husband and I are spending a night away this Saturday to celebrate our anniversary and my mom has gratefully offered to watch our dog for the evening. Though such a little event, it makes me so grateful things are ‘normal’. Normal in the sense that my mom is able to watch our little dog and things can carry on as usual. How close we were to things NOT being normal!! But they are and I am, we are, SO lucky. My mom sends us cards in the mail for all holidays- and when I opened our two anniversary cards, one from my parents and one addressed from our dog (of course sent by my mom) I just had a flash to realize how incredibly sad I would be to not get cards in the mail from her constantly. Sometimes I chuckle that she sends me postal mail though we live so close and I see her all the time, but I realized I love it. And I do just the same – I love sending cards and do so whenever I can!

So at this time of year I am so thankful for my husband, our marriage and for our biggest cheerleader, my mom.


i am so thankful.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

my best friend.

As I sat by my mom's bedside in the neuro-ICU for days on end, I had countless hours available to me to think, ponder, cry and just watch my mom's every movement, still in disbelief each day that this was really happening. Who ever thinks their young and vibrant mom would be seemingly helpless lying in the ICU, her body taken over by beeping machines, tubes and drains. Even a drain coming straight out of her head (a vision I hope to one day be able to erase out of my head.) The machines, the fact my mom had not left a bed for days, weeks, having no idea where she was turned her into someone she's not. For those of you who have been through this, you know exactly what I mean. That ICU and the machines can surely do a number on someone. I just wanted my mom back each day I sat there by her side, watching TV or doing crossword puzzles (at least in the early days) and I am lucky enough to have her.

Sitting at her bedside for hours made me realize how she is my best friend and how lucky I am to have that in my mom. I know way too many people that are not blessed with the relationship I have with their mothers. Sometimes I think it's sad it took a horrific event like this for me to truly realize what we have and how much I love her, but so what. Better now than never, right? I almost didn't have that chance to realize it, but I did get another chance. Another chance I am so grateful for. And to have her back just the way she was - we could not have been any luckier. She really is...


my best friend.

Friday, March 21, 2008

i am so proud.

To step forward a moment, here we are today. 62 days post the rupture of my mom's aneurysm. She is home, upset it's snowing so hard that she can't drive to church. So instead she decides to nap on the couch, taking a break from Easter preparations. Amazing? I think so. We all think so. Though sometimes we must remind her of that fact, as she thinks she's just fine. Each day I am utterly amazed at her recovery - each new day brings a bit more strength to her voice, a deeper chuckle to her laugh, a shorter nap and a bigger smile. Sure, there have been setbacks to her positive outlook. Sure, there have been discouraging conversations with doctors who tell her she can't go back to work for many months. But then she remembers (sometimes after some slight reminders from me!) that she's here, alive and well, among her husband, children and grandchildren. What more could you ask for?

There are times we must remind her of the horror and trauma that we went through, particularly my dad. I don't know that I'll ever be able to understand the terrible thoughts and visions I'm sure he still carries with him from that January 19. He watches my mom like a hawk and sometimes seems to annoy her incessantly, but then we have to remember what he saw and probably still has nightmares about. She does not remember, so we must remind her.

How every new holiday since that fateful day has meant so much. We have been lucky enough to celebrate as a family my 28th birthday, the birth of my new nephew, her new grandson, my mom's 61st birthday, St. Patrick's Day and now Easter on Sunday. It's truly amazing.

I am so proud.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

i need her.

After getting the call, that car ride never seemed to end. Rocking back and forth in my passenger seat, attempting to keep my shaking and shuddering body under control, I felt my whole life with my mom flash before my eyes. I was only 27 on that day – I can’t lose my mom now I kept thinking. I have my whole life ahead of me with her. I don’t have kids yet, haven't had grandkids for her to love yet - I can’t have kids without her. She’s my mom and I need her. I need her, I need her, I need her. That’s all I remember going through my head that entire seeming-like-eternity ride. All I knew was there was something terrible happening to my mom and I just was not there.

At some point I called my brother, and thankfully got ahold of him. I still had absolutely no idea what was going on! Once I spoke with him, I was comforted to hear something but more upset by what I did hear. He arrived at the house - the house I lived in for 25 years - in a flash, he said by driving nearly 100 miles per hour down the single road to their house. Not only driving nearly 100 miles per hour, but driving that fast with knives sitting under the floor mat of the passenger seat. Leaving his own house in such a crazed panic, he said it was just a reaction to grab them from the kitchen knife holder on his way bounding out the door as he had no idea what was going on over at their house. Robbers? Intruders? No idea – grab some protection is what went through his head.

As he’s talking to me I hear the commotion in the background, voices, sirens, just noise is what I remember. The bits I recall hearing from him is that dad found mom laying unconscious in the indoor hot tub in their den and he couldn't wake her. The paramedics arrived just about the time my brother did and thankfully they were able to get her to come to. With my ears feeling clogged shut, not wanting to hear one more stomach-sickening thing, he continued to say she was conscious and somewhat coherent, but couldn’t move the entire right side of her body. What? My mom not being able to move the side of her body? You're crazy and don't know what you are talking about. That's when I think my ears and my entire body began to shut down. I distinctly remember while he was telling me all this that he seemed to be not telling the whole, 100% truth to me. I just felt my big brother was making it sound better than it was, as awful as it even did sound already.

I need her, I need her, I need her. I have not had kids yet.

the call.

“Dad, what is the matter? What happened?!”

“Mary you just need to get home now, right now. Where are you guys? You need to get here now. Oh, they can’t see her like this,” he sobbed over the phone.

“DAD – you have to tell me what’s going on,” is all I managed to get out as my own eyes began to tear up. Having gone almost 27 full years with never seeing or hearing my dad shed more than a single tear, I knew immediately something was gravely wrong when hearing the utter fear and panic in his voice.

My husband and I are such homebodies and are rarely far from the house and of course on this Saturday night at 7pm we were about 45 minutes away at a friend’s housewarming party. My husband watched my face and voice turn to a near panic while on this call and acted immediately when I demanded with tears streaming down my face that he get my purse and coat.

As he retrieved my black, dressy coat I so rarely wear, and black purse from the nearby bedroom, I tried to control my now-convulsing body and dialed my brother’s house. Living about four minutes away from my parents’ house I prayed as I dialed they were home. My very pregnant sister-in-law answered and I stammered out something about the distressing call I got from my dad and later find out she immediately called 9-1-1 when we hung up. Thank God.

I didn’t even answer the first call from my dad. I heard my phone ringing as we were chatting in the kitchen with friends, picked it up and saw it was my dad. He loves to call me at all hours with nothing important to say, I think just to check in because he misses me and loves talking on the phone. So I just let the call go to voicemail assuming it was his usual ‘just calling to say hello’ phone call. And normally I would let the voicemail wait until the next day but for some reason I felt compelled when I heard the little voicemail chime go off on my phone. I have learned through all of this that weird things happen in these dire, life-threatening situations. Some stars just tend to align, like something inside me made me check that voicemail.

That’s when I heard the most horrid, hysterical message from my dad that I deleted immediately. All I knew at that moment was I never wanted to hear that again. I called him back as quickly as my shaking fingers could dial and heard his fear-stricken voice.

“Why won’t he tell me what’s wrong?!” I yelled through my uncontrollable sobs in the car as Greg tried his hardest to find his way out of the unfamiliar, winding subdivision we were in.

God dammit. I stared out the window of our sturdy white Jetta and could not even believe what was going on. At that point I think I was just numb and in a zone. I really do not remember that car ride – I think it was the longest and quickest ride of my life all at the same time.

the beginning.

I'm 28 and nearly lost my mom. It scared the living daylights out of me and I can't stop thinking about it. Can't stop writing about it. So here I am starting my first blog, dedicated to my mom. She kicked this aneurysm's ass and I'm here to tell you my story, my family's story. Once you go through this, you realize the only people that really understand are those that have gone through a similar experience. Those that have lived days and nights in the depressing neuro-ICU for weeks. You learn all these medical terms - like SAH, coiling, CT profusion, vasospasm, the list goes on and on - that you wish you never had to know. But now that you know them you become obsessed with learning about them. Obsessed with learning about what went on in your body, or your loved one's body. And it's only people that have lived through the post-aneurysm rupture ICU period that know the true fear that these medical terms ignite in someone. Only those people understand the fear one feels when leaving their loved one's bedside just for a moment, in fear that a vasospasm may attack the moment you leave the room, or a seizure may steal that person from your life in a blink of an eye. But life had to continue while my mom was laying in that bed for weeks, but I could not leave her side.

Here's my story.