Archive Page 277

Busted

Friday, August 17, 2007

Axel came home today – Jim and I busted him out of the joint today at about 1:45, hit the coffee shop for a jolt of caffeine and then took a lovely lazy drive on 127 back to Manchester. He had a misty moment with his old friend the ocean, commented on how much he was noticing, how different everything looked. Upon arrival in Manchester, we ‘spun the beach’ per Axel’s request then hurried home. It was a fancy return, Ted laid out the red carpet at the end of the ramp (a lovely red towel) and Sylvia wheeled herself out the front door. It happened rather quickly, in fact. Axel mentioned to Ted and the gang ‘I never thought I’d be so happy to see you all that I’d cry!’ He and his lovely wifey were in each other’s arms in a matter of seconds. There were tears of joy and sweet nothings I’m sure, but I was running inside to get the camera so I could document it for you all – and I missed it. (You can see some of the shots I did get – I’ll put em up on flickr later). We walked around the house, guiding him through the new layout. He seems to be sure that he’s rid of much of his ‘clutter problem,’ and commented that he liked the lack of ‘stuff’ in the hallways…we’ll see how long this lasts.

We had some visitors – Gary Gilbert and his friend Lars (wohoo for the Swedes) came over to figure out what house painting projects dad had been working on, and it seems they are gonna help finish some of them. Kurt Melden came over with some tart apples from his apple trees and promised the folks a ride in his golf cart type mini car thing? He’s going to give em a ride up around Smith’s Point tomorrow – that should be an adventure. Nancy Coffey came over with a spinach quiche for lunch tomorrow and some homemade bread. All delicious. We had a walk in the garden, picked some tomatoes, some carrots, and (most exciting) unearthed some fresh potatoes – the first harvest!

The day went by rather quickly – my father was up most of the day (and stayed up until about 11:30 with Tessa and I watching a movie), had a nap before dinner and many glasses of ginger ale. Sylvia had a bit of a rough day, as she did yesterday, due to what she thinks (and what seems to be) withdrawal from the pain meds she was on. She had a real tough time yesterday, finding much of her pain unmasked. Aches and pains and general discomfort – hot and cold sweats…I think tomorrow should be much better. She now has some Tylenol with Codeine to help her through really tough times, but she is trying to steer clear of any narcotics from now on. She awoke when we brought dad to bed at 11:30, and it seems like the presence of her hubby will definitely alleviate some of the pain. This is way too much detail, but this is the level I seem to be operating at right now, so I apologize. Suffice to say, I suppose, that the homecoming was a success. We had a delicious first post crash meal as a family unit of hamburgers and french fries and mozzarella/basil/tomato salad (Jim is a fantastic cook)– most of the ingredients came straight from the garden! Axel did a lot of walking, didn’t seem to have any problem getting up the stairs – slept in his own bed, with his own wife, and his own blankets…Sylvia curled up next to him and is anxious to get the hospital smell off him. Tomorrow we experiment with giving Axel a shower, learning about exercises he has to do from the visiting nurses, and getting used to having two lovely, charming patients in the house. I think Chris Kessler comes tomorrow (or Saturday) to stay for the weekend, and then Monday I am off to Dallas for a week of work…I think most of the coverage for that week has been sorted out, but it’s always worth cheking in. Tessa’s email is tessamagnuson@gmail.com if you would like to check in (and check the calendar).

That’s it for me now – tomorrow I am sure I can write something a bit more insightful, but tonight I’m exhausted, and am going to fall asleep happy, grateful, and full of love and admiration for my parents, my sister, Jim, Steve and everyone else who has done so much and been so strong . It is such a pleasure to have our resident pirate back – there’s nothing better than reuniting a pirate with his wench. Pictures to follow.

Sita

Thursday, August 16, 2007

No shakes this night. After some consultation with my doctor we settled on Tylenol with codeine for bad periods, and plain Tylenol for mild discomfort. It worked; I had a fairly good night. It is an odd reality for me to be writing so much about nights when I, in my pre-cash life, I took nights entirely for granted. It is the same with limbs. Pre-crash I had taken them all for granted, but now, with my right leg in a cast, uncomfortable and useless, I am acutely aware of what it cannot do for me. Joan called me ecstatically from Worcester saying “I have my left arm back!” Such a great gift. We are all anxious to have our limbs back.

Edith Maxwell took over morning duty from the girls and drove from Ipswich with a special blend of her granola breakfast and home-made muffins. She showed up at 6:30 just when I had gotten myself dressed. She is recovering from hip surgery, but has made great progress in getting her mobility back. I watched her walk with envy. The rest of the day was overshadowed by the continuing pain management challenge so it was good there were no visitors as I was not in a good place for most of the day. I tried to postpone bedtime as long as I could, fearing a difficult night (which it wasn’t). I watched a bunch of silly movies while Sita was doing the household’s administration, trying to keep costs under control. I did not think we’d done a good job teaching our kids about financial management but it appeared, after all, that we did, or else she picked it up someplace else. I am astounded at her organizational skills.

Tessa had a few setbacks dealing with vets and Canadian banks and found solace in a trip to the mall. She returned among other things with more pillows so that we can build Axel a multi-pillow nest like mine.

I started a new challenging puzzle and am looking forward to tackle it with puzzle enthusiasts. I also made some promises to my colleagues at work about starting taking on a few tasks come mid September. I should be out of my current cast and I hope the ribs have healed by then.

The new dishwasher did not materialize as we had hoped but it got delivered in my dreams instead. We hope it comes today as we are adding a new member to the household.

We got more cards, so the postman’s arrival is an event each day. Tim and Iris manage to find the most outlandish cards and send these with great regularity. A package arrived from Hala and Bill with goodies for the girls and an eye mask for me and more. Alistair and Birgit sent us their love from Beirut with an extraordinary gift. We are humbled by all your attentions, expressions of love and gifts.

Our summer neighbor Debbie came to say goodbye as she leaves for her regular homestead and told us some great stories about dog spas in the East Village in New York and how to apply for a spot (private room or suite). I wished Alison had been there to hear them. She also left us with tons of mixes for smoothies and huge bags of coffee. Thanks Debbie for all your support and encouragement.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

We will try the old sleeping arrangement, upstairs, so for now we don’t need a hospital bed or movers. Thanks for the offers and being on standby.

Later this week we will post requests on the calendar for having someone around the house while Sita is away in Dallas and Tessa in the store in Rockport. I am waiting to get Tessa’s work schedule and we are also waiting to sort out what help me will need when Axel is back home. If you don’t have access to the calendar and can’t figure out how to use it, send an email to sita@klompje.com and she will invite you to the calendar.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

After a fairly good day without the powerful pain pills, and only one administration of Tylenol Extra Strength I decided to try the night without Oxycontin as I am anxious to get off this strong medicine. Sita had put the Tylenol within reach, just in case.

It turned out to be a very difficult night. First of all it took hours to fall asleep and I could not get comfortable. I suppose the Oxycontin has helped me to always drift quickly into deep sleep at the beginning of the night. Now, without it, I was lost. Not only that, I experienced hot and cold sweats throughout the night, my cast hurt, the wound on my wrist was in the way, etc. I was quite miserable and chalked it up to withdrawal from Oxycontin. If this is the downside of Oxycontin, I will brace myself for another night like this, or maybe several more. I may not go to bed as early, to shorten the agony.

Lots of dreams of which I can only remember bits and pieces: a multicultural event and a simulation which I did not get right or finished on time; trying to bike home with crutches on one side of the handlebar and a violin over my shoulder. My dreams a tossed salad of early childhood experiences and more recent ones from work. The mind is a mysterious thing as it dredges up these old bits of experiences and reconfigures them into new wholes. These dream pieces left me puzzled and exhausted this morning.

Tessa took off to work in her beloved leather shop in Rockport. A bit of a contrast with working her other summer job this year of planting trees in the northern Canadian woods. I did not see her before she got back but heard she had a fabulous day with rocket sales. Sita stayed with me except for an brief excursion to Salem from which she came back with shopping bags full of stuff that Axel had accumulated since his arrival there. This is how we acquire stuff: it comes to us!

Talking about stuff, in the middle of Sita’s massage Jim and his dad Marc showed up with Sita and Jim’s stuff from Amherst in a large trailer and truck. The stuff included the cats Mooshie and Cortez, who immediately left a thin layer of cat hairs over everything. This is going to be an interesting challenge for the coming months: managing the cat hair which causes sneezing reactions in Axel (and probably in Tessa as well, our two allergixs). But we are now all happy having our babies close by: Sita has her cats, Tessa her bunny and we have our girls!

Chris Pilcavage showed up with a delicious four course Japanese lunch. She took me for a tour of the garden where we managed to extract a few more raspberries that the chipmunks had overlooked, and picked some warm tomatoes, carrots, radishes, squash and basil. I miss working in the garden but going for a visit is nearly as good. After our lunch I took a two hour nap, and Chris vacuumed the house, which she later confessed, she actually loved doing. With work and napping done, we practiced some idleness watching the cove empty and enjoying the gorgeous weather. Later Abi the masseuse sat with us enjoying the bunny and the weather and I had my pretend beer. And just before the cove emptied Woody with friend and dogs in a small boat called us from the water and waved from the mouth of the cove.

After the visitors left I did another vain attempt at the puzzle. I haven’t made much progress since Anzie left me the other day. I think I am going to do something that flies in the face of my deep Calvinistic upbringing and that is not to finish the puzzle of the royal pair. I put in only 5 new pieces of the prince’s navy suit, after trying each time about a 100 pieces in the same slot. This ain’t no fun. It feels rather naughty not to finish the hard part of a puzzle; I don’t think I ever did this in my life. But then again, I am in a new life now.

Good luck Ida, Lourdes and team in Nigeria, thanks for the message. Joan and I are cheering you on. You will do well! Thanks Carole for the water massage idea I will check it out and thanks everyone else for your encouraging and supportive messages in the guestbook, by phone and through the mail.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

I slept another 12 hour night, once again in half hour increments. This isn’t as bad as it sounds. My bed is like a nest, with pillows everywhere and it is very comfortable as I drift in and out of sleep. While still awake, whether I like to or not, I often go back to that fateful afternoon. My head jerks left or right as if to say ‘no!’ and then I fall asleep. I have many dreams but not about the accident. There are no nightmares. It is as if the conscious revisiting of the Gardner airstrip before falling asleep inoculates me against bad dreams.

I have whittled the list of recommended therapists from Paul, Mary and Leslie down to three, one on vacation, one I will talk with today and one later this week. I still trip over low level complexity (something that I would not have considered complex in my pre-July 14 life) and need to gather much strength and courage to tackle such tasks.

Joan and Axel have both indicated that their lives are changed forever. Joan mentions the experience of being so totally dependent on others and the deep experience of gratitude, Axel too is rethinking priorities, staying with questions rather than trying to answer them. I think I am forever changed as well although I am still trying to sort out what is temporary and what will last. Like Joan, I was not used to being dependent and tended to boss others around (especially Axel and the girls). I also used to have a hard time sitting still and just staying in the moment and contemplate all that is good around me. I read the book “How to be Idle” that Emilie sent me and find myself quite adept at not doing anything important at all for 12 hours on end and not feel guilty about it.

Anne and Chuck came by after their visit to Axel to tackle the African food. We ate it just before the thunderstorm hit the area, sitting out by the cove. It was delicious, thank you Fatou! We are beginning to make a dent in the supply. Anne helped me complete the easy parts of the Royal Pair puzzle and left me with large amounts of undistinguishable pieces in red and dark blue. She also brought an even larger puzzle for a new challenge. It has 1500 pieces! It remains hard to do it from a wheelchair perspective; again, patience and perseverance rule, two words that are prominent in my life these days.

It is as if Sita has temporarily (?) absorbed all my excess energy that I cannot use these days. All day she dashed in and around the house doing chores, cleaning up, stacking, throwing out, filing, organizing, sorting, as if there was no tomorrow. I watched her and recognized myself. Tessa is so much more like her dad; she looks at Sita, rolls her eyes and thinks about matters related to comfort; she did the shopping and is in between chores reconnecting with her friends. They are both taking their personalities into their caring roles, and some of these personalities are like a mirror to Axel and me. We will have fun when he comes back comparing notes on whose genes are at work in whom.

The network showed its power again yesterday when plumber Jack Manderson from Ipswich showed up to unhook the old dishwasher. Jack came to us via Ellie Cabot. He is now part of the network and reading Caringbridge as well. Jack thinks that he shares a common ancestry with the Magnusons and that when the Vikings invaded the Scotland, a child was born and a new name negotiated: that is how Magnuson changed into Manderson. It sounded pretty compelling to me. Welcome to the family Jack!

Jack left with a bag full of hotel soaps and shampoos that Sita has collected over the years and which she finally decided she did not need. He will drop the bag off of at Partners in Development, Inc. in Ipswich, an outfit that works in Haiti and also in Guatemala. Jack is in that network too. Overlapping networks, imagine the possibilities!

Sita and Tessa left at 6:30 PM to go see their dad and watch a movie together. I was put to bed (voluntary!) while neighbor Ted was put on back-up duty as orderly/nurse reachable by phone.

On the hospital bed front, the latest news from Axel is that the occupational therapists think he can handle a flat bed with a foam wedge to lift the head up a bit. The staff at Shaughnessy is all for patients going back to their usual sleeping arrangements and seem to have convinced Axel that moving beds in and out of the house may not be necessary after all. I will wait to hear Sita and Tessa’s views on this.

Thanks again for your messages in the guestbook, it makes for a great start of a new day.

Monday, August 13, 2007

This is the week of Axel’s homecoming. It is both exciting and daunting. He won’t have a button anymore to call a nurse, orderly or specialized professional but he’ll have his voice to call on any of his women. The bed situation is still unclear. I can make it to the top of the stairs and have shown I can manage a flat bed as long as there are plenty of cushions to support the various painful body parts. So for me a return to our own bed upstairs is the best of all options. For Axel this is less clear. With his turtle shell come extra complications: how to put it on and off, how to lift himself into sitting position, how to shower. He will try to get some answers to that today.

If we need to rent a hospital bed for him we will need some heavy lifters to clear the room in the next few days and put some things in storage. Please let us know if you can help with either of those two things.

Yesterday was overshadowed by Steve’s departure. Tessa drove him to the bus station in the afternoon after he visited for a last time with Axel at Shaughnessy. We have become very fond of him and he has been a tremendous source of support for all of us, especially for Tessa of course. They will reunite in a couple of weeks for their new life together in London.

Sita and I tackled a 1000 piece jigsaw puzzle of the Dutch crown prince and his princess. The large smiling mouths and teeth were the easy part. The dark navy suit is a killer.

Fatou showed up in the afternoon with enough food to serve an entire refugee camp. Fatou, we have enough!! Fatou calculates caloric requirements based on hour-long marches to fetch wood and water. If you would like to have some West African food, please come by and help yourself, that way you also get an idea of what will be waiting for you when we have our party later this month. If Fatou keeps going like this we will soon have an appeal for additional refrigerators and freezers.

Thanks to Kurt’s ramp it is now so easy to go back and forth between the inside and the outside, I can do this on my own as long as someone holds the door open.

Steve and Ingrid Miles from North Shore Friends Meeting came by for dinner. Even though Sita had told them to not bring anything and that the menu was West African, they wanted to share a wonderful Pakistani dish with us. We sat outside by the cove and had a wonderful time eating, drinking (me just an O’Douls) and watching a young woman who had driven her car too far onto the beach play damsel in distress. It was dinner theatre and just when the mosquitoes started biting too hard the knight in his shiny red truck showed up and pulled her back onto the asphalt. After that we went inside so we don’t know the end of the story. Steve and Ingrid were sent off by Tessa with a large container with African food. (And so did Steve on the bus!)

Sita and Jim had the night off and went to a movie while I went to bed around 8 again and put in another 11 hours of sleep, completed in half hour segments.

Thanks Lynndsie, Joe, Suzie, Marianne, Kent for your wonderful, funny and important words you write in the guestbook. I wake up with those and they do me a world of good. I am equally inspired by you. Thanks Maurits for your good wishes. Scary huh, these photos. After I recover I am never going to crash again. I will be a much better pilot.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

We’ve come along way in one month, two of us at home and Axel walking with a cane and needing less and less professional help. I find that the further we move away from the moment of the crash, the further I can start to look in the future. I remember the first few days I could only consider the coming night or, if I stretched, the next day. When I got home I could only consider the next week, then Axel’s homecoming and now I can start to contemplate September. I suppose this is a good thing, and a sign of returning to normalcy, something we all want to happen, sooner, rather than later.

This notion of living in the moment was very appealing to me a couple of weeks ago but it is less so now. It is a childlike sort of living, where you don’t need to worry about anything because others are taking care of that. When Joe was still here I remember him saying, each time I worried about something to get back to focus on my body’s healing, and that the Lobster Cove Calamity Management team (LoCoCalMan) would take care of the rest. It has indeed done that and I can’t begin to express my thanks to everyone who took part in this effort and played a role in managing our complicated household.

The girls went to bed very late as Steve is preparing his departure for Canada and is starting to say goodbye to his friends. They do that on the beach around a campfire and by staying up very late. It is always a surprise who will descend the stairs in the morning.

While everyone was sound asleep and after nurse Tessa set me up with breakfast, book, pills, computer and phone, I settled into my quiet morning routine of idleness which was pleasantly interrupted by Cynthia from North Shore Friends Meeting who came by for a chat, brought strawberries and wheeled me outside over the new ramp into a glorious Lobster Cove morning.

About 1 PM the house started to wake up and Steve and Barbara showed up, followed shortly by Jim’s mom Helen and Ed. Steve and Barbara took me to Salem and we had a nice time sitting on the deck with Axel who is starting to outgrow Salem and its various routines and eternal background busyness. He is more than ready to come home. On the way home Steve and Barbara bought me a small icecream cone which turned out to be about a pint (I should have asked for half a kiddie cone) and I managed to eat the whole darn thing during the remaining drive. That should put some weight back on me. It became my dinner and was supplemented with some chips and a green pepper from the garden.

As usual, I was exhausted from the trip and went to bed about 6:30 PM. I was happy to read caringbridge guestbook messages from Edith (sorry you could not make it here) and from my nephew Steve. I enjoy these so much and can’t wait to read them together with Axel.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

What with a new dishwasher in the near future and MLK’s encouraging speech to us, this new day winks at me from behind the porch window with a big smile.

Contrary to Sita’s and Tessa’s prediction about my adventure up and down the stairs yesterday – which they disapproved of – I feel fine and not any more sore than other days. I even took one pain pill less last night, bringing down the oxycontin to 10 mg for the night. I am going to push the envelop and not take any oxycontin this morning.

I am reading A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini and recommend it to anyone who needs some perspective on their own suffering. Here I am with bruises and broken bones but encircled by a large network of people cheering for us. The Afghan women whose story Hosseini tells have no supporters at all with broken teeth and bruises inflicted by their husband and other self-righteous men. At times it is too painful to read and I put it away because although this is a story, I know there are many women still living such nightmares daily, all over the world. And then I count my blessings and pull that necklace out again.

We had a quiet morning yesterday. The duty nurse always sets an alarm, no matter what time the girls go to bed, and she gets me started with the day. This includes setting the shower up for me, making breakfast, counting my pills, bringing my computer and book to the living room. Sometimes the morning duty nurse is very talkative, sometimes she is not and I can barely look past the slits that are her eyes.

Yesterday morning our neighbor Kurt showed up with his grounds man Paul and in the pouring rain they installed a beautiful ramp at the other door that leads to our sitting area on the Cove side. I can now go out when it is nice without having to be wheeled around the house. He also always brings a bag of blueberries. Thanks so much Kurt, what a wonderful gift!

Ellie Cabot, our former neighbor stopped by and we compared notes on broken ankles and recovery times. She also brought lobster salad and we talked about hospital beds and sleeping arrangements. Later in the day Ellie came back with all sorts of supplies to make me more comfortable, such as a cast cover for the shower, a neck brace, etc.

The Lipkinds showed up after Ellie with dinner and they stayed with me while the girls ran errands. Leslie, a therapist herself, was a great help in sorting out the kind of therapy I am looking for and the process of selecting one from the list that Paul and mary supplied me with. This is a task I am going to tackle on Monday.

I talked with Joan as she is trying to sort out the various dimensions of going home. In those moments the guilt comes creeping back up. Joan is so very generous and forgiving but I am also so completely aware that all the things she has to deal with, all that discouraging complexity, is all because of a mistake I made. At least when Axel comes home I can play a role in helping him adjust to being home, but with Joan I cannot offer much of anything and am frustrated by that state of affairs. She will make her first ride in a car and I hope that this will not be as scary as she thinks it is. The insurance is done with ambulances.

Friday, August 10, 2007

All is looking well on the dishwasher front… my best friend Valerie Doyon (whose family owns Doyon’s TV and Home Appliances) and her father have offered to give us a great deal on a great dishwasher, which is unbelievably generous and grately appreciated, our only problem now is that we need a plumber to come install it for us (due to the fact that the old one is 14 yrs old and all the hook-ups are completely out dated). We are trying to find a plumber who can come install our new toy. If anyone knows any good plumbers (with reasonable rates) in this area, please let us know so that we can get this old one out of here and the new one set up.
Dad is doing well (very excited about the new dishwasher) and working his butt off in rehab. Today he is attacking the stairs (a full flight!), and he has been set loose in the halls of the 3rd floor to roam when he pleases. He’s also standing up and peeing by himself, putting his turtle shell brace on, washing himself, and zipping through the latest Harry Potter book.
Sita and I are trying to figure out sleeping arrangments for mom and dad upon dads arrival home (next week!), and mom has proven that she can move up and down the stairs on her bum with ease (although we’ll see how sore she is tomorrow from the intense physical exertion). But things are moving along and looking good.
My continued thanks to everyone for all of your love, support, cards, flowers, food, and gifts.
-tessa

Friday, August 10, 2007

I have been thinking a lot about patience yesterday. For one, it is a noun now, and I am that noun, a patient. It comes from the Latin verb patior (pati passus) which means to suffer , undergo, experience; to permit, allow. That is really all there is to do for me right now: suffer, undergo and endure. I find that when I don’t do that I grow impatient and the waiting gets longer. I remember this quote which always made me smile: “Never become irritable waiting for things to get better. If you’ll be patient, you’ll find that you can wait much faster.”

I have always been an impatient person. Impatient with myself for doing something too slowly, not getting something; impatient with others (for the same reasons); impatient with work, with the seasons, with traffic with waiting times. I was also impatient with the vegetables growing in my garden, especially the raspberries and that one blueberry.

But everything changed on that July afternoon when I came to my senses in the plane wreck, stuck in the mud. I remember hearing Axel calling for help, and Joan telling the rescue workers to get us out. I don’t recall saying anything (what else was there to add), or maybe I don’t remember. But what I do remember is about patience: The knowledge that the crew was working as hard as it could and that I had to wait with patience. The knowledge that impatience made the pain in my right ankle flare up. The knowledge that it would take longer to get to me who was at the bottom of the pile of bodies. I remember focusing on my breathing. I learned that some 27 years ago when Sita was born but I don’t think I really got it then. Now I did. Focusing on my breathing made me patient…in and out….in and out….I think it made time go faster. Some people say it took an hour to get us out. I thought it was 30 minutes.

And now I am a patient and my body is healing from the inside out. I try to visualize the two ends from the broken ribs reaching out to each other and my patient breathing weaving the fringed ends back together. I visualize the two sides of my broken ankle, forced back against one another, patiently rebuilding the cells that will connect the two parts….in and out, in and out.

In Native American mythology the animal that represents patience is the ant. In our kitchens we consider them pests, but what they really are is patient animals. I like to imagine the construction workers inside my body being directed by ants. And while they do that, I’ll be (a good) patient.

Yesterday was a quiet day visitor wise, a few more phone calls, an afternoon nap, the delivery of another edible arrangements package (chocolate dipped strawberries from Jennifer Leonardo – thank you!) and a lot of yard and garden work by our neighbor Ted (I watched you, what a workout, I bet you are as stiff as I am in the morning) and Carol Moore who made sure that when I get outside all the flowerbeds in my line of vision look beautiful. Thanks so much Ted and Carol.

I talked with Joan on the phone and she is gearing up to go home, happy but also a little daunted by the prospect of not having around the clock caregivers. Unlike Axel and me, she does not have children nearby or who can move in like Sita did, and Morsi has a fulltime job. I saw that Mary Wright offered her help in the guestbook. We are in this together and might as well be like family. The calendar that Sita has created will also allow for Joan and her family to post requests or needs. If someone is willing and able to coordinate Joan’s support, the position is vacant right now.


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