Mary in Cuba, 2008
During
those 11 stormy, unpredictable weeks in ICU, as Mary’s pregnancy neared its end,
Paul and myself, and Bob, took on roles none of us ever anticipated. We became a
sort of unholy triumvirate, a cohesive threesome, each trying to respect the
other, yet each attempting to make Mary’s life – and that of her unborn child –
as comfortable and as optimum as it could be in such grim surroundings.
It was a
daunting task: all the more so because we were, essentially, totally and
completely helpless. Almost as helpless as Mary herself, a machine controlling
her breathing, a tube through her nose feeding her, various other tubes doing
other things; we controlled
nothing – not even the minutiae of our daily lives.
If Paul
became the steady hand on the rudder, ploughing ahead in a fog so thick we
couldn’t see our noses, then Bob was a solid first mate, always there, working
through an unexpected grief, a situation completely and utterly beyond his ken.
As for
me, I was more like a demented deckhand, everywhere at once and achieving
nothing – not even the swab of a deck. I was unable to function, almost paralyzed
with an unfathomable loss.
And in
these times, if you think you can lean on your spouse – well, you can’t, because
they are going through the very same thing. Statistics and countless studies
(too many to mention if you browse the web), show that many couples split when
children become terminally ill and die, or suffer a life-changing illness.
There’s a strain on the fabric of everything you’ve built and it becomes rent
beyond mending.
But you trudge on. And when you think you
can’t take any more, that you’ve reached the very, very end of the road, that’s
when you learn to lean on yourself. You begin to build some sort of rationale, a
framework or perspective – call it an inner strength, if you will – that helps you get out of bed in the morning and get through the day.
It
weakened our union; but it strengthened it, too. You can’t watch a child you
raised go through something like this without it having a profound and lasting
effect on a relationship. You are bound, yet torn from the very person you
love. You lose hope for your family, even as it seems you have to hold it
together.
And all
of this – all this pain, turmoil, loss and confusion – is just because someone didn’t
do their job properly one night, didn’t stop to think of consequences or
possibilities; they just didn’t THINK.
Sometime
during those early ICU days, a lovely nurse turned to me and said, “I have two
daughters, I can’t imagine …” It was meant as a comfort, but it hurt. I had one
– and now it looked as though I would have none.
The baby
was monitored closely during Mary's ICU stay and we were invited, one particular day, to watch as a young
woman, an Irish obstetrics resident, came to do an ultrasound. The baby
at that point was an unknown. We didn’t know how she would turn out –
considering the drugs used to paralyze Mary for CTs, the trauma of asphyxia
(was the baby deprived of oxygen, too?), the fall – and it was something that
got pushed to the back of our heads as we watched Mary hang between life and
death, like so many of her roommates in that silent corridor.
If we
couldn’t wrap our heads around what had happened to Mary, Paul and I certainly
couldn’t possibly, at that point, come to grips with the idea of a baby coming
into the world as our daughter left it. Worse, after a ‘team’ meeting and the
suggestion of putting Mary in palliative care was raised, I was haunted by the
possibility of having to watch Mary die a slow and horrid death as the
necessities of life were withdrawn, even as a new life was starting to thrive –
a life Mary helped create.
It was
unbearable.
The obstetrics resident – herself a mother of three children – looked at me as she
readied her ultrasound equipment.
She knew Alastair had cerebral palsy, had likely
seen him labouring along the hallways with his unsteady gait – a solid, tall
man, dark-haired and good-looking.
“Do you
have other children, Mrs. Archer?”
“No.”
I
seriously thought she might cry. She looked away and began the process. Little
hands, little feet. The baby looked good, she said. She scanned some more and a
small recognizable face, snub nose, small chin floated into view. Dear God. The
baby looked like Mary.
“Oh,
look at that rosebud mouth!” the resident exclaimed.
And
suddenly, the possibility of this baby being born okay was a huge and
overriding reality.
One of
the last names Mary and Bob had been toying with for a girl before the tragedy
was Isobel. I don’t know where that came from. But somehow, in those horrid
days, in a mire of despair and hopefulness, the three of us came up with the
name Isabella. Bob managed properties near Isabella St., one of them was a
co-op called the Grace McInnis. So Grace was added to the mix. She was Isabella
Grace and she was suddenly as real as Mary.
“It’s
an odd situation,” an ICU nurse said one day, “because we’re dealing with
two patients here.”
Mary’s
slow awakening was a long, drawn-out affair that kept everyone guessing. I
think we talked the poor girl awake. I think we all poked and prodded so much –
Mary didn’t like to be touched by strangers and wasn’t a big hugger or
hand-toucher – that she rose up from whatever dark place she was in to tell us
all to fergawdsake’s stop.
To my
utter amazement, she did press my hand one day and I nearly collapsed. It was
such a wonderful thing I kept asking her to do it. Bob would ask her to try and
lift her hand and she did, a small gesture, but still an answer to a command.
She opened her eyes one day, staring at nothing, a wide-eyed, blank look that
didn’t alter when you passed a hand in front of her face.
We
asked her to blink twice. She did. We’d ask the stupidest questions – yes, all
intelligence seems to flee in these situations – and she’d blink – once for no, twice for yes.
Blink,
blink. We were overjoyed.
We take
so much in our lives for granted. We just overlook what we shouldn’t. Pure joy
isn’t in the things you can buy, the material goods you gather about yourself,
the car, the house, the job, the status you attain in your life. It’s all
fleeting and it can all pass or be altered in the blink of an eye.
I hate
to say it but whatever it is you do – or think you can do, or want to do, isn’t
really that important when it comes down to it. Someone else can do the job if you drop dead, someone else will have those things, someone else can achieve
as much as you think you can. Those great individuals who leave permanent
footprints for the rest of the world are so, so few.
What is
important is acknowledging the love of the people around you, their gifts,
their lives and to cherish each day and the lives we are given. We have to stop
and realize our ability to just live.
We forget, sometimes, to simply be.
And I
realized this the moment Mary blinked her "yes". I knew then that we might get our
daughter back. And with those blinks, nothing I ever had, or thought I had, or
wanted to have or to do, was as important to me as that moment my “vegetative”
daughter acknowledged I was standing there, asking her a question. That was
akin to snatching her from the jaws of death. I could work with that; having
her acknowledge our existence – and hers – was life itself.
You only
have to listen to the sobs and cries of family members as someone in ICU – many
of them trauma victims in their 20s – slip the bonds of life and go to …
wherever … to know how vitally important it is to simply be.
But it seemed
Mary was on her way back. And it was wonderful. And it wasn’t going to be easy.
First
of all, we couldn’t convince the doctors that we were getting reactions from
Mary. It’s involuntary, they told us. Those twitches in her cheeks were likely
small localized seizures. They still had her written off – working with the
order to only keep her alive until the baby could be born.
Still, we
persisted. We are getting a reaction, she is squeezing our hands, she will raise
her hand if we ask her to, she blinks, for heaven's sake, we told them. And we told them again.
No. And
no, they said. They were still toeing the death line.
And then
one day we came in and one of the many doctor/faces – we gave them all ‘neuro’ nicknames
like Neuro Nose, Neuro Clown, Neuro Pasta and even The Neuro Nazi, because they all seemed alike
in attitude and all seemed to hide their name tags – came to us and said, “Yes,
we looked at her this morning and you are right. She is responding.”
Later,
one particular ‘Neuro’ came to us and respectfully said: “You never gave up
hope. You kept at it.”
Well,
yeah. She’s our daughter, she’s Bob’s partner. What did you expect us to do?
Believe you?
The respirator removed, Mary seems more at ease.
And
then we had yet another ‘team meeting’ in ICU, all of us squeezed around the
table in that dreadful room.
I had
the audacity to ask for Mary’s tube – the respirator – to be taken out as she
was quite capably breathing above the machine and able to sustain her own life
by this time.
The
company line collectively reared its ugly head: “But that would make it more
difficult for her to pass on at the end. It would prolong things,” said one
sage, name-tag turned so I couldn’t read his name.
“I’m not
thinking of that right now,” I said, miraculously managing to hold back my notoriously
quick temper. “I’m thinking of her comfort. So please take it out.”
There was some kerfuffling along the table,
some throat clearing, some hesitation. But the doctor who commended our hope
came through and agreed.
“We’ll
take it out, Mrs. Archer. I tend to agree with you.”
Three
days later a bloodless hole was made – a tracheostomy – and now, instead of the
thunk of the respirator, we had the hiss of moisturized oxygen and the sound of
Mary coughing and coughing for the first time in weeks. Suctioning became a
regular thing – sometimes so often I’d see blood in the tube. Bob became adept
at clearing her throat, but we’d leave the deep suctioning to the nurses and
look away as Mary’s body would go rigid and arch as it was done.
Mary, by
now, was looking around, dazed, and unseeing. Still, we had a bit of hope and out came the Rancheros Los Amigos scale again and we decided Mary was
probably at Level II: ‘Generalized response regardless of type of location of
stimuli.’
Or maybe
on a good day it was Level III: ‘Localized response. Blinks to strong light
(well, no), responds to physical discomfort, inconsistent response to commands
(well, yes).’
So that
was good. Or, at least, better. The friends, her social work colleagues, her cousins,
aunts and uncles all came in, ignoring the blips and beeps, the hissing and
coughing.
They all
have great senses of humour, thank God, and used them as they talked to Mary. One
friend, after a machine had gone off one day, leaned over her and yelled the OLG slogan in her
face: “Gagnant! You’re a winner!”
We upped
the reading, the talking, the pedicures, the aromatic lotions. We just persisted
because we had to. These were ‘have-to’ times and there was no slowing down, no
escaping.
Now it’s Mother’s Day, 2009; everyone has or
had one at one time or other. Both my parents were gone and for that, particularly with this tragedy, I was thankful.
This was a hideous situation and I can’t imagine my mother’s histrionics had
she been alive. She would have had me on life support, too.
It was a
poignant day, an uncomfortable and sad one. But Paul’s mom was still around, the
only grandparent still living. She is a wonderful woman, someone I admire greatly,
always have, always will. When this whole bloody thing began, the horror, the
fear, the angst, it was my mother-in-law – who lost her youngest child in 1974
at age 14 – who came to me, grabbed my hand and said, “I know exactly what
you’re going through.”
I’ve
never told her, and I should, but of all the words uttered to us in those early
days – it was her words that meant the most to me. Someone else had walked in
our steps. Someone else had suffered the same pain. And it was someone I knew.
Mary lifts a hand in acknowledgement to our persistent demands.
So
Mother’s Day was tough. It was hard to go in there and see my daughter – who was
slowly coming around – lie there in such a state. It was her habit to come to our
home on Mother’s – or Father’s Day – to make us breakfast. The bacon had to be
made in a frying pan. Real bacon is done that way. What’s with this sticking it
in a microwave, she’d ask. Yep. Nothing like a smoking hot pan full of bacon
getting the house all reeked up on Mother’s Day. Windows open for two days,
rain or shine, to get rid of the bacon smell.
But it was wonderful, all of it
cooked campfire style, eggs too. There was nothing like it.
Who wants to spend Mother’s Day in an ICU?
No one. But there we all were, going in, taking it in turns to visit Mary,
still more than a month away from becoming a mom herself. I pointed this fact
out to her.
“Soon,
Mary. You’ll be a mother, soon, too.”
She looked at me blankly. What the hell are you
talking about? She has, we soon discover, forgotten she is even pregnant.
“Can you
give me a smile?” I ask. Was that too much? Should I have done that?
Her
eyes blink lazily and slowly, ever so slowly, and her mouth curves up in that
quirky way she has and I get a very weak, very beautiful smile – the best smile
ever.
Next
week: Isabella
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