Day 3

Email: (from Nana to friends & family)

Hi all,

Sorry about this big group email, but a couple days ago [Papa] was doing fine then in the evening started having garbled speech.  Kari and I took him to the E.R. and after some tests discovered he has a brain tumor.  He is feeling good and in very good spirits; we just have a very hard time communicating!  He is to have surgery to remove the tumor next week.  There are a lot of unknowns right now, but we are hopeful for a good outcome.  He will likely come home from the hospital tomorrow, then we will go back for the surgery.  So far he is not getting too frustrated and has a good sense of humor.  I am doing well; trusting the Lord for His good will.  I have been staying at the hospital and will go back after getting cleaned up a bit.

Thank you for your concern and prayers!  I will keep you posted.  Needless to say, we will not be going to CA and places in between at the end of the month.

Love,  Papa and Nana

 

My Reflections:

We celebrate the birthday of our little cousin.  It feels strange doing something so “normal” when life seems anything but, considering the present circumstances.  It’s almost easier being at the hospital because then I can at least feel reassured that Papa is doing ok in the moment.  It’s not being there when the enormity of what’s happening sets in.  But it’s good to celebrate with J’s family and I know the boys are happy to be in on the fun.

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C Bear all decked out in the “Bob the Builder” theme, and ready to dig into that cake. The cartoon’s theme chant “Can we fix it? Yes we can!” seems a bit presumptuous in the larger scheme of life today.

While at the party, Papa’s brother, calls.  He wants to get the latest update, but even more than that, he has a generous offer for us.  He won an iPad in a recent raffle and already has one of his own.  Could he send us this extra iPad to possibly help Papa in his communication?  There are apps we can get that could be useful as well as the opportunity to FaceTime with family far away.

“Um wow.. Yes!, that would be great!,” or the like is my response, and Papa’s brother arranges for it to be shipped to me ASAP so Papa can start using it right away.  I’m so touched by his willingness to do this; just one of the many, many, kind & generous gestures to be shown to us in the days ahead.

When we return home from the party, there’s the usual chaos of life with three boys.  In the midst of changing Little M’s diaper, I discover he’s had a major blow-out, much more than any wet-wipe can handle.  As I take his squirmy, poopy mess to the tub and then begin to bathe him, the emotions start to swell in my chest.  I get Little M cleaned up, and by the time he’s back to the changing table for a change of clothes and fresh diaper, continuing to wiggle and squirm all the while, I feel completely in over my head.  The waves of my emotions are starting to take over.

“J, can you please HELP me up here!,” I yell in desperation from the 2nd floor nursery. J comes and with no further explanation, I just look at him and say, voice breaking, “I can’t do this anymore!”

And leaving J with the baby, I rush out and into our room, to my closet, shut the door, and fall to the floor in a heap, right there under my skirts and my dresses.  And that’s when it all comes crashing in on me; all that’s transpired these last few days.  And I let out big, choking sobs, curled in a ball, right there in the safety and sanctuary of my closet, right there on the floor across from my shoes.  And I sob, and I cry, and let the tears finally come in full force.

And a little while later J comes and sits next to me on the floor.  And he talks to me and tells me it’s ok; that it’s a lot to take in and that it’s all happened so fast and that it’s good to let myself finally cry.  And I’m thankful for his support.  And I’m scared and I’m sad and I don’t know what else yet.  And eventually I get up off that floor in my closet, I wipe away my tears, take a deep breath, and somehow get it together to just keep moving forward through the day.

When evening comes, I make my way back to the hospital to visit with Nana & Papa.  And, thankfully, Nana & I make some important discoveries about Papa’s ability to communicate.  He’s able to tell us (in his own gibberish) that not only is his speech mixed-up, but what he’s hearing other people say is mixed-up too.  For instance, when the nurse asks him a certain question, he hears an entirely different question.  Her words don’t sound mixed up to him, but just come across as different words than what she’s actually saying.  We’ve just been assuming Papa can clearly understand what we’re saying, but this new insight definitely helps us understand why he’s seemed so out-of-it at times in his responses.  Now we know he just needs further clarification when we or the nurses speak to him.

An even bigger break-through comes, though, when he wants to use his laptop.  I stand there looking over his shoulder, thinking there’s no way he’ll be able to correctly type in the password to get into his computer.  And then I watch, dumb-founded, as he speaks aloud each character in his nonsensical way, yet actually types the letters correctly (for example, saying fu, da, swa, shoo, fee, while actually typing k-i-t-e-3).  Nana & I begin to write out questions to Papa, and are amazed when he completely understands what we have written.  His speech and our speech are mixed-up, but his comprehension of the written word is still good!  What a relief to know there’s a way he can clearly understand us!

There’s still a long way to go, but we’re slowly adapting and learning how to better understand Papa and vice vs.  I’ll take that.  I’ll take whatever ray of hope we can get right now.

 

Email: (response from me to Papa’s brother)

Thank you so very much!  I know he’ll have fun with it [the iPad] and I’ll do my best to help him with it too.

Want to share a bit of details about my visit with my dad tonight; feel free to share some/all of this with the rest of the siblings if you think they’d be interested.  I know it’s hard to get an idea for how things are going with my dad when you’re so far away, so here’s a little “window” into his world at the moment…….

Was very encouraged in visiting with my dad tonight, especially considering my conversation earlier with you concerning the iPad.  Each time I’m with my dad, I learn more about communicating with him.  As I told you over the phone, the biggest roadblock in his communicating is his mixed-up speech.  For the most part, he speaks fluently, but as if in a different language.  Most words you can’t understand because the words are all mixed up or he gets some letter sounds right, but then adds on other letter sounds to words (saying “chumer” instead of “church,” etc.).  Then he’ll throw in a word or phrase here or there that’s perfectly clear and understandable (like tonight when he spoke in a whole string of nonsense words trying to explain to us what he was talking about, and then he just paused and sighed and said, clear as day, “I wish I could talk.”).  We’ve tried having him write words, and that is a struggle too as he can write letters clearly, but gets them all mixed up, or gets stuck in trying to figure out how to spell something.  Tonight he was verbally spelling out words for us and, again, he was just spelling nonsense words.  It was interesting though, because when he spelled them verbally, he would also trace the letters in the air, but the letters he would speak would be different than the ones he would trace in the air.  If we could pay attention to the traced letters, often they would make more sense than the letters he spoke (for example, he’d say “N-U-U-Z-T,” but as he spoke, he’d trace B-I-L-L-S… then we’d say, “oh, bills?”  and he’d say, “yes, that’s what I says.”).

Also, there are times my dad seems a bit “out of it” and unable to comprehend questions…. not “quite all there,” if you know what I’m saying.  Usually this is with the nurses or doctors.  For instance, a nurse would ask, “Can you tell me your birthday?”  and he’d just look at her funny, or shrug, or list numbers from an old home address, etc.  Well tonight, my dad was able to explain to my mom & I that he would hear people say different things than they were actually saying.  He commented how weird it was because it wasn’t like he was hearing the nurse speak in “jibberish” (as he put it), but that his brain was actually hearing her say different words than she was actually speaking.  At some point today somebody got the bright idea to write down their question and then my dad was able to read it and comprehend it no problem “Oh, you mean (such and such)……!”  He read it, and the lightbulb went on for him and the very question he hadn’t understood when someone spoke it, he understood and answered (in his language, but enough for us to know he knew what we were talking about) after he read it.  Thus we discovered that all we needed to do was write things down when he wasn’t getting what we were asking or saying.  It was encouraging to know he was more “with it” than he was letting on at times.  There definitely is a disconnect in his brain with forming words verbally and receiving them orally, but this doesn’t mean the capacity for him to understand and respond aren’t there…. we just have to be a little more creative in the way we go about it at times.  The more we communicate with him, the more we’re able to find ways to understand each other.  Sometimes it takes us a few minutes just to figure out a single word he’s saying, but usually we’re able to figure it out with a bit of patience and work on both sides.  Never before have I so intently listened to someone during conversations… definitely makes you focus as you try to understand, but it’s quite rewarding when you’re successfully able to communicate.  How does one fill the time during a hospital visit?  Well, we just sit around and try to figure out what everyone is talking about!  My dad is very appreciative for our patience in conversing with him and commented how most of the nurses and doctors who come in really don’t care what he’s trying to say and only pretend to try to understand him (and yes, I have to admit at times my mom & I just nod and smile and act like we know what he’s saying when we don’t.  We try our best though!)

Another thing we discovered tonight – he’s still computer-literate!  My mom had brought his computer to the hospital, but was hesitant to pull it out thinking it might really frustrate him in trying to use it.  When we finally did get it out to look up something on it, he was persistent in typing in his password.  Even though the letters he was saying weren’t correct as he typed each key, the actual letters he was hitting were the correct ones – again a sign that he knew what he was doing, his brain was just mixing up the letters as he spoke them.  It took a bit of time to type, but he got it and was able to pull up what he wanted and shut down the computer by himself.  We didn’t use it very long, but enough to impress me that he still has the skills and the savvy and the recollection in using it.

ALL that to say, I’m excited with the prospects the iPad has in being a help with communication!

My dad, mom, and I also discussed some of the “hard” stuff that I’d rather avoid at a time like this, but that’s important to confront, all the same.  I asked him if he was comfortable with the decision to go ahead with the surgery and he expressed that he thought this was the best option;  that maybe it wouldn’t help, and maybe it would make things worse, but that it could make things better and that would be good.  He also told me a lot of what the neurosurgeon had discussed with my mom and him yesterday so that helped confirm that he has a good understanding of what’s going on and what’s to be done.  We also talked about some of the hard “what ifs?”and, fortunately, my dad has done lots of advanced planning and has household/medical/financial “stuff”in order to help my mom out if this surgery should leave him in a worsened state (praying that doesn’t happen!).

Anyway, that’s the very long (and wordy!) update, but I wanted to help give you an idea of what’s going on at the moment.  I’m not sure if you & the other siblings have Skype and could communicate via video with my dad that way, but he expressed an interest in this and I think this would be a good way to communicate with him as it really helps to see my dad as he talks (his body language adds a lot in helping to understand him).  I know Skype has the ability to type text as well and that might help for him to read some questions if he doesn’t understand some of what’s being said (my mom or myself could be there to help interpret too!).  Let me know if this is a possibility and we can set up a time to make it happen.

That’s all for now.  Will keep you posted with further updates.  Appreciate your concern and help : )

Love,

Kari

Day 2

Email: (from me to a friend)

Thanks, [friend].  I did feel encouraged after the neurosurgeon was in today.  Surgery is scheduled for next week &, if nothing else, it helps to know things are moving along and this will lead to getting more concrete answers.  He seemed a bit optimistic about removing the tumor, although I know there are a lot of risks involved.  Find myself expecting the worst, but who knows what God will do?  One step at a time, right?  Have to keep reminding myself to trust God… feel like my brain is on overload with everything it’s trying to process.  Ugh.  I’m so, so sorry for all you had to go through with your dad.  Know you dealt with this type of stuff and so much more.

Appreciate your offer to help.  Until surgery, it won’t look like there will be anymore juggling of hospital visits, so that will help out a lot.  At this point, they’re saying my dad will be discharged probably tomorrow and be able to stay home till surgery.  Not sure how that will work out, but I’m sure that would be better for him than waiting it out in the hospital for surgery(?).  Then after surgery, he’ll most likely be in the hospital for 5 days of recovery, so we’ll see how that goes and I will keep you posted.

-Kari

My Reflections:

I visit Papa at the hospital today.  He has visitors from his & Nana’s church.  In talking with all of us, Papa is surprisingly very jovial and animated (even more so than Papa would normally be). He seems overly talkative and doesn’t seem to mind that we still can’t fully understand what he’s saying.  We do our best to communicate though, watching his exaggerated hand gestures and attempting to figure out the context of the conversation.  While there, a pastor from their church asks if he can read some scripture and wants to know if Papa has a favorite passage from the Bible he’d like to hear.  Papa’s able to communicate the verse and the pastor reads it… something about going out into the wilderness or such, a bit despondent in its tone and not at all what any of us present would consider the usual “favorite verse” fare.  But the pastor obliges and then we joke with Papa about why he picked it.

After Papa’s visitors leave, I stay and chat a while longer.  I use the term “chat” loosely as conversing with Papa at present is anything but what you’d expect a light, casual “chat” to be like.

At one point in our conversation, Papa tries to write out questions and responses to Nana and me.  We soon realize though, that Papa’s handwriting is just as mixed up as his speech.  He knows what he wants to write, it just won’t come out right.  He writes some words, and then crosses them out as he tries so hard to get his brain to formulate the words he’s trying to communicate.  Nana saves the paper with some of what he writes today.

He writes:

LARRY IS INAI  INAN  INTO AN A TN  TUSA TUMON TUSA T TUMONS BAM BAIND I.

Nana & I look at him and look at his writing and then look at each other as if to say “What the heck is that supposed to mean?”  And then we attempt to do what that nurse has told us to do: work at understanding this gibberish.

He writes some more:

ASK EUSAMIN THUSAMUM

And we try to figure out whoever “EAUSAMIN THUSAMUM” is by asking question upon question and suggesting anyone we can possibly think of.

And then we take a good 10-15 minutes of back-and-forth over QUALISE and SEISENP; and then AUUA, COSTS, COSTO, KIBL, CUSMTL, and SAMS; just to figure out that Papa’s asking about what brand of hearing aide I have.  When I tell him it’s Widex, Papa responds,

“Yeahhh, that’s what I say…., SEISENP!”

He’s trying to let me know about hearing aides being available at Sams Club and wondering if they’d be just as good as what I have.  It’s his attempt at small talk, but, unfortunately, just “small talk” takes an excruciating amount of concentration, focus, and patience on Nana’s and my part.  It’s like trying to solve a big coded mystery, except the “big” mystery involves such things as hearing aide brands and wholesale shopping marts.

My brain hurts when I return home from the hospital.  This communication business is exhausting!

Day 1

Email: (from me to a friend)

Hey [friend],

Gah!  Can you please pray for me?  Took my dad to the E.R. this evening with what seemed to be stroke symptoms (garbled speech)… turns out that there is a mass on his brain which looks to be cancerous (I hate that word – the “C” word -and writing it just now makes it all that much more real, and scary).  He was admitted to the hospital, my mom is there with him, and there will be more tests and a biopsy (hopefully very soon).  Just too big to wrap my mind around… he’d been busy all day at my place putting up bead board and other such projects; seems fine except now he can’t get his words to make sense – sounds like he’s speaking in a foreign language.  Lots of unknowns at this point.  Just would appreciate your prayers.

– Kari

 

My Reflections:

Papa ‘s not acting like himself; more accurately, Papa’s not talking like himself.  At all.  It’s as if he’s speaking an entirely foreign language; except for the fact that he doesn’t speak any foreign languages.  And the rest of us just sit there eating Nana’s belated b-day dinner, trying to act casual and carry on conversation as if Papa’s speech isn’t that horribly abnormal.

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Happy Birthday, Nana! (Papa in background snapping photos as usual.) Little M is obviously not in a partying mood.

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Papa taking a photo of my ice-cream scooping skills. I’m trying to do my best to act like everything is “normal.”

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I’m sure Nana won’t approve of this photo, but her expression speaks volumes as she looks on with concern as Papa snaps her photo, seemingly unphased by his own sudden speech issues.

Inwardly, we are concerned though, and a mite embarrassed for Papa too.  It’s not until he excuses himself to the restroom that Nana, J, and I start voicing our concern.

The possibility of stroke is fresh on my mind since I recently talked with a friend who told me about her dad having one.

“Mom, Dad’s kinda worrying me,” I say.  “Is mixed-up speech a sign of a stroke?  Make sure you keep an eye on him tonight.”

Nana agrees that it could be a sign, but, like myself, doesn’t feel it’s an emergency situation. Ironically, Papa and Nana have had discussions previously about signs of a stroke (he’s on blood thinners for his heart and thus at a higher risk) and the importance of getting to a hospital in the first few hours to prevent long-term damage.  In the moment though, despite the signs, Nana and I don’t sense the urgency of this situation.  Papa seemes completely normal except for his garbled, mixed-up speech.  It can’t be that bad, can it?

Thankfully, J ‘s more level-headed than the rest of us, and recommends (insists) that we take Papa to the E.R. right away.  When Papa returns to the table from the restroom, we tell him our concern and our plan.  Even he thinks it’s a bit over-kill and especially ridiculous that I want to drive them there, but he doesn’t argue (much) and within moments we’re out the door and on our way.

When we get to the E.R., we quickly realize how serious things are.  I’ve been to the E.R. on several other occasions, but never before have I seen anyone rushed into a room so quickly as they rush in Papa.  Immediately there’s a flurry of doctors and nurses attending to him, asking us questions, ordering tests, and whisking him away for scans and such.  In the midst of all this, the nurses and doctors all seem to be confirming what we thought; surely Papa has had a stroke.

And then a doctor comes in to give us the report of the CT scan.  The scan indicated no bleeding on the brain.  It’s not a stroke like they had thought.  Instead, the CT scan showed some “shadowing” on an area of Papa’s brain, indicating that there’s most likely a mass there.  And from the way the blood vessels are shown to be flowing to this area, it’s probable that the mass is cancerous.

I sit there listening, nodding, feeling numb and as if things are running in slow motion.  Events with Papa over the past couple of months run through my head and I nod as I hear the term “brain cancer” and somehow it all makes sense…

Less than two months earlier I’d been talking with J in bed one night, commenting on how Papa seemed to have gotten “older” all of a sudden:  that time when he was helping me paint our deck and told me he had to go in because he was getting tired (he wasn’t one to easily get tired), how he’d lately gotten so “doomsday” on politics and financial matters (he usually wasn’t so pessimistic), how his patience had shortened with his grandkids (being more sensitive to their noise and antics), those times he’d made mistakes in measurements for house projects he was helping me with (he was an engineer and usually so precise with details), and how he’d told me he’d been sporadically mixing up a word here and there for the last several months.  As I talked with J that night, tears streamed down my face and I told him I wasn’t sure how much longer Papa would be around.  After that conversation, I’d made a conscious effort to just sit and listen as Papa talked about politics or other topics I’d previously not be inclined to listen to in lieu of pressing household demands.  And I let J know how important it was for us to make a 2 1/2 hour round trip to get lunch at a specific restaurant just because Papa liked it and really wanted to take us there. It was just a gut feeling that his time was limited.

And there in the E.R., in that moment when time slowed down and the surrounding emergency rush blurs for a brief second or two, those two words of the doctor, “brain cancer,” make sense for some crazy gut, can’t-put-my-finger-on-it, feeling that I’ve been carrying with me these past short months.

Even earlier that very day I’d seen it.  Even before Papa’s speech got so mixed up you couldn’t understand a word he was speaking.  Papa had been installing some beadboard above a countertop in our basement.  Weeks before he’d cut a few of the boards too short and Papa & I decided to use a trim piece on the bottom to cover up the mistake.  On this day when the beadboard install was complete, I walked down to the basement to check it out.  The first words out of my mouth were “Dad!, What did you do?!”  He’d installed the boards leaving the gap at the top, not the bottom, like we’d discussed.

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Photo taken after some of the boards were removed to correct gap at top.

I couldn’t believe he’d forgotten what we’d talked about, it was so out of character for him.  The trim I’d bought to cover up the previous mistake wouldn’t work to cover this mistake.  And I felt bad that he’d worked so hard on it and it wasn’t done “right.”  He told my mom that he’d disappointed me; and then I felt worse for my reaction.  I  did my best to apologize and told him it was just me being too perfectionistic.  We were able to get it all fixed; breadboard and hurt feelings.  And then Papa went upstairs to rest on our couch (he wasn’t one for typically resting on couches).  He even sat there and petted Bobo, our beagle (completely out of character for this animal non-lover).  And then more small things started to happen.  He asked to use our laptop (he’s forever searching the web), but then said he couldn’t get it to work (it worked just fine when I came over to look at it).  He mentioned to J about his and Nana’s upcoming trip to “Colorado” (they were going to California, not Colorado).  And then in a three hour timespan his speech went from fine to completely nonsensical.  And all the while he kept trying to talk as if we’d understand what he was saying.

They bring Papa back from the CT scan and the doctor tries to explain to him about the brain tumor. The doctor asks him if there’s any history of brain cancer in his family and Papa responds with a noncommittal “no” or “nah.”  Nana and I are taken aback a bit and Nana reminds Papa about his own dad having, and passing away from, brain cancer (something that Papa was previously very aware of).  Now Papa doesn’t seem to understand or remember.  The doctor looks at me and asks if I have any siblings.  When I tell him “yes, I have a brother (out of state,)” the doctor responds that I need to be aware and let my brother know that a link has been shown between heredity and brain cancer.  I silently wonder what one is supposed to do with this grim “awareness.”  And how does one watch for signs of brain cancer?  Are my brother and I to soon follow suit after my grandfather and Papa?

At one point when Papa’s out of the room for a test or otherwise preoccupied with nurses attending to him, one of the doctors or nurses mentions to Nana & me how important it is not to pretend to understand what Papa’s saying in his nonsensical way, but instead letting him know when we can’t understand him and trying to do our best to work at figuring out what he’s trying to communicate.  In Papa’s current state we’ve gotten to the point of just nodding and smiling when possible, while he continues to talk fluently in his own “foreign language.”   It’s just been a whole lot easier at times to “fake it,” especially when he gets so frustrated when we don’t understand him.

All this time, I feel like I’m doing a pretty solid job of keeping it together as I attempt to take in everything that’s happening.  I send out some quick texts to friends asking for prayer.  One friend and her husband are having a date night when she gets the text and they drop by the E.R. for a few moments with cups of hot tea from Starbucks for Nana and me.  In a numb fog, I fill them in on the latest, so glad to see their kind faces in the midst of the crazy night.  I’ve been updating J through texts and calls and let him know that I’m ok and he doesn’t need to worry about coming in.

Yes, I’m doing a pretty solid job… until the seizure hits.  Papa’s very adamantly trying to tell Nana & me something of importance that needs to be done.  Neither of us can understand him, but we’re trying our darndest with asking more questions and making guesses and so forth.  Papa gets frustrated and exasperated and then the right side of his face begins to get droopy and  his eyes start to roll back; and his head and arms and legs and entire body begin to shake in stiff, uncontrollable motions.  And it’s absolutely terrifying to witness.  Nurses are right there doing whatever it is they do when a seizure hits and, as if on cue, a doctor rushes in and says she’s just gotten off the phone with the neurologist who says Papa will need anti-seizure meds prescribed to minimize this common side affect with brain tumors.

Apparently.

It’s then that the tears come.  And I try to just listen and blink them back and swallow the lump rising in my throat; the last thing I want to do is lose it in front of Nana and Papa and all these nurses and doctors.  But the dam is about to break and I can’t hold it together much longer.  I excuse myself as soon as I can and escape to the nearest sitting area down the hall.  And I call J, crying.  Reality is beginning to sink in.

Late tonight (or rather very early the next morning) when things settle down, plans are made for Papa to be admitted to the hospital for further monitoring, and I head home.  Alone.

At least that’s how it feels.

Right now my heart is numb, I’m in shock and comfort and strength seem far, far away.

It might take awhile before I can fully grasp it, but in time, a quote my brother will write (when this is all said and done), will prove to ring true, even for me:

1

(quote & composition by Mark)

To be lifted up, one must first walk in the valley.

Welcome to Day 1 of life in the valley.