Thursday, November 29, 2012

Déjà Vu



I really didn’t want to have to start like this. I really meant to write after things had settled down and Ben was feeling fine. Some of you might have been waiting to hear the post-operative good news. It took a little longer this time. He had trouble with the anesthesia in the days following surgery. Vicious headaches and nausea every time he sat up. The 10 hours of travel home from Philly less than 72 hours post-op were not a breeze. But he did come out of it. We did have some great days. And now I’m sorry I didn’t write when I had the chance.

Because yesterday, which was, incidentally Ben’s 15th birthday, yesterday everything changed and now what I have to tell you is that in a few hours Ben is going in for his twelfth surgery at Shriners Los Angeles. His surgical wound has not healed, is leaking a clear fluid, and is swollen. He and Mark arrived in LA early this morning and headed straight to the hospital where the doctors were expecting them.

 Yesterday morning I felt possessed. I awoke early and after checking emails saw, with some surprise, that our friends and family had already started wishing Ben “Happy Birthday!” on his Facebook page. “What kind of a mother am I who isn’t the first one on the planet realizing it’s her child’s birthday?” I thought. Not that I hadn’t known it was his birthday. We’d already had the celebratory dinner a couple days early (scheduling conflicts!) and we’d been talking about it and his party was happening on Friday night. But, How is it, I asked myself, that I could awaken and not just know it…my first realization, my first thought? I pondered what I was going to do to make his day special.

I didn’t always leave birthday planning to the last minute. I used to shop and think and plan, plan, plan. It’s not my fault really, it’s Mark’s. And since I have recently rhapsodized about Mark’s saintly qualities, I can say this openly. Mark isn’t very good at birthdays or Chanukah or Valentine’s Day. My most incredibly generous husband doesn’t care much about them, so he doesn’t think about them (avoids them?)…until the last minute when there’s no denying the fact that they’ve arrived. After 21 years of marriage, I am much the same at least in the thinking ahead department. (The other person’s birthday, that is. My birthday? Oh, I care about that!)

So yesterday after realizing it really was Ben’s birthday and there was no denying it, the wheels started turning…what to do, what to do?

About 45 minutes later I was on my way to Santa Rosa to do some last minute shopping. The rain was in Biblical flood mode. I’ve rarely seen it so torrential. I asked myself, “What are you doing driving in this weather? Do you want to be the mom who dies in a car accident on the way to buy her son a video game because she was too stupid to plan ahead? Is that the legacy you want to leave?” The answer, of course, was no, but I kept on. Determined. Mission-focused. I will be safe. I will be safe. I drove a bit farther back from the cars ahead and I drove cautiously. “What is going on with you?” I asked myself. “Why is this so important?” And the only answer I had was that I had a driving need to do something SOMETHING and I knew I wanted to make him smile and feel loved and cared for and it wasn’t going to happen without this effort.

I got to BestBuy and found it not yet open. On to Old Navy to buy t-shirts, on to Trader Joe’s to buy brownie mix (even though he said he didn’t want any special treats) for a little birthday celebration at his teen meditation class’ last meeting of the year. Finally back to BestBuy to pick up the lastest hot blow’em up Xbox game. (Here I had to just swallow my motherly pinched expression…this is his game, not my game…let it go.) I was done in 45 minutes. I turned around and headed back to Sebastopol, for one more stop: our favorite bagel store. 20 minutes later, a dozen pizza bagels in hand, I was on my way home.

The house was silent and warm when I walked in. My three homeschooled boys were peacefully snoozing and I had time to wrap his presents, make myself some breakfast, and slice the bagels before the house woke up.

When Ben finally emerged from his room at about noon the fun began. He was totally surprised that I got him the game, he loved and then donned the silly t-shirt, and he ordered two pizza bagels toasted with cream cheese for, um, brunch. All three brothers went off to play the new game and I started baking brownies. About 45 minutes later the power went off. Remember the Biblical deluge? Well, trees went down and power lines with them so we had no power. No video games. No oven. No heat. No landlines. Hmmm.

It was at that moment when everything changed, that moment when Harry said, “Ben, why do you have a wet spot on your back?”

I looked, he looked. We all stood there while Ben felt his surgical wound and said, “I don’t know…”

When he pulled off his shirt and peeled back the medical tape loosely covering his incision I could see clear fluid dripping out, I would say slowly, but honestly, one does not want to see fluid dripping out at any speed, so it looked like too much too fast. Drip…drip…drip…The area around where I imagine his hardware to be (the screws holding the rod to his lumbar vertebrae) was quite puffy, too. None of this was a good sign.

A little while later I was speaking with the on-call doctor at Shriners Hospital in Philadelphia. Back and forth back and forth, between him, Ben’s surgeon, Mark… “How soon can you get here?” he asked. Ummm…WHAT?! Dr. C really wanted to see Ben, to go back in and manage the situation himself. We grappled with all the ramifications of this. We checked flights. Mark cancelled appointments for the week ahead.

Luckily, though, Mark appealed to them to consider other options. For Ben and Mark to fly to Philly is a 10 hour adventure. In his condition that really seemed like a bad choice. “If this was your child, would you put him on a plane and fly across the country?” I asked the on-call doctor.

They listened to Mark. Dr. C contacted cohorts at the Shriners in LA and arranged for a team to be ready for Ben this morning. We booked flights to LA. We had a couple meltdowns. For the second time in about two weeks we packed the hospital suitcase.

Late last night, after putting everyone to bed, Mark and I cuddled and talked about the strange path of the day. I told him how possessed I had been in the morning to do something special for our boy, and how glad I was that I had. If he hadn’t been wearing that new shirt, if he hadn’t been playing Xbox with his brothers, if the power hadn’t gone out and he hadn’t sat up and Harry hadn’t noticed the wet spot…when would we have figured it out? And if I hadn’t gotten him the game the brothers wouldn’t have had the sweet pleasure of rushing back to the TV after the power clicked back on three hours later. Brotherly bonding over blowing things up, especially when you’re feeling the full force of the loss of control of your life, nothing quite holds a candle to that.

The strange part is that the moment when Harry noticed the wet spot…we’ve been there before. That rushed me right back to when we discovered Ben’s sudden scoliosis at his 8 year well-check seven years ago. I’ll never forget that moment. All of this, the weeping wound about 2 weeks post surgery, rushing back to the hospital for another surgery, wet spots on pillows, calls to doctors and anxious waiting, is all too familiar. That time it ended up with two months in the hospital waiting and trying everything to get that damned wound to heal. This is different in some ways, but the familiarity is scary. Even Ben asked me last night, "Am I going to end up in the hospital for another two months?" And the truth is I think not, but I don't absolutely know.

Despite a day gone quickly downhill, our birthday boy shined with courage last night. At dinner his brothers were anxious about what was going to happen. Harry gets prickly. Toby gets goofy. They started fighting with each other. Ben, the middle brother, who is not usually a peacekeeper, but more of a fire-starter or pot-stirrer, spoke up: “Guys,” he said, “you don't need to worry. I will be fine. I will come back. This surgery is not very serious and it’s certainly less serious than the ones I usually have. And those aren’t very serious. So you don't have to worry. OK?” I thought he was going to say, “Hey! Why are you upset? Who’s the guy who has something to be upset about???” But no. He was beautiful. Glowing. I gazed at him all through dinner.

So instead of arguing or panicking, we ate take out burritos for dinner and had a pile of donut holes with three candles in them for dessert. We sang happy birthday almost in tune. We laughed. A lot. Ben was hilarious. So were they all. They keep me in stitches…

After dinner I took him to his meditation class. He was glad that he and “Dada” didn't need to leave until morning to get to LA. On the way home he was cracking me up. I was amazed. "I can't believe you are so funny in the midst of all of this," I said. "Are you kidding?" he said. "I can't focus on the bad stuff! Fuck that shit!" 

Yeah. 

I will keep you posted, good or bad. Promise.

1 comment:

G said...

I'm praying all is going well - watching your Facebook status updates. Hugs and love to you all.