When The Body Tries To Warn You – Part 6

The day had come. All of my tubes had come out, and my PICC line was removed. All that remained were the telemetry wires, and a huge patch/bandage over my sternum. I wanted my daughters to come to the hospital. I needed to see them. I know that I did not look perfect, but I no longer looked as bad as I thought. Them seeing me in this bed would not scare them.
It is always the hardest thing, what and how much to tell a child is happening. Of course a lot depends on age. And on top of that, at their young ages, they already had a friend who lost their father to a cardiac incident, so how I explained everything would make a huge difference to them.
I was told that my daughters had arrived at the hospital and were on their way upstairs. I felt a huge swell of emotions as this was all I wanted, to see my daughters again, to know that I was going to have a “rest of my life” with them. In the distance I could hear my older daughter talking, noticing everything as she walked the hallway. And then, there they were, standing in the doorway. It felt like forever. You could see excitement in their eyes to see me, but confusion as to “what happened to you Daddy?”
My older daughter walked cautiously around the bed, of course gravitating toward what was left of the machinery, looking at all the blinking lights and numbers. My younger daughter was a lot more deliberate, seemingly moving an inch at a time.
“Hi Girlies! I am so happy to see you! I have missed you so much! Daddy is all better! The doctors took real good care of me, and I am feeling better. I am going to be better!”
It is often asked, “what and how much do you say to a child when dealing with a serious issue?” And the answer is always, you tell the truth, but you keep it age appropriate. My daughters were 5 and 3 years old, and how I greeted them was all that they needed to know. You could feel the collective relief from all of us.
Maddie was still busy checking things out, but Emmy had found her way, lifted up onto the bed. This was going to be a test. A 3-year old has no concept about a healing breast bone, anything could happen. This would not be a blooper if it did. As she sat by my waste, I grabbed her hand, and told her once again, “Daddy is going to be okay now.” A few moments later, she repositioned herself, now laying her head by my pelvis, nestled, almost as if she were guarding me, keeping me safe. Maddie’s inventory of my room was completed, so now there were 5-year old questions to be answered.
I don’t know how much of the environment sunk in to my daughters. But I could tell the impact of them seeing me, not bouncing all over the place completing activities or playing with them. They knew I was not feeling well. But they also knew that what I told them the other night, that I was going to be better. And that is what they saw.
Now I could say that I was recovered, that I made it through this harrowing surgery. Another day or two in the hospital and I was going to be allowed to return home. There was just one minor task that needed to be completed. I am going to keep this from getting too graphic or detailed, but it was still a major issue. I had not had a bowel movement since my surgery. In fact, with stethoscopes, nurses could not even hear any gutteral noises. Again, without going into detail, I have a complicated system, so while this was normal for me, it was still unacceptable to them.
And in it came, “power pudding.”

Power pudding. I had no idea what was in it, but I was told it was guaranteed to make me go. Later I would find out the ingredients, apple sauce, prune juice, and wheat bran, mixed together until it produces a pudding consistency. Sadly, my medical team was disappointed and the pudding did not produce results.

In spite of me not meeting all of the “unofficial” requirements or benchmarks, I was released and sent home, with the heart shaped pillow as pictured in the beginning and above. Its use was to help me protect myself with sudden sneezes or coughs, or any other kind of movements that would put pressure on my breast bone. I still have it to this day, 18 years later. And also 18 years later, I am still here to witness the many exciting memories to come since I have gotten to see both my daughters grow into adults, now on the doorsteps of graduating from college. Had you told me back in 2008 that I would still be here to this day to see this milestone, even my cardiologist admonished me, “it was not a question of ‘if’ I would have that fatal heart attack, but ‘when'” had I gotten there any later.
There have been many times in my survivorship, when I have heard fellow survivors expressing experiencing that similar sensation that I had. Besides being a major trigger for me, I have not been wrong yet insisting on them going to the emergency room, all facing that “widow maker.” This series of posts was quite heavy, but believe me, it could not be any more important. They call cardiac disease the silent killer for a reason, even with symptoms, either because we are scared of what we think could be happening, or in total denial. And it is much better not to take any chance, go to the ER, and let them either diagnose you, or say there is nothing wrong. Just you don’t make the wrong decision.



