‘Just’ a Tonsillectomy…
I must acknowledge
first off, that Kate and I recently celebrated the birth of our sixth child,
Phillip. Details to come, I promise. Things have certainly been busy at the
Shirley’s casa on La Casa.
When Kate arrived at
the entrance to the ER yesterday with Patrick, I was stunned. My oldest son could barely walk. I had been working when Kate sent me a
picture of a toilet bowl full of fresh blood and a note that she was on her way
to Primary Children’s Medical Center. I
walked across the bridge and got there before she did. She needed me to park The Behemoth, and as I
pulled away from the curb I looked back to see Patrick shuffling his feet as
Kate supported him. His pajama pants and
Kate’s jacket were baggy on him and he was as white as a ghost. He carried a barf bag full of blood.
After parking the van I
reentered the ED lobby and was told by the registrar that they had already
taken him back. The volunteer escorted
me to the room. I was surprised when she
took me to the right, toward the trauma rooms.
I was even more surprised to find nearly twenty people in his room. Everyone from radiology to anesthesiology to
social work to security was there. In
the time it took Kate to give the registrar her insurance card, they had taken
Patrick back, put him on a bed and started two IVs, one for each arm. There was no room in the bay for me, so I
stood in the hallway, Kate’s purse in my left hand, and Phillip’s car seat at
my right.
After checking in at
the desk in the waiting room Kate and I looked around for a place where we
could sit apart from all the other parents.
We didn’t want Phillip exposed to too many people. Eventually we found a spot in the
hallway. After waiting an eternity (it
was a really long hour) Kate was allowed to go see him in recovery. Eventually they came to get me and I packed
up the purse, Patrick’s belongings, the diaper bag and Phillip and trudged over
to recovery.
I passed into darkness
as I stepped through the curtain and found Patrick on his side, half
sleeping. He was okay. When his tonsils had been removed a week
earlier I was told by the surgeon that Patrick’s left side had been a
challenge, due to excessive scar tissue, and that P Man would be pretty sore
because of it. And ultimately it had
been the left side that had punched his return ticket to the hospital. In surgery they had cauterized the bleed. Fortunately it was a venous bleed, instead of
arterial, which could have been fatal.
Kate had just fished
Phillip out of the bath when Patrick first vomited blood. Her plan had been to go to the store to get Patrick
some strawberry milk. Had she been 5
minutes faster, she would not have been there when it started.
After sitting with
Patrick for a while I looked at Kate and we decided that a hospital was a bad
place for a newborn. So Kate left with
Phillip. Of course, I rode the train to work
that day, so we had to make transportation arrangements, hoping that he would
get to go home that night.
After Kate left I had
nothing to do but sit while Patrick recovered.
I could only do so much work from my phone, so Cormac McCarthy’s The
Road kept me company while Patrick zoned out and watched The Avengers. It was a good distraction from the ‘what-ifs’
that surge through any parent’s head after a scary event.
Seven hours after he
went to surgery we were cleared to take him home. Thankfully he did not need a blood
transfusion. They did pump him full of
fluids, though. As we waited for our
ride I watched him, already a thin boy, emaciated from lack of eating over the
last week and weak and pale in his wheelchair.
I knew he was really feeling crappy when he stopped laughing at my
wickedly funny jokes. We were glad to
have him sleep on the spare mattress at the foot of our bed last night. And for once, I didn’t give him a hard time
for sleeping past noon…