Saturday, July 29, 2017

It’s a Matter of Life and Death



Matters of life and death aren’t always the most important. I sat watching two nurses working on a fragile premature infant trying to get a huge needle into his delicate spine.  I didn’t even know this child, but I couldn’t hold back the tears. My son, Benjamin, who had emergency surgery just a few days before, at only two days old, looked like a football player compared to the rest of these residents of the NICU.   “How could all these souls” I prayed, “come to these bodies that are so damaged and defective to endure such pain of their own free will?”   No sooner had this prayer ascended to heaven when a very comforting message entered my mind and heart. “They knew it would be worth it.”  At the same time, I just knew that Benjamin came to serve his family. 
Years later in yet another marathon doctor’s appointment I was told by the doctor that my son’s condition was tenuous. I feared for my son’s life if I didn’t obey his orders.  This doctor is one of those doctors who I refer to as having a “God complex.” From the first time I met him, he expected me to blindly obey every command he uttered. I was constantly getting lectured for not doing something he had never even told us to do.  He sent us to a gastroenterologist who never agreed with his treatment plans and constantly changed the dosages. I would ask him about the contradictions, and he would simply say, “do everything she tells you to do.”  Consequently, she overprescribed Benjamin’s digestive enzymes, and caused permanent damage to his intestines.  To cover up their mistakes they began to falsify records in Benjamin’s medical files.
Benjamin spent his entire life in and out of hospitals.  They would admit him just long enough to get an IV inserted and stabilize the levels of medication in his system. They would then send him home for us to run three weeks or more of IVs and even draw blood for lab work ourselves.  During one particular hospitalization when Benjamin was 7 years old, I carefully wrote down all of the orders that we were expected to follow.  We had to run the feeding tube at a rate that it would take 10 hours to feed 24 ounces of canned “nutritional supplements”.  Of course, it never ran 10 hours straight before Benjamin would have to get up and use the bathroom because this “nutrition” he was being pumped full of was not being digested. Benjamin had Cystic Fibrosis, and he needed to take supplemental enzymes when he ate. He couldn’t take enzymes while he slept.  He needed breathing treatments with albuterol every 4 hours, followed by chest percussion therapy that took 30-60 minutes. This couldn’t be done within an hour after eating or running his feeding tube.  He got Pulmozyme twice a day, and Tobramycin twice a day.  He took digestive enzymes with every meal and snack. He was supposed to consume 3000-5000 calories per day. We were to give him one can of Pulmocare 3 times a day delivered by gravity through the feeding tube.  This caused dumping syndrome, which meant the food just went right through him.  After a few days of trying to adjust it or slow it down so it wouldn’t go straight through him, we had to stop because nothing helped.  He took Omeprazole twice a day, Adeks water soluble vitamins twice a day, Ciprofloxacin twice a day, but not within an hour of milk products.  I’m sure I’m forgetting something, but my point in listing all this is to illustrate the fact that all that we were supposed to do would take 26 hours, and we were supposed to do it every day.
While I was working “twenty-six” hours a day, my five other children had less of a mother than they deserved.  One of my daughters really struggled as a teenager.  She was emotionally insecure, and I remember crying because I couldn’t give her the attention that she craved and do all of the medical garbage that the doctors kept telling us we needed to do to keep Benjamin alive, when in reality a lot of it was damaging him.
 During the time that we were responsible for all of these extensive medical treatments at home, I received a revelation in the temple that my daughter would be okay.  I was startled by this revelation, because I didn’t know why it came until the next day when she ran away from home.  She didn’t return home for three days, and I would have been an emotional wreck that weekend without that sweet tender mercy. I was still concerned, but I knew she would be ok.
Years later, we found that the best healthcare we could get for Benjamin was in Salt Lake City. In hindsight, I’m grateful we didn’t know this earlier, because I know that I would have traveled those eight hours at the expense of caring for my other children, after all, it was a matter of life and death!  What could be more important? The Lord knew my weaknesses as a mother and He sent Benjamin with all of his challenges to give my other kids an example of pure love and sacrifice.  When they think of him, they will want to be with him forever.
            I had learned first-hand through these experiences what Elder Dallin H. Oaks tells us in his opening sentence from his talk “Good, Better, Best”.   “Most of us have more things expected of us than we can possibly do.’ Most people would say that matters of life and death are the most important things that we can devote our time doing.  I learned that working to keep my son alive was better than almost anything else I could do. There were so many good things that I didn’t have time to do.  Elder Oaks quoted President Gordon B. Hinckley saying that he has pleaded that we “work at our responsibility as parents as if everything in life counted on it, because in fact everything in life does count on it.”  The phrase “It’s a matter of life and death” needs to leave my vocabulary, and in its place “It’s a matter of eternity.”

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

We dropped off the face of the earth!


      When you last heard from me, Gene and I were in a tailspin.  I had decided to take a break from school, Gene had suddenly lost his job of 31 years, and was looking for a job programming dinosaurs...I mean mainframe computers in the COBOL programming language.  We were getting quite discouraged, and I got a concussion.  I don't remember if I even blogged about that. (If I didn't, I'll have to do that!)  I don't remember a lot!  
Anywho....fast forward to February 18, 2016.  I didn't even know that Gene had a job interview.  It was supposed to be a skyped interview.  His appointment was at 2:00, and by 2:20 he had a job in Lansing, MI, and they wanted him there immediately.  I would have preferred to take at least a few weeks packing up what we needed to take, but Gene was pretty adamant that he wanted me to come with him when he flew out.  He spent the next 2 weeks filling out a bazillion forms in triplicate because this was a job working for the government through an outside agency.  Lots of paperwork!  
     I spent the next 11 days packing a few items of furniture, and canned food.  It might seem odd that I packed the canned food, but I had just bought eight or so cases of canned goods from the Smith's case lot sale, and they weren't put away yet.  So, I packed them.  I packed just ONE box of beading supplies. Every time I want to do any beading, I don't have what I need here.  When I'm back in Vegas, I have the same problem because I thought I was packing everything I would need here. 
 I forgot so many things, not because I actually forgot them, but because I ran out of time.   I scheduled a U-haul Ubox.  They were cheaper than other companies, and the terms fit our plans.  I took everything over to the location so nobody would see us moving out, and think the house was empty while our son was there alone.  When we left sort of early on Saturday, the weekend crew thought we were done, and scheduled our box to be picked up. We had left the box alone to honor the Sabbath, and it was nothing short of a miracle that the driver wasn't able to pick it up before we arrived back there to finish filling the box.  I would have loved to bring two Uboxes, but I didn't have time to pack them myself.   
March 5, 2016 we landed in this snow covered foreign land.  We are both desert rats, and know nothing about how to live in the snow.  Gene had a 6 month contract, and I expected to be back in Las Vegas by September.  Surprise, we're still here.  Three weeks after we arrived, Gene noticed his paycheck listed March 3, 2017 as the end of his contract.  They loved him immediately, and they even let someone else go to free up the funds to keep Gene longer.  I need to break the whole story into multiple posts, but long story short, it looks like we will be here at least until March of 2018.
        I didn't bring my finished jewelry that I had expected to relist in March of 2016, so I'm glad that the listings had expired. Obviously, I didn't own appropriate shoes either.  I was wearing a borrowed coat.
I'm hoping to keep this updated much better than I have done, and even if it's just for my own benefit, I need to update my stories of the past couple of years.  Until next time, Thanks for reading.

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