I always wanted to be a Missionary. Now that I have four children at home, seven in Heaven, I realize that my Mission Field is my backyard and my family and I are a testimony to Life!! Here I recount my musings, my stories, thoughts, and adventures as a Mommy and as a Missionary helping to build the Culture of Life! Won't you join me?

Saturday, November 3, 2012

It's Been a Year, part II: The Gift of a PE and Pneumonia

So I ended the last post by saying that Padre Pio and Pope John Paul II were going to be playing a bigger role in my life "very soon."  I have always had a very strong and special devotion to St. John Paul II.  As a child I used to ask God for sufferings to offer for the Pope and experienced a closeness with him that is hard to describe.  After his death I mourned his loss and started a private devotion to him while praying for his Cause for Canonization.  I also asked him if he would accept me as his Spiritual Daughter.  His answer was "First you must make My Mother your Mother."  Of course he was talking about Mary.  I had always had a hard time with the Blessed Mother.  I prayed my Rosary, I honored her, I wanted to love her, and perhaps by an act of will I did, but it always felt flat.  In my heart I hadn't surrendered to Her Motherhood.  Well, Papa JPII got me thinking.  I desperately wanted him to accept me as a Spiritual Daughter so if he said to make Mary my Mother well, OK then!  I began begging her to help me do this.  At the same time I was given an incredibly strong sense that were anything "really bad" to happen to me, BL (now Saint). John Paul II would save me.  I didn't know what this meant, and quite frankly was a little rattled by this revelation that I was given while in prayer.  I thanked him for looking out for me and asked for his continued intercession.

This all began about 2 month before losing Baby Lolek.  Shortly before Lolek's death Padre Pio started "popping up."  He does this when he is letting us know we are going to need his help.  So I took the hint and began a novena to him asking for his protection.  When everything happened with Lolek I knew Padre Pio was interceding, and I clutched a prayer card of his throughout the ordeal.

The day after I was released from the hospital I was experiencing some very intense chest pain.  I had felt pretty woozy and lightheaded when they discharged me but was told by the nurse to expect to feel weak and to feel a heavy discomfort in my chest because of all the IV fluid.  So when I felt pain I recalled the words of the nurse and tried to ignore it.  The pain worsened throughout the day.  Perhaps it was my milk coming in?  After losing Claire my milk came in and it hurt.  Maybe it was anxiety?  I always get post-pardum anxiety.  Maybe its just my body recovering from trauma?  Maybe its all of the above?  As the day went on the pain only intensified.  It became hard to breathe.  I couldn't inhale.  I felt like I couldn't catch my breathe.  It must be anxiety.  This is the worst attack I've ever had.... I thought to myself.  Curled up on our big chair with a blanket I just struggled to breathe.  Walking made me dizzy and feel faint.  Wow.  I lost a lot of blood, probably normal....

I coped with these strange symptoms all day.  I mentioned them to my husband but tried to assure him that almost dying the day before was enough "badness" for a while - I was sure I'd be OK with some more rest.  Except I couldn't breathe!  I managed to make it through the day with as little exertion as possible.  OK, no exertion at all.  I tried to go to sleep that night.  My husband was restless and spent the night awake watching some movies in the living room.  I think I had given him quite a scare!  I lay in bed alone trying to get a good breath.  I once again thought of the nurse's warning, "It will be uncomfortable and feel heavy."   Boy, she wasn't kidding!  I tried to lay still.  After the 3rd Rosary I drifted into an uncomfortable sleep.  At about 4 am I shot bolt upright in bed - searing pain across my midsection from the bruises I had gotten after all the "mashing" the day before.  I was gasping for air and clutching my chest. Blinding pain was ripping into the left side of my chest and I had the distinct feeling that I had stopped breathing.  I gulped air, each gulp causing pain that made me dizzy.  Pope John Paul II's face flashed in my mind.  I tried to steady my breath.  I couldn't talk.  My heart was pounding so fast!  Slow breaths I commanded myself.  This must be another anxiety attack.  What else could it be?  After about 20 minutes of slow deliberate, painful breaths I put my head on my pillow and started another Rosary.  I was thinking of John Paul II.  I fell back into a fitful sleep only to wake up a short time later with the same awful sensation - gasping for air, clutching my chest in searing pain.  John Paul II's face again in my mind.  I didn't know what was happening but I DID Know that the "something really bad" had probably just happened.  I sat still, heart facing, trying to breathe through the pain in my chest.  I couldn't talk, couldn't move.  What was going on!?  I calmed down and tried to chalk it up to anxiety again, but I was a little scared.  And there was NO WAY I was going back to sleep! I sat very still in my bed, waiting for the sun to rise.  I may have dozed, in and out.  My husband  went to sleep as the sun was rising.  I told him what happened.  He looked concerned.  I told him I'd see how I felt and then call the doctor if necessary.  He said to wake him if I needed to.  I managed to get breakfast for my kids.  I walked slowly - every movement made me dizzy and made breathing more difficult.

Once noon hit I couldn't take it anymore.  I called the number on my discharge papers from two days before and left a message for the doctor.  Then I curled up on the chair with a blanket and tried to breathe.  My kids were a great distraction.  My husband woke up around 2:30 and at 3pm I got a call back from the doctor.  "If you are experiencing shortness of breath or chest pain you need to go to the ER, now."  I told her what the discharging nurse had said to me.  She wasn't impressed.  "You need to go to the ER.  What that nurse told you doesn't apply anymore."  I didn't really know what that meant but I told Dear Hubby we had to go to the hospital.  Our friend came over to keep an eye on the kids and we were off.

I will spare you the details of the Er trip.  The highlights included a dubious doctor who thought maybe my hemoglobin was low, and then a full oxygen mask, a heart rate dangerously high, blood pressure issues, X-Rays, a CT Scan (which I HATED!), an ultrasound of everything below my belly button, including my legs and feet, and eventually the dubious doctor poking his head into my room saying, "You're a MESS!"  It turned out I had a Pulmonary Embolism AND pneumonia.  PE in the right lung, pneumonia in the left. Our priest came and gave me the anointing of the sick.  I was instructed to NOT move at all.  Apparently my heart rate was so erratic that movement of any kind made it spike dangerously high  I was started on heparin, a blood thinner, and given something for the pneumonia, which they said was "hospital induced."  I had an OB come and consult because the doctors were afraid the blood thinners would make me hemorrhage again.   I was so scared!!  After getting started on everything I was admitted and taken to the cardiac ICU.  It had been 2 days since I had been in the ICU in the ER after losing Lolek.  I couldn't believe it.  What in the world was happening to me?!

The doctors were not very forthcoming with information.  I had a PE which I knew could kill you, and I was in danger of hemorrhaging, which could kill you.  The pneumonia seemed parochial at that point, and I refused to dwell on the fact that my grandfather had died from hospital induced pneumonia.  My husband had to go home to take care of the kids and I dictated a list to him of items to bring back in the morning.  I assured him I'd be fine and knew the kids needed him.  So I put on my brave face and joked through the oxygen mask, "Well I get breakfast in bed tomorrow!"  ("If I live that long" I added to myself, fear creeping into my thoughts.)  Hubby said good bye and I sat in the bed as a cascade of nurses came in.  Apparently in a cardiac ICU you get lots of attention.  I tried to adjust myself and my monitor started beeping.  A nervous looking nurse ran over.  "Honey, you CAN NOT move.  Your heart rate is way too high."  All I had done was try to adjust my position! Great. So if the PE doesn't kill me, and the anticipated hemorrhage doesn't kill me, and the pneumonia doesn't kill me, I will end up sending myself into cardiac arrest by accident and THAT will kill me.  All of a sudden I felt very vulnerable, very out of control, helpless and terrified.  I apologized.  She looked at me, "Your heart has had a work-out what with the heart attack and all."
Heart attack?  What heart attack?  I looked at her puzzled. She looked back.  The PE is in the right side.  It had to go through your heart to get there.  You're lucky you are alive."  I thought back to the night before- sitting up in bed clutching my chest gasping for air.  "OH! THAT'S what that was!"  I was stunned.  I was 29 years old and had already had my first heart attack.  I didn't know whether to be proud or mortified.  Instantly I thought of Pope John Paul II and in that moment I understood.  He had saved my life.  I had absolutely no doubt.  That thing was stopping up my heart and through his intercession it didn't kill me.  I silently thanked him.  So grateful.

I asked the nurse for my purse and slowly and carefully (so as not to speed up my poor heart)  took out my worn prayer book.  Pieta Prayer Book, in case you were wondering - my favorite.  I also took out my rosaries, Padre Pio and JPII prayer cards, and my Holy Water. I clutched them.  The nurses explained that my bed had to remain at a certain angle and I couldn't adjust it.  They messed around with my IV lines, gave me a catheter (ick), increased my oxygen, and drew some blood.  Then they instructed me to yell or press my call button if I thought I was bleeding to death, told me not to move again and left.  I was alone.

Now, I won't go into detail about the next 7 days in the hospital.  They had to draw blood every few hours, so by day 3 my arms were full of bruises and my veins didn't want to cooperate.  My blood thinners took a while to get in the "zone" where its safe (too little thinning and the clot can break free and blood can't move past it, too much thinning and well.... its bad).  The first 4 days I wasn't allowed to move more than my arms, and even then I had to be careful.  I will never forget laying there at that awful, uncomfortable 30 degree angle and wondering if I was going to die.  Would it hurt?  Would anyone be there with me?  Was I ready?  Why wasn't I excited at the prospect of Heaven?  What about my kids?  That's where I would get stuck.  My kids.  I was Mommy.  I had to take care of them.  Sure I thought about dying and getting to meet my three in Heaven, but my ones on earth needed me! I finally understood why so many prayers ask for the "Grace of a happy death."  I pray them very sincerely now.

Those first few terrifying days I look back on now with great thanks.  God was working on me.  I was, for the first time in my life, completely helpless.  I couldn't fight my way out of it.  I couldn't "suck it up, offer it up, and deal."  I couldn't even breathe without the oxygen mask! I realize now that those days are when I learned about contemplative prayer.  It was as if God taught me the amazing way to pray under fire.  It wasn't until months later that I realized that was what I was doing, how I was praying was contemplative.  I was so excited!  What a Grace I had been given!  I also learned that I needed to surrender.  I was afraid to.  I knew I was afraid to.  I was offering it up for my family and for my husband.  I was not complaining.  I was thanking God for the pain, for the fear, for the uncertainty, and yet I couldn't completely surrender.  I prayed the Stations of the Cross over and over again.  I found such comfort in them.  I knew I had to mourn my baby, Lolek, but I also knew that I couldn't yet.  It was as if my mind said "one crisis at a time, and this one is more immediate."  Besides my husband was making arrangements with the funeral home and the Church, I could be at peace knowing he would get the burial a child of God deserved.

One thing that was astounding to me were the insane conversations I would have with doctors.  They would come in every day to check on me.  I saw about 13 different doctors over the course of the first 7 days I was there.  THEY ALL told me I needed to decide what birth control to use.  A conversation would go like this:
Doctor: Hello Laura, how are you feeling
Me: Hello.  I still can't breathe and I have a lot of chest pain
Doctor:  Well that will take a  lot of time.  Your INR (how thin the blood is) is still off so we have to adjust your dose again.
Me: OK
Doctor: Now, lets talk about Birth Control for a moment.
Me: No, that's OK.
Doctor: Dr. So and So tells me you refused birth control yesterday.
Me:  Yes I did! *smile*
Doctor: That is not wise.  You see, blood thinners can cause birth defects and pregnancy can cause blood clots.
Me: So can Birth Control
Doctor:  Well, that's not exactly true
Me: Yes it is. It says so on the hormonal BC inserts.  Why in the world would you want me on BC if it causes them?  I ALREADY HAVE ONE!
Doctor: Well, it would be irresponsible of you to take a risk of getting pregnant
Me:  BC isn't fool proof. Besides my husband and I use a natural method and we use SELF control instead.
Doctor:  That's not really a smart idea.
Me:  Excuse me?  I am a Roman Catholic.  My faith teaches me that Birth Control is not only harmful to me, but its harmful to my marriage, to society, and to my soul.  AND I BELIEVE IT.  I practice my Faith.  I am very upset that every day I get a birth control lecture even after asking the nurses to notate on my chart that it is not to be discussed with me.  There is nothing you can say that will ever change my mind.
Doctor:  Well its your decision but it is not a smart one. If you get pregnant you have to come off the blood thinners and go on a different medication and you will need a high risk OB/GYN.  Plus, how many children do you have now?
Me: Four on earth.
Doctor:  My goodness.  All with the same man?
ME: YES!
Doctor: Don't you think that's enough?
Me:  I think its not for me alone to decide, and its none of your business.
Doctor: Very well, we are done.

At that point a nurse will hurry in and tell me my blood pressure was too high and I would explain that it was the doctor's fault.

So these were my days.  Plenty to offer up, and yet, I was still holding something back.

When I was released 7 days later I got home late afternoon. My mom was there with my sister.  My kids were so happy.  I was exhausted.  I was very weak, and still couldn't breathe.  I felt like I had been run over by a bus.  I got set up on the overstuffed chair and cuddled my kids.  I felt terrible.  The next day I still felt awful but managed a shower.  The kids had an early bedtime.  I decided to sleep on the chair because it was comfortable for my breathing.  As I tried to doze off an all too familiar sensation made me hurry to the bathroom.  I was hemorrhaging again.  A lot.  In half an hour I was back in an ambulance heading to the hospital.  It had been less than 12 hours since I was discharged.

The blood thinners were reversed to stop the bleeding.  This put me at risk for another clot and made my pain level higher and difficulty breathing worse.  An ultrasound revealed what they thought "might" be a retained bit of tissue.  I was told to not eat or drink in case I needed a D and C to remove it. I was admitted again but since the cardiac unit was full I was put on a Bariatric floor.

The poor nurses there didn't know what to do with me.  All the equipment was too big for me - it was designed for obese people getting bariatric surgery.  After all my problems I weighed about 118 pounds - hardly obese.  Still those nurses were wonderful. They knew I was hungry and wasn't allowed to eat, and they didn't have monitors for my vitals so they came in to check as often as they could.  Some dear friends came to pray over me.  They brought relics of several saints and along with a few other friends, including my amazing "super-doula" best friend we prayed.  Through the course of the prayer I began to feel very strange.  I had been given a drug that was supposed to help expel the retained tissue, but came with the risk of further hemorrhage.  The doctor had told me we still couldn't rule out a D and C and would I consent to placing an IUD while getting the procedure.  I practically shouted her out of the room.  "NO!  STOP TALKING TO ME ABOUT BIRTH CONTROL!"  She was very upset with me and told me she hoped I didn't hemorrhage but if I did, at least I could get another transfusion, and she left.

As I began to feel strange, I thought to myself, here it comes.  I'm going to bleed to death right here.  There are no monitors so the nurses won't see that my BP is dropping and my pulse is racing.  I began to feel faint.  I hadn't eaten in 36 hours, and I'm sure that didn't help.  I couldn't see straight, my heart was pounding.  I started to get tunnel vision.  "Surrender, Laura."  I heard a whisper in my heart.  "Make my mother your mother."  Papa JPII?  My friends were praying.  I felt like I was dying.  "Mama!!!  Mama!!!  I surrender!  Help me Mama!  I give up!  God can have me if He wants.  I surrender.  Please, be my Mother.  Help me to love you as my mother, help me surrender completely to God.  If its His Will that I die now, then I accept it.  Please hold my hand Mama, I give everything to God.  Everything. My life, my health, my kids, my husband, everything."    I was screaming in my mind.  I felt as though I was saying it out loud.  And in that moment, Mary became my Heavenly Mother.  I had broken through.

My pulse quickened, the dizziness intensified, and I felt as though I couldn't breathe.  I could tell I was about to hemorrhage.  "Call a nurse," I whispered. My friends looked worried. They pressed the call button and went into the hallway.  Two nurses came running.  "I'm not OK."  I told them.  "I feel like I do before I hemorrhage, and I want to pass out."  They started checking vitals.  The looked worried.  Very worried.  They called another nurse.  One left to make a call.  The other two ushered out my friends.  They shut the door and brought over a portable commode.  Lets prop you up on this and see what happens.  I agreed.  I prepared myself for the inevitable gush of blood and what I knew would be me passing out afterwards.  "You have to hold me up," I said.  The nursed could see I was so dizzy I couldn't even sit up without help.  "We aren't leaving your side," they said.  And so I glanced upward, asked Mary to give me courage, and resigned myself to the very real sense that I was going to die that night.

Then a strange thing happened.  I sat propped up waiting for the worst.  Instead of a rush of blood the only thing that my body expelled was a piece of tissue.  It looked to be the size of the retained tissue that the ultrasound had revealed. I was flabbergasted. So were the nurses.  You see, it just doesn't work like that.  You don't just expel a bit of tissue and NOTHING else.  Not post pardum, not when you have been hemorrhaging.  The dizziness began to wane.  Tunnel vision went away.   The nurses put me back in bed.

"See, I am your Mother."  I heard her whisper in my heart.  With complete clarity I understood. Mary had just kept me alive.  She had saved my life.  It was my final act of surrender that made it possible.  I was filled with gratitude.  Immense gratitude.  I can't write this without crying.  That night, Mary became my mother, and I learned that surrender - ultimate surrender - is a freedom.  Not something to be feared.

Shortly after this experience the nurses came in to tell me I was being transferred to the Cardiac Unit "where I belonged."  Soon I was back on the cardiac floor in the ICU for a few days, and then to the regular cardiac floor before being sent home.  All told I had been in the hospital for 16 days.

I had an ultrasound the day after the night when Mary saved my life to check on the "retained tissue" and wouldn't you know, they couldn't find it.  The whole time I had the distinct feeling of Mary's presence.  It was as if she was letting me know that just as I wouldn't leave one of my children's sides were they in the hospital, neither was she leaving mine.  I had the most profound peace.  I was no longer scared.  I didn't really know what would happen to me yet but I was not scared.  I was at peace.  I was still in a lot of pain and I still couldn't breathe, but I had peace.  I remember realizing that I had done as John Paul II said.  I made Mary my Mother!  And as I thought these things, in my heart I knew I had a new Spiritual Father as well.  I was overjoyed!  There I was with my oxygen cannula on, the anti-clot balloons on my legs, heart monitors all over, two IVs, and bruises up and down my arms, grinning like a fool.  Our God is an amazing God.

In my next post I would like to introduce you to some very amazing, very special, extremely dear friends without whom I couldn't have survived the hospital tedium, or recovered once home.  They have become my Virginia Family and I thank God for them every day.  So, next time you will meet "Lolek's Friends."  

2 comments:

  1. In awe......seriously do not know how to even respond to this story. Tears, emotions of gratitude, complete understanding of struggles with Mary and Saintly promptings to love her more....I am so glad to have met you and know I have much to learn from you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You humble me, truly. I should say after "meeting you" I feel the same way about you!

    ReplyDelete