Archive for » January, 2008 «

Mimsy Were the Borogoves

Concerning My Hospital Stay

Looking back on it all, one of the most interesting days was the day I was brought out of the coma.  The events of that day, have, in fact, changed my attitude towards mental illness.

After the decision was made to take me out of the hospital and place me in the hospice program, I was brought out of the coma and taken off the respirator.  Some of the doctors didn’t think I would survive at that point, but I did.  I don’t know how long it took me to regain full consciousness, but when I did, I was very much aware of everything around me.  That happened to be the day that Saddam’s capture was announced, so I was glued to the TV reporting.  I was not, however, able to verbalize.  To be conscious but not verbally coherent was very frustrating.

Although I was accurately processing what was said and seen around me, I was also hallucinating.  And those hallucinations added to my version of reality.  My son, for instance, was by my bedside and was communicating with me as best he could.  I understood everything he said and tried to respond as best I could.  But in between our conversations, I was convinced that he was entering and exiting my room through the window.  I watched him do it several times.  At least I thought I did.  I tried to explain to him that the nurses would soon get on his case for doing that and that he should start using the door like everyone else, but what little of that message he could understand only confused him.

But that wasn’t my only delusion.  There was the matter of those self-cleaning walls.  Somehow, the hospital had installed a new system of tiles that would clean themselves on a regular, rotating, basis.  Whenever I got bored with TV, I could watch those ceiling and wall tiles drip cleaning solution on themselves, turn inside out and back again, and then move on to the next group.  I remember thinking about what a great cost reducing invention that was and how excited I was to be one of the first to see it in action.  At one point, even the wall clock moved itself out of the way as the wall behind it was cleaning itself.  I wasn’t exactly a Flower Child in the 60’s, but I did have a few Height-Ashbury type experiences.  But nothing like those walls.

There were other things, too.  I complained to the nurse about a lousy meal that I had just eaten when they had given me no food at all.  I kept asking my son to push the button above me on the ceiling, when there was no button and not even a reason to push the one I thought was there. But the Grand Champion Hallucination was the one when I was ready to be transported out of the hospital.  My leaving the hospital had been delayed two hours (fact).  I believed it was because my orderly had locked the transport people out of the hospital (not a fact).  To make matters worse, another orderly had accidentally closed and locked my door when she left the room (also not a fact).  Then, because I had already been checked out paper-work wise, the hospital’s master computer had changed the security code to my room (so, so much not a fact).  So there I thought I was……..locked in my room, with my transportation people locked out of the hospital.  At that point computer programming code began to appear on the wall near the door.  Clearly, the problem was that their system was an NT system, not a Unix system.  I tried to call out using what could only have been the nurse call buttons, but there were not enough buttons to make a phone call.  It was very frustrating.  Eventually the maintenance crew was able to take off the top of the door.  (Presumably so the computer tech people could see that computer code.)  And then the door opened and there were the transport people.  My rescue was complete.

Life can be very exciting when you supply your own reality.

What was NOT a hallucination, however, was my conversation with the doctor when he came in to give me his CYA speech.  He wanted to make sure that I knew that I was going home to die and not to be treated.  I understand why he had to give me that speech, but I didn’t appreciate it much then.  When he finished, I mumbled as best I could, “suuut uuut”.  He couldn’t understand me, so he leaned in closer.  I tried again, “suuuuuuuuuut uuuuuuuuut!”  I still didn’t get through so I mustered up all my energy and verbal skills and said as best I could, “shuuuuut uuuuuup!”  “Oh,” he said, “you want me to shut up.”  And he did.  Even though I was hallucinating, I was still always able to understand everything that was said TO me, so I really believe that conversation with the doctor happened.  At any rate, it’s too precious a memory so I choose to believe it was real.

  • Share/Bookmark

The Miracle

On December 12, 2003, my family called for an ambulance and I was rushed to the emergency room in critical condition. I was hallucinating, I could not speak and I was in near total renal failure. Infections on my legs, which I was trying to treat myself, had turned sepsic. Gangrene was present. Within two hours of my arrival at the hospital I was put in a drug-induced coma and placed on a respirator. The doctors’ diagnosis was grim: immediate double amputations above the knees and dialysis. Or death.I was in that coma for 5 days, and during those days, my wife agonized and prayed over the situation. Our first miracle was that I survived those 5 days. And many doctors thought I could not survive without the respirator. Then our second miracle – God gave Barbara the grace, wisdom and courage to refuse the amputations.

I was taken off the respirator and dismissed from the hospital. I was admitted into a hospice program and went home to die. When I arrived home I had a fever of 106, I was still hallucinating and I still could not speak. My organs were shutting down, as were the neuropathways in my brain. I was actually in the physical process of dying. The hospice team iced me down, put morphine patches on me and tried to make me as comfortable as possible. My life expectancy was measured in days. Perhaps even in hours. Funeral arrangements were begun.

It’s important to note that hospice was not treating my legs. Their job was to make my death as painless as possible. I was being given a strong, but common, anti-biotic and they were applying only saline solutions to the wounds. Other than amputation, there is no cure for gangrene. But the miracles that happened next were either to numerous to count or they need to be lumped into one continuous miracle that lasted almost six weeks.

First my temperature returned to normal. Then my kidneys returned to normal functioning. And then the real adventure began. “But there is no cure for gangrene,” they would say, amazed, as the gangrene dropped off my legs and exposed fresh, new skin. “I don’t understand” and “I’ve never seen anything like this before” were common refrains. After a few weeks, it was obvious that, for some reason, I was not dying. But they cautioned me that I would still lose a leg. I told them no. When I did not lose a leg they, they said I would lose a foot. I told them no. When I didn’t lose a foot, they said I would lose some toes. I told them no. When I didn’t lose any toes, they said I would lose a nail. And I did. But it grew back.

I entered the hospice program with two terminal conditions and a life expectancy of only days. But we got a second opinion from God. He saved me, healed me and restored me. I am now beginning to walk again. And on the same two legs that God gave me 57 years ago. When the healing power of Jesus Christ hits a body, sometimes all you can do is just stand back and watch!! Praise His Name Forever!!

  • Share/Bookmark