A really, really rough New Year's Eve
We are now two days into the New Year, and now I feel I can write about what our New Year’s Eve was like. In a nutshell, it was very, very rough.
My mother (who, as you remember, is now in a nursing home) was hospitalized on Dec. 30 with pneumonia and a blood infection. It didn’t sound good. Then on Dec. 31, the doctor (not her regular doctor, but the one on call over the holiday weekend) said she wasn’t responding to treatments. He summoned the immediate family (my dad and all my brothers; I’m too far away) for a meeting on New Year’s Day.
Doctors don’t summon immediate family for no reason. We were braced for the worst. When I talked to my youngest brother (who lives geographically closest to my parents and has been a rock for them), he said he fully expected Mom to go into hospice. He’s a big strong man, my brother, but he was crying as he told me this.
Since I couldn’t physically be present at the meeting, my brother asked me to stay by the phone on New Year’s Day in case my input was needed for whatever decisions were being made about my mother’s care.
Needless to say we were a gloomy household on New Year’s Eve. Younger Daughter (stationed in Europe) was traveling, and my brother urged me not to ruin her trip because she couldn’t do anything anyway. Older Daughter was very upset about the news and buried herself in work, since she has a large wholesale order going out shortly.
On the evening of New Year’s Eve, Don and I decided to call our pastor and explain the situation, and ask for prayers. This good man was – literally – in the middle of a prayer on the phone when Older Daughter came crashing into house from the shop, holding up a bloody and mangled finger. While working on the router, a piece of wood snapped and her finger connected with the router blade. She was in terrible pain, covered in blood and sawdust.
We yelled to our pastor that we had to go, and immediately embarked on a hasty first-aid for Older Daughter. We bundled her into the car and Don drove her to the emergency room, a half-hour drive away.
After they left, I called our pastor back and explained what happened, noting grimly that this was a helluva way to end the year. He finished the prayer he had started earlier, and then – without asking – went to meet Don and Older Daughter at the emergency room. (Apparently he does this a lot with congregants. They know him there in the emergency room.)
Don and Older Daughter were back within a couple of hours. OD’s finger is swathed in gauze, of course, but it will mend. She chewed off the tip, but the injury didn’t reach the bone and she should recover full use after it heals. Heavens above, it could have been way worse.
So New Year’s Day dawned, and Don went out to the shop to take over the production run of tankards for Older Daughter’s wholesale order. I, meanwhile, stayed inside by the phone, waiting for word on my mom. I took down the Christmas tree and cleaned the house as a sort of occupational therapy. Older Daughter slept much of the day, exhausted.
It wasn’t until evening that my brother called with surprising news: My mother had rallied!
This took, literally, all of us by surprise. The entire family was braced for the worst. My brother said Mom looked terrible, was mostly comatose, and hadn’t eaten in days (she had a feeding tube). My dad had tried to wake her up several times to no avail.
My dad tried to wake her up one last time. She actually woke up, but was terribly groggy. But then, miraculously, she kind of blinked herself awake over the span of about five minutes and became much more alert. She was responsive and talking (as best she could; her speech was badly impacted by the stroke). Her vitals stabilized. The doctor was just as surprised as the rest of us by her rapid improvement, and decided to belay any recommendations for hospice.
My brother said Dad went from the darkest gloom to incandescent happiness in the span of an hour.
Mom is still hospitalized and she is by no means out of danger, but the likelihood of her imminent departure seems to have passed.
Phew. It’s been a roller-coaster of emotions over the last couple of days, let me tell you.
On a more positive note, something interesting and even amusing happened to Older Daughter while being treated in the emergency room, which I’ll explain later in another blog post.
In the meantime, prayers for my parents would be deeply appreciated.
Source: http://www.rural-revolution.com/2026/01/a-really-really-rough-new-years-eve.html
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