Paul's Heart

Life As A Dad, And A Survivor

Archive for the category “Side Effects”

Patient versus Caregiver


I apologize.  As you will see by this post, it has been a long time since I have written, but you will also see why.  But finally, here is post #199.

Several weeks ago, I received a phone call from my father.  His doctor was expressing concern over a spot that had been found of his left lung on a CT scan.  My father could not understand ordering a CT scan for just a simple cough.  As it would turn out, he would be diagnosed stage 1, non squeamous small cell carcinoma – lung cancer.

His scheduled surgery was for May 13th, the day after Mother’s Day.  It may have been Mother’s Day, but my mind was completely preoccupied with my father’s pending surgery.  Because of the early arrival, I had planned to spend the overnight with my dad, which would have the benefit of providing alternative conversations, to distract him of his concerns with the pending lung removal.  But with my previous scheduling balancing my employment and my campaign for school board, I had hit what I thought was my burnout point.  Evidently not.

My brother and I made final arrangements with each other in regards to post-care for my dad, and constant care for my stepmother.

Day #1

Monday – it had begun.  My dad was prepped for surgery and the anesthesiologists had come into his holding room.  The “A Team” I will call them had given some good news, that they were going to provide an epidural which would seriously help with pain.  My dad was prepared to lose the entire lung as the surgeon had warned.

When the surgeon called, he informed me that my dad was fortunate or unfortunate depending on how you wanted to look at it.  Only the 1/2 of the lung came out.  The other half of the lung, and other lung was fairly riddled with emphasema and he most likely would never be able to survive that surgery.  This partial lobectomy would be his best bet for recovery.  Possible radiation therapy loomed upon recovery.

When everything was completed, my father was moved to Intensive Care Unit, and there he was.  Of course there was pain, but with my own eyes, I saw my dad survive cancer surgery.  I had no doubt that he was going to get the best care because as I stepped off the elevator, I realized where I was, standing outside the same intensive care unit where I had been more than five years ago, recovering from my own major heart surgery.  In spite of overwhelming flashbacks, I was able to remain focused on making sure that my father was being taken care of.

Day #2

Tuesday

My father was transferred to his own room for the duration of his recovery.  Ironically, his room is directly across the hall from where my room was on the exact same floor.  But instead of a growing alertness and recovery, something is wrong, horribly wrong.  His symptoms are stable, but he is not retaining consciousness.  Having been through enough procedures, I chalk it up to the pain meds just keeping him real sedated.

Day #3

Wednesday

However, by today, my stepbrother Ralph and I both agree, this is not normal behavior.  We did our best to convince the nurses that something was wrong.  He was not touching his food and had not eaten in nearly four days now.  Remembering that I had been told he struggled with his breathing while in recovery, and knowing how important oxygen is to the brain, challenged the nurse and a call was put into cardiology.  They would attempt and MRI later that night, but of all times for him to be “aware”, that is when he chose and would not cooperate.

Day #4

Thursday

The doctor did not even attempt to do another MRI on my dad, instead they chose to do a CT scan.  It should have come as no surprise, but was definitely a disappointment to find out that my father had suffered two strokes at some point either during or after the surgery.  It seems that some substance or article had broken loose, most likely from one of his heart valves, and had travel into the very carotid that had just been cleaned out a few months back, completely blocking it.  Removing the blockage carried too much risk, but so did the load on the other two arteries.  The doctors had decided on Coumadin therapy.

Day #5, #6

Friday and Saturday

It was more of the same, visiting with my father, and while having a small conversation, he would stare off.  But a new symptom was developing, a racing heartbeat.  Just sitting or lying no his bed, resting, his heartbeat could jump as high as 190 beats per minute.  The doctors scrambled to find out the cause as well as relieve or stop the symptom.  Though my father had become a slight bit more alert, he gave no obvious sign that he could feel when these episodes would occur.  But they would also not remove him from his bed or chair, which they needed to get him started not only to get him out of the hospital, but to avoid any further complications such as pneumonia or blood clots.

Days #7, #8, #9

Sunday, Monday, Tuesday

My father still was not eating more than two or three bites of his meals.  Conversations with him would often be lost and you could tell not by his nodding off anymore, but his eyes would grow large as confusion sunk in as he tried to survey his surrounding environment.  But the staff has  begun to do something totally unexpected given my father’s condition.  Doctors are starting to tell him that he should be going home.  WHAT!!!  My father is my stepmother’s caregiver and he cannot even take care of himself.  We do not even know the results of the cancer pathology yet.  But a decision is coming, he must be moved to a rehab facility for not only his surgical needs, but now to recover from his strokes.

Day #10

Wednesday

My dad is moved to a rehab facility and is now more confused than ever.  He honestly believes he is at home.  It is almost as if the took the facility and dropped it right over top of his home, like an overlay.  The layout of the floor is very similar, but his actions only confirm his confusion.  He has three hours of diverse therapy ranging from speech, physical and occupational.  Occupational does not just pertain to returning to work, but to functioning in the home when you are discharged.

Day #11

Thursday

Every day my dad seems to be making some progress.  Clearly Ralph and I are exhausted but we are determined that he must get through this.  We make sure that observations that we make during our visits with him are communicated to the staff so that they can be dealt with or concentrated on during therapy.  Just the simplest comment, that he ” could not remember what he ordered for dinner” that day, is key to dealing with a stroke recovery.  Plus, case management is now talking about discharging him within a week.  It seems impossible to me that a prediction like that can be made with a person who is unable to recall what prescriptions he has taken, will not only be expected to take care of himself, but my stepmother as well who relies on his care for injuries she sustained nearly two decades ago.

Days #12, #13, #14, #15, #16

Friday,Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday

There is continued improvement.  The days have really become a blur for me.  All that matters to me is that my dad continues to improve.  The insurance company has weighed their opinion and granted my father more time in the rehab facility.  Duh!  He needs it.

Day #17

Wednesday

Shortly after I receive the phone call from my father’s caseworker at the Rehab Hospital, my dad is told he can expect to be discharged to go home in a week.  There is disappointment for him, and clearly he still has deficits.  But the facility claims they can no longer keep him.  In spite of our protests, we must now plan for him to return to his home, with his wife next week.

I have counted the days on this blog, but at this point, I really do not know how long it has been or what day of the month it is.  It has been so hard to watch my father go through what he has.  It was much easier for me to be a patient and go through what I went through than be his caregiver.

Once You Let A Fart Rip…


You cannot “unstink” a fart.  It is going to stink no matter what you do to try and cover it up.  You cannot take it back.  It happens and often it is going to clear a room.

Just like you cannot take back things you have said, like in a jury, or an argument.

I learned a most valuable lesson from my father, though I wish I could have learned it a different way.

It was many ago, just days before the Christmas holiday.  By now, my dad and stepmother were done with the holiday shopping, or so they thought.  A minor argument ensued, I believe over insurance, when they realized they still needed a last minute gift.  From the argument, frustration was added as they prepared to head out into the holiday rush traffic.  My father would leave the house first, cross the street and start up the car.  He glances out of the driver side window, to see where my stepmother could be as he thought she was right behind him.

It was dusk as the evening sun had settled.  Headlights were now being turned on to see the path in front of them.  Except for one vehicle.  My dad waits for her to cross the street and sees that on her side traffic is letting up that she can now cross to the middle of the busy street.  She continues her path across the west bound lane just inches away from the front fender of my dad’s car.

She never knew what hit her.  All my father saw was his wife of nearly two decades be thrown dozens of feet from where he just saw her.

I do not know much else about the next several hours as my father does not talk about that night.  By the time that I had received the phone call about what had happened, it was very early in the morning of the next day.  But the news was not good.  She had sustained major life threatening injuries besides her one leg being broken, a severe head injury.

But what my dad will talk about, and to this day, is the guilt that he carries from that night.  That he never got to resolved the argument that he and my stepmother had that night.  They never got to apologize.  This would go beyond “go to bed angry”.  They would never get that chance to apologize.  To make matters worse, there are things that compiled on to his list of guilt.  He apologizes frequently for not being there for my sister and I following my parents’ divorce.  He apologized for missing certain milestones in our lives.  He carried guilt about not being there for my battle with cancer.

On Monday, I will stand next to my dad, as he faces his biggest fight of his life, his own battle with cancer, lung cancer to be exact.  And this goes beyond blame or guilt.  This is now about survival and the chances that lay ahead of him.  Beings somewhat familiar with medicine and cancer terminology, I feel very good about his chances of beating it.  And I hope that as he knows I am standing by his side, I have long forgiven him for our past.

“Dad, just do this!  Madison and Emmalie love their Poppop and know that if Daddy could beat his cancer, and you are his dad, then you can do it too.”

I Know You Didn’t Just Say That To Me


So one of my supervisors decides to say to me, “you’re such a negative person.”  Now I consider myself a very positive person, in spite of the things that I have dealt with in my life, and continue to deal with, and will deal with.  But if my reaction to him was to just want to give him a “backhand”, must I forfeit my positive attitude claim?

There are certain roles that I have taken on in my life, some of the leadership, some of them role models.  It is my positive attitude that allowed me to choose to take on these things, as well as have the support from my peers to be selected for those roles.  As a cancer survivor, my role is simply to encourage and inspire.  In spite of everything I have gone through over the last five years, that is truly what I want to do.

As a political candidate, that too can be inspirational as to the reason why I would run for what many say is a thankless job, school board.  But given that I balance a full time job, medical appointments for myself, attend school district meetings, and still have time to campaign, I guess for the most part, it has been a positive thing in my life.

But as for work, after more than thirteen years of the department I am currently in, this past Winter I was elected one of four shop stewards.  I belong to a union.  There is very little positive to be thought about the shop steward position, again it is thankless, and unfortunately it is a lot of mediation and awareness.  So it is very rare to have the opportunity to be positive.  Any my record over these last thirteen years do speak for themselves as far as me being a “positive” employee.

I miss the old days of working for a “mom and pop” company.  Where numbers of employees were small enough that it was like a second family away from home.  You give that up when you work for a big company in corporate America.  Quantity becomes the priority over quality.  Greed replaces reputation.  Success blurred from pride.

In most of my working life, up until I came to this company and into this department, my work reputation had been spotless.  I had never been terminated, never even reprimanded.  My attendance record was near spotless, including during my treatment days.  Unfortunately, the downside of working for such a small company, lack of advancement opportunities and benefits.  Being a cancer survivor, benefits often outweigh value even over salary.  And given my health status today, I am very thankful that as a union member, I have group health insurance.

But it did not take long before I got a taste of what it was like to work for a major corporation.  Within the first couple of weeks, I had received a reprimand.  And in spite of my protest and objection, and ability to prove myself innocent, instead I faced a blackmail-like behavior by not only management, but by my union representation.  Eventually, it got to the point, where I was so stubborn with my work ethic, unable to get me to crumble, management made it personal.

Every year, I would struggle with not being able to get management to back off.  And it seemed every year, it would escalate.  I ended up isolated from my co-workers, some who had been more than just co-workers.  Given the union representation that I had, I was hoping to be elected to the shop steward position.  Over the years, I have seen so much quality go down, more bullying from management, so now that I am finally in the position of shop steward, I can now deal with much of these problems, or at least be aware of more of them.  At least by them not being sprung on me, that can help prevent me from erupting with stress.

But that is just it, with my hermit-like reputation at work, now I will be a lot more visible.  But I will be seen coming to the defense of people, in other words, for negative things.  It is kind of hard trying to put a positive spin on something such as an employee being served a termination notice while recovering from open heart surgery, or while laying in a hospital bed in a coma from a car accident (yes, both are real events).

Unfortunately, I have to leave work to get back to that positive outlook.  Unfortunately I have to repeat that whole behavior the next day.  And that is hard to put a positive spin on.

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