Showing posts with label Ochsner's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ochsner's. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Paying It Back: I Love Mama



A mother's love.  My mother's love.  I know there are some awful mothers out there.   I've a friend who's biological laid her in the floor of her grandmother's home, stepped over her, and said "There she is if you want her -- I don't."   I can't imagine it but know it happens, my friend has no reason to lie.

I have a pretty good mother.  I would say a perfect mother but she does have a few minor but selective hoarding issues that tarnish the definition.  And she's awfully passive aggressive to everyone she loves and since she loves just about everybody (but any and all of our presidential candidates for the last 16 years) the behavior extends all the way to the bag boy at Piggly Wiggly too.  She's spoiled just a tad even though she's not started smelling yet and tends to be a bit sloppy with housework.  Her place-for-everything-and-everything-in-it's-place generally means wherever whatever gets laid out is where it stays before, during, or after use.  And she has a few opinions on the Scriptures that I can't find a precedence for anywhere but in her mind.  The fact she likes flavored water weak coffee and doesn't like dark chocolate still makes me wonder if I wasn't born to one of her sisters, even though older folks and Wade call me Perlena Junior,  that's a big rip in the cloak of perfection for me.

She's an excellent nurturer, even if she is a bad liar.  We call Brother #4 FC, Favorite Child.  It'll bring Mama to drop big ol' alligator tears when she hears us say something about it, her peely wally admonishment she- loves-us-all-the-same falling indifferently on the ears of those of us that aren't Favorite Child.  Favorite Child status gets awarded at different times to one of the five that's done something splendid to enrich her life so sometimes someone other than FC gets to BE favorite child.  But not often, the title being his by default.  That's okay with us, too.  She's the sole beneficiary of the unspoken game.

She paid for fifteen years of piano lessons for me.  Classical piano lessons - pricey - no playing by ear here.  She funded years and years of cleaning band uniform, munchies and boarding fees to contests, clinic after clinic, Lion's Band trip, Junior Miss Pageant dress (hhhhey, no haters, I did the pageant:  was awared the Congeniality Award, too);  wedding;  washing machine; sons' haircuts; and lets me use one of her vehicles 'cause I gave my own to one of The Fellows, his own transportation needs to/from/and around Mississippi State exceeding my own.  Mama continues to help by supplying eggs for cakes, memories for the blog, and sewing lessons  for Havard Lane Totes.

She's given so much for her fambly in time, effort, and love than I feel like I can ever repay.  Then again, being a mother isn't about getting repaid for anything done for the sake of your child.  I figure, though, it's time to pay it back in earnest, loving through action than in word.

I had started a timeline last Wednesday beginning with the ire felt at coming down here a full day ahead of necessary.  I kinda sorta wanted a day with Youngest Fellow + GE (Gur'friend Extraordinare) all to myself but Mama insisted I lead the way for her and FC down here.  **insert gripey face**  Thursday was spent getting all the presurgical testing done, the surgeon's final interview, and preadmittance to the hospital cleared up all the while dealing with FC plus Brother #2 in their we're-older-and-know-best-dammit capacities.  It's alright.  I know they are and do.  It's irksome, though, when you're 51 going on 85 and know a few things yourself.  Friday was tough, watching Mama being wheeled down the hall, feeling the incredible dichotomy of trusting the Almighty to do His job regardless of the outcome and uhhmmmmmm trusting the Almighty to do His job despite the outcome.  Surgery was delayed by a couple of hours and then voila!  was done.  ICU surround-sound-beeping and Mama unconcious with intubation and tongue hanging out, not to mention the tower and monitors and the intubation and the pressure cuffs on her legs constantly inflating and the chest drain and the central line and the intubation and canisters of drainage on every corner of the bed and floor, was disturbing.

She was a model of aortic-valve replacement surgery:  a text-book procedure.  Saturday morning she woke up breathing fine on her own, intubation went bye-bye, and she started barking orders talking.

She spent Saturday, Sunday, and Monday in the Intensive Care Unit - not because she needed to be there beyond Saturday evening (24 hours required?) but because a room wasn't available on the Cardiac Care Unit.

The chest drain was removed early Monday morning.  AAAaaack!  I didn't to stay to watch it and wished I hadn't've watched the removal of the central line Monday night.  The catheter had been removed Monday morning before coming down here to CCU.  She was tickled beyond pink (and her coloring is nice and pink, too, by the way) to get her big gurl panties on yesterday.  Forty, previously. and now twenty milligrams of furosemide have made sure she potties like a toddler. And she is a toddler again, the shuffling steps looking precariously balanced.

They've got my last good nerve in a lab here somewhere, furiously trying to clone it and get it back to me before leaving  tomorrow.  I sent it to them Monday shortly after FC left going back to work.   Without it I've been managing on love, trying to let Mama see not only how well I do love her, but also how well she taught me to love -- how well I was paying attention.

Mayree?  Well.  It's got to be love -- otherwise it'd be guilt and I don't do things like take her false teeth out and clean them and put them back after every meal and every night for guilt.  I can do things out of guilt.  I've plenty of training with that too, but holding a warm cloth to her head while she tries to ack up phlegm isn't guilt.  I have no explanation why it's easier to help a child than an adult with acking.  I think it's due to adults being able to interject noises with the action.  Children throw up, plainly, simply, and often explosively.  Adults add a blech and sliminess to it making it entirely different.  It's love, pure love, that keeps that cloth in place.

Carefully scratching around the edges of bandages with just enough touch to be touched without causing any redness is love.  Rubbing dry cracked feet with lotion and trimming those skanky nails is love.  Dressing the spot of eczema directly atop the natal cleft (google it, please) and covering it is love.

It's also love that holds her seemingly frail (it's not) hand and drags her grumbling, griping, and panting down the hallway another ten feet beyond the previous walk.  She's ahead of schedule on the walks.

 It's love that opens all the food and drink containers, adding just enough salt to make the bland food taste like food; that peels and slices the apple in the right thicknesses to make for late night snacking sans bottom teeth.  She's not anemic or dehydrated.


You could say I'm a devoted daughter and I'd have to argue with you.  I'm a daughter of a woman of the Deep South that was one of seven daughters, one of the youngest two, that was a careprovider for her mother also.  It's a genetic predisposition I'm glad to possess, knowing that love is better shown and returned here in the bathroom handing her toilet paper than in any melodic ode or well-crafted poem.  She's a valuable resource, a real Proverbs 31 woman;  I'm priveleged to call her blessed....


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We're scheduled to go home tomorrow.  It's been a week of emotional extremes, biting the inside of my mouth to keep from opening it at times.  She's not always easy to tend to;  even the nurses recognize she's spoiled rotten.  She's adored here and they take exceptionally good care of her, the nursing staff taking the occupation to all time level highs.  I'm so glad we're here at Ochsner's.  I'll be even gladder when we're not here at Ochsner's.  Now if I can just break into Mother's for that brownie recipe before we leave I'll call it a successful trip all the way around!


Thank you all so much for your prayers during our preparation, surgery, and stay for the miniAVR.  Prayers work:  Mama's been the text-book example for the surgery and recovery and that's not for her age, either.  That's across any age group.  We're blessed and we know it.
MawMaw Havard with FC's daugher, Tiffany
Much love to you all.
Mary

Saturday, February 18, 2012

The Dentist Had a Rumbly Tummy

I went to the dentist two weeks ago.  It's taken me that long to recovery my last good nerve, especially after taking Mama back to Ochsner's in Metarie, Louisiana to get the mini-AVR surgery scheduled.  I despise going to the dentist.  Oh.  He's a nice enough of a fellow with an easy touch.  It's just that I'm afraid of him and his implements of personal destruction drills.
 
I don't care for the probes and other things that can pick out last week's broccoli casserole from a body's cecum via a molar, either.

I used to have a certifiable phobia of the masochist parading as dentist until I realized they were actually human.  Through the years of watching them become less Neanderthal and more homo sapien I noticed that Dr. W always smelled good, Dr. A looked like an all-American Eagle Scout, Dr. C has intense eyes, and Dr. R...  Well... Dr. R. has a rumbly tummy.

I believe in getting the unpleasant done and over with as quickly as possible so I'm often his first victim patient on the appointed morning.  The conversation with his stomach tells me I'm often there after coffee but before breakfast.

Seriously?  Mayree?? You're blogging about the dentist visit and his empty gut?  Wellllllll...  It's actually about nitrous oxide and my brain and the dentist's almost-verbal digestive tract.

I don't go readily into the chair without the tank of nitrous steadily by my side.
I couldn't care less what happens after the mask is in place and the mixture of N2O is delivered to the lungs and then to the gray matter in this graying head.

As the sedating gas works it's medical miracle and relaxation starts I count ceiling tiles and wonder why they're accoustic.  I count the numbers of perforations in each tile.  I snicker to myself when I can't multiply tiles time perforations because somebody is talking in the room with me and the tank.

Dr. R is asking about cakes while administering the face-altering numby stuff.  There's no answering with the syringe where it is.  I hear his stomach ask "Yo.  Woman.  How's 'bout a chocolate cake?"  I feel my face crinkle into a smile while telepathically replying, "Curls are extra."

The dentist tries to sneak that scraper thingie around the line of peripheral vision but his tummy gives his actions away "Incoming!  Take cover!"

Scrrrrrrreeeeeetch scccccrrrratch scraaaape scrappe scrape! goes the sounds of metal on a lower left incisor.  My mind thinks of Dorothy Parker's line, "What fresh hell is this?" The GastroGeniusRumbler aka the dentist's stomach, says, "I told you so."

Fortunately, the dental carie is small and only the one drill bit, previously used to attempt to drain the Indian Ocean from Mississippi, sounds it's terror while the Voice of Stomach Karma sings to me Tom Waits' Underground.

The fluoride treatment tastes like new shower curtains smell.  Ggr (GastricGeniusRumbler) wonders if fluoride could ever be a secret ingredient in the basket on the cooking show Chopped.  Not being able to wrap my thoroughly relaxed and free-thinking mind around a good reason why it couldn't be, I pretend not to hear him.

Dr. R and his assistant are talking some cryptic code that sounds suspiciously like they know what they're doing and Ggr assures me it's almost over.  I'm actually a little saddened to realize the conversation will be finished before we've had a chance to discuss the gateway to the fourth dimension.

Surely enough, the bib is taken off and the O2 is turned on to kill my imaginary confidante clear my head.  You'd have to be there, in my mind, to understand the mirth and fear that happens simultaneously when this brain gets a dose of nitrous at the dentist's office.  I'm thankful to have had Dr. R's intelligent digestive organ to keep me company and for distraction last week.

I wonder if I should call the man and tell him chocolate curls are extra?

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Mama's surgery is scheduled for March 2nd with an expected hospital stay of 5 to 10 days.  To say she's a little apprehensive is an understatement.  Y'all keep her in your thoughts and prayers and we'll both appreciate it.  <3 Mary