Gracelyn,
Pull Over
It was a hot and humid Wednesday afternoon last
year, around 4 o'clock. I was very tired, driving to Grasmere from my office in
Meiers Corners to pick up my three children after a long day of drilling
teeth. Half-way to my in-laws' house, my
cell phone chirped.
It was my one of my tennis buddies, Mary, an
obstetrician-gynecologist, and when I pressed the little speaker-phone button
on my steering wheel, she commanded me to pull over. She had just read the radiologist's report of
the sonogram she ordered the night before for my 11-year-old and the news was
not good. She didn't want me driving for the conversation.
My daughter, Charista, had been complaining about
her stomach for about two months. I had dismissed her intermittent and dull
pain for a few weeks, thinking she was trying to make excuses to not go to her
daily, early-morning swim practice. Even the pediatrician had examined her and said it was probably
nothing, but Mary disagreed and told me to take her to Regional Radiology to
get it checked out.
At that moment, with my hazards blinking on the side
of the service road near the Verrazano Bridge, I listened intently to Mary's
voice, as she slowly and clearly told me that Charista had a large cyst in her
abdomen. The world stopped. Everything
became silent. My universe was suspended for a few seconds. I focused my brain
to Mary's voice but, weirdly, a vivid memory of newborn, baby Charista being handed
to me by my labor and delivery nurse flashed before my eyes.
Eight minutes seemed like eight hours on the phone
with Mary. I reminded myself to breathe when she told me the cyst's unusually
large dimensions. I pushed down the panic that was emerging in my throat,
controlling my emotions and organizing my mental to-do list when she told me
the cyst was about to burst and Charista needed to have surgery, the sooner the
better.
By that evening, Charista was in wretched pain,
curled up in a fetal position on my bed, trying to massage it away with the
palms of her hand, closing her eyes, willing it away. I felt hopeless. Wasn't
there anything I could do as her mother besides give her Motrin?
I was on the phone till about midnight with my
brother-in-law, Kenny, a Manhattan orthopedic surgeon, who gave me
the cell phone number of one of the best pediatric surgeons in New York City.
He had spent hours getting recommendations from his medical colleagues in the
Northeast Region and her name kept coming up. And upon speaking to her on the
phone that night, I knew it was in God's hands. And hers. I trusted her
implicitly. I had to.
"Mommy, what are they going to do
tomorrow?" my 11-year-old asked me that night, as I was stroking her hair
to help her fall asleep. I lied and told her that we were going to New York University
Langone early the next morning and that they would stick a little needle in her
tummy to take out a teeny, tiny pimple that was causing her so much pain.
"Will it hurt?" she mumbled, as she started to drift off to sleep. I
lied again and said no, reassuring her she'd feel so much better when the doctors
work their magic.
Charista was admitted the next morning at 6 o'clock.
She was writhing in pain at that point, yet still completely and utterly
trusting us adults, keeping calm beyond her years. She watched a Justin Bieber
movie on her iPod. I pushed her wheelchair to and from radiology, helped her into
her hospital gown, onto her hospital bed. Our O.R. time was delayed to 2:30 PM
because of a kidney transplant.
The consent form frightened me. Essentially, the document
gave surgeons permission to remove my
11-year-old daughter's sizable abdominal cyst. Or perform a bowel resection. Or
partial or full hysterectomy. Or adjoining organs. Or whatever they saw fit. As
a dentist, I know about the head, neck and mouth. I jotted down some unfamiliar
medical jargon blurted to me to look up later. Then I steadied my hand and
signed on the dotted line and wrote "Mother" on the line next to it.
Charista and I held hands as she was wheeled into
O.R. #3. I kissed her forehead as she whispered, "Thank you, Mommy. I love
you," as the pediatric anesthesiologist placed the gas mask over her face.
I smiled and told her I'd be waiting for her when she woke up. When the double
doors swung closed behind me as I exited the cold, deadly serious room filled
with a dozen sterile medical personnel, I wandered the halls until I found a
ladies' room far away enough from anyone hearing my uncontrollable sobbing for
the next forty-five minutes.
Six hours later, her eyes opened in recovery and the
very real nightmare ended. At that moment the image of newborn Charista faded. Instead a
vivid one of her as a young woman I imagine she'd someday become suddenly
flashed before my eyes.
This one I read with tears in my eyes. I can remember being so scared for you and for Charista. Having seen Meghan through 9 surgeries of varying complexities, I know that sinking feeling all too well. But, no two children, surgries, or experiences are ever quite the same. I can share with you the faith, and the belief that no matter how desperate things seem, God holds our children (and us) in the palm of His hand. So grateful that you are now a year past an event that surely changed you forever. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete