(This is a post I found from about a year ago, I forgot about it so I'm posting it now.)
We've lived in New Hampshire for a little over a year now and let me just say, it's been a doozy. We have moved twice, sold our home in Mass., I sprained my ankle, one of our dogs was hit by a car and killed, my Grandmother passed away, my car literally started falling apart (why does rust make the things that are supposed to move get stuck while at the same time making things that are supposed to be solid, fall apart?), my oldest turned 12 and at the same time became impossible, my youngest started throwing fits like you read about (I occasionally wonder if she needs an exorcism), I started homeschooling all 4 of them, and I almost died from an undiagnosed ectopic pregnancy. Obviously some of these things are more traumatic than others but it was all hard. All along I kept waiting for it to be too much. When was I going to fall apart? Every time a new obstacle or challenge came along I waited. I was good for a long time, until I wasn't.
It took me a while to get past the pregnancy. I was reminded of what the bottom looks like and let me tell you, it's ugly. The longer I go feeling good the uglier it is at the bottom and I had been feeling good for a while. The good news is that I got out...again. I am going to be 37 in a few weeks. I think, maybe, I'm finally learning that I will always get back up. With my husband, kids, parents, sisters, brothers, and friends, by the grace of God, I will always get back up.
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
There Is No Point to Point To
“Irony
is easier than hopeless silence but braver than flight. The problem is that sometimes your finger shakes as you
gesture, there is no point to point to, and maybe you can’t point anywhere---or
at least not at anything visible.”
This a quote from The Empathy Exams,
page 154. I have read this paragraph many times.
In
May of 2013 I almost died. I ended up in the emergency room after two weeks of
not being able to catch my breath, passing out, and some major shoulder pain. I
went to the ER on a Sunday after I passed out in the bathroom at church. Even
then I was hesitant to go to the hospital. I would hate to make a big deal over
nothing. I had seen the doctor when I first started feeling sick and he said it
was ovarian cysts. There was no ultra-sound or anything, that was just what he
thought it was and I believed him. He was nice, why would I question a nice
doctor? Turns out I had an ectopic pregnancy. The embryo had implanted in my
fallopian tube and the sickness and pain started when my fallopian tube split
open because a fallopian tube is not equipped to house an embryo. I had been
bleeding internally for two weeks. I had to have emergency surgery that was
supposed to take about 45 minutes but ended up taking three hours because my
entire abdomen was filled with blood and had to be irrigated out before the
doctor could see what was happening to be able to remove the pregnancy and my
right fallopian tube. The doctor thought he was done and was looking around to
make sure and discovered that my entire chest cavity was filled with blood as
well, so that had to be removed too. Of course I only found this all out a week
later when I went back for a follow-up. The doctor apologized, sincerely
apologized. I was ready to be mad at him but he knew he had messed up by not
realizing what was wrong sooner. If you google “fainting and shoulder pain”
ectopic pregnancy is one of the first things that pops up under causes. In fact,
after my surgery when I googled that exact phrase it said if you have these
symptoms call 911 immediately because it is a sign of internal bleeding. Not
only did I not call 911, I kept
living my life as best I could. I drove my kids around, made dinner, and all
that other stuff that I normally do. Why did I not die?
The above quote refers to this
situation for me. I laughed about it, “Hey remember
last week when I almost died?” or “I think I was busy trying not to die when
that happened, sorry I couldn’t help you.” I had to stop joking about it
because it scared my kids but I needed to feel something about the whole,
horrible situation and humor helped. I wanted to go to the doctor and point my
finger at him, yell, and blame him for….for what? Making a mistake? He was
humble and felt sorry, he’s human and I didn’t die. I couldn’t be mad at him. I
had nowhere to point. I still have nowhere to point and this still bothers me.
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